22 Jan 2019
Posted by Andrew Kantor
A study published Friday in JAMA Network Open found a direct correlation between gifts given to doctors and the number of opioid deaths.
It found that counties where opioid manufacturers offered a large number of gifts and payments to doctors had more overdose deaths involving the drugs than counties where direct-to-physician marketing was less aggressive.
The World Health Organization has added the misguided anti-vaccination movement — what it calls “vaccine hesitancy” — to its list of the top 10 health threats facing the world.
Amid the latest U.S. measles outbreak (in Washington State), Forbes explains why “Measles Outbreaks Show Why Anti Vaxxers Made WHO’s 10 Global Health Threats.”
Alzheimer’s patients who take anti-epileptic drugs tend to spend more time in the hospital, at least according to a new study out of Finland (and published in the Journal of American Medical Directors Association).
A common gut bacteria might make Parkinson’s meds ineffective, finds a new study.
Gut bacteria metabolizes levodopa, a common Parkinson’s medication, into dopamine, a neurotransmitter in the brain. Since dopamine can’t pass through the blood-brain barrier, it saps the levodopa of its effectiveness
Solution: Use a a decarboxylase inhibitor, obviously.
A Swiss team has created a “microswimmer robot” that could someday be able to deliver drugs directly to specific locations in the body.
“[It] is a few millimeters in length and made using a folding technique similar to the Japanese art of origami, helping it adapt to the environment around it” and can be controlled from the outside of the body. Science, baby!
Why, in 2019, do American medical practices still use fax machines? The basic answer is that the laws that digitized medicine considered storing information but didn’t take into account the need to share it. But there’s plenty more to the story.
Could be worse, could be in Britain where people are stockpiling medication in fear of a chaotic, no-deal Brexit in March. (The government there says ‘Don’t worry!’ because “Plans have been drawn up for the use of alternative transport routes and prioritisation of medicines.”)