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Quality Data Made Accessible To Clinical Teams
NHS clinical teams will have access to data showing their performance against a set of more than 200 indicators of high quality care in the NHS in one place. It is the next phase in the drive to help NHS professionals improve the quality of care they deliver to patients, and will also support providers and commissioners of NHS services.
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Helping Youth Avoid Risky Behavior: Family-Based Program
Children"s behavior is determined, in part, by their genes and by the settings in which they develop. A new longitudinal study describes how a family-based prevention program helped rural African American teens avoid engaging in risky behaviors, even if some of them may have had a genetic risk to do so.
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Civilian Doctors, Not Just Those In Combat Settings, Urgently Need Training On Blast Injuries
The increasing incidence of terrorist attacks means that doctors in civilian settings, as well as those in combat operations, need training on blast injuries. The issues surrounding these frequently devastating injuries are discussed in a Seminar published Online First and in an upcoming edition of The Lancet, written by Dr Stephen Wolf, Department of Emergency Medicine, Denver Health Medical Center, Denver, CO, USA, and colleagues.
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Minimally Invasive Surgery For Esophageal Cancer Reduces Mortality Rates, Length Of Hospital Stays

Patients with esophageal cancer who require surgery may benefit from having minimally invasive surgery instead of an open esophagectomy, or removal of the esophagus, according to a University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute (UPCI) phase II study. The results will be presented May 31 at the 45th annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) in Orlando, Fla. "Esophageal cancer rates are rising more rapidly than for any other cancer in world," said James D. Luketich, M.D., associate professor of surgery at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine and lead investigator and co-director of UPCI"s Lung and Esophageal Cancer Program. "In the last two decades alone, esophageal cancer cases have grown more than 400 percent." This is the first time minimally invasive esophagectomies (MIE) have been assessed in a multicenter study, although single institution studies have previously demonstrated success with MIEs. The study enrolled 106 patients from 16 institutions across the country. Of those patients, 99 qualified for and received an MIE. While overall survival rates remained the same whether a patient received an MIE or an open procedure, surgical mortality rates were lower and the hospital stays shorter for MIE patients. Co-investigator Arjun Pennathur, M.D., assistant professor of surgery at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, will present this work at the meeting. "The best treatment for this disease is removal of the tumor, and if we can do the necessary surgery with MIE and reduce recovery times and mortality rates, then patients will benefit enormously," he noted. Approximately 16,500 cases of esophageal cancer will be diagnosed in the United States this year. Although symptoms often don"t appear until the disease has progressed into later stages, an increasing number of patients are diagnosed with early stage disease, according to Dr. Luketich. "With this cancer on the rise, we need to do everything we can to increase patients" survival," he said. "MIE is an ideal surgery because it encourages faster healing and less time spent inside the hospital, where patients can be exposed to infections and other complications. The more quickly patients recover, the more quickly they can begin other forms of treatment they might need." This study was sponsored by the National Institutes of Health. University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute


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