27 April 2011

Ontario government-paid fees fall by 1.25% over 40 years.

GP government fee falls by 1.25% yearly for 40 years

OHIP fee A007 (Intermediate assessment - 2 diagnosis) $33.10

OMA recommended fee $65.90

At start of OHIP in 1970 OHIP fee was equal to OMA recommended fee

In 40 years OHIP fee has fallen by 1.25 % yearly.

OHIP hourly rate $33.10 x 3 = $99.30
PRIVATE $65.90 x 3 = $197.90

A reason why many GPs`are moving into NON-OHIP practice: COSMETIC MEDICINE inc HAIR TRANSPLANT; ORTHOTICS; PSYCHOANALYSIS (psychiatry covered by OHIP);SPORTS MEDICINE; & EYE TESTING 20y-64y(not OHIP covered in Ont. except for Welfare clients and those with established eye disease)

25 April 2011

OMA CEO leaving Feb 2012: Search by ODGERS BERNDTSON (J.STONEHOUSE)

Present CEO Jonathan GUSS LLB was Canadian diplomat in The Hague.

OMA well situated in fashionable Yorkville. 150 Bloor. at Avenue road. Next to 4-Seasons Hotel and Hyatt.

24 April 2011

Canadian PROVINCIAL LEGAL "DRINKING" AGE

18[1]Alberta, Manitoba, and Quebec, but underage drinking by 16-17 year olds under parental supervision is permitted in Manitoba and under parental supervision in a residence or a temporary residence in Alberta.[5]
19 [1]In Ontario, Saskatchewan, British Columbia, Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, Northwest Territories, Yukon, and Nunavut, the legal drinking age is 19. Underage drinking under parental supervision is permitted, with some restrictions, on one's own property in the provinces of New Brunswick[6] and Ontario[7] and at home in the provinces of Prince Edward Island, British Columbia[8] and Saskatchewan.[9] In British Columbia, only children of the supervising parents, not any other minors such as guests, are allowed underage drinking. Consumption of alcohol in another person's home is subject to other laws.[10]


(NB Montreal's McGILL UNIVERSITY is  popular among Anglophone students; also excellent location in city)

23 April 2011

GLAUKOS,California: iSTENT

Technology Overview

iStent®  Trabecular Micro-Bypass overview
The iStent is the first ab interno micro-bypass implant for the treatment of glaucoma.  The investigational device is currently undergoing FDA review and is not available for use in the United States. The iStent is CE marked and available for use in select countries in Europe.  In Canada, the iStent was recently approved for use.
The iStent is custom designed for optimal fit and retention within Schlemm’s canal. The device is made of surgical grade nonferromagnetic titanium, weighs 60 µg with a snorkel bore diameter of 120 µm, and has measurements of 0.5 mm x 0.25 mm x 1.0 mm.

Measuring approximately 1 mm in length, the iStent is the smallest medical device ever implanted into the human body.
Mechanism of action
Elevated or uncontrolled IOP is the number one risk factor for glaucoma. The primary cause of elevated eye pressure in patients with primary open-angle glaucoma is abnormality of the trabecular meshwork which creates resistance to outflow and back-up of aqueous humor. Up to 75% of resistance to outflow is located in the trabecular meshwork.1
Implantation of the iStent bypasses the trabecular meshwork and is placed in Schlemm’s canal near the lower nasal quadrants. The lower nasal quadrants have a large presence of collector channels. The iStent creates a patent bypass through the trabecular meshwork and into Schlemm’s canal; thereby reestablishing physiological outflow.2,3
Future innovations
Glaukos is developing a portfolio of micro-bypass stents to improve upon the safety and efficacy outcomes of minimally invasive, surgical implant procedures. The clinical objective of the Glaukos product portfolio is to provide patients across all stages of glaucoma with minimally invasive, sustainable therapies while decreasing the risk for vision loss.  Advances in delivery devices and targeted stent placement within Schlemm’s canal may further optimize micro-bypass stent therapy and improve the efficiency of the procedure. Our goal is to provide physicians with a titratable, minimally invasive, surgical system to reduce IOP and alleviate medication dependence for their patients.
References:
  1. Rosenquist R, Epstein D, Melamed S, Johnson M, et al. Outflow resistance of enucleated human eyes at two different perfusion pressures and different extents of trabeculotomy. Curr Eye Res. 1989;8:1233-1240.
  2. Dvorak-Theobald G. Schlemm's Canal: Its Anastomoses and Anatomic Relations. Trans Am Ophthalmol Soc. 1934;32:574-595.
  3. Bahler CK, Smedley GT, Zhou J, et al. Trabecular bypass stents decrease intraocular pressure in cultured human anterior segments. Am J Ophthalmol. 2004;138:988-994.

