Popular Articles

Low Birth Weight May Mean Higher Risk For Kidney Disease
Parents of newborns who tip the scales at less than 5 ÷½ pounds should put some heavy thought to a possible future consequence: kidney disease. Low birth weight babies have a 70% greater risk of developing chronic kidney disease (CKD) in later life, according to research published in the August issue of the American Journal of Kidney Diseases, the official journal of the National Kidney Foundation.

NOW Election Highlights Debate Over Strategy For Future Of Feminist Movement
The AP/Kansas City Star on Sunday examined how the upcoming election for the next president of the National Organization for Women has brought to the forefront a debate over how the feminist movement should define itself moving forward. NOW President Kim Gandy is stepping down after eight years in which she led the group in opposition to many of former President George W. Bush"s policies. Running to replace her are Latifa Lyles, a 33-year-old who serves as a vice president to Gandy, and Terry O"Neill, a 56-year-old who served as NOW"s vice president for membership from 2001 to 2005. Lyles, who is black, would be NOW"s youngest president while O"Neill, who is white, would be its oldest to start a term. According to the AP/Star, the election represents "both an unusual clash of generations and an opportunity for activists to confront some of the challenges facing the feminist movement." The election will be held at NOW"s conference in Indianapolis this weekend.The candidates share the goals of ensuring that women"s needs are represented in health care reform and economic recovery efforts, and they both support working to make abortion and birth control more accessible. Lyles said she contrasts with NOW"s current membership, which is mostly white and older than age 40. Lyles believes she could help give the organization a more diverse, younger image and help encourage participation from a broader range of women. "The profile of NOW is just as important as the work we do," she said, adding, "There are a lot of antiquated notions about what feminism is." Gandy, who has endorsed Lyles, said, "It"s hard to ignore the fact there"s been a generational shift in the country, and an organization that doesn"t recognize that is living in the past." She added that Lyles" "youth is not a detriment, but an advantage. ... She"ll take NOW to a different level." Jessica Valenti, a prominent younger feminist and founder of the blog Feministing, said, "This could be the moment where NOW becomes super-relevant to the feminist movement again."O"Neill said she would focus on grassroots organizing and membership recruitment. She said that "even with a friend in the White House and a lot of friends in the Congress, it"s going to take well-organized, grassroots movement to advance our agenda." O"Neill added, "I keep hearing "Terry, I want to see more activism in my community,"" adding, "The press releases, the media exposure, invitations to the White House -- these are excellent things, but they"re not enough. The grass roots are not personally engaged." Former NOW President Patricia Ireland, who supports O"Neill, said, "There is a role that requires us to take unpopular stands and push on our friends. That"s what I think [O"Neill] really gets. She"s the one I believe will be very willing to use a wide array of tactics -- not just traditional letters and e-mails, but also engage in civil disobedience, organize fasts, be at some congressman"s district office" (Crary, AP/Kansas City Star, 6/14).
News of the day
ICES Study Finds More Ontario Children Being Diagnosed With Diabetes
Ontario children are more likely to get diagnosed with diabetes than their American counterparts. A study out of the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences (ICES) has found a 3 per cent increase per year in the rate of diabetes in Ontario children from 1994 to 2004.
Cardiovascular

NHS Produces Fairer Primary Healthcare System, Study Finds, UK

England"s ethnic minorities are just as likely to access GP services as their white counterparts and have similarly positive clinical outcomes, a study published this month has found. The research found no differences for the clinical outcomes of care for patients from ethnic minority backgrounds with high blood pressure, raised cholesterol and - on the whole - diabetes: they were no more likely to have undiagnosed illness, and just as likely to have their condition well-managed. The findings are a surprising departure from widely held views that people from ethnic minorities have poorer care in the NHS. They also strongly suggest that poorer health of ethnic minority groups in England is not a consequence of limited access to healthcare, but poorer socioeconomic profile. However, the report did find inequalities in how patients from ethnic minorities access hospital services and a "marked" difference in accessing dental care. It is published in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health. "While inequalities in the care received may exist for some conditions and other health care settings, particularly internationally, the implication of our research is that ethnic inequalities in healthcare are minimal within NHS primary care. "In other words, publicly funded primary care with universal access has resulted in greater equality of access to and outcomes of care across the main ethnic groups," said Professor Nazroo- who led the study. "It"s a vindication of the NHS and the principles that underpin it." One factor that might contribute towards poorer access to secondary care, according to the team, is that white people are far more likely to use private hospital care than patients from ethnic minorities. And the low use of dental services may reflect the difficulty ethnic minority patients experience in finding an NHS dentist, or paying dental fees. The study analysed thousands of respondents to four waves of the Health Survey for England, a representative population survey. Professor Nazroo said: "We found no evidence among respondents that ethnic minorities suffer disproportionately poorer care for hypertension and raised cholesterol. "In fact in some cases, there were indications that ethnic minority respondents received better care. "For diabetes there were also few differences, although there was some evidence of poorer outcomes for the Pakistani and Irish groups. Notes Data used are drawn from the 1998, 1999, 2003 and 2004 sweeps of the Health Survey for England (HSE), a representative national survey. Method Respondents were asked if: they had visited a GP in the last two weeks; they visited a dentist for regular or occasional check-ups (1999 HSE only); and, in the last twelve months, they attended hospital as an outpatient, day patient, or at A&E, or had been in the hospital as an inpatient (overnight or longer). The paper - Ethnic inequalities in access to and outcomes of healthcare: Analysis of the Health Survey for England is published in Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health this week and is available. Doi 10.1136/jech.2009.089409 University of Manchester


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):