Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Hpv vaccine

  • CINCINNATI, July 9 (UPI) -- The human papillomavirus vaccine has reduced the infection in immunized U.S. teens, but also in teens not immunized, U.S. researchers found. Lead author Dr.
  • (United Press International)
  • The HPV vaccine has been effective in lowering rates of human papillomavirus (HPV) after the vaccination was licensed for use in the United States in June of 2006, says a new study published in the August 2012 issue of the journal Pediatrics.
  • (The Inquisitr)
  • The HPV vaccine not only has resulted in a decrease in human papillomavirus infection in immunized teens but also in teens who were not immunized.
  • (News-Medical.Net)
  • The human papillomavirus is one of the most common sexually transmitted infections, but a new U.S. study shows the HPV vaccine appears to be protecting not just the teens who get the shot but also those who were not immunized.
  • (CBC)
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  • (Slate)
  • HPV, or the human papillomavirus, is one of the most prevalent sexually transmitted viral infections in the world, causing symptoms that range from genital warts to increased risk of cervical cancer.
  • (Science Daily)
  • Its been hard enough to persuade parents to get their preteen girls vaccinated against the virus that causes cervical cancer. Now, health care providers have an even harder sell: reaching the parents of boys.
  • (Detroit Free Press)
  • More than 240 doses of HPV vaccine worth a total of $32,000 were lost after a refrigerator at a Hamilton immunization clinic broke down this spring.
  • (Hamilton Spectator)
  • Doctors stop recommending the HPV vaccine to women once theyve reached their mid-20s.
  • (Atlantic Online)

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