THAILAND: MALARIA

ProMED-mail to promed-edr
show details 17:49 (15 hours ago)

MALARIA - THAILAND: (YALA PROVINCE)
***********************************
A ProMED-mail post
<http://www.promedmail.org/>
ProMED-mail is a program of the
International Society for Infectious Diseases
<http://www.isid.org/>
Date: Fri 22 Apr 2011
Source: The Nation (Bangkok) [edited]
<http://www.nationmultimedia.com/2011/04/22/national/Malaria-remains-threat-in-border-areas-30153662.html>

Malaria increase in Yala Province, southern Thailand
----------------------------------------------------
More than 2000 people in Thailand were infected with malaria in the
past 3 months, the Public Health Ministry said yesterday [21 Apr
2011].
Malaria remains a threat in the deep south, especially Yala Province,
where the number of malaria cases has increased from 30 a year to 3000
annually over the past several years because of the unrest in the
area, Vector-Borne Disease Bureau director Dr Wichai Satimai said.
"Medical personnel could not enter villages to provide medicine and
equipment to prevent infection, because of the unrest during the past
few years," he said. He was speaking at a workshop on malaria
prevention and control for high-risk groups living along Thailand's
borders.
He said the number of Thais diagnosed with malaria from January to
March was 2320. But when compared with the same period last year, the
figure had decreased 44 per cent.
Meanwhile, the number of foreigners infected with malaria in Thailand
this year was 3220, a 19 per cent decrease from the same period last
year. Last year, about 24 816 people were infected with malaria. Of
this number, about 15 181 cases were people living along the
Thailand-Burma border.
Dr Charles Delacollette, manager of the World Health Organization's
Mekong Malaria Programme, said he was worried about the spread of
infection along the Thai-Burmese border, as the number of malaria
cases in Burma had increased to more than 400 000 in 2009.
"If there is no collaboration between Thailand and Burma, they are
going to fail in disease prevention," he said. However, there is a
declining interest among government and donors in malaria control and
prevention.
Wichai said reductions to public health staff nationwide due to
reorganisation of the health system and poor community participation
and involvement had led to inadequate public awareness of the malaria
problem. Inflexibility in the malaria surveillance system, which is
unable to respond to changing situations, is another obstacle to
controlling the disease, he said.

22 April 2011

AUDIENCE

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148
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17
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16
Germany
5
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5
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4
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3
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3

(Please click on advertisers to pay for blog research time)

LEPTOSPIROSIS: NEW SOUTH WALES

 Reply |ProMED-mail to promed-ahead-e.
show details 08:20 (25 minutes ago)

LEPTOSPIROSIS - AUSTRALIA (02): (NEW SOUTH WALES)
*************************************************
A ProMED-mail post
<http://www.promedmail.org/>
ProMED-mail is a program of the
International Society for Infectious Diseases
<http://www.isid.org/>
Date: Thu 21 Apr 2011
Source: ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation) [edited]
<http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2011/04/21/3197611.htm>

An outbreak of a rare disease spread by mice has prompted a warning
by health authorities for local farmers to cover up. 4 cases of
leptospirosis have been confirmed in the Murrumbidgee Local Health
Network.
Public health director Tracey Oakman said the mouse borne disease has
similar symptoms to the common flu. Ms Oakman said farmers are
particularly susceptible in the mouse plague, as the infection happens
when open wounds come in contact with mouse urine. "It's really
important, if people do have cuts they can make sure they cover them,"
she said. "I know gloves are difficult for farmers, or bandages, but
try and avoid best you can coming into contact with soil and water and
mud that have urine in it."
Ms Oakman said it was not normally seen as far south in New South
Wales but mouse numbers are up this year [2011] because of all the
rain. It's important that people do go to the doctor with
leptospirosis because you can get kidney failure, jaundice, and
meningitis and bleeding on the lungs as a complication," she said.
"Many people do end up in hospital after it, so if they're unwell,
please go and see a doctor to diagnose it and a blood test will
diagnose it."

