EN.9

Just about health&med

<b>Medical</b> Criteria for Eating Disorders Miss the Mark | Psych <b>…</b>

»
»
Stress News »
Medical Criteria for Eating Disorders Miss the Mark

Reviewed by John M. Grohol, Psy.D.
on April 13, 2010

Medical Criteria for Eating Disorders Miss the MarkA new study suggests the diagnostic criteria used to determine eating disorders may be too stringent.

Researchers from the Stanford University School of Medicine and Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital believe diagnostic cutoffs delay treatment for individuals with anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa.

According to the researchers, many patients who do not meet full criteria for these diseases are nevertheless quite ill, and the diagnosis they now receive, “Eating Disorder Not Otherwise Specified,” may delay their ability to get treatment.

“There’s mounting evidence that we should reconsider the EDNOS categorization for young people,” said Rebecka Peebles, MD, the study’s primary author.

The EDNOS diagnosis has become a “mosh pit,” lumping dissimilar patients into a single category that gets poor recognition from clinicians and health insurers, she said.

“It is a bit misleading to patients — it can make them feel like they don’t have a real eating disorder,” said Peebles, an instructor in pediatrics at Stanford and an adolescent medicine specialist with the Comprehensive Eating Disorders Program at Packard Children’s Hospital.

Anorexia affects about one percent of teen girls, while bulimia affects between two and five percent of teen girls. Both diseases are more common among females than males.

Their diagnostic criteria were developed by expert consensus, without the benefit of studies to track patients’ health.

An anorexia diagnosis is now based on being at less than 85 percent of the expected body weight, loss of menstrual periods for at least three months and fear of weight gain despite being dangerously thin.

Bulimia patients repeatedly binge on large quantities of food, then “purge” calories by vomiting, abusing laxatives or diuretics, or overexercising. Both diseases can cause serious long-term health problems, and severe cases may lead to death.

Peebles’ team conducted the first-ever large study to ask whether adolescents with EDNOS are less ill than those who meet the full diagnostic criteria for anorexia or bulimia.

The research, published online in Pediatrics, examined records from all 1,310 female patients treated for eating disorders at Packard Children’s between January 1997 and April 2008.

They verified patients’ diagnoses of anorexia, bulimia or EDNOS, and created categories of “partial anorexia nervosa” and “partial bulimia nervosa” to analyze patients who barely missed cutoffs for these diseases.

“Our purpose was to ask if the diagnostic criteria now in use are really separating out the sickest of the sick,” Peebles said.

Patients’ conditions were assessed by noting signs of malnutrition — such as low heart rate, low blood pressure, low body temperature, low blood levels of potassium and phosphorus — and long QT interval (an electrocardiogram measurement linked to risk of sudden cardiac death).

Nearly two-thirds of the patients studied had EDNOS. As the researchers suspected, the EDNOS category acted as a catchall; patients with partial anorexia were more similar to those with full-blown anorexia than to other EDNOS patients with partial bulimia, for instance.

In addition, 60 percent of EDNOS patients met medical criteria for hospitalization and this group was, on average, sicker than patients diagnosed with full-blown bulimia.

The sickest EDNOS patients were those who had dropped more than 25 percent of their body weight before diagnosis. These patients had been overweight and had lost weight too quickly and dangerously in order to end up at what is typically considered a normal weight.

“People were initially just patting them on the back for their weight loss,” Peebles said. “It often took months or years for others to realize that what they were doing didn’t seem healthy.” Despite their normal body weights, this group was in some ways worse off than underweight patients diagnosed with anorexia, she added. “They manifested criteria of severe malnutrition.”

In sum, Peebles said, the study suggests that medical criteria for eating disorders should be re-evaluated. Though the current diagnostics cover the right general areas, “we erroneously treat these criteria in a very black-and-white way,” she said.

“Many practitioners interpret these to believe that menses has to be lost to get an anorexia diagnosis; bulimics have to binge and purge at least two times a week for three months. These findings illustrate the arbitrary nature of those cutoffs.”

