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WHO, UNICEF Say Vitamin A, Deworming Interventions Safe, In Response To Alleged Deaths, Sickness In Bangladesh
The WHO and UNICEF on Tuesday said that vitamin A supplements and deworming tablets are safe, after two deaths and the "sickness of hundreds" were alleged among the children who received the interventions during a nationwide campaign in Bangladesh, Bernama.com reports (Bernama.com, 6/9).
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Exercise Helps Patients With Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease
Counseling patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) on how to increase physical activity leads to health benefits that are independent of changes in weight. These findings are in a new study in the July issue of Hepatology, a journal published by John Wiley & Sons on behalf of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD). The article is also available online at Wiley Interscience.
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Automated Tissue Engineering On Demand
Skin from a factory - this has long been the dream of pharmacologists, chemists and doctors. Research has an urgent need for large quantities of "skin models", which can be used to determine if products such as creams and soaps, cleaning agents, medicines and adhesive bandages are compatible with skin, or if they instead will lead to irritation or allergic reactions for the consumer. Such test results are seen as more meaningful than those from animal experiments, and can even make such experiments largely superfluous.
Mental Health

National Patient Safety Agency Outlines Ways To Improve Patient Safety For Children And Young People

The National Patient Safety Agency (NPSA) is calling on health practitioners and staff across England and Wales to follow recommendations, issued recently, to improve patient safety for children and young people. The advice follows the publication of the Review of Patient Safety for Children and Young People, unveiled by the NPSA. One of the key findings in the report, which looked at incidents that occurred between October 2007 and September 2008, was that there was a high rate of medication administration dosing errors, in particular in children under the age of four. NPSA"s Medical Director, Dr Kevin Cleary, said: "The majority of patient safety incidents involving children were reported to have resulted in no harm or low harm. "However we"re hoping this constructive feedback will support all trusts and clinicians in delivering even safer clinical care to all NHS patients in the future." Dr Cleary added: "We are urging all trusts and healthcare providers to follow our recommendations and use the tools described within the report. "Examples include the Seven Steps to Patient Safety and the Manchester Patient Safety Framework - both designed to help organisations measure and improve progress towards making patient safety a central focus. "I would also like to remind all practitioners and staff about our Patient Safety First campaign. This initiative, launched last year, aims to increase awareness about how to reduce instances of harm to patients through effective leadership and training." A copy of the Review of Patient Safety for Children and Young People is available to download here. The National Patient Safety Agency


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