Filtered By:
Vaccination: Cervical Cancer Vaccine

This page shows you your search results in order of date. This is page number 4.

Order by Relevance | Date

Total 153 results found since Jan 2013.

Top 20 Research Studies of 2020 for Primary Care Physicians
This article summarizes the top 20 research studies of 2020 identified as POEMs (patient-oriented evidence that matters), including the two most highly rated guidelines of the year on gout and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Regarding COVID-19, handwashing and social distancing through stay-at-home orders or quarantine measures are effective at slowing the spread of illness. Use of proper face masks (not gaiters or bandanas) is also effective at preventing trans- mission. This is important because the virus can infect others during the presymptomatic phase. Aspirin can no longer be recommended for the primary...
Source: American Family Physician - July 15, 2021 Category: Primary Care Authors: Roland Grad Mark H Ebell Source Type: research

No Family Should Suffer From Cervical Cancer Twice –The Palliative Care Role in HPV Prevention
Cervical cancer, caused by human papillomavirus infection, is the source of significant personal and societal burden, and robs more than one hundred thousand Indian women and their families of the chances of a healthy and productive life each year. As outlined by the World Health Organization, the three-pronged approach of screening, vaccination, and reduction in mortality by early treatment presents the possibility of the elimination of cervical cancer as a public health problem in the next decade.
Source: Journal of Pain and Symptom Management - July 10, 2021 Category: Palliative Care Authors: Sloka Iyengar, Kaley Kantor, Sunu Cyriac, Keerthi Remadevi, Vidhya Usha, Sherin Robinson, Ashla Rani, M.R. Rajagopal, Ann Broderick Tags: Brief Report Source Type: research

No Family Should Suffer From Cervical Cancer Twice –The Palliative Care Role in HPV Prevention
Cervical cancer, caused by human papillomavirus infection, is the source of significant personal and societal burden, and robs more than one hundred thousand Indian women and their families of the chances of a healthy and productive life each year. As outlined by the World Health Organization, the three-pronged approach of screening, vaccination, and reduction in mortality by early treatment presents the possibility of the elimination of cervical cancer as a public health problem in the next decade.
Source: Journal of Pain and Symptom Management - July 10, 2021 Category: Palliative Care Authors: Sloka Iyengar, Kaley Kantor, Sunu Cyriac, Keerthi Remadevi, Vidhya Usha, Sherin Robinson, Ashla Rani, M.R. Rajagopal, Ann Broderick Tags: Brief Report Source Type: research

No family should suffer from cervical cancer twice – the palliative care role in HPV prevention
Cervical cancer, caused by human papillomavirus (HPV) infection, is the source of significant personal and societal burden, and robs more than one hundred thousand Indian women and their families of the chances of a healthy and productive life each year. As outlined by the World Health Organization (WHO), the three-pronged approach of screening, vaccination, and reduction in mortality by early treatment presents the possibility of the elimination of cervical cancer as a public health problem in the next decade (1).
Source: Journal of Pain and Symptom Management - July 10, 2021 Category: Palliative Care Authors: Sloka Iyengar, Kaley Kantor, Sunu Cyriac, Keerthi Remadevi, Vidhya Usha, Sherin Robinson, Ashla Rani, M.R. Rajagopal, Ann Broderick Tags: Brief Report Source Type: research

Integration of prevention and control measures for female genital schistosomiasis, HIV and cervical cancer.
Abstract Female genital schistosomiasis as a result of chronic infection with Schistosoma haematobium (commonly known as bilharzia) continues to be largely ignored by national and global health policy-makers. International attention for large-scale action against the disease focuses on whether it is a risk factor for the transmission of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Yet female genital schistosomiasis itself is linked to pain, bleeding and sub- or infertility, leading to social stigma, and is a common issue for women in schistosomiasis-endemic areas in sub-Saharan Africa. The disease should therefore be recog...
Source: Bulletin of the World Health Organization - August 31, 2020 Category: International Medicine & Public Health Authors: Engels D, Hotez PJ, Ducker C, Gyapong M, Bustinduy AL, Secor WE, Harrison W, Theobald S, Thomson R, Gamba V, Masong MC, Lammie P, Govender K, Mbabazi PS, Malecela MN Tags: Bull World Health Organ Source Type: research

Post-approval Safety Monitoring of Quadrivalent and Bivalent Human Papillomavirus Vaccines Based on Real-world Data from the Korea Adverse Events Reporting System (KAERS)
ConclusionsBoth application site disorders and systemic AEs were somewhat more frequent with the bHPV vaccine than with the qHPV vaccine. This might be caused by an immune response induced by adjuvants contained within the vaccines.
Source: Clinical Drug Investigation - May 29, 2020 Category: Drugs & Pharmacology Source Type: research

Human Papillomavirus Vaccination and Physical and Mental Health Complaints Among Female Students in Secondary Education Institutions in Denmark
ConclusionWe conclude that HPV vaccination was not associated with physical and mental health complaints among girls in secondary education institutions in Denmark after a median of 5.3  years since HPV vaccination.
Source: Journal of General Internal Medicine - April 26, 2020 Category: Internal Medicine Source Type: research