The New England journal of medicine
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The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine refugees (UNRWA) has provided health, education, and welfare services since 1949. A team of physicians from Georgetown University visited UNRWA Health Centers and refugee camps in Jordan, Lebanon, the West Bank, and the Gaza Strip, as well as some affiliated hospitals. ⋯ Effective programs for health education, maternal and child health, and immunization have markedly improved the health of the refugees over the years of UNRWA's operation. The general health of the population is good, primarily as a result of wise emphasis on public health and preventive medicine measures.
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To investigate the effect of individual formulations of oral contraceptives on the risk of breast cancer in women, we analyzed case-control data from the Cancer and Steroid Hormone Study of the Centers for Disease Control. The cases were 4711 women 20 to 54 years old with newly diagnosed breast cancer who were selected from eight population-based cancer registries. The controls were 4676 women selected by random-digit dialing of the population of each area covered by a registry. ⋯ Neither the type of estrogen nor the type of progestin contained in oral contraceptives used was associated with an increased risk of breast cancer. The duration of oral-contraceptive use and the time since last use did not influence the risk. These findings provide further support for the contention that oral-contraceptive use does not increase the risk of breast cancer in women.
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In 1981-1982, a Massachusetts Hospital Association and Massachusetts Blue Cross-Blue Shield task force reviewing ancillary services found that the use of respiratory therapy at New England Deaconess Hospital far exceeded the statewide average. These findings led to a hospital-wide effort to reduce ancillary services. As part of this effort, we studied the effect of the reductions in respiratory therapy on patient outcome. ⋯ Marked reductions in all categories of respiratory therapy had occurred, but morbidity and mortality from pulmonary disorders had not increased. In the largest group studied--patients undergoing coronary-artery bypass surgery--the charges for respiratory therapy, the length of hospital stay, and pulmonary complications had all decreased. We conclude that consistent application of prescribed guidelines for respiratory therapy results in marked decreases in its use and that such decreases can be achieved without a reduction in the quality of care.
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We assessed the diagnostic value of determinations of serum levels of immunoreactive erythropoietin in 90 patients referred for the investigation of a raised packed red-cell volume (hematocrit) and possible erythrocytosis (a red-cell volume greater than that predicted by weight, body-surface area, or both). The mean values for erythropoietin were 16 mIU per milliliter (range, 8 to 22) in patients with polycythemia rubra vera (n = 24), 30 mIU per milliliter (range, 14 to 123) in patients with secondary erythrocytosis (n = 12), 27 mIU per milliliter (range, 13 to greater than 400) in patients with erythrocytosis of unknown origin (n = 19), and 25 mIU per milliliter (range, 18 to 35) in normal controls (n = 25). The values in the patients with polycythemia rubra vera were lower than those in the other three groups (P less than 0.01, P less than 0.05, and P less than 0.0001, respectively). ⋯ Among patients with erythrocytosis with an unknown cause, abnormally high serum erythropoietin levels were found in 3 of 19 subjects, and in 1 of these 3 the abnormality was intermittent. Thus, measurement of serum erythropoietin in a single sample may be misleading and may not have high discriminatory value in distinguishing between polycythemia rubra vera and secondary erythrocytosis. This assay is useful in identifying patients with secondary erythrocytosis who have inappropriate erythropoietin secretion.