The wider picture Philippine Star, Philippines - Nov 29, 2008 America may be our friend but it is time that we act out our sovereignty and take care of ourselves with a more equal hand to all countries, whether it is ...
State Suspends License of Salina Child Care Center WIBW, KS - Nov 24, 2008 Posted By: wah: Boo Hoo Bill, get over yourself. "I didn't get to tell my gandson" KSU 5-7 next season. Posted By: It's Just a Game: Seems like the logical ...
Philadelphia Phans: Why Do We Boo? Because We Care Bleacher Report, CA - Nov 4, 2008 We booed Matthew Scott, the only person in United States history to receive a hand transplant, when he threw out the ceremonial first pitch to a Phillies ...
Thankful for babies, travels, teachers DavidsonNews.net, NC - Nov 25, 2008 Peter and Boo take care of the administrative duties for Mike and their efforts have resulted in an awareness of the need for assistance by international ...
What Just Happened? - the Sunday Times review Times Online, UK - Nov 29, 2008 At a test screening, the audience start to boo and walk out when the bad guys blow away a dog. The studio boss, Lou (Catherine Keener), is demanding an ...
Unusual pets dot county's landscape Shelbyville Times-Gazette, TN - Nov 21, 2008 "She took care of them like they were her own puppies." As they grew, Rowdy and Boo Boo ate hamburger meat -- and a lot of it -- and whatever else the ...
Boo-tiful Costumes Western Howard County View, MD - Nov 6, 2008 By Sean Wallace Pirates, ogres and other cooky characters were on hand for the fourth annual "Howl-O-Ween" event Oct. 25 at Happy Dog Care, in Ellicott City ...
Did LSU Learn Its Lesson? CollegeOTR, NY - Nov 19, 2008 But fans, c?mon, you can?t boo the guy. I don?t care how much you pay for your seat, you just can?t boo him. Some disguise their actions by saying, ...
A girlfriend's poignant last promise Bermuda Sun, Bermuda - Nov 29, 2008 She said she called him 'Davy-boo' and he always carried a photo of her in his wallet. Chelsea said: "We used to talk and hang out together, ...
Holiday Happenings Pittsburgh Post Gazette, PA - Nov 20, 2008 Call Boo Willner at 412-341-5574. Jefferson Hills Library, 925 Old Clairton Road, will hold a holiday floral decoration class at 7 pm Dec. 22. ...
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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: care + 666 + 0.44 Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/7/2008)
Rogers Reports Second Quarter 2008 Financial and Operating Results PR Newswire (press release), NY - Jul 29, 2008 In addition, there were higher costs to support increased usage of data and roaming services, as well as increases in customer care, credit and collection, ...RCI
[CITATION] Physical and psychological distress in hospitalized cancer patients S Care
Specialized prenatal care and maternal and infant outcomes in twin pregnancy - B Luke, MB Brown, R Misiunas, E Anderson, C Nugent … - American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 2003 - Elsevier ... scored as delayed compared with nonprogram children (AOR 0.65, 95% CI, 0.44-0.96 ...
and nutritional care is an integral part of prenatal care, yet this ... 661?666. ...
DEMOGRAPHIC AND SOCIOECONOMIC PREDICTORS OF DENTAL CARE UTILIZATION - RJ MANSKI, LS MAGDER - The Journal of the American Dental Association, 1998 - Am Dental Assoc ... sectional household survey con- ducted by the National Center for Health Statistics,
included questions on the dental health care of the US ... 60 (0.44) 68 (0.43) ...
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Bandage innovations: Give a hand to improved boo-boo care
It used to be so simple.
You were a kid. You fell down and skinned your knee. You cried.
Mom came to the rescue, washed off your wound — let's use the technical term, which is "boo-boo" or "owie" — and applied hydrogen peroxide or mercurochrome. You cried again.
She opened the little can that holds the adhesive bandages, and depending on the extent of your boo-boo, selected the wide kind, or the skinny little one or the dot, and stuck it on. When it was time to peel off the bandage, it hurt. You cried some more.
But today if a mom — or dad — needs to reach for a bandage, the choices go far beyond just size or shape. The consumer market for adhesive bandages has exploded in the past decade or so, driven, say industry spokesmen and medical professionals, by technological advances in hospitals.
Lisa Corbett, an advanced-practice registered nurse with the Center for Wound Healing and Hyperbaric Medicine at Hartford Hospital in Connecticut, says the improved treatment of chronic nonhealing wounds, those that persist longer than 30 days, has spun off products now available to the public.
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Wound Care 101 Whatever product you choose, , here is the procedure to follow:
Sponge the wound with cold water alone to remove dirt and debris.
Do not use products such as hydrogen peroxide or strong antiseptics, which can kill the baby cells that will form new healthy tissue. No one would even consider using mercurochrome, which contains mercury, anymore.
