313 research outputs found
Child care and preschool pandemic influenza planning checklist
2 pages.Checklist to prepare child care facilities for an outbreak of pandemic influenza
Faith-based & community organizations pandemic influenza preparedness checklist
2 pages.Checklist to prepare churches and community service organizations for an outbreak of pandemic influenza
Medical offices and clinics pandemic influenza planning checklist
5 pages.Checklist to prepare medical facilities for an outbreak of pandemic influenza
School district (K-12) pandemic influenza planning checklist
3 pages.Checklist to prepare schools (K-12) for an outbreak of pandemic influenza
Emergency medical service and non-emergent (medical) transport organizations pandemic influenza planning checklist
4 pages.Checklist to prepare paramedics for an outbreak of pandemic influenza
Colleges and universities pandemic influenza planning checklist
3 pages.Checklist to prepare colleges and universities for an outbreak of pandemic influenza
Home health care services pandemic influenza planning checklist
4 pages.Checklist to prepare home health care workers for an outbreak of pandemic influenza
Behavioral determinants of successful early melanoma detection
BACKGROUND. Reduced melanoma mortality should result from an improved understanding of modifiable factors related to early detection. The authors of this report surveyed newly diagnosed patients to identify differences in prediagnosis behavioral and medical care factors associated with thinner versus thicker melanoma. METHODS. In total, 566 adults with invasive melanoma completed questionnaires within 3 months of diagnosis on demographics, health care access, skin selfâexamination (SSE), and physician skin examination (PSE) practices in the year before diagnosis. SSE was measured by us e of a melanoma picture aid and routine examination of some/all body sites versus none. Patientâreported partial or fullâbody PSE also was assessed. Melanoma thickness was dichotomized at 1 mm. RESULTS. Patient ranged in age from 18 years to 99 years, and 61% were men. The median tumor thickness was 1.25 mm, and 321 tumors (57%) were >1 mm thick. Thinner tumors (â€1 mm) were associated with age â€60 years ( P = .0002), women ( P = .0127), higher education level ( P = .0122), and physician discovery ( P †.0001). Patients who used a melanoma picture aid and performed routine SSE were more likely to have thinner tumors than those who did not (odds ratio [OR], 2.66; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.48â4.80). Fullâbody PSE was associated with thinner tumors (OR, 2.51; 95% CI, 1.62â3.87), largely because of the effect of PSE in men aged >60 years (OR, 4.09 95% CI, 1.88â8.89). CONCLUSIONS. SSE and PSE were identified as complementary early detection strategies, particularly in men aged >60 years, in whom both partial and fullâbody PSE were associated with thinner tumors. Given the high rates of physician access, PSE may be a more practical approach for successful early detection in this subgroup with highest mortality. Cancer 2012. © 2011 American Cancer Society. Physician skin examination (PSE) in the year before melanoma diagnosis is strongly associated with thinner tumors in men aged >60 years. Improving rates of PSE in this highârisk group is likely to result in earlier detection of melanoma.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/92369/1/26707_ftp.pd
Evidence for physical activity guidelines as a public health intervention: efficacy, effectiveness and harm â a critical policy sciences approach.
BACKGROUND: Evidence for the efficacy of physical activity in conferring health benefits is unequivocal, and this has led national governments to produce guideline recommendations for physical activity levels in their populations.
AIM: To evaluate how far evidence for the efficacy, effectiveness and comparative effectiveness of current physical activity guideline recommendations as a public health intervention is considered in developing guideline recommendations, including a consideration of the extent to which, in comparison to alternatives, they may result in harm.
METHODS: Utilising a critical policy sciences approach, national physical activity guideline recommendations in Australia, the UK and the USA, and those of the World Health Organisation, are examined, along with their stated underlying evidence bases, to analyse what evidence has been considered, how it has been interpreted, for what purpose, and with what outcomes.
RESULTS: All current guidelines recommend 150 minutes moderate physical activity per week. However, efficacy evidence shows 60 minutes is sufficient to provide some health benefits. None of the guidelines consider effectiveness evidence nor potential effectiveness. No evidence could be found for the effectiveness of a recommendation of 150 minutes in improving population health, and none of the guidelines consider whether a recommendation at a lower but still sufficient level of efficacy (e.g. 60 minutes) would be a more effective public health intervention.
CONCLUSIONS: Evidence considered in drawing up physical activity guidelines relates only to the efficacy of physical activity in conferring health benefits. The lack of effectiveness evidence, the failure to consider potential effectiveness, and related un-evidenced value judgements call into question the claim that the guidelines are evidence-based. Because neither effectiveness nor comparative effectiveness is considered, it is possible that current guidelines of 150 minutes may result in net harm to population health in comparison to the opportunity cost of recommendations at alternative levels
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