Monday, November 27, 2017

Google Alert - health

Google
health
Daily update November 27, 2017
NEWS
Indiana University Health is investigating a controversial tweet allegedly sent by a nurse who works for the organization. The tweet, from an account named Night Nurse that has been linked to an employee named Taiyesha Baker, said: "Every white woman ...
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A nurse at one of the largest hospital systems in the nation who sparked an internal investigation after posting a controversial tweet reportedly "is no longer an employee" at Indiana University Health.
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An Indiana hospital no longer employs a nurse at the center of outrage over a tweet calling for white women to sacrifice their sons, the hospital announced Sunday.
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DETROIT - Despite rain and snow, thousands of Michigan hunters dragged their deer to check stations to be tested for chronic wasting disease - a condition that comes from the same family as "mad cow" disease.
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NEW YORK - It was a telling setting for a decision on whether post-traumatic stress disorder patients could use medical marijuana.
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NEW YORK (AP) When New York decided to let post-traumatic stress disorder patients use medical marijuana, it joined a fast-rising tide of states.
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Despite rain and snow, thousands of Michigan hunters dragged their deer to check stations to be tested for chronic wasting disease - a condition that comes from the same family as "mad cow" disease.
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Kelly Yeoman is "drowning in her own poo" and desperate for treatment to save her life. Her organs are barely noticeable in an X-ray as her chest cavity fills with feces, leaving her struggling to breathe.
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Smoking kills 1,200 people a day. The tobacco companies worked to make them as addictive as possible. There is no such thing as a safer cigarette.
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Two visitor attractions in Grand Rapids say they've seen an attendance boost in the year since voters approved a property tax increase to support their operations.
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Brooke Miller, a college freshman at the University of Florida, was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes at age 3. "I don't really remember my life without it because I was so young," says the 18-year-old.
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The term "adult-onset diabetes" is no longer relevant, as the numbers of kids and teens who are being diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes continues to climb - at alarming rates.
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Decades after they were banned from the airwaves, Big Tobacco companies return to prime-time television starting today (Nov. 26) -- but not by choice.
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Court-ordered tobacco company "corrective statements" about the health dangers of smoking, which have begun appearing in newspapers, were hailed by the American Cancer Society.
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NEW DELHI, Nov. 27 (Xinhua) -- Doctors in central Indian state of Madhya Pradesh in a rare surgery removed iron objects including coins and needles weighing around five kg from a man's stomach, health officials said Monday.
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Children should be given the flu vaccine before Christmas to prevent them putting older relatives at risk of infection, NHS bosses have warned.
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New research indicates that those of us who are acutely sensitive to houseflies may have a point after all. A study published in Scientific Reports found that two of the most common or garden insects - houseflies and blowflies - are both capable of ...
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Surgeons treating a man with suspected food poisoning were stunned to discover 263 coins and 100 nails in his stomach. Maksud Khan, 35, was admitted to hospital with abdominal pains and doctors performed an endoscopy to investigate the cause.
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FILE - In this Oct. 17, 2017 file photo, a boy accompanied by his dog watches the repairs of Guajataca Dam, which cracked during the passage of Hurricane Maria, in Quebradillas, Puerto Rico.
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A CUSTOMER being served by two cashiers captured the moment both appeared to fall asleep in the middle of scanning grocery items. Patrick Knox.
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If you're a hardcore coffee lover, you no longer have to call your love of caffeine a vice. Experts say you don't have to give up your cup of joe habit to be healthy.
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In response to the article 'Vape, don't smoke - expert' published on Newshub on 24 November 2017 stating "A professor of public health has claimed smoking rates would be dramatically reduced if misinformation wasn't being spread about e-cigarettes.
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Leukemia patient Coline Corbitt at the AU Medical Center in Augusta Ga., Thursday morning November 9, 2017 to receive chemotherapy treatments.
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In a new research that comes via the American Cancer Society, it has been seen that over 40 percent of all cancers and nearly one in two cancer deaths can be prevented by incorporating simple lifestyle changes in daily routines.
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When Jeff Simmons, now 52, was diagnosed HIV-positive in 1991, the virus was still a death sentence for many - and he went to several friends' funerals.
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The American Society of Clinical Oncology, which represents many of the nation's top cancer doctors, cited evidence that even light drinking can slightly raise a woman's risk of breast cancer and increase a common type of esophageal cancer.
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SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) - Hardcore coffee lovers don't have to give up their caffeine habit to be healthy, according to a new study published Wednesday.
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New research suggests that even modest levels of physical activity are beneficial to heart health. Elderly people should be encouraged to at least do low intensity physical activities.
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The number of women undergoing lung cancer surgery in Australia is escalating faster than that of men, reflecting the tobacco industry's aggressive marketing of feminised "slim" and "light" products in the 1980s and '90s.
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Guwahati, Nov 25 (PTI) Tobacco use has increased in Assam, Tripura and Manipur against an overall decline in the country between 2009-2017, according to the regional report of the second round of Global Adult Tobacco Survey (GATS) 2016-17 of North ...
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People who are unsociable tend to think more creatively and get new ideas when they are alone. They are able to enjoy their isolation and use it creatively and productively.
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The human brain, which is the larger version of the ancestral primate brain, demonstrates the dramatic difference between humans and other primates, a study has showed.
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According to a new research it has been found that even infants can tell that badly one wants to achieve something. This study is an important step in trying to understand the roots of common-sense understanding of other people's actions.
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Even a 10-month-old infant can tell how badly you want something by observing how hard you work to achieve it, says new study that suggests that we learn to infer motivations of others much earlier than previously thought.
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Not socializing with others may not be so bad after all, according to a new study. Occasionally distancing yourself from peers is linked to a spark in creativity, researchers from the University of Buffalo found.
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Still unanswered are the questions of exactly how and when these intuitive abilities arise in babies. Still unanswered are the questions of exactly how and when these intuitive abilities arise in babies.
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