2014年11月29日 星期六

2014-11-30 Australia Health


The Australian
   
Order to tear down Aspen Medical Ebola work posters   
The Australian
STUDENTS who plastered lampposts and letterboxes with posters urging health professionals to join the fight against Ebola in west Africa have been asked to take them down. The posters said Aspen Medical, which is handling Australia's response to the ...

Ebola medical staff train in Darwin   Sky News Australia

all 5 news articles »   


Brighton and Hove News
   
Health Canada updates Canadians regarding sale of unlicensed HIV test kits via ...   
News-Medical.net
Health Canada is informing Canadians that multiple distributors (Positive Health, dailySupply, BestDealCA, eshopic, Urban Inspirations, grabthesale, and dealkings) are selling the unlicensed "OraQuick in Home HIV Test" kit via Amazon.ca. The "OraQuick in ...

Increase in HIV in Bradford   Bradford Telegraph and Argus
The 15-minute test that could save your life   The Argus
A health centre is marking World AIDS Day on Monday (1 December) with HIV ...   Brighton and Hove News

all 8 news articles »   


helpmeoutDOC News - A consistent flow of medical news
   
Are body measurements the next frontier in biometric ID?   
iT News
University of Adelaide anatomist and PhD candidate Teghan Lucas has uncovered a way to identify individuals without using facial, DNA or fingerprint recognition, claiming "body recognition" could be a new form of biometric identification in the future. Using a ...

University of Adelaide researcher developing new method of biometric ...   Biometric Update
Body recognition may improve identification of individuals   helpmeoutDOC News - A consistent flow of medical news
"Body recognition" compares with fingerprint ID   Medical Xpress

all 9 news articles »   


Perth Now
   
Children as young as three are being hospitalised after intentionally harming ...   
Daily Mail
It's an issue that's rarely spoken about, but groundbreaking new research has revealed alarming statistics concerning intentional self-harm among young Australians. Children as young as three are deliberately harming themselves, with 8,227 admitted to ...

Shock Report Finds Self-Harm in Australia's Young Children is Growing   International Business Times UK
Self harming report: Teens and children as young as three being hospitalised   The Australian

all 3 news articles »   


The Australian
   
Jorge Castillo-Riffo, who died from injuries sustained at the new Royal Adelaide ...   
The Australian
THE family of Royal Adelaide Hospital worker Jorge Castillo-Riffo have paid tribute to their big-hearted loved one and say his work site death should have been prevented. In a statement released on behalf of his family, friends and fellow worker, ...

Worker dies from injuries sustained at Royal Adelaide Hospital construction site ...   ABC Online
Construction worker on new Royal Adelaide Hospital dies in hospital from critical ...   Herald Sun
SA hospital worker dies after crush injury   9news.com.au

all 16 news articles »   


School students show hairspray keeps Christmas trees alive longest   
Brisbane Times
Getting it right: Students Emily Scarlis 11, Lilla Szentmariay, 13, and Madison Dixon, 12, working on their study. Photo: Peter Rae. About this time last year, scientist Angela Moles was erecting her family Christmas tree and wondering how best to keep it alive ...


and more »   


Sydney Morning Herald
   
Lady Cilento Hospital opens at South Brisbane   
Sydney Morning Herald
The new $1.2 billion Lady Cilento Children's Hospital officially opened its doors on Saturday morning, while at the same time Brisbane's existing two children's hospitals closed theirs. In between those doors went a fleet of nine ambulances, transferring almost ...

Successful move for sick kids in Brisbane   NEWS.com.au
Massive patient transfer underway as new Lady Cilento Children's Hospital ...   ABC Online
Nurses Meegan Price, Roslyn Bale and Marissa Alexander put the finishing ...   The Australian

all 12 news articles »   


Herald Sun
   
Rise of the screenager: WA teens average seven hours a day staring at screens ...   
Herald Sun
WA teenagers are averaging seven hours a day in front of a screen – almost the equivalent of a full-time job, a new study shows. It means “screenagers” are staring at a computer screen, television, smart phone, tablet, computer game or portable DVD player ...


and more »   


CTV News
   
New drug could reduce effects of binge drinking   
CTV News
It can't take back those drunken phone calls or erase your friends' memory of what you might have said, but a chemical compound could preserve your brain cells during a night out. Binge-drinking, defined by the National Institutes of Health as drinking five or ...

British researchers develop first binge drinking side effect cure   Examiner.com
Sober up… new drug could reduce the effects of binge-drinking   Malay Mail Online
New 'breakthrough' drug may reduce neurological side effects of binge drinking   Medical News Today
Daily Mail   
Irish Independent   
Daily Times   
all 51 news articles »   


Sydney Morning Herald
   
Ice addiction: 'I did not know if he was dead or alive'   
Sydney Morning Herald
Rebecca* broke down and wept last month as her son, Chris*, gave a rousing best man's speech at her wedding. As witty and moving as his words were, it was his mere presence that afternoon that triggered her tears. Just months earlier, Chris was 17, ...


and more »   

沒有留言:

張貼留言