Friday, April 7, 2017

Google Alert - health

Google
health
Daily update April 7, 2017
NEWS
A magnification of stained HPV viruses. Nearly half of adult Americans are infected with genital human papillomavirus, researchers have found.
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In the latest data, collected from the National Center for Health Statistics, researchers found that the infection prevalence of genital HPV from 2013-2014 was 42.5% among adults between ages 18 and 59.
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23andMe headquarters in Mountain View, Calif. The Food and Drug Administration said on Thursday that it would allow the company to sell genetic tests directly to consumers.
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Infection with human papilloma virus, or HPV, continues to be the most common sexually transmitted infection in the U.S., according to a new report from the U.S.
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Harpursville, NY - In a Facebook update Wednesday morning, April the giraffe's keepers note no significant changes since Tuesday evening.
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As Americans wait with baited breath for April the giraffe to give birth, our friends in the U.K. welcomed a rare Rothschild's giraffe calf into the world.
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Patricia Lauder bought a Fitbit to count her steps and help her lose weight. But now, the 73-year-old credits the fitness tracker with saving her life.
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(CNN) GlaxoSmithKline is recalling more than 590,000 albuterol inhalers. Three lots of Ventolin HFA 200D inhalers have been voluntarily recalled due to a potential issues with the delivery system, a spokesman for the British pharmaceutical company said.
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British pharmaceutical company GlaxoSmithKline is recalling more than a half a million asthma inhalers due to a defect. Reuters reports GSK has issued a voluntary Level II recall of Ventolin inhalers from U.S.
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HARPURSVILLE, N.Y. (CBS4) - Zoo workers say April has a large appetite tonight as she prepares to deliver her calf. Other parks tell Animal Adventure Park that mothers will sometimes feast just before birth.
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A usually harmless virus may play a role in triggering celiac disease, a new study in mice suggests. The researchers found that, among mice that were genetically engineered predisposed to celiac disease, those that were infected with a virus called ...
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While UC Berkeley students may be notorious for staying up studying and messing up their sleep schedules, according to a study recently published by campus researchers, such sleeping habits could be detrimental to brain health if continued later in life.
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Washington (CNN) What do full-size bottles of shampoo, recreational oxygen and medical marijuana have in common? The TSA says you can't bring them on a plane.
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Researchers have found a genetic mutation that turns people into Martians - at least when it comes to sleep patterns. People with the mutation tend to be night owls because it keeps them on a perpetual 24 ½ hour schedule - close to the Martian 24 ...
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I was rather surprised, not long ago, when a friend declined to smoke weed with me: It wasn't because he doesn't enjoy it, but because of its residual effects.
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No matter how hungry you are, you'd be very unlikely to sit down to a piping hot bowl of Larry—or anyone else, for that matter.
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At first glance, a stranger would probably think the attractive mother and her daughter look like any other suburban mother and daughter.
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astronaut A young male who can't get out of bed for two months is monitored closely as he takes part in an experiment that study the effects of microgravity on the human body.
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INDIANAPOLIS - A central Indiana family considered a cross-country move in order to help their daughter the medicine they feel she needs.
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President Trump's nominee to lead the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) refused at his confirmation hearing Wednesday to commit to banning flavored cigars and electronic cigarettes.
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It turns out human beings don't make for a terribly sustaining supper. Research published Thursday in the journal Scientific Reports concludes our ancient ancestors who practised cannibalism probably weren't doing so for purely dietary reasons.
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A 6-year-old Ohio girl, who is a competitive dancer, lost her left leg over the weekend after doctors diagnosed her with a rare skin infection.
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If you've been a night owl all your life and mornings are your nemesis, you may be able to blame a gene mutation for all those late nights.
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As marijuana use becomes ever more socially and legally acceptable in the developed world, researchers are scrambling to understand how the plant - more potent today than ever before - impacts our health.
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Do you get your best work done late at night and then struggle to wake up in the morning? New research suggests your night owl tendencies could be hard-wired in your genes.
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Archaeologists have suggested that Stone Age people sometimes ate one another for nutritional reasons. But a new study suggests that from a calorie perspective, hunting and eating other humans wasn't efficient.
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Communicating the threat of Zika is a powerful tool in the fight, shaping public policies and attitudes that can slow transmission of the virus or hasten its spread.
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Dr. Scott Gottlieb, President's Trump's nominee to head the Food & Drug Administration, has said the FDA displays an "unreasonable hunger for statistical certainty" and a "profound lack of confidence in the ability of doctors to make careful judgments ...
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A stem cell treatment for heart failure patients is safe and shows early signs of effectiveness, according to a study published Wednesday.
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One in every 68 kids in the nation have Autism. That's eleven thousand children in Mississippi. A national group called Autism Speaks, along with the Mississippi Autism Board and other organizations were at the Capitol Wednesday for Autism Awareness ...
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Uruguay will begin selling cannabis in pharmacies from July, the final stage in the country's pioneering regularisation of the drug.
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(Reuters Health) - - Patching the heart with sheets of patients' own cells might improve symptoms in some cases of severe heart failure, an early study suggests.
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Transportation Security Administration officials seemed dazed and confused this week on the agency's stance on flying with medical marijuana.
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With about a month left in the calendar, the measures now head back to the Senate for further consideration. The majority of the bills will go into conference committees where House and Senate conferees will negotiate differences in the measures and ...
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In this Thursday, Sept. 17, 2015, file photo, a nurse administers a flu vaccine shot in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, File) more >.
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Today at the Microbiology Society's Annual Conference, researchers will show that the overall balance of the bacteria on a person's skin, rather than the presence or absence of a particular bacterial strain, appears to be an important factor for acne ...
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For patients with coronary artery disease (CAD), swinging back and forth with weight gain and weight loss was associated with death and other adverse events, a study suggested.
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