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Africa's medical news resource for the industry! 25 Mar 2008
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World TB Day 2008
The 24th March is my husband's birthday - it is also World TB Day - not a day that most people know about, I suspect. However, TB is a growing global problem. TB or tuberculosis still kills about 4000 people a day - that's an appalling figure and one that we should be ashamed of in a world where you can find half a dozen different versions of the same drug to treat hypertension, for example. And, alarmingly, according to the WHO report, Global tuberculosis control 2008, the pace of progress to control the global TB epidemic actually slowed slightly in 2006 - the most recent year for which full statistics are available. The main slow down is in diagnosis. Apparently some national programmes are no longer managing to keep up the pace that they managed in the first five years of their inception. And in sub-Saharan Africa - where the dual pandemic of TB and HIV is taking its toll - there has been no increase at all in diagnosis in national programmes.

There appear to be two main barriers to progress. The first is the increase in multidrug resistant TB, reported by the WHO in February 2008 to have reached the highest levels ever recorded. The second is the lethal combination of TB and HIV - in which some countries are managing to take steps - notably Rwanda, Malawi and Kenya - all of whom have achieved the highest rates of HIV testing among TB patients. Note that South Africa is not on this list.

The increase in the incidence of multidrug resistant TB is alarming, because many of these patients die - we simply do not have the drugs or the resources to treat them. New diagnostic tests and new drugs are urgently needed. TB is a neglected disease for the simple reason that most people who suffer and die from it are poor - so pharmaceutical companies won't make any money out of developing new drugs. It has taken private money from peoeple such as Bill Gates to encourage any interest at all in the disease. However, the BBC recently reported a case of multidrug resistant TB in a Somali immigrant to Scotland. Perhaps it will take a resurgance of the disease in the West before more money will be put into research into new approaches to treatment. My more cynical side thinks that a more likely result is a further tightening of immigration regulations, however.

Bridget Farham Editor
https://www.bizcommunity.com

Headlines

Medical
Killer chocs!
Experts are warning pet owners not to give their dogs or cats chocolate over the Easter period.

Poison!
Poison prevention starts with respecting, inspecting medicines.

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Chronic diseases
Cell transplant dramatically changes diabetic's life
Experimental cell plant transplantation has dramatically changed the life of a diabetic woman in Australia.

Personal contact the key to maintaining weight loss
A study in the USA suggests that maintaining weight loss is more successful in those who were randomised to the personal contact group.


Corporate Social Responsibility
Help stop TB
[ActivRetail] World TB Day was yesterday, March 24, 2008, and the slogan for this year was ‘I Am Stopping TB'. The day was also the start of a two-year campaign involving people around the world to stop TB. One of South Africa's leading retail pharmacy groups, Clicks, believes that everyone can do something to stop the disease, and initiated its own program.

Marathon runners can sock it to AIDS orphans
Old Mutual Two Oceans entrants can run their PUMA socks off for charity on Saturday and help AIDS orphans across the country.

Company news: Netcare's Mother and Child Trust appoints Corporate Social Investment (CSI) project - Martina Nicholson Associates (MNA)
Monday, 17 March 2008 - Private hospital group Netcare has appointed the Lusikisiki Child Abuse Resource Centre (LUCARC) as the Mother and Child Trust's Corporate Social Investment (CSI) project.


HIV/AIDS
Uganda: Home-based HIV treatment extends lives
Off the beaten track east of Uganda's capital, Kampala, a four-wheel-drive vehicle is taking a nurse, a community health worker and a cooler full of life-saving medication to Gayaza village, where they will call on homes affected by HIV/AIDS.


Medical Research
Stopping a receptor called 'nogo' boosts the synapses
Findings could help explain brain benefits of exercise.


"Heart of Soweto" study reveals high rate of heart conditions in the Soweto population - University of Witwatersrand
Cardiovascular diseases, particularly those related to atherosclerosis (fatty lesions in the blood vessels) and high blood pressure, are often perceived to be problems unique to the ‘developed world' or high-income countries.


