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Chipotle CEO Apologizes for E.Coli Outbreak, One Seattle Location Temporarily ... One of the Mexican chain's Seattle locations was closed Thursday by the local health department for "repeated food safety violations.
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Seattle Chipotle open again after violating health code The Mexican-style restaurant closed Thursday for repeated food-safety violations. Health officials said Friday workers fixed the problems.
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We've learnt many lessons from this outbreak and from the response – Dr. David ... Dr. David Nabarro, Special Envoy on Ebola, at a press conference in New York in November 2015. UN Photo/Loey Felipe. Print. 10 December 2015 - In August 2014, amid a rapidly growing outbreak of Ebola, Dr.
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FDA Panel Urges Stronger Regulation of Codeine savesaved. by Shannon Firth Contributing Writer. SILVER SPRING, Md. -- An FDA advisory panel wants more restrictions on codeine use in children, and it said the FDA should move now to remove codeine from the over-the-counter monograph for use in the ...
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Report: US pregnancy rate, abortions hit all-time low The rate of women getting pregnant in the U.S. has hit a record low, according to a study released Friday by the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention.
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Mexico approves first vaccine for dengue fever The initial phase of inoculations in the country will focus on about 40,000 people in areas where dengue fever is endemic. By Stephen Feller | Dec. 11, 2015 at 4:43 PM.
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Jury still out on routine skin cancer screening There isn't enough evidence yet to say whether routine full-body skin cancer screenings are safe or effective, according to new proposed U.S.
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Update: Essex County Family Still Trying To Get Hospitalized Son Home For ... An Essex County student is stuck in a Finland hospital, only weeks removed from life support. Here's how you can help get him home.
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Obesity 'biggest threat to women's health' in England Obesity is the biggest threat to women's health and the health of future generations, warns England's chief medical officer Dame Sally Davies.
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What Dates on Food Packaging Really Mean What Dates on Food Packaging Really Mean Amid concerns that between 30 percent and 50 percent of food worldwide is going to waste, the U.S.
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A few drinks may keep Alzheimer's death away Tom Wallace, Star Tribune A new small study shows that having a few drinks a day is associated with a much lower risk of death for Alzheimer's patients, compared with those who drink more, less or not at all.
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Lawmakers, activists come together on World AIDS Day - 5 hours ago Today South African government is telling about 3.2 million people who are under ARVs treament, of which we learn that 1.5 million people who are on such a treatment are based in KwaZulu Natal Province-South Africa.
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Scientists have found a new strain of bacteria that is resistant to all ... FOR years experts have warned there would come a day when antibiotics would cease being effective. And it seems that day could be sooner than first thought after scientists discovered a new superbug that is not just impervious to the last line of ...
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4 area hospitals penalized Four northeast Indiana hospitals are among 758 nationwide that will lose some federal funding next year because they have reported more hospital-acquired conditions than did their peers.
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Many US schools failing sex ed Fewer than half of all high schools and only a fifth of middle schools in the United States teach all of the sex education topics recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, according to a new report.
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Antibiotics Use in Meat Rising at 'Alarming Rate' A new FDA report was released. U.S. sales of antibiotics approved for use in livestock rose by 23 percent between 2009 and 2014, federal regulators said on Thursday, fueling concerns about risks to humans from antibiotic-resistant bacteria.
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Abortion in US hit significant lows in 2010 The Dispatch public affairs team talks politics and tackles state and federal government issues in the Buckeye Forum podcast. Your Right to Know.
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Widening the Use of Sport as a Tool for HIV/AIDS Prevention There are about 1.2 million people living with HIV in the US, with 659,000 deaths from AIDS-related illnesses since the start of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, according to AVERT.
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Abortion falls to record low in the US, CDC says A room is readied for a patient receiving an abortion at the Planned Parenthood clinic in Sioux Falls, S.D. A new report from the CDC says the abortion rate among U.S.
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BC: 141 students now showing signs of Chipotle-related illness The number of Boston College students suffering norovirus symptoms related to an outbreak at a Hub Chipotle jumped to 141 yesterday, according to a university spokesman, as the restaurant's founder offered a mea culpa on national TV.
