- Drug gives couch potato mice benefits of a workout (AP)
- Cell changes may help Lou Gehrig's research (AP)
- More cities move aggressively to stop heat deaths (AP)
- Mexico criticizes US salmonella findings (AP)
- Astronaut technology could prevent elderly falls (AP)
- Drug gives couch potato mice benefits of a workout (AP)
- Study: To sleep better, perchance to live longer (AP)
- Settlement will reduce carcinogens in potato chips (AP)
- CDC understated number of new HIV infections in US (AP)
- New HIV cases in US underestimated by 40 percent (AP)
- Mixed results for growth hormone in HIV patients (AP)
- Mexican sex workers want place at AIDS conference (Reuters)
- Abbott faces more litigation over AIDS drug (AP)
- Grass-roots effort in Egypt fights 'cutting' girls (AP)
- 12-year-old with HIV to open world AIDS conference (AP)
- Lax oversight risks millions of Medicare dollars (AP)
- Clinton in Africa says nutrition key to AIDS fight (AP)
- Study: Restaurant kids' meals loaded with calories (AP)
- Lens implant offers chance at beating lazy eye (AP)
- Immigrants kids even less active than U.S.-born (AP)
- In era of pills, fewer shrinks doing talk therapy (AP)
- HIV-positive migrants accuse US of neglect (AP)
- Kids Who Sleep Poorly at Risk for Being Overweight (HealthDay)
- Erectile dysfunction may be "normal" with age (Reuters)
- MDs urged to quit prostate screens in elderly men (AP)
- Study: Restaurant kids' meals loaded with calories (AP)
- Kids Who Sleep Poorly at Risk for Being Overweight (HealthDay)
- Overweight problems seen even in infants (Reuters)
- Suspected cholera outbreak in Philippines kills 21 (AP)
- Prostate test advice for elderly won't stop debate (AP)
- Average ER waiting time nears 1 hour, CDC says (AP)
- Clinton honors 43 schools for anti-obesity efforts (AP)
- All U.S. adults could be overweight in 40 years (Reuters)
- Grassroots networking at heart of AIDS meeting (AFP)
- Average ER waiting time nears 1 hour, CDC says (AP)
- Surprises in first adoption survey to include men (AP)
- For unexplained infertility, 2 methods don't help (AP)
- For unexplained infertility, 2 methods don't help (AP)
- Scientists create stem cells for 10 disorders (AP)
- Male circumcision could be even greater boon than thought (AFP)
- Report say flu is bigger risk than terror in UK (AP)
- Gift cards key to new AIDS prevention strategy (AP)
- FDA: Some cholesterol and heart drugs don't mix (AP)
- Obese Men Face Twin Threat From Prostate Cancer (HealthDay)
- Rabies from bats suspected in Venezuela deaths (AP)
- Obese Men Face Twin Threat From Prostate Cancer (HealthDay)
- Global AIDS prevention gives short shrift to gays (AP)
- Scientists Create Mice Resistant to Obesity (HealthDay)
- Scientists Create Mice Resistant to Obesity (HealthDay)
- Calif. lawmakers weigh chemical ban in baby items (AP)
- Surprise! Half of overweight adults may be heart-healthy (AP)
- Balancing brain time-out in concussion recovery (AP)
- Calif. lawmakers weigh chemical ban in baby items (AP)
- Surprise! Half of overweight adults may be heart-healthy (AP)
- Scientists Create Mice Resistant to Obesity (HealthDay)
- Obese people can be healthy: study (AFP)
- After combat, citizen soldiers turning to alcohol (AP)
- VA patients in Pa. fear prostate treatment error (AP)
- Clumsy children more likely to become obese adults (Reuters)
- After combat, citizen soldiers turning to alcohol (AP)
- Poor Coordination in Childhood Tied to Adult Obesity (HealthDay)
- Healthy Sex Life Can Extend Into 80s (HealthDay)
