![]() | ||||||||
health | ||||||||
NEWS | ||||||||
Could Diet Drinks Make Your Baby Fat? Babies whose moms drank diet drinks every day while pregnant are more likely to be overweight, researchers reported on Monday. It's not clear why - and the study doesn't show that the diet drinks cause the babies to gain too much weight.
| ||||||||
Artificial Sweeteners During Pregnancy May Make for Heavier Infants MONDAY, May 9, 2016 (HealthDay News) -- Pregnant women who drink artificially sweetened drinks every day may be more likely to give birth to heavier babies who are then more likely to become overweight children, researchers report.
| ||||||||
'Second Skin' May Reduce Wrinkles, Eyebags, Scientists Say A photo published in Nature Materials accompanying research reporting early studies on a chemically manufactured second skin. Credit Olivo Laboratories.
| ||||||||
Study: Artificial sweeteners during pregnancy may make for heavier infants MONDAY, May 9, 2016 -- Pregnant women who drink artificially sweetened drinks every day may be more likely to give birth to heavier babies who are then more likely to become overweight children, researchers report.
| ||||||||
Could 'Breast Cancer Genes' Play Role in Prostate Cancer, Too? MONDAY, May 9, 2016 (HealthDay News) -- A man's risk of aggressive and lethal prostate cancer may be heavily influenced by gene mutations previously linked to breast and ovarian cancer in women, a trio of new studies suggests.
| ||||||||
E-Cigarette Liquid Poisonings on the Rise in Young Children, Study Says (NEW YORK) -- E-cigarette use has increased drastically over the last few years and cases of children being accidentally exposed to the liquid nicotine inside have risen just as drastically.
| ||||||||
Child's Obesity Tied to Mom's Pregnancy Weight: Study MONDAY, May 9, 2016 (HealthDay News) -- A mother's excess weight gain or elevated blood sugar levels in pregnancy may put her child at increased risk for being overweight or obese, a new study finds.
| ||||||||
Weight gain can 'imprint' obesity in children Putting on excess weight or having high blood sugar levels during pregnancy can "imprint" obesity in children, researchers have claimed.
| ||||||||
Swaddling tied to increased risk of SIDS (Reuters Health) - Swaddling infants may increase their risk of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) during sleep, an analysis of previous research suggests.
| ||||||||
Boy Who Has Autism, Is Nonverbal Falls Head-Over-Heels For Snow White Photographer Amanda Coley's 2-year-old son, Jackson, who has autism and is non-verbal, is very shy around strangers. However on a trip to Walt Disney World in Florida, her son was transformed when he fell head over heels in love with Snow White.
| ||||||||
Value-Based Mental Health May Be 'Gold' For Insurers News that one of the nation's largest health insurance companies is pursuing an evidence-based approach to substance abuse treatment and opioid addiction could potentially speed up the slow march away from fee-for-service mental health treatment.
| ||||||||
Local home health nurse highlight demand for more Jace Clark has been a nurse for 13 years, but seven years ago, she decided to shift her career focus to home health and hospice nursing.
| ||||||||
Boy with autism has heartfelt encounter with Snow White at Disney A mom filmed her 2-year-old son with autism "falling in love" with Snow White at Disney. A mom filmed her 2-year-old son with autism "falling in love" with Snow White at Disney.
| ||||||||
Scientists have sequenced the genome of this popular vegetable Researchers said on Monday they have sequenced the genome of the carrot, an increasingly important root crop worldwide, identifying genes responsible for traits including the vegetable's abundance of vitamin A, an important nutrient for vision.
| ||||||||
Boy who grew out hair for cancer patients faces stage 4 diagnosis Vinny Desautels' grew out his hair for two year to donate to cancer patients has been diagnosed with stage four cancer. ×. Boy who grew out hair for cancer patients faces stage 4 diagnosis.
| ||||||||
Malaria Vaccine Protects Half Who Try It An experimental malaria vaccine appears to protect half of the people who tried it for as long as a year - an effect greater than the only licensed vaccine now available, researchers said Monday.
| ||||||||
Extensive Web of Nursing Education Opportunities Abounds in Santa Barbara County Most of us have heard about the nursing shortage that has been spreading across the United States for the past decade. Yet, with such a high demand for qualified nurses, nursing schools are finding themselves overflowing with applicants, with waiting ...
| ||||||||
Does swaddling babies raise risk of SIDS? If infants are swaddled during sleep, their risk of dying from SIDS is higher, especially if they are placed on their stomachs, new research suggests.
| ||||||||
Celebrating the importance of nurses Fellowship programs are effective avenues of entry into the profession and provide opportunities for new and veteran nurses. UF Health Jacksonville's programs include the New Nurse, Emergency Department and Critical Care Nurse fellowships.
