By Daniel J. DeNoon
Advisory Panel Votes 13-0 to Make HPV Vaccination Routine for Boys
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By Serena Gordon
In the latest research to tout the cardiovascular benefits of an already beloved food, Swedish scientists report that eating chocolate seems to lower a woman’s risk of stroke.
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By Amanda Gardner
The sooner people can cross their legs after having a stroke, the better their chances for recovery, new research suggests.
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By Serena Gordon
Three new studies show that diabetes education and behavioral interventions can help lower blood sugar levels in people who are having trouble managing their diabetes.
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By Steven Reinberg
Middle-aged women who suffer from a common condition called restless legs syndrome may be at increased risk of high blood pressure, U.S. researchers report.
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By Denise Mann
An experimental Alzheimer’s disease drug, gantenerumab, may help lower levels of amyloid plaque in the brains of people with the disease, an early clinical trial indicates.
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By Steven Reinberg
Far from being healthy, supplements such as multivitamins, minerals and folic acid may actually raise the odds for death in older women who take them, a new study suggests.
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By Mary Elizabeth Dallas
Shift work or working odd hours can cause changes in stress hormone levels, especially when people start these schedules as young adults, according to a new Dutch study.
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By Mary Elizabeth Dallas
There may be some truth to the expression “cleanliness is next to godliness” after all, finds a new review of previously published studies.
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By Mary Elizabeth Dallas
People are more sympathetic and receptive to the pain of likeable patients than those who are disliked, according to a new study.
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By Robert Preidt
Anemia increases the risk of death and complications in patients who have different types of surgery, not just heart operations, a new study says.
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By Amanda Gardner
As many as one-third of Medicare beneficiaries in fee-for-service plans have inpatient surgery in the last year of their life, a new Harvard study finds.
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By Denise Mann
Indoor tanning beds may be even more likely to cause skin cancer than previously believed.
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By Robert Preidt
More than 28,000 cases of injury and illness caused by swimming pool chemicals are estimated to have occurred in the United States between 2002 and 2008, according to a new federal study.
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By Randy Dotinga
Technology that directly oxygenates the blood reduced the risk of death in patients who were severely sickened by the H1N1 flu virus, a new British study shows.
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By Robert Preidt
A large, national study on how new government regulations affect smoking and other tobacco use and people’s understanding about the risks was announced Thursday by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and the U.S. National Institutes of Heal
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By Robert Preidt
People whose parents had a drinking problem are more likely to reach for the bottle when they’re under stress, a new study says.
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By Amanda Gardner
The death of Apple Inc. co-founder Steve Jobs has once again focused attention on cancers of the pancreas, which have claimed the lives of several high-profile celebrities.
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By Steven Reinberg
Over the past decade, the number of children treated in emergency rooms for traumatic brain injuries, including concussions, increased 60 percent, according to a new report from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
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By Robert Preidt
The time between the start of substance abuse and the first admission for treatment is longer for men than for women, a U.S. government report shows.
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