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        תוצאת חיפוש

        דצמבר 1997

        פסח שורצמן
        עמ'

        Sunscreen Use in an Urban Negev Population

         

        Pesach Shvartzman

         

        Family Medicine Dept., Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer Sheba

         

        The use of sunscreen in the Negev population was assessed. The study population included 1458 subjects, mean age 35.5‏±14.2 years, half born in Israel and 25% in East Europe. Two-thirds were exposed to the sun 1-2 hours a day and 13% 4 hours a day or more. Only about 15% used sunscreen while shopping, 69% used it at the beach, and less than half applied it to children being sent to school. Sunscreen use was greater in women (p<0.000001), especially those with sensitive skin (p<0.0001) and red hair (p<0.0001). No significant association was found with age, education or country of birth.

        נובמבר 1997

        יאירה חממה-רז, זהבה סולומון ואברהם עורי
        עמ'

        Fear of Personal Death among Hospital Physicians

         

        Y. Hamama-Raz, Z. Solomon, A. Ohry

         

        School of Social Work and Dept. of Neuro-Rehabilitation, Chaim Sheba Medical Center, Tel Hashomer (Both affiliated with Tel Aviv University)

         

        Many studies have tried to explain why professionals experience difficulty when dealing with, and in treating efficiently situations connected with death. We studied levels of personal fear among physicians in general hospitals and addressed 2 questions: Does exposure to death on professional and personal levels, affect the level of the fear of personal death which physicians experience? Is there a relationship between personality variables, represented by the repression-sensitization dimension, and level of fear of personal death? A sample of 233 physicians from 22 general hospitals who specialized in oncology, internal medicine, surgery, psychiatry or pediatrics was studied. Each answered 4 questionnaires with regard to demographic information, fear of personal death, level of repression-sensitization and exposure to the death of relatives and significant others. There were no differences in level of fear of personal death of physicians according to specialization, but those who had been exposed to death on the personal level, feared less their own death. With respect to the personality variable, tendency to sensitization, it was found that those who were sensitized exhibited a higher level of the fear of their own death compared to those who were repressive. Of the various demographic variables examined (sex, level of religiouobservance, age, number of children, health, professional experience) it was found that those: with many years of professional experience, who were relatively older, who were nonobservant religiously and who were in good health, had lower levels of personal fear of death; gender was not a factor.

        ספטמבר 1997

        שושנה וייס
        עמ'

        Urgent Need for Prevention of Alcohol Drinking among Arab Youth

         

        Shoshana Weiss

         

        Dept. of Prevention, Israel Society for the Prevention of Alcoholism

         

        A study was conducted in the winter of 1996 among 2,220 Arab adolescents in northern Israel. This fourth study among Arab youth dealt with frequency of drinking and amounts of alcohol drunk during a drinking bout. Among Christian, Druze and Moslem males there were 81.72%, 49.61% and 31.93%, respectively, who drank. The figures for females were 36.75%, 11.25% and 12.78%. About 4% of Moslem males drank 5 drinks or more consecutively, daily or every 2-3 days. The need for preventive efforts in the Arab sector is stressed.

        יוני 1997

        אמיר ויזרי, אלי מימון, משה מזור, אילנה שוהם-ורדי, טלי זילברשטיין, ארנון ויז'ניצר ומרים כץ
        עמ'

        Effect of the Yom Kippur Fast on Parturition

         

        A. Wiser, E. Maymon, M. Mazor, I. Shoham-Vardi, T. Silberstein, A. Wiznitzer, M. Katz

         

        Depts. of Obstetrics and Gynecology and of Epidemiology, Soroka Medical Center, and Faculty of Health Sciences, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer Sheba

         

        Food-withdrawal has been proposed as a possible mechanism for initiating the onset of labor in animals and humans. The hypothesis was based upon the reported increase in deliveries of infants during the Yom Kippur fast. We studied the effect of the fast on full term deliveries of Jewish women, with non-fasting Bedouin women as controls (1988-1995, 1,313 Jewish and 1,091 Bedouin deliveries). To determine the effect of Yom Kippur itself, delivery rates on Sukkot and Yom Kippur were compared in both groups. The mean delivery rate in the Jewish population was significantly higher during Yom Kippur and the day after, than during the 7 days before Yom Kippur (15.1±5.1 and 14.6±4.7 vs 10.7±3.5, p<0.04 and p<0.01, respectively). There was an increase in delivery rate during the 6 hours before the end of the fast. In the Bedouin women there were no changes in delivery rate during any of these periods. There were no significant differences in the rates of deliveries during the Sukkot festival between Jewish and Bedouin women. We conclude that fasting is associated with a significant increase in the rate of deliveries at term.

        אפריל 1997

        יצחק אשכנזי ויהושע שמר
        עמ'

        Smoking Habits of Young Israeli Soldiers

         

        I. Askenazi, J. Shemer

         

        Medical Corps, Israel Defense Forces, and Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv University

         

        A random sample of 32,166 soldiers were interviewed (on their day of discharge from the Israeli Defence Forces, between 1980-1995) with regard to smoking habits. Among men, prevalence of current smoking was 46.8%, and among women 32.9%. Over the study period, prevalence in men decreased 27%. Among women, prevalence decreased from 1981 to 1991, but since then it has steadily increased. Among men, mean number of cigarettes smoked decreased from 21.6 in 1989 to 16.6 in 1995. Among women cigarettes smoked decreased from a mean of 14.3 in 1989 to 13.1 in 1995. 65.9% of the men and 49.3% of the women had started smoking by the age of 18. Among men the age distribution of smoking changed hardly at all over the years of the study. However, the proportion of women who began to smoke in the youngest age bracket (15 years of younger) doubled over the course of the study.

        הבהרה משפטית: כל נושא המופיע באתר זה נועד להשכלה בלבד ואין לראות בו ייעוץ רפואי או משפטי. אין הר"י אחראית לתוכן המתפרסם באתר זה ולכל נזק שעלול להיגרם. כל הזכויות על המידע באתר שייכות להסתדרות הרפואית בישראל. מדיניות פרטיות
        כתובתנו: ז'בוטינסקי 35 רמת גן, בניין התאומים 2 קומות 10-11, ת.ד. 3566, מיקוד 5213604. טלפון: 03-6100444, פקס: 03-5753303
        עדכנו את מדיניות הפרטיות באתר ההסתדרות הרפואית בישראל. השינויים נועדו להבטיח שקיפות מלאה, לשקף את מטרות השימוש במידע ולהגן על המידע שלכם/ן. מוזמנים/ות לקרוא את המדיניות המעודכנת כאן. בהמשך שימוש באתר ובשירותי ההסתדרות הרפואית בישראל, אתם/ן מאשרים/ות את הסכמתכם/ן למדיניות החדשה.