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- Search Terms:ISSN: 08203946AndISSN: 14882329AndVolume Number: 184AndIssue Number: 2AndStart Page: 214AndDate: 2012 Revise Search
- 1From: CMAJ: Canadian Medical Association Journal. (Vol. 184, Issue 15) Peer-ReviewedA recent CMAJ news article, "Aboriginal health programming under siege, critics charge," (1) did not include key facts that would have provided a balanced view of federal Aboriginal health programs. I would like to...
- 2From: CMAJ: Canadian Medical Association Journal. (Vol. 184, Issue 15) Peer-ReviewedIn this issue of CMAJ, Quach and colleagues present the results of a large cross-sectional Canadian study that identified significant ethnic disparities in influenza vaccination. (1) Most importantly, after adjusting for...
- 3From: CMAJ: Canadian Medical Association Journal. (Vol. 184, Issue 8) Peer-ReviewedShuffling strategies: Canadian Health Minister Leona Aglukkaq has unveiled a refinement of the national tuberculosis (TB) strategy aimed at reducing the incidence rate of the disease on First Nations reserves. "Working...
- 4From: CMAJ: Canadian Medical Association Journal. (Vol. 184, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedA previously healthy white 29-year-old man presented to the emergency department with a one-day history of diffuse muscle aches and dark urine following a four-hour hockey game. He had no symptoms to suggest intercurrent...
- 5From: CMAJ: Canadian Medical Association Journal. (Vol. 184, Issue 14) Peer-ReviewedThe federal government is deliberately undermining capacity to generate accurate Aboriginal health data and circulating discredited health data so as to downplay the severity of the Aboriginal health crisis in Canada,...
- 6From: CMAJ: Canadian Medical Association Journal. (Vol. 184, Issue 15) Peer-ReviewedBackground: The success of influenza vaccination campaigns may be suboptimal if subgroups of the population face unique barriers or have misconceptions about vaccination. We conducted a national study to estimate...
- 7From: CMAJ: Canadian Medical Association Journal. (Vol. 184, Issue 8) Peer-ReviewedUnder Jordan's Principle, (1) which was unanimously approved by Canada's Parliament in December 2007 (2) and subsequently adopted by most provinces and territories, no Status Indian or Inuit child should be denied...
- 8From: CMAJ: Canadian Medical Association Journal. (Vol. 184, Issue 9) Peer-ReviewedSuicide is one of the leading causes of death among adolescents and young adults worldwide and is a central public health concern in Canada. Effective prevention requires a clear understanding of the size of the problem,...
- 9From: CMAJ: Canadian Medical Association Journal. (Vol. 184, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThose looking for an example of an instance in which genetics is revolutionizing modern heart medicine might not think first of the wildly beautiful area surrounding Gitxsan First Nation villages near the junction of the...
- 10From: CMAJ: Canadian Medical Association Journal. (Vol. 184, Issue 12) Peer-ReviewedBackground: Previous studies of differences in mental health care associated with children's sociodemographic status have focused on access to community care. We examined differences associated with visits to the...
- 11From: CMAJ: Canadian Medical Association Journal. (Vol. 184, Issue 15) Peer-ReviewedChildren's injuries: Aboriginal children in Canada are more likely to suffer death or disability from unintentional injuries than the national average, according to the Canadian Paediatric Society. "Fully 26% of all...
- 12From: CMAJ: Canadian Medical Association Journal. (Vol. 184, Issue 8) Peer-ReviewedHealth care cuts: The National Aboriginal Health Organization is shopping for a university or research institute to absorb its holdings after being informed by Health Canada that its $4.4 million per year budget was cut...
- 13From: CMAJ: Canadian Medical Association Journal. (Vol. 184, Issue 9) Peer-ReviewedHealth care in the caves: Providing health care to indigenous peoples in remote areas is tricky at the best of times. Imagine, though, situations in which some of the patients are living in caves and the primary means of...
- 14From: CMAJ: Canadian Medical Association Journal. (Vol. 184, Issue 14) Peer-ReviewedBackground: Although Aboriginal adults have a higher risk of end-stage renal disease than non-Aboriginal adults, the incidence and causes of end-stage renal disease among Aboriginal children and young adults are not well...
- 15From: CMAJ: Canadian Medical Association Journal. (Vol. 184, Issue 8) Peer-ReviewedBackground: Inflammatory bowel disease is the result of both genes and environment. Canadian First Nations people, despite living in a region with a high prevalence of inflammatory bowel disease, are relatively protected...
- 16From: CMAJ: Canadian Medical Association Journal. (Vol. 184, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedIf cervical cancer is diagnosed early and treated, the chances of a cure are very high. The Papanicolaou (Pap) test is used to detect abnormal cells that could indicate cervical cancer. Routine Pap testing is one of the...
- 17From: CMAJ: Canadian Medical Association Journal. (Vol. 184, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedIn the Nov. 8, 2011, issue of CMAJ, Latino-Martel and colleagues (1) suggested that new evidence connecting alcohol consumption and increased risk of cancer means that drinking guideline limits are too high, at least as...
- 18From: CMAJ: Canadian Medical Association Journal. (Vol. 184, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedThe authors have presented an excellent picture of a patient with calciphylaxis, who despite treatment subsequently died. (1) The authors also comment on possible modalities of treatment, however fail to mention...
- 19From: CMAJ: Canadian Medical Association Journal. (Vol. 184, Issue 10) Peer-ReviewedChan re-appointed: The World Health Assembly has appointed Dr. Margaret Chan to serve a second term at the helm of the World Health Organization. In her acceptance speech, Chan urged that WHO continue to press for...
- 20From: CMAJ: Canadian Medical Association Journal. (Vol. 184, Issue 18) Peer-ReviewedCMAJ 2012. DOI: 10.1503/cmaj.111735 Ryan E. Childers MD Internal medicine PGY-3 Department of Medicine Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center Baltimore, Md What we wear Yours is long, white, made of good...