HPV - tratamiento del hpv
HPV vaccine now available for boys
By QMI
Agency
Last
Updated: February 23, 2010 2:39pm
An
HPV vaccine that protects women from most varieties of genital warts
and cervical cancer, has been approved for use by boys and men in
Canada.
The
vaccine, Gardasil, has been approved for boys and men ages nine through
26, the same age range as its approval in girls and women. In 2007, the
federal government announced $300 million in funding to deliver
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HPV vaccine to prevent genital warts approved for males aged 9 to 26 in Canada
(CP)
– 19 hours ago
TORONTO
— The vaccine manufacturer Merck says Health Canada has
approved Gardasil for the prevention of genital warts caused by HPV
infection in boys and men aged nine to 26.
HPV,
or human papillomavirus, is the most common sexually transmitted
infection and can also cause anal cancer in men. Gardasil has already
been approved for females aged nine to 26 in Canada to prevent cervical
cancer and genital warts.
The
vaccine is designed to prevent infection by four of the most common
strains of the virus.
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Bill seeks more HPV coverage
By
Marissa Cumbers
New
legislation proposed in a Michigan Senate committee would require
health insurance providers to cover testing for human papillomavirus,
or HPV.
Insurance
providers would be required to cover the HPV test, which exposes a
virus that is linked to cervical cancer, under a two-bill package
sponsored by state Sen. Martha Scott, D-Highland Park.
“Women
are dying before their time because they can’t have this
test,” Scott said.
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HPV MEDICAL CENTER & HPV MEDICAL GROUP
HPV
Medical Center & HPV Medical Group has been created
to prevent, to diagnose and treat HPV before it develops into cancer.
For this purpose, we use DNA detection techniques (PCR and
hybrid-capture) which allow us to make a diagnosis of the virus in its
early stages of infection, also called “latent..
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Public Health workshop enhances programing of 26th International Papillomavirus Conference
MONTREAL,
Mar. 2, 2010 (Canada NewsWire Group) -- /CNW Telbec/ -- Public health
professionals are for the first time invited to the Public Health
Workshop, a bilingual preconference that will be held July 3 to 4,
2010, at the Palais des congrès de Montréal, as a
complement to the 26th International Papillomavirus Conference. The
initiative, proposed jointly by the Public Health Agency of Canada and
the Institut national de santé publique du
Québec, will highlight the many public health issues
connected with preventing human papillomavirus (HPV) and related
diseases and cancers.
Dr. Marc Steben,
Steering Committee co-chair, elaborates: "The Public Health Workshop
will meet a real need for skills development. We are committed to
making the training as interactive as possible, with a view to
exchanging information and building on the lessons learned, in addition
to the many solutions that have come from HPV-related experiences here
and elsewhere."
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Free and reduced HPV vaccine
By Myrriah Gossett
The Coastal Health
District will offer women aged 19-26 the full Human Papillomavirus
vaccine. The treatment was developed to help prevent cervical cancer
caused by HPV.
The vaccine is given
over a course of three doses. All three are required for the vaccine to
be fully effective. The series, which normally cost upwards of $160 per
dose, will only cost an administrative fee of $14. However, the Coastal
Health District has said that they will not turn away those who cannot
pay the fee.
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Cervical cancer vaccine, conference offer women hope
Tuesday,
02 March 2010 19:54 By Maya Prabhu
March could mark a
turning point in the fight against cervical cancer in Uganda.
In the context of the increasing international availability of a new
vaccine, government officials and NGOs involved in the struggle against
cervical cancer will launch a strategic plan to combat the disease.
Prevention
International: No Cervical Cancer brings care, training and equipment
to clinics and hospitals in 8 countries, screening and treating poor
women.
At the same time,
Mulago Hospital, Makerere University, and the organisation PATH will
begin joint research into new methods of screening for the illness.
Efforts also include a pilot vaccination distribution programme
currently taking place in two districts, which aims to gather
sufficient information to make possible a future national vaccination
strategy. Furthermore, the Uganda Cancer Institute will contribute to
plans for a comprehensive national policy on cancer.
There are
over one hundred viral subtypes that differ in their DNA. Some of these
subtypes like HPV 16 are associated with precancerous and cancerous
lesions in different parts of the body. Other viral types
that have been associated with cancerous lesions are HPV 18, 31, 33,
35, 39, 45, 51, 52, 56, 58, 59, 68 and others. HPV has been attributed
as the cause of Cervical Cancer.
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Screens, Vaccine for HPV Less Beneficial in Older Women
Rate of new infections declined with age, study
found
THURSDAY, Feb. 18 (HealthDay News) -- As women age, they receive fewer
benefits from frequent screening for human papillomavirus (HPV) and
vaccinations to prevent the virus, new research shows.
While infection with certain types of HPV can lead to cervical cancer,
there is a vaccine that can help protect against many of these HPV
infections.
However, this study of Costa Rican women, aged 18 to 97, concluded that
the benefits of HPV vaccination and screening are low among women over
the age of 41. The rate of newly detected cancer-causing HPV infections
declined with age, ranging from 35 percent in women aged 18 to 25 to
13.5 percent in women aged 42 and older.
The fundamental reasons
for HPV
treatment are:
- Prevent cancer in the
case of tumoral virus.
- Prevent transmission to
others.
- Aesthetic and personal
comfort.
- To improve quality of
life.
- Prevent infection from
mother to child during birth.
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