Tag: Driving

  • Pioneering research from UAE students driving the future of the region’s healthcare industry

    Pioneering research from UAE students driving the future of the region’s healthcare industry

    • Groundbreaking professional medical exploration by college students from the UAE outlining healthcare challenges in the location to be recognised in the course of the event
    • Arab Health returns to the Dubai Planet Trade Centre from 30 January – 2 February

    Dubai, United Arab Emirates: Learners from the UAE will get centre stage at Arab Overall health, the major healthcare exhibition in the Center East, which will take place from 30 January – 2 February 2023 at the Dubai Globe Trade Centre, with the launch of the inaugural Potential Medical professional Program.

    As element of the new initiative, college students from the area have designed research addressing critical topics in the UAE healthcare marketplace, which includes radiology, operation, emergency drugs, agony management, sustainability in health care and healthcare innovation, among other folks.

    The leading 15 study papers will be showcased in poster structure at the show, wherever learners will have the option to focus on their results and have interaction in scientific dialogue with industry experts talking at the Arab Overall health Congress.

    The exploration covers a wide spectrum of healthcare elements, which includes the escalating prominence of telehealth, wherever healthcare is carried out almost by way of facts and telecommunication technologies. According to investigation carried out by students from the American College in Dubai, there is a developing acceptance of this method of healthcare, and it is starting to be a fundamental function of wellness programs in the UAE. According to details, 54{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} of expats are likely to use it, which is 14{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} better than the global normal.

    Investigate performed by college students from the University of Drugs – College of Sharjah has disclosed a deficiency of knowledge and knowing among the grown ups in the UAE surrounding kidney stones and their triggers. The examine uncovered that Gulf nations confirmed an greater incidence of kidney stones due to socioeconomic, environmental and dietary variables, underscoring the worth of measuring amounts of recognition, avoidance, early detection and administration.  

    Meanwhile, pupils from the Gulf Professional medical College Ajman have compiled study to assess the predictors of the knowledge of complementary and substitute medicine among grown ups in Ajman, UAE. The research revealed that age, gender, nationality, marital and work standing were substantial sociodemographic variables in deciding complementary and choice medication literacy.  

    Elsewhere, RAK Medical and Well being Sciences University learners dealt with rising fears around vitamin D insufficiency and deficiency and the effects on the skeletal and further-skeletal consequences on the human entire body.

    Other investigate investigated radiographers’ perceptions and attitudes toward AI implementation in radiology.

    Cynthia Makarutse, Conference Director for Informa Marketplaces, claimed: “We want to set up Arab Health as the spot to launch occupations for the UAE’s future technology of clinical experts. The Potential Physicians Method recognises and encourages youthful talent to showcase their hottest study and evokes them to pursue their specialised training.

    “This suits effectively with Arab Health’s mission to assistance sector transformation and sustainability targets.”

    A whole of 9 Continuing Professional medical Instruction (CME) conferences will just take location at Arab Health and fitness 2023, welcoming an predicted 3,200 delegates and about 300 international speakers.

    In addition, the exhibition will element over 3,000 exhibitor corporations from 70 international locations and include things like nine product sectors, showcasing the newest technological know-how and innovations in disposables, orthopaedics, health care and common solutions, imaging, health-related units, IT, wellness and prevention, and infrastructure and assets.

    Rounding out the solution sectors is the Transformation Zone, which will consist of start out-ups and innovators introducing their most recent merchandise foremost healthcare authorities offering keynote presentations as component of the Transformation Talks the Products Showcase location and the well-known Innov8 Talks, which will present start out-ups and business owners from close to the earth with the possibility to present their healthcare improvements to a panel of sector industry experts and potential investors.

    Also involved is a new attribute for Arab Well being 2023 – the Clever Wellbeing Pavilion, which will allow for visitors to practical experience are living demonstrations of the most progressive and sustainable health care technologies across collaborating sellers to strengthen the overall patient treatment setting.

    For additional information and facts, please check out www.arabhealthonline.com.

