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

Trial results 'do not support the use of general health checks' warn experts

Checks have not reduced number of deaths from cardiovascular disease or cancer

2012-11-21
(Press-News.org) Research: General health checks in adults for reducing morbidity and mortality from disease: Cochrane systematic review and meta-analysis

Editorial: The value of conducting periodic health checks

Researchers have found that routine general health checks, which have become common practice in some countries, do not reduce the number of deaths from cardiovascular disease or cancer. They do, however, increase the number of new diagnoses.

Health checks were defined as screening for more than one disease or risk factor in more than one organ system offered to a general population unselected for disease or risk factors.

Health checks were introduced with the intention of reducing morbidity and prolonging life and there are many potential benefits, including: detection of both increased risk factors and precursors to disease (thus preventing cancer from developing); counselling on diet, weight and smoking; reassuring healthy people thus reducing worry about potential disease.

However, screening healthy people can be harmful and can lead to overdiagnosis and overtreatment, a topic which was featured in the BMJ in October. The researchers also point out that invasive diagnostic tests may cause harm. Being labelled as having a disease may also negatively impact healthy people's views of themselves and their health behaviour.

Few of the individual tests commonly used in health checks have been adequately studied in trials and it is not clear whether they do more harm than good. When tests have been studied in trials, the results have been varied. Authors from the Nordic Cochrane Centre in Denmark therefore carried out a review of a total of 14 trials that looked at systematic health checks. The studies had between 1 and 22 years of follow-up.

Nine of the 14 trials had data on mortality and included 182,880 participants, 11,940 of whom died during the study period. 76,403 were invited to health checks and the remainder were not. All participants were over 18 years old and the study excluded trials specifically targeting older people or trials that only enrolled people aged 65 or over.

Despite some variation regarding the risk of death from cardiovascular disease and cancer, no evidence was found for a reduction of either total mortality, cardiovascular mortality, or cancer mortality. Unsurprisingly, the researchers found that health checks led to more diagnoses and more medical treatment for hypertension, although this was infrequently studied.

The lack of beneficial effects indicates that the interventions did not work as intended in the included trials. Health checks are likely to increase the number of diagnoses, but in the absence of benefits, this suggests over-diagnosis and overtreatment.

The researchers also note that people who accept a health check invitation are often different from those who do not, so the checks might not reach those who need prevention the most. Plus, many physicians already carry out testing for cardiovascular risk factors or diseases in patients that they judge to be at risk when they see them for other reasons.

In conclusion, the results do not support the use of general health checks aimed at the general population. The researchers say that further research should "be directed at the individual components of health checks e.g. screening for cardiovascular risk factors, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, diabetes, or kidney disease".

In an accompanying editorial, Professor Macauley, Primary Care Editor at the BMJ, agrees that although health checks are "seductive" and "seem sensible" there is little evidence to show that they reduce morbidity and mortality. As well questioning whether they do more harm than good, Dr Macauley says that Krogsbøll and colleagues' study finds that "regular health checks are ineffective" and show "evidence of little effect" and adds that policy should be based on "wellbeing rather than […] well meant good intentions".

### END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

High-speed video and artificial flowers shed light on mysteries of hummingbird-pollinated flowers

2012-11-21
How flowers have evolved particular colours, shapes and scents to attract pollinators has long fascinated ecologists. Now, using artificial flowers and high-speed video, researchers have gained intriguing insights into the intimate relationship between hummingbirds and the flowers they pollinate. The study, published in the British Ecological Society's journal Functional Ecology, is the first to measure how much energy hummingbirds use while hovering to feed from flowers of different orientation. Hummingbirds are among the smallest and most brightly-coloured birds on Earth, ...

Naerly 90 percent of clinical trialists think data should be more easily shared

2012-11-21
Research: Sharing of clinical trial data among trialists: a cross sectional survey Nearly nine out of ten clinicians carrying out biomedical research trials believe that trial data should be shared more easily, even though they do express some practical concerns, a study published today on bmj.com reveals. BMJ has long championed transparency in medical research. Last month, the journal launched an open data campaign to compel greater accountability in healthcare, and from January 2013, it will require a commitment from trialists to make their data available on reasonable ...

New test for tuberculosis could improve treatment, prevent deaths in Southern Africa

2012-11-21
Boston, MA — A new rapid test for tuberculosis (TB) could substantially and cost-effectively reduce TB deaths and improve treatment in southern Africa—a region where both HIV and tuberculosis are common—according to a new study by Harvard School of Public researchers. "This test is one of the most significant developments in TB control options in many years," said lead author Nicolas Menzies, a PhD candidate in health policy at Harvard School of Public Health. "Our study is the first to look at the long-term consequences of this test when incorporated into routine health ...

Research shows diabetes drug improves memory

2012-11-21
An FDA-approved drug initially used to treat insulin resistance in diabetics has shown promise as a way to improve cognitive performance in some people with Alzheimer's disease. Working with genetically engineered mice designed to serve as models for Alzheimer's, University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston researchers found that treatment with the anti-insulin-resistance drug rosiglitazone enhanced learning and memory as well as normalized insulin resistance. The scientists believe that the drug produced the response by reducing the negative influence of Alzheimer's ...

