News

In our Medical News section, you'll find up-to-date and relevant information on the latest advances in the field of health. This space is designed to keep you informed about research, clinical developments, and evidence-based science.

Will your smartphone be the next doctor's office?

The use of smartphones as diagnostic tools is a work in progress, experts say. By Hannah Norman and Kaiser Health News. The same devices used to take selfies and write tweets are being repurposed and marketed to quickly access the information needed to monitor a patient's health. The tip of a…

Read more

WHO: COVID-19 pandemic remains a public health emergency of international concern

lawebdelasalud.com The Director-General of the World Health Organization (WHO) announced that he agrees with the advice offered by the Emergency Committee of the International Health Regulations (2005) regarding the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, and in this regard, "determines that the event continues to constitute a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC)." Dr. Tedros Adhanom…

Read more

The FDA will ease restrictions on blood donations from gay men.

The agency is moving to individual risk assessments to expand blood donor eligibility. The FDA plans to relax rules that for decades have prohibited gay and bisexual men from donating blood due to concerns about HIV transmission. The draft guidelines (opens in a new tab or window) were published…

Read more

The happiness of doctors has not recovered as the pandemic continues

Christine Lehmann, MA. Doctors don't seem to be recovering from the early days of the pandemic: their happiness at work and outside of it remains significantly lower than before the pandemic. Doctors also reported similar levels of unhappiness last year. Nearly half of the doctors said they were somewhat or very unhappy…

Read more

How can long-acting PrEP injections reduce new HIV cases?

A group of researchers is evaluating the potential of the first long-acting HIV treatment as a tool for controlling new HIV infections in high-risk groups. Ángel Luis Jiménez. Over the last few years, significant progress has been made in the fight against HIV. From a treatment perspective,…

Read more

Sunlenca twice a year works well for initial HIV treatment

Sunlenca twice a year works well for initial HIV treatment. The new injectable antiretroviral keeps HIV under control, but it still needs a similarly long-acting partner. • By Liz Highleyman. Sunlenca (lenacapavir), a long-acting injectable drug recently approved for people with multidrug-resistant HIV who have already received treatment, also works well for…

Read more

Pre-exposure prophylaxis yields good results in Latin America

By Clarinha Glock. Same-day initiation of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) against human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection is feasible in Latin America, with few early losses during follow-up, high adherence, and long-term commitment. However, issues related to the social and structural determinants of vulnerability…

Read more

Another HIV vaccine fails in a large trial

Researchers halt Mosaic trial after experimental vaccine found to be safe but ineffective against HIV. By Liz Highleyman. Another large trial has been paused after Johnson & Johnson's experimental HIV vaccine, which uses the same technology as the company's COVID-19 vaccine, proved to be…

Read more

After the PANORAMIC Study — Where is Molnupiravir headed?

By Paul Sax We turn to discuss one of the controversial articles published in late 2022 on COVID-19, namely the PANORAMIC study of molnupiravir versus usual care in outpatients with the disease. This is controversial not because the study was poorly conducted or unimportant, but because molnupiravir has been, from the outset,…

Read more

Syndemic: The threat to healthcare in 2023 according to the Davos Forum

This refers to a set of mutually reinforcing health problems that affect the overall health of a population. The World Economic Forum—also known as the Davos Forum—defines a syndemic as "a set of simultaneous, mutually reinforcing health problems that affect the overall health of a population." A situation…

Read more

Criminalizing gay men is the strongest predictor of HIV

This is demonstrated by ten years of work in 10 countries, 25 study sites, dozens of collaborators and more than 8000 participants. Associations between punitive policies and legal barriers to consensual same-sex sexual acts and HIV among gay men and other men who have sex with men in sub-Saharan Africa:…

Read more
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10