    -Ends-

    About Arab Wellness

    Arab Health is the major healthcare event in the Middle East and is organised by Informa Marketplaces. Recognized 48 many years ago, Arab Health presents a system for the world’s primary brands, wholesalers and distributors to fulfill the clinical and scientific community in the Center East and subcontinent.

    Arab Wellbeing Congress is reputed for providing the optimum high quality Continuing Healthcare Instruction (CME) Conferences to health-related specialists in the location.

    Arab Well being 2023 will choose position from 30 January – 2 February 2023 at the Dubai Entire world Trade Centre, Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

    Web page:          www.arabhealthonline.com
    Facebook:       https://www.facebook.com/ArabHealth/
    Twitter:            @Arab_Health and fitness #ArabHealth
    Linkedin:          Arab Wellbeing Discussion board
    Instagram:       @arabhealthonline

    Media contact:
    JAMES LAKIEGeneral Supervisor
    E-mail : james
    [email protected]

  • How the cost of cancer treatment is driving Americans into debt : Shots

    How the cost of cancer treatment is driving Americans into debt : Shots

    Jeni Rae Peters and daughter embrace at their home in Rapid City, S.D. In 2020, Peters was diagnosed with stage 2 breast cancer. After treatment, Peters estimates that her medical bills exceeded $30,000.

    Dawnee LeBeau for NPR


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    Dawnee LeBeau for NPR


    Jeni Rae Peters and daughter embrace at their home in Rapid City, S.D. In 2020, Peters was diagnosed with stage 2 breast cancer. After treatment, Peters estimates that her medical bills exceeded $30,000.

    Dawnee LeBeau for NPR

    RAPID CITY, S.D. ― Jeni Rae Peters would make promises to herself as she lay awake nights after being diagnosed with breast cancer two years ago.

    “My kids had lost so much,” said Peters, a single mom and mental health counselor. She had just adopted two girls and was fostering four other children. “I swore I wouldn’t force them to have yet another parent.”

    Multiple surgeries, radiation, and chemotherapy controlled the cancer. But, despite having insurance, Peters was left with more than $30,000 of debt, threats from bill collectors, and more anxious nights thinking of her kids.

    “Do I pull them out of day care? Do I stop their schooling and tutoring? Do I not help them with college?” Peters asked herself. “My doctor saved my life, but my medical bills are stealing from my children’s lives.”

    Cancer kills about 600,000 people in the U.S. every year, making it a leading cause of death. Many more survive it, because of breakthroughs in medicines and therapies.

    But the high costs of modern-day care have left millions with a devastating financial burden. That’s forced patients and their families to make gut-wrenching sacrifices even as they confront a grave illness, according to a KHN-NPR investigation of America’s sprawling medical debt problem. The project shows few suffer more than those with cancer.

    About two-thirds of adults with health care debt who’ve had cancer themselves or in their family have cut spending on food, clothing, or other household basics, a poll conducted by KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation) for this project found. About 1 in 4 have declared bankruptcy or lost their home to eviction or foreclosure.

    Other research shows that patients from minority communities are more likely to experience financial hardships caused by cancer than white patients, reinforcing racial disparities that shadow the U.S. health care system.

    “It’s crippling,” said Dr. Veena Shankaran, a University of Washington oncologist who began studying the financial impact of cancer after seeing patients ruined by medical bills. “Even if someone survives the cancer, they often can’t shake the debt.”

    Shankaran found that cancer patients were 71{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} more likely than Americans without the disease to have bills in collections, face tax liens and mortgage foreclosure, or experience other financial setbacks. Analyzing bankruptcy records and cancer registries in Washington state, Shankaran and other researchers also discovered that cancer patients were 2½ times more likely to declare bankruptcy than those without the disease.

    And cancer patients who went bankrupt were more likely to die than those who did not. Oncologists have a name for this: “financial toxicity,” a term that echoes the intractable vomiting, life-threatening infections and other noxious effects of chemotherapy.

    “Sometimes,” Shankaran said, “it’s tough to think about what the system puts patients through.”