The issue is particularly urgent because many health insurers offer less coverage for EDNOS treatment than for treatment of anorexia or bulimia. And doctors and parents may be falsely reassured if a child is labeled with EDNOS.

“I think that when parents walk out of a doctor’s office having heard their kid doesn’t meet criteria for anorexia, they’re relieved,” Peebles said. But they shouldn’t let their guard down: in many cases, the child’s disturbed eating patterns still need treatment.

Source: Stanford University Medical Center

Read the original here:
<b>Medical</b> Criteria for Eating Disorders Miss the Mark | Psych <b>…</b>

Fast Food

B Kerekes posted a photo: Umbrella

More:
Fast Food

Malawi gay prisoner ‘seriously ill’, not getting <b>medical</b> treatment <b>…</b>

Malawi gay prisoner ‘seriously ill’, not getting medical treatment

Malawi’s ‘prisoner of conscience’ Steven Monjeza charged with gross indecency for being a gay is in critical condition at Chichiri prison and need urgent medical care, Human rights campaigner has told Nyasa Times.

Monjeza, 26, and Tiwonge Chimbalanga, 20, were arrested in December after holding a civil marriage ceremony in what is one of Africa’s most conservative states.

London-based human rights campaigner, Peter Tatchell of OutRage! told Nyasa Times on Monday that Monjeza who together with his partner Chimbalanga awaits court judgment is seriously ill.

“Steven Monjeza is seriously ill in the notorious Chichiri Prison in Blantyre, Malawi. He has been held on remand in an overcrowded, fetid call for over three months, without proper food, sanitation or medical care,” Tatchell said.

The human rights campaigner has been sent an urgent appeal from inside the prison, requesting help for Monjeza.

“According to eye-witnesses in the prison, Steven has been vomiting, coughing and suffering from pain and pressure in his chest for 11 days. He looks very ill and has lost weight. People who have seen him fear for his health,” Tatchell said.

“The prison authorities have failed to give Steven proper treatment, or even sufficient pain-killers. His pain-killers ran out on 10 April.”

Tatchell said his informant told him that Monjeza urgently needed to go to hospital for a full medical examination and treatment fearing that his health was likely to deteriorate further unless he got swift medical care.

“Mr. Monjeza is being held in a cell with a dozen other men. There is not enough space to sleep comfortably. Chichiri prison was built for 800 prisoners. It currently holds around 2,000 inmates. Most are suffering.

“Toilet and shower facilities are deficient. Mr. Monjeza receives only two meals a day. It is always the same maize porridge with beans, which has low nutritional value.”

The couple has been denied bail by the courts on two occasions ostensibly to keep them safe.

The rights campaigner said even though people convicted of violent assaults, even murder, have been previously granted bail it looks like Malawi authorities have singled out the gay couple for “special victimisation”.

Tatchell appealed to campaigners all over the world to lobby the Malawian Ambassador to “ask him or her to press the government of Malawi to transfer Monjeza to hospital and provide him with medical treatment.”

Homosexuality in Malawi is criminal and carries a maximum sentence of 14 years.

Email This Post Email This Post

Original post:
Malawi gay prisoner ‘seriously ill’, not getting <b>medical</b> treatment <b>…</b>

The Dubai Mall <b>Medical</b> Centre strengthens portfolio with <b>…</b>

The Dubai Mall Medical Centre strengthens portfolio with Complementary and Alternative Medicine Department

  • United Arab Emirates: 3 hours, 37 minutes ago

The Dubai Mall Medical Centre, the flagship healthcare centre of the Emaar Healthcare Group and Methodist International partnership, has strengthened its portfolio of healthcare services with the opening of the Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM) Department.