21 April 2011

RABIES in MADRAS (CHENNAI)

A ProMED-mail post
<http://www.promedmail.org/>
ProMED-mail is a program of the
International Society for Infectious Diseases
<http://www.isid.org/>
Date: Thu 21 Apr 2011
Source: The Times of India [edited]
<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/chennai/Rabies-kills-15-in-Chennai-corporation-in-denial/articleshow/8042206.cms>

Rabies kills 15 in Chennai, corporation in denial
-------------------------------------------------
The Chennai Corporation has hidden information on a serial killer.
Rabies, which has no effective treatment, has killed 15 people in the
city in the last 4 months.
The corporation has contributed to the problem by withholding
information about rabies deaths to agencies involved in fighting the
disease. The civic body has also not reported the 12 deaths in 2010
and 13 deaths in 2009.
Experts say that if the corporation had reported the deaths, animal
birth control and vaccination programmes could have been strengthened
for stray dogs in the suburbs. "We would have strengthened awareness
campaigns that would encourage people to take the vaccines after they
are bitten by an animal. These vaccines are available free at all
government and corporation hospitals," said the director of public
health Dr RT Porkai Pandian.
The rabies deaths occurred in the government hospitals in the city
and the death certificates were issued by the corporation. But the
civic body did not report the deaths to the state health department.
As a result, Chennai city's data on rabies death showed zero for the
last few years at the national level. In 2009, Tamil Nadu recorded 3
deaths against 263 across the country and in 2010 they recorded 2
deaths against 162 nationally (source: National Health Profile 2010).
The 25 rabies deaths in the city in the last 2 years went unreported.
Chennai Corporation says that they did not inform the state health
department as the victims weren't residents of Chennai. "People who
died in 2009 and 2010 lived in the suburban areas, where there is no
good vaccination programme for stray dogs. In effect, we have had only
2 cases this year," said Deputy commissioner of health Ashish Kumar.
But health care professionals find the corporation's defense "lame
and irresponsible." They say that the corporation's action is wrong in
terms of procedure and medical practice.
"It's alarming that Chennai has so many cases," said Porkai Pandian.
"If they register a rabies death in the city, no matter where the
victim belongs to, it's a death the civic body should own up," he
said. Rabies, a viral disease that is transmitted to humans from
animals, leads to death in all cases. It spreads when the infected
saliva enters the body through a bite.
Stray dogs affected with rabies in one area can quickly spread the
virus to other animals, experts say. "The virus has no borders," they
say, and add that a dog with rabies in Alandur can spread the
infection to those in neighbouring Guindy.
Non-governmental agencies (NGOs) involved in the animal birth control
programme say that though Chennai started its rabies prevention
programme much ahead of many other cities, it has a long way to go.
The city has outsourced the stray dog animal birth control and
vaccination programme to 3 NGOs. The dogs are sterilised and the
anti-rabies injection is given. But this vaccine is valid only for a
year and there is no guarantee of follow-up vaccinations. The last
stray dog census was done in 2003.

19 April 2011

AUDIENCE

United States
125
Canada
29
Singapore
17
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15
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5
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3
Ireland
3
Australia
2

NEW BMJ JOURNAL: PALLIATIVE MEDICINE

BMJ Supportive & Palliative Care - Editorial Board


Editor-in-Chief


Bill Noble
Competing interests >>
Macmillan Senior Lecturer in Palliative Medicine
University of Sheffield
Sheffield, UK
http://spcare.bmj.com/site/about/bill.noble@sheffield.ac.uk

Associate Editors

Myra Bluebond-Langner
Louis Dundas Centre for Children's Palliative Care
London, UK
bluebond@ucl.ac.uk

Eduardo Bruera
U.T. MD Anderson Cancer Center
Texas, USA
ebruera@mdanderson.org

Merryn Gott
School of Nursing, University of Auckland
Auckland, New Zealand
m.gott@auckland.ac.nz

Irene Higginson
Cicely Saunders Institute, King's College London
London, UK
irene.higginson@kcl.ac.uk

Matthew Hotopf
King's College London
London, UK
matthew.hotopf@kcl.ac.uk

Christine Ingleton
University of Sheffield
Sheffield, UK
c.ingleton@sheffield.ac.uk

Pål Klepstad
St Olav University Hospital
Trondheim, Norway
pal.klepstad@ntnu.no

Geoff Mitchell
MBBS Program Ipswich
Queensland, Australia
g.mitchell@uq.edu.au

Editorial Advisory Board

Sir Al Aynsley-Green
Former Children's Commissioner for England
Professor Emeritus of Child Health
University College London
London, UK

Sam Ahmedzai
University of Sheffield
Sheffield, UK

Finella Craig
Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children
London, UK

David Currow
Flinders University
Adelaide, Australia

Gustavo de Simone
Universidad del Salvador
Buenos Aries, Argentina

Yvonne Engels
Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre
Nijmegen, The Netherlands

