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Saturday, 31 December 2016
Fit Tip: Snacking
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Fit Tip: Proper Breathing
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Fit Tip: Breathing Athletes
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Fit Tip: Anaerobic Exercise
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Fit Tip: Eating Breakfast
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Friday, 30 December 2016
Dame Sally Davies: I enjoy a glass of wine too
Therapy dog Leo helping patients recover
Bill Gates: We are vulnerable to flu epidemic in next decade
Innovations that will change lives
Thursday, 29 December 2016
Harry Maceachen and dad on liver transplant
'Don't hold it in' - Hatton on depression
Art and dementia
Wednesday, 28 December 2016
Dieter tells how son calling him fat prompted health drive
Top 10 Healthy Food Trends for 2017
I can't believe 2016 is almost over. It certainly was a big year. Food wise, we saw cauliflower everything, avocado toast start to pitter out (although it's still popular), doughnut shops take hold, and smoothie bowls everywhere. So what's coming up for 2017? I asked EatingWell's editors what healthy food trends they're seeing on the horizon for next year. Here's what we predict will be hot next year.
Tuesday, 27 December 2016
Dutch IVF centre probes suspected sperm mix-up
Carey Mulligan on dementia and music
Hip pain may be 'hangover from evolution'
Monday, 26 December 2016
Doctors confirm 200-year-old diagnosis
Friday, 23 December 2016
Exercise May Be Real Medicine for Parkinson's Disease
Physical activity helps improve gait and balance, research review finds
Source: HealthDay via Exercise and Physical Fitness New Links: MedlinePlus RSS Feed Read More Here..
Final trial results confirm Ebola vaccine provides high protection against disease
Homeless issued with cards saying they are entitled to GP care
And GPs and receptionists reminded that homeless people can register for treatment Related items from OnMedica GPs call for more collaborative working £38.7m boost to cut homelessness Not tackling infections in homeless could spark epidemics Doctors warn on rising rates of homelessness Call for action to tackle ill health of homeless |
Record numbers of NHS staff receive flu vaccine
Over half a million workers vaccinated between September and November Related items from OnMedica Flu shot refusers rate jab as unimportant Nasal spray flu vaccine for children proving effective Flu vaccination programme extended to thousands more children Last winter’s death rate halved due to type of flu virus Flu during pregnancy not linked to child’s autism risk |
Abortion care 'must be reformed'
Too much abortion care is provided outside the NHS Related items from OnMedica Domestic violence linked to pregnancy termination No prosecution of doctors prepared to carry out sex selection abortion 7 million women treated for unsafe abortions per year Abortion provider put women at risk |
NHS part of £250m China health trade mission
Deal will bring a state-of-the-art scanning equipment to the UK Related items from OnMedica General Practice Chinese style UK/China fund on antimicrobial resistance to launch India and China account for a third of global mental health burden NHS cancer patients still denied treatments available in other countries |
Manchester merges mental health and social care
New organisation could be a model for integration across the UK Related items from OnMedica What does it mean to be a Multispecialty Community Provider? Multispecialty community provider contract options unveiled Should local leaders pursue devolution deals for health care? Deal to devolve £6bn NHS and social care budget to Manchester is signed Greater Manchester presses ahead with devolved health and care services |
'Lack of qualified workforce in abortion care'
Ebola experimental vaccine is highly effective, trial shows
Glimmer of hope
Brain's party noise filter revealed by recordings
It’s time to bust the myth that a healthy diet has to be costly
On The Pulse - December 2016
‘Drink plenty of fluids’ not always good advice |
Thursday, 22 December 2016
Eat the Rainbow with This Healthy Hummus Recipe Made 4 Ways!
The only thing better than a big bowl of homemade creamy hummus is 4 big bowls of homemade creamy hummus in all the colors of the rainbow. That's right—vibrant, colorful hummus all naturally dyed by vegetables. We're always looking for new ways to eat more veg, and this may be our favorite yet! Roasted red peppers, beets, avocado and cilantro don't just add color, they also add tons of flavor and silkiness to this healthy snacking favorite!
