![]() | ||||||||
health | ||||||||
NEWS | ||||||||
Watch live video of April the pregnant giraffe after an 'interesting' night HARPURSVILLE, N.Y. - Zookeepers say April the giraffe had an interesting night. They have been watching the video feed closely for more signs of her pregnancy moving along.
| ||||||||
Watch live: April the giraffe has 'notable bulges' on her left side, baby is 'extremely quiet' HARPURSVILLE, N.Y. - Zookeepers at Animal Adventure Park say April the giraffe's pregnancy is moving along. Animal Adventure Park began streaming on Feb. 23 on YouTube showing April preparing to give birth, drawing attention worldwide.
| ||||||||
Giraffe watch: Everything is good with April HARPURSVILLE, NY (RNN) - Keepers and vets at Animal Adventure Park agree that April's pregnancy is progressing nicely, noting increased mammary development as a good sign.
| ||||||||
Girl Suffers Burns While Making Slime ROCKLAND, Mass. (CBS) - A girl from Massachusetts recently suffered chemical burns while making got burned while making slime. Her story has prompted a safety warning to parents.
| ||||||||
Health: Researchers grow heart tissue on spinach leaves In this sequence, a spinach leaf is stripped of its plant cells, a process called decellularization. The process leaves behind the leaf's vasculature which is then used to create heart tissue.
| ||||||||
Baby giraffe watch at New York zoo; April not in labor yet, mammary changes indicate it's soon April the giraffe is pregnant and due soon at Animal Adventure Park in Harpursvile, New York. March 27 evening update: The veterinarian checking up on April determined her mammary development is increasing slowly.
| ||||||||
Study shows no long-term cognitive benefit to breastfeeding (CNN) While the medical benefits of breastfeeding for helping newborns fight infections and helping pre-term infants get stronger are fairly well established, the long-term impact is much less so.
| ||||||||
April Still On Track For Healthy Birth HARPURSVILLE, N.Y. (CBS4) - Keepers at The Animal Adventure Park updated it's thousands of viewers and fans Monday night on April the Pregnant Giraffe's condition.
| ||||||||
Reducing the intake of this ingredient in your food will help you sleep better at night LONDON: There is good news for people who need to wake up one or more times during the night to go to the toilet. Researchers have found that simply cutting back on salt intake can reduce such night-time trips.
| ||||||||
For babies, breastfeeding is still best, even if it doesn't make them smarter (though it might) There are lots of reasons why doctors encourage new mothers to breastfeed their babies. Compared with babies who get formula, babies who are breastfed are less likely to die as a result of infections, sudden infant death syndrome or any other reason.
| ||||||||
Scientists convert spinach leaves into human heart tissue — that beats If an overhyped vegetable existed before marketers coined the term superfood - and long before Oprah Winfrey chatted up acai berries with Dr.
| ||||||||
Genetic Similarity to BRCA1/BRCA2 Mutations May Impact Treatment Options Research indicates up to 5% of breast cancers are related to hereditary mutations in the BRCA1 or BRCA2 genes. Identification of genetic signatures similar to BRCA1/BRCA2 mutations in patients without the mutation could make it possible to treat 1 in 5 ...
| ||||||||
Here's America's Third Leading Cause Of Death And What Trump's Budget May Do Headlines such as "Republicans Pan Trump Budget" and "Donald Trump's Budget Is Universally Unloved" have suggested that identifying problems with President Donald Trump's proposed federal budget has been like pointing out wet spots on the Titanic.
| ||||||||
11-Year-Old Woke up with Burns on Her Hands After Popular 'Craft Project' at Sleepover 11-year-old Kathleen Quinn has been making "slime" since December. Like many kids her age, she enjoyed making the popular kids craft when she got home from school.
| ||||||||
11-year-old girl's hands covered in third-degree burns after making "slime" Last Updated Mar 27, 2017 9:57 PM EDT. Kathleen Quinn just finished creating a popular gooey concoction called "slime" at her kitchen table last week when she noticed both of her hands were starting to hurt.
