-
A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial conducted in England among 687 children 10-60 months of age with acute virus-associated wheezing compared a five-day course of oral prednisolone (10 m once a day for children 10-24 months of age and 20 mg once a day for older children) with placebo.
-
For this study, 12,765 patients from the large French Hospital Database for HIV with CD4+ lymphocyte counts < 200 cells/uL who received cART during 2000-2005 were selected.
-
Influenza activity has been relatively low thus far in the 2008-2009 season in the United States. However, of the influenza viruses isolated and tested to date, there is significant resistance among the influenza A (H1N1) viruses to the antiviral oseltamivir.
-
-
In this issue: FDA warning on topical anesthetics; antipsychotics increase sudden cardiac death; the step up vs step down debate; treating pain, fatigue, mood, and sleep in fibromyalgia; FDA Actions.
-
-
Once thought of as shocking outliers, the continuing hepatitis outbreaks in ambulatory care settings and clinics increasingly suggest that for every cluster detected, many more infections acquired in health care are being missed due to inadequate surveillance systems and lack of public health resources to investigate individual cases.
-
In light of continuing outbreaks of hepatitis in ambulatory and long-term care, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is considering recommending hepatitis B virus vaccination for diabetic residents of nursing homes.
-
The recently reported rapid deaths of two patients infected with a new highly toxic staph strain suggests the deadly pathogen is emerging in the community and certainly will pose a threat to hospitals, a researcher tells Hospital Infection Control & Prevention.
-
The Joint Commission and other national infection prevention groups made a point to include catheter-related urinary tract infections (CA-UTIs) traditionally considered a relatively benign adverse event in a recently issued compendium targeting the major health care-associated infections (HAIs).