Friday, 15 July 2011

another reason why sending children ...

another reason why sending children ...

One reason for sending children to test-it is fear or guilt because of the possibility of infecting the baby. If test results prove negative, all of these unspoken fears stop. A negative result may also mean parents no longer have to worry about how to care for HIV-infected child. Reasons not to undergo testing Although many parents realize that infected through unprotected sex, drug use or blood transfusion, they do not want the child to get tested, because they will be hard to get used to the idea that they have infected her child with HIV. Sometimes parents say, treating a child as a healthy, they know "something to live on." If they send a child to the testing and the result is positive, it would destroy their hopes for the future of the child and cause them to become witnesses of the disease in the child. Some parents decide not to send a child to the testing because it can not solve any problems. If the child will be HIV positive, whether they should tell it to relatives or friends, and thus reveal its own status? Parents can take that away from testing the child will not be any good, because there is no HIV drugs. In Britain, for example, all children born to HIV positive mothers are subject to mandatory treatment and testing as long as the tests do not have a negative or self-evident.

Pirazidol in the treatment of depression in patients with coronary heart disease


Professor S. Ivanov, Professor AL Syrkin, Professor MJ Drobizhev, MD MG Poltava, KA Baturin, AV Boatmen Mental Health Research Center RAMS, Moscow MMA behalf IM Sechenov Among the psychiatric disorders observed in patients ishemichekoy heart disease (CHD) and depression are among the most common. According to various authors [10,11, 14,22,25], to 44% of patients in hospital admission for coronary heart disease with depression. Even higher rate of depression indicated in the assessment of mental pathology in patients with coronary artery disease undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG), as in the pre-and post-operative period - up to 50% and 61% respectively [6,27,29, 36.37]. Established that depressive states most adversely affect the course and outcome of coronary heart disease. For example, depression that emerged after myocardial infarction, is equivalent to such a prognostic sign of death, as the degree of circulatory failure (classified Killip) [25]. Shown that depression increases the risk of death after CABG. So, after 4-38 months (mean 25 months) after CABG mortality among patients with pre-and postoperative depression reaches 12,5%. At the same time in patients with the same demographic characteristics and the volume of surgical intervention, but without the depression the same figure is only 2.2% [19].

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