Gynaecology

Young Smokers Want to Quit, But Don’t Seek Proven Treatment
Children's health 28 Aug 2007

Young Smokers Want to Quit, But Don’t Seek Proven Treatment

Despite tried and true methods to quit smoking, young adults do not take advantage of these proven smoking cessation treatments that can double their chances of quitting, University of Illinois at Chicago public health researchers report. The research is published online and will appear in the August issue of the…
Study Finds Connection between Teenage Violence and Domestic Violence
Children's health 28 Aug 2007

Study Finds Connection between Teenage Violence and Domestic Violence

Researchers tracing the development of violent behaviour have found a link between teenage violence and domestic violence. Adolescents who engaged in violent behaviour at a relatively steady rate through their teenage years and those whose violence began in their mid teens and increased over the years are significantly more likely…
Crucial Progress in Understanding Fragile X Mental Retardation Protein
Children's health 28 Aug 2007

Crucial Progress in Understanding Fragile X Mental Retardation Protein

Researchers in the Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences at Yale School of Medicine have identified a new regulatory target for the Fragile X mental retardation protein (FMRP), laying the groundwork for possible new treatments for Fragile X syndrome(FXS), the leading inherited form of mental retardation. The findings, published…
Non Invasive Biomarkers of Gut Function
Children's health 24 Aug 2007

Non Invasive Biomarkers of Gut Function

Gut health or healthy gut function can be determined by simple non-invasive tests like blowing into a container.
No Hiding for Child Abusers
Children's health 24 Aug 2007

No Hiding for Child Abusers

People who shake children hard enough to cause brain damage may soon be unable to hide behind false defences in court, thanks to new University of Queensland research. Researchers from the University of Queensland have conducted tests on a true-to-life model of a baby to show exactly how shaking damages…
Teen Diets Can Hurt Their Lungs
Children's health 24 Aug 2007

Teen Diets Can Hurt Their Lungs

For most teenagers in the United States and Canada, fish and fruit are not high on their delicious list. Also, many of them – about 20 percent of those under 18 – cough, wheeze, and suffer from asthma and bronchitis. Researchers at the Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) have…
Sugar and Spice and Everything Nice: Health Differences in Newborn Girls and Boys
Children's health 24 Aug 2007

Sugar and Spice and Everything Nice: Health Differences in Newborn Girls and Boys

Two new studies seek to understand why death rates for female infants are higher after heart surgery and why female donor livers may be less effective for transplants. For generations, girls have whimsically been said to be made of “sugar and spice and everything nice,” and boys from “snakes and…
Novel Drugs Relieve Attacks of Swelling in Hereditary Angioedema
Children's health 21 Aug 2007

Novel Drugs Relieve Attacks of Swelling in Hereditary Angioedema

An investigational drug called ecallantide (also known as DX-88 significantly relieves attacks of a rare, life-threatening disease called hereditary angioedema, report researchers from Children’s Hospital Boston and 25 other study sites. The placebo-controlled trial was published in the August issue of the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology. A second…
Language Barriers Put Patients at Risk for Wrong Prescriptions
Children's health 21 Aug 2007

Language Barriers Put Patients at Risk for Wrong Prescriptions

Nearly 52 million Americans speak a non-English language at home, and 23 million Americans have limited English proficiency (LEP). Language barriers can result in adverse consequences in health care, but little is known about whether pharmacies provide sufficient care to patients with LEP. In the study, “Language Barriers to Prescriptions…