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2012 Compendium
February 2010
Massive Effort Launched to Aid Haitian Earthquake Victims
WASHINGTON, DC—As part of the overall US relief effort for Haiti, the US military began a massive effort last month to provide assistance in the wake of a deadly earthquake that killed thousands of people and left a staggering number of others injured and in need of help. Full Article
2010 DoD-VA Suicide Prevention Conference
WASHINGTON, DC—The Defense Centers of Excellence for Psychological Health and Traumatic Brain Injury and VA held a conference last month examining suicide and suicide prevention. “For all of our sophisticated knowledge, we still do not know all there is to know about preventing a needless death from occurring,” Full Article
Veterans Service Organizations Invited to Discuss Legislative Priorities
WASHINGTON, DC—In what is becoming an annual ritual, the House VA Committee invited dozens of veterans service organizations for a roundtable discussion on their legislative priorities. Topping the list was the growing backlog of disability claims, Full Article
Webinar Provides Training for Healthcare Responders
A webinar last month provided medical responders with an understanding of the common types of injuries (crush injury and syndrome, wound care and management, tetanus) and public health challenges encountered in the immediate phase of the Haiti earthquake response. Full Article
DoD-VA Suicide Prevention Conference: Compassion Fatigue Can Plague Healthcare Providers
WASHINGTON, DC—Mental healthcare providers in the military are not immune from developing compassion fatigue, experts said at the 2010 DoD/VA Suicide Prevention Conference held last month. “We are not immune from compassion fatigue by a long shot,” said Capt Joan Hunter, USPHS, RN, who is the director of psychological health for the National Guard Bureau. Full Article
Hypertension Greater Risk in IHS with High Prevalence of Type 2 Diabetes
WASHINGTON, DC—About 60 million people in the US have high blood pressure according to the CDC. High blood pressure is a major risk factor for heart disease, the leading cause of death in the US. Often referred to as the “silent killer,” hypertension usually has no noticeable warning signs or symptoms until other serious problems arise. Full Article
Smoking Rates Among US Adults Remain Stalled in 2008
WASHINGTON, DC—Smoking rates among US adults remained stalled in 2008, halting the nation’s progress toward ending the tobacco epidemic, according to the CDC. Full Article
Literature review: Psychiatry and Oncology
This new section of U.S. Medicine will bring to our readers highlights from the peer-reviewed literature and clinical trials of topics that are of most universal interest to the readers of this multidisciplinary magazine. Full Article
Veterans May Seek Crisis Counseling Via Internet Chat
washington, dc—The VA and Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) want to take advantage of new opportunities afforded by evolving technology to reach those who are suicidal, officials said last month at the 2010 DoD/VA Suicide Prevention Conference. “It has been part of our effort to try to adapt ourselves [to changing technologies],” said SAMHSA suicide prevention expert Richard McKeon, PhD. Full Article
Lack of Pediatric Formula Leaves Physicians Guessing
GAITHERSBURG, MD—There is an admonition that pediatricians can frequently be heard to say to other physicians: “Children are not just small adults.” This is no truer than when dealing with prescription drugs. Children are not immune to serious illness and disease—the kinds of disease that require powerful pharmaceuticals. But many times no pediatric formula exists and parents and physicians are left to play a guessing game Full Article
Most Popular Stories
- Many Healthcare Providers Lose VA Retention Bonuses
- Federal Medicine Organizational Meetings — Tarred with the Same Brush?
- Despite Formulary, High-Cost Diabetes Drug Use Varies Widely Across VA Facilities
- Report Says Administration Faces Hard Choices For Veterans Programs
- Physician Overcomes TBI to Return to Active-Duty Medicine
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