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Flu Vaccines Match This Year "This year we're giving out probably more than ever before," says Dr. Marc Itskowitz, an internist at Allegheny General Hospital.
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Bionic Eye Helps Woman See For First Time In Years AURORA, Colo. (CBS4)– A woman from Johnstown is the first person in the mountain west to receive a bionic eye to help her see. Jamie Carley has retinitis pigmentosa, which caused her to lose the ability to see left and right and then over time she lost ...
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Time to Get to the Real Work of Ending Breast Cancer This past October, the National Breast Cancer Coalition highlighted our longtime theme of "action, not awareness" during Breast Cancer Awareness Month and challenged everyone to take the actions needed to help end breast cancer.
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Antibiotic Use On Farms Is Up, Despite Promises To Kick The Drugs If you go by their declarations and promises, meat producers are drastically cutting back on the use of antibiotics to treat their poultry, pigs and cattle.
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Study links contaminants in milk to Parkinson's disease A pesticide phased out in the 1980s, found in milk, may play a role in the development of Parkinson's disease. By Stephen Feller | Dec. 10, 2015 at 1:32 PM.
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Early vaccination tied to fewer flu symptoms for health workers (Reuters Health) - For health care providers, earlier influenza vaccination is linked to fewer flu symptoms and less time away from work, a Mexican study suggests.
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Mississippi is still in poor health and still rejecting the Medicaid expansion WASHINGTON -- Mississippi's legacy of poor health continued in 2015 as the Magnolia State finished 49th among the 50 states in the annual "America's Health Rankings," released Thursday by the United Health Foundation.
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3D gamers score memory boost Playing 3D games like Super Mario 3D World boosted people's memories by 12 per cent over two weeks. Scientists just can't agree on whether video games will save you or kill you: some say they make you distracted or aggressive, others that they help ...
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Flu season running closer to normal than last round The seasonal flu has gotten off to a milder start than it did last fall, but don't let your guard down. "We are seeing cases of influenza, although not nearly as many as at this time last year," said Mary Anderson, infection control manager at Edward ...
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Blind Colorado Mother Tears Up After Seeing Son for '1st Time in Years' With ... A mother from the Denver area in Colorado who has been blind for over two decades was recently brought to tears after seeing her son "for the first time in years" with a new bionic eye.
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FDA Just Approved Not One, Not Two But Three Drugs (RTTNews.com) - Drug companies take years, even decades, and burn a tremendous amount of cash to bring a drug to the market. The journey of new drugs from lab to market is a long one.
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US Schools Still Lack Sufficient Sex Education Programs A new report from the CDC suggests that less than half of all high schools and only a fifth of middle schools in the country teach the basics of sex education.
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What the Titans, state health have in common It was a pretty good week for both Tennessee Titans football fans and some public health officials. The Titans won at home Sunday for the first time in 420 days and the state made small gains in a pair of health rankings this week.
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Santa's Powerful Message For Boy With Autism: 'It's OK To Be You' Those five words may seem extraordinarily simple, but for one Michigan boy and his family, that short phrase -- uttered by an "amazing" Santa Claus -- was a profound Christmas gift.
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Novo Nordisk Files Faster-Acting Insulin Aspart NDA in U.S. Novo Nordisk (NVO - Analyst Report) announced that it submitted a New Drug Application (NDA) for faster-acting insulin aspart to the FDA.
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More raw dog and cat food recalled over salmonella worries Bravo Pet Foods is recalling more than 200 cases of its Chicken Blend diet for dogs and cats because the raw chubs may be contaminated with salmonella.
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In US, Young Adults' Cigarette Use Is Down Sharply WASHINGTON, D.C. -- The smoking rate for 18- to 29-year-olds in the U.S. has dropped 12 percentage points to 22% over the past decade, more than twice the drop seen for any other age group.
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House Speaker Greg Stumbo pre-files bill requiring prompt pay by Medicaid MCOs FRANKFORT - Looking to improve Medicaid managed care for all Kentuckians, House Speaker Greg Stumbo pre-filed legislation that would end unnecessary delays in Medicaid payments to healthcare providers and recipients while setting a baseline limit ...
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Gluten-Free Diet: Benefits & Risks A gluten-free diet is one that excludes most grains, and it is recommended for people who have celiac disease or gluten sensitivity.
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