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

Preventive law becomes preventive medicine

2012-10-22
(Press-News.org) (Boston) - In a commentary to appear in the Oct. 22 issue of the journal Pediatrics, Barry Zuckerman, MD, the Joel and Barbara Alpert Professor of Pediatrics at Boston University School of Medicine, discusses how by working together, lawyers and physicians potentially can close the gap in health disparities that persist even in universal health care coverage.

While the relationship between poverty and poor health is complex, access to basic needs like adequate housing and nutrition, appropriate education and personal safety is well documented to improve health trajectories.

According to Zuckerman the article by Beck, et al in Pediatrics represents a special example of how a multidisciplinary approach to social determinants of health initiated from a primary care setting can address poor housing conditions and reduce risk for asthma for individual patients and for a population. "When families do not receive the benefits or protections of certain laws, their health can be undermined. The consequences can be treated medically, but their upstream causes are social and are more effectively addressed using legal strategies," said Zuckerman.

A recent report estimates that 50 to 85 percent of health center users – between 10 and 17 million people – experience unmet legal needs, many of which impact their health. Most at-risk individuals may not know that their problems have legal solutions. Medical-Legal Partnerships, founded by Zuckerman at Boston Medical Center in 1993 for children, helps parents navigate the complex government and legal systems that often hold solutions for many social determinants of poor health.

"The health care team's role is to identify early unmet legal needs that cause or exacerbate child health problems. Once identified, lawyers bring critical skills to complement the expertise of the health care team," explained Zuckerman.

By reducing the impact of legal determinants that affect health, this creative partnership in clinical settings will compliment increased access to health care provided by recent health care reforms.

### END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

CAMH protein discovery may lead to new treatment to prevent smoking relapse

2012-10-22
For Immediate Release – October 22, 2012 (Toronto) – Scientists at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) have identified a potential new approach to preventing smoking relapse, which occurs frequently in smokers who attempt to quit, despite current treatments. "We have developed a protein peptide that may be a new type of highly targeted treatment to prevent smoking relapse," says Dr. Fang Liu, Senior Scientist in CAMH's Campbell Family Mental Health Research Institute and Professor in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Toronto. Dr. Liu and ...

A new glow for electron microscopy

2012-10-22
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. -- The glowing green molecule known as green fluorescent protein (GFP) has revolutionized molecular biology. When GFP is attached to a particular protein inside a cell, scientists can easily identify and locate it using fluorescence microscopy. However, GFP can't be used with electron microscopy, which offers much higher resolution than fluorescence microscopy. Chemists from MIT have now designed a GFP equivalent for electron microscopy — a tag that allows scientists to label and visualize proteins with unprecedented clarity. "With things that may appear ...

Survival of the shyest?

2012-10-22
A fish's personality can influence how it responds to, and learns from threats, according to a new study by Professor Grant Brown from Concordia University in Canada and his colleagues. Their work, looking at how personality influences a fish's memory of a predator threat, shows that bold trout forget predator odor, and hence potentially predator threat, quicker than shy trout. The research is published online in Springer's journal Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology. A prey's ability to balance the conflicting demands of avoiding predators and foraging, defending territories ...

New design could improve condenser performance

2012-10-22
CAMBRIDGE, MA -- Condensers are a crucial part of today's power generation systems: About 80 percent of all the world's powerplants use them to turn steam back to water after it comes out of the turbines that turn generators. They are also a key element in desalination plants, a fast-growing contributor to the world's supply of fresh water. Now, a new surface architecture designed by researchers at MIT holds the promise of significantly boosting the performance of such condensers. The research is described in a paper just published online in the journal ACS Nano by MIT ...

Would you buy a product endorsed by Lance Armstrong?

2012-10-22
It's much easier for consumers to justify continued support of a celebrity or politician disgraced by scandal when they separate moral judgments about a public figure from assessments of their professional performance, according to a new study in the Journal of Consumer Research. "Distinguishing between morality and performance allows consumers to avoid condoning immoral behavior. This may be one reason that the public discourse around scandals often focuses on the relationship between performance and morality rather than how wrong an action is," write authors Amit Bhattacharjee ...

It's all in the details: Why are some consumers willing to pay more for less information?