- Doctors debate when to declare organ donors dead (AP)
- Drugs as good as stents for many heart patients (AP)
- Argentine senate declares obesity a disease (AP)
- Poor Coordination in Childhood Tied to Adult Obesity (HealthDay)
- Healthy Sex Life Can Extend Into 80s (HealthDay)
- Doctors debate when to declare organ donors dead (AP)
- Obesity Linked to Ear Infections (HealthDay)
- Argentina investigates deaths of vaccine kids (AP)
- Kids' Obesity Linked to Ear Infections (HealthDay)
- Heart disease risk soars with obesity, diabetes (Reuters)
- Statins Might Reverse ED in Some Men (HealthDay)
- 1st US drug for Huntington's disease wins approval (AP)
- FDA says chemical found in plastic bottles is safe (AP)
- Salmonella outbreak winds down; questions remain (AP)
- Lawsuits help guarantee drug safety, doctors say (AP)
- Statins Help Obese People After Bypass Surgery (HealthDay)
- Blood transfusions give Argentine patients HIV (AP)
- Statins Help Obese People After Bypass Surgery (HealthDay)
- Statins Might Reverse ED in Some Men (HealthDay)
- University opening new integrative medicine center (AP)
- Mom, daughter lead Kenyan village in AIDS recovery (AP)
- Egypt: Septuplets' mother hopes to hold them soon (AP)
- Blood protects against long-gone killer 1918 flu (AP)
- Angioplasty through the wrist backed by new study (AP)
- Study: You can chew gum and get well at same time (AP)
- Vitamin D's wild days: Who to test, what to take? (AP)
- FDA reports deaths with diabetes drug Byetta (AP)
- Many think God's intervention can revive the dying (AP)
- New study backs angioplasty through the wrist (AP)
- FDA reports deaths with diabetes drug Byetta (AP)
- Impotence drug treats prostate enlargement: study (Reuters)
- Many think God's intervention can revive the dying (AP)
- More women are having fewer children, if at all (AP)
- California fines 18 hospitals for shoddy care (AP)
- Condom ringtone launched in India (AFP)
- Cervical cancer shots less cost-effective with age (AP)
- Judge: Company must give experimental drug to teen (AP)
- Trace arsenic in water may be linked with diabetes (AP)
- Stem cell advance may help transfusion supplies (AP)
- Addiction drug reverses obesity in rats (Reuters)
- ED Drug Relieves Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms (HealthDay)
- 61-year-old woman gives birth in Japan (AP)
- Jump in measles outbreaks worries health officials (AP)
- Insurance gap leads some elderly to forgo medicine (AP)
- Face transplant patient can smile, blink again (AP)
- FDA: Irradiating spinach, lettuce OK to kill germs (AP)
- FDA investigates possible Vytorin link to cancer (AP)
- Extra pounds mean insurance fees for Ala. workers (AP)
- Doorknobs and TV remotes are germ hotbeds (AP)
- FDA's conclusion that chemical is safe is flawed (AP)
- Diabetes drug costs soaring, top $12B last year (AP)
- Staph germs harder than ever to treat, studies say (AP)
- NCI: No prostate benefit from vitamin E, selenium (AP)
- White adults who see discrimination often overweight (Reuters)
- Cialis May Help Ease Pulmonary Hypertension (HealthDay)
- Obesity blamed for doubling rate of diabetes cases (AP)
- Consumer group asks government to ban Avandia (AP)
- Therapy plus Zoloft helps kids with anxiety (AP)
- Turning your clock back Sunday may help your heart (AP)
- Too much weight in pregnancy can make baby fat (Reuters)
- Teen pregnancies tied to tastes for sexy TV shows (AP)
- HEALTHBEAT: Brain slows at 40, starts body decline (AP)
- Study: War deployments make kids more aggressive (AP)
- Few options remain when job insurance disappears (AP)
