![]() | ||||||||
health | ||||||||
NEWS | ||||||||
Liberia declared Ebola-free, but outbreak continues over border MONROVIA (Reuters) - Liberia was declared free from Ebola by the government and the World Health Organisation (WHO) on Saturday after 42 days without a new case of the virus, which killed more than 4,700 people there during a year-long epidemic.
| ||||||||
Ebola: timeline of a ruthless killer Here are key dates in the current Ebola epidemic, the worst ever outbreak of the haemorrhagic fever which first surfaced in 1976 in what is now the Democratic Republic of Congo.
| ||||||||
Liberia is free of Ebola, says World Health Organization Liberia President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, speak to nurses and others as they celebrate being an Ebola-free nation. Photo / AP. Liberia is now free of Ebola after going 42 days - twice the maximum incubation period for the deadly disease - without any new ...
| ||||||||
Liberia cautiously marks end of Ebola after 4700 deaths On the day Mercy Kennedy lost her mother to Ebola, it was hard to imagine a time when Liberia would be free from one of the world's deadliest viruses.
| ||||||||
Dipping Out: San Francisco Bans Smokeless Tobacco At Its Sports Stadiums The Yankees Alex Rodriguez and the rest of the Major League Baseball will have to do without smokeless tobacco when they visit AT&T Park in 2016.
| ||||||||
Chewing Tobacco Heads for Blanket Ban at San Francisco Sports Venues Chewing tobacco has for several generations been as much a part of the ballpark experience and overpriced beer and bad hot dogs. However, as the US moves closer toward a future where public health takes precedence over what we now know to be 'bad' ...
| ||||||||
San Francisco Says No to Chewing Tobacco at Its Playing Fields These content links are provided by Content.ad.Both Content.ad and the web site upon which the linksare displayed may receive compensation when readers click on these links.
| ||||||||
San Francisco Giants Forbids Chewing Tobacco At the Park The San Francisco Giants, today, announced that the Major League Baseball franchise will no longer allow chewing tobacco in the park.
| ||||||||
San Francisco giants bans smokeless tobacco at sporting venues- Law signed ... san giants For so long now, the tradition of chewing tobacco and watching a game of baseball has endured but it is coming to a stop now in San Francisco.
| ||||||||
Chewing Tobacco About To Be Axed A at San Francisco Sports Venues Just like how ballpark experience and overpriced beer and bad hot dogs have been, so has Chewing tobacco has been for several generations.
| ||||||||
Sports Venues in San Francisco moves to ban Chewing tobacco For several generations, tobacco chewing has provided the same kind of experience as that of overpriced beer, or bad hot dogs, particularly in sporting venues.
| ||||||||
Do We Trust Hot Online Dating Photos? It Depends… Taking a million selfies to pick which goes on your online dating profile is wasting your time. That's according to research from the University of Connecticut.
| ||||||||
SF mayor signs law that bans chewing tobacco at ballparks SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - San Francisco has become the first city in the nation to outlaw chewing tobacco from its playing fields, including AT&T Park, home to the San Francisco Giants.
| ||||||||
Ebola Outbreak Posed Challenges To The Global Health Security Ebola outbreak has posed numerous challenges to the world. One of major challenge is the global health security. Recently, the weekly peer reviewed medical journal "The Lancet" published the opinions of global health practitioners regarding the effects of ...
| ||||||||
Ebola crisis forced health practitioners to think about global health security Other than illustrating the incompetence and lack of commitment of the political class in West Africa, the Ebola virus outbreak has also triggered discussions on the impact of the crisis on global health security.
| ||||||||
What would be the overall impact of Ebola crisis on the security of global health? The outbreak of Ebola virus in West Africa has not just illustrated the absence of political commitment towards public health, but it has also initiated discussions on the security of global health.
| ||||||||
Impact of Ebola crisis on the security of global health? The Ebola virus outbreak in West Africa has not just illustrated the absence of political commitment towards public health, but it has also initiated discussions on the security of global health.
| ||||||||
WHO outs best practices for naming new human infectious diseases The World Health Organisation (WHO) has linked the naming of new diseases with unnecessary negative effects on nations, economies and people - so much so that it has also pegged disease names as rather barriers to travel, commerce and trade - and in ...
| ||||||||
Women's "Beautified" Profile Pictures May Make Them More Attractive But Less ... Customer Julie Ask surfs the Internet using a wireless connection at a McDonald's restaurant July 8, 2003 in San Francisco, California.
| ||||||||
Enhanced Dating Site Photos Spark Less Trust From Men Than Women, Study ... Men find women attractive but less trustworthy, while women find men to be both attractive and trustworthy. By Julie Sabino julie.
| ||||||||
Enhanced Online Dating Photos May Lower Chances Of Meeting A Match For ... A new online dating study reveals that uploading an enhanced profile picture may act as an obstacle in meeting your match if you are a woman.
| ||||||||
Too much enhancement of women's dating site photos can kill their chances ... We all want to have a ravishing pictures in display with our social media sites, even more so for dating apps and sites like Tinder or OkCupid and with more other apps that can help us "enhance" our pictures with frames, filter and even caption, it's very simple ...
| ||||||||
Women Who Enhance Photos Of Themselves On Dating Sites Are Considered ... Women who try too hard to look good may be considered more untrustworthy than they would otherwise be regarded. Still, men will date them.
| ||||||||
Women may get more dates by enhancing their profile pictures but they could be ... The University of Connecticut researchers said that correcting the quality of a woman's image in a photo in fact could intensify attractiveness but at the same time could diminish trust.