    Cancer diagnosis upends a family

    At the three-bedroom home in Rapid City that Peters shares with her children and a friend, there isn’t time most days to dwell on these worries. There are ice skating lessons and driving tests and countless meals to prepare. Teenagers drift in and out, chattering about homework and tattoos and driving.

    Despite having medical insurance, Peters had to pay thousands of dollars out of pocket. “I don’t even know anymore how much I owe,” she said. “Sometimes it feels like people just send me random bills. I don’t even know what they’re for.”

    Dawnee LeBeau for NPR


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    Dawnee LeBeau for NPR


    Despite having medical insurance, Peters had to pay thousands of dollars out of pocket. “I don’t even know anymore how much I owe,” she said. “Sometimes it feels like people just send me random bills. I don’t even know what they’re for.”

    Dawnee LeBeau for NPR

    The smallest children congregate at a small kitchen table under a wall decorated with seven old telephones. (As Peters tells it, the red one is a hotline to Santa, a green one to the Grinch, and a space shuttle-shaped phone connects to astronauts orbiting the Earth.)

    Peters, 44, presides cheerfully over the chaos, directing her children with snide asides and expressions of love. She watches proudly as one teenage daughter helps another with math in the living room. Later she dances with a 5-year-old to Queen under a disco ball in the entry hall.

    Peters, who sports tattoos and earlier this year dyed her hair purple, never planned to have a family. In her late 30s, she wanted to do more for her adopted community, so she took in foster children, many of whom come from the nearby Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. One of her daughters had been homeless.

    “Foster kids are amazing humans,” she said. “I joke I’m the most reluctant parent of the most amazing children that have ever existed. And I get to help raise these little people to be healthy and safe.”

    In spring 2020, the secure world Peters had carefully tended was shattered. As the COVID pandemic spread across the country, she was diagnosed with stage 2 breast cancer.

    Within weeks, she had an intravenous port inserted into her chest. Surgeons removed both her breasts, then her ovaries after tests showed she was at risk of ovarian cancer, as well.

    Cancer treatment today often entails a costly, debilitating march of procedures, infusions, and radiation sessions that can exhaust patients physically and emotionally. It was scary, Peters said. But she rallied her children. “We talked a lot about how they had all lost siblings or parents or other relatives,” she said. “All I had to do was lose my boobs.”

    Much harder, she said, were the endless and perplexing medical bills.

    There were bills from the anesthesiologists who attended her surgeries, from the hospital, and from a surgery center. For a while, the hospital stopped sending bills. Then in April, Peters got a call one morning from a bill collector saying she owed $13,000. In total, Peters estimates her medical debts now exceed $30,000.

    High costs, despite insurance

    Debts of that size Peters carried aren’t unusual. Nationwide, about 1 in 5 indebted adults who have had cancer or have a family member who’s been sick say they owe $10,000 or more, according to the KFF poll. Those dealing with cancer are also more likely than others with health care debt to owe large sums and to say they don’t expect to ever pay them off.

    This debt has been fueled in part by the advent of lifesaving therapies that also come with eye-popping price tags. The National Cancer Institute calculated the average cost of medical care and drugs tops $42,000 in the year following a cancer diagnosis. Some treatments can exceed $1 million.

    Usually, most costs are covered. But patients are increasingly on the hook for large bills because of annual deductibles and other health plan cost sharing. The average leukemia patient with private health insurance, for example, can expect to pay more than $5,100 in the year after diagnosis, according to an analysis by the consulting firm Milliman.

    Even Medicare can leave seniors with huge bills. The average blood cancer patient covered by fee-for-service Medicare can expect to pay more than $17,000 out-of-pocket in the year following diagnosis, Milliman found.

    Additionally ongoing surgeries, tests, and medications can make patients pay large out-of-pocket costs year after year. Physicians and patient advocates say this cost sharing ― originally billed as a way to encourage patients to shop for care ― is devastating. “The problem is that model doesn’t work very well with cancer,” said Dr. David Eagle, an oncologist at New York Cancer & Blood Specialists.

