Monday, November 19, 2018

Google Alert - health

Google
health
Daily update November 19, 2018
NEWS
Lots of pacifier news this week. By lots, I mean two news items, because let's face it, pacifiers aren't exactly the Kardashians when it comes to getting media attention.
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SUNDAY, Nov. 18, 2018 (HealthDay News) -- People with peanut allergy can protect themselves from an allergic reaction by consuming a small amount of peanut powder every day, a new study suggests.
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Montana wildlife officials say three deer in Blaine County have tested positive for a brain wasting disease. The Great Falls Tribune reports that the deer found to have chronic wasting disease were all harvested within a priority surveillance area.
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Your baby's pacifier falls on the floor. Before giving it back to your child, do you wash it in a sink or, perhaps reluctantly, clean it with your own saliva?
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(CNN) Sometimes, Ellis Glover would be forced to leave her friends and sit at a lunch table where no one was eating peanut butter and jelly sandwiches.
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An experimental drug derived from peanuts protected some children and adolescents with life-threatening peanut allergies, according to a study, allowing the subjects to eat small amounts of peanuts without suffering a serious reaction.
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People who live in cold climates with less sunlight are more likely to drink heavily, according to a new study. Research from the US has established a link between average temperature, hours of sunlight and alcohol consumption.
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Just Cutting Calories is Not the Key to Losing Weight. Just cutting calories is not the Key to losing weight, according to a new clinical trial.
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How common are milk allergies? A recent study revealed that they are more common than believed, with many of them eventually outgrowing the milk allergy.
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An 11th child has died and 23 additional children have become sick in connection with an adenovirus outbreak at a New Jersey health care facility, the state's Department of Health announced Friday.
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MARRERO, La. - By the time Jourdan Loyola was finally diagnosed with a rare and baffling condition called acute flaccid myelitis two years ago, the 5-year-old could not move his neck, right arm or either leg.
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A North Carolina man said he ruined his family's thanksgiving celebrations last year when fluid unexpectedly seeped out of his nose and into the holiday dinner.
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A combined evaluation of common variants with small effects and rare predisposing mutations among young female childhood cancer survivors may further stratify this high-risk population for subsequent breast cancer risk (Clin Cancer Res 2018; ...
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The long, dark nights of winter are upon us. The end of daylight savings time, the beginning of fall, and a drop in temperatures all mean people are spending more time indoors and less time out in the sun.
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SEATTLE -- Milk allergy was the most common food allergy among children age <5 years in the U.S., but only around one in four young children with milk allergies had prescriptions for epinephrine auto-injectors, according to researchers here.
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Dear Doctor: My husband's mother had breast cancer and so did both of his aunts. He's really worried about our two daughters' risk, but I've read that breast cancer can affect men as well.
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This community checked every box for a chickenpox outbreak. A North Carolina grade school with one of the state's highest anti-vaccination rates has become ground zero for an outbreak of the disease, which causes rashy, itchy skin and leads to death in ...
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Public health officials have found that influenza vaccination rates among adults dropped in recent years, leading some experts to conclude that was likely a contributing factor to making the 2017-18 season the deadliest flu outbreak in recent memory.
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If you're feeling shortchanged because the sun now sets about 5 p.m., consider this: The sun set for the last time this year on people in Barrow, Alaska, the nation's northernmost city, Nov. 11.
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Your browser does not currently recognize any of the video formats available. Click here to visit our frequently asked questions about HTML5 video.
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Men and women who identify as lesbian, gay, or bisexual are more likely to misuse opioids when compared with those who identify as heterosexual, a new study shows.
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'Tis the season for the common cold, and for premature babies and infants, this season is a particularly worrisome one. You may have heard of the recent social media messaging trend known as, "Don't Kiss My Baby".
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According to the study's findings, 9 percent of participants reported being bullied at work, while 13 percent reported experiencing violence or threats of violence at work in the past year.
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NEW DELHI: A first-of-its-kind study conducted on 4,000 patients admitted to 10 hospitals across India, including four from the capital, shows mortality rates owing to drug-resistant bacteria in the country are more than twice compared to that in high ...
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The 'battle of the sexes' has pitched men against women for thousands of years, usually with the connotation that women provide the brains and men the brawn.
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PARIS - In new research studying how genetic factors determine taste, scientists now believe they know why some humans prefer coffee while others opt for tea.
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There's a number of obvious factors that influence how much coffee you drink. How much sleep you got last night, for instance, or how many times your needy cat woke you up.
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Washington DC - According to a recent study, while all physical activities are beneficial for heart health, static activities such as strength training was found to be more strongly associated with reducing heart disease risks than dynamic activities ...
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