Health

Losing belly fat for better health

Belly fat accumulation is often the result of a combination of factors including diet, lifestyle, genetics, and hormones. A diet high in calories, especially from sugary and processed foods, along with a lack of physical activity, are major...

Belly fat accumulation is often the result of a combination of factors including diet, lifestyle, genetics, and hormones. A diet high in calories, especially from sugary and processed foods, along with a lack of physical activity, are major...

2 months 1 week ago

Health | NOW Grenada

GFNC: We need breastfeeding-friendly workplaces

With the Grenada Hospital being Baby-Friendly certified, GFNC believes that workplaces should also become breastfeeding-friendly

View the full post GFNC: We need breastfeeding-friendly workplaces on NOW Grenada.

With the Grenada Hospital being Baby-Friendly certified, GFNC believes that workplaces should also become breastfeeding-friendly

View the full post GFNC: We need breastfeeding-friendly workplaces on NOW Grenada.

2 months 1 week ago

Health, PRESS RELEASE, breastfeeding, CDC, centres for disease control and prevention, general hospital, gfnc, grenada food and nutrition council, ilo, international labour organisation, who, world health organisation

Health – Dominican Today

SISARIL fines Abel González Clinic for denying care in Jet Set tragedy

Santo Domingo.- The Superintendency of Health and Occupational Risks (SISARIL) has fined the Dr. Abel González Advanced Medicine Center, SAS, RD$2,189,154.8—equivalent to 101 national minimum wages—for failing to provide emergency care to Franklin Alberto Rodríguez Garabitos and Luis Thomas Graveley during the tragedy at the Jet Set nightclub on April 8, 2025.

Santo Domingo.- The Superintendency of Health and Occupational Risks (SISARIL) has fined the Dr. Abel González Advanced Medicine Center, SAS, RD$2,189,154.8—equivalent to 101 national minimum wages—for failing to provide emergency care to Franklin Alberto Rodríguez Garabitos and Luis Thomas Graveley during the tragedy at the Jet Set nightclub on April 8, 2025. The fine was imposed after the center was found in violation of social security regulations, including Administrative Resolution No. 00165-2009 and Law 87-01.

The sanction followed complaints received by the General Directorate of Information and Defense of Social Security Affiliates (DIDA), which initiated an administrative procedure against the center. The resolution requires the medical facility to pay the full fine within ten business days and underscores the obligation of health providers to deliver timely care to social security affiliates in critical situations.

Additionally, the center must implement corrective measures, including submitting a detailed action plan within ten days, and ensuring all administrative and clinical staff participate in technical training on Family Health Insurance regulations. Compliance will be monitored by SISARIL’s Health Insurance Directorate, aiming to protect patients’ rights and enforce emergency care standards.

2 months 1 week ago

Health

Health Archives - Barbados Today

A&E wait times slashed with digital kiosks, faster triage — QEH



Patients arriving at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital’s Accident and Emergency Department are now being registered in as little as three minutes, the hospital said Monday, with overall triage waiting times cut by 40 per cent, following sweeping efficiency reforms.

Registration, once one of the major bottlenecks, is now down to as quick as three minutes, while wait times for triage have fallen by almost half.

Service Improvement Manager Dr Ayja Clarke said on the hospital’s Pulse Radio show that new digital self-registration kiosks have made a significant difference.

“The first thing we’ve been looking at is decreasing that time to registration,” she said. “So once you get through the door of the Accident and Emergency Department, you will be screened with security. What you will see now is you are going to be directed to a digital kiosk, so a self-registration kiosk.

“So now we have decreased registration time. So once you come into the department, we have registration time sometimes as low as three minutes. Sometimes it’s ten minutes during peak times when things are really, really busy.”

Clarke said triage has also been restructured with the addition of a senior doctor working alongside nurses.

“Since introducing the changes, especially with the introduction of the physician-assisted triage, the wait times between patients coming through the door and getting to triage are down by 40 per cent,” she said.

