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  • Pharmacology Watch: The FDA and Merck Fielding Concerns About Vioxx

    Erythromycin and the Risk of Sudden Death; Vaccine Shortage Putting Americans At Risk; FDA Actions.
  • Special Feature: Sedation During Mechanical Ventilation

    Clinicians have been criticized for prescribing too much, as well as too little, sedation for critically ill patients, especially patients who require mechanical ventilation. Over-sedation may prolong weaning from ventilatory support, increase ICU and hospital lengths of stay, and predispose to development of ventilator-associated pneumonia. Inadequate sedation predisposes the patient to pain and discomfort and can evoke a stress response that compromises recovery.
  • Visiting Hours in the ICU: Too Restrictive? Too Liberal?

    In this article, a leading expert in the area of improving health care quality argues that restricting visiting hours in ICUs is neither caring, compassionate, nor necessary.
  • Internet use for dating tied to sexual risk taking

    The phenomenon of people searching Internet sites for sex partners apparently is common among the general population and not just among men who have sex with men (MSM), according to a new study. A random digit-dialing survey of more than 900 people in Seattle between the ages of 18 and 39 found that 18% of those surveyed had searched for sex partners on the Internet, and 3% had met with sex partners whom they contacted on-line.
  • Access to affordable drugs hinges on competition

    Developing nations with greater market competition for antiretrovirals and more generic drugs tend to have cheaper antiretrovirals available through the private sector, according to a new study.
  • HCV rates outpacing HIV in NYC, study finds 

    New research in New York City shows that injection drug users (IDUs) are acquiring hepatitis C (HCV) at a faster rate than HIV. Investigators looked for a correlation between HCV and HIV among IDUs in the Bronx, Harlem, and other areas, and were surprised to find that where there were high HCV rates, there were not necessarily high HIV rates.
  • Study finds depression higher among inpatients

    When New Orleans investigators analyzed data about HIV patients who were hospitalized and those who werent, what they found was surprising: Only a few significant differences existed between these groups, and one of the most prominent was that depression was more common among the hospitalized group.
  • Assembly inhibitors offer hope for future treatment

    Some very early research into a nontraditional target holds promise for a new line of defense against HIV in decades to come. New compounds that are tentatively being called maturation or assembly inhibitors provide a very early target in HIVs activity within the body, researchers say.
  • AIDS Alert International: Programs aim to reduce MTCT in poor nations

    There are no easy answers to preventing HIV transmission between HIV-infected mothers and their nursing infants, but a number of programs have developed strategies for reducing the risk among women in poor nations.
  • Attention HIV doctors: You’re doing a good job 

    HIV patients surveyed about their medical care reported overall satisfaction, although many continued to experience side effects, a new study reports. They still said they were satisfied with their treatment and care and the physicians decisions, says Jeffrey Smith, director of clinical research at the American Foundation for AIDS Research (amFar) in New York City.