Web-Based Support Helps Women with Breast Cancer

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Research
05 March 2012
Every day 18 Swedish women are diagnosed with breast cancer. Although there is a real need for support and information, many women struggle and get lost in the deluge of information. In a study of 227 women, researchers at the Sahlgrenska Academy at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden, have developed a web-based programme to guide patients all the way from diagnosis to rehabilitation.
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EEG Shows How Brain Tracts are Formed

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Research
19 February 2012
In the past few years, researchers at the University of Helsinki have made several breakthroughs in discovering how the brain of preterm babies work, in developing treatments to protect the brain, and in developing research methods suitable for hospital use.
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New Method Makes it Easier to Treat Prostate and Pancreatic Cancer

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Research
15 February 2012
Laser light in combination with certain drugs - known as photodynamic therapy - can destroy cancer tumours, but is today used mostly to cure skin cancer. The reason that internal tumours are not treated with the method is that the technology does not exist to check that the precise amount of light is administered.
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Patients' Online Hospital Reviews Reflect Data on Hospital Outcomes

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Research
14 February 2012
Patients' ratings of hospitals tally with objective measures of the hospital's performance, according to an independent study published today in Archives of Internal Medicine. Since 2008, patients have been able to post comments on and rate hospitals using the NHS Choices website, in the same way as they might rate a hotel on Tripadvisor.
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Could Alzheimer's Disease be Diagnosed with a Simple Blood Test?

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Research
25 January 2012
Spanish researchers, led by Pedro Carmona from the Instituto de Estructura de la Materia in Madrid, have uncovered a new promising way to diagnose Alzheimer's disease more accurately. Their technique, which is non-invasive, fast and low-cost, measures how much infrared radiation is either emitted or absorbed by white blood cells.
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Aiding Cancer Therapy by Mathematically Modeling Tumor-Immune Interactions

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Research
25 January 2012
Mathematical modeling of cancer usually involves describing the evolution of tumors in terms of differential equations and stochastic or agent-based models, and testing the effectiveness of various treatments within the chosen mathematical framework.
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T-Rays Technology Could Help Develop Star Trek-Style Hand-Held Medical Scanners

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Research
23 January 2012
Scientists have developed a new way to create electromagnetic Terahertz (THz) waves or T-rays - the technology behind full-body security scanners. The researchers behind the study, published recently in the journal Nature Photonics, say their new stronger and more efficient continuous wave T-rays could be used to make better medical scanning gadgets and may one day lead to innovations similar to the 'tricorder' scanner used in Star Trek.
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More eHealth News ...

  1. Europeans Ready for 'Active Ageing', New Survey Says
  2. Smart Way of Saving Lives in Natural Disasters
  3. New "Virtual Liver" Technology Helps Detect Liver Tumours
  4. Robotic Therapy May Provide Lasting Gains for Immobilized Stroke Survivors
  5. From Heterogeneous Patient Measurements Towards Earlier Diagnosis in Alzheimer's Disease
  6. New Potential Personalized Medicine Platform
  7. European Robots Helping to Perform Safer, Quicker Brain Surgery
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