ISSN: 2167-0420
Editor Note - (2016) Volume 5, Issue 4
Colleagues looking at the new edition of the Journal of Women's Health Care, a journal that is already in the 5 year issue- The number of messages has over the existence of the magazine exceeded the number of 140 and offers a study dealing with the basic assumptions of human, women's health in terms of clinical and field practice in countries with well-developed health and supporting disciplines on the one hand and on the other hand, contributions from workplaces countries emerging. Papers presented here cover a wide range of medical and social problems, morphological and functional, all from the perspective of improving the health status and lifestyle of the women population of all ages.
Current issue brings 8 contributions renowned institutes from more or less surveillance studies (e.g. Salt and Pregnancy Complications: A Proposal for Future Research), through study diagnostic (e.g. Early Detection of Breast Cancer: Management with Radiotherapy associated with Cardiovascular Disease (CVD), Heart Failure among the Breast Cancer Survivors Woman) to the clinical study (e.g. Prevalence and Associated Factors of Adverse Birth Outcomes among Women Attended Maternity Ward at Negest Elene Mohammed Memorial General Hospital in Hosanna Town, SNNPR, Ethiopia). The current issue is the study of the psychological (e.g. Physical Activity as a Buffer for Anxiety Symptoms in Rural African American Adolescent Females), but the work of kinesiology and rehabilitation (e.g. Comparison of Aerobic versus Stretching Exercise Programmes on Pain and Menstrual Symptoms in Subjects with Primary Dysmenorrhea) [1-8].
The structure and content of published studies shows the diversity of issues that are being addressed and that need to be addressed now and in the near future. Confirms that interest in influencing the health of the women population worldwide and is designed depending on the experience and conditions of the workplace, the workplace in developing countries - Ethiopia, to the developed countries - the USA.
I hope that the reader finds in the present issue of information that will assist in professional growth and evoke interest in the magazine and allow the family contributors to Women's Health Care, thus helping to improve the level of the Journal and its better inclusion in reputable databases.