Boy battling leukaemia conducts orchestra
GP pharmacy scheme set for big boost
£100m investment will bring 1,500 clinical pharmacists into GP surgeries Related items from OnMedica Role of pharmacists is set to grow and grow Pharmacists call for more integrated future with GPs Include pharmacists in general practice team, say patients and carers Train non-medics to take on some doctors’ work Give pharmacists more prescribing rights to ease GP burden |
Record numbers leaving A&E without treatment
Doctors warn of another sign that the system is 'overstretched' Related items from OnMedica Who knows best when it comes to emergency hospital admissions? Missed A&E targets reflect cuts in social care and NHS funding Primary Care Home has positive impact on care and services Better funding and capacity vital for A&E to survive Trend to dissuade patients from attending A&E is flawed |
New multiple sclerosis drug hailed as a 'landmark'
Ocrelizumab kills the cells that assault the myelin sheath and cause nerve damage Related items from OnMedica NHS England loses appeal over PreP drugs Experts call on regulators to revisit nalmefene decision 75% of reappraised CDF drugs approved for NHS NICE approves extra ‘triple therapy’ drug for diabetes Antibiotic prescribing continues to spiral |
Obese but healthy? It’s genetic
Three genes may determine the way fat is stored and transported Related items from OnMedica Managing obesity in primary care - Part 1 Managing obesity in primary care - Part 2 ‘Safest’ BMI has risen by 3.3 over past three decades Unhealthy lifestyles and poor diets Weight gain linked to cancer risk |
Nursing leaders update guidance on assisted suicide
New document sets out the differing legal positions across the UK Related items from OnMedica Medical school end-of-life care training 'wanting' Only half of clinicians feel patients’ end-of-life needs are met Medication focus in new end-of-life guidance End-of-life care standards not universally high, says regulator End-of-life care ‘improving’ |
Double whammy
'Shell-shocked'
'Amazing difference that little bit of light can make'
Facebook lurking makes you miserable, says study
Multiple sclerosis drug is 'landmark'
Wednesday, 21 December 2016
Becoming a mother may change the brain to read baby’s mind
Health of 'young and old' hit by China smog
Abortion provider put women at risk
Care Quality Commission found proper consent was not obtained and staff were inadequately trained Related items from OnMedica Fourteen NHS abortion clinics in breach of law, regulator finds Domestic violence linked to pregnancy termination Abortions suspended at Marie Stopes clinics amid safety fears 7 million women treated for unsafe abortions per year |
Whole grapes are a choking risk for children
Grapes are the third most common cause of food-related choking after hot dogs and sweets Related items from OnMedica Infant food linked to risk of type 1 diabetes Babies who eat rice have higher urinary arsenic levels Make laundry and dishwasher liquitabs childproof, doctors urge Recovery position can curb child hospital admissions |
Rotavirus vaccination programme led to fall in GP visits
Estimates suggest 87,000 visits to GPs and hospital emergency departments for gastroenteritis have been avoided Related items from OnMedica Flu vaccination programme extended to thousands more children Last winter’s death rate halved due to type of flu virus Rotavirus vaccine offered to babies from today Rotavirus jab linked to sharp drop in admissions Rotavirus shows big decline since vaccine campaign |
Processed meat linked to worsening asthma symptoms
Four or more servings of processed meat per week linked with highest risk Related items from OnMedica Vitamin D supplements reduce severe asthma attacks Inhalers Asthma costs UK health service at least £1bn every year Yoga may relieve asthma symptoms and boost quality of life Healthy diet linked to lower COPD risk |
NHS Health Checks have prevented up to 8,400 heart attacks and strokes
Independent review quantifies the impact of the first five years of the programme Related items from OnMedica Learning disability health checks Public Health England defends NHS Health Checks Over 40s health checks show few benefits People with mental illness losing out on health checks NHS Health Checks fail the most deprived, researchers say |
Moderating demand
Can primary care really absorb excess capacity from hospitals? Related items from OnMedica GPs, consultants and public back striking juniors CQC fee hike slammed by GPs and health providers Staff shortages now outweigh funding fears in NHS It ‘beggars belief’ that seven-day NHS plans are uncosted, say MPs Fewer staff in NHS needed to get finances balanced |
Processed meat 'may be bad for asthma'
Tuesday, 20 December 2016
Antibiotic resistance will hit a terrible tipping point in 2017
New non-surgical treatment for early prostate cancer shows promise