Focused on the holistic wellness of visitors in addition to offering specialised services that meet modern lifestyle requirements, the CAM Department is headed by Dr Heather Eade, Naturopathic Medicine Practitioner, with extensive experience working in Canada and Saudi Arabia previously.
The CAM Department at The Dubai Mall Medical Centre offers a spectrum of treatment options that address specific patient profiles in addition to supporting the other departments by providing valuable lifestyle recommendations for patients. A variety of conditions can be addressed by the department including gastro-intestinal problems, skin conditions, reproductive concerns, hormonal abnormalities, as well as lifestyle issues like smoking cessation, weight loss, and stress management.
Mr Omar Al Shunnar, Chief Executive Officer, Emaar Healthcare Group, said, “A recent healthcare survey in the UAE reports that nearly a third of the Emirati population is obese and that one in every four Nationals is diabetic. This is an indication of the need for modifying lifestyles, in which complementary & alternative medicine can play a pivotal role.”
He added, “The opening of the CAM departments underlines our commitment to offer holistic treatment options for visitors, and underscores how we are leading the way in integrated medical care for the community. By integrating wellness treatments with modern treatments, patients benefit from an overall lifestyle modification that adds to their well-being.”
“While antibiotics have saved millions of lives, there has been a real shift in the way people think about their health,” said Dr. Sarper Tanli, Executive Director for Methodist International. “Many people are attracted to complementary alternative medicine, as it emphasizes on treating the whole person – body, mind and spirit. Some physicians have started to use CAM as a part of support to their conventional medicine practice. A combination of complementary and conventional medicine integrates the solutions for people’s well-being and patients find the individualized and collaborative approach of medicine particularly appealing.”
Dr Eade added, “Complementary & Alternative Medicine is gaining acceptance as a healthcare priority by healthcare organisations globally. CAM treatments are focused on preventative as well as corrective options, in tune with the individual needs of each patient. The value of CAM therapies, when integrated in a modern treatment centre, is immense as the focus is on healthcare options that promote and support the body’s natural healing processes.”
Dr Eade’s scope of practice as a Naturopathic Medicine Practitioner includes clinical nutrition, homeopathy, herbal medicine, acupuncture, and physical medicine. Further certifications in colon hydrotherapy, cranio-sacral therapy, intravenous, and chelation therapy leave Dr. Eade well positioned to offer comprehensive CAM treatment protocols for a variety of medical conditions. In addition, the department offers food and environmental sensitivity screening.
Dr Eade completed her BSc (Honors) in Life Sciences at Queen’s University in Canada in 1999, and her four-year doctorate degree in naturopathic medicine at the Boucher Institute of Naturopathic Medicine in Vancouver, Canada in 2005, where she earned the prestigious John Cosgrove Award for Excellence in Clinical Skills.
Previously she managed the Complementary and Alternative Medicine department in a private hospital in Saudi Arabia, and has experience treating patients of all ages. She has a particular interest in helping her patients achieve their health and wellness goals through truly individualized and integrated care.

Conveniently located within The Dubai Mall, the 60,000 sq ft premium multi-speciality medical centre is focused on offering an integrated healthcare experience, and is the largest out-patient facility in the region. The focus of the medical centre is to drive Emaar Healthcare Group’s goal of creating holistic healthcare systems that are aligned with the needs of the community.

Other specialities offered include: cardiology, orthopaedics, general surgery, paediatrics, family medicine, endocrinology, urology, gastroenterology, general medicine, obstetrics and gynaecology.

Log in to request more information from Emaar Healthcare

Notes and media contacts

About Emaar Healthcare Group LLC:

Emaar Healthcare Group LLC, the wholly owned subsidiary of Emaar Properties PJSC, plans to develop and manage hospitals, clinics and medical centres in the Middle East and North Africa region, the Indian Subcontinent and South East Asia. These centres will offer quality health services and also work to strengthen the healthcare sector of the various countries through effective public-private partnerships. Emaar Healthcare has also formed a strategic tie-up with a renowned medical institution to bring about and set best practice standards in all the regions it serves.

About Emaar Properties PJSC:

Emaar Properties PJSC, listed on the Dubai Financial Market, is a global property developer with a significant presence world-wide. Besides building residential and commercial properties, the company also has proven competencies in shopping malls & retail, hospitality & leisure, education, healthcare and finance sectors. For more information visit: www.emaar.com.