Robin Fainsinger
University of Alberta
Edmonton, Canada

Marie Fallon
Edinburgh Cancer Research Centre (CRUK)
Edinburgh, UK

Paul Glare
Department of Medicine at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center
New York, USA

Xavier Gómez-Batiste
WHO Collaborating Centre for Public Health Palliative Care Programmes/The Qualy Catalan End of Life Observatory
Barcelona, Spain

Stein Kaasa
University Hospital of Trondheim Palliative Medicine Unit
Trondheim, Norway

Jane Maher
Macmillan Centre for Cancer Support
London, UK

Diane Meier
Director of the Center to Advance Palliative Care (CAPC)
New York, USA

Marcia Meldrum
UCLA Pain Study Group
Los Angeles, USA

Dan Munday
University of Warwick
Coventry, UK

Scott Murray
Primary Palliative Care Research Group
Edinburgh, UK

Josep Porta Sales
Catalonian Institute of Oncology (L'Hospitalet-Barcelona)
Barcelona, Spain

Jane Seymour
University of Nottingham
Nottingham, UK

Kris Vissers
Radboud University
Nijmegen, Netherlands

Declan Walsh
Harry Horvitz Center for Palliative Medicine, The Cleveland Clinic Foundation
Ohio, USA

Andrew Wilcock
University of Nottingham
Nottingham, UK

17 April 2011

BLOG AUDIENCE

United States
99
Canada
27
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14
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14
India
5
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4
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4
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3
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2
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2

QUEBEC CITY: CONFERENCE ISSTDR 10-13 July,2011

Image
The 19th International Society of Sexually Transmitted Diseases Research (ISSTDR), 10-13 July 2011, Quebec, Canada
WHO, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM), and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) will co-organize a symposium on the role of rapid syphilis testing in congenital syphilis elimination efforts. In addition, LSHTM will host a symposium on STI rapid diagnostics and it there will be many other individual oral and poster presentations on the topic of congenital syphilis.

16 April 2011

BLOG AUDIENCE

United States
94
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27
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14
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11
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5
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4
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3
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2
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2

BMJ: 60% of UK medical students are female.

FEMINISATION of medicine in UK. 60% of UK medical students are female.

International conferences show that male MDs are majority in physically difficult surgery: ENT Cancer surgery,, NEUROSURGERY, ORTHOPAEDICS, SPINAL SURGERY, THORACIC SURGERY.

15 April 2011

CANADA HEALTH INFOWAY


 

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$1 million pension for 6 years in government job
By Andrew McIntosh, QMI Agency
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MONTREAL – The head of a non-profit agency overseeing Canada’ shift to electronic medical records has racked up more than a $1 million taxpayer-funded retirement pension - after a mere six years on the job, a QMI investigation shows.
Richard C. Alvarez has been chief executive of Canada Health Infoway Inc. (Inforoute Santé du Canada) since only 2004.
Yet he’s already snared a fully funded, golden retirement that would be the envy of ordinary public servants, never mind ordinary taxpayers struggling to get timely health care.
Details of Alvarez’s gold-plated pension are buried in six years worth of Infoway financial reports reviewed by QMI Agency.
News of his deluxe package comes amid rumours that the Harper government may curtail pension plans of ordinary federal public servants so they’ll pay more of the rising cost of their retirements.
Options include boosting individual workers’ contributions and or restricting early retirements.
Infoway was created by the Liberal government in 2001. It now has about 200 employees in Montreal and Toronto.
The non-profit has so far received $1.6 billion to spend on electronic health records projects across Canada, working with the provinces, territories and technology companies.
It was to get another $500 million this year, but the minority Conservative government put that on ice in its recent budget.
Infoway works with the provinces and territories to develop and finance electronic health records projects that aim to create a safer, more cost-effective health-care system.
Alvarez’ pension plan was created specially for him when he joined the non-profit organization in 2004. He is a former Alberta and federal public servant. There was no mention of such a plan existing for his Infoway predecessor, Linda Lizotte-Macpherson.
"It’s unreal!’’ said Catherine Swift, president of the Canadian Federation of Independent Business when told of the pension.
"We have a problem with the proliferation of these quasi-government, but independent, arm’s-length corporations created so they can avoid the already loosey -goosy rules of government,’’ Swift said.
Infoway spokesman Dan Strasbourg defended Alvarez’ hefty pension, saying the plan was approved by its board of directors, which includes senior provincial health bureaucrats.
That’s the problem, Swift says. "A lot of the people making the decisions benefit from the decisions,’’ she added, noting that pensions for many senior bureaucrats are also out of control and an overly generous package for one, will push others higher.
Strasbourg said the Alvarez package "is comparable to CEOs of major hospitals and government agencies.’’
Strasbourg declined to answer when told major hospitals in Montreal and Toronto, and major government agencies, each have thousands of employees to oversee, not 200 workers like at Canada Health Infoway.
Strasbourg also declined to discuss why Infoway didn’t offer Alvarez much less expensive RRSP contributions for retirement. That’s what Infoway offers its other staffers, its website says.
Strasbourg said Alvarez has moved Canada’s electronic health records efforts "from a small group of pilot projects to a national collaboration involving every province and territory, which has resulted in nearly 300 initiatives across Canada.’’
He cited a report by Auditor General Sheila Fraser – tabled in Parliament in November – saying that Infoway’s compensation policies reflected "prudence and probity’’ and had considered comparable benchmarks. None of them were publicly disclosed.
Strasbourg claimed that the taxman will eventually take a large bite out of Alvarez’ retirement windfall.
"The pension fund will be subject to approximately 50% in taxes upon settlement,’’ Strabourg said, suggesting that all Alvarez will eventually get is a cool $40,000-a-year pension annuity.
Infoway is not covered by federal Access to Information legislation and Strasbourg refused to disclose details of Alvarez compensation package.
eHealth Ontario – a provincial electronic medical records sister to Infoway - disclosed the employment agreement of its former CEO, Sarah Kramer, in response to a Freedom of Information request last year. Details of Kramer’s $517 428 pay package – including a $380,000 base salary – are available on the Internet for all to see.