Vascular targeted photodynamic therapy derived from bacteria on the ocean floor Related items from OnMedica 'Network drugs' could beat aggressive prostate cancer Scientists find five different types of prostate cancer Statins may slow prostate cancer progression in advanced disease New risk estimation for prostate cancer improves accuracy Radiotherapy for prostate cancer linked to increased risk of secondary cancers |
UK must retain and attract ‘scientific talent’ post Brexit, insist Peers
Essential to ensure UK has prominent place in global economy Related items from OnMedica Brexit and cancer research Former NHS chief executive says Brexit poses a threat to NHS Don’t let Brexit scupper UK drug discovery and delivery, MPs told Exempt EU scientists already in UK from immigration curbs, urge MPs Offer European NHS workers ‘automatic’ British citizenship |
Rise in hospital activity outstripping NHS funding
Real-terms budget increases have shrunk to 1.2% amid annual increases in demand Related items from OnMedica Social care directors warn of funding crisis NHS struggling as bed occupancy rates soar Sustainability and Transformation Plans Small Translucent Penguins NHS unprepared for winter pressure, say doctors |
Send ‘harmful drinkers’ for liver disease scans, GPs urged
Draft NICE quality standard aims to boost detection of cirrhosis and cancer Related items from OnMedica Alcohol and the nervous system England faces 135,000 alcohol-related cancer deaths by 2035 A fifth of over-65s are drinking too much Foetal alcohol syndrome must be better recognised Exercise might partly compensate for drinking alcohol |
Nurse leaders blame government for drop in nursing degree applicants
Applications in England have fallen 20% compared with this time last year Related items from OnMedica Anger as government axes nurse and midwife bursaries Will removing bursaries for student nurses actually lead to more nursing staff? Nurses to gain formal recognition for enhanced skills Public believe many more nurses needed for safe care Nurses 'unable to afford basic necessities' |
'Pregnancy fluid' reverses ageing bones
Now that’s what I call Christmas
Despite the reasons to go 'bah humbug', patients' gratitude can make things better Related items from OnMedica BMA calls for maximum number of patients per GP GMC warns of 'state of unease' amongst doctors To improve GP access, we all need to step out of the trenches Hunt ‘never planned to insist on changes to existing contracts’ Primary Care Home has positive impact on care and services |
Nick Grimshaw visits Cancer Research UK
Codeine becomes prescription-only medicine in Australia
Prostate cancer laser treatment 'truly transformative'
Blood test for hidden heart disease
Monday, 19 December 2016
Pregnancy alters woman's brain 'for at least two years'
Becoming a mother may change the brain to read baby’s mind
Tweet with flashing images sent to epileptic writer
MPs say UK suicide rate ‘unacceptably high’
NHS managers funding delays are stalling improvements to mental health services Related items from OnMedica Those bereaved through suicide, at risk of doing the same Falling suicide rate linked to improving NHS mental health care Commit to ‘zero suicides’ Deputy PM urges NHS Mental health deaths rise by over 20% Child mental health funding not reaching CCGs |
NHS struggling as bed occupancy rates soar
Think tank reveals hospitals are running out of beds over the winter Related items from OnMedica Emergency care already facing greater ‘winter pressures’ than last year NHS unprepared for winter pressure, say doctors MPs call for renewed action on discharge delays Psychiatric patients ‘discharged too early’ Use billions wasted on bed-blocking to bolster residential care, urges think tank |
Health safety investigation plans need more work
Indemnity experts say proposals for ‘safe-space’ are high on rhetoric Related items from OnMedica I am a CEO and I make mistakes Tired GPs greatest threat to patient safety Poor communication tops complaints list again New guidance spells out doctors’ duty of candour to admit mistakes Treatment of whistleblowers a “stain on NHS”, say MPs |
UK HIV diagnosis rates twice as high as western Europe
Annual HIV report says over 13,000 people unaware they are infected Related items from OnMedica Preventing HIV NHS England loses appeal over PreP drugs GPs should offer HIV tests in routine appointments HIV prevention scheme gets extension UN achieves HIV treatment target 9 months early |
Send heavy drinkers for liver scan, GPs told
RCGP calls for improvements to out-of-hours care
But extended weekend and evening opening will not solve access problems |
Suicide: We must end isolation, says campaigner
Scientists won’t stop discovering stuff, no matter what
Sugary drinks tax 'will benefit children most'
Mum troll fighter
Night riders
Sunday, 18 December 2016
Is air pollution really a public health crisis?
