Thursday, March 30, 2017

Many women may tune out mammogram confusion and other top stories.

  • Many women may tune out mammogram confusion

    Many women may tune out mammogram confusion
    In this file photo, a radiologist compares mammogram images.(Photo: Torin Halsey, AP)It happened again this week: headlines implied mammograms have been oversold to women. This time it was a study from Denmark that suggested one in three breast cancers found through the screening tests are “overdiagnosed” — meaning they never would have threatened a woman’s life but still led to treatments such as surgery, radiation and chemotherapy.Most studies have found routine mammograms lower the overall ri..
    >> view original

  • US flu season picks up as European levels stay high

    US flu season picks up as European levels stay high
    The US flu season picked up more steam last week, with rising flu indicators and the first three pediatric flu deaths reported, as many countries in Europe grapple with an early, busy flu season led by the H3N2 strain that poses a serious threat to seniors.In its weekly update today, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said all 10 of its regions are above their baseline percentages of clinic visits for flulike illness for the first time, though the country as a whole has been..
    >> view original

  • China confirms one more human death from H7N9 bird flu

    China confirms one more human death from H7N9 bird flu
    SHANGHAI A man in China's central Henan province has become the latest person reported to have died this winter from H7N9 bird flu, the state news agency Xinhua said on Saturday citing local health authorities.The 36-year-old roast duck salesman developed a fever and a cough around Dec. 25 in coastal Zhejiang province, near Shanghai, and returned to Henan in early January, Xinhua said. He was diagnosed with H7N9 on Jan. 10 and died the next day.Bird flu is most likely to strike in winter and s..
    >> view original

  • No Antibiotic In The U.S. Could Save This Woman. We Should All Be Worried.

    No Antibiotic In The U.S. Could Save This Woman. We Should All Be Worried.
    The recent death of a woman in Reno, Nevada, from an infection resistant to every available kind of antibiotic in the U.S. highlights how serious the threat of antibiotic-resistant superbugs has become.  Experts say that while cases of a bacteria resistant to all antibiotics are still extremely rare in the U.S., we should expect to see more in the future.  “This is an important case because it serves as a reminder to the health care community that these kinds of things can show up, even though..
    >> view original

  • Urine test could reveal if your diet is a threat to your health

    Urine test could reveal if your diet is a threat to your health
    Friday January 13 2017 Urine provides of clues about a person’s health "A urine test that can reveal how healthy your meals are has been developed by UK scientists," BBC News reports. Researchers wanted to see if they could help crack one of the biggest problems confronting people trying to carry out studies into diet and health. Namely, that the most widely used method to assess diet – self-reporting – is notoriously unreliable. Study after study has ..
    >> view original

  • CVS has a far cheaper competitor to the $600 EpiPen, but there's a trick to getting it

    CVS has a far cheaper competitor to the $600 EpiPen, but there's a trick to getting it
    Last summer, drug company Mylan shocked EpiPen users and parents of children who might need the life-saving device when it announced the EpiPen would cost over $600, a 300% increase since 2009. Thanks to a recent price-cut to $109.99 for a two-pack, CVS is now home to the cheapest EpiPen alternative on the market. Just like the EpiPen, the generic epinephrine auto-injector device is used to treat insect stings, exercise-induced conditions, asthma, and allergies related to food, drugs and latex..
    >> view original

  • Harvard Medical School Study Shows Amygdala's Role In Stress And Heart Attacks

    Harvard Medical School Study Shows Amygdala's Role In Stress And Heart Attacks
    A study led by Dr. Ahmed Tawakol, of Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, showed how the amygdala plays a role in the link between stress and heart attacks. It is widely known that stress can lead to heart attacks or strokes but Tawakol and his team's research may have finally shown which part of the brain is responsible for the disease. Live Science reported that people in the study who had more activity in the amygdala, the part of the brain that controls stress and fear..
    >> view original

Cuban-Americans react to end of 'wet foot, dry foot' policy .What Ambassador David Friedman Means for the American Community .
CRAWFORD | Six reasons Louisville fans shouldn't sweat the ... .Child's Toy Whirligig Inspired Stanford Researchers To Invent Low-Cost, Hand-Powered Blood Centrifuge .

No comments:

Post a Comment