| ||||||||
7 Alarming Stats You Need To Know About Mental Health And Work Mental health conditions don't evaporate the moment someone walks into their office, but openly discussing mental health issues at work is still considered taboo.
| ||||||||
NY nurses to rally at state capital for safe-staffing bill ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) - Nurses will stage a rally Tuesday outside the state Capitol in an effort to get lawmakers to pass the Safe Staffing for Quality Care Act.
| ||||||||
Swaddling babies is tied to heightened risk of sudden infant death syndrome Swaddling a baby - the age-old technique of snugly wrapping an infant in a cloth or light blanket, with only the head exposed - is believed to create a calmer child who cries less and sleeps better.
| ||||||||
Former FDA head: Opioid epidemic one of "great mistakes of modern medicine" Doctor David Kessler, who ran the FDA from 1990 to 1997, doesn't hold back when talking about the explosion in opioid use in the last two decades.
| ||||||||
Swaddling babies may increase risk of SIDS, study says NEW YORK - Swaddling infants is a common practice among parents, but a new study shows it may increase the risk of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, or SIDS.
| ||||||||
Unlike alcohol, it's tough to set DUI limits for marijuana There is a legal limit for drunk driving, but when it comes to marijuana, new research shows it may be impossible to say just how high is too high to drive.
| ||||||||
Obama Administration Announces Contest To Redesign Medical Bill The Obama administration launched a contest among health care groups, developers, designers and tech firms to redesign a medical bill that is much simpler than the current system.
| ||||||||
Judge delivers FTC rare healthcare loss in Pennsylvania hospital case A federal judge on Monday declined to block a union between Penn State Hershey Medical Center and PinnacleHealth System pending the outcome of the Federal Trade Commission's antitrust challenge.
| ||||||||
Autistic boy swoons for Snow White Two-year-old Jack Jack had the time of his life meeting Snow White. (Photo and video courtesy Amanda Coley). Embed. <iframe width="476" height="267" src="http://abc13.
| ||||||||
The 5 Best States To Grow Old In America See how your state fares when it comes to quality of living and cost of senior care. 05/09/2016 06:29 am ET. 397. Yagana Shah Huff/Post 50 Editor, The Huffington Post.
| ||||||||
Inefficient prescribing costs billions of healthcare dollars (Reuters Health) - In the U.S. between 2010 and 2012, nearly $73 billion was spent on brand name medications instead of less expensive alternatives, according to a new study.
| ||||||||
7-year-old boy who grew out hair to donate to cancer patients diagnosed with stage 4 cancer ROSEVILLE (KTXL) -- For two years, 7-year-old Vinny Desautels grew out his hair to help kids with cancer. "I want to help people so they don't have to go to the doctors to fight cancer," he said.
| ||||||||
Huge food recall list continues to grow – frozen fruits, veggies, fried rice, cooked chicken affected Two large food recalls continue to grow nationwide, one involving frozen fruits and vegetables sold at several local stores, and the other involving almost 10 million pounds of cooked chicken that was used in a number of products.
| ||||||||
GET YOUR GEAR ON: Lymeez Tick Gaiter Tick season is in full swing, and if you're anything like me, just the thought of the blood-sucking parasites is enough to make the skin crawl.
| ||||||||
Alphabet soup: Understanding what nurses do The various qualifications for nurses can be opaque to a patient unfamiliar with the system. Here is a quick primer on what RNs and other professionals involved in nursing care are trained to do: Registered Nurse (RN): Many RNs work as part of a team ...
| ||||||||
Mosquito season brings no urgency for money to fight Zika FILE - In this Feb. 11, 2016 file photo of aedes aegypti mosquitoes are syndication.ap.orgFILE - In this Feb. 11, 2016 file photo of aedes aegypti mosquitoes are seen in a mosquito cage at a laboratory in Cucuta, Colombia.
| ||||||||
Study: 50 percent of teens are digitally addicted to their mobile devices YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (WKBN) - According to a new study conducted by Common Sense Media, 50 percent of teens say they are digitally addicted to their mobile devices.
| ||||||||
Marijuana reform activists march to City Hall, push for legalization Activists and advocates for marijuana reform marched in Center City to celebrate recent laws passed in Philadelphia and Pennsylvania.
| ||||||||
Relay participants keep hope alive A crowd of people are reflected in a puddle as they walk on a track Friday during the Relay for Life event at Tarboro High School.
| ||||||||
Hepatitis B: The "silent" threat that's demanding attention When Hee-Soon Juon asked her physician a few years ago whether she needed to be screened for exposure to the Hepatitis B virus, he told her, "You don't need to be.
| ||||||||
Survey: Insurance shortchanging doctors, patients Four of five ER doctors surveyed believe privately-insured patients skip needed medical care amid worry about costs. Loading… Post to Facebook.
| ||||||||
You have received this email because you have subscribed to Google Alerts. |
![]() |
Send Feedback |
No comments:
Post a Comment