Saturday, 17 December 2016
Heimlich manoeuvre inventor dies
WHO calls for urgent resumption of medical evacuations from besieged east Aleppo
Friday, 16 December 2016
Pokemon Go, Pokemon Gone
Source: HealthDay via Exercise and Physical Fitness New Links: MedlinePlus RSS Feed Read More Here..
Minutes Count in the Cleveland Clinic Florida Emergency Room: Patient Story
Disclaimer: I work at Cleveland Clinic Florida, but I am not paid for this post.
WHO celebrates achievements in 2016, despite global health challenges
UK soft drinks industry levy will have significant health benefits for children
Modelling by researchers shows that the levy will reduce obesity, diabetes and tooth decay in children Related items from OnMedica Childhood obesity plan attacked as 'weak' and 'watered down' Get tough on curbing children’s poor dental health, government urged Fruit drinks for children have ‘unacceptably high’ sugar levels Child type 2 diabetes is a ‘wake-up call’ to the nation Children order fast food from schools, report shows |
CCGs have a long way to go on GP access
Fewer than half provide the ‘full’ access required by 2019 anywhere in their area Related items from OnMedica Tired GPs greatest threat to patient safety GP access plans ‘based on flawed information’ Most patients happy with GPs – and opening hours BMA calls for maximum number of patients per GP Primary Care Home has positive impact on care and services |
NHS England announces funding for vanguards
£101m of new funding now available for new care models Related items from OnMedica Innovative use of technology key to improving patient outcomes GPs link to new emergency ‘vanguard’ sites Ealing’s integrated care journey: learning from international models Pressure makes diamonds Sustainability and Transformation Plans |
The toddler saved from meningitis on Christmas Day
Mitochondrial donation gets go ahead in England
NHS England announces it will fund ground-breaking clinical trial of the technique Related items from OnMedica Personalised test could fine tune IVF treatment Three-person IVF is ethical, report says Lords approve mitochondrial donation First UK approval for gene editing on human embryos |
Herpes virus linked to most common type of childhood cancer
Congenital cytomegalovirus infection may increase risk of developing acute lymphocytic leukemia Related items from OnMedica Cold sore virus could kill cancer New guidelines on managing genital herpes in pregnancy Scientists find genetic signature linked to leukaemia Breastfeeding could cut children’s leukaemia risk Prophylactic antibiotics help children with leukaemia |
Antibiotic resistance will hit a terrible tipping point in 2017
Six pharmaceutical firms accused of price-fixing
Australian court increases fine over 'misleading' Nurofen
Babies made from three people approved in UK
Let’s hope UK’s soft drink tax cuts obesity and diabetes rates
NHS staff do mannequin challenge
Thursday, 15 December 2016
Ex-soldier shows BBC secrets behind his style
Three-person babies approved in UK
UK becomes first country to give go ahead to three-parent babies
Protein in urine linked to increased risk of memory problems
Chronic kidney disease and dementia share many risk factors, researchers point out Related items from OnMedica Constipation linked to kidney disease Dementia now leading cause of death in England and Wales Memory clinic referral criteria delay diagnosis 'Watch and wait' might be better in advanced kidney cancer |
MRI scan provides more certainty in diagnosing foetal abnormalities
Researchers propose MRI scan be offered when foetus has a suspected brain abnormality Related items from OnMedica Blood test identifies high-risk lupus pregnancies Experts find ‘substantial’ variation in maternity care ‘Red flag’ unwell pregnant women to curb maternal deaths, clinicians told ‘Morning sickness’ linked to lower risk of pregnancy loss New guidelines on epilepsy in pregnancy |
Dr Halfdan T. Mahler, WHO’s third Director-General, dies at 93
Woman gives birth thanks to ovary removed when she was eight
Marital history linked to stroke survival
Stroke survival is highest for married people who have never been divorced or widowed Related items from OnMedica Depression risk much higher for three months after stroke RCGP defends ‘under-prescription’ of stroke medicines by GPs Lifestyle factors biggest cause of heart disease risk variation NICE wants GPs to prevent 8,000 strokes a year Stroke can often be avoided, claims study |
Fewer children smoking and drinking
Number aged 8 to 15 who have ever tried alcohol reaches lowest level ever in annual Health Survey Related items from OnMedica Absentee parent link to smoking and drinking before adolescence Stats show decline in harmful drinking among young Smoke-free laws have cut child hospital admissions Young people’s regular use of e-cigarettes still low Commission more teen mental health and alcohol services |
Long use of pain relievers associated with hearing loss
