Archive for August, 2008

Johns Hopkins Healthcare Earns URAC Accreditation

Friday, August 29th, 2008

Johns Hopkins HealthCare LLC (JHHC) has earned accreditation from the Utilization Review Accreditation Commission (URAC), a Washington, D.C.-based organization that establishes standards for the health care industry covering network management, provider credentialing, utilization management, quality improvement and consumer protection.

Johns Hopkins and Mexican Society of Neurosurgery Holds Joint Conference in Puerto Vallarta

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

Johns Hopkins Medicine and the Mexican Society of Neurosurgery co-hosted a day-long conference on brain tumor management in Mexico this month, an unusual joint venture the planners hope will be a model for continuing medical education programs covering a wide range of medical specialties in that country.

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Johns Hopkins Scientists Discover What Drives the Development of a Fatal Form of Malaria

Wednesday, August 20th, 2008

Platelets – those tiny, unassuming cells that cause blood to clot and scabs to form when you cut yourself – play an important early role in promoting cerebral malaria, an often lethal complication that occurs mostly in children. Affecting as many as half a billion people in tropical and subtropical regions, malaria is one of the oldest recorded diseases and the parasite responsible for it, Plasmodium, among the most studied pathogens of all time. Still, cerebral malaria, which results from a combination of blood vessel and immune system dysfunction, is not well understood.

Rare Case in a Baltimore Couple Explains Why Some Infected with HIV Remain Symptom Free for Years Without Antiretroviral Drugs

Wednesday, August 13th, 2008

AIDS experts at Johns Hopkins say they have compelling evidence that some people with HIV who for years and even decades show extremely low levels of the virus in their blood never progress to full-blown AIDS and remain symptom free even without treatment, probably do so because of the strength of their immune systems, not any defects in the strain of HIV that infected them in the first place.

New Uses for Old-Line Diabetes Monitoring Test: Screening and Diagnosis

Wednesday, August 6th, 2008

A blood test currently used as the gold standard for monitoring people already under care for diabetes may have far wider use in identifying millions with undetected diabetes, a team led by a Johns Hopkins physician suggests.

New Uses for Old-Line Diabetes Monitoring Test: Screening and Diagnosis

Friday, August 1st, 2008

A blood test currently used as the gold standard for monitoring people already under care for diabetes may have far wider use in identifying millions with undetected diabetes, a team led by a Johns Hopkins physician suggests.