About Methodist International:

The Methodist Hospital in Houston has a 90-year legacy of medical milestones that attracts patients from around the world. As a founding member of Texas Medical Center, Methodist is a major academic medical centre that was home to famed heart surgeon Dr Michael E DeBakey. The Methodist Hospital is recognized by the American Nurses Credentialing Center with Magnet Designation in the areas of nursing administration, education, clinical practice, research and quality. Methodist was ranked by US News & World Report on its prestigious “Best Hospitals Honor Roll” for 2009 and is continually ranked among Fortune Magazine’s “100 Best Companies to Work For”. Methodist is the highest ranked healthcare organization in the US by Fortune and ranked 1st in the US for its patient satisfaction score by UHC. As its subsidiary, Methodist International is focused on collaboration with global care organizations to build capacity through the transfer of knowledge and expertise. Its goal is to improve care and to move global health care quality towards a consistent level of excellence.

For more information, please contact:

Kelly Home
ASDA’A Burson-Marsteller
Tel: (+971 4) 334 4550

Siba Sami Ammari Posted by Siba Sami Ammari
Sunday, April 11 – 2010 at 09:48 UAE local time (GMT+4)

Read the original post:
The Dubai Mall <b>Medical</b> Centre strengthens portfolio with <b>…</b>

<b>Medical</b> travel options – Which one is best for you? · <b>Medical</b> <b>…</b>

Medical travel options – Which one is best for you?

April 10, 2010 in

When considering non-emergency travel for a family member or even for yourself, which option is the safest. First and always, check with your doctor. There are a few good reasons not to travel by air, just a few being recent chest or abdominal surgery (less than 10 days), having a highly contagious infection, or unstable angina. Smoking is not good anytime, but especially not before a flight as it leads to increased dehydration, as does drinking alcohol. Dehyradation can lead to headaches and various other uncomfortable symptoms. If you choose to travel by ground transportation, MedTransport Center offers comfort, reliability, and non-emergent medical care by way of a private nurse. Your trip is non-stop with 2 professional drivers onboard who see to the need of the client and/or any family members every need during the trip. Careful attention is given to all the details of the trip, but especially the medical needs of the client. A full medical report is received and reviewed so that staff of MedTransport Center can make sure that proper foods, as well as all needed medications are on board and are able to be administered as needed during the trip. Communication during the trip between family members is encouraged for the peace of mind of the client and the waiting family. Please contact MedTransport Center at 1-800-311-3412 to discuss the details of a trip and get professional and courteous answers to all your non-emergent medical travel. And yes, pets are welcome – just ask for the details.

Continued here:
<b>Medical</b> travel options – Which one is best for you? · <b>Medical</b> <b>…</b>

Sex & Breakfast

I N W posted a photo: environmental typography assignment for design class

See the original post:
Sex & Breakfast

Ignite

Kaffe-och-cigaretter posted a photo: The nights become strange and the mornings foodless and visionless..

Read more:
Ignite

Daily Developments: Kips Bay <b>Medical</b> Files for $57.5M IPO

« Target Field Awarded LEED Silver Certification |
| MN Financial Adviser Accused of Stealing »

Kips Bay Medical Files for $57.5M IPO

If the initial public offering is completed, it will be only the second Minnesota-based company to go public since 2007.

Plymouth-based Kips Bay Medical, Inc., on Thursday filed for an initial public offering worth up to $57.5 million.

If the IPO reaches completion, Kips Bay will be only the second Minnesota-based company to go public in more than two years.

Kips Bay Medical develops and manufactures vein support technology for use in coronary artery bypass grafting, or CABG, surgery.

The company’s main product—eSVS MESH—is a nitinol mesh sleeve that, when placed over a saphenous vein graft during CABG surgery, is designed to improve the structural characteristics and long-term performance of the vein graft.

In a regulatory filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Kips Bay said that it will use the proceeds from the offering to seek regulatory approval to market its eSVS MESH in the United States and abroad and conduct human clinical trials in the United States.

