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Mayo Clinic Proceedings January tip sheet
01-18-2008 · EurekAlert!Featured articles from the January issue of Mayo Clinic Proceedings include the effects of antioxidant supplements on cancer, guidelines for workplace drug screening and the safety and effectiveness of nasal spray flu vaccine.
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- Mayo Clinic Proceedings Jan. tip sheet
01-18-2008 · EurekAlert!
Featured articles from the Jan. issue of Mayo Clinic Proceedings include the effects of antioxidant supplements on cancer, guidelines for workplace drug screening and the safety and effectiveness of nasal spray flu vaccine.
Similar news · Read more »
- Nonminority medical students more satisfied than minority students, study finds
11-09-2006 · EurekAlert!
Minorities account for 30 percent of the U.S. population, but only eight percent of the physician workforce, and experience less personal satisfaction during medical school than nonminority students, finds a Mayo Clinic study published in the November issue of Mayo Clinic Proceedings.
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- Researchers: Few heart disease trials reporting sex-specific results
01-30-2007 · EurekAlert!
Heart disease differences in men and women continue to be poorly understood because women are included in clinical trials far less than men, and even when women are included, study results are not reported by sex, according to a study in the current issue of Mayo Clinic Proceedings.
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- Majority of herb users don't follow evidence-based indications, researchers find
05-09-2007 · EurekAlert!
Sales of herbal dietary supplements have skyrocketed by 100 percent in the United States during the last 10 years, but most people don't consider evidence-based indications before using them, according to a University of Iowa study published in this month’s Mayo Clinic Proceedings.
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- Mayo Clinic Proceedings provides forum for debate about capital punishment
01-02-2008 · EurekAlert!
In a commentary and two editorials published in the September 2007 issue of Mayo Clinic Proceedings, three anesthesiologists and a medical ethicist discussed whether doctors should participate in capital punishment executions.
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- Doctors and medical ethicist discuss whether doctors should participate in capital punishment
09-04-2007 · EurekAlert!
Should doctors be involved in the state-ordered administration of capital punishment? In the September issue of Mayo Clinic Proceedings, three anesthesiologists and a medical ethicist take an in-depth look at this question in a commentary and two editorials.
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- Same-day coronary angiography and surgery safe for many patients
05-23-2007 · EurekAlert!
Mayo Clinic researchers discovered it is safe -- and much more convenient and less costly -- for many patients to undergo coronary angiography and elective valve surgery on the same day, it is reported in the current issue of Mayo Clinic Proceedings.
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- Medical therapy for restless legs syndrome may trigger compulsive gambling
02-08-2007 · EurekAlert!
A new Mayo Clinic study is the first to describe this compulsive gambling in RLS patients who are being treated with medications that stimulate dopamine receptors in the brain. The Mayo Clinic report appeared in the January 23 issue of Neurology.
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- Treatment of asthma: Stepping up treatment and also stepping it down
04-09-2007 · EurekAlert!
Asthma symptoms vary greatly among individuals and vary at times with each individual. In this comprehensive study in the April issue of Mayo Clinic Proceedings, researchers address the prevalence and process of step-down therapy as symptoms subside. Of the 397 adults and children studied, 64 percent had at least one change in medication dose during the two years of the study. Most changes were step-up in doses during an asthma flare. Step-down changes were far less common.
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- VA tops private hospitals in infection-control study
06-01-2007 · EurekAlert!
Department of Veterans Affairs medical centers are more likely than non-VA hospitals to follow recommendations for preventing bloodstream infections associated with central venous catheters, says a survey of more than 500 US health care centers. The results appear in the June issue of Mayo Clinic Proceedings.
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