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Association between serum vitamin C and HPV infection in American women: a cross-sectional study | BMC Women s Health

Evidence regarding the relationship between serum vitamin C levels and human papillomavirus (HPV) infection is limited. Therefore, this study aimed to investigate whether serum vitamin C levels are independently associated with HPV infection. Data for this cross-sectional study were obtained from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 2003–2006. A total of 2174 women, 18–59 years of age, were enrolled in this study. The associations between serum vitamin C levels (continuous and categorical forms) and cervicovaginal HPV infection were estimated using weighted logistic regression. The adjusted binary logistic regression showed that serum vitamin C was not associated with the risk of HPV infection after adjusting for age, race, poverty income ratio, alcohol consumption, smoking, body mass index, education, and health condition (odds ratio [OR] 0.998, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.994–1.001). Serum vitamin C levels were converted from a continuous

Lab technician meets accreditation

Jjay Grazette, laboratory technician for Key West Medical Center, was recently surveyed with no citations and has met all the criteria for Laboratory Accreditation by COLA Inc., a leading national

Patient claims N J lab exposed countless residents to COVID-19 by giving wrong tests

Patient claims N.J. lab exposed countless residents to COVID-19 by giving wrong tests Updated Dec 12, 2020; Less than a week after the FBI urged anyone who got a COVID-19 test at an Atlantic County laboratory to get retested, one patient filed a lawsuit against the lab, claiming the lab advertised and administered the wrong tests, exposing people and their families to sickness and death. Attorneys for Dana Kares, a Burlington County resident, sued Infinity Diagnostics Laboratory, of Ventnor City, for advertising finger-prick blood tests as effective tests to detect COVID-19, despite being meant to detect antibodies. The lab advertised the finger-prick blood tests as as a “COVID test”, “COVID Testing” or “rapid 10-minute testing” for COVID-19, according to the complaint.

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