Ezeagu Health Workers Association

Ezeagu  Health Workers Association Association of all medical and non-medical personals from ESUT Teaching Hospital Parklane. Enugu. Motto: Njande by ike
Email: ezeaguhealthwa@gmail.com

PLAN THE NEXT MEDICAL OUTREACHSub-Saharan Africa has a quarter of the world’s disease burden, but just 3% of the world’s...
21/08/2020

PLAN THE NEXT MEDICAL OUTREACH

Sub-Saharan Africa has a quarter of the world’s disease burden, but just 3% of the world’s health workers. It is well known that infectious diseases such as malaria, TB and HIV are some of Africa’s major health challenges. But now, noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) such as diabetes, cancer and hypertension are on the rise. The World Health Organization even estimates that NCDs are likely to overtake infectious diseases by 2030. In 2015, NCDs were also included in the Sustainable Development Goals, under Goal 3: Ensure healthy lives and promote well-being at all ages.

With access to quality health services, infectious diseases can easily be prevented and treated and NCDs can be kept under control. This is why one of our top priorities is bringing health care closer to those who need it most.

Ezeagu Health workers Outreach visits underdeveloped villages to provide healthcare to those in need. Medical professionals from all across every field unite to form various teams to share the love of Christ using the tool of medicine

Help us plan our next Outreach.
1: suggest place and provide reason (Ezeagu only)
2: suggest sponsors or donors
3: suggest date.

05/03/2018

EASTER OUTREACH PROGRAM.
Next outreach program is @ Imezi-Owa on Easter Monday 2nd April. Please indicate interest by sending in your ID. Departure is @ ESUT Teaching Hospital Parklane Enugu car park. 7:30am prompt.

21/02/2018

Acetaminophen Use Alters S*x Hormones, May Cause Birth Defects

February 19, 2018

Acetaminophen (paracetamol) use has been linked with a depletion of sulfated s*x hormones in a large metabolomic study, and the findings suggest that fetal exposure to the drug could even be linked with risk of male uroge***al malformation at birth.
Acetaminophen has been used for over 50 years, and more than half of women take it for pain relief while pregnant, but recent data, including animal-model and human-epidemiologic studies, suggest it may have some unexpected side effects.

"The current work identifies depletion of sulfated s*x hormones as a potential mechanism" for ge***al malformation at birth in boys, say Isaac V Cohen, a PharmD candidate at the University California, San Diego, and who works at Human Longevity, in San Diego, California, and colleagues, in an article published online February 1 in EBioMedicine.
"The surprising thing that we observed in people who were taking acetaminophen (paracetamol) was that all of them had a peculiar profile in hormone metabolites," senior author Amalio Telenti, MD, from J Craig Venter Institute, in La Jolla, California, explained to Medscape Medical News.
The researchers speculated that they might find liver dysfunction with large doses of acetaminophen, "because that is normal toxicity," but surprisingly they found that acetaminophen was associated with changes in certain hormonal metabolites.
For example, the effect of taking acetaminophen on pregnen-diol disulfate was roughly equivalent to the effect of 35 years of aging, or the normal decrease in levels seen in menopause.
However, the effect only lasts 2 days, Telenti noted. "Three days after you took the acetaminophen you would be back to your chronological age."
Nevertheless, given "epidemiologists are concerned that the people with animal models are concerned, and now we have data saying [acetaminophen] does modify some of the hormones," Telenti said, "I would try to be cautious until we understand better."
"I'm not saying that there is a risk to taking acetaminophen because you have a headache," he said. However, "I would not like to take acetaminophen every day for 1 month during pregnancy."
Common OTC Painkiller, Reproductive Health Concerns

Even though acetaminophen is one of the most common pain medications used worldwide, there is a lack of consensus about its mechanism of action, and more recently, growing concern about possible adverse effects on reproductive health.
Acetaminophen has also falsely elevated continuous glucose monitor readings by a large margin in some patients with diabetes, which is a cause for concern as these devices are increasingly being adopted.
In the new study, Cohen and colleagues enrolled 455 active adults age 18 years and older and performed an analysis of more than 700 metabolites in 208 participants to establish a metabolomic profile. They then tested the training model in the other 247 participants.
They found that 19 of the 208 participants were likely taking acetaminophen based on the presence of acetaminophen and its seven metabolites, and this use affected a unique subset of sulfated s*x hormones.

The model was validated in 1880 individuals of European ancestry in the TwinsUK cohort and 1235 individuals of African American and Hispanic ancestry from the Insulin Resistance Atherosclerosis Study.
"Overall, our analysis of 3570 individuals (including training test, Europeans, African Americans, and Hispanic participants) confirm the generalizable effect of acetaminophen use on sulfated s*x hormone levels across human populations," they write.
The study also sheds light on how acetaminophen may ease pain.

"Individuals who took acetaminophen," they note, "had very low levels of neurosteroids such as pregnenolone sulfate and DHEAS [dehydroepiandrosterone], a mechanism that could synergize with acetaminophen's known mode of action in the central nervous system that implicates the COX [cyclooxygenase], vanilloid, and endocannabinoid systems."
Moreover, "the current work showcases the use of pharmacometabolomics to identify unexpected effects of a commonly used drug, acetaminophen, on hormone metabolism," according to the researchers. "Closer scrutiny of this commonly used medication is warranted," they add.
"These findings are significant for they showcase how the body is impacted by seemingly innocuous everyday medications like Tylenol," said Telenti in a press release by Human Longevity. "There are hundreds of other drugs that no one has done this research for. We delineate a general strategy that should be applied broadly in the study of medications in common use."

11/12/2017

The 1st phase of Medical outreach @ Iwollo on the 9th of December was a huge success. Join us again on the 29th for the 2nd phase. It promises to deliver more. Be there!

09/11/2017

November medical outreach is @ Iwollo. Saturday 18th Novermber 2017. 8am-5pm.

October medical outreach is @ Ogwuofia Imezi-owa. Saturday 7th October 2017. 8am-5pm.
05/10/2017

October medical outreach is @ Ogwuofia Imezi-owa. Saturday 7th October 2017. 8am-5pm.

Address

Park-lane GRA
Enugu

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