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Chasing Clues To Detect Outbreak [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K
[...]usually only health departments and other government agencies have the ability and authority to track down additional cases to document disease outbreaks and warn those at risk. The national surveillance system for outbreaks of infectious and other communicable diseases relies on reports that physicians are required to send to local and state health departments and that are then relayed to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
PROQUEST:1134483133
ISSN: 0362-4331
CID: 815352

Chasing clues to detect an outbreak [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K
Dr. [Marion A. Kainer]'s investigation progressed in steps similar to peeling the layers of an onion. Within two days of receiving Dr. [April C. Pettit]'s e-mail, Dr. Kainer learned that the steroid had come from the New England Compounding Center. Then Dr. Kainer learned of three additional suspect cases of meningitis and stroke linked to the clinic. But fungi had not yet been identified in those patients' spinal fluid. Also, her team could find no correlations in factors like time of day or week when the patients received the injections. One patient had a particular kind of stroke known as posterior circulation, which attracted Dr. Kainer's attention because she had learned in neurology that fungal infections can cause such strokes. "What didn't make sense was that two patients appeared to be improving without antifungal treatment, and that didn't fit the clinical picture," Dr. Kainer said. As a result of their actions, they determined that the first case in the outbreak apparently had occurred in July in Florida. But a perplexing aspect of the outbreak is why the fungus Aspergillus was identified in Dr. Pettit's case but a different one, Exserohilum, in an overwhelming majority of the remaining cases. "I just don't understand it," Dr. Kainer said. The near-miss discovery of the fungal meningitis outbreak raises questions about other outbreaks that possibly were not detected. "Surely things have gone by, but I don't know how often, and as good as our surveillance system is, it is not as good as it could be," Dr. Kainer said
PROQUEST:1138268786
ISSN: 0294-8052
CID: 815342

A World Without AIDS, Still Worlds Away [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K
Among those gains: antiretroviral drug combinations for women to prevent infection of their newborns; drugs to treat and prevent infection with H.I.V., the virus that causes AIDS, among adults; and evidence that voluntary male circumcision can reduce the risk of female-to-male transmission by 50 to 60 percent. [...]defining the word "epidemic" is difficult
PROQUEST:1030174313
ISSN: 0362-4331
CID: 815382

Strides in Medicine, and Their Price [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K
Medicine has advanced more in the last century than in all of previous history, and technology's fingerprints can be found on most of the gains -- from new ways to teach medical students to care of patients in hospitals with the most sophisticated equipment to everyday practice in offices. Inappropriate use of antibiotics has led to the spread of drug-resistant microbes that threaten to undo many of the gains the antibiotics have achieved. [...]recently, "see one, do one, teach one" was a mantra of medical education
PROQUEST:1095183986
ISSN: 0362-4331
CID: 815362

1982: The AIDS Epidemic [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K
Altman revisits the 1982 AIDS Epidemic. Thirty years after scientists gave a frightening new disease its name, AIDS still afflicts millions of men and women around the world. AIDS has infected more than 60 million people worldwide and has killed at least half that number in one of the worst epidemics in history
PROQUEST:1012330832
ISSN: 1525-1292
CID: 815422

G.O.P. Ticket Is Picture Of Health, Doctors Say [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K; Grady, Denise
Mr. Romney takes a low-dose aspirin daily (81 milligrams, often called baby aspirin) to help prevent heart attacks, and a statin drug, Lipitor, to lower his cholesterol, which is 169 with the treatment, a level considered normal, Dr. Gaz said
PROQUEST:1048183180
ISSN: 0362-4331
CID: 815372

Arctic researchers unravel mystery of Rudolph's red nose [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K
(The leader of the team, Can Ince, a physiologist at Erasmus University Medical Center in Rotterdam, says he has a financial interest in the company that manufactures the technology, which is used to monitor reactions to various drugs and therapies among critically ill human patients.)
PROQUEST:1242960320
ISSN: 0839-296x
CID: 815322

Hasty and Ruinous 1972 Pick Colors Today's Hunt for a No. 2 [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K
Scott Lilly was a young member of Senator George McGovern's presidential campaign staff in the summer of 1972, and he remembers the satisfaction he felt when Mr. McGovern chose Mr. Lilly's home-state senator to be the Democratic Party's vice-presidential candidate
PROQUEST:1030523434
ISSN: 0362-4331
CID: 815392

Cheney File Traces Heart Care Milestones [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K
(Damage from attacks had long been detected in autopsies.) In time, doctors learned the myriad symptoms that can accompany a heart attack -- among them
PROQUEST:2641614431
ISSN: 0362-4331
CID: 167369

For Cheney, Pros and Cons in New Heart [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K; Grady, Denise
Dr. Reiner has cared for Mr. Cheney for many years at George Washington University Hospital in Washington. Because that hospital does not perform heart
PROQUEST:2617921091
ISSN: 0362-4331
CID: 167371