Other measures include advanced triage, where tests and scans can be ordered earlier; nurse-initiated medication to provide pain relief on arrival; and plans for a minor case unit to fast-track patients with less severe conditions.

Head of Accident and Emergency Dr Anne Marie Cruikshank said the digital changes were also helping staff act faster.

“As [the nurses] enter digitally into the system, that information goes directly to the medical records officer. … We have physician-assisted triage, and we can now start the investigations, the pain meds, the imaging’s being ordered. Everything can start from screening or triage,” she said.

Dr Clarke also revealed that the hospital has introduced Estimated Date of Discharge boards on wards, giving teams and relatives a clear plan for getting patients home.

“Overall in the hospital, I’m happy to report that so far the average length of stay in the hospital is down in all of the wards by 1.2 days, but in the wards that we piloted the boards on, we have noted that the average length of stay is down even further, down by 2.9 days,” she said.

QEH Chief Executive Officer Neil Clark said the introduction of service improvement managers earlier this year was designed to allow departments space to rethink service delivery.

“They’ve been focused on the A&E pathway and what I call the Unplanned Care Pathway, A&E, inpatient flow and discharge planning, and we’ll move them at some point in the future to the Planned Care Pathway,” he said.

He cited oncology as one area where staff-led improvements were delivering results.

“You would have seen the cancer waiting times at 140 days for your first outpatient appointment. We’re now down to three weeks. We’re down to 21 days from 140 days. And that’s that team in the Oncology Department just taking the initiative and saying they’re going to fix this, we’re going to improve this for the population.”

Clark added: “What I sense when I walk around is that there’s a change coming. I feel that change in people who are speaking to me. I feel people are getting permission to do things. And it feels like it was always that they were waiting for the CEO to say yes you can do this and I keep saying it’s your department, if you think that works better, try it, and that’s happening.” (SM)

The post A&E wait times slashed with digital kiosks, faster triage — QEH appeared first on Barbados Today.

2 months 1 week ago

Health, Local News

Health | NOW Grenada

Free dental outreach returns to Carriacou and Grenada

“This year’s dental clinics are located at Happy Hill Secondary School and Hillsborough Government School from Monday, 18 August to Friday, 22 August, and Monday, 25 August to Friday, 29 August”

2 months 1 week ago

Carriacou & Petite Martinique, Health, PRESS RELEASE, dental, festina hamlet, great shape inc, grenada dental association, happy hill secondary school, hillsborough government school, Ministry of Health, mohammed hussein, sandals foundation

Health & Wellness | Toronto Caribbean Newspaper

I had to Have Fibroid Surgery, but our Girls Shouldn’t Have To

“Beauty should never come at the cost of our future.”

The post I had to Have Fibroid Surgery, but our Girls Shouldn’t Have To first appeared on Toronto Caribbean Newspaper.

“Beauty should never come at the cost of our future.”

The post I had to Have Fibroid Surgery, but our Girls Shouldn’t Have To first appeared on Toronto Caribbean Newspaper.

2 months 1 week ago

Health & Wellness, #LatestPost, Beauty, Community, Culture, Health, wellness

Health & Wellness | Toronto Caribbean Newspaper

10 Essential Health Screenings Every Adult Must Prioritize for Longer Life

“Forget the full-body MRI. Remember the screening tests that truly protect your health.”

The post 10 Essential Health Screenings Every Adult Must Prioritize for Longer Life first appeared on Toronto Caribbean Newspaper.

“Forget the full-body MRI. Remember the screening tests that truly protect your health.”

The post 10 Essential Health Screenings Every Adult Must Prioritize for Longer Life first appeared on Toronto Caribbean Newspaper.

