Late Breaking News
April 2009 Issue
VA Pilot Program Focuses on Caring for the Caregiver
WASHINGTON—While dementia patients typically receive the bulk of their clinical care in hospitals and nursing facilities, it is often the family members and other at-home caregivers who bear the brunt of the stress created by their loved ones’ disease.
Alzheimer’s Disease and Dementia Significant Concerns for IHS
WASHINGTON—Dementia refers to a group of illnesses that involve memory, behavior, learning and communicating problems. Although dementia is rare in people under the age of 60, the risk for dementia increases as a person ages.
Mental Health Impacts Physical Health, Experts Say
WASHINGTON—Mental illnesses and addiction disorders are chronic illnesses with significant burden, disability and mortality, according to officials who spoke at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s 20th National Conference on Chronic Disease Prevention and Control held in February.
Environment and Public Health Tightly Linked, Experts Say
WASHINGTON—Understanding the link between environment and public health is critical in moving the public health agenda forward. “More and more we need to learn—as people who care about promoting health—to think about energy and transportation and land use because those are issues that are very pertinent to health,” said Howard Frumkin, M.D., director of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Center for Environmental Health.
Infections Found in VA Patients Exposed to Contaminated Equipment
According to Department of Veterans Affairs, 16 patients who were exposed to contaminated equipment at VA medical centers have tested positive for viral infections including hepatitis.
Suicide Rate Among Tribal Youth Twice National Average
WASHINGTON—Representatives from Indian Country asked Congress last month for more resources to deal with the staggering number of youth suicides that occur on Indian reservations.
DoD and VA Synchronize Product Data
One of the challenges the Departments of Defense and Veterans Affairs face when collaborating on a joint initiative is the interoperability of our respective data systems.
Clinical Briefs
DNA Test for Two Types of HPV Approved
The first DNA test that identifies the two types of human papillomavirus that cause the majority of cervical cancers among women in the United States was approved last month by the Food and Drug Administration.
CDC: Public Health Organizations Must Focus on Protecting Cognitive Function
WASHINGTON— How can cognitive health be maintained and protected as we age?
Legislators Question the Delays in Creation of Vision Centers of Excellence
WASHINGTON—Delays in the creation of joint Department of Veterans Affairs and Department of Defense Vision Centers of Excellence have legislators wondering what the cause is, whether it is a question of funding, direction or the will to act.
2011 Directory
