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    白血病

    医療 健康 関連語 放射線 抗がん剤 チェルノブイリ シーベルト
    • ある愛の詩
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    • 'Violent protests' over China pollution
      Hundreds of Chinese have mounted violent protests against a solar panel factory in eastern China over three days, accusing it of cancer-causing pollution, state media reported SundayAround 500 protesters gathered in Haining city, Zhejiang province, on Thursday, demanding an explanations for the death of large numbers of fish in a nearby river, the Xinhua news agency said.Industrial contamination had caused at least 31 cases of cancer among residents of Hongxiao village, which is part of Haining, they said, including six of leukaemia. 中国人数百人ががんの原因となる汚染からそれを非難するような、3日間の東部、中国の太陽電池パネルの工場に対して暴力的な抗議行動をマウントした、国営メディアは、死の説明を要求し、木曜日に市、浙江省を、海寧に集まったSundayAround 500抗議を報告近くの川で魚の多数から、新華社通信said.Industrial汚染は、白血。。含めて、彼らによると、海寧の一部であるHongxiao村の住民の間で癌の少なくとも31例が発生していた

    • The Book of Job, Part 2, Theodicy on the street | Alexander Goldberg
      The Book of Job cannot excuse suffering or argue it away, but it shows us a process by which it can be made bearableA woman stands over her dead child's body in a hospital. The child suffered from leukaemia and her long fight with this horrid disease has ended. Is the mother standing over her dead child not entitled to question: why her? why not me? where was G-d when I needed Her? What has my little girl, what have I done to deserve this?Issues of providence often arise out of suffering. At the core of Job's message is that not everything is fathomable to mere mortals and that reward and punishment is not a simplistic formula that can be used to explain suffering. At first glance, it may appear a cruel conclusion that there is a limitation to our knowledge and comprehension of why things are happening to us. I would never advocate that anyone administering pastoral care should tell a cancer patient to read Job and then they'll understand their predicament.What the book has given us is a more subtle and multi-layered answer: not just argument, but action. Job teaches us that we need to slowly be reintegrated into society following a bereavement: it is from Job we derive the intense seven days of mourning (shiva), where Jews stay at home and receive comforters. For the first 30 days of mourning Jews do not shave but do return to work after the week. Following 11 months of Kaddish we finally erect a stone to mark the grave and the mourning process is over. Every year, on the anniversary of the death, a candle is lit, and prayers are said. Slowly, we heal.Jewish teaching has long realised that at our weakest moments we need a process to deal with suffering and that rather than simply processing the reason for the tragedy there is a need to heal the pain. The Jewish mournin ジョブの予約は、苦しみを許すことができない、または離れて、それを主張するが、それは私たちがでそれがbearableA女性を作ることができるプロセスを示して病院で死んだ子供の体の上に立っている

    • Why I think Saudi Oil Production is now at Capacity
      In August of 1985 the Saudi’s grew tired of their role as swing producer for the world, supporting oil prices in the $25 per barrel range. Regardless of how they pleaded and threatened, other OPEC members over‑produced their quotas, forcing the Saudi’s to cut their production to support the increasingly untenable price. With production down to something on the order of 2 million barrels per day, the Saudis began offering oil to the world at the spot price, thereby bringing production up to 5 million barrels per day by early 1986, and causing prices to collapse to under $15 per barrel. It was the end of the era of trying to maintain a high oil price in the face of falling world demand, brought on by the high oil price. The Saudis had learned a few lessons they would not easily forget. These are: 1985年8月にはサウジアラビアさんが1バレルあたり25ドルの範囲あたりの原油価格をサポートする、世界のスイングプロデューサーとしての役割に疲れて育った

    • Presenter and author Clive James has leukaemia
      The Australian, 71, treated at Addenbrooke's hospital in Cambridge after being diagnosed in 2010Clive James, the Australian television presenter and critic, has leukaemia, it has emerged. James, 71, was diagnosed with the illness in January 2010. His wife, Prue Shaw, an academic, said her husband was being treated at Addenbrooke's hospital in Cambridge. Luke Slattery, editor of the Australian Literary Review, said James had been forced to ration his time to work on several book projects, including a second volume of Cultural Amnesia. James, who has two daughters, has lived in England since leaving Sydney in 1961 and has worked as columnist for The Observer, as well as television critic.Clive JamesCancerHealthDamien Pearseguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds オーストラリア、71、白血病を持って2010Cliveジェームズは、オーストラリアのテレビの司会者や評論家、と診断された後、ケンブリッジでアデンブルックの病院で治療を受け、それが浮上している

    • Is this the answer to latent TB?
      Only 10% of people with latent tuberculosis go on to develop the active disease. Monica Desai asks who stands to benefit if the latest research bears fruitTuberculosis. Surely that's not a disease we worry about in the UK?Unfortunately, that's far from the truth. It is true that of the 9 million people who develop TB every year, the largest number of cases are in south-east Asia. The disease kills 1.8 million people per year according to the World Health Organisation, that's about the same number as die from Aids.However, it's not just a disease of the developing world. In the UK, we've seen a rise to more than 9,000 new cases per year. That's more than the number of new diagnoses of leukaemia every year in the UK.But not everyone who is exposed to TB gets the disease. More than a third of the world's population has been exposed to TB, resulting in an immune response, but only one in 10 of these people will go on to develop the active disease, with symptoms such as cough, fever and weight loss. Exposure without these symptoms is called latent TB.Current tests for TB do a poor job of distinguishing between who will go on to develop active disease and who won't. As a result, we're unnecessarily treating nine of every 10 people with latent TB.Conventional treatment for latent TB is a long regimen of drugs, such as isoniazid. There is some good evidence that this prevents the active disease from developing. But there are also problems: first off, who wants to take a drug every day for nine months, when they don't have symptoms of the disease? And how long should the treatment go on for? Three months or as long as a year? There is no marker to identify that the latent disease has been successfully treated.TB drugs can cause liver damage and nerve problems. As a result, in th 潜。結核を持つ人々の10%だけがアクティブに疾患を発症するに進みます


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