UCSB anthropologist studies reciprocity among chimpanzees and bonobos

2012-11-21
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) –– When your neighbor asks to borrow a cup of sugar and you readily comply, is your positive response a function of the give and take that characterize your longstanding relationship? Or does it represent payment –– or prepayment –– for the cup of sugar you borrowed last week, or may need to borrow a month from now? Adrian Jaeggi, a postdoctoral researcher in anthropology at UC Santa Barbara, and a junior research fellow at the campus's SAGE Center for the Study of the Mind, is studying this question of reciprocity, using chimpanzees and bonobos ...

UAlberta prostate cancer researcher and team developing 'homing beacon drugs' to target cancer cells

2012-11-21
A medical researcher with the University of Alberta and his team just published their findings about their work on developing 'homing beacon drugs' that kill only cancer cells, not healthy ones, thanks to nano-technology. John Lewis, the Frank and Carla Sojonky Chair in Prostate Cancer Research with the Faculty of Medicine & Dentistry, published his findings in the peer-reviewed journal, Nano Letters. He is also an associate professor in the Department of Oncology, a Fellow with the National Institute for Nanotechnology at the U of A and director of the Translational Prostate ...

Algae can draw energy from other plants

Algae can draw energy from other plants
2012-11-21
This press release is available in German. Flowers need water and light to grow. Even children learn that plants use sunlight to gather energy from earth and water. Members of Professor Dr. Olaf Kruse's biological research team at Bielefeld University have made a groundbreaking discovery that one plant has another way of doing this. They have confirmed for the first time that a plant, the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, not only engages in photosynthesis, but also has an alternative source of energy: it can draw it from other plants. This finding could also have ...

Executive pay limits narrowed scope of TARP banking rescue

2012-11-21
CHESTNUT HILL, MA (Nov. 20, 2012) – The executive pay provisions of the TARP – the Troubled Asset Relief Program – stoked controversy. Bankers claimed the rules would thwart their efforts to attract and retain the best executives. But the pay rules may have had an unintended benefit of reducing the scope of the program, researchers say. A newly published report in the Journal of Banking, Finance & Accounting finds that pay provisions did discourage some banks from participating in TARP, which was intended to help banks weather the 2008-2009 financial crisis, according ...

Seals gamble with their pups' futures

2012-11-21
Some grey seal mums adopt risky tactics when it comes to the future of their young, a strategy that can give their pup a real advantage, according to scientists. Researchers from Durham University, UK, and the University of St Andrews, looking at grey seal colonies in Scotland, found that some seal mothers are flexible in the parenting style they adopt and 'gamble' on the outcome of their actions, whilst other play it safe and steady. The study is the first to demonstrate how variation in personality traits in large marine mammals in the wild can persist, rather than ...

New American Chemical Society video series shines a light on transparent solar cells

2012-11-21
WASHINGTON, Nov. 20, 2012 — The American Chemical Society (ACS) today launched a new video series that highlights headline-making research from the society's suite of more than 40 peer-reviewed scientific journals. The first episode of Breakthrough Science focuses on research reported in one of those journals, ACS Nano. It involved development of new transparent solar cells, an advance toward giving windows in homes and other buildings the ability to generate electricity while still allowing people to see outside. The video is available at http://pubs.acs.org/page/videos/breakthroughscience.html. Breakthrough ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New research study reveals sedentary behavior is an independent risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease

American Academy of Sleep Medicine announces 2025 award recipients

Scientists define the ingredients for finding natural clean hydrogen

New study sheds light on health differences between sexes

Scientists film the heart forming in 3D earlier than ever before

Astrophysicists explore our galaxy’s magnetic turbulence in unprecedented detail using a new computer model

Scientists precisely simulate turbulence in the Galaxy — it doesn’t behave like they thought

DiffInvex reveals how cancers rewire driver genes to beat chemotherapy

Combinations of chronic illnesses could double risk of depression

Growth before photosynthesis: how trees regulate their water balance

Stress hormone pathways in primate brains reveal key insights for human mental health research

Enlarged salience network could be first reliable biomarker for depression risk

Higher success rate using a simple oral swab test before IVF

New survey shows privacy and safety tops list of parental concerns about screen time

Enhanced activity in the upper atmosphere of Sporadic E layers during the 2024 Mother’s Day super geomagnetic storm

Accelerating bacterial evolution in the laboratory

Summer in the city

Echidna microbiome changes while mums nurse puggle

No increased risk of gynecological cancer with testosterone use after five years

Growth in informal lead mining is contributing to widespread poisoning

Unprecedented progress in tackling smoking during pregnancy threatened by NHS cuts, experts warn

Top scientific research recognized at ACC Asia Conference

GLP-1 drugs are helpful for children who are living with severe obesity, data from Swedish clinic indicates

Popular weight-loss drugs following bariatric surgery may offer additional cardiovascular benefits

Patients of an online obesity clinic achieved the same weight loss as those in clinical trials of semaglutide – but with much lower doses of the drug

Protein bars enriched with collagen have potential as a weight-loss aid, Spanish study finds

Semaglutide may provide early protection against heart disease in high-risk patients—even before clinically meaningful weight loss and prior to the full target dose

Civil defense units must invest in professionalization and own resources to face climate risks

Flamingos create water tornados to trap their prey

FFAR taps Danforth Center plant scientists for crop research to preserve soil and water health

[Press-News.org] Trial results 'do not support the use of general health checks' warn experts
Checks have not reduced number of deaths from cardiovascular disease or cancer