Articles Tagged With:
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Syphilis Makes Dangerous Resurgence
Experts say it’s time to act.
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Telehealth Improves Access to Reproductive Health Education and Services for Rural Adolescents
For adolescents living in rural areas who otherwise would forgo care because of fear of embarrassment, transportation difficulties, and/or confidentiality concerns, using a web app could alleviate many of these concerns.
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Data Eye Vaginal Bacteria as Trigger for Recurrent UTIs
New research uncovered a trigger of recurrent urinary tract infections — a type of vaginal bacteria that moves into the urinary tract.
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Discuss Benefits of HPV Vaccine with Parents
Research indicates that concern about sexual activity is declining as a reason parents do not allow their daughters to receive the HPV vaccine.
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Research Affirms Protective Benefit of Oral Contraceptives
The latest findings from a long-term study indicate that most women who choose to use oral contraceptives do not expose themselves to long-term cancer harms.
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Breast Cancer Screening Recommendations Amid Changing Guidelines
A recently published research letter contains in-depth information about breast cancer screening recommendations physicians give their patients amid recent guideline changes.
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New U.S. Zika Figures Prompt Healthcare Providers to Play a Key Role in Prevention Efforts
Although it has been more than a year since the CDC released the first travel alert related to Zika virus in the Americas, experts warn now is not the time to be complacent.
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Diabetes Microvascular Complications
Diabetes mellitus is expensive, but most of the costs are attributed to complications and hospital care. This article will review the recommendations from the ADA 2017 Standards of Care for microvascular complications and relevant position statements, and will highlight preventive screening and clinical pearls for the primary care physician treating patients with diabetes.
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A Novel Target for Migraine Prevention Through Modulation of Stress Receptors
Kappa opioid receptors (KORs) modulate response to stress, a common migraine trigger, so KOR blockade may be a novel preventive treatment for migraine as well as other stress-related diseases.
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Outcomes After Surgical Treatment of Nonlesional Neocortical Epilepsy
In this study of 109 consecutive patients with medically refractory neocortical epilepsy without MRI-identifiable lesions who underwent focal resection at a single hospital from 1995 to 2005, almost 60% of patients achieved long-term seizure freedom, with anti-epileptic drugs being withdrawn successfully in about a third of these patients.