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  • Pharmacology Watch: FDA Drug Approval to Change its Ways?

    In This Issue: FDA drug approval to change? Urinary incontinence in women; how metabolism of certain drugs can be predicted by genetic analysis; bowel preps may compromise renal function especially in the elderly according to a new study; FDA Actions.
  • Special Feature: Amniocentesis Today — Is It Really A Benign Procedure?

    Over the last five years, there has been an increased emphasis on screening for aneuploidy, in part due to the ACOG endorsement of the concept of offering nuchal translucency (NT) and biochemical screening to all pregnant patients, and not just those of advanced maternal age (AMA).
  • Does Anyone Still Do Routine Episiotomies?

    It is unclear how many practitioners around the world use routine episiotomy today as a way to avoid third and fourth degree lacerations. There certainly was a period of time when episiotomy was a routine practice in nulliparas.
  • Is The Maintenance of Oxic Cancer ... Toxic?

    The primary purpose of this phase III study was to determine if maintenance of hemoglobin values above 12 g/dL by use of R-HUEPO during chemoradiotherapy (weekly cisplatin) for advanced cervix cancer was associated with improved outcomes (progression-free and overall survival and local control rates) relative to maintenance of hemoglobin values above 10 g/dL by way of non-R-HUEPO methods.
  • Blood clots and "The Patch"

    By Alison Edelman, MD, MPH, Assistant Professor, Assistant Director of the Family Planning Fellowship Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, is Associate Editor for OB/GYN Clinical Alert.
  • Bioterror drill goes awry, lab workers are exposed

    An exercise designed to test laboratory readiness for a bioterrorism incident turned into a real-life disaster of another sort when specimen mislabeling and flagrant breaches in infection control resulted in several exposures to an attenuated vaccine strain of Brucella abortus RB51, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports (CDC).
  • Study: Employees don't know their cholesterol levels

    One in six Americans, which is almost 36 million people, have never had their cholesterol checked, according to new statistics from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ).
  • Part-time and temporary workers are at much higher risk for injury illness

    If an employee is morbidly obese, drug-impaired, or chronically sleep-deprived, you would probably suspect that this individual is at greater risk for injury or illness in the workplace. But what if the worker is part-time or hired on a temporary basis?
  • Occ health programs and key business objectives

    This is the second part of a three-part series on using financial data to demonstrate the value of occupational health programs. This month, we explore how to show that occupational health programs impact business objectives.
  • E-mail leaves "paper trail" lawyers may utilize

    Imagine this e-mail from one of your colleagues being Exhibit A at your malpractice trial: "You misdiagnosed Jane Doe with indigestion last night and she showed up this morning on my shift with a heart attack and didn't live. Since this is your third time to miss this sort of thing, you really need to pay better attention."