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Heavy, Consistent Alcohol Intake Increases Risk of Colorectal Cancer Among the 12,327 patients in the trial who had a negative baseline colorectal cancer screen, 812 had an incident colorectal adenoma. Current drinkers with the highest average lifetime alcohol intake did not have higher adenoma risk when compared with those ...
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Dr. William Foege, leader in smallpox eradication, dies ATLANTA (AP) — Dr. William Foege, a leader of one of humanity's greatest public health victories — the global eradication of smallpox — has died. Foege died Saturday in Atlanta at the age of 89, according to the Task Force for Global Health, ...
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High Alcohol Intake Is Linked to an Increased Risk of Colorectal Cancer "The inverse association with CRC was strongest in the screening arm of the trial, suggesting that screening has the potential to modify the association between alcohol drinking and CRC risk," the researchers noted. Current ...
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Shared decision-making, informed consent, and the rhetoric of false empowerment Recently, RFK Jr. made sweeping changes to routine childhood immunization recommendations in the U.S., with more changes likely to come next month. Many of these changes have centered on medical phrases such as "shared clinical decision-making" or ...
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CDC to decide if US loses measles elimination status Sally: What happens if we continue to see measles spread? Dr. Daskalakis: So it is the most infectious virus that we know, really, that people know. If there's 10 people who ...
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Research findings may lead to new test for endometriosis CINCINNATI — Endometriosis affects 1 in 10 women worldwide, and many go years before diagnosis. Symptoms include chronic pelvic pain, heavy bleeding during menstruation and/or sexual intercourse, bloating and fatigue. Dr. Katie Burns' research at the ...
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New Guidance Supports HPV Self-Sampling for Cervical Screening UPDATED global guidance has reinforced the role of human papillomavirus self-sampling as an effective approach to improve participation in cervical cancer screening programmes, particularly among women who face barriers to clinic-based testing.
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Scientists Inch Closer to Solving 'Kissing Disease' Mystery Bloomberg Scientists have identified 22 genes that increase the risk of conditions like lupus, stroke, and rheumatoid arthritis in patients who've caught the virus behind mono, an illness known as the "kissing disease.".
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Researchers Are Using AI to Decode the Human Genome For decades, scientists had struggled to understand how strings of molecular building blocks fold into the complex, three-dimensional structures of proteins. Demis Hassabis, John Jumper and their colleagues at Google DeepMind trained a program ...
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Environmentally driven immune imprinting protects against allergy Allergic diseases are caused by overexuberant type II immune responses mounted against environmental antigens. The allergic state is typified by the presence of allergen-reactive immunoglobulin E (IgE), which triggers mast cell degranulation upon ...
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