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(via kqedscience)
Posted on March 1, 2012 via Science with 84 notes
Source: examiner.com
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Teaching to the test.
Posted on February 16, 2012 via Calamities of Nature with 3 notes
Source: calamitiesofnature.com
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[M]edical sociologists and social epidemiologists need to contextualize risk factors by asking what it is about people’s life circumstances that shapes their exposure to… risk factors.
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How to ‘eat locally’ in winter
As the season changes, take care where your food comes from — and consider buying frozen — for a healthy, mostly local diet
(From The Boston Globe)
Good to know!
Posted on December 14, 2011 via Public Health with 17 notes
Source: pubhealth
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Morning sugar shock
In a study of 84 children’s cereals from the four big manufacturers (Kellogg’s, Post, General Mills and Quaker Oats), the majority contained more sugar than three chocolate chip cookies.
Read related article.
(From The Washington Post)

(via emilymullin)
Posted on December 10, 2011 via Public Health with 31 notes
Source: pubhealth
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(from The Globe and Mail, Toronto)
Posted on December 9, 2011 via Public Health with 54 notes
Source: pubhealth
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Is the ban on gay blood donation health-conscious or homophobic?
Susan E. Matthews reports on an old law that is getting renewed attention in An unwanted donation in Scienceline (via reportingonhealth)(via reportingonhealth)
Posted on December 9, 2011 via ReportingonHealth.org with 1 note
Source: scienceline.org
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CDC: Do not castrate lambs with your teeth. (Related: Do not be a testosterone-fueled idiot.)
Notes from the Field: Campylobacter jejuni Infections Associated with Sheep Castration — Wyoming, 2011
December 9, 2011 / 60(48);1654-1654
On June 29, 2011, the Wyoming Department of Health was notified of two laboratory-confirmed cases of Campylobacter jejuni enteritis among persons working at a local sheep ranch. During June, two men had reported onset of symptoms compatible with campylobacteriosis. Both patients had diarrhea, and one also had abdominal cramps, fever, nausea, and vomiting. One patient was hospitalized for 1 day. Both patients recovered without sequelae.
During June, both patients had participated in a multiday event to castrate and dock tails of 1,600 lambs. Both men reported having used their teeth to castrate some of the lambs.
Among the 12 persons who participated in the event, the patients are the only two known to have used their teeth to castrate lambs.
During the multiday event, a few lambs reportedly had a mild diarrheal illness. Neither patient with laboratory-confirmed illness reported consumption of poultry or unpasteurized dairy products, which are common sources of exposure to C. jejuni. The patients resided in separate houses and did not share food or water; none of their contacts became ill.
Both patients provided stool specimens for laboratory testing; C. jejuni was isolated from each. The pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) patterns of the isolates were indistinguishable when restricted separately by two enzymes, SmaI and KpnI. This PFGE pattern had never been reported among 667 specimens from which C. jejuni was isolated in Wyoming and is rare in CDC’s PulseNet* database, with a frequency of 0.09% (8 of 8,817). The low frequency of this PFGE pattern suggests that both patients were infected from a common source.
Animals at the ranch included sheep, cattle, horses, cats, and dogs; none were ill during the site visit on October 19 when investigators obtained fecal samples from five lambs. C. jejuni was isolated from two lambs; one isolate had a PFGE pattern indistinguishable from the two human isolates. C. jejuni is transmitted via the fecal-oral route; this is the first reported association of C. jejuni infection with exposure during castration of lambs. The PFGE pattern identified in these cases had not been associated with animal exposure.
Ranch owners and employees were advised to use standardized, age-specific techniques for lamb castration (e.g., Burdizzo, rubber rings, or surgery) and to wash their hands thoroughly after contact with animals…
Woo hoo! Go Wyoming.
Posted on December 8, 2011 via The Further Adventures of Germ Girl with 95 notes
Source: germgirl
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This Is What You Eat in a Year (Including 42 Pounds of Corn Syrup)
(via pubhealth)
Posted on December 8, 2011 via cool health infographics with 90 notes
Source: coolhealthinfographics
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Preventing Antibiotic Resistance – We All Have a Role to Play
(From CDC)
Posted on November 29, 2011 via Public Health with 16 notes
Source: pubhealth