14 April 2011

Toronto Physician-Proctologist Murray FISHER:: YORK UNIV DONATION

Proctologist Murray (Woody) FISHER MD(Tor.58) FRCPC(65) donated the Costa Rica forest of LAS NUBES to York University as part of the Fisher Fund for Neotropical conservation.

Dr.Fisher now practices at the BALMORAL MEDICAL ARTS at 1366 Yonge st. (south of St.Clair) after all the doctors at the historic 1926, MEDICAL ARTS BUILDING at Bloor and St.George  were evicted in 2007 by Toronto University who changed the building to the JACKMAN HUMANIST INSTITUTE after a donation by (Past Ont. Lt.Gov.Gen.) Hon. Henry JACKMAN O.C, O.Ont. BA( Tor.53), LLB( LSE 56), Chairman of National Trust.

12 April 2011

FRANCE; HEPATITIS E.

ProMED-mail to promed-ahead-e.
show details 21:42 (37 minutes ago)

HEPATITIS E - FRANCE: (SOUTHEAST), AUTOCHTHONOUS AND FOOD-BORNE
***************************************************************
A ProMED-mail post
<http://www.promedmail.org/>
ProMED-mail is a program of the
International Society for Infectious Diseases
<http://www.isid.org/>
Date: Tue 12 Apr 2011
From: Philippe Colson [edited]
<philippe.colson@univmed.fr>

