The Bupa Health Foundation
awards have been announced, with
five projects selected for funding
that totals $1m.
One such project involves
a randomised clinical trial to
determine whether antibiotics cure
refractory urge incontinence.
Run by St George Hospital’s
Professor Kate Moore from
February this year to February
2017, the project received
$273,704 from the Health
Foundation.
The study would be a multicentre,
double blind trial of six
weeks of rotating antibiotics versus
identical placebos, in parallel with
routine care that is anticholinergic
(darifenacin) therapy for all
subjects, said researcher Professor
Kate Moore.
The study would involve women
aged 50 and over.The above article was sent to subscribers in Pharmacy Daily's issue from 08 Apr 14 To see the full newsletter, see the embedded issue below or CLICK HERE to download Pharmacy Daily from 08 Apr 14
THE stark health inequalities between Australians living in regional and metro areas have been highlighted in a new report from The Royal Flying Doctor Service (RFDS).
AN “AI explosion” is sweeping Australia’s healthcare sector, signalling the arrival of an “extraordinary era of medicine”, according to a new report from CSIRO.
THE Australian and New Zealand College of Advanced Pharmacy (ANZCAP) has celebrated the 1,000th pharmacist to complete its pharmacy recognition program (PD 24 Nov 2023).
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