Popular Articles

2009/044 NICE Issues Final Guidance On The Use Of Rituximab For First Line Chronic Lymphocytic Leukaemia
The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) has today (22 July) published guidance on the use of rituximab for the first line treatment of chronic lymphocytic leukaemia. The guidance recommends that rituximab should be considered asa possible first treatment for people with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia who are able to take fludarabine in combination with cyclophosphamide.

Global Med Technologies(R) Licenses Transfusion Software Solution To Nationwide Healthcare System
Global Med Technologies(R), Inc. ("Global Med" or the "Company") (OTC Bulletin Board: GLOB), an international healthcare information technology company, announced that its Wyndgate Technologies(R) division has licensed its SafeTrace Tx(R) transfusion management software to a 40+ hospital healthcare system. The organization will also be contracting validation services, another cost-effective business solution, from Global Med"s PeopleMed subsidiary. Terms of the agreement were not disclosed.
News of the day
GE, Big Vendors Corner EMR Market; Smaller Vendors Explore Health 2.0
Staying ahead of the upcoming drive to sell electronic health records to hospitals and physicians may be difficult for smaller vendors, Pharmawire/Financial Times reports. General Electric announced a program last week to provide health care organizations with financing options to purchase health technology through its financial services arm even as it sells electronic records through its health care wing. Other large vendors like Cerner and McKesson will be able to keep up, but smaller producers will be left behind, industry experts said.
Sexual Health

Girl Scouts Can Be Good Venue For Physical Activity

Promoting physical activity during Girl Scout meetings can be an effective way for young girls to get the exercise they need to be healthy, according to a study presented at the American College of Sports Medicine"s 56th Annual Meeting in Seattle. Richard Rosenkranz, Ph.D., implemented physical activity intervention strategies in three Girl Scout troops, training group leaders to instruct and lead exercise sessions among troop members. Compared to four troops who received no physical activity intervention, the intervention troops spent significantly more time participating in and learning about exercise, and performed much higher levels of both moderate-intensity and moderate-to-vigorous intensity exercise during troop meetings. "Implementing these physical activity strategies was relatively simple - all it took was a brief training to boost the skills and confidence of the troop leaders," Rosenkranz said. "I believe it would be feasible to take this education to a broader scale, to get girls the physical activity they need. Encouraging physical activity when girls are already gathered in groups is an effective strategy as well, and can cement the idea of exercise being fun and socially acceptable." Girl Scouts in Rosenkranz"s study averaged between 10 and 11 years of age. The interventions also successfully negated differences in exercise amounts among various ethnicity groups, an important finding because minorities statistically accumulate lower amounts of physical activity. Traditionally, young girls are less physically active than their male counterparts, especially as they age. Federal physical activity guidelines, released in October 2008, recommend that all children perform at least 60 minutes of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity per day. American College of Sports Medicine


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):