2 months 1 week ago

Health & Wellness, #health, #LatestPost, access to healthcare professionals, better health, body health, Canadian health, Mental Health

Health – Demerara Waves Online News- Guyana

GPHC, Gift of Life International deliver life-saving heart care to 18 Guyanese children

The Georgetown Public Hospital Corporation (GPHC), in collaboration with Gift of Life International (GOLI), successfully concluded its second paediatric cardiac collaboration for 2025 from August 4th to 8th, delivering renewed hope and advanced cardiac care to Guyanese children living with life-threatening heart conditions.

This impactful initiative brought together local medical professionals and a 25-member international ...

2 months 1 week ago

Health, News, advanced cardiac care, children, Georgetown Public Hospital Corporation (GPHC), Gift of Life International (GOLI), open-heart surgeries, paediatric cardiac catheterisation

Health – Dominican Today

Heat waves increase pollution and health risks

Santo Domingo, (EFE).- Research from the University of Texas shows that heat waves, which are becoming more frequent, intense, and prolonged worldwide, not only pose a risk from high temperatures but also worsen air pollution.

Santo Domingo, (EFE).- Research from the University of Texas shows that heat waves, which are becoming more frequent, intense, and prolonged worldwide, not only pose a risk from high temperatures but also worsen air pollution. Presented at the American Chemical Society conference, the study analyzed the 2024 Texas heat wave, during which temperatures ranged from 32°C to 41°C.

Using air samples collected day and night on the Texas A&M University campus, researchers measured pollutants like nitrogen oxides, ozone, volatile organic compounds (VOCs), and nanoparticles. The study found that extreme heat increased levels of ozone, oxygenated VOCs, and highly acidic nanoparticles. Tree emissions of natural VOCs, such as isoprene, also rose during the heat wave, interacting with other pollutants to create harmful ozone and secondary organic aerosols.

To protect public health, researchers recommend limiting outdoor activity during peak heat hours, avoiding exercise, monitoring air quality, and keeping windows closed. They stress that understanding how climate change impacts atmospheric chemistry and air quality is crucial to mitigating these risks.

2 months 1 week ago

Health

Healio News

TRAVERSE fracture outcomes raise need for more research

Testosterone therapy should not be used as the sole medication to lower fracture risk for men with hypogonadism, but more research is needed on how the therapy impacts bone health, according to a speaker.As Healio previously reported, one of five substudies in the TRAVERSE trial compared fracture risk for men aged 45 to 80 years with hypogonadism and with preexisting cardiovascular disease or a

t high risk for CVD receiving testosterone gel (AbbVie) vs. those receiving placebo. The substudy, which was published in The New England Journal of Medicine in 2024, found men receiving testosterone

2 months 1 week ago

Medical News, Health News Latest, Medical News Today - Medical Dialogues |

Centre forms panel to draft Brain Stem Death Certification Guidelines

New Delhi: The Department of Health and Family Welfare
(Medical Services Section) has announced the constitution of a

New Delhi: The Department of Health and Family Welfare
(Medical Services Section) has announced the constitution of a
National Level Brain Stem Death (BSD) Experts Committee to draft and
finalise National BSD Certification Guidelines, including paediatric BSD
guidelines, BSD training modules, curriculum, and BSD Performa for reporting,
monitoring, and auditing.

Also Read:India has 1,15,900 MBBS seats across 780 Medical Colleges: Health Ministry gives breakup

