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

High costs of dental care leave many with too little money for basic necessities

2015-04-29
(Press-News.org) Having to pay for dental health care can put a considerable strain on household finances in many countries, according to an international study led by King's College London.

The new study, published in the journal PLOS ONE, assessed the extent of household 'catastrophic dental health expenditure' (CDHE) in 41 low and middle income countries. Expenditure was defined as catastrophic if it was equal to or higher than 40% of the household's capacity to pay.

Up to 7% of the households surveyed in these countries had incurred catastrophic dental health expenditure in the last month.

The study by King's, UCL and Universiti Teknologi MARA (Malaysia) found that wealthier, urban and larger households and more economically developed countries had higher odds of facing CDHE. In low and middle income countries, the use of dental services is more a function of household's ability to pay than of people's dental needs.

The analysis did not include the indirect costs of seeking dental care, including income loss due to ill health, travel, waiting at clinics or providing care to family members and the results therefore probably underestimate the financial consequences for dental health care on these households.

Dr Eduardo Bernabe, lead author from the Dental Institute at King's College London, said: 'Using dental services can cost households a large proportion of their available income and push many into poverty and long-term debt. Those needing dental treatment face both the direct costs of using the service and indirect loss of income to attend a clinic during working hours.

'Our study highlights the low level of financial protection that healthcare financing systems provides for their citizens. Dental public health advocates and international dental organizations should push for dental care to be included in current discussions about universal health coverage.'

INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Improved sanitation may reduce sexual violence in South African townships

2015-04-29
New Haven, Conn.--Improving access to public toilets in South African urban settlements may reduce both the incidence of sexual assaults by nearly 30% and the overall cost to society, a study by researchers at the Yale School of Public Health and Yale School of Management found. The research was published April 29 in PLOS ONE. Development and human rights organizations have pointed to inadequate local sanitation facilities as a key factor in a woman's risk for physical or sexual assault. Many women in South Africa must travel out of their homes to public toilets, ...

Novel rapid method for typing of Clostridium difficile could limit outbreaks

2015-04-29
The Public Health Agency of Sweden has developed a method of typing that can allow laboratories to faster establish the presence of hospital outbreaks of the intestinal bacterium Clostridium difficile. The findings are now published in PLOS ONE. The Clostridium difficile bacteria exist in the intestines of 2-5 per cent of the healthy population, and is rather common among infants. In certain circumstances the bacteria can induce diarrhea in persons treated with antibiotics. The diarrhea is in some cases serious. The majority of the cases occur at hospitals. This is ...

New therapy from naïve cells attacks high-risk viruses in cord blood transplant patients

2015-04-29
HOUSTON - (April 29, 2015) - Researchers in the Center for Cell and Gene Therapy at Baylor College of Medicine, Houston Methodist and the Texas Children's Hospital have expanded the use of virus-specific cell therapy in cord blood transplant patients to successfully prevent three of the most problematic post-transplant viruses affecting this group of patients that have yet to be addressed clinically - cytomegalovirus (CMV), Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), and adenovirus. The team published their results of a clinical trial that evaluated the safety and efficacy of the therapy ...

Urine profiles provide clues to how obesity causes disease

2015-04-29
Scientists have identified chemical markers in urine associated with body mass, providing insights into how obesity causes disease. Being overweight or obese is associated with higher risk of heart disease, stroke, diabetes and cancer, but the mechanisms connecting body fat and disease are not well understood. The new study, led by Imperial College London, shows that obesity has a 'metabolic signature' detectable in urine samples, pointing to processes that could be targeted to mitigate its effects on health. The findings are published in Science Translational Medicine. Urine ...

Locally sourced drugs can be effective for treating multidrug-resistant TB

2015-04-29
Locally-sourced antibiotics can be as effective as 'internationally quality-assured' (IQA) antibiotics for treating multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) in Pakistan, and may help avoid delays in starting treatment while programmes wait for drugs to arrive from overseas, according to new research published in PLOS ONE. The study is the first to compare outcomes of MDR-TB patients treated using IQA drugs with those treated using locally procured drugs in the same hospitals over the same period. It was a collaboration between researchers from the London School of ...

Pharmaceutical industry regulation undermines NICE drugs appraisal work

2015-04-29
Government policies that support UK pharmaceutical science and enhance export income are costing the NHS millions and undermine the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence. In an essay published today by the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, health economists Professor Alan Maynard and Professor Karen Bloor describe an inflationary regulatory system that lacks accountability, is not evidence-based and subverts the efficiency of the technology appraisal work carried out by NICE, a target of pharmaceutical industry hostility since it was established in 1999. Professors ...