Autochthonous hepatitis E -- Marseille, southeastern France
------------------------------------------------------------
We report on 11 hepatitis E virus (HEV) infections diagnosed from
January through March 2011 by PCR and serology in our microbiology lab
at University hospitals of Marseille, southeastern France. The 11
cases were 10 men and a woman. Their age was 57 plus or minus 11
years. One patient died 2 months after the onset of hepatitis. None of
the cases traveled abroad during the three months before the disease
onset. Consumption of pig liver sausage was documented in 6 of 9
patients that could be interviewed. Noteworthy, anti-HEV IgM could be
detected in the serum from the wife of 2 of the cases that ate
uncooked pig liver sausage. Both women ate the same sausage as their
husbands. In one of the women, ALT level was 165 UI/l; no clinical
symptom was noted.
Eight of these 11 hepatitis E cases occurred from 24 Feb 2011. From
this date, the number of hepatitis E cases diagnosed in our lab
significantly increased. This was detected by EPIMIC, a home-made
alert and surveillance epidemiologic tool that analyses in real-time
the number of clinical samples and positive diagnosis in our
microbiology lab. The alert threshold is the mean value of historical
data plus 2 standard deviations (SD). Starting from 24 Feb 2011, the
number of serum samples tested and of those testing positive for
anti-HEV IgM were above the threshold. Indeed, 54 sera were tested
(mean value, 22; 2 SD, 30), and at least 5 of them tested positive for
anti-HEV IgM (Adaltis assay) (mean value, 1; 2 SD, 3). Concurrently,
the number of PCR-documented hepatitis E was between 1 and 3 per week,
whereas the mean value is 0.4 based on historical data.
In developed industrialized countries, it was thought until recently
that hepatitis E was related to travel in tropical or sub-tropical
countries, where HEV infection is hyper-endemic. Nevertheless, it
turns out that most cases are autochthonous, occurring in patients who
have not traveled abroad over the last 2-9 weeks (incubation period of
the disease). In France, more than 200 indigenous cases are reported
each year. Most of them were diagnosed in the southern region, where
the prevalence of anti-HEV IgG in blood donors is higher than in the
North (8-16.6 percent versus 3.4 percent).
It has been clearly shown in developed industrialized countries that
pigs (and boars) are reservoirs of the virus. Acute hepatitis E has
been diagnosed in our lab in persons who consumed uncooked pig liver
sausages, which are widely eaten in southeastern France. These
sausages are good candidates for the transmission of hepatitis E
because they are made with pig liver (the site of viral
multiplication), are not cooked during the manufacturing process, and
are often eaten uncooked. We reported in 2009 on 8 hepatitis E among
patients who ate pig liver sausage [see: ProMED-mail post archived as:
Hepatitis E - France: (Marseille) pig liver sausage 20090917.3267]. A
case-control study conducted in 3 different families revealed that
acute or recent hepatitis E were significantly associated with
consumption of uncooked pig liver sausage. In addition, genetic links
were found between viral sequences recovered from sausages and those
recovered from patients.
Subsequently to the notification of these cases, French health
authorities compelled producers of pig liver sausages to indicate on
the label of the products that they need to be cooked thoroughly.
Indeed, it was shown that cooking pieces of liver containing HEV
limits their infectivity.
The mortality of symptomatic cases of hepatitis E is 1 to 4 percent;
fatal outcome occurs mostly among people who already have chronic
liver disease. Moreover, it appears that the infection can progress
towards chronic hepatitis among severely immunocompromized persons, as
observed in kidney or liver transplant recipients and in persons
infected with HIV. The proportion of asymptomatic HEV infections
remains unknown to date.
--
Philippe Colson PharmD PhD
Pôle des Maladies Infectieuses et Tropicales Clinique et
Biologique,
Federation de Bacteriologie-Hygiene-Virologie,
Centre Hospitalo-Universitaire Timone, AP-HM,
URMITE CNRS UMR 6236 IRD 198
Facultes de Medecine et de Pharmacie
Universite de la Mediterranee
<philippe.colson@ap-hm.fr>
and
Rene Gerolami MD PhD
Service d'Hepato-Gastro-Enterologie
Centre Hospitalo-Universitaire Conception
147 boulevard Baille, 13385 Marseille CEDEX 05, France
<rene.gerolami@ap-hm.fr>
[ProMED-mail thanks Drs Philippe Colson and Rene Gerolami for sharing
with us and our readers this account of their current investigations
of hepatitis E virus infection in southeastern France.
To put the clinical investigation of of Drs Colson and Gerolami in
context, the following are some extracts from the WHO Fact sheet
(<http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs280/en/index.html>):
"Hepatitis E was not recognized as a distinct human disease until
1980. Hepatitis E is caused by infection with hepatitis E virus (HEV),
a non-enveloped, positive-sense, single-stranded RNA virus. HEV is
transmitted via the faecal-oral route.
"Hepatitis E has been considered a waterborne disease, and
contaminated water or food supplies have been implicated in major
outbreaks. Consumption of faecally contaminated drinking water has
given rise to epidemics, and the ingestion of raw or uncooked
shellfish has been the source of sporadic cases in endemic areas.
There is a possibility of zoonotic spread of the virus, since several
non-human primates, pigs, cows, sheep, goats and rodents are
susceptible to infection. The risk factors for HEV infection are
related poor sanitation in large areas of the world, and HEV shedding
in faeces. Person-to-person transmission is uncommon. There has been
no evidence for sexual transmission or for transmission by
transfusion. The highest rates of infection occur in regions where low
standards of sanitation promote the transmission of the virus.
Epidemics of hepatitis E have been reported in Central and South-East
Asia, North and West Africa, and in Mexico, especially where faecal
contamination of drinking water is common. However, sporadic cases of
hepatitis E have also been reported elsewhere and serological surveys
suggest a global distribution of strains of hepatitis E of low
pathogenicity. In general, hepatitis E is a self-limiting viral
infection followed by recovery. Prolonged viraemia or faecal shedding
are unusual and chronic infection does not occur.
"The incubation period following exposure to HEV ranges from 3 to 8
weeks, with a mean of 40 days. The period of communicability is
unknown. There are no chronic infections reported.
"Hepatitis E virus causes acute sporadic and epidemic viral
hepatitis. Symptomatic HEV infection is most common in young adults
aged 15-40 years. Although HEV infection is frequent in children, it
is mostly asymptomatic or causes a very mild illness without jaundice
(anicteric) that goes undiagnosed.
"Typical signs and symptoms of hepatitis include jaundice (yellow
discoloration of the skin and sclera of the eyes, dark urine and pale
stools), anorexia (loss of appetite), an enlarged, tender liver
(hepatomegaly), abdominal pain and tenderness, nausea and vomiting,
and fever, although the disease may range in severity from subclinical
to fulminant.
"Since cases of hepatitis E are not clinically distinguishable from
other types of acute viral hepatitis, diagnosis is made by blood tests
which detect elevated antibody levels of specific antibodies to
hepatitis E in the body or by or by reverse transcriptase polymerase
chain reaction (RT-PCR). Unfortunately, such tests are not widely
available.
"Hepatitis E should be suspected in outbreaks of waterborne hepatitis
occurring in developing countries, especially if the disease is more
severe in pregnant women, or if hepatitis A has been excluded. If
laboratory tests are not available, epidemiologic evidence can help in
establishing a diagnosis. (As is demonstrated by Drs Colson and
Gerolami above).
"As no specific therapy is capable of altering the course of acute
hepatitis E infection, prevention is the most effective approach
against the disease. Hospitalization is required for fulminant
hepatitis and should be considered for infected pregnant women."

