Posts Tagged: ‘public health’

It’s been a rough week for the tobacco companies on EurekAlert! I can tell you. All in a single day, no less than three (3) papers scrutinizing Big Tobacco were published in the Public Library of Science’s journal PLoS Medicine. Must have been a special issue or something.

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National Breast Cancer Awareness Month doesn’t take place until October, when the pink and Halloween orange will duke it out for color supremacy (I’d put my cash on pink, FYI), but new research (via Forbes) indicates that it’s time to rethink pink.

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Europe approaches sex a bit differently than the United States — probably not a big surprise there. A Slate slideshow of American and European public sex ed and contraceptive ads demonstrates how countries abroad treat teen sex, STD prevention and condom use in a much more straightforward, honest and possibly more effective way.

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Many of us have no way to understand this, but there are millions of people in the U.S. and around the world who, for some reason, worship celebrities. This photo is indicative of how extreme the problem can get: A fan cries People magazine, Us magazine, the Tabloids, TMZ, etc. are also indicative. One of [...]

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Tomorrow is the last installment of the Conversations at The Carter Center series for 2009-2010. The subject of the webcast is “Improving the Lives of Women Through Public Health Initiatives.” For more details, please see the promo: http://cartercenter.org/news/features/cc/conversations-video-promo.html.

You can watch the webcast tomorrow, Thursday, April 22 starting at 7:00 p.m. (EST) on www.cartercenter.org.

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Depending on where you live, you may not think too much about malaria. And that’s a ridiculous luxury, considering that every 30 seconds a child dies from the infectious disease, according to the World Health Organization. Despite favored interventions such as using bed nets treated with insecticides, spraying the inside of dwellings, getting rid of standing water and, of course, drug treatments, about 250 million people get sick and 1 million people die every year from malaria, reports the WHO.

Given those numbers, it’s hard not to be interested when a malaria vaccine apparently shows promise — even if it is years away from reaching the people who need it. The candidate in question is RTS,S, a vaccine developed by the pharmaceutical company GlaxoSmithKline Biologicals, working with the PATH Malaria Vaccine Initiative, an organization funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. (You know, the same foundation that gives money to people for things like figuring out how to detect tuberculosis with an electronic nose.)

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