Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Google Alert - health

Google
health
Daily update May 20, 2014
NEWS
CNN
Pancreatic cancer will be 2nd deadliest by 2030: Study
Pancreatic cancer is set to become the second deadliest cancer in the United States by 2030, new research predicts. If the projections hold, pancreatic cancer will bypass breast, prostate and colorectal cancers, ending up second only to lung cancer as the ...
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Exercise tied to decreased diabetes risk among high-risk women
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Women who become diabetic during pregnancy may be able to avoid later developing type 2 diabetes with exercise, according to a new U.S. study. Among women who had so-called gestational diabetes, those who upped their ...
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FDA approves Ajinomoto's no-calorie sweetener
May 19 (Reuters) - U.S. regulators have approved a new non-caloric sweetener from Japan's Ajinomoto Co that can be used as a substitute for sugar or high fructose corn syrup in foods and beverages. Called advantame, the white powder is made from ...
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More Americans Hospitalized for Irregular Heartbeat, Study Finds
MONDAY, May 19, 2014 (HealthDay News) -- There's been a sharp rise in the number of Americans hospitalized with a heart rhythm disorder called atrial fibrillation, a new study shows. Researchers analyzed national data from 2001 to 2010 and found there ...
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Telegraph.co.uk
Clues to How Mediterranean Diet Protects the Heart
MONDAY, May 19, 2014 (HealthDay News) -- Study after study has shown that a Mediterranean-style diet rich in fish, nuts, vegetables and fruits seems to lower your risk of heart trouble. Now, a new mouse study hints at why. "When unsaturated fatty acids, ...
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Daily Mail
Perfect match! Husbands and wives have similar DNA, research shows
It seems birds of a feather really do flock together. Husbands and wives are more similar to each other than would be expected by chance, research has revealed. The finding comes from behavioural scientists who compared the DNA of more than 800 ...
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Scotsman
Study To Probe How Tech Affects Young Minds
School students will be invited to participate in a study into how technology affects young people's memory and brain development. 1:09am UK, Tuesday 20 May 2014. A young woman on a phone in Bordeaux. Participants will do computerised tests to ...
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Tech Times
Four glasses of wine in two hours can be dangerous to your health, says study
A new study shows that alcohol binge may be more dangerous than what people previously thought. It provides evidence of greater gut permeability and higher levels of endotoxins. (Photo : obeck). Based on a new study, a single alcohol binge can now be ...
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WCVB Boston
Bakery recalls frozen pancakes for allergy risk
LAWRENCE — Middle East Bakery Inc. is recalling its dairy-free, gluten-free frozen pancakes — they are sold with a Market Basket store label — because they may contain undisclosed milk. The company said Monday that the pancakes were sold in Market ...
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Guardian Liberty Voice
Wireless Tiny Medical Implants Could Change Health Care
Popular Mechanics is not usually a source for a health article, but it is appropriate to write about a new mechanical breakthrough that could revolutionize medical technology. A Stanford University Engineering team developed a tiny medical implant that could ...
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Sky News Australia
Drugs that could help in fight against MERS-coronavirus revealed
Researchers have identified a number of existing pharmaceutical drugs and compounds under development that may offer effective therapies against Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS). In the first study, researchers screened a library of 290 ...
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BBC News
Uganda HIV nurse Rosemary Namubiru jailed by Kampala court
A Ugandan court has sentenced a nurse to three years in prison for negligence over the potential infection of a two-year-old boy with HIV. Rosemary Namubiru, who is HIV-positive, was criminally negligent by using an intravenous needle, that she had ...
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Philly.com
'Sterile' Urine May Be a Myth
MONDAY, May 19, 2014 (HealthDay News) -- Many people have heard that human urine is devoid of germs, but a new study seems to question that idea. "Doctors have been trained to believe that urine is germ-free," Dr. Linda Brubaker, dean of Loyola ...
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Sydney Morning Herald
US youth activity report card gives poor grades to adults
NEW YORK (Reuters) - American children are scoring failing marks in fitness because of the lure of the Internet, time-pressed parents and the culture of the car, fitness experts say. Only one quarter of children aged 6 to 15 meet the current guidelines of 60 ...
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Headlines & Global News
Suicide Rate Increased During U.S. Foreclosures: Study
A new research suggests that recent U.S. foreclosure crisis contributed greatly to the rise in suicides. (Photo : Flickr). A new research suggests that recent U.S. foreclosure crisis contributed greatly to the rise in suicides. Researchers Jason Houle and Michael ...
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Medscape
Delaying Childhood Vaccines Ups Postvaccine Seizure Risk
Delaying the first measles-mumps-rubella vaccine (MMR) or the first measles-mumps-rubella-varicella vaccine (MMRV) beyond the age of 15 months may more than double a 2-year-old's risk for postvaccination seizures, researchers report in an article ...
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BBC News
New study casts doubt on e-cigarettes
A new review has cast doubt on the safety of e-cigarettes and their use as a smoking cessation aid. However, the report from the Center for Tobacco Research and Education in California, says in cases where other smoking cessation methods have failed, ...
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University of Michigan Health System News
Sepsis contributes to as many as half of all hospital deaths in US, study says
ATS 2014, SAN DIEGO ─ Although it's present in only a tenth of all patients who are admitted to the hospital, sepsis contributes to up to half of all hospital deaths in the U.S., according to a study presented at the American Thoracic Society's annual conference ...
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SFGate
The Governor Of Colorado Signs Nation's First 'Right To Try' Bill Into Law
FORT COLLINS, Colo. (CBS) – With the governor's signature Colorado is now the first state to allow terminally ill patients to have access to medication that is not approved by the government. Gov. John Hickenlooper stated he doesn't want patients to die ...
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