| ||||||||
GOP STRATEGIST: Trump is harming himself with Congress The American Health Care Act debacle was President Donald Trump's initiation into how the sausage is made in Washington and odds are that he is not a fan.
| ||||||||
Scientists turned spinach leaves into beating human heart tissue Researchers have successfully used spinach leaves to build functioning human heart tissue, complete with veins that can transport blood.
| ||||||||
Richmond man killed in avalanche in Banff National Park Massachusetts General Hospital officials said Victor Fedorov and another doctor were snowshoeing in Banff National Park in Alberta when they disappeared on March 14.
| ||||||||
Could eating less salt reduce nighttime bathroom trips? Lowering your salt intake could mean fewer trips to the bathroom in the middle of the night, a new study suggests. Most people over age 60, and many even younger, wake up to pee one or more times a night.
| ||||||||
Good news: Study says your cat actually does want to chill with you It's time to stop trying to convince your dog-lover friends that your cat doesn't hate you by sharing riveting stories of that one time Fluffers sat on your legs or the time you pet Cupcake and she didn't slink away.
| ||||||||
Could eating less salt reduce nighttime bathroom trips? CBS NEWS - HEALTHDAY Lowering your salt intake could mean fewer trips to the bathroom in the middle of the night, a new study suggests.
| ||||||||
My view: Crippling budget cuts to National Institutes of Health FILE— President Donald Trump speaks in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington, Friday, March 10, 2017, during a meeting on healthcare.
| ||||||||
Allergic to Peanuts? Tree Nuts May Be OK People who think they're allergic to tree nuts such as walnuts or almonds may not really be, doctors reported Monday. And people who are allergic to one nut may not necessarily be allergic to other types of nuts, the team of allergy experts found.
| ||||||||
In Breakthrough Discovery, Scientists Mass-Produce Artificial Blood The technique could one day be used to sustainably create blood, particularly for patients with rare blood types. By Carolyn Gregoire.
| ||||||||
This is the single most unattractive thing men can do during sex It seems women are united in thinking that men who boast about their own sexual prowess are a complete turn off. The new report, titled Do Women's Orgasms Function as a Masculinity Achievement?
| ||||||||
Illinois joins states considering recreational marijuana legalization as budget fix SPRINGFIELD, Ill. - Marijuana advocates are trying to lay the groundwork for Illinois to become the first state in the Midwest and the ninth nationwide to legalize recreational pot, arguing the move will help solve the state's notorious budget crisis ...
| ||||||||
Why Trump Could Still Be a Threat to Medical Device Stocks The Republican healthcare bill, American Health Care Act (ACHA), which was released earlier this month with the target to repeal the Affordable Care Act (ACA), hasn't found favor with the masses.
| ||||||||
Avalanche victims were 'rising young stars' at MGH They had training, experience, and the right gear. Lauren Zeitels and Victor Fedorov, a pair of medical residents from Boston, had trekked on snowshoes for about 20 minutes in Banff National Park in Alberta, Canada, earlier this month, evidently seeing ...
| ||||||||
Whites without a college degree are dying in America, that's why they voted for Donald Trump Thousands of stories have been written about why angry, poor, under-educated white voters put Donald Trump into the Oval Office in a 2016 presidential election that almost every political analyst got wrong.
| ||||||||
Disease fatal to dogs on rise in North Jersey, report says PARAMUS-- Veterinarians say they have seen a marked increase in cases of leptospirosis, a bacterial disease carried by squirrels and rats, News 4 New York reported.
| ||||||||
What are we doing about the opioid epidemic? If you've just come out of surgery or are suffering from chronic pain, you probably appreciate medicine that numbs it, like opioids.
| ||||||||
New research shows old teaching on how to put babies to sleep was wrong, led to infant deaths Tennessee health officials have some clear advice for the parents of newborns: Don't listen to your grandmother. New research shows decades of teaching on how to put babies to sleep was wrong - leading to the deaths of hundreds of infants every year.
| ||||||||
Illinois Considers Legalizing Marijuana for a Fiscal Boost Marijuana advocates are trying to lay the groundwork for Illinois to become the first state in the Midwest and the ninth nationwide to legalize recreational pot, arguing the move will help solve the state's notorious budget crisis.
