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Cancer Immunotherapy May Also Treat Certain Autoimmune Diseases
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RNA Research Brings Hope to Millions with Rare Diseases
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Improving Care for Children During Disasters
Regional hospitals unite to strengthen emergency response plans for children impacted by such crises as a pandemic, hurricane, flood or mass shooting.
When a hurricane, flood or health disaster strikes, impacted children have unique needs.
Those who are separated from parents may experience severe trauma and psychological distress and need help reunifying with guardians.
Others may need diapers, baby formula and chaperones to keep them safe at shelters.
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And children who get severely sick or injured will need specialized pediatric emergency care.
But when it comes to disaster preparedness, most agencies’ response plans are primarily designed with adults in mind – not children.
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Systemic sclerosis is an autoimmune disease associated with inflammation and fibrosis, or scarring, that affects organs including the skin, heart, kidney and lungs.
This form of scleroderma, this tightening and thickening of the skin, is a progressive, orphan illness that affects approximately 80,000 Americans and has no clear pathogenesis or FDA approved treatment option, leaving a proportion of patients affected to develop scarring so severe that they need organ transplants.
Lung fibrosis is the major cause of mortality in systemic sclerosis patients, with its prevalence on the rise and no way to stabilize or reverse the damage, according to Dinesh Khanna, M.B.B.S, M.S.c, director of Michigan Medicine s Scleroderma Program.