6 result(s) for preventable diseases in Articles
International Vaccination Center at Wáberer Medical Center in Budapest
- 31 Jan 2024 2:29 PM
- specials
This International Vaccination Centre has a paediatrician for 0-14 year olds and an internist-infectologist for patients over 14 years of age who provide personalised professional advice on vaccinations (also for non-travellers, but also for those travelling abroad).
Breast Cancer is Preventable & Curable by Dr. Rose Private Hospital Budapest
- 25 Oct 2022 8:11 PM
- specials
Every year, more than 8,000 breast tumors are detected and more than 2,000 deaths from breast cancer are reported, according to Hungarian statistics.
More Die From Preventable Diseases In Hungary Than Elsewhere In EU
- 17 Aug 2020 8:55 AM
- hungarymatters.hu
- health & wellness
Proportionally more people die from preventable diseases in Hungary than anywhere else in the European Union, the opposition Democratic Coalition (DK) said on Sunday, adding that the statistic was ‘shameful’.
WHO Hungary: European Immunization Week 2019
- 23 Apr 2019 3:40 PM
- health & wellness
Vaccination is a life-long investment in children’s health and well-being. Thanks to vaccines, most children and adults in the European Region are immune to measles, rubella, mumps, diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus and polio.
WHO: World No Tobacco Day, Hungary, 31 May
- 29 May 2015 9:01 AM
- health & wellness
Eliminating the illicit trade in tobacco would generate an annual tax windfall of US$ 31 billion for governments, improve public health, help cut crime and curb an important revenue source for the tobacco industry. Those are the key themes of World No Tobacco Day on May 31 when the World Health Organization will urge Member States to sign the Protocol to Eliminate the Illicit Trade in Tobacco ...
FirstMed Health Report: 'Why Vaccinate?' By Dr. Sue McGladdery
- 4 Jul 2010 1:00 AM
- health & wellness
Iron lungs and braces for polio, the gasping breathing and characteristic sound of whooping cough and the devastating birth defects caused by rubella are medical problems from another age, far removed from the modern world we live in.
Yet a little more than a century ago, the U.S. infant mortality rate was about 20 percent, and the childhood mortality rate before age five was also 20 percent. ...
International Vaccination Center at Wáberer Medical Center in Budapest
- 31 Jan 2024 2:29 PM
- specials
This International Vaccination Centre has a paediatrician for 0-14 year olds and an internist-infectologist for patients over 14 years of age who provide personalised professional advice on vaccinations (also for non-travellers, but also for those travelling abroad).
Breast Cancer is Preventable & Curable by Dr. Rose Private Hospital Budapest
- 25 Oct 2022 8:11 PM
- specials
Every year, more than 8,000 breast tumors are detected and more than 2,000 deaths from breast cancer are reported, according to Hungarian statistics.
More Die From Preventable Diseases In Hungary Than Elsewhere In EU
- 17 Aug 2020 8:55 AM
- hungarymatters.hu
- health & wellness
Proportionally more people die from preventable diseases in Hungary than anywhere else in the European Union, the opposition Democratic Coalition (DK) said on Sunday, adding that the statistic was ‘shameful’.
WHO Hungary: European Immunization Week 2019
- 23 Apr 2019 3:40 PM
- health & wellness
Vaccination is a life-long investment in children’s health and well-being. Thanks to vaccines, most children and adults in the European Region are immune to measles, rubella, mumps, diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus and polio.
WHO: World No Tobacco Day, Hungary, 31 May
- 29 May 2015 9:01 AM
- health & wellness
Eliminating the illicit trade in tobacco would generate an annual tax windfall of US$ 31 billion for governments, improve public health, help cut crime and curb an important revenue source for the tobacco industry. Those are the key themes of World No Tobacco Day on May 31 when the World Health Organization will urge Member States to sign the Protocol to Eliminate the Illicit Trade in Tobacco ...
FirstMed Health Report: 'Why Vaccinate?' By Dr. Sue McGladdery
- 4 Jul 2010 1:00 AM
- health & wellness
Iron lungs and braces for polio, the gasping breathing and characteristic sound of whooping cough and the devastating birth defects caused by rubella are medical problems from another age, far removed from the modern world we live in.
Yet a little more than a century ago, the U.S. infant mortality rate was about 20 percent, and the childhood mortality rate before age five was also 20 percent. ...