By NATASHA SINGER
Where has all the Pepcid Complete gone?
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By GARDINER HARRIS
DOYLESTOWN, Pa. — Alone with his psychiatrist, the patient confided that his newborn had serious health problems, his distraught wife was screaming at him and he had started drinking again. With his life and second marriage falling apart, the
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By ROBERT PEAR
WASHINGTON — Members of Congress, including Democrats, have urged the Obama administration to search for another Medicare chief after concluding that the Senate is unlikely to confirm President Obama’s temporary appointee, Dr. Donald M. Ber
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By ANEMONA HARTOCOLLIS
Every morning, Kay Brown engages in a ritual similar to a heroin addict’s, or a diabetic’s: she sticks herself with a syringe. Only hers contains hCG, a pregnancy hormone.
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By KAREN STABINER
One of the surest ways to frustrate my mother was for her to accompany Grandma Ethel, then in her mid-90s, to her favorite delicatessen near the assisted-living facility she called home in Chicago. It had a menu as big as a billboard, and Ethel reli
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Control Yourself! 2011-03-09
By C. CLAIBORNE RAY
Q. Is there evidence that Kegel exercises really strengthen bladder control?
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By TARA PARKER-POPE
Psychiatrists are talking less and prescribing more. Many of the nation’s 48,000 psychiatrists no longer provide talk therapy, the form of psychiatry popularized by Freud that has been a mainstay of psychiatry for decades, writes Gardiner Harr
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By PETER B. BACH, M.D.
Ruth’s hair was gone from her first rounds of chemo, replaced by a collection of wigs that ranged from professional to va-va-voom. She was wearing one from the latter category, with thick red hair. “World’s smallest transvestite,&
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By Daniel J. DeNoon
Latest Step Forward for Lab-Made Organs: 5 of 5 Boys Cured of Urethral Defects
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By Bill Hendrick
Well-Being Index Rates the Emotional and Physical Health of Americans
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By Matt McMillen
Researchers Identify New Gene Regions Associated With Coronary Artery Disease
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By Salynn Boyles
Study Suggests HDL Levels May Be a Useful Indicator of the Risk of Colon Cancer
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By Denise Mann
Fifty Studies of a Half Million People Show That a Mediterranean-Style Diet Reduces Risk of Metabolic Syndrome
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By Brenda Goodman
Study Shows Kids With the Highest BMIs Enjoy ‘Exergames’ the Most
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By Bill Hendrick
Study Shows High Rates of Type 2 Diabetes in the South
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By Daniel J. DeNoon
Study Shows Nicotine Levels in Toenails May Indicate Lung Cancer Risk
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By ANAHAD O’CONNOR
Heavy lifting, overuse and middle age are some of the most familiar risk factors for lower back pain. But for many people, predicting a lifetime of lumbar trouble could be as simple as consulting the family tree.
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By JANE E. BRODY
Nearly six years ago in this column, I discussed what was then a little-known problem associated with long-term use of bisphosphonates, the valuable drugs that protect against fractures caused by bone loss. The drugs, among them Fosamax, Actonel an
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By MICHAEL COOPER
More than a thousand miles from the labor tumult in Wisconsin — where his name shows up on the signs of protesters and a liberal blogger impersonating him got through to the governor on the phone and said “gotta crush that union!”
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By ROBERT PEAR
MANCHESTER, N.H. — Workers at a circuit-board factory here just saw their health insurance premiums rise 20 percent. At Buddy Zaremba’s print shop nearby, the increase was 37 percent. And for engineers at the Woodland Design Group, they
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