Popular Articles

Prostate Cancer-Derived Urine Exosomes: A Novel Approach To Biomarkers For Prostate Cancer
UroToday.com - In the online edition of the British Journal of Cancer, Dr. J. Nilsson and an international team of investigators report on a new biomarker methodology for prostate cancer (CaP). The authors explain that prostatic secretions contain two types of microvesicles; prostasomes (150-500nm) are produced by prostatic ductal epithelial cells that are a normal component of seminal fluid and participate in male fertility and exosomes which are specialized nanovesicles (30-100nm) with cup-shaped morphology and are actively secreted by normal and tumor cells.
buy viagra
Research Says Modern Work-Related Stress Damages National Output More Than 1970s Strikes
Research presented by Bernard Casey of the University of Warwick"s Institute for Employment Research shows that work-related stress today damages national output even more than the loss to national output due to strikes at the peak of industrial unrest in the 1970s.
News of the day
New Software To Improve Clinical Trial Performance
TranSenda International, LLC announced today that it is developing a new solution, Cortex, designed to improve an organization"s ability to manage a clinical trial"s performance. Based upon patent-pending ClinBUS® data interchange technology already in use in TranSenda"s Office-Smart solutions, Cortex will enable organizations to leverage the power of access to centralized operational data from all applications used across all clinical studies. For years the industry has struggled with an increasingly fragmented environment of disconnected clinical applications, sites and partners. TranSenda"s Cortex, with its proven ClinBUS technology, represents a breakthrough in managing and controlling studies within a common environment-independent of study data formats and clinical trial applications.
Oncology

UCSF Nurses To Picket Hospital Over "Dangerous" New Staffing Policies

Protesting what they call a "dangerous and frightening" reduction in medical res, Registered Nurses from UCSF will picket their hospital this Wednesday, calling on administrators to immediately withdraw their proposal to increase patient loads for nurses by 25 to 100 percent. What: Nurses Picket UCSF Over Dangerous Patient Care Proposal Where: UCSF, 505 Parnassus, SF When: Wednesday, June 10, 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. The dispute arises from UCSF"s long-time refusal to schedule "break relief nurses" who step in to care for patients when the bedside RN takes her legally-mandated meal and rest breaks. The administration proposes to solve this by pulling one nurse per shift in every unit of the adult hospital and dedicating them to break relief. This proposal would have the effect of significantly increasing the workload of the nurses who care for UCSF patients. Nurses working on medical-surgical units could see their patient load jump from four to five, for example, an increase of 25 percent. Nurses in the ICU could see an increase from one patient to two, despite the fact that their critical acuity demands the undivided attention of a single nurse. The Agency for Health Research and Quality in May of 2007 laid out the dangers of this approach, finding that every patient a nurse is assigned (above four) leads to a 7 percent increased chance of mortality, in addition to a 53 percent higher chance of respiratory failure and a 17 percent increase in medical complications. "UCSF administration has ignored state law that requires patients to have adequate nursing care at all times, including when their bedside nurse is on their breaks. Rather than solving this staffing issue, UCSF is instead forcing through staffing cuts that will place our patients in grave danger. We cannot allow these staffing cuts to happen," said Maureen Dugan, RN on 13 Long, a medical-surgical unit that cares for patients recovering from abdominal, urologic or head and neck surgery. "UCSF is a unique hospital because we receive some of the sickest patients from around the world. It is imperative that our patient safety procedures and our nurse staffing reflect this," said Brady Logue, RN on 9 Long, the unit that cares for post-surgical patients after kidney, liver, or pancreas transplant surgery. The California Department of Public Health


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):