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An
organizing principle for cancer therapeutics
As knowledge
of the human genome advances, physicians are finding ways to
tailor cancer prevention and treatment to specific molecular
targets, according to Richard Klausner, M.D., director of the
National Cancer Institute. Speaking at grand rounds in February
on The Taxonomy of Molecular Targets, Klausner said, I
think we are beginning to see ways that we can organize the extraordinary
complexity of genetic change in cancer. The challenge for
oncology and general medicine, he said, is to develop a usable,
meaningful phenotypic database. We are going to have a
hard time developing successful therapies if we cant understand
the targets were looking at. |
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The
uneven distribution
of health care
Wealth is more
concentrated in Latin America and poverty rates are four times
those of countries with similar gross domestic products, said
David Brandling-Bennett, M.D., deputy director of the Pan American
Health Organization, speaking at grand rounds at Epidemiology
and Public Health in February. That adds up to poor health care
for large segments of the population. We are not attending
to the needs of those who are the neediest, he said. Governments,
he continued, must ensure that basic health services of adequate
quality are provided equitably. Of the $2.3 trillion spent on
health care annually around the world, 90 percent is spent in
industrialized nations. We are not addressing the issue
of disparity in health. |
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Where
Harley Street crosses Fleet
As editor of
The Lancet, Britains leading medical journal, Richard
Horton, M.D., finds himself straddling two worlds. Editors
have one foot in the perfumed halls of academia and the other
in the sewage-strewn gutters of the press, he said in April
at the 52nd annual meeting of the Associates of the Cushing/Whitney
Library. His journals readership is a broad clinical audience.
Only 300 of the 6,000 manuscripts submitted each year are published,
Horton said, and they must meet journalistic as well as scientific
criteria. When they find their way into the hands of the lay
press, misinterpretations can have unfortunate results. One study
published in his journal described a possible link between submissiveness
in women and lower rates of heart disease. The resulting newspaper
headline? Put down that rolling pin, darling, its
bad for your heart. Another press report, however, led
parents to the mistaken belief that childhood vaccinations could
cause developmental disorders. There was a panic, a serious
drop in the uptake of the vaccine, Horton said. The
effect was catastrophic. |
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Linking
HIV care to socioeconomics
Many interventions
aimed at stemming the spread of AIDS miss the point, says Tom
Peterman, M.D., chief of the prevention studies section at the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. They assume, he said
during a talk to Yale AIDS researchers in March, that individuals
are in control of themselves and their environment. But in this
country the disease is increasingly associated with high rates
of poverty, homicide, teen pregnancy, drug abuse and other sexually
transmitted diseases. It is hard to ignore race and racism
as a factor in public health in the United States, he said.
It is a pretty consistent finding that income inequality,
more than income, determines health. |
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Communicating
in the clinic, across cultures
Language and
culture can come between patients and caregivers, sometimes with
disastrous clinical consequences, said Glenn Flores, M.D., co-director
of the Pediatric Latino Clinic at Boston Medical Center. Culture
affects clinical care, Flores said during his talk in March,
Culture and Patient-Physician Relationships: Achieving
Cultural Competency in Health Care, sponsored by Y-NHH
Ambulatory Services. It affects outcomes and it affects
quality of care. He cited the example of a physician who
failed to grasp the severity of a Mexican girls abdominal
pain because her parents spoke no English. After two return visits
to the emergency room she was diagnosed with peritonitis. In
another case, a mistranslation led to suspicions of abuse and
a mothers uninformed consent to turn her daughter over
to child welfare officials. Caregivers, he said, must be familiar
with the language and culture of their patients. What is
not going to work, he said, is to say, Lets
all be sincere, lets hold hands and sing We Are the
World. We need to have a more diverse work force. |