Medical Technology
Tech market of the future: the brain
In January, Miguel A. L. Nicolelis, M.D., Ph.D., announced that his team completed the first steps toward a brain machine interface that might make it possible for paralyzed people to walk by directing devices with their thoughts. The team's monkey, in North Carolina, demonstrated the power of the technology when she used her brain signals to make a robot in Japan walk.

World's newest flexible drug-eluting stent used by Methodist cardiologists
The FDA has approved a more flexible drug-eluting stent studied in clinical trials at the Methodist DeBakey Heart & Vascular Centre, and Methodist physicians were the first in Houston to implant the new device.

US university surgeon demonstrates robotic prostate procedure for peers
One of the nation's top robotic surgeons will remove the cancerous prostate of a Southern Tier man during a live demonstration of robotic surgery today, Wednesday, March 19. University of Rochester Medical Centre surgeon Jean Joseph, M.D., was selected to demonstrate the procedure because of his expertise, during the World Robotic Urology Symposium, currently taking place in Florida.


Total ankle replacement gaining foothold
A procedure aimed at not only relieving pain from arthritic ankles, but providing mobility for patients, is gaining a foothold in upstate New York.


Company news: X/procure® rated tops in Markinor Study - Owlhurst Communications
X/procure® contracted Ipsos Markinor in the latter half of 2007 to conduct a holistic relationship, product and service assessment among its clients, in an attempt to establish transparency and client satisfaction. The results show that the Unlimited subsidiary is enjoying the relationship high ground.


Nutrition
Mauritania: Record hunger predicted in 2008
Food security experts predict that Mauritania, where 70 percent of food eaten is imported, may face its highest ever levels of hunger in 2008, and aid agency representatives are concerned they do not have enough money to meet people's needs amid skyrocketing food prices and dwindling cereals for sale on world markets.

Health from the sea - Natrodale
Natrodale is making waves in the health market with the launch of Natrodale Neptune Krill Oil.


Obstetrics and Gynaecology
Women's sexual disorders get medical attention in new Stanford program
Medicine is finally opening the bedroom door to women. When the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved the male erectile dysfunction drug Viagra in 1998, many middle-aged men experienced a new lease on life, or at least on life in the bedroom.


Oncology
DotScan for cancer promises less trauma for patients
A rapid new diagnostic test developed by Sydney researchers will mean fewer tests and less trauma for cancer patients says Richard Christopherson, who has a Personal Chair in the School of Molecular and Microbial Biosciences in the Faculty of Science.


Opthalmology
Free glaucoma testing conducted by SAGS in Mamelodi - The Wright Agency
World Glaucoma Day has been developed by The World Glaucoma Association and the World Glaucoma Patient Organization in response to the concern over the worldwide increase in the number of people with glaucoma (also known as “the sneak thief of sight”) and the resulting increase in the number of people who could go blind from this disease as the population increases and ages.



Paediatrics
Parents play important role in detecting sleep problems in children
A new study from the University of Rochester has found that parental observations and perceptions of their children's sleep habits are a valuable supplement to objective laboratory tests in detecting obstructive sleep apnea (OSA).


Many Australian children too fat to fit into standard car booster seats
Research by Australian scientists has revealed that many Australian children are too fat to fit into car booster seats.


Public health
Egypt: Water pipe smoking a significant TB risk
The smoking of the traditional `shisha' water pipe is increasingly emerging as a significant health risk in Egypt, due to air-borne tuberculosis (TB) transmission from pipe sharing and uncontrolled, manual preparation of the pipe.

Somalia: Hundreds of cases of AWD reported in Hiiraan region
A number of people have died in the town of Beletweyne, the Hiiraan regional capital in central Somalia, following an outbreak of acute watery diarrhoea, medical sources said on 17 March.



Tuberculosis
Uganda: Only one third of TB patients cured
Becky Mugisha* had been ill with a hacking cough for three months before she was admitted into one of Kampala's busiest tuberculosis (TB) wards, but she recognised the symptoms long before that. It was her second bout with the disease.

Global TB - we need to do more, better
The Global Tuberculosis Control 2008, released by WHO, finds that the pace of the progress to control the tuberculosis (TB) epidemic slowed slightly in 2006, the most recent year for which data were available.

 

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