- World TB day celebrated on March 24, 2013
Politics and Policies:
- Somalia signs its new Healthcare Plan. It has moved away from the emergency-level health provision towards more mainstream national health systems.
- Kenya’s President elect promises much needed free primary healthcare for the citizens and raising the financing from 6-15%
- Five memorandums of understandings has been signed by Egypt with South Sudan in the healthcare, livestock and agriculture sectors.
- Tanzania and Japan sign Sh802 million project grant. It will help Tanzania in various sectors including health, education and water supply.
- Kansas, United States, doctors may be required to tell patients that abortion causes breast cancer.
Programs:
- The World Bank will help Cameroon to build safety net system aimed at reducing poverty and vulnerability. Households will get training to improve their health.
- Solar power in Africa helps people to grow nutritional vegetables and improve their basic needs including health.
- The United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) calls for more reproductive health resources.
- UNAIDS and other health organizations support new TB and HIV initiative in Africa. It will include a package worth more than US$120 million to be used to expedite this process.
- South Sudan through its community health workers detect and treat tuberculosis. This strategy is helping to fight tuberculosis draws communities themselves to detect and treat cases of tuberculosis.
- UC San Francisco receives $2 million from billionaire Li K-shing for transforming its medical care by integrating data from the human genome and disease research with information from patient’s records and environmental data.
Research:
- According to a study about 570 United Kingdom children start smoking every day. This has made the UK government to consider whether to introduce plain packaging for tobacco products.
- According to a study published in the New England Journal of Medicine physiotherapy results are as good as knee surgery.
- According to a study, as part of prevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV virus, antiretroviral therapy has to be initiated before the last trimester of pregnancy to achieve an undetectable RNA plasma viral load before delivery.
- A report of United Nation states that about four and a half billion people have access to toilet (as compared to six billion people who have access to mobile phones) of the world’s seven billion people.
- Researchers are working to tackle obstacles to medical aid.
- According to the World Health Organization and Global Fund Africa and Europe has not yet reached the millennium tuberculosis goal. They say that strains of tuberculosis with resistance to multiple drugs could spread widely.
- According to a report by the UNICEF, about 66 million Nigerians are without portable water. It is the leading cause of diseases and deaths especially among under five aged children.
- Doctors have discovered a women’s mysterious bone condition due to drinking a pitcher of tea every day for past 17 years.
- Reports indicate that only 28% of Ugandans have access to hand-washing facilities. Statistics from the Uganda Demographic and Household Survey show that 190,000 Ugandan children die every year due to diarrhea.
- A report publish by the World Health organization (WHO), among South-East Asia Region, Indonesia has achieved an amazing 90% success rate for TB treatment.
- Scientists from the John Hopkins University have developed a new innovative method known as Predicting Infectious Disease Scalable Model (PRISM) extracts relationships between clinical, meteorological, climatic and socio-political data in Peru and the Philippines.
- According to a study flu sufferers can spread the virus by sneezing, while talking, breathing by at least 6 feet.
- A new method to treat blinding cornea diseases in children is now available in Singapore.
- According to a study breast cancer radiation therapy increases a women’s risk of suffering a heart attack or other heart problems.
- A study indicates an increase in the number of parents who won’t vaccinate daughters against Human Papilloma Virus (HPV).
- A study shows that parents seem to be increasingly worried about the vaccine’s safety.
- Low-GI protein blends have been designed to be eaten about 30 minutes before meals to reduce satiety is being marketed by a Swedish form Indevex. It increases release of incretin hormone which can provoke insulin release before blood glucose levels due to meal consumption.
- A research done by Lund University in Sweden shows that we can modify the function of genes through epigenetic changes that can take place over the course of time.
- United States tuberculosis rates reach all-time low but resistance of bacteria is a continuous threat.
- Researchers have indicated that menstrual blood cells can be used to treat heart failure patients.
- Researchers say that females with ovarian cancer too often get insufficient treatment.
Diseases and Disasters:
- Chinese Public call for tackling water pollution.
- Reports indicate that about 40 patients have lost their lives in drug trials in Maharashtra, India.
- According to a report released by the CDC, from early December, 2012 to mid-February 2013, the Salmonella Typhimurium outbreak linked to ground beef had sickened a total of 22 people.
- Natives of United States call for increased HIV testing per Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommendations.