Here are some of the latest health and medical news
developments, compiled by the editors of HealthDay:
Updated Guidelines to Prevent Bloodstream Infections
Health care worker education/training and cleaning a patient's
skin with an antibacterial scrub are among the major
recommendations included in updated guidelines to protect American
hospital patients from bloodstream infections.
The use of maximal sterile barrier precautions and avoiding
routine replacement of certain catheters are also among the main
areas of emphasis in the health care provider guidelines issued by
the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the
Healthcare Infection Control Practices Advisory Committee.
The guidelines were created by a working group led by clinical
scientists from the National Institutes of Health Clinical Center
Critical Care Medicine Department, along with 14 other professional
organizations.
"Preventing these infections is an excellent example of how hospitals and other health care facilities can improve patient care and save lives, all while reducing excess medical costs," CDC Director Dr. Thomas R. Frieden said in a CDC news release.
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Radiation-Tainted Food After Chernobyl Still a Problem in
Ukraine: Study
Hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians still consume food
contaminated by radiation from the Chernobyl nuclear power plant
disaster in 1986, according to Greenpeace report released
Monday.
The group said that samples of milk, potatoes, root vegetables
and berries in two areas of northwestern Ukraine have unacceptable
high levels of the radioactive isotope cesium-137, the
Associated Press reported.
The two areas are outside the 30-kilometer "exclusion zone"
around the destroyed Chernobyl plant but were in the direct path of
the radiation cloud created when a reactor at the plant
exploded.
Two years ago, the Ukrainian government stopped providing the
two regions with counter-radiation measures, such as supplying
uncontaminated hay for dairy cattle, the
AP reported.
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Jennie-O Turkey Burgers Recalled Over Salmonella
Twelve cases of salmonella poisoning in 10 states has prompted
the recall of 54,960 pounds of Jennie-O Turkey Store frozen turkey
burgers, say U.S. officials.
The recall includes 4-pound boxes of Jennie-O Turkey Store "All
Natural Turkey Burgers with seasonings Lean White Meat," that
contain 12 1/3-pound individually wrapped burgers,
CBS News reported.
The recalled products have a use by date of "DEC 23 2011" and a
lot code of "32710" through "32780" on the side panel of each box.
The establishment number "P-7760" is located within the USDA mark
of inspection on the front of each box, according to the federal
government.
The 12 cases of salmonella poisoning believed to be linked to
the recalled turkey burgers were in Arizona, California, Colorado,
Georgia, Illinois, Mississippi, Missouri, Ohio, Washington, and
Wisconsin,
CBS News reported.
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White House Appeal of Health Care Law Ruling Set for June 8
Oral arguments in the Obama administration's federal-court
appeal of a ruling that the new U.S. health care law is
unconstitutional will be heard June 8, says an Atlanta-based
appeals court,
Bloomberg News reported.
The appeal challenges a Jan. 31 decision by U.S. District Judge
Roger Vinson that the new health care law's requirement that nearly
all Americans must have medical insurance by 2014 violates the
constitution. The ruling was in a lawsuit filed by 26 states that
oppose the new health care law.
In its ruling, the appeals court denied the state's request for
a full-panel review of Vinson's decision. Instead, the court said
the White House appeal will be heard by a randomly selected
three-judge panel,
Bloomberg reported.
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Restless Legs May Indicate Heart Problem: Study
Restless legs syndrome may be a sign of a hidden heart problem
in some people, according to researchers.
Their study of 584 people with the syndrome found that the 45
percent of patients who had the most leg movement while sleeping
were more likely to have thick hearts than those who had less leg
movement. Thick hearts make people more prone to heart problems,
stroke and death, the
Associated Press reported.
After about three years of follow-up, patients with severely
thick hearts were twice as likely as other patients to have
suffered a heart problem or died, the study found.
"We are not saying there is a cause-and-effect relationship," just that restless legs might be a sign of heart trouble that doctors and patients should consider, said study leader Dr. Arshad Jahangir, a heart rhythm specialist at the Mayo Clinic Arizona in Scottsdale, the AP reported.
The findings were presented Sunday at an American College of
Cardiology meeting.