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10-Feb-1999 12:00 AM EST
Prison Security Constraints May Compromise Safety of Health Care Workers
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

A study from the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health has found that the security constraints common to most prisons may lead health care workers to engage in risky behaviors that increased their risk of bloodborne infections.

Released: 12-Feb-1999 12:00 AM EST
Controlling Sexually Transmitted Diseases May Not Lower HIV Infection Rate
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

A large clinical trial in a Ugandan population heavily infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) has shown that despite reductions in sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), HIV incidence was not reduced by STD control measures.

17-Feb-1999 12:00 AM EST
Researchers Prove Chemoprevention Can Work
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

A team of researchers has shown that a certain type of chemoprevention used to experimentally deter liver cancer from developing is effective. The researchers gave the drug oltipraz, originally developed to treat schistosomiasis, to a group of people at high risk for developing liver cancer. The oltipraz changed the way in which the study group metabolized aflatoxin, a liver carcinogen produced by a fungus that contaminates foods like corn and peanuts.

Released: 26-Feb-1999 12:00 AM EST
Dietary Vitamin A Supplements Improve Maternal Survival In South Asia
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

In a field trial in 270 villages in rural Nepal, researchers from the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health showed that women had their risk of death from pregnancy lowered by about 40 percent after taking dietary supplements of vitamin A or beta-carotene, compared to women who did not take the supplements.

Released: 9-Mar-1999 12:00 AM EST
Flu Shots Keep Health Workers on the Job
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

A new study has shown that doctors and nurses lose fewer days from work because of the flu when they are vaccinated annually.

Released: 27-Apr-1999 12:00 AM EDT
Pollutants in House Dust Increase Pesticide's Toxicity
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

Four pollutants found in house dust add to the ability of a common household insecticide to inhibit an enzyme important in neurologic function in humans, researchers at the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health reported in the April 1999 issue of Toxicology Letters.

Released: 3-Jan-2006 1:45 PM EST
Guidelines Needed to Help Care for Children During Emergencies
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

Evidence-based guidelines for the care of children in emergency situations should be developed and distributed to international relief organizations. The highest mortality rates following armed conflicts, natural disasters, population displacements or famines are often in children younger than five years.

24-Jan-2006 1:50 PM EST
Trauma-Center Care Significantly Lowers Risk of Death
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

Care at a trauma center lowers by 25 percent the risk of death for injured patients compared to treatment received at non-trauma centers.

Released: 15-Feb-2006 12:30 PM EST
New Compound Protects Against Liver Cancer
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

Researchers have identified a potential cancer preventative. A new compound that protects against the development of liver cancer in laboratory animals was recently identified.

28-Feb-2006 4:30 PM EST
Depressive Symptoms in Adolescents Associated with Parental Domestic Violence
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

Adolescents who witness domestic violence between their parents are significantly more likely to suffer from symptoms of depression. This study is among the first conducted in the developing world to explore adolescent mental health and its association with parental domestic violence.


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