Primary Care/Hospitalist
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Prevalence of Rest Tremor in Essential Tremor
Rest tremor is seen in patients with more advanced essential tremor, yet its prevalence varies significantly between patient groups.
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Is It Time to Purge Full-Strength Aspirin from the Outpatient Armamentarium?
The current study provides further evidence of a lack of benefit to high-dose maintenance aspirin, along with a suggestion of harm.
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Comparative Efficacy and Safety of Blood Pressure-lowering Agents in Adults with Diabetes and Kidney Disease
Although no blood pressure-lowering strategy prolonged survival in adults with diabetes and kidney disease in this meta-analysis, angiotensin-converting enzyme and angiotensin-receptor blockers, alone or in combination, were the most effective pharmacological strategies to prevent the development of end-stage renal disease.
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Are women getting screened for osteoporosis? Just-released research suggests answer is ‘no’
Too few women at high risk for osteoporosis are being tested for the condition, while too many women at low risk are being screened, results of a California-based study suggest.
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At least 20 insurers aren’t offering Affordable Care Act’s breastfeeding benefits
Breastfeeding rates continue to rise. In 2011, 79% of U.S. newborn infants started to breastfeed, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
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Research indicates text messages can aid adolescent adherence to contraceptive use
Sending teen girls periodic text messages reminding them to follow through on their clinic appointments for periodic birth control injections aids in improving timing and adherence to contraception, research indicates.
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Time to change Medicaid sterilization wait period
U.S. health policy requires Medicaid beneficiaries to wait 30 days before tubal sterilization. In a journal analysis, national experts argue that this practice violates healthcare justice, as elective tubal sterilization is readily available to women with a private source of payment.
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New research indicates promise of nine-valent human papillomavirus vaccine
The recently approved nine-valent human papillomavirus vaccine potentially can prevent 80% of cervical cancers in the United States if given to all 11- or 12-year-old children before they are exposed to the virus, results of a new seven-center study suggest.
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Research adds more insight into newer OCs and risk of VTE
Results from two United Kingdom population-based, case-control nested studies using two large primary care databases indicate risks of venous thromboembolism associated with combined oral contraceptives were, with the exception of norgestimate, higher for newer drug preparations than for second-generation drugs.
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Obstructive Sleep Apnea
MONOGRAPH: Continuous positive airway pressure devices remain the mainstay of treatment. If CPAP is poorly tolerated, here are your options.