... the disease. This public health success is often credited to widespread screening programmes. But in the developing world, where most cervical cancer occurs, there is little information about rates of ...
... this case is called CHOP (chemotherapy regime), which is given every 3 weeks. In the developed world, CHOP is administered in combination with an antibody therapy called rituximab.
But many patients ...
... subjects," said Alex John London, lead author of "Justice in Translation: From Bench to Bedside in the Developing World" and director of Carnegie Mellon's Center for the Advancement of Applied Ethics ...
... every year. However, a number of studies have suggested that the prevalence of dementia in the developing world is between a quarter and a fifth of that typically recorded in developed countries.
Now ...
... control specialists and international organizations that call for improved cervical cancer prevention in the developing world. The International Union Against Cancer also announced the launch of a ...
An institute to assess the impact of mobile banking in the developing world has been launched.
The incoming president of the International Council for Science says that promoting developing world science education will be her top priority.
Two internationally minded scientists have joined the US president-elect's transition team, raising hopes for science in the developing world.
... in Global Health Initiative to develop affordable, easy-to-use diagnostic tools for the developing world.
"A pivotal issue in having this technology work is making these tests storable for long ...
Science journalism is prospering in the developing world, while the field faces staff cuts and is seen as a 'luxury' in the developed world.
A new generation of simple, affordable medical diagnostic tests is heading toward the developing world where they may protect impoverished people from AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria and other infectious ...
A new generation of simple, affordable medical diagnostic tests is heading toward the developing world where they may protect impoverished people from AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria and other infectious ...
... -cost, high-performance prosthetic knee joint for amputees in the developing world. Dubbed the JaipurKnee Project, the team aimed to help rectify lives ravaged by war and diseases ...
UK science societies are running small-scale collaborations with scientists in the developing world.
Science journalists in the developing world can help bring science news to a global public, says senior Harvard fellow Cristine Russell.