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Sunday, October 26, 2008
click here to view: Recap of 4 related items - Ovarian Cancer Screening/Diagnostic Markers
Gardasil Passes a 2-Year Safety Check
Gardasil Passes a 2-Year Safety Check:
"Most parents' concerns about Gardasil were not explicitly related to concerns about vaccine safety."
The Lancet Oncology - World Cancer Declaration (needs password - free - to view)
The Lancet Oncology
Reflection and Reaction
World Cancer Declaration: a need for partnership
"We can no longer afford to sit on our hands and watch people die needlessly. We all have a personal and common responsibility to help overcome this global challenge and I encourage you to read the World Cancer Declaration, endorse the policy via the UICC website, and think carefully about what changes you can do, however small, in your private and professional lives to bring about change, before we live to regret this moment in history."2008 Health Care in Canada - full report (103 pages)
HCIC_2008_e.pdf (application/pdf Object)
Health Care in Canada 2008 (HCIC 2008) is the ninth in a series of annual
reports on the health care system and the health of Canadians. This year,
HCIC 2008 provides a review of key analytic work undertaken at CIHI that
highlights CIHI’s health care research priorities (access, quality of care, costs,
health human resources and population mental health). Also included in this
report are key findings from seminal Canadian and international health care
research as they relate to these health care priorities. HCIC 2008 is a reference
tool to identify current priorities in health care for health researchers, persons
involved in strategic decision-making in health care, the media and Canadians
in general.
God Syndrome | Psychology Today Blogs
God Syndrome | Psychology Today Blogs: "Medicine is a complex affair; we frequently do not do justice to what our patients suffer and what they need."
Thursday, October 23, 2008
news item: Gates Foundation Awards $100,000 grants (non-peer review)
Flying Syringes and Other Bold Ideas - washingtonpost.com
"In making its picks, the foundation has rejected the widespread practice of peer review -- assigning other specialists in a field to evaluate research -- because, in the words of Tadataka Yamada, the foundation's director of global health, "peer review -- by definition almost -- excludes innovation because innovation has no peers."
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
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