| ||||||||
Cats actually like people, says new university study A new study completed by researchers at Oregon State University and New Jersey's Monmouth University has found that cats are actually quite fond of people.
| ||||||||
Top heart doctors warn proposed NIH cuts would be catastrophic March 27 (Reuters) - Top heart doctors and researchers have a simple reaction to President Donald Trump's proposed 20 percent cut to the budget of the U.S.
| ||||||||
Tesaro Secures Early and Broad Approval for PARP Inhibitor in Ovarian Cancer Tesaro (TSRO) won U.S. approval Monday for its PARP inhibitor niraparib as a new maintenance treatment for ovarian cancer patients responsive to platinum-based chemotherapy.
| ||||||||
The weirder side of obesity: genetic forms of obesity are rare yet numerous (CNN) While scientists have been aware of about two dozen genetic conditions that can cause obesity, a new study published Monday in the journal Obesity Reviews finds there are many more.
| ||||||||
More Cancers Occur by Random Chance Than for Any Other Reason, Study Finds We usually attribute cancer to inherited genes such as the BRACA1 or BRACA2 mutations, responsible for breast, ovarian, and prostate cancer.
| ||||||||
Why a lack of education raises death risk for some Americans FILE - This April 22, 2014, file photo shows an employment application form on a table at a job fair in Hudson, N.Y. Middle-age white Americans with limited education are increasingly dying younger, on average, than other middle-age U.S.
| ||||||||
Largely white opioid epidemic highlights black frustration with drug war Michael Eric Dyson, Georgetown University professor, minister and author, offers a view of the role of race in responses to the opioid epidemic following an appearance at the University of Memphis on Feb. 21, 2017.
| ||||||||
White and Dying in America The morality rate among under-educated whites in America is rising, which explains why so many voted for Trump. By Jeff Nesbit, Contributor | March 27, 2017, at 4:26 p.m.. MORE. LinkedIn · StumbleUpon · Google +; Cancel. White and Dying in America.
| ||||||||
After detection of virus, emergency immunisation drive launched ISLAMABAD: Health authorities have discovered traces of poliovirus in environmental samples collected from the capital nearly 10 years after the last case of the crippling disease was reported from the city.
| ||||||||
We've known how to stop the 'Deaths of Despair' crisis gripping America's white working class for 120 years "Deaths of despair" - deaths related to suicide, drugs, and alcohol - continue to increase among middle-aged white working-class Americans without a high-school degree, according to research by Princeton economists Anne Case and Angus Deaton.
| ||||||||
Sorry Environmentalists, DNA Causes 66% Of Cancers If you read the claims of environmental groups, trace levels of chemicals are the source of most cancers, even if they are well below harmful levels, due to vague claims of "bioaccumulation.
| ||||||||
South Carolina medical marijuana bill bolstered by conservatives "We shouldn't be forcing a choice between breaking the law or not taking care of members of your family," said Republican Rep. Bill Herbkersman.
| ||||||||
A century of Alzheimer's disease It has been 110 years since Dr. Aloysius Alzheimer first described the disease that was subsequently named for him. His patient, Auguste Deter, had exhibited memory loss, erratic behavior and language problems.
| ||||||||
Mom dies hours after giving birth to twins Jamie Snider of California was battling cancer and was able to hold out until the twins' birth before her body gave out. A pair of twins is now without their mother after she passed away after a long battle with cancer just hours after giving birth to ...
| ||||||||
Drought-stricken Somalia battles hunger and cholera BAIDOA, Somalia - Thousands of desperate Somalis have streamed into Baidoa in southwestern Somalia seeking food and medical care as a result of the country's prolonged drought.
| ||||||||
Israel falls behind in the war against smoking, says expert On sidelines of European antitobacco panel, the chairman of prevention council says country fails to implement WHO convention. cigarettes displayed at the open market.
| ||||||||
You have received this email because you have subscribed to Google Alerts. |
![]() |
Send Feedback |
No comments:
Post a Comment