RSSCategory: University of Washington

Adolescents using insulin pumps achieve better blood sugar levels, but diabetes control still poor

Adolescents using insulin pumps achieve better blood sugar levels, but diabetes control still poor

Adolescents with type 1 diabetes who use insulin pumps achieve better blood-sugar levels than do adolescents who use other methods, according to a new study. Those using insulin pumps also required fewer hospitalizations and emergency room visits, the study found. But even with the pump many children and teens still fail to achieve good blood-sugar [...]

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May 2, 2009 | By | Reply More
UW School of Medicine ranked among top 10 medical schools by U.S. News & World Report

UW School of Medicine ranked among top 10 medical schools by U.S. News & World Report

The University of Washington School of Medicine has been ranked 6th in the nation by U.S. News & World Report. In the speciality categories, UW ranked: 1st in primary care, family medicine, and rural medicine 5th in women’s health 6th in pediatric and geriatric medicine 8th in internal medicine. To learn more: Go to the U.S. [...]

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April 24, 2009 | By | Reply More
Better numbers needed to cut heart attack deaths

Better numbers needed to cut heart attack deaths

 If you have a cardiac arrest whether you live or die depends largely on where you live. If you live in Seattle, for example, you have about a 50/50 chance of surviving. But if you live in Dallas, Texas, your chances are 1 in 10. In New York City, they’re 1 in 20. And if you [...]

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February 28, 2009 | By | Reply More
Simple checklist markedly reduces surgical deaths-updated video

Simple checklist markedly reduces surgical deaths-updated video

Using a simple checklist to make sure operating teams completed important safety tasks before, during and after operating, reduced surgical deaths and serious post-operative complications by roughly one third.

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January 30, 2009 | By | Reply More
UW to host free six-part “Mini-Medical School” lecture series

UW to host free six-part “Mini-Medical School” lecture series

The first lecture of the University of Washington School of Medicine’s six-part “Mini-Medical School” series will be held February 3rd.  The weekly programs are scheduled for 7 p.m., Tuesday evenings, from February 3 until March 10, 2009, in Hogness Auditorium, Warren G. Magnuson Health Sciences Center, University of Washington, 1959 N.E. Pacific Street, Seattle.  The series will cover such subjects as [...]

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January 22, 2009 | By | Reply More
Public forum on growth attenuation in children with profound disabilities

Public forum on growth attenuation in children with profound disabilities

The “Ashley” case will be discussed in an open forum sponsored by Seattle Children’s Treuman Katz Center for Pediatric Bioethics on Friday, Jan. 23. In 2006, doctors from Seattle Children’s reported in the journal Archives of Pediatric & Adolescent Medicine the case of a six-year old girl with profound disabilities whose parents asked doctors to [...]

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January 14, 2009 | By | Reply More
AIDS expert to speak at UW for World AIDS Day

AIDS expert to speak at UW for World AIDS Day

    Dr. Catherine Wilfert developed the idea that it was possible to prevent the AIDS virus from spreading from an infected mother to her uninfected newborn by giving an anti-HIV drug to the mother just before and to the child right after delivery. The approach can cut mother-to-child transmission of HIV by 80%  and [...]

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November 29, 2008 | By | Reply More
AIDS pioneer to speak at UW Monday, Dec. 1

AIDS pioneer to speak at UW Monday, Dec. 1

Dr. Catherine Wilfert developed the idea that it was possible to prevent the AIDS virus from spreading from an infected mother to her uninfected newborn by giving an anti-HIV drug to the mother just before and to the child right after delivery. The approach can cut mother-to-child transmission of HIV by 80%  and is credited [...]

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November 29, 2008 | By | Reply More
Ginkgo Biloba fails to prevent dementia and Alzheimer’s disease

Ginkgo Biloba fails to prevent dementia and Alzheimer’s disease

Gingko biloba, a popular herbal preparation used to prevent or treat memory problems, failed to prevent the onset of dementia or Alzheimer’s diseases in a large study of older men and women. The study appears in today’s issue of JAMA, the Journal of the American Medical Association Gingko biloba is one of the most popular [...]

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November 18, 2008 | By | Reply More