TORONTO: VENEREAL DISEASE THREAT

Conference-popular Toronto now Bangkok-North. In free tabloids NOW & EYE pages of photo ads offering cheap hetero and homosexual prostitution: " nude oral" @ $40; "full" @ $60. "Shiatzu" & "Holistic massage" brothels scattered throughout the City including residential areas . One, the Beaches Massage, is two streets North of the Ontario Medical Association office in fashionable Yorkville. No medical inspection of sex workers by Toronto Public Health.

11 April 2011

Private medicine BEST DOCTORS Inc. approved by Canadian Medical association.

CANADIAN HEALTH is published quarterly by the Canadian Medical Association.
The sub. is about $14/year depending on the Province. Provided free to CMA members for office use.

The inside cover has a full page ad for BOSTON based BEST DOCTORS Inc. Individual basic membership is $125/year.

Ontario College Physicians Surgeons PEER ASSESSMENT DEFENCE

CPSO PEER ASSESSMENT DEFENCE

CPSO PEER ASSESSORS fill up a TWELVE PAGE check list which can lead to costly penalties. Learn how to defend youself . Experienced doctors who have been through the misery of a Peer Assessment will visit your office for a whole day for $1,000. and travel expenses. They will also give you names of Lawyers who are expert in Medico-Legal matters.

There are also DAY Courses in HAMILTON, KINGSTON, LONDON, OTTAWA, THUNDER BAY, & TORONTO for $400 inc tax..( restaurant lunch incl.Ontario wine.).

FREE TIP: All MDs over 70y in Ontario are Assessed. Best to give up Clinical medicine after 70 but keep your licence to be able to be elected to OMA jobs. Copy past OMA`Sec-Gen.(1952-1973)  Glenn SAWYER and study LAW (at 65y) or take an MBA.

416 473 4878

10 April 2011

INDIA: ADULTERATED BUCKWHEAT

ProMED-mail to promed
show details 8 Apr (3 days ago)

FOODBORNE ILLNESS - INDIA: (DELHI) ADULTERATED FOOD
***************************************************
A ProMED-mail post
<http://www.promedmail.org/>
ProMED-mail is a program of the
International Society for Infectious Diseases
<http://www.isid.org/>
Date: Thu 7 Apr 2011
Source: The Times of India, Times News Network (TNN) [edited]
<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/City/Delhi/Adulterated-kuttu-kills-MCD-staffer-300-ill/articleshow/7892256.cms>

In the 1st death from consumption of adulterated kuttu (buckwheat), a
50-year-old MCD [Municipal Corporation of Delhi] employee succumbed to
food poisoning in an east Delhi hospital on Wednesday morning [6 Apr
2011], less than 24 hours after taking ill. More than 300 people were
being treated in hospitals across Delhi and some NCR [national capital
region] areas, while 17 people had been arrested for selling the
spurious food.
Kuttu, which is used as a grain though it's not a cereal, is widely
consumed by those fasting during the 9-day [Hindu festival of]
Navratras, which started on Monday [4 Apr 2011].
"We have arrested 11 people including the owner of Nandu Masala Mill,
which was the maiden supplier to many wholesale retailers and
shopkeepers in east and northeast Delhi. He possibly also supplied to
Ghaziabad shops. We have also arrested 8 shopkeepers who were selling
adulterated buckwheat," said deputy commissioner of police (northeast)
Sanjay Kumar Jain.
The 1st victim of the adulteration, was admitted in Lal Bahadur
Shastri Hospital around 1.30 pm on Tuesday [5 Apr 2011] after he
complained of dizziness and nausea. This victim later suffered a
paralytic attack in hospital. "Prima facie, it appears that his
condition was precipitated due to buckwheat consumption," said
hospital medical superintendent Veer Singh.

