Key Highlights
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A major review of 39 studies found that offering people money can encourage healthier behaviors like exercise and quitting smoking, but the effects are often small and temporary. This highlights a practical, though limited, tool for public health programs aiming to improve population health.
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The review also showed that financial incentives work best when the reward is large, given immediately, and tailored to the person’s situation. This provides crucial guidance for designing more effective public health campaigns that can potentially reduce health disparities.
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A large study in Africa found that adverse drug reactions are severely under-reported on the continent, with only 1% of global reports coming from its 47 countries. This reveals a critical gap in safety monitoring that puts patients at risk, especially for common drugs like the HIV medicine efavirenz.
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The analysis suggests that many of these adverse reactions in Africa could be linked to common genetic variations that affect how people process medications. This underscores an urgent need for genetic testing to personalize treatments and improve drug safety across the diverse African population.
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A study of over 15,000 new mothers with anemia found that lower hemoglobin levels after birth were directly linked to worse physical capacity and wellbeing. For every 10 g/L increase in hemoglobin, mothers could walk nearly 3 meters farther in a 6-minute test, showing a clear, measurable impact of anemia on recovery.
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Mothers with severe postpartum anemia were nearly 50% more likely to expect difficulties doing their usual activities compared to those with mild anemia. This strong evidence supports global health efforts to prevent and treat anemia in new mothers to protect their health and ability to care for their newborns.
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