The list of experts
finalized by the National Organ and Tissue Transplant Organization (NOTTO) for
inclusion in the committee includes: Dr. J. Balavenkata Subramanian, President,
Indian Society of Anaesthesiologists; Dr. Sukhminder Jit Singh Bajwa, Secretary,
Indian Society of Anaesthesiologists and Professor & Head, Anaesthesia and
Intensive Care, GSMCH, Patiala; Dr. Anirban Hom Choudhuri, Director, Professor
& Head, Critical Care Medicine, VMMC & SJ Hospital, New Delhi; Dr.
Bharat Jagiasi, General Secretary, ISCCM and Director, Critical Department,
Kokilaben Hospital, Navi Mumbai; Prof. Dr. Pradip Kumar Bhattacharya,
President, Indian Society of Critical Care; Dr. Sourabh Sharma, Assistant
Professor, Nephrology, Safdarjung Hospital, New Delhi; Dr. Ridhima Sharma,
Associate Professor, Anaesthesia and Critical Care, AIIMS Nagpur; Dr. Santvana
Kohli Arora, Associate Professor, Critical Care Medicine, VMMC & Safdarjung
Hospital, New Delhi; Dr. Deepak Gupta, Professor and Consultant Neurosurgeon,
Department of Neurosurgery, AIIMS & JPN Apex Trauma Centre, New Delhi; Dr.
Amlendu Yadav, Professor and Head, Emergency Medicine, ABVIMS & Dr. RML
Hospital, New Delhi; Dr. R. M. Chhabra, Senior Consultant Physician, Max Super
Speciality Hospital, Shalimar Bagh and Saroj Super Speciality Hospital, New
Delhi.

Other notable members include- Dr.
Srinivas Samavedam, President Elect ISCCM and Chief Intensivist, Ramdevrao
Hospital, Hyderabad; Dr. Daljit Singh, President, Neurological Society of
India; Dr. Madhuri Kurdi, Professor & Head, Anaesthesiology, KIMS, Hubli;
Dr. Sheila Naynan Mayatra, Professor, Anaesthesiology and Critical Care
Medicine, Tata Memorial Hospital, Mumbai; Dr. J. Divatia, Head, Critical Care,
Lilavati Hospital and Research Centre, Mumbai; Dr. Arpita Ray Chaudhury,
Professor, Nephrology, NBMCH/IPGMER Kolkata; Dr. Vivek Kute, Professor and Unit
Head, Nephrology and Transplantation, IKDRC-ITS & Gujarat University of
Transplantation Sciences, Ahmedabad; Dr. Sangeeta Ravat, President IAN and
Dean, KEM Medical College, Mumbai; Dr. Meenakshisundaram U, Secretary IAN and
Director Neurology, MGM Healthcare, Chennai; Dr. Roop Gursahani, Senior
Consultant Neurology, Hinduja Hospital, Mumbai; along with one forensic expert
from a central government hospital and one legal expert from the Ministry of
Law and Justice.

The committee also
includes Prof. & HOD, Department of Critical Care Medicine, Incharge Trauma
Centre & Central Emergency, Dean Research, Rajendra Institute of Medical
Sciences, Ranchi; Dr. Easwer H.V., Professor, Department of Neurosurgery, Sree
Chitra Thirunal Institute for Medical Sciences and Technology, Trivandrum; Dr.
Swagata Tripathy, Past Vice President, Society of Neurocritical Care and
Professor, Department of Anaesthesia & Critical Care, AIIMS Bhubaneswar;
Prof. Dr. Yogesh N. Parikh, Secretary General, Indian Academy of Pediatrics and
Associate Professor, Pediatrics, Government Medical College & Civil
Hospital, Surat; and Prof. Dr. G. V. Basavaraja, National President, Indian
Academy of Pediatrics.

Also Read:Ayush Ministry's Consultative Committee to convene first meeting on August 19

The broad terms of
reference for the committee include preparing national certification
guidelines, a paediatric BSD framework, training modules, curriculum, and a
performa for reporting and monitoring. Further discussions will cover
identification of BSD in ICUs, certification criteria, definitions of potential
and actual donors, surveillance and audit mechanisms, ICU performance
evaluation, recognition of well-performing ICUs, quality monitoring, withdrawal
of life support, and other related matters, stated the order.

According to the official order, during physical
meetings, government officials will draw their TA/DA from their parent
organizations. Non-government participants will be eligible for allowances as
per Department of Expenditure guidelines and GFR 2017 provisions, equivalent to
those admissible to a Junior Administrative Grade officer with a grade pay of Rs.
7600, including economy class air travel where applicable.

2 months 1 week ago

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