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New Cognitive Screening Test For Detecting Early Dementia
Researchers at Addenbrook"s Hospital in Cambridge published a study on bmj.com in which they explain their design and evaluation of a new cognitive test for detecting Alzeimer" disease called TYM ("test your memory") which is considered quicker and more precise than many existing tests, and which can also help diagnose early dementia.
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Final Analysis Shows HPV Vaccine Highly Effective At Preventing Precancerous Cervical Lesions
The final analysis of the PATRICIA study shows that the HPV-16/18 AS04-adjuvanted vaccine (GlaxoSmithKline) has high efficacy against the precancerous cervical lesions that can eventually lead to cervical cancer. The vaccine also shows cross-protective efficacy against other oncogenic (cancer-causing) HPV types closely related to HPV-16/18. Furthermore, it also shows efficacy in the cohorts relevant to universal mass vaccination and catch-up programmes. The findings are reported in an Article Online First and in an upcoming edition of The Lancet, written by Dr Jorma Paavonen, University of Helsinki, Finland, and colleagues.
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ANA Responds To Recent Negative Portrayals Of TV Nurses Who Violate Nursing Code Of Ethics
At a time when the entertainment industry is perpetuating inaccurate portrayals of nursing in the new television shows "Nurse Jackie" and "HawthoRNe," ANA"s ethics books are especially relevant to all registered nurses (RNs). The fictional nurses are shown violating the nursing Code of Ethics by participating in activities ranging from on-the-job drug use to inappropriate nurse/patient contact in these shows. The very heart of nursing is mischaracterized as nurses are portrayed engaging in irresponsible and often criminal acts for entertainment purposes. ANA sets the ethical standards for nurses in the U.S. and internationally with its highly respected Code of Ethics for Nurses with Interpretive Statements, and is deeply concerned about the lasting impact these negative portrayals may have on the nursing profession.
Diagnostics

Every Daytime Sedentary Hour Adds Three Minutes To Time Children Take To Fall Asleep

Every hour of the day children are inactive adds three minutes to the time it takes them to fall asleep, finds research published ahead of print in Archives of Disease in Childhood. Children who fall asleep faster also sleep for longer, the study shows, even though one is not the direct consequence of the other. Research indicates that around 16% of parents of school aged children say that their child finds it difficult to get to sleep. Poor sleep patterns in children have been associated with poorer school performance and an increased risk of overweight and obesity. The authors studied the daytime activity and sleep patterns of a representative sample of 591 seven year olds, using an activity monitor (actigraph) worn for 24 hours. Full information on sleep patterns was available for 519 of the children, who took an average of 26 minutes to fall asleep, known as sleep latency, but ranging from 13 to 42 minutes (interquartile range). Around one in 10 of the children regularly found it difficult to fall asleep quickly, their parents reported, and these children took around 15.5 minutes longer to get to sleep. Children who were physically active during the day, fell asleep more quickly than their more sedentary peers, and the more vigorous activity they did, the faster they fell asleep. On the other hand, every hour of the day spent in sedentary activity increased sleep latency by 3 minutes. Shorter sleep latency was also linked to longer duration of sleep. It fell by more than 11 minutes for each additional hour of sleep. These results will confirm what many parents already believe - that tiring out a child with plenty of physical activity will increase the chances that s/he will sleep well, say the authors. "This study emphasises the importance of physical activity for children, not only for fitness, cardiovascular health and weight control, but also for sleep," they conclude. "Falling asleep: the determinants of sleep latency" Online First Arch Dis Child 2009; doi 10.1136/adc.2009.1574453 Archives of Disease in Childhood


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