2012-10-22
Some consumers will pay more for a product if they are given detailed information on how it works while others are inclined to pay less when given too much detail, according to a new study in the Journal of Consumer Research. "Certain consumers like to understand how a product works and are willing to pay more when given this information. But others do not want deep explanations and are satisfied by sketchy, abstract knowledge. Asking them to explain how a product works undermines their sense of understanding and makes them less willing to pay for it," write authors Philip ...

In the blink of an eye: Distracted consumers are most likely to remember ads with subtle variations

2012-10-22
Consumers are more likely to remember an ad they've seen repeatedly if one element in the ad changes location from one exposure to the next, according to a new study in the Journal of Consumer Research. "Consumers are bombarded with thousands of advertisements daily, are increasingly multitasking, and are preoccupied with everyday activities. The likelihood that they will devote their full attention to any one specific message is getting smaller every day. What impact can an ad have if consumers pay virtually no attention to it?" write authors Stewart Shapiro (University ...

Split-personality elliptical galaxy holds a hidden spiral

2012-10-22
Most big galaxies fit into one of two camps: pinwheel-shaped spiral galaxies and blobby elliptical galaxies. Spirals like the Milky Way are hip and happening places, with plenty of gas and dust to birth new stars. Ellipticals are like cosmic retirement villages, full of aging residents in the form of red giant stars. Now, astronomers have discovered that one well-known elliptical has a split personality. Centaurus A is hiding a gassy spiral in its center. "No other elliptical galaxy is known to have spiral arms," said lead author Daniel Espada (National Astronomical Observatory ...

High quality or poor value: When do consumers make different conclusions about the same product?

2012-10-22
Depending on which naive theory consumers use, a low price can indicate either good value or low quality, whereas a high price may imply either poor value or high quality, according to a new study in the Journal of Consumer Research. "Consumers rarely have complete information and use various strategies to fill the gaps in their knowledge as they consider and choose products. One of these strategies involves using naive theories: informal, common sense, explanations that consumers use to make sense of their environment. For example, consumers may believe that popular ...

Rewards programs: When do consumers compare experience over value?

2012-10-22
Consumers are often less satisfied when they buy or receive products that are easily counted because this makes them focus on value instead of experience, according to a new study in the Journal of Consumer Research. "Numbers make us feel more certain of what is in front of us. When we count, we understand exactly how big, expensive, heavy, or old something is. But when we buy or receive products that are easily counted, we may be less satisfied," write authors Jingjing Ma and Neal J. Roese (both Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern University). What happens when ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Short, light-intensity exercise boosts executive function and elevates mood in children

Jeonbuk National University researchers reveal new interface engineering strategy for efficient and stable back-contact solar cells

Tyrosinase drives hydroquinone-induced exogenous ochronosis: not HGD inhibition

UMass Amherst chemists develop unique tool for studying RNA

Disappointment alters brain chemistry and behavior

A built-in odometer: new study reveals how the brain measures distance

Stress-related brain signals drive risk of cardiovascular disease in people with depression and anxiety

New details on role of fat transport molecules in Alzheimer’s onset

Study illuminates how an antiviral defense mechanism may lead to Alzheimer’s disease

Spot the males: New gene-editing method could transform mosquito control

AI learns to build simple equations for complex systems

NAU team releases 13 years of detailed U.S. CO2 emissions data

Unveiling how sodium-ion batteries can charge faster than lithium-ion ones

How do childcare tax credits affect children’s long-term health?

Can an electronic nose detect indoor mold?

Do natural disasters have long-term impacts on mortality in older adults?

Modification improves sodium‐ion batteries as an alternative to lithium-ion batteries

Parasports provide a range of benefits for people with cerebral palsy

How does grandparental care affect children’s health?

Why are there so many Nordic mediators?

Young shark species more vulnerable to extinction

Mobile fetal heart monitoring linked to fewer newborn deaths in Tanzania

Bluey’s dad offered professorial chair in archaeology at Griffith University

Beyond small data limitations: Transfer learning-enabled framework for predicting mechanical properties of aluminum matrix composites

Unveiling non-thermal catalytic origin of direct current-promoted catalysis for energy-efficient transformation of greenhouse gases to valuable chemicals

Chronic breathlessness emerging as a hidden strain on hospitals

Paleontologists find first fossil bee nests made inside fossil bones

These fossils were the perfect home for ancient baby bees

Not everyone reads the room the same. A new study examines why.

New research identifies linked energy, immune and vascular changes in ME/CFS

[Press-News.org] Preventive law becomes preventive medicine