Medical Malpractice Lawyers

Medical Studies are the basic/applied research that is performed to expand knowledge in the field of medicine. Medical research, as it is called, can be divided into two general categories. The first is the evaluation of new treatments for both safety and efficiency in what are labeled “clinical trials”. It also includes all other research that contributes to the development of new treatments. If the goal of the latter is specifically to elaborate knowledge for the development of new therapeutic strategies, it is termed “pre-clinical”.

Medical Studies Case Evaluation

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  • George Habash, founder of PFLP, dies (Moldova.org)
    George Habash, the doctor who founded the Marxist Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, died Saturday in a hospital in Jordan.Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas decreed three days of mourning, The New York Times reported.Habash was born in Lydda in 1925 in what was then the British Palestine Mandate, the son of a merchant. In 1948, he had to abandon his medical studies at the American ...

  • Professor T. Cecil Gray: General practitioner whose 'Liverpool Technique' established modern methods in anaesthesia (Independent)
    Thomas Cecil Gray, anaesthetist: born Liverpool 11 March 1913; Demonstrator in Anaesthesia, Liverpool University 1942, 1944-46, Reader in Anaesthesia, and Head of Department of Anaesthesia 1947-59, Professor of Anaesthesia 1959-76 (Emeritus), Dean of Postgraduate Medical Studies 1966-70, Dean of the Faculty of Medicine 1970-76; Editor, British Journal of Anaesthesia 1948-64; President, ...

  • Reforms Needed for Medical Guidelines? (WebMD)
    Congress should create a new national board to help America's doctors and patients digest the dizzying volume of medical studies published each year, an Institute of Medicine report recommends.

  • Many blacks remain wary of clinical trials (Baltimore Sun)
    Tuskegee study continues to fuel suspicions, research finds Many African-American patients refuse to join medical studies because they fear they will be lied to and harmed by scientists who view them as human guinea pigs, according to a study by Johns Hopkins researchers.

  • Study probes why U.S. blacks wary of medical trials (Reuters via Yahoo! News)
    Distrust of doctors and concern over being abused as human guinea pigs may explain why U.S. blacks have been less willing than whites to volunteer to take part in medical studies, researchers said on Monday.

  • 'Young at heart' find surgical success (Bucks County Courier Times)
    More medical studies suggest that the so-called "oldest of the old" can survive - even, thrive - after heart valve surgery.

  • Rwanda: Minister Warns On Medical Studies (AllAfrica.com)
    Health minister Dr Jean Damascene Ntawukuliryayo has raised concern over 'quack' medical students, saying they could lead to unprofessional medics.

  • Landmark Heart Study Expands to Genetics (News 8 San Diego)
    Doctors didn't know cigarettes were bad and thought high blood pressure could sometimes be good when homemaker Helen Vaughn was lured by a 1948 newspaper ad to join one of history's most important medical studies.

  • 1,500 Surgical Objects Accidentally Left Inside Patients (Fox News)
    Every year, in the United States, about 1,500 people are wheeled out of the operating room with a surgical object accidentally left inside of them, according to medical studies.

  • Bar Codes Keep Surgical Objects Outside Patients (Slashdot)
    Reservoir Hill writes "Every year about 1,500 people in the US have surgical objects accidentally left inside them after surgery, according to medical studies. To prevent this potentially deadly problem, Loyola University Medical Center is utilizing a new technology that is helping its surgical teams keep track of all sponges used during a surgical procedure. Each sponge has a unique bar code ...

  • Hospital to put codes on surgical sponges (EARTHtimes.org)
    Loyola Medical Center in Chicago is putting bar codes on surgical sponges to make sure they aren't left inside a patient after an operation is over. U.S. medical studies show that 1,500 people each year have surgical objects accidentally left inside them ...

  • Surgical Objects Accidentally Left Inside About 1,500 Patients In US Each Year (Science Daily)
    Every year, in the United States about 1,500 people have surgical objects accidentally left inside them after surgery, according to medical studies. About two-thirds of the surgical objects left behind are sponges, which can lead to pain, infection, bowel obstructions, problems in healing, longer hospital stays, additional surgeries and in rare cases, death.

  • 60 years later, heart study expanding to genetic factors (ABC 7 Chicago)
    Doctors didn't know cigarettes were bad and thought high blood pressure could sometimes be good when homemaker Helen Vaughn was lured by a 1948 newspaper ad to join one of history's most important medical studies.

  • Landmark heart study expands to genetics (The San Luis Obispo Tribune)
    Doctors didn't know cigarettes were bad and thought high blood pressure could sometimes be good when homemaker Helen Vaughn was lured by a 1948 newspaper ad to join one of history's most important medical studies. At the time, Vaughn's main attraction to the Framingham Heart Study was its free medical exams. Sixty years later, Vaughn is nearing 91 and the landmark study has moved well past ...

  • Framingham Heart Study adds genetics (The Barre Montpelier Times Argus)
    FRAMINGHAM, Mass. -- Doctors didn't know cigarettes were bad and thought high blood pressure could sometimes be good when homemaker Helen Vaughn was lured by a 1948 newspaper ad to join one of history's most important medical studies. ... - By JAY LINDSAY The Associated Press

  • Landmark heart study expanding into genetics (MSNBC)
    Doctors did not know cigarettes were bad and thought high blood pressure could sometimes be good when homemaker Helen Vaughn was lured by a 1948 newspaper ad to join one of history's most important medical studies.

  • Landmark heart study expands to genetics (AP via Yahoo! News)
    Doctors didn't know cigarettes were bad and thought high blood pressure could sometimes be good when homemaker Helen Vaughn was lured by a 1948 newspaper ad to join one of history's most important medical studies.

  • 60 years later, Framingham Heart Study expanding into genetics (The Daily Comet)
    FRAMINGHAM, Mass. Doctors didn't know cigarettes were bad and thought high blood pressure could sometimes be good when homemaker Helen Vaughn was lured by a 1948 newspaper ad to join one of history's most important medical studies.

  • Assuming an Unhealthy Burden for Football Glory (New York Times)
    Weight problems among high school football players have far outpaced those of other male children and adolescents, according to two recent medical studies.

  • 60 years later, Framingham Heart Study expanding into genetics (Boston Globe)
    Doctors didn't know cigarettes were bad and thought high blood pressure could sometimes be good when homemaker Helen Vaughn was lured by a 1948 newspaper ad to join one of history's most important medical studies.

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