Women who use ibuprofen or acetaminophen for 6 years or more have higher risk of hearing loss Related items from OnMedica Regular aspirin use linked to blindness NSAIDs and COX 2s linked to heart failure admission Some common painkillers can raise heart risks No role for paracetamol in treating pain in osteoarthritis Common painkiller used by mums-to-be linked to children’s behavioural issues |
The woman with Down's ... and a cookie business
'I gave too much' - man who ran 401 marathons
Extra baby scan 'spots brain problems'
'Three-person baby' decision awaited
Wednesday, 14 December 2016
Viruses may have evolved to hit men hard but go easy on women
Antibacterial products may help bacteria beat antibiotics
Vapers experimenting with illegal drugs bought on the dark web
Low-carb diets appear to be safe for short-term use
Analysis also reveals low-carb diets are slightly more effective for weight loss than low-fat diets Related items from OnMedica Managing obesity in primary care - Part 1 Managing obesity in primary care - Part 2 Call for nutritional ‘traffic light’ labels to be mandatory Nutrition more important than calories, say experts Experts call for food to have 'activity' labelling |
Brain tests predict children's futures
'Gender-biased infections' may exist
Snapchat spectacles worn by UK surgeon while operating
Scotland to reform approval process for rare and end-of-life drugs
Scottish Government announces reform as a review of access to new medicines is published Related items from OnMedica Pharmaceutical industry regulation undermines NICE drugs appraisal work Sweeping changes to Scottish drug approval system MPs slam government for its poor management of Cancer Drugs Fund Plan to speed up drug approval process 75% of reappraised CDF drugs approved for NHS |
Statins may influence risk of Alzheimer’s
Risk reduction depends on specific statin and ethnicity and sex of patient Related items from OnMedica US doctor says FDA should have withdrawn rosuvastatin Detection bias may be behind memory loss with statins Statins might not cut colorectal cancer risk after all Major review clears statins US expert group updates statins recommendations |
Two years of silence
Full impact of devastated health services in north-eastern Nigeria revealed by WHO report
WHO steps up response in Aleppo and demands that health personnel be protected
WHO has delivered 12 medical shipments of life-saving medicines and medical supplies to the stricken city, sufficient to treat more than 290 000 patients. The medical supplies distributed to 11 public hospitals and 23 primary health care centres, include trauma and surgical supplies, hygiene kits, IV fluids, antibiotics, chronic disease, psychotropic and paediatric medicines, as well as other essential medical equipment. via WHO news Read More Here..
NICE recommends old-fashioned temperature check over other methods
Infrared ear thermometers and forehead strips should not be used before, during or after surgery |
'Dog saliva almost killed me'
Over a third of GPs in Scotland plan to retire in the next five years
Retirement plans revealed in workforce survey conducted by the BMA Related items from OnMedica Four in five GPs plan to quit or cut back their hours in next five years General Practice creaking under strain of workload A third of GPs plan to retire within the next five years Third of general practice nurses set to retire by 2020 GMC warns of 'state of unease' amongst doctors |
Pokemon Go: Exercise impact 'short-lived'
Tuesday, 13 December 2016
Antibacterial products may help bacteria beat antibiotics
Viruses may have evolved to hit men hard but go easy on women
Sniff Out Alzheimer’s Risk with Powerful New Smell Test
A provocative new report suggests a low-cost, non-invasive testing protocol may identify older individuals at increased risk of Alzheimer’s disease.
Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) investigators discovered testing individuals’ ability to recognize, remember and distinguish between odors provided similar recommendations as genetic, imaging, and more detailed memory tests.
The report — suggesting testing of both olfactory and cognitive abilities as a means to designate candidates for treatments designed to halt or slow Alzheimer’s symptom development — has been published online in Annals of Neurology.
Mark Albers, M.D., Ph.D., of the MGH Department of Neurology, the principal investigator and corresponding author of the report says:
“There is increasing evidence that the neurodegeneration behind Alzheimer’s disease starts at least 10 years before the onset of memory symptoms. The development of a digitally-enabled, affordable, accessible, and non-invasive means to identify healthy individuals who are at risk is a critical step to developing therapies that slow down or halt Alzheimer’s disease progression.”
It is well-known that brain circuits that process olfactory information can be affected by Alzheimer’s disease, and several studies have documented a diminished ability to identify odors in affected individuals.
