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Specialty: International Medicine & Public Health
Education: Academia

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Total 113 results found since Jan 2013.

Prehospital emergency department care activations during the initial COVID-19 pandemic surge
CONCLUSIONS: After the announcement of public health measures to mitigate COVID-19, ED care activations declined in a large Northeast academic ED, followed by post-peak surges in activations as COVID- 19 cases decreased.PMID:35913181 | DOI:10.5055/ajdm.2022.0417
Source: American Journal of Disaster Medicine - August 1, 2022 Category: International Medicine & Public Health Authors: Rebecca Leff Alex Fleming-Nouri Arjun K Venkatesh Vivek Parwani Craig Rothenberg Rohit B Sangal Colin T Flood Matthew Goldenberg Charles Wira Source Type: research

Study finds plasmin -- delivered through a bubble -- more effective than tPA in busting clots
(University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center) A new University of Cincinnati study has found that, when delivered via ultrasound, the natural enzyme plasmin is more effective at dissolving stroke-causing clots than the standard of care, recombinant tissue plasminogen activator. The novel delivery method involved trapping plasmin into bubble-like liposomes, delivering them to the clot intravenously and bursting it via ultrasound. The research team presented their abstract today at the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine annual meeting.
Source: EurekAlert! - Medicine and Health - May 15, 2013 Category: Global & Universal Source Type: news

Using Big data for an Economic Evaluation of reducing the Innappropriate prescribing of atypical Antipsychotics among Dementia Patients
This study is an economic evaluation of the NPS MedicineWise educational program in terms of reduced falls and stroke incidence due to reduction in antipsychotic prescribing including olanzapine, quetiapine and risperidone
Source: Value in Health - May 1, 2015 Category: Global & Universal Authors: R. Khan, A. Jammali-Blasi, A. Todkar, A. Heaney Source Type: research

Depression and extremes of blood pressure predict highest rates of harmful vascular events
(European Society of Cardiology) Depressive symptoms and extremes of blood pressure predict the highest rates of harmful vascular events in patients with existing heart disease, diabetes or stroke, according to research presented at ESC Congress today by Dr. Bhautesh Jani, clinical academic fellow in the Institute of Health and Wellbeing, University of Glasgow, UK.
Source: EurekAlert! - Medicine and Health - August 29, 2015 Category: Global & Universal Source Type: news