Popular Articles

HIV/AIDS Vaccine Coalition Urges Continued Funding For Research Amid Economic Crisis
A recently released AIDS Vaccine Advocacy Coalition report says that although there has been a renewed focus on discovery, innovation and basic science in vaccine research, action is needed to ensure that research funding continues during the economic downturn, VOA News reports. AVAC executive director Mitchell Warren said the report is "about putting all the pieces together ... not just the search for an AIDS vaccine, but in fact the entire HIV prevention response." He added, "[T]he good news is we have some new pieces of the puzzle, and we"re expecting additional new pieces of understanding through research this year." Warren said that AVAC believes HIV/AIDS vaccine research is in "one of the most exciting times," with "new energy, new commitment to unlocking some of the basic scientific roadblocks that have impeded our ability to find a vaccine." For example, a study released earlier this week examined efforts to produce a vaccine through genetic transfer. Regarding the study, Warren said, "It doesn"t mean we have an AIDS vaccine, but it means we have an entirely new approach to trying to deliver protection." Warren said that the field of HIV/AIDS vaccine research has shown a renewed commitment since Merck canceled its vaccine trial in 2007. According to Warren, the new AVAC report examines knowledge gained from the Merck study, which has provided "an unimaginable amount of information." Meanwhile, the effect of the economic crisis on research funding is concerning, Warren said, adding, "I believe that every dollar spent is going to be held up to a greater scrutiny as budgets tighten and as funders have to re-examine their priorities." According to Warren, without renewed funding commitments, "we will not only incur a much greater public health catastrophe, but I would argue that the economic catastrophes to come, if we don"t respond aggressively to HIV, will actually have repercussions that will ... make the economic crisis pale in comparison" (DeCapua, VOA News, 5/18).

Regional Center For Biodefense And Emerging Infectious Diseases Research Funded By NIH
A consortium of research centers in the Tri-state Region, including Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University, has received a $46 million grant to conduct research on emerging infectious diseases.
News of the day
RNs Praise House Vote To Permit State Single-Payer Laws
The nation"s largest union and professional association of registered nurses hailed passage of a key amendment in the House Education and Labor Committee to the national healthcare reform bill this morning that would enable individual states to go a step farther and adopt single-payer, Medicare-for-All style reforms.
Endocrinology

Make National Labour Force Survey Compulsory

Medical practitioners should be required to participate in a new national medical labour force survey as part of their registration obligations, to assist workforce planning, according to an article published in this year"s General Practice edition of the Medical Journal of Australia. Dr Deborah Askew, Senior Research Fellow in General Practice at the University of Queensland, and her co-authors argue that the data from the current workforce surveys administered by state and territory medical boards are neither timely nor comprehensive. Dr Askew said the establishment of a new national medical registration scheme and a National Minimum Data Set Project in 2010 should be used to move medical workforce data collection into the 21st century. "Workforce planning aims to ensure an adequate supply of doctors with the appropriate skills to meet the current and projected future medical care needs of the population," Dr Askew said. "This requires accurate information about the current medical workforce. "Making the workforce survey a compulsory component of registration would enable development of a comprehensive national dataset. "The introduction of web-based electronic data capture for both medical registration and workforce data would facilitate timely analysis and reporting." Dr Askew said national labour force data could be used to monitor trends such as the impact of the feminisation of the general practice workforce on work patterns and the demands placed on GPs who teach medical students and doctors-in-training. In the same issue of the Medical Journal of Australia, the Australian Primary Health Care Research Institute outlines recommendations from a Workforce Roundtable. Recommendations highlighted by Associate Professor Kirsty Douglas and her co-authors included: Simplifying the Medicare Benefits Schedule; effectively funding undergraduate and prevocational medical and nursing education and training in primary health care; developing the career structure and training pathways for GPs and primary health care nurses. GP Week runs from 20 - 26 July. The Medical Journal of Australia is a publication of the Australian Medical Association. Australian Medical Association


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):