    Peters tries her best to support her children, including her daughter Lisha Jane Featherman. She had never planned to have a family. In her late 30s, she wanted to do more for her adopted community, so she took in foster children. Now, she has two adopted kids and four foster kids.

    Dawnee LeBeau for NPR


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    Dawnee LeBeau for NPR


    Peters tries her best to support her children, including her daughter Lisha Jane Featherman. She had never planned to have a family. In her late 30s, she wanted to do more for her adopted community, so she took in foster children. Now, she has two adopted kids and four foster kids.

    Dawnee LeBeau for NPR

    More broadly, the KHN-NPR investigation found that about 100 million people in the U.S. are now in debt from medical or dental bills. Poor health is among the most powerful predictors of debt, with this debt concentrated in parts of the country with the highest levels of illness.

    According to the KFF poll, 6 in 10 adults with a chronic disease such as cancer, diabetes, or heart disease or with a close family member who is sick have had some kind of health care debt in the past five years. The poll was designed to capture not just bills patients haven’t paid, but also other borrowing used to pay for health care, such as credit cards, payment plans, and loans from friends and family.

    For her part, Peters has had seven surgeries since 2020. Through it all, she had health insurance through her employers. Peters said she knew she had to keep working or would lose coverage and face even bigger bills. Like most plans, however, hers have required she pay thousands of dollars out-of-pocket.

    Within weeks of her diagnosis, the bills rolled in. Then collectors started calling. One call came as Peters was lying in the recovery room after her double mastectomy. “I was kind of delirious, and I thought it was my kids,” she said. “It was someone asking me to pay a medical bill.”

    Peters faced more bills when she switched jobs later that year and her insurance changed. The deductible and cap on her out-of-pocket costs reset.

    In 2021, the deductible and out-of-pocket limit reset again, as they do every year for most health plans. So when Peters slipped on the ice and broke her wrist ― a fracture likely made worse by chemotherapy that weakened her bones ― she was charged thousands more.

    This year has brought more surgeries and yet more bills, as her deductible and out-of-pocket limit reset again.

    “I don’t even know anymore how much I owe,” Peters said. “Sometimes it feels like people just send me random bills. I don’t even know what they’re for.”

    Making sacrifices to pay the bills

    Before getting sick, Peters was earning about $60,000 a year. It was enough to provide for her children, she said, supplemented with a stipend she receives for foster care.

    Peters took on extra work to pay some of the bills and support her family. Five days a week, she works back-to-back shifts at both a mental health crisis center and a clinic counseling teenagers.

    Dawnee LeBeau for NPR


    hide caption

    toggle caption

    Dawnee LeBeau for NPR


    Peters took on extra work to pay some of the bills and support her family. Five days a week, she works back-to-back shifts at both a mental health crisis center and a clinic counseling teenagers.

    Dawnee LeBeau for NPR

    The family budget was always tight. Peters and her kids don’t take extravagant vacations. Peters doesn’t own her home and has next to no savings. Now, she said, they are living at the edge. “I keep praying there is a shoe fairy,” she said, joking about the demands of so many growing feet in her home.

    Peters took on extra work to pay some of the bills. Five days a week, she works back-to-back shifts at both a mental health crisis center and a clinic counseling teenagers, some of whom are suicidal. Last year, three friends on the East Coast paid off some of the debt.

    But Peters’ credit score has tumbled below 600. And the bills pile high on the microwave in her kitchen. “I’m middle-class,” she said. “Could I make payments on some of these? Yes, I suppose I could.”

    That would require trade-offs. She could drop car insurance for her teenage daughter, who just got her license. Canceling ice skating for another daughter would yield an extra $60 a month. But Peters is reluctant.

    “Do you know what it feels like to be a foster kid and get a gold medal in ice skating? Do you know what kind of citizen they could become if they know they’re special?” she said. “There seems to be a myth that you can pay for it all. You can’t.”

    Many cancer patients face difficult choices.

    About 4 in 10 with debt have taken money out of a retirement, college, or other long-term savings account, the KFF poll found; about 3 in 10 have moved in with family or friends or made another change in their living situation.