Apply just a dab of an antibacterial ointment and cover the wound with a bandage that will create the moist environment crucial for healthy healing.
If a wound doesn't heal after 30 days, it's time to see a doctor.
Source: Lisa Corbett, an advanced-practice registered nurse with the Center for Wound Healing and Hyperbaric Medicine at Hartford Hospital
So parents are faced with store shelves jam-packed with products: liquid and spray-on bandages, ionized-silver bandages or waterproof or moist-environment-promoting or easy-to-remove bandages. Or anti-itch, anti-bleeding or anti-bacterial bandages. Not to mention bandages shaped to fit fingers or knuckles, or medicated to minimize scars or cushioned to heal blisters. There are eye-catching bandages for kids, decorated with licensed cartoon characters or tattoo designs, and clear ones that appeal to adults because they don't catch the eye.
"At first, it seems like a challenge to navigate" among all these choices, says Todd Andrews, a spokesman for CVS Corp. "But it's a real benefit to consumers."
Just as there have been advances in treating heart disease, Andrews says, there have been "leaps forward in technology in wound care and management products." The diversity "seems daunting but is useful," he says, noting that as hospital stays grow shorter, postoperative wound care is increasingly being managed at home.
"Our customers have told us, through studies, that they want these products," he says.
Michael Sweeney, a spokesman for 3M's Nexcare line, says that while different products offer different benefits, the most important is their performance, such as whether they are easier to use, longer-lasting or more waterproof.
Liquid-bandage products are among the newest to catch the interest of consumers, he says, and while they may be more expensive per application, they last longer, which helps bring their cost closer to that of strip bandages. Further refinements will make such innovations more convenient and affordable, Sweeney says.
The choices can seem overwhelming, he says, and that is why Nexcare has recently redesigned its packaging as "a simplification to help consumers find what they need."
Fred Tewell, product director for Johnson & Johnson's Band-Aid Brand Adhesive Bandages, says industry research shows that mothers continue to be the primary purchasers of bandages for the whole family. He says older consumers, a growing group, are buying bandages that are gentle to the skin, such as the liquid type or Band-Aid's Hurt-Free line.
The Band-Aid story
We've come a long way from the birth of the first Band-Aids, which company lore says were invented in 1920 by Earle Dickson, a cotton buyer for Johnson & Johnson, whose new bride, Josephine, was prone to acquiring cuts and burns while cooking.
He fashioned bandages for her from cotton gauze and adhesive strips, which soon were marketed by the company. At first made by hand and 3 inches wide by 18 inches long, they were not an immediate success, but smaller strips soon caught on. And Dickson became a vice president.
By now, more than 100 billion Band-Aids have been made, and the company's trademarked name has become the shorthand term for any adhesive bandage.
According to a report posted on MarketResearch.com, 60 percent to 70 percent of adhesive bandages in the United States are used on children, and those with licensed images account for 15 percent to 20 percent of the entire market.
Among other popular innovations:
Hydrocolloid or hydrogel bandages, such as Johnson & Johnson's Advanced Care and Curad's Hydro-Heal brands. They have particles that absorb fluids from the wound and form a gel that provides a moist environment.
That is most helpful because it helps tissues heal faster with less scarring, says Lisa Corbett, an advanced-practice registered nurse. Some of these bandages are semipermeable and form a seal around the wound that helps strap healing cells.
"We tell our clients to think rain forest, not desert," Corbett says of the emphasis on covering wounds and keeping the environment moist.
Letting a wound dry out and form a scab lengthens the time it takes to heal and increases the possibility of scars or infection, says Marcia Taraschi of Johnson & Johnson.
Liquid and spray-on bandages offer aesthetic appeal, flexibility, good waterproofing and the ability to cling to the wound. They are useful for hard-to-cover areas and slough off when the wound heals.
Scar-reducing bandages can minimize the appearance of raised or red scars over a period of weeks and can be used on fresh or old scars.
Bandages containing ionized silver, tiny bits that leach out over time, offer a natural anti-bacterial effect. Their use has shaken up hospital care of chronic wounds, says Corbett.
"Silver is a very potent anti-microbial," she says, but adds that for minor cuts likely to heal within a few days, less-expensive traditional bandages will do the job well.
Anti-blister bandages use hydrocolloid technology to generate a gel cushion that stays in place for several days, seals out water and germs, and is flexible.
Anti-itch bandages contain a topical ointment that dulls pain and throbbing, lessening the urge to scratch an insect bite or minor wound, which can lead to infection.
Anti-bleeding bandages use fibers or gels to stop bleeding quickly. They may be of use to people who take anti-coagulant drugs.
But a little bleeding can be a good thing, says Corbett.
"We like it when wounds bleed. It's the first phase in the cascade of healing," when blood platelets migrate to the wound and attract growth factors for new tissue, she says. Just as a mild fever is a natural part of fighting infection, bleeding plays an important role in healing.