Improved Outcomes With Transradial Approach in Alcohol Septal Ablation
CONCLUSIONS: ASA via transradial approach is equally effective and associated with significantly less contrast use and fewer complications as compared with the traditional transfemoral approach.PMID:36200996 (Source: The Journal of Invasive Cardiology)
Source: The Journal of Invasive Cardiology - October 6, 2022 Category: Cardiology Authors: Noah Blaker Katrina Bidwell Ahmadreza Karimianpour Thomas Miller Christopher Nielsen Valerian Fernandes Source Type: research

Cervical cancer programme, Kenya, 2011-2020: lessons to guide elimination as a public health problem
CONCLUSION: The Kenyan cervical cancer control programme suffered from inadequate health system strengthening and poor quality implementation. Evidence-based policy implementation and sustained health system strengthening are necessary to move towards cervical cancer elimination as a public health problem.PMID:36200015 | PMC:PMC9470178 | DOI:10.3332/ecancer.2022.1442 (Source: Ecancermedicalscience)
Source: Ecancermedicalscience - October 6, 2022 Category: Cancer & Oncology Authors: Valerian Mwenda Woki Mburu Joan-Paula Bor Mary Nyangasi Marc Arbyn Steven Weyers Philippe Tummers Marleen Temmerman Source Type: research

Improved Outcomes With Transradial Approach in Alcohol Septal Ablation
CONCLUSIONS: ASA via transradial approach is equally effective and associated with significantly less contrast use and fewer complications as compared with the traditional transfemoral approach.PMID:36200996 (Source: The Journal of Invasive Cardiology)
Source: The Journal of Invasive Cardiology - October 6, 2022 Category: Cardiology Authors: Noah Blaker Katrina Bidwell Ahmadreza Karimianpour Thomas Miller Christopher Nielsen Valerian Fernandes Source Type: research

Cervical cancer programme, Kenya, 2011-2020: lessons to guide elimination as a public health problem
CONCLUSION: The Kenyan cervical cancer control programme suffered from inadequate health system strengthening and poor quality implementation. Evidence-based policy implementation and sustained health system strengthening are necessary to move towards cervical cancer elimination as a public health problem.PMID:36200015 | PMC:PMC9470178 | DOI:10.3332/ecancer.2022.1442 (Source: Ecancermedicalscience)
Source: Ecancermedicalscience - October 6, 2022 Category: Cancer & Oncology Authors: Valerian Mwenda Woki Mburu Joan-Paula Bor Mary Nyangasi Marc Arbyn Steven Weyers Philippe Tummers Marleen Temmerman Source Type: research