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2024

Новости за 20.08.2024

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Errors in Figure, Results, and End Matter

The Original Investigation titled “Tirzepatide for Weight Reduction in Chinese Adults With Obesity: The SURMOUNT-CN Randomized Clinical Trial,” published on May 31, 2024, was corrected to remove the dashed lines from panel B of Figure 2, indicating patients who discontinued treatment, and to fix typographical errors in the Results and Additional Contributions sections. This article was corrected online.

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Origins of “Confidential Commercial Information” at the FDA

This Viewpoint reviews regulations regarding FDA’s handing of confidential commercial information, explains how these regulations serve as a barrier to disclosure of information in the interest of public health, and suggests how information could be carefully shared to improve health outcomes and advance research.

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Medications for Obesity

This review examines the safety and efficacy of various antiobesity medications in conjunction with lifestyle modification according to their mechanism of action, including intragastrointestinal, centrally acting, and nutrient-stimulated hormone-based medications.

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Reporting Health Consequences of War—Reply

In Reply We thank Dr Kravitz for his supportive comments and appreciate his perspective as a former journal editor who faced the challenge of deciding what research and opinion manuscripts warrant publication in medical journals. His formula of new, true, and potentially practice-changing for making decisions adds further clarity and wisdom into the ways that medical journals can act in responsible and careful ways to advance medical knowledge and practice. His comments about the complexity of understanding... Читать дальше...

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Reporting Health Consequences of War

To the Editor I read with interest the Viewpoint by Dr Greenland and colleagues and the response by JAMA editors Drs Curfman and Bibbins-Domingo regarding the appropriate role of medical journals in health crises associated with war or political disorder. Greenland and colleagues argued that journals should abstain from publishing political views that are not directly informed by knowledge of medicine or public health. The editors responded that JAMA will continue to publish “scholarly articles addressing... Читать дальше...

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Errors in Table

In the Original Investigation titled “Youth Experiencing Parental Death Due to Drug Poisoning and Firearm Violence in the US, 1999-2020,” published online May 5, 2024, and in print on May 28, 2024, there were errors in the Table. The top 4 cells in the seventh column duplicated the bottom 4 cells. In addition, the 95% CI values in the seventh row of data in the eighth column were transposed. The value given as “(1.3-0.9)” should have been “(0.9-1.3).” This article has been corrected online.

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Safe in Bed

The sun had moved an hour through the sky, unknown to me, because I was asleep, awash in dark so deep, perhaps I’ll die. My body lies prepared to take the leap, a throw tucked tight, two pillows for support. I sleep at night, I sleep in day, I take a breath, I rise and walk, my life cut short. Dreamless, I sleep. I try to tame the snake with tiny prayers, as if a beast could hear, and still the squeeze. If I could be a leaf falling this fall, if I could disappear, the wind would steal me like a gentle thief. Читать дальше...

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Risk Assessment and Prevention of Falls—Reply

In Reply We appreciate the comments of Dr Strandberg and of Dr Jones and colleagues, who noted that our recent review did not address alcohol and postprandial hypotension, respectively, as potential risk factors for falls in older adults. They correctly highlight that the etiology of falls in older adults is inherently multifactorial, and for individual patients, both of these factors may be highly salient. Jones and colleagues reference a systematic review that described an association between syncope... Читать дальше...

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Risk Assessment and Prevention of Falls

To the Editor The comprehensive review of risk assessment and prevention of falls by Dr Colón-Emeric and colleagues did not mention one important, common, and modifiable risk factor: alcohol use. The relationship between alcohol intoxication and falls is self-evident, whereas the effect of smaller amounts of consumption has been less studied and with inconsistent results. Still, geriatricians well know that in an older individual, even a small, “social” amount of alcohol can affect balance and lead to a fall. Читать дальше...

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Management of Patients With Chronic Coronary Disease

This JAMA Clinical Guidelines Synopsis summarizes the 2023 American Heart Association (AHA)/American College of Cardiology (ACC) guideline on management of patients with chronic coronary disease.

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Moving Beyond Statements to Protect Transgender Youth

This Viewpoint explores the politicized nature of gender-affirming care for transgender and nonbinary youth and how children’s hospitals can provide education, resources, and access to families seeking care.

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Don’t Waste Your Cancer

In this narrative medicine essay, a pediatric neurology resident who survived childhood cancer reflects on her experience and later how it affected her mother and by extension how life-threatening diagnoses of children impact their parents, grandparents, and siblings.

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The Progress of Surgery

By Herman E. Pearse, M.D., Chairman of Committee on Progress of Surgery, Kansas City, MO.

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COVID-19 May Protect Against the Common Cold

This Medical News article discusses new research on immune system cross-reactivity to different coronaviruses and implications for pan-coronavirus vaccines.

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Monetary Incentives May Improve Chances of Quitting Smoking

Adults with low socioeconomic status who received small financial rewards for quitting smoking in addition to usual care were more than 3 times as likely to have continued to abstain after about 3 months than were those who received only usual care, according to a recent randomized clinical trial. The study involved 320 participants in the US who were uninsured or covered by Medicaid—groups that tend to have a harder time quitting, the researchers noted in JAMA Network Open. Usual care involved a combination of counseling and pharmacotherapy... Читать дальше...

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HHS Invests in Training Clinicians, Caregivers to Support Older Adults

More than $200 million will go toward improving the ability of “the most trusted people” in older adults’ lives—primary care clinicians, family members, and caregivers—to support them as they age, the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) said in a recent statement.

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WHO: Global Deaths From Alcohol Remain High

About 2.6 million people around the world—the majority of whom were male—died from causes related to alcohol consumption in 2019, according to a new report from the World Health Organization (WHO). The greatest proportion of alcohol-related deaths occurred in people aged 20 to 39 years.

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First-Line Antidepressants Tied to Minor Differences in Weight Gain

Weight gain is a common adverse effect of antidepressants and might contribute to some patients stopping the medications. Now, a new observational study focused on the effects of 8 first-line antidepressants found that some types were associated with a greater chance of weight gain in patients than others.

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COVID-19 Vaccination in Early Pregnancy Not Linked to Birth Defects

Pregnant people who received a messenger RNA, or mRNA, COVID-19 vaccine during their first trimester did not have a greater risk of giving birth to infants with structural birth defects than those who didn’t receive the vaccine then, according to data from an observational cohort study published in JAMA Pediatrics. The study involved more than 42 100 pregnancies that led to live births. The results “should provide reassurance to pregnant people and their obstetric care practitioners,” the researchers wrote.

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FDA Proposes Guidance for Increasing Diversity in Clinical Trials

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recently announced new draft guidance that aims to increase the number of participants from underrepresented populations in clinical trials in the US and globally by requiring medical product sponsors to submit strategies, known as diversity action plans. Age, ethnicity, sex, and race are all factors that can contribute to clinical trial diversity, but sponsors should also consider types of diversity beyond those, such as geographic location, sexual orientation, or socioeconomic status, the FDA wrote.