Articles Tagged With: screening
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Task Force Issues Cervical Cancer Screening Guidance: What Changes Can Clinicians Expect?
Ages 30-65: Cervical cytology every three years or HPV testing every five years.
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‘Talk. Test. Treat.’ Aimed at Syphilis
There are more reported cases of primary and secondary syphilis in the United States now than there have been in more than 20 years. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has issued a call to action to reverse the trend.
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Task Force Issues Draft Guidance on Ovarian Screening
The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force has issued a draft recommendation statement on ovarian screening, finding that the potential harms of screening outweigh the benefits.
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Science Considers Women’s Attitudes and Beliefs on Pelvic Screening
Researchers at the University of California, San Francisco, have looked at the effect of providing healthy women with information about pelvic examinations, including a professional society’s strong recommendation against them.
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Ovarian Cancer Screening: Mortality Results
This paper is a 15-year median follow-up of extended mortality of the ovarian cancer screening portion of the Prostate, Lung, Colon, Ovary trial.
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Infectious Disease Alert Updates
Wee Bacterium Parasitizes Other Oral Bacteria; How Safe Is Your Honey?; Benefits of TB Screening Confirmed
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Task Force Recommends Syphilis Screening For Nonpregnant Persons at Increased Risk
Statistics are troubling: The number of cases of primary and secondary syphilis has been increasing since 2000.
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Discussing Firearms with Emergency Department Patients: Why, Who, Where, When, and What
This article explores questions around physician firearm safety counseling — including why emergency physicians might do it, who might benefit, where and when to consider it, and what such counseling should include (along with what resources exist for emergency physicians and for patients).
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Screening for Ovarian Cancer: Helpful or Harmful?
Ovarian cancer has the highest mortality of any of the gynecologic cancers. Due to the poor prognosis associated with this disease, researchers have been searching for 50 years for an early detection tool.
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It Works: Suicide Screening in the ED
Discussing suicide risk in the ED has been successful in identifying suicidal patients who might not have been identified any other way.