- Study: Women lead men in bacteria, hands down (AP)
- Health Tip: Obesity and Your Child (HealthDay)
- General bucks culture of silence on mental health (AP)
- NY family opposes end to care for brain-dead boy (AP)
- Gov't seizes more contaminated heparin (AP)
- Study links lead in blood to wild game consumption (AP)
- Teen pregnancies tied to tastes for sexy TV shows (AP)
- Smoking Coupled With Obesity Raises Death Risk (HealthDay)
- Male hormone patch increases libido in women (Reuters)
- Despite failures, search for anti-obesity drugs still looks golden (AFP)
- Studies: Vitamin pills don't prevent heart disease (AP)
- Study: Wider cholesterol drug use may save lives (AP)
- Obama reviews Bush orders on stem cells, drilling (AP)
- African researchers plan malaria vaccine trial (AP)
- Music headphones can interfere with heart devices (AP)
- Studies: Elderly fare well in open-heart surgery (AP)
- Blood pressure gap leads to deaths of 8,000 blacks (AP)
- Rerouting urinary nerves may help spina bifida (AP)
- AMA acts against trans fats, texting while driving (AP)
- Fat kids found to have arteries of 45-year-olds (AP)
- Study: Deadly stomach bug more common than thought (AP)
- Study: Exercise offers little to heart patients (AP)
- British girl allowed to refuse heart transplant (AP)
- Study: Concerns on mixing Plavix, heartburn drugs (AP)
- Obese Kids Have Old Arteries (HealthDay)
- Report urges states to tackle preterm birth crisis (AP)
- Doctors say marrow transplant may have cured AIDS (AP)
- Study: Same-sex heart transplants are better (AP)
- Study: Diabetes drug fails to slow artery buildup (AP)
- Study: Brain stimulation may ease anxiety disorder (AP)
- Experts: Paranoia may be more common than thought (AP)
- Waist, hip size key to predicting health risk (Reuters)
- Doctors say marrow transplant may have cured AIDS (AP)
- Study: HPV vaccine prevents genital warts in males (AP)
- More countries make spreading HIV a crime (AP)
- Panel: Gulf War syndrome research lacking (AP)
- Pelvic Inflammation Puts Girls at Risk for Repeat STIs (HealthDay)
- AP NewsBreak: Gulf War vet health research lacking (AP)
- Pelvic Inflammation Puts Girls at Risk for Repeat STIs (HealthDay)
- High-Fat Diet While Pregnant May Produce Obese Kids (HealthDay)
- Deaths uncounted in China's tainted milk scandal (AP)
- Despite failures, search for obesity drugs still looks golden (AFP)
- Study: Vitamin C or E pills do not prevent cancer (AP)
- W. Virginia town shrugs at poorest health ranking (AP)
- Burlington, Vt., is healthiest city, CDC says (AP)
- Florence Wald, leader in US hospice, dies at 91 (AP)
- W. Virginia town shrugs at poorest health ranking (AP)
- UK-Odd Summary (Reuters)
- Family history can trump breast cancer gene test (AP)
- Burlington, Vt., is healthiest city, CDC says (AP)
- Counseling on alcohol key to teens' sexual health (Reuters)
- Doctors hoping for new era of artificial ankles (AP)
- Medicare wants limits for weight loss surgery (Reuters)
- Doctors transplant windpipe with stem cells (AP)
- Ginkgo fails to prevent Alzheimer's in large study (AP)
- Panel urges revised warning on facial filler risks (AP)
- Teen lives 4 months with no heart, leaves hospital (AP)
- Insurers make pitch for health coverage mandate (AP)
- Surgeon who did first US heart transplant dies (AP)
- Fast-food ad ban could cut child obesity: U.S. study (Reuters)
- Study: Banning fast-food TV ads could dent obesity (AP)
- Philippine family planning bill headed for defeat: Church (AFP)
- Teen lives 4 months with no heart, leaves hospital (AP)