Three secrets to healthier eating

Three secrets to healthier eating
2015-04-29
If you want to know the secrets of healthier eating, think of the kitchen fruit bowl. A fruit bowl makes fruit more convenient, attractive, and normal to eat than if the same fruit were in the bottom of the refrigerator. A new Cornell study analyzed 112 studies that collected information about healthy eating behaviors and found that most healthy eaters did so because a restaurant, grocery store, school cafeteria, or spouse made foods like fruits and vegetables visible and easy to reach (convenient), enticingly displayed (attractive), and appear like an obvious choice ...

Parents describe arduous journey from diagnosis to pediatric epileptic surgery

2015-04-29
Having a child diagnosed with epilepsy can be a frightening and confusing time. Now, parents share their arduous and "circuitous" journey to get referrals for pediatric epilepsy surgery once their child's disease stops responding to anti-seizure medications. The UCLA study sheds light on the difficulties parents face obtaining specialty and sub-specialty care for their children during an already stressful time. The study points to the need to develop interventions that target and remediate these barriers to comprehensive epilepsy care for children, said study first ...

Prevent type 2 diabetes blood-sugar spikes by eating more protein for breakfast

2015-04-29
COLUMBIA, Mo. -- Individuals with Type 2 Diabetes have difficulty regulating their glucose -- or blood sugar -- levels, particularly after meals. Now, University of Missouri researchers have found that Type 2 diabetics can eat more protein at breakfast to help reduce glucose spikes at both breakfast and lunch. "People often assume that their glucose response at one meal will be identical to their responses at other meals, but that really isn't the case," said Jill Kanaley, professor and associate chair in the MU Department of Nutrition and Exercise Physiology. "For instance, ...

Uncovering new functions of a gene implicated in cancer growth opens new therapeutic possibilities

2015-04-29
Weill Cornell Medical College researchers have shown for the first time that a gene previously implicated in blood vessel formation during embryonic development and tumor growth also induces immune suppression during tumor development. This finding, published April 29 in Nature Communications, opens the door for new therapeutic approaches and vaccine development in treating patients with melanoma and other advanced-staged cancers. Two decades ago, researchers discovered that a gene called Inhibitor of Differentiation 1 (Id1), which is normally found in the embryo, was ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

3 Ways to reduce child sexual abuse rates

A third of children worldwide forecast to be obese or overweight by 2050

Contraction inhibitors after 30 weeks have no effect on baby's health

Nearly 1 in 5 US college athletes reports abusive supervision by their coaches

THE LANCET: More than half of adults and a third of children and adolescents predicted to have overweight or obesity by 2050

Ideal nitrogen fertilizer rates in Corn Belt have been climbing for decades, Iowa State study shows

Survey suggests people with disabilities may feel disrespected by health care providers

U-Michigan, UC Riverside launch alliance to promote hydrogen-fueled internal combustion engines

New insights into network power response: Unveiling multi-timescale characteristics

Simple algorithm helps improve treatment, reduce disparities in MS

Despite high employment rates, Black immigrants in the United States more likely to be uninsured, USC study shows

Research supports move toward better tailoring stroke rehabilitation

Imagining future events changes brain to improve healthy decision-making, new study indicates

Turning plastic waste into valuable resources: A new photocatalytic approach

Sea otters help kelp forests recover — but how fast depends on where they are

Study links intense energy bursts to ventilator-induced lung injury

Uncovering the protein complex critical to male fertility

Scientists discover how a naturally occurring mechanism hampers fertility

Integrated framework for ecological security: A case study of the Daqing river basin

New design paradigm boosts reconfigurable intelligent surface efficiency

Long-term cocaine use may increase impulsivity

How London’s Ultra Low Emission Zone is changing the school run

Breakthrough CRISPR-based test offers faster, more accurate diagnosis for fungal pneumonia

3D-printed knee implants improves quality and reliability

UC San Diego innovators to spotlight transformative science at SXSW 2025

Burning question: How to save an old-growth forest in Tahoe

SwRI, U-Michigan engineers create more effective burner to reduce methane emissions

Dental implants still functional after forty years

A hot droplet can bounce across a cool pan, too

Synthetic microbiome therapy suppresses bacterial infection without antibiotics

[Press-News.org] High costs of dental care leave many with too little money for basic necessities