PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

New moms and obese people risk complications from influenza: McMaster study

2013-08-27
(Press-News.org) Hamilton, ON (August 27, 2013) – Although up to 500,000 people world-wide die of severe influenza each year, there has been no clear evidence about who is susceptible for influenza complications and it may not be who people think, says a study from McMaster University.

This is important because issues during past influenza seasons and pandemics have included vaccine shortage; the time needed to develop vaccines for specific influenza strains and which groups are first in line for vaccination.

New mothers and obese people, two groups not typically regarded as risk groups, were found to have a higher risk of death and other severe outcomes from influenza, according to the global study sponsored by the World Health Organization. But, in contrast to current assumption, ethnic minorities such as American Aboriginal People and pregnant women were not found to have more complicated influenza and would not need priority vaccination. The report is published online in the BMJ, the journal of the British Medical Association. "Policy makers and public health organizations need to recognize the poor quality of evidence that has previously supported decisions on who receives vaccines during an epidemic," said Dr. Dominik Mertz, lead author of the study and an assistant professor of medicine of McMaster's Michael G. DeGroote School of Medicine. "If we can define the risk groups we can optimally allocate vaccines, and that is particularly important when and if there is vaccine shortage, say during a new pandemic." The researchers reviewed 239 observational studies between 1918 and 2011, looking at risk factors for complications of influenza including developing pneumonia or needing ventilator support, admission to hospital or its intensive care unit or dying. "These data reinforce the need to carefully define those conditions that lead to complications following infection with influenza," said Dr. Mark Loeb, senior author on the paper. He is also a microbiologist and professor of medicine of the Michael G. DeGroote School of Medicine. ### Editors: The paper, and a short video by Dr. Mertz about the paper, may be found here: http://www.bmj.com/content/347/bmj.f5061 A recent photo of Dr. Mertz is attached.

To arrange interviews and for further information, please contact:

Veronica McGuire
Media Relations
Faculty of Health Sciences
McMaster University
905-525-9140, ext. 22169
vmcguir@mcmaster.ca


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Johns Hopkins researchers find promising therapeutic target for hard-to-treat brain tumor

2013-08-27
Johns Hopkins researchers say they have found a specific protein in nearly 100 percent of high-grade meningiomas -- the most common form of brain tumor -- suggesting a new target for therapies for a cancer that does not respond to current chemotherapy. Importantly, the investigators say, the protein -- NY-ESO-1 -- is already at the center of a clinical trial underway at the National Cancer Institute. That trial is designed to activate the immune systems of patients with other types of tumors that express the protein, training the body to attack the cancer and eradicate ...

Snapping turtles finding refuge in urban areas while habitats are being polluted

2013-08-27
COLUMBIA, Mo. -- In the Midwest, people have a fear of encountering snapping turtles while swimming in local ponds, lakes and rivers. Now in a new study, a University of Missouri researcher has found that snapping turtles are surviving in urban areas as their natural habitats are being polluted or developed for construction projects. One solution is for people to stop using so many chemicals that are eventually dumped into the waterways, the scientist said. "Snapping turtles are animals that can live in almost any aquatic habitat as long as their basic needs for survival ...

Researcher controls colleague's motions in first human brain-to-brain interface

2013-08-27
University of Washington researchers have performed what they believe is the first noninvasive human-to-human brain interface, with one researcher able to send a brain signal via the Internet to control the hand motions of a fellow researcher. Using electrical brain recordings and a form of magnetic stimulation, Rajesh Rao sent a brain signal to Andrea Stocco on the other side of the UW campus, causing Stocco's finger to move on a keyboard. While researchers at Duke University have demonstrated brain-to-brain communication between two rats, and Harvard researchers have ...

No evidence of residential property value impacts near US wind turbines

2013-08-27
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) analyzed more than 50,000 home sales near 67 wind facilities in 27 counties across nine U.S. states, yet was unable to uncover any impacts to nearby home property values. "This is the second of two major studies we have conducted on this topic [the first was published in 2009, see below], and in both studies [using two different datasets] we find no statistical evidence that operating wind turbines have had any measurable impact on home sales prices," says Ben Hoen, the lead author of the new report. Hoen is a researcher ...

NASA sees Tropical Storm Kong-Rey battling wind shear

2013-08-27
NASA satellite imagery on Aug. 27 showed that wind shear was having an effect on the thunderstorms in Tropical Storm Kong-Rey's northern quadrant. NASA's Aqua satellite passed over Tropical Storm Kong-Rey on Aug. 27 at 0515 UTC/1:15 a.m. EDT and the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer took a visible image of the storm. The imagery showed that the northern quadrant of the storm had the weakest area of thunderstorm development as a result of northeasterly wind shear, while the southern and western quadrants had strong thunderstorms. Wind shear is expected to relax ...