    Dr. Kashyap Patel, chief executive of Carolina Blood and Cancer Care Associates, said the South Carolina practice has found patients turning to food banks and other charities to get by. One patient was living in his car. Patel estimated that half the patients need some kind of financial aid. Even then, many end up in debt.

    The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society, which typically helps blood cancer patients navigate health insurance and find food, housing, and other nonmedical assistance, is hearing from more patients simply seeking cash to pay off debt, said Nikki Yuill, who oversees the group’s call center.

    “People tell us they won’t get follow-up care because they can’t take on more debt,” Yuill said, recalling one man who refused to call an ambulance even though he couldn’t get to the hospital. “It breaks your heart.”

    Academic research has revealed widespread self-rationing by patients. For example, while nearly 1 in 5 people taking oral chemotherapy abandon treatment, about half stop when out-of-pocket costs exceed $2,000, according to a 2017 analysis.

    Robin Yabroff, an epidemiologist at the American Cancer Society, said more research must be done to understand the lasting effects of medical debt on cancer survivors and their families. “What does it mean for a family if they have to liquidate savings or drain college funds or sell their home?” Yabroff said. “We just don’t know yet.”

    As Peters put away bags of groceries in her kitchen, she conceded she doesn’t know what will happen to her family. Like many patients, she worries about how she’ll pay for tests and follow-up care if the cancer reappears.

    She is still wading through collection notices in the mail and fielding calls from debt collectors. Peters told one that she was prepared to go to court and ask the judge to decide which of her children should be cut off from after-school activities to pay off the debts.

    She asked another debt collector whether he had kids. “He told me that it had been my choice to get the surgery,” Peters recalled. “And I said, ‘Yeah, I guess I chose not to be dead.’ “

    The audio version of this story was produced by Seth Tupper at South Dakota Public Broadcasting.

    KHN (Kaiser Health News) is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues. It is an editorially independent operating program of KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation).

  • Can CBD Impact Your Driving Ability? What We Know

    Can CBD Impact Your Driving Ability? What We Know

    • A small study discovered that cannabidiol (CBD) experienced little influence on people’s driving, but more study is required.
    • Thousands and thousands of Us citizens use CBD to aid with chronic suffering, sleep disorders, and nervousness.
    • People can encounter drowsiness while employing CBD.

    Cannabidiol, or CBD, had minor effect on people’s driving or cognitive capabilities, a new review observed, even at larger doses.

    This must offer you reassurance to the tens of millions of People who use this cannabis compound for long-term suffering, snooze problems, or stress.

    “This is a remarkably significant topic, supplied the raising prevalence of CBD use by the general public for a selection of health-related and psychiatric indications,” mentioned Thomas D. Marcotte, PhD, co-director of the Heart for Medicinal Cannabis Analysis at the College of California, San Diego, who was not concerned in the study.

    The authors of the review warning that far more study is essential and that their review centered on CBD in isolation, so people getting other prescription drugs along with CBD need to travel with treatment.

    “Although CBD is typically considered ‘non-intoxicating,’ its outcomes on protection-delicate jobs are still currently being proven,” examine author Danielle McCartney, PhD, a researcher at the College of Sydney’s Lambert Initiative for Cannabinoid Therapeutics, stated in a news launch. “Our examine is the initial to verify that, when eaten on its personal, CBD is driver-risk-free.”

    Unlike THC, the primary psychoactive compound in hashish that produces the “high” sensation, CBD does not surface to have the very same influence on folks.

    Even so, only one preceding examine, also by researchers at the College of Sydney, immediately investigated CBD’s influence on driving functionality.

    Researchers discovered that CBD did not enhance how considerably people today weaved or drifted in checks performed on a driving simulator — a standardized evaluate of driving capacity.

    This previously study used vaporized CBD-that contains cannabis. CBD is extra commonly ingested orally as oils, capsules, or edibles.

    In the new tiny research, which was printed May possibly 30 in the Journal of Psychopharmacology, researchers gave 17 persons CBD in oil — at just one of three doses (15, 300, or 1,500 milligrams) or an inactive placebo.

