Search results for "TB"
showing 10 items of 2582 documents
The Association of Schools of Public Health in the European Region Statement on the Erosion of Public Health Systems
2021
Increase in admissions for anorexia nervosa after lockdown measures: Focus on a children's neuropsychiatry unit.
2021
ASPHER Statement
2021
Submitted by Agostinho Macau (arm@ucp.pt) on 2021-09-14T08:06:58Z No. of bitstreams: 1 ijph_66_1604361.pdf: 553290 bytes, checksum: 213f7a1eaedc390557eeae306bfc3262 (MD5) Made available in DSpace on 2021-09-14T08:06:58Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 ijph_66_1604361.pdf: 553290 bytes, checksum: 213f7a1eaedc390557eeae306bfc3262 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2021-08-23 info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Comment on “ COVID ‐19 and psoriasis: Is it time to limit treatment with immunosuppressants? A call for action”
2020
Immunosuppressive treatment for systemic sclerosis—Therapeutic challenges during the COVID ‐19 pandemic
2020
Cutaneous manifestation of COVID‐19 reporting from Middle‐Eastern countries: A point of view!
2020
Toxicity as prime selection criterion among SARS-active herbal medications
2021
We present here a new selection criterion for prioritizing research on efficacious drugs for the fight against COVID-19: the relative toxicity versus safety of herbal medications, which were effective against SARS in the 2002/2003 epidemic. We rank these medicines according to their toxicity versus safety as basis for preferential rapid research on their potential in the treatment of COVID-19. The data demonstrate that from toxicological information nothing speaks against immediate investigation on, followed by rapid implementation of Lonicera japonica, Morus alba, Forsythia suspensa, and Codonopsis spec. for treatment of COVID-19 patients. Glycyrrhiza spec. and Panax ginseng are ranked in …
Conspiracy Beliefs Are Related to the Use of Smartphones behind the Wheel
2021
The belief in conspiracy theories predicts behaviors related to public health such as the willingness to receive vaccines. This study applies a similar approach to an aspect of road safety: the use of smartphones while driving. A representative sample of 1706 subjects answered a series of questions related to what can be regarded as erroneous or conspiracy beliefs against restricting or banning the use of smartphones while driving. The results show that those having such conspiracy beliefs reported a greater use of smartphones behind the wheel.