Fernand's remnants still drenching eastern Mexico

2013-08-27
Tropical moisture continued to stream over eastern Mexico on Aug. 27, from the remnants of former Tropical Storm Fernand. NASA's TRMM satellite captured the moisture-laden Tropical Storm Fernand after it made landfall and was dropping rainfall at a rate of 2 inches/50 mm per hour. On Aug. 27 at 10:32 EDT, radar data from Mexico showed rainfall streaming in from near the city of Tampico on the Gulf of Mexico, to the west and northwest. Areas including Ebano and Panuco were experiencing heavy rainfall at the time. The center of Fernand's remnants were near 20.6 north latitude ...

CU study relies on twins and their parents to understand height-IQ connection

2013-08-27
The fact that taller people also tend to be slightly smarter is due in roughly equal parts to two phenomena—the same genes affect both traits and taller people are more likely than average to mate with smarter people and vice versa—according to a study led by the University of Colorado Boulder. The study did not find that environmental factors contributed to the connection between being taller and being smarter, both traits that people tend to find attractive. The modest correlation between height and IQ has been documented in multiple studies stretching back to the ...

New implanted defibrillator works well without touching heart

2013-08-27
A new type of defibrillator implanted under the skin can detect dangerously abnormal heart rhythms and deliver shocks to restore a normal heartbeat without wires touching the heart, according to research in the American Heart Association journal, Circulation. The subcutaneous implantable cardiac defibrillator (S-ICD®) includes a lead placed under the skin along the left side of the breast bone. Traditional implantable cardiac defibrillators (ICDs) include electrical conducting wires inserted into blood vessels that touch the heart. ICDs can greatly reduce the risk of ...

Sea otters promote recovery of seagrass beds

2013-08-27
Scientists studying the decline and recovery of seagrass beds in one of California's largest estuaries have found that recolonization of the estuary by sea otters was a crucial factor in the seagrass comeback. Led by researchers at the University of California, Santa Cruz, the study will be published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences the week of August 26. Seagrass meadows, which provide coastal protection and important habitat for fish, are declining worldwide, partly because of excessive nutrients entering coastal waters in runoff from farms and ...

Maintain, don't gain: A new way to fight obesity

2013-08-27
DURHAM, N.C. -- Programs aimed at helping obese black women lose weight have not had the same success as programs for black men and white men and women. But new research from Duke University has found that a successful alternative could be a "maintain, don't gain" approach. The study, which appears in the Aug. 26 issue of JAMA Internal Medicine, compared changes in weight and risk for diabetes, heart disease or stroke among 194 premenopausal black women, aged 25-44. They were recruited from Piedmont Health's six nonprofit community health centers in a multi-county area ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Laser-powered device tested on Earth could help us detect microbial fossils on Mars

Non-destructive image sensor goes beyond bulkiness

1st Japanese version of US psychological scale for esophageal symptoms

HikingTTE: a deep learning approach for hiking travel time estimation based on personal walking ability

Environment nudges birds to fast, or slow, life lane

The U-shaped relationship between admission peripheral oxygen saturation and all-cause hospital mortality in acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a retrospective analysis using

New research highlights wide variation in prostate cancer testing between GP practices

Antidepressants linked to faster cognitive decline in dementia

DNA origami suggests route to reusable, multifunctional biosensors

Virginia Tech study reveals that honeybee dance ‘styles’ sway food foraging success

Beehive sensors offer hope in saving honeybee colonies

Award-winning research may unlock universe’s origins

BRCA1 gene mutations may not be key to prostate cancer initiation, as previously thought

Melatonin supplementation may help offset DNA damage linked to night shift work

Common gynaecological disorders linked to raised heart and cerebrovascular disease risk

Nerve fibers in the inner ear adjust sound levels and help compensate for hearing loss in mice, study finds

ECMWF – Europe’s leading centre for weather prediction makes forecast data from AI model available to all

New paper-based device boosts HIV test accuracy from dried blood samples

Pay-for-performance metrics must be more impactful and physician-controlled

GLP-1RAs may offer modest antidepressant effects compared to DPP4is but not SGLT-2is

Performance-based reimbursement increases administrative burden and moral distress, lowers perceived quality of care

Survey finds many Americans greatly overestimate primary care spending

Researchers advance RNA medical discovery decades ahead of schedule

Immune ‘fingerprints’ aid diagnosis of complex diseases in Stanford Medicine study

Ancient beaches testify to long-ago ocean on Mars

Gulf of Mars: Rover finds evidence of ‘vacation-style’ beaches on Mars

MSU researchers use open-access data to study climate change effects in 24,000 US lakes

More than meets the eye: An adrenal gland tumor is more complex than previously thought

Origin and diversity of Hun Empire populations

New AI model measures how fast the brain ages

[Press-News.org] New moms and obese people risk complications from influenza: McMaster study