Popular Articles

Recovery Act Funding Supports 23 Fellowships For Early Career Scientists
Funding from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act will allow the National Institutes of Health to create jobs for early career scientists and increase the ranks of researchers and clinicians working in the global health field. With $3 million in funding over the next 18 months, the NIH"s Fogarty International Center will be able to support 23 additional participants in its Clinical Research Training Scholars and Fellows Program.
generic viagra online
Medical Acoustics Highlights Of The 157th ASA Meeting, May 18-22 In Portland
Bionic ears, bubbles, blast waves and biofilms
News of the day
White House Reassures Drug CEOs: Reimportation Could Be 'Unnecessary'
The Wall Street Journal reports: "Industry representatives met at the White House Tuesday with officials to consider specifics of a cost-saving agreement the industry reached last month with health-care negotiators and to discuss other concerns that the pharmaceutical industry has with the larger health-care overhaul being considered by Congress. As a presidential candidate, President Barack Obama endorsed re-importation, an idea the industry opposes. White House officials have told the industry if the larger health care bill passes, the cost savings will be so great that reimportation will be unnecessary, according to Billy Tauzin, president of the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America." Some of the pharmaceutical companies represented at the Tuesday meeting included Merck & Co., Pfizer Inc., Amgen Inc., Abbott Laboratories and AstraZeneca.
Oncology

Report On The Experience Of Patients In Black And Minority Ethnic Groups, UK

The following statistics were released by the Department of Health: Report on the experience of patients in Black and Minority Ethnic groups, based on data up to and including 2008 patient surveys. This report produced by the Department of Health with input and advice from the Care Quality Commission, examines variations in the self-reported views of NHS patients from different ethnic groups. Results are presented from the 2008/09 adult inpatient, 2008/09 emergency department, 2007/08 primary care services and 2007/08 community mental health patient surveys. These findings give us insight into the areas of NHS service provision where experience of the service looks different to patients from different ethnic groups. Results are based on data from the National Patient Survey programme, led by the Care Quality Commission. Main findings - This is the second time this analysis has been undertaken (the first BME report was published in May 2008) and overall there are relatively few changes between the previous analysis and this one. The same general patterns are apparent, both in terms of results for groups and when looking at particular sets of questions. - Results show a range of variations between black and minority ethnic (BME) groups and their white British counterparts. Where differences do exist, most are negative, indicating that BME groups are less likely to report a positive experience. However many areas show no difference with some showing a positive difference. - Patients from the White Irish group were more likely to give positive responses, across the majority of questions, compared with the White British baseline. - Patients from the Asian and Chinese/Other groups were less likely to give positive responses compared with the White British group). - Patients from the White Other and Mixed groups were again typically less likely to give positive responses, but less consistently than the Asian and Chinese groups. - Results for Black patients were mixed, although they were slightly less likely to give positive responses, particularly in the primary care and A&E surveys. - BME groups tended to be less positive about questions relating to "access and waiting" or to "better information and more choice". - Across survey settings, differences were seen most in the primary care survey, where all BME groups (except the White Irish) were less likely to give positive responses. Very few differences were found in the community mental health survey. Detailed data can be found here. Department of Health, UK


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):