By GINA KOLATA
About 25 years ago, before I came to The Times, I had a job interview at U.S. News & World Report. I really wanted the reporter position, and it seemed to me that things were going well. Then I was asked, “What will be the important medica
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By Bill Hendrick
Study Shows Many Smokers Are Also Using Smokeless Tobacco
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By Charlene Laino
Women With DCIS Under 45 Appear at Highest Risk of Having Cancer Return, Study Finds
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By Katrina Woznicki
Cymbalta Effectively Treats Osteoarthritis and Chronic Low Back Pain, Studies Show
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By Bill Hendrick
Many International Travelers Fail to Research Infectious Diseases, Get Recommended Vaccinations, Study Finds
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By Katrina Woznicki
Vitamin E Supplements Increase Risk for Hemorrhagic Stroke but Decrease Risk for Ischemic Stroke, Researchers Say
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By Jennifer Warner
Most People Wait 2 Hours or More After Heart Attack Symptoms Start to Seek Help, Researchers Say
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By Jennifer Warner
Heartburn Drugs Safe to Use With Antiplatelet Drugs in Heart Disease Treatment
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By Katrina Woznicki
Treatment With Allopurinol Reduced Tumor Growth, Study Says
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By Charlene Laino
Majority of Men Report Being Sexually Active After Proton Therapy for Prostate Cancer
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By Kathleen Doheny
Children Taught by Parents Learned More Words, Research Finds
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. 2010-11-06
By .
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By DONALD G. McNEIL Jr.
Babies born during the brief but intense Biafra famine in Nigeria 40 years ago have grown up to be more susceptible to obesity and its attendant maladies than those born on either side of it, scientists have found.
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By OYCE COHEN
In remote northwestern Alaska, where dental decay is rampant, some of Stephanie Woods’s patients suffered from toothaches for months on end — “raging toothaches with swelling,” she said in an interview, “something that
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By PAM BELLUCK
About half of adolescents who recovered from major depression became depressed again within five years, regardless of what treatment or therapy they received to get over their initial depression, a new study shows.
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By SIDDHARTHA MUKHERJEE
The hope to cure cancer rests on finding the right kind of drug. But what if we have to first find the right kind of cell?
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By APRIL DEMBOSKY
In the three years since her son Diego was given a diagnosis of autism at age 2, Carmen Aguilar has made countless contributions to research on this perplexing disorder.
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By PAULA SPAN
It’s hard for physicians to determine with much precision how long anyone with a terminal disease can expect to live, but it’s particularly challenging when the disease is advanced dementia.
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By DAVID M. HERSZENHORN
Energized by their big victories in the midterm elections, Congressional Republican leaders wasted no time on Wednesday in putting President Obama and Democrats on notice: the days of single-party control are numbered and legislating in Washington i
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By TERRY PRISTIN
AS more women began clamoring for the latest sensation in hair care, the so-called Brazilian hair-relaxing treatments, the Neil George Salon in Beverly Hills, Calif., added a cabana with open sides and a fabric roof to isolate the process from the s
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