    Most reports on the effective results of CBD use doses up to 1,500 milligrams.

    Right before and several occasions following taking CBD or placebo — up to 3.5 to 4 several hours — members concluded jobs on a driving simulator.

    This incorporated subsequent securely driving an additional automobile and driving together highways and rural streets. Researchers made use of these assessments to measure how very well people today could manage the simulated vehicle.

    Members also took numerous computerized assessments that measured their cognitive operate, drug-induced impairment, and reaction time.

    In addition, they described on their subjective encounter, this kind of as whether or not they felt “stoned,” “sedated,” “alert,” “anxious,” or “sleepy.”

    Each particular person concluded the screening four instances — for the three various doses plus the placebo — with at least 7 times in between every single session.

    None of the doses of CBD appeared to impair participants’ driving potential or cognitive general performance or induce inner thoughts of intoxication, the scientists discovered.

    In addition, the normal transform in how a great deal men and women weaved or drifted was lesser than what was viewed with intoxication with other prescription drugs in another study, the scientists said. It was also smaller than in the former CBD and driving study.

    “This is a effectively-performed analyze that adds to an evolving literature that CBD by yourself is not likely to be cognitively impairing or negatively impact driving functionality,” stated Dr. Marcotte, “although details on the latter stays sparse.”

    In selecting whether CBD impaired motorists, researchers looked especially at irrespective of whether the effect of CBD was increased than what takes place at a .05 p.c blood liquor focus (BAC).

    In the steps they appeared at, it was not.

    Tim Brown, PhD, director of drugged driving investigation at the Countrywide Advanced Driving Simulator at the University of Iowa, reported while BAC is a valuable comparison, some driving impairment occurs at .05 per cent.

    And in some nations, this is the authorized limit, while, in most U.S. states, it is better — .08 {fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c}.

    “So not currently being worse than that amount [0.05 percent] does not imply ‘safe,’” Dr. Brown said.

    Researchers located that folks who took 300 or 1,500 milligrams also described reduce levels of stress than those who took 15 milligrams of CBD or the placebo. This matches with other investigation wanting at the anti-stress gains of CBD.

    Simply because of COVID-19 limits in area when the examine was getting carried out, scientists were being not able to recruit as many persons as they experienced at first supposed.

    As a result, they could not establish the impression of CBD on the “car following” aspect of the initial simulated driving examination, which transpired 45 to 75 minutes just after persons took CBD.

    Brown reported although the research indicates small impact of CBD on driving, the benefits ought to be considered with warning.

    Most of the contributors have been not recurrent hashish or CBD consumers, he explained, so additional research is necessary to know no matter whether long-expression CBD use or CBD use along with other drugs affects driving potential.

    Marcotte explained potential reports should really also glimpse at drivers using CBD for health-related or psychiatric signs and symptoms, which include older grownups.

    In addition, whilst the capacity to keep in one’s lane when driving is a “good proxy evaluate of basic safety,” Brown explained the final results really don’t rule out the affect of CBD on other facets of driving.

    “Drugs could have minor effect or even strengthen lane retaining but continue to consequence in delayed response time to critical gatherings,” he stated.

    For instance, if a stimulant increases emphasis, a driver may possibly be so intent on what’s going on before them that they skip — and delay responding to — what is likely on in their periphery, these types of as a little one running into the street.

    Brown mentioned there are also signs that folks in the study having CBD could have pushed slower, which can mask the consequences of the drug on how a lot a person weaves or drifts.

    Even though the new analyze indicates that CBD is unlikely to impair driving as a result of intoxication, some men and women getting CBD can knowledge drowsiness, which might have an impact on their driving potential.

    CBD can also most likely interact with other medicines, like discomfort prescription drugs, antidepressants, seizure drugs, and diabetes remedies.

    Drivers should also be mindful about which CBD products they use simply because some could contain other hashish factors.

    “In badly controlled marketplaces, it is vital for people to be aware that the purity of CBD products is not constantly crystal clear, and THC (which can impair driving) may perhaps be existing in some products and solutions,” Marcotte said.