Category: Research (Page 84 of 93)

Pregnancy Learning Center Offers Valuble Information for Unplanned Pregnancy

Teen pregnancy is a major cause of young women dropping out of school.

Studies have shown a strong correlation between completion of high school and decreased long-term welfare dependence.

Studies have also shown that pregnant teens are at a high risk of medical complications.

They have twice the normal risk of delivering low birth weight infants with mental, physical and developmental problems.

For more information The Pregnancy Learning Center offers resource guides to help you navigate unplanned teen pregnancy.

Screening Guidelines for Cervical Cancer and Pap Smears Revised

The American Society of Clinical Oncology meets in Chicago and will review a new study which suggests that 3 year intervals are safe for Cervical Cancer Screening Tests.

Most women aged 30 and older with normal Pap and human paillomavirus (HPV) test results can safely wait three years until their next set of cervical cancer screening tests, according to a new study.

Such co-testing is currently recommended by the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. The guidelines note that women with certain risk factors for cervical cancer may need more frequent testing.

Your Heart is at Risk from Noise Pollution

The idea that people get used to noise is a myth, the Environmental Protection Agency has reported.

A now-classic study conducted in the 1970s found that children living on the lower, noisier floors of an apartment building overlooking a busy Manhattan bridge had lower reading scores than those living on higher floors.

But was noise really the major factor explaining that difference? After all, people tend to move away from extremely noisy neighborhoods if they can, and those who don’t are more likely to be poor, which by itself is a risk factor for delayed educational advancement and ill health.

Even when we think we have become accustomed to noise, biological changes still take place inside us.

Countries in Europe aggressively regulate noise, he points out. In the Netherlands, some roads are topped with low-noise pavement. Cars have low-noise tires, and airports compensate residents for sound-proofing their houses.

The U.S., however, doesn’t regulate noise on the federal level. There was a time when the EPA handled noise much like other pollutants, setting and enforcing regulations, recommending reductions and assessing the risks. That changed in 1982, when Ronald Reagan closed the Office of Noise Abatement and Control.

Late Night Binging Brings on the Bulge!

Does late night eating cause weight gain?

The debate has gone back and forth with no real scientific evidence either way.

Sleep in and of itself plays a huge part in proper weight maintenance.

The accepted widom was that a calorie is just a calorie, however recent findings may have proven otherwise.

Although researchers have found that late night eating does cause weight gain they are not sure why.

African-Americans With Liver Cancer Get Fewer Transplants

The treatment of liver liver cancer is expensive, high tech and on the rise.

But that doesn’t address the issue fully.

African -Americans face obstacles such as, lack of insurance, information, community and family support.

There is also the issue of discrimination within the medical community toward minority patients.

American Cancer Society statistics have shown the following:

African Americans with liver cancer are less likely than whites to get a transplant for the disease, according to U.S. researchers.

About one in 100 men in the U.S. develop the cancer at some point, while women are less than half as likely to do so, according to the American Cancer Society

The researchers found that over the first half of the study, white liver cancer patients had a 30 percent chance of receiving a new liver, compared to only 15 percent for blacks.

Although there are probably several reasons for the disparity, the biggest driver is the difference in access to care at the early stages of the disease due to health insurance.

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