In February, the company submitted an application seeking regulatory approval in Europe. It said that it expects to get approval and begin marketing the device in select European markets during the second half of 2010.

In addition, the United States Food and Drug Administration is reviewing the company’s application for an investigational device exemption (IDE). If the IDE is granted, the company will be allowed to begin clinical trials of its eSVS MESH in the United States.

Once the IPO is completed, Kips Bay will be listed as “KIPS” on the Nasdaq Global Market.

Kips Bay Medical was founded in 2007 by Manny Villafaña, who has founded several other medical start-up companies, including Cardiac Pacemakers, St. Jude Medical, GV Medical, ATS Medical, and CABG Medical. He was recently named to Twin Cities Business’ list of “200 Minnesotans You Should Know.”

The economy has out a damper on the number of initial public offerings in recent years.

In October, Plymouth-based AGA Medical Corporation went public—making it the first Minnesota company to go public since Eden Prairie-based Virtual Radiologic Corporation and St. Paul-based EnteroMedics, Inc., which both went public on the same day in November 2007.

Last month, Minnetonka-based Welsh Property Trust, Inc., filed for an IPO worth up to $345 million, but the offering has not yet been completed.

—Melissa Loth
(mloth@tcbmag.com)

Posted at 02:25 PM Permalink

Continue reading here:
Daily Developments: Kips Bay <b>Medical</b> Files for $57.5M IPO

Credigy Receivables | Cantel <b>Medical</b> Co., Ltd. – <b>Medical</b> equipment <b>…</b>

Cantel Medical Co., Ltd. – Medical equipment – providing the enterprise market research partner profile — Aarkstore aggregate

by Credigy Receivables on April 9, 2010

Cantel Medical Co., Ltd. – Medical equipment – Preferred and Alliance ProfileSummary Cantel Medical Co., Ltd. – Medical equipment – plus, and affiliated companies for the profile data and information is an essential source. Profile of the company’s key business structure and operations, history and products, inspection, and major product lines and strategies, as well as highlighting the company’s last major financial affairs to provide a summary analysis. Cantel Medical Corp. (Cantel) infection prevention and control products for the medical market in the field of dialysis, such as providing food, endoscopes, an integer, is specialized in the treatment of disposable health treatment specialist filtration and packaging. The company in the U.S., Canada, Asia Pacific, Europe, Africa, Middle East, Latin America, South America and in the works. Our products distributor and retailer of 3rd party are sold through its own network. The company reports more inside the United States, New Jersey and is headquartered … Recent development October 9, 2009: $ 15 Cantel Medical net income. 6000000-2009 fiscal year, August 21, 2009: Elizabeth McCaughey Cantel Medical Announces Withdrawal as one of its directors juin 04, 2009: Cantel Medical posts income, net of $ 4. 1 million this fiscal year, three quarters 2009Scope – provides business intelligence for major corporate information – mergers and acquisitions, asset transactions, physical and financial transactions of the major recent integration to provide information about the / Venture Products, Inc. products, debt offerings and partnership . – Data is the company’s history, key executives, business description, locations and subsidiaries as well as information about the products and services and the latest available company statement will supplement the list. Why Buy – quick “one-stop-shop” community to understand. – Customer Support sales activities by understanding your business. – Pre-qualified partners and suppliers. – Understand the competitive strategy and business structure to respond to potential customers. – Do you have a social formation? Provided the key.

For more information, please visit:

302 previous 302 moved the previous article here.