- Obese have right to 2 airline seats: Canada court (Reuters)
- Pfizer drops bid to sell Viagra over the counter in Europe (AFP)
- Study: Pill as good as chemo on lung cancer, but costlier (AP)
- HIV tests not yet as routine as cholesterol checks (AP)
- Astronauts venture out for spacewalk No. 2 (AP)
- AP IMPACT: Govt pays millions for unapproved drugs (AP)
- Foes of stem cell research now face tough battle (AP)
- AP IMPACT: Govt pays millions for unapproved drugs (AP)
- Nap without guilt: Study finds it boosts sophisticated memory (AP)
- To some psychiatric patients, life seems like TV (AP)
- FDA: Epilepsy drug may be risky for Asians (AP)
- New tobacco product alarms some health officials (AP)
- High-protein meals may help overweight burn fat (Reuters)
- To some psychiatric patients, life seems like TV (AP)
- Nap without guilt: Study finds it boosts sophisticated memory (AP)
- FDA advisers recommend approval of new gout drug (AP)
- Study: Many kids in Katrina trailer park anemic (AP)
- FDA finds traces of melamine in top-selling U.S. infant formula (AP)
- Germ alert: Steer clear of flatbed chicken trucks (AP)
- Encouraging dip in rate of new cancers, deaths (AP)
- Livers go to sickest, access for blacks improves (AP)
- Study says HIV could be eliminated in a decade (AP)
- Obesity, lack of exercise reported in asthmatics (Reuters)
- Encouraging dip in rate of new cancers, deaths (AP)
- Separation planned for Oklahoma conjoined twins (AP)
- Patient-led drug trials defy medical establishment (AP)
- Fat-Sensing Hormones Might Fight Obesity (HealthDay)
- Calls for national infant formula recall spread (AP)
- Brain scans show root of memory glitch with aging (AP)
- Fat-Sensing Hormones Might Fight Obesity (HealthDay)
- FTC tosses guidance on tar, nicotine in cigarettes (AP)
- Ant aphrodisiac conman executed (Reuters)
- Amateurs are trying genetic engineering at home (AP)
- Millions of older Americans use risky drug combos (AP)
- Too sick to work? Need health care? Take a number (AP)
- Avoiding the painkiller-overuse rut in migraines (AP)
- FDA warns against some diet pills sold on the Web (AP)
- Low death rate after obesity surgery in Sweden (Reuters)
- Health Tip: Why You May Have Erectile Dysfunction (HealthDay)
- Calif. teen's family sues Cigna over transplant (AP)
- Health Tip: Why You May Have Erectile Dysfunction (HealthDay)
- US offers Viagra to win over Afghan warlords: report (AFP)
- Hospitals ill from more bad debt, credit troubles (AP)
- Study: Obesity surgery reverses diabetes in teens (AP)
- Country Doctor of Year: 50 years of house calls (AP)
- Study: Family behavior key to health of gay youth (AP)
- Gastric Bypass Halts Diabetes in Obese Teens (HealthDay)
- Many teens don't keep virginity pledges, study finds (HealthDay)
- Trying to prevent lymphedema after breast cancer (AP)
- Hard to hear at holiday parties? Blame your brain (AP)
- FDA approves new prostate cancer drug (AP)
- Gastric Bypass Halts Diabetes in Obese Teens (HealthDay)
- Many teens don't keep virginity pledges, study finds (HealthDay)
- Obese men have worse sperm quality than leaner men (Reuters)
- Smoking ban leads to major drop in heart attacks (AP)
- Overweight women have lower risk of premature birth (Reuters)
- Teens may not know risk factors for infertility (Reuters)
- Celgene warns that anticlot drug linked to deaths (AP)
- Pa. police find woman's body, 60 birds in trailer (AP)
- Weight loss surgery improves sexual function in men (Reuters)
- Doctor, former patient now colleagues in Detroit (AP)