By Nicholas Bakalar
Gains From Exercise After Heart Attack Are Lost if Exercise Stops
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By Science Daily
Molecular imaging has a powerful new weapon in the fight against prostate cancer.
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By NewsCore
A drug commonly used to treat blood pressure, heart failure and diabetes-related kidney damage, was linked to a “modest” increased risk of cancer in a study published Monday.
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By ALLISON CONNOLLY
Germany's Bayer AG said Monday that cancer treatment Nexavar failed to reach its primary goal of extending the lives of patients with a certain advanced form of lung cancer in a late-stage clinical trial.
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By JODI XU
Human Genome Sciences Inc. said the Food and Drug Administration likely won't approve its effort to sell a hepatitis C drug in a dose that is taken every two weeks, expressing concern about the "risk benefit."
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By Neka Sehgal
An innovative next-generation emergency contraceptive pill “ella” that is supposed to be a longer working alternative to the ‘morning-after pill’ is being offered by French pharmaceutical company HRA Pharma of Paris.
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By Emily Landrieu
Kathy Myers is one of the 1.2 million people living in Michigan without health insurance. After an accident with her dog, Myers withstood a month of intense pain in her right shoulder. Unemployed, uninsured, and unable to afford a doctor to look at her
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By Kate Pickert
Only a few months after the heated battles on Capitol Hill, it must have been quite a relief for President Obama to turn his focus to health care reform, however briefly, last week. After being pummeled by Republicans and cable talking heads over his r
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By Kate Day Sager
As a cancer survivor Becky Threadgill can expect to feel special during Friday’s American Cancer Society Relay for Life at the Olean Middle School track on Wayne Street.  
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By PAULINE W. CHEN, M.D.
Four years ago at age 78, R., a retired professional known as much for her small-town Minnesotan resilience as her commitment to public service, developed a fleeting rash over her left chest. The rash, which turned out to be shing
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By Pam Belluck
It has long been one of the most vexing causes of America’s skyrocketing health costs: people not taking their medicine.
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By Nicholas Wade
Ten years after President Bill Clinton announced that the first draft of the human genome was complete, medicine has yet to see any large part of the promised benefits.
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By Robert Pear
The White House on Monday will issue new rules that strongly discourage employers from cutting health insurance benefits or increasing the costs of coverage to employees, administration officials say.
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By Damien Cave
The last of the nation’s original tuberculosis sanitariums sits, improbably, just off Interstate 95, near a Dunkin’ Donuts and a Motel 6, and just behind fields of children playing soccer. The fading signs out front simply say
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By Abby Ellin
BLAME the pizza. That’s what Jennifer Deans does. She blames the pizza she and her husband devoured on a regular basis for the combined 95 pounds they gained in the four years that they have been married.
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By Natasha Singer
More Disputes Over Handling of Drug Recall
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By Walecia Konrad
RIGHT about now, as you’re dusting off your beach gear, may seem the wrong time to talk about next fall’s open enrollment for health insurance.
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By Andrew Pollack
A new study found that certain women getting a lumpectomy may not need an operation to remove underarm lymph nodes, a procedure that can leave them with painfully swollen arms. Compared with not removing the nodes, the surgery did not prolong
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By Reed Abelson
A fight has broken out between the nation’s biggest drugstore chains, Walgreen and CVS Caremark, potentially affecting where millions of consumers can fill their prescriptions.
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By Nicholas Wade
The glue that binds a human society together is trust. But people who trust others too much are likely to get taken for a ride. Both trust and distrust, it now seems, are influenced by hormones that can induce people to ratchet their feeling of trust u
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