By Kathleen Doheny
Study Finds Each Minor Infection Costs a Patient About $200 to Treat
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By Bill Hendrick
CDC Says U.S. Is Making Strides in the Fight Against AIDS and Other Diseases
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By Bill Hendrick
Study Shows Obese Adults Who Have Arthritis Are More Likely to Skip Exercise
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By Daniel J. DeNoon
Paraplegic Man Regains Voluntary Movement With Implanted Device, Rehab
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By Denise Mann
Overweight, Obese Children at Higher Risk of Developing the Inflammatory Skin Condition, Researchers Say
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By Brenda Goodman
Increase in Home Births Comes as Debate Over Safety Intensifies
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By Robert Preidt
A gene allele that increases the risk of Alzheimer’s disease starts to damage the brain 50 years before symptoms of the disease appear, a new study suggests.
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By Randy Dotinga
Richer women are more likely to choose to deliver their babies by cesarean section than poorer women, a switch from the past when the reverse was the case, a new Scottish study has found.
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By Robert Preidt
Deprivation and neglect can cause premature aging of children’s chromosomes, a new study suggests.
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By Robert Preidt
A DNA region linked to depression has been identified by two different groups of scientists.
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By Amanda Gardner
Men who drink a lot of coffee might feel a bit jittery or high-strung, but those side effects may come with a hidden benefit: prostate health. According to a new study, drinking six or more cups of coffee per day can lower a man’s risk of fat
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By Mary Elizabeth Dallas
Voter registration cards may offer more insight into who people promise to love and cherish than personality or appearance, new research suggests.
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By Jenifer Goodwin
More children aged 3 and younger are now being treated for autism in Massachusetts, a new study finds.
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By Lynne Peeples
Sleep problems and depressed mood often go hand in hand. Insomnia, early-morning waking, and nighttime disturbances can be symptoms as well as warning signs of depression—as can too much sleep and daytime fatigue.
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By Robert Preidt
Problem gambling will become more widespread because of the increasing availability, especially online, of gambling opportunities, said experts who called for more research to improve understanding and treatment of the disorder.
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By Serena Gordon
For people with pollen allergies, this year is especially tough, say allergy experts.
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By Steven Reinberg
Rep. Gabrielle Giffords continued her remarkable recovery Thursday, one day after doctors inserted a plastic implant to replace the piece of skull that had been removed after she was shot in the head by a would-be assassin four months ago.
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By Larry Keller
Gossip can be malicious and mean, but it also may serve a protective purpose, forcing the brain to focus on people who might be threatening, a new study suggests.
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By Robert Preidt
The need for a good sense of smell helped lead to the development of large brains in humans and other mammals, scientists suggest.
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By Margaret Steele
Summer fun can take a nose dive if someone in the family gets swimmer’s ear, a common infection that accounts for almost $500 million in U.S. health-care costs each year, according to a new government report.
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