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HEALTH LAW, ETHICS, AND HUMAN RIGHTS: Wellness Programs and Lifestyle Discrimination -- The Legal Limits
Mercredi 09 Juillet 2008 - 06:55 - 6 mois depuis - Presse spécialisée - New England Journal of Medicin Many health plans and employers offer wellness programs and incentives for participation. In this article, the authors examine the legal issues employers and health plans must consider as they develop programs to reward healthy behaviors and discourage unhealthy ones. |
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CME: Extended Antiretroviral Prophylaxis to Reduce Breast-Milk HIV-1 Transmission
Mercredi 09 Juillet 2008 - 06:55 - 6 mois depuis - Presse spécialisée - New England Journal of Medicin (No abstract is available for this citation) |
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CME: Initial Management of Epilepsy
Mercredi 09 Juillet 2008 - 06:55 - 6 mois depuis - Presse spécialisée - New England Journal of Medicin (No abstract is available for this citation) |
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CME: Case 21-2008: An 11-Month-Old Boy with Fever and Pulmonary Infiltrates
Mercredi 09 Juillet 2008 - 06:55 - 6 mois depuis - Presse spécialisée - New England Journal of Medicin (No abstract is available for this citation) |
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La Criirad dénonce "une série de dysfonctionnements" sur le site nucléaire du Tricastin
Mercredi 09 Juillet 2008 - 06:20 - 6 mois depuis - Presse généraliste - Le monde Sciences Pour Bruno Chareyron, responsable de laboratoire à la Commission de recherche et d'information indépendantes sur la radioactivité, l'incident survenu dans la nuit du 7 juillet n'est pas "une catastrophe nucléaire". Mais il soulève des inquiétudes sur le niveau de sécurité des installations. |
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Vitamine A contre mortalité infantile
Mercredi 09 Juillet 2008 - 06:17 - 6 mois depuis - Presse généraliste - Nouvel Observateur Sciences Une seule dose orale de vitamine A, administrée aux nourrissons peu de temps après la naissance dans les pays en voie de développement (PVD), peut réduire leur risque de décès de 15 pour cent. |
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Effective Treatment of Pancreatic Cancer Remains Elusive
Mercredi 09 Juillet 2008 - 05:58 - 6 mois depuis - Presse spécialisée - Medscape family medicine Developing effective therapies to treat pancreatic cancer remains a challenge, because many promising therapies have not done as well as expected. The trend toward targeted therapies, however, offers promise for the future. Medscape Medical News |
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Effective Treatment of Pancreatic Cancer Remains Elusive
Mercredi 09 Juillet 2008 - 05:58 - 6 mois depuis - Presse spécialisée - Medscape hematology oncology Developing effective therapies to treat pancreatic cancer remains a challenge, because many promising therapies have not done as well as expected. The trend toward targeted therapies, however, offers promise for the future. Medscape Medical News |
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News Scan Briefs: Eating with Tension, Cancerous Marriage, Milk and Diabetes [Scientific American Magazine]
Mercredi 09 Juillet 2008 - 05:58 - 6 mois depuis - Presse spécialisée - Scientific American Eating with TensionThe long, thin beaks of shorebirds called phalaropes are no good at sucking up water and any tasty crustaceans within. Instead they rely on the attractive force of liquid known as surface tension to ferry prey upward. The birds first swim in small, fast circles on the surface of the water, creating a vortex that pulls creatures up within their reach. They next peck at the water and then rapidly open and close their beaks. This scissoring motion both pulls and squeezes droplets, about two millimeters in size, and moves them from the tip of their beaks into their mouths. In experiments with mechanical beaks, scientists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the French National Center for Scientific Research find that the droplets do not move well if the water contains oil, detergents and other pollutants that alter water’s surface tension. Draw in the findings from the May 16 Science. [More] |
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News Scan Briefs: Eating with Tension, Cancerous Marriage, Milk and Diabetes
Mercredi 09 Juillet 2008 - 05:58 - 6 mois depuis - Cancer - Scientific American Eating with TensionThe long, thin beaks of shorebirds called phalaropes are no good at sucking up water and any tasty crustaceans within. Instead they rely on the attractive force of liquid known as surface tension to ferry prey upward. The birds first swim in small, fast circles on the surface of the water, creating a vortex that pulls creatures up within their reach. They next peck at the water and then rapidly open and close their beaks. This scissoring motion both pulls and squeezes droplets, about two millimeters in size, and moves them from the tip of their beaks into their mouths. In experiments with mechanical beaks, scientists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the French National Center for Scientific Research find that the droplets do not move well if the water contains oil, detergents and other pollutants that alter water’s surface tension. Draw in the findings from the May 16 Science. [More] |
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