Open access
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Thu, November 8 – 10 Stories of The Day!

8 Nov, 2018 | 00:01h | UTC

 

1 – 2018 ACC/AHA/HRS Guideline on the Evaluation and Management of Patients With Bradycardia and Cardiac Conduction Delay (free)

See also: Executive Summary (free) AND Summary form ACC (free) AND Bradycardia Guideline Hub (free resources)

 

2 – Basic Emergency Care: approach to the acutely ill and injured – World Health Organization (free PDF)

 

3 – Podcast: Battle of the Heart Societies: Who Is Right–the US or Europe–Regarding How to Manage Hypertension? – JAMA (free)

Related: Impact of the Discordance Between Blood Pressure Guidelines (free perspective and commentaries)

 

4 – In win for open access, two major funders won’t cover publishing in hybrid journals – Science (free)

See also: Wellcome and Gates join bold European open-access plan – Nature (free) AND Wellcome is updating its open access policy (free) AND Big funders back plan for instant free access to journals, but researchers say it is risky for science – Science|Business (free)

Related: cOAlition S: Making Open Access a Reality by 2020 (free Statement and commentaries)

 

5 – Perspective: Why Doctors Hate Their Computers – The New Yorker (free)

“Digitization promises to make medical care easier and more efficient. But are screens coming between doctors and patients?”

 

6 – Review: State-of-the-Art Diagnosis and Treatment of Hypertension in Pregnancy – Mayo Clinic Proceedings (free)

 

7 – Review: Lower extremity arterial disease in patients with diabetes: a contemporary narrative review – Cardiovascular Diabetology (free)

 

8 – Instant soups and noodles responsible for burning nearly 10,000 children each year – American Academy of Pediatrics (free)

Commentary: How Instant Soup, Noodle Burns Send Over 9500 Kids To ERs Each Year – Forbes (free)

 

9 – Vaccination and Allergic Sensitization in Early Childhood – The ALADDIN Birth Cohort – EClinicalMedicine (free)

Commentary: Link between vaccines and allergies dismissed – Karolinska Institutet (free)

 

10 – Health-motivated taxes on red and processed meat: A modelling study on optimal tax levels and associated health impacts – PLOS One (free)

Commentaries: Should there be a tax on red meat? – BBC (free) AND Taxing red meat would save many lives, research shows – The Guardian (free)

Related: To improve global health, tax the things that are killing us – Financial Times (free policies, articles and commentaries) AND Policy lessons from health taxes (free research and commentaries) AND Fiscal policies for diet and the prevention of noncommunicable diseases – World Health Organization (free) AND The Lancet taskforce on NCDs and economics (free series and commentaries)

 


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