Other studies have associated deficits in odor identification with established Alzheimer’s disease biomarkers and with greater rates of cognitive decline. However, the most commonly used test of olfactory ability — the University of Pennsylvania Smell Identification Test — has a number of limitations and does not take into account the great variation in olfactory ability among healthy individuals.
In the research the MGH team used a battery of four tests to addresses both olfactory and cognitive functions:
- In the OPID (Odor Percept IDentification)-10 test, participants are presented with a battery of 10 odors — menthol, clove, leather, strawberry, lilac, pineapple, smoke, soap, grape, or lemon. After experiencing each odor for two seconds, they are asked whether the scent is familiar and then asked to choose among four words — from the names listed above — for the one that best describes the odor.
- Participants then complete the Odor Awareness Scale (OAS), a previously validated questionnaire that assesses their overall attention to environmental odors and how they are affected emotionally and behaviorally by scents.
- The OPID-20 test includes the 10 odors previously presented and an additional 10 — banana, garlic, cherry, baby powder, grass, fruit punch, peach, chocolate, dirt, and orange. Participants are first asked whether a presented odor was included in the OPID-10 test and then asked which word best describes the odor. Their ability to remember odors from the first test determines their POEM (Percepts of Odor Episodic Memory) score.
- In the Odor Discrimination (OD) test, participants are presented with two consecutive odors and asked whether they were different or the same, a process that is repeated 12 times with different paired scents.
The study recruited 183 participants, most of whom were enrolled in ongoing studies at the MGH-based Massachusetts Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center.
At the time of the olfactory testing, 70 were cognitively normal, 74 tested normal on cognitive tests but were personally concerned about their cognitive abilities, 29 had mild cognitive impairment, and 10 had been diagnosed with possible or probable Alzheimer’s disease.
As part of the studies they were enrolled in, all of them had comprehensive medical and neurological examinations — including annual tests of their memory and cognitive abilities — and several had brain imaging studies of Alzheimer’s-associated factors.
Results of the OPID-20 test significantly differentiated among the four groups of participants, and those results correlated with the thinning of two brain regions — the hippocampus and the entorhinal cortex — previously associated with Alzheimer’s risk.
Participants’ ability to remember a previously presented aroma, as reflected in the POEM score, also showed significant differences between the two cognitively normal groups and participants with Alzheimer’s disease, whose results were no better than chance.
Because the ability of normal individuals to recognize and discriminate between odors can vary by as much as 40 times, the POEM scores of the two cognitively normal groups were compared with what would have been predicted based on their ability to identify and differentiate between odors, as reflected in the OAS and OD tests.
That comparison determined whether each individual was a good or poor POEM performer, and poor POEM performers were more likely to have the variant of the APOE gene associated with increased Alzheimer’s risk. While results of an annual test of short-term memory improved year-to-year for the good POEM performers, no such improvement was seen among the poor performers, who also showed thinning of the entorhinal cortex.
Albers and his colleagues are currently recruiting participants for a larger-scale study to validate these results:
“It is well recognized that early diagnosis and intervention are likely to produce the most effective therapeutic strategy for Alzheimer’s disease — preventing the onset or the progression of symptoms. If these results hold up, this sort of inexpensive, noninvasive screening could help us identify the best candidates for novel therapies to prevent the development of symptoms of this tragic disease.”
This guest article originally appeared on PsychCentral.com: Sniff Test May Detect Risk for Alzheimer’s by Rick Nauert PhD.
REFERENCES
Dhilla Albers, A., Asafu-Adjei, J., Delaney, M.K., Kelly, K.E., Gomez-Isla, T., Blacker, D., Johnson, K.A., Sperling, R.A., Hyman, B.T., Betensky, R.A., Hastings, L. and Albers, M.W. (2016) ‘Episodic memory of odors stratifies Alzheimer biomarkers in normal elderly’, Annals of Neurology, . doi: 10.1002/ana.24792.
via Brain Blogger Read More Here..Tourette's tics
Malaria control improves for vulnerable in Africa, but global progress off-track
£300,000 NHS dialysis unit fraudsters jailed
Manager and contractors charged Epsom and St Helier Trust for bogus work Related items from OnMedica NHS England vows to tackle conflicts of interest Operating theatre fraudsters ordered to repay £650,000 Financial fraud costs the NHS more than £5 billion a year Fraud doctor jailed |