Or write to us @ aarkstore media. com or call 919 272 852 585

Aarkstore Enterprise

Phone: 912 227 453 309

Mobile Number: 919272852585

E-mail: contact @ aarkstore. In co.kr

Website: http://www. My aarkstore. In co.kr

Blog: http://blogs. aarkstore. co.kr site /

Follow us on Twitter: http://twitter must. co.kr site / aarkstoredotcom

P a> Aarkstore Enterprise is a leading provider of business and financial information and world-class solutions. Our market research reports, books, magazines, and conferences at competitive prices specializing in providing online business information market, we provide innovative services to customers in order to better its best. Our customers are more than 700 large financial institutions, professional service providers, enterprises and accounting and consulting other companies in the world are included. P a>

Related Blogs

Tagged as:
Aarkstore,
aggregate,
Cantel,
Enterprise,
Equipment,
Ltd.,
market,
Medical,
partner,
profile,
providing,
research

Follow this link:
Credigy Receivables | Cantel <b>Medical</b> Co., Ltd. – <b>Medical</b> equipment <b>…</b>

<b>Medical</b> Marijuana Debated – 420 Magazine

News Hawk
 
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: Michigan
Posts: 783
Warbux is a jewel in the roughWarbux is a jewel in the roughWarbux is a jewel in the roughWarbux is a jewel in the rough

Medical Marijuana Debated
The Political Science Student Association presented a forum in the Old Main Ballroom at the University Center March 31 to debate the Jacki Rickert Medical Marijuana Act and the medicinal legalization of cannabis.
The event featured president of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML) Gary Storck arguing in favor and David Nordstrom, professor of counselor education at UW-Whitewater, against.
Nordstrom said he is not an activist on the issue and not lobbying for or against the legalization of marijuana.
“We should be operating on scientific basis to see if [cannabis] is safe and effective,” he said. “There are those who want to throw the FDA out the window and go through the legislative, political process to choose drugs. That’s not right in my opinion.”
The Food and Drug Administration said in 2006 that “no sound scientific studies” supported the medical use of marijuana, contradicting a 1999 review by the Institute of Medicine, a part of the National Academy of Sciences, the nation’s most prestigious scientific advisory agency.
“There isn’t backing for [cannabis] in our society by health officials, the people who would be prescribing and treating people who want to take this drug,” Nordstrom said.
Storck, who suffers from glaucoma, said he has smoked cannabis since high school to save and preserve his eye sight.
“Conventional drugs that Western medicine hands off are not safe, the side effects are intolerable. Cannabis has been used by man for a millennium,” Storck said. “It’s incredibly safe as opposed to FDA [medicine].”
Storck said there are several drugs taken off the market which were once approved by the FDA due to safety.
Marinol, a synthetic version of a marijuana component, is approved to treat anorexia associated with AIDS and the nausea and vomiting associated with cancer drug therapy.
“I think the reason [legislation] hasn’t progressed is because of awareness,” Storck said. “If everyone was aware how helpful [legislation] could be for patients and how inadequate the current drugs we use today are, the bill would pass.”
The Jacki Rickert Medical Marijuana Act is sponsored by state Rep. Mark Pocan and state Sen. Jon Erpenbach.
The Wisconsin Legislature needs to pass the bill before it ends regular business April 22. Gov. Jim Doyle, who is not running for re-election, has said he will sign the bill should it pass.
When asked if it was for or against marijuana reform, the majority student crowd attending the forum overwhelmingly raised their hands for reform. Less than half had read the bill after being asked.
PSSA president Max Taylor said the event went tremendously well and hoped to raise political awareness on the topic.

“Bringing out an issue (marijuana reform) that is currently hot within our state legislature, this would make the average student who wouldn’t necessarily care about politics care,” Taylor said.

Wisconsin could become the fifteenth state to legalize medical marijuana should the bill pass.

News Hawk: Warbux
Source: Royal Purple UW-Whitewater Student Newspaper
Author: Michael Poe
Contact: http://www.royalpurplenews.com/search?q=”Michael Poe”
Copyright: 2010 The Royal Purple Newspaper
Website: Royal Purple – Medical marijuana debated

__________________
420 Magazine News Team
Creating Cannabis Awareness Since 1993
http://www.420Magazine.com

Man, in his infinite wisdom, is the only animal on the planet who visits war and destruction on his own Brethren…

Warbux is offline

You may not post new threads
You may not
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
HTML code is Off

All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:46 AM.

Originally posted here:
<b>Medical</b> Marijuana Debated – 420 Magazine