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Combination Therapy Appears Helpful For Short-Term Treatment Of Insomnia; Cognitive Behavior Therapy May Be Better For Long-Term
For patients with persistent insomnia, a combination of cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) and the medication zolpidem for 6 weeks was associated with improvement in sleep, although for a longer treatment period CBT alone was more beneficial, according to a study in the May 20 issue of JAMA.
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318 Articles On The H1N1 Swine Flu Virus Available Online Free Of Charge On SpringerLink
Springer Science+Business Media is offering all journal articles which deal with the H1N1 virus, or swine flu, free of charge on its online information platform http://www.springerlink.com. The articles can be found by using the search term "H1N1." A total of 318 scientific articles will be available to print out or download from now until 31 December 2009.
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Lancet Examines Leishmaniasis In East Africa
A Lancet world report examines the growing threat of visceral leishmaniasis on populations in eastern Africa. Each year, the parasitic disease affects around 500,000 people worldwide, killing roughly 50,000. Though "[t]wo-thirds of [leishmaniasis] patients are in southeast Asia ò€¦ the second largest foci is east Africa: perhaps as many as 40,000 cases every year, and incidence is on the rise," according to the article. The report explores the difficulty monitoring visceral leishmaniasis due to poor diagnostics and data surveillance, a surge in leishmania/HIV coinfection in Ethiopia and the Sudan, the shortcomings of the therapies available to treat visceral leishmaniasis, as well as future efforts to control the spread of the disease.
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Op-Eds: Pharma In Africa; U.S. Global TB Funding; ITN Distribution Strategies Examined

Economic Crisis Presents Opportunity To Reform Pharmaceutical Practices In Africa, Says UNAIDS Head With an estimated 22 million people living with HIV in Africa, the demand for affordable and effective HIV/AIDS medications on the continent presents an opportunity to reform its pharmaceutical practices, Michel Sidibe, executive director of UNAIDS, writes in a Mail & Guardian opinion piece. "What the continent needs is a single drug agency ò€¦ [to] guarantee the quality of medicines on the continent," Sidibe writes, adding how such changes could help to attract "private sector investment for the production of medicines within Africa" and serve as "a model for removing bottlenecks, but also for wider development that would contribute to an AIDS/MDGs movement in Africa." Sidibe concludes, "In this economic crisis African leaders have an opportunity for innovation. Let AIDS not be an obstacle. Rather let the AIDS response provide an opportunity to transform the continent (7/7). U.S. Congress Must Come Through On TB Pledge Though H1N1 (swine) flu continues to dominate the daily headlines, "tuberculosis, is already killing about 4,800 people around the world each day," and "[i]ncredibly, the world still does relatively little to stop it," Jorge Sampaio, the U.N. envoy for the Global Plan to Stop TB, writes in an opinion piece appearing in the Times of Trenton. "The U.S. could make an enormous difference in TB control and reap significant diplomatic benefits with comparatively little financial investment" Sampaio writes, pointing to the devastating effects of TB in Africa and Muslim countries, such as Pakistan and Afghanistan. "Of course, the main focus in Congress is on rebuilding the economy. But, we should not see TB as a distraction from that task, since the disease is already a massive weight on the global economy," Sampaio writes, urging, "In accordance with the increase pledged last year, the Congress should provide $650 million in 2010 for the United States" own global TB programs" (Sampaio, Times of Trenton, 7/6). BMJ Editorial Examines Methods For Distributing ITNs With the effort "under way across sub-Saharan Africa to increase the distribution of insecticide treated nets to achieve the Roll Back Malaria target of 80 percent coverage of children and pregnant women in endemic areas by 2010," Thomas Eisele, of the International Health and Development at Tulane University, and Richard Steketee, of the of Malaria Control and Evaluation Partnership in Africa examine the various approaches to ensuring high coverage, including private, public and mixed delivery strategies in an editorial appearing in the British Medical Journal. "Evaluations of feasible widescale delivery systems to maintain high equitable coverage in households and communities should be a high priority for countries once they achieve high bednet coverage," the authors conclude (Eisele/ Steketee, 7/2). This information was reprinted from globalhealth.kff.org with kind permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily Global Health Policy Report, search the archives and sign up for email delivery at globalhealth.kff.org. © Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.


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