| | |
| Obama tackles rape comments, "fiscal cliff" on TV talk show Wednesday, Oct 24, 2012 08:44 PM PDT | Top |
| Disabled South Koreans protest "inhumane" benefits system Wednesday, Oct 24, 2012 08:18 PM PDT SEOUL (Reuters) - Wheelchair-bound Choi Jong-hun spends most Fridays in a makeshift tent encampment in one of Seoul's busy subway stations, eating instant noodles as commuters dodge and weave around him and a handful of fellow demonstrators. He's part of a protest that has lasted more than 60 days and aims to change South Korea's benefits system, which campaigners say humiliates disabled people by "grading" them according to their disability. ... Full Story | Top |
| Study: are cancer patients' hopes for chemo too high? Wednesday, Oct 24, 2012 07:21 PM PDT (Reuters) - At least two thirds of people with advanced cancer believed the chemotherapy they were receiving might cure them, even though the treatment was only being given to buy some time or make them comfortable, according to a U.S. survey. Researchers reported in the New England Journal of Medicine that 69 percent of patients who were terminally ill with lung cancer, and 81 percent with fatal colorectal cancer, did not understand that their chemotherapy was not at all likely to eliminate their tumors. ... Full Story | Top |
| Indiana candidate sorry about rape comment; Romney stands by him Wednesday, Oct 24, 2012 06:12 PM PDT | Top |
| Obama offers a glimpse of his second-term priorities Wednesday, Oct 24, 2012 06:03 PM PDT | Top |
| Oops: Harvard affiliate apologizes for promotion of "weak" study Wednesday, Oct 24, 2012 05:48 PM PDT CHICAGO (Reuters) - A Harvard-affiliated hospital is backing away from its decision earlier this week to promote a paper linking the artificial sweetener aspartame and cancer, now saying the evidence was "weak." Brigham and Women's Hospital said in an e-mail to reporters that data in the paper, which was published Wednesday in the Journal of Clinical Nutrition, "is weak, and that Brigham and Women's Hospital media relations was premature in the promotion of this work." The hospital apologized to reporters for wasting their time. ... Full Story | Top |
| Hormone therapy may cut Alzheimer's risk in menopausal women Wednesday, Oct 24, 2012 04:40 PM PDT CHICAGO (Reuters) - The latest data from a long-running study of hormone therapy suggests women who started taking hormone replacements within five years of menopause were 30 percent less likely to develop Alzheimer's disease than women who started years later. The findings, reported on Wednesday in the journal Neurology, add to evidence suggesting that taking hormone treatments around the time of menopause may be doing more than just helping women cope with hot flashes and night sweats. ... Full Story | Top |
| U.S. death toll rises to 24 in meningitis outbreak Wednesday, Oct 24, 2012 02:42 PM PDT | Top |
| US doctors can consider spinal taps for more steroid patients-CDC Wednesday, Oct 24, 2012 02:42 PM PDT NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. doctors monitoring patients for signs of fungal meningitis can consider performing spinal taps, possibly weekly, on some of those who received contaminated steroid injections, even if they show no symptoms, health officials said on Wednesday. The revised guidelines from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reflect concern that the last groups of patients who received the steroid may be at a higher risk of deadly infection. The recommendation took some physicians by surprise. "Are we going to do spinal taps on thousands of people once a week?" asked Dr. ... Full Story | Top |
| School "hand hygiene" plan shows no asthma benefit Wednesday, Oct 24, 2012 02:08 PM PDT NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - An arsenal of hand sanitizers, hygiene education and good old-fashioned soap failed to prevent asthma attacks among school children in one Alabama county. For children with asthma, the common cold is the top trigger of symptom attacks. So in theory, cleaner hands at school could mean fewer colds being passed around - and fewer asthma attacks. But in a new clinical trial, researchers found that kids at schools with a "hand hygiene" plan, including alcohol-based hand sanitizers, suffered asthma attacks just often as their peers at other schools. ... Full Story | Top |
| Are cancer patients' hopes for chemo too high? Wednesday, Oct 24, 2012 02:07 PM PDT | Top |
| People more likely to do CPR in wealthier areas Wednesday, Oct 24, 2012 02:06 PM PDT | Top |
| Ecuador fears for Assange's health, seeks UK safe passage Wednesday, Oct 24, 2012 01:34 PM PDT | Top |
| Obama holds out prospect of post-election "grand bargain" Wednesday, Oct 24, 2012 01:08 PM PDT | Top |
| CDC panel OKs Glaxo's meningitis vaccine for at-risk infants Wednesday, Oct 24, 2012 12:56 PM PDT CHICAGO (Reuters) - Advisers to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention voted on Wednesday to recommend the use of GlaxoSmithKline's newly approved vaccine for bacterial meningitis in babies at increased risk of the infection. The vote is not related to the ongoing outbreak of fungal meningitis that has been linked to tainted steroid injections and has so far killed 24 people. Children at increased risk include those with sickle cell disease and an immune system disorder known as complement component deficiency. ... Full Story | Top |
|

No comments:
Post a Comment