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MEDICAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN

MEDICAL INTELLIGENCE NEWS blog started`as MEDICAL INTELLIGENCE BULLETIN which was hacked. Info on M.I.BULLETIN can be still acccessed but not commented.

CHINA: NITRITE in MILK

PRO/EDR> Nitrite, milk, fatalities - China: (GS)
InboxX

 Reply |ProMED-mail to promed-edr
show details 09:59 (23 hours ago)

NITRITE, MILK, FATALITIES - CHINA: (GANSU)
******************************************
A ProMED-mail post
<http://www.promedmail.org/>
ProMED-mail is a program of the
International Society for Infectious Diseases
<http://www.isid.org/>
Date: Fri 8 Apr 2011
Source: The Guardian, Reuters report [edited]
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/apr/08/tainted-milk-china-kills-three>

Milk poisoning kills children in China
--------------------------------------
Xinhua news agency has reported in the latest food safety scandal to
hit the [Chinese] dairy industry, that 3 children have died & 35
people have become ill from drinking nitrite-tainted milk in China's
north-western Gansu province.
Most of the 35 were children under 14, now being treated at 2
hospitals in Pingliang city, Xinhua said, citing the local government
and health bureau.
"An initial investigation shows all the patients were poisoned by
nitrite after drinking bulk milk provided by 2 local dairy farms,"
Xinhua said.
Nitrite is used for curing meat.
The 2 farms were sealed off and their managers were being
investigated, Xinhua said.
China's food sector has been beset by poisonings and toxin scandals
that have shaken consumer confidence, and dairy production has been at
the heart of those worries.
China's quality inspection agency last week [week of 28 Mar 2011]
ordered nearly half the country's dairy firms to halt production as
part of a campaign to clean up the industry.
In 2008, at least 6 children died and nearly 300 000 fell ill from
powdered milk laced with melamine, an industrial chemical added to
low-quality or diluted milk to fool inspectors by giving misleadingly
high readings for protein levels.
Earlier this year [2011], Chinese quality authorities sought to calm
renewed public alarm after reports that some manufacturers had
illegally added a leather protein powder to dairy products to cheat
protein-content checks.
Zhao Lianhai, who organised a website for parents of children who
became ill from tainted milk after his own son became sick, was jailed
for 2.5 years last November [2010] after being convicted of "inciting
social disorder."
--
Communicated by:
ProMED-mail
<promed@promedmail.org>
[Sodium nitrite has on a number of occasions been mistaken for table
salt. However, to have it in milk is difficult for me to understand.
While it has been used in the meat industry, its use or purpose in the
milk industry sounds like adulteration of the product.
Clinical signs of ingestion may include gastroenteritis, abdominal
pains, dizziness, bloody diarrhea, convulsions and collapse. Purging
(vomiting) and diuresis are expected. If the victim receives small,
repeated doses there may be headache and mental impairment. Generally
in the case of mistaking sodium nitrite for sodium chloride, the dose
may be larger for large meals typical of celebrations.
Sodium nitrite has been used in curing meat for centuries. Nitrite is
added to certain foods to prevent the growth of the spore-forming
bacterium _Clostridium botulinum_, whose toxin causes botulism,
leading to paralysis and, potentially, death. The word botulinum comes
from the Latin word 'botulus', meaning sausage, which was responsible
for many deaths centuries ago before curing with nitrite was used. In
addition to serving as an antimicrobial, nitrite is used to produce
the characteristic flavor, texture, and pink color of cured meats.
At significant blood levels, the nitrite's oxidation of the iron in
hemoglobin from the ferrous to the ferric state yields methemoglobin,
which does not carry oxygen and imparts a brown hue to the blood.
Symptoms of methemoglobinemia include headaches, fatigue, tachycardia
(fast heart rate), weakness, and dizziness. As oxygenation of tissues
decreases to the point of becoming truly inadequate, dyspnea
(shortness of breath), acidosis, arrhythmias (irregular heart
rhythms), coma, convulsions and even death may occur. - Mod.TG]