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US female gun violence victims less likely to die than male victims despite same injury severity

They also have better outcomes, with fewer complications after hospital admission  Female victims of gun violence in the US are less likely to die than their male counterparts, despite having similar injury severity, finds a 7-year analysis of a US national injury database, published in the open access journal Trauma Surgery ...

2024-06-04T10:23:23+01:0013 December 2023|Press release, Trauma Surgery and Acute Care Open|

Twice daily electrical stimulation may boost mental processes in Alzheimer’s disease

Non-invasive technology (tDCS) may fire up brain’s plasticity, enabling new neural networks Twice daily non-invasive electrical stimulation of the brain may boost mental processes (cognitive function) in people with Alzheimer’s disease, suggest the results of a small clinical trial published online in the open access journal General Psychiatry. The technology, known ...

2024-06-04T10:23:23+01:006 December 2023|General Psychiatry, Press release|

Covid vaccination before infection strongly linked to reduced risk of developing long covid

Unvaccinated individuals almost four times as likely to be diagnosed than those vaccinated before first infection Receiving at least one dose of a covid-19 vaccine before the first infection is strongly associated with a reduced risk of developing post-covid-19 condition, commonly known as long covid, finds a study published by The ...

2024-06-04T10:23:24+01:0023 November 2023|Press release, The BMJ|

Renting rather than owning a private sector home linked to faster ‘biological ageing’

Renting rather than owning a private sector home linked to faster ‘biological ageing’ Impact of renting vs outright ownership double that of being out of work vs employment Effects reversible, emphasising role of housing policy in health improvement Renting a private sector home, falling repeatedly into arrears, and exposure to ...

2024-08-05T16:38:04+01:0011 October 2023|Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health, Press release|

Flawed body of research indicates true ‘long covid’ risk likely exaggerated

Flawed body of research indicates true ‘long COVID’ risk likely exaggerated Overly broad definitions and lack of comparator groups have distorted risk, say researchers Leading to increased public anxiety and healthcare spend; misdiagnoses; diversion of funds Major flaws in the current body of published research on ‘long COVID’ have likely ...

2024-06-04T10:23:28+01:0026 September 2023|BMJ Evidence Based Medicine, Press release|

Doctors with long covid deserve more support

Doctors who risked their lives for others say “we’ve been left to rot” Calls for long covid to be recognised as an occupational illness Doctors and other healthcare workers whose lives have been destroyed by long covid deserve more support from the government and NHS, reports The BMJ today. Freelance journalist Adele ...

2024-06-04T10:23:28+01:0021 September 2023|Press release, The BMJ|
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