Falls, eye tests may detect early Alzheimer's
Sun,17 Jul 2011 08:01 AM PDT
Reuters - PARIS (Reuters) - People at risk for Alzheimer's are twice as likely to fall as healthy people, and the disease may also be visible in scans of the eye, researchers said on Sunday. Full Story |
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Avid CEO confident in Alzheimer's imaging agent
Sat,16 Jul 2011 11:53 AM PDT
Reuters - PARIS (Reuters) - The chief executive of Eli Lilly and Co's Alzheimer's imaging unit is confident it can create a training program for its imaging drug that will satisfy concerns raised by U.S. regulators. Full Story |
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U.S. pediatrician feels heat over child obesity idea
Fri,15 Jul 2011 03:00 PM PDT
Reuters - BOSTON (Reuters) - Boston pediatrician David Ludwig, the center of a media firestorm this week, wants to set the record straight on his view that a state should intervene in the most extreme cases of child obesity. Full Story |
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Millions at risk of cholera in Ethiopia: WHO
Fri,15 Jul 2011 01:38 PM PDT
Reuters - GENEVA (Reuters) - Five million people are at risk of cholera in drought-hitEthiopia, where acute watery diarrhea has broken out in crowded, unsanitary conditions, the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Friday. Full Story |
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Most drugs for Parkinson's psychosis unproven
Fri,15 Jul 2011 01:36 PM PDT
Reuters - NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Nearly every prescription written to treat Parkinson's psychosis -- a common psychiatric side effect of Parkinson's disease -- is for medications that have not been shown to improve the condition, a new study finds. Full Story |
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Patients worse off with more-experienced docs?
Fri,15 Jul 2011 01:35 PM PDT
Reuters - NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - In a study that flies in the face of common sense, sicker patients turned out to fare worse under the care of seasoned doctors than when newcomers to medicine looked after them. Full Story |
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Traffic court does not reduce crashes later on
Fri,15 Jul 2011 01:33 PM PDT
Reuters - NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Drivers who choose to fight a speeding ticket in court, rather than pay a fine by mail, are more likely to be involved in a car crash later on, a new study of Maryland drivers shows. Full Story |
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Medicare Part D sees falling drug costs: study
Fri,15 Jul 2011 01:32 PM PDT
Reuters - WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Cheaper generic drugs will continue to hold down costs for the U.S. government, insurers and patients enrolled in the federal prescription drug benefit, according to a report released on Friday. Full Story |
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 GENEVA (Reuters) - Five million people are at risk of cholera in drought-hit Ethiopia, where acute watery diarrhea has broken out in crowded, unsanitary conditions, the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Friday. |
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 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - At Utah-based Intermountain Healthcare, comparative research made physicians realize that inducing early childbirth in healthy women created unnecessary and costly risks for newborns. |
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Panel backs stricter blood cancer drug label
Thu,14 Jul 2011 03:12 PM PDT
Reuters - SILVER SPRING, Maryland (Reuters) - A U.S. advisory panel backed an experimental drug from Seattle Genetics Inc for treating two rare types of blood cancer, but recommended stricter labeling than the company sought. Full Story |
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U.S. medical devices spending steady: report
Thu,14 Jul 2011 02:44 PM PDT
Reuters - WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Medical devices accounted for about 6 percent of the total U.S. health spending in 2009, barely changed from 10 years earlier and slightly higher than two decades ago, according to an industry report. Full Story |
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Vitamin A may not prevent asthma: study
Thu,14 Jul 2011 02:43 PM PDT
Reuters - NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Despite the important role of vitamin A in lung development, researchers have found that giving the nutrient to pregnant women or preschoolers in Nepal doesn't protect kids against asthma. Full Story |
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