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Target for universal access to HIV medicine is missed BBC News By Jane Dreaper Health correspondent, BBC News A new report says only a third of people worldwide who need life-saving HIV drugs are actually getting treated. World leaders had pledged to achieve universal access to HIV medication by the end of this ... See all stories on this topic » | ||
Health Buzz: Kids With Food Allergies Often Bullied U.S. News & World Report By Angela Haupt Call them the allergy bullies: One scattered peanut butter cookie crumbs in the lunchbox of a middle school student allergic to peanuts. Another smeared peanut butter on a high school student's forehead. More than 30 percent of children ... See all stories on this topic » | ||
October: National Breast Cancer Awareness Month Food Consumer October is National Breast Cancer Awareness Month - a campaign launched 25 years ago to raise awareness of breast cancer nationwide. We post below some news on the disease for those who may be interested. Becoming aware of this disease and having it ... See all stories on this topic » | ||
Surgery For Aggressive Prostate Cancer Gives 92% 10-year Survival Rate Medical News Today Patients with the most aggressive form of prostate cancer who have surgery - radical prostatectomy - were found to have a 10-year cancer-specific survival rate of 92%, which is high, and a 77% overall survival rate, according to researchers from the ... See all stories on this topic » | ||
Celiac disease can develop later in life: study CTV.ca Celiac disease is a digestive affliction which attacks the tissue in the small intestine, which can result in abdominal pain, bloating and cramping. New research suggests celiac disease can develop at any age -- even in seniors who seemed for decades ... See all stories on this topic » | ||
Baby Boomer Suicides on the Rise eMaxHealth The baby boomers who once were hippies and flower children in the 1960s and 70s and protested for peace are now reaching retirement age and are killing themselves at unprecedented numbers. "This is a striking new trend," says social demographer Julie ... See all stories on this topic » | ||
Some US executions held up by shortage of drug The Associated Press COLUMBUS, Ohio — Some executions in the US have been put on hold because of a shortage of one of the drugs used in lethal injections from coast to coast. Several of the 35 states that rely on lethal injection are either scrambling to find sodium ... See all stories on this topic » |
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