Monday, October 6, 2008

Hepatitis B Vaccinated Children Not At Increased Risk Of MS

Hepatitis B Vaccinated Children Not At Increased Risk Of MS

The majority of children vaccinated against hepatitis B are not at an increased risk of developing multiple sclerosis (MS).

The study based in France involved 349 children with MS and 2,941 children without the disease. The children were all under the age of 16. A total of 24.4 percent of the children with MS were vaccinated for hepatitis B in the three years before the study, compared to 27.3 percent for the children without MS.

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Family History Of Brain Tumors Linked To Increased Risk Of Brain Cancer

People with a family history of cancerous brain tumors appear to be at higher risk of developing the same kind of tumors compared to people with no such family history.

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Efforts To Improve Sexual Rights, Curb Spread Of HIV

A group of women in Namibia recently called for efforts to improve their sexual rights in an effort to curb the spread of HIV in the country, the New Era reports. "Women should know about their sexual rights; it is very important, especially for women in rural areas where men, more often than not, abuse women," advocate Vicky Schimming said at a recent workshop on sexual rights, culture and HIV/AIDS.

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Understanding Kawasaki Disease

Kawasaki Disease is an acute vasculitis (disorder involving inflammation of one or more blood vessels) which typically affects young children. Most often, the patients are young boys or girls in the first three years of life. After the age of 10 years, Kawasaki Disease is extremely rare, and the diagnosis should be regarded with suspicion.

Symptoms

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Ugandan President Calls For Increased HIV/AIDS Prevention Strategies

Citing waning efforts to fight HIV/AIDS in Uganda, President Yoweri Museveni on Thursday called for increased prevention strategies, particularly concerning mother-to-child transmission, Uganda's New Vision reports. Museveni was speaking at the opening of the $2.5 million Baylor Children's Centre of Excellence at Mulago Hospital -- which will provide care for children living with HIV/AIDS and was funded by Baylor College of Medicine, CDC and John Damonti, president of the Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation.

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