By Denise Mann
Study Shows Association Between Development of Psychosis and Smoking Marijuana
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By Bill Hendrick
Daliresp Will Be Sold in Pill Form to Treat Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
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By Kathleen Doheny
Researchers Say an Earlier Decline Due to Reduced Hormone Use Appears to Have Stopped
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By Matt McMillen
Study Shows Secondhand Smoke May Also Put Women at Risk
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By Jennifer Warner
American Academy of Pediatrics Wants to Reduce Children’s Sun Exposure
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By Salynn Boyles
Study Shows Link Between Obesity and Triple-Negative Breast Cancer
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By Kathleen Doheny
Study Shows Long-Term Emotional Impact for People Who Make Treatment Decisions for Ill Loved Ones
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By DENISE GRADY
Bloodstream infections caused by tubes inserted into major blood vessels of intensive care patients showed a big drop from 2001 to 2009, government researchers said on Tuesday.
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By GRETCHEN REYNOLDS
We all know that physical activity is beneficial in countless ways, but even so, Dr. Mark Tarnopolsky, a professor of pediatrics at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, was startled to discover that exercise kept a strain of mice from becoming
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By THE NEW YORK TIMES
Barbara Fernandez for The New York Times Larry Garfield, 95, with his wife, Sunny, 87, has not changed his eating habits even though he’s had his gallbladder and prostate removed.
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By PAULA SPAN
She thought her father, who was 70 and a retired teacher, could use some help. He handled all his personal care, but shopping and cooking and laundry were beginning to tax him. He’d fallen several times.
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By REED ABELSON
The week begins with a meeting of some of the nation’s for-profit hospitals, talking public policy and business in the nation’s capital. The Federation of American Hospitals, which represents investor-owned or for-profit hospitals, is ho
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By JAVIER C. HERNANDEZ
Every year, the Brain Tumor Foundation bombards the City Council with stories of loved ones lost, frightening statistics about the prevalence of cancer and pledges to “literally save the lives of your constituents.”
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By KEVIN SACK
Ken Kewley woke up Tuesday without health insurance for the first time in nearly nine years.
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By CLAUDIA DREIFUS
Dr. Emery Neal Brown, 54,  is a professor of anesthesiology at Harvard Medical School, a professor of computational neuroscience at M.I.T. and  a practicing physician, seeing patients at Massachusetts General Hospital. Between all that, he
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By NICHOLAS BAKALAR
Alzheimer’s disease is more common in people whose mothers had the illness than in those whose fathers had it — and the evidence can be found in the brains of people who are still healthy.
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By PAULA SPAN
Wendy Miller first became alarmed when her mother began complaining during their phone conversations. “I’m spending so much money,” she fretted. “I can’t figure out why I don’t have any money.” This was a de
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By JANE E. BRODY
Two time-honored remedies for injured tendons seem to be falling on their faces in well-designed clinical trials.
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By WALT BOGDANICH and KRISTINA REBELO
It was well after midnight when Dr. Salvatore J. A. Sclafani finally hit the “send” button. Soon, colleagues would awake to his e-mail, expressing his anguish and shame over the discovery that the tiniest, most vulnerable of
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By Christoph Niemann
As every runner knows, a painful side stitch can quickly ruin a workout. In today’s Really? column, Anahad O’Connor explores recent research that suggests side stitches are related to poor running posture.
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