| ||||||||
More Women in U.S. Having Children, But Latino Family Size Still Dropping - Pew Childlessness is so passé. Yet, there have been increases in large families among highly educated women. There has also been a decrease in the number of large families within the Latino population.
| ||||||||
More University Educated Women Choosing Motherhood, Pew Study Finds Women with higher education are having more children today than they did before, a new study claims. Published by the Pew Research Center, the study claims that 22 percent of women aged 40 to 44 with master's degree or higher have no children today ...
| ||||||||
New trend in motherhood - More educated women opting to have children The findings of a new Pew Research Center study are an indicator that women have finally mastered the balance between career and family.
| ||||||||
Study Finds "Enhanced" Photos in Dating Profiles Elicit Different Reactions ... Dating is not easy. Dating apps should help, right? Well, a new study suggests that online interactions are not always what they seem.
| ||||||||
Educated Women Likely to Have More Children In a new study by the Pew Research Center and the Census Bureau, researchers have discovered that fewer women in the United States are childless in their 40s.
| ||||||||
China to deepen health system reform BEIJING, May 9 (Xinhua) -- China has unveiled a document on deepening medical and health system reform in 2015, mapping out measures to improve public hospitals and the medical insurance system.
| ||||||||
After Ebola Outbreak, Liberian Churches Confront Crisis of Faith MONROVIA, Liberia - It decimated hospitals, schools, families, fortunes and, for many, even their faith. Now, it is officially over.
| ||||||||
California may require warnings on products containing chemical BPA SACRAMENTO, Calif. Plastic drinking bottles, canned goods and other items containing the chemical bisphenol-A (BPA) distributed in California might soon be required to carry a label disclosing that the compound can cause reproductive harm to women.
| ||||||||
Woman Claims She and Daughter With Autism Were Kicked Off United Airlines ... An Oregon woman claims United Airlines kicked her family off a Portland-bound flight because of her teenage daughter who has autism.
| ||||||||
Watch shocking moment autistic teenage girl and her family are removed from ... JULIETTE BEAGLE, 15, was asked to leave the flight along with her family following an emergency landing in Utah. Share; Share; Tweet; +1.
| ||||||||
WHO releases code to name new diseases LONDON: The recent outbreak of Swine flu saw unnecessary culling of pigs worldwide. Bird flu outbreaks caused healthy chickens and wild birds being slaughtered.
| ||||||||
Despite Rainy Weather, Hundreds Turn Out For Komen Race For The Cure CHICAGO (CBS) - Hundreds of race participants braved the weather this morning at Chicago's annual Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure, reports WBBM's Mariam Sobh.
| ||||||||
WHO urges more care in naming of new diseases No more animal names like swine flu, monkeypox and mad cow. Avoid place names like Spanish flu, Rift Valley fever, West Nile virus, Lyme disease and Ebola (a river in the Democratic Republic of Congo).
| ||||||||
With the baby, men cut down on shared housework Even couples who share household work relatively equally stop doing so after the arrival of the baby as the man withdraws from many of the chores that he used to do, new research has found.
| ||||||||
WHO releases code for naming new diseases LONDON: The World Health Organization (WHO) has released a code for naming new human infectious diseases. The best practices code applies to new infections, syndromes and diseases that have never been recognized or reported before in humans, ...
| ||||||||
World Health Organisation wants to ban names of diseases offensive to animals They are supposed to be at the forefront of fighting disease and saving lives all over the world. But in an astonishing example of political correctness, World Health Organisation officials have called for terms such as swine flu, bird flu and monkey pox to be ...
| ||||||||
WHO goes 'politically correct' on naming infectious diseases In 1909, Brazilian physician Carlos Chagas discovered the parasitic infection, Chagas disease, which is appropriately named after him.
| ||||||||
1 formerly conjoined twin released from Houston hospital HOUSTON (AP) - One of the formerly conjoined twin girls separated at a Houston hospital in February has been discharged, but her sister is expected to remain there for likely a few more months.
| ||||||||
Race for the Cure wends its way through Schenley Park Under cloudless skies and summer-like temperatures, an estimated 23,000 people have turned out in Schenley Park for the 23rd annual Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure, which benefits breast cancer research.
| ||||||||
Arizona lawmakers enjoy prime health-care benefits Arizona lawmakers enjoy government-subsidized health-care benefits, but at the same time they continually opposed public benefits for residents.
| ||||||||
How Do We Name Infectious Diseases? Nothing Offensive Please ... WHO has come up with a best practice guide for naming new infectious disease. The goal is to prevent unnecessary and serious impacts on nations, people and economies.
| ||||||||
Va. company recalls sprouts over contamination concerns SPRINGFIELD, Va. - A Virginia company says it has recalled packages of soybean sprouts and mung bean sprouts over potential listeria contamination.
| ||||||||
Pennsylvania Woman Gives Birth To Nearly 14 Pound Baby A western Pennsylvania woman gave birth to a boy tipping the scales at 13 pounds and 10 ounces, just days before Mother's Day.
| ||||||||
Think more sex makes you happier? Think again, say researchers So you think more sex leads to more happiness? Not quite, American researchers have discovered. In fact, the findings suggest frequency of intercourse has little to do with boosting life enjoyment.
| ||||||||
WHO adds Hepatitis C drugs in the list of essential medicines WHO - The world health organization added an updated list of essential medicines that should be included in new treatment options.
| ||||||||
Will Obamacare's litany of failures define Obama's legacy? The Affordable Care Act proved to be everything but. Is this really Obama's biggest achievement? 0Email 0Share 0Share 0Share 0Share 0Reddit 0Tweet.
| ||||||||
You have received this email because you have subscribed to Google Alerts. |
![]() |
Send Feedback |
No comments:
Post a Comment