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Obese Man Dies After 8 Months in Chair

Firefighters in South Carolina had to cut a severely overweight man out of the recliner where he had stayed for eight months without moving. Daniel Webb, who was 33 years old and weighed about 800 pounds, according to deputies, died in a hospital. His mother had called paramedics. Webb's wife, Ada, says her husband had been in the chair since injuring his knee in March.
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Sphere

Critics Blast Advice About Mammograms

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Woman getting mammogram
AP
New guidelines for breast cancer screenings lead to sharp disagreements among doctors. Some support the government panel's findings. Others, like Dr. Constance Lehman of Seattle's Cancer Care Alliance, consider them a "totally misguided effort to save money."
Also See: US Panel Suggests Guidelines
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Politics Daily

Senate Health Bill Would Cost $849B

The Democrats take another big step in their effort to overhaul health care as Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid unveils his reform bill. The measure, clocking in at $849 billion, would cover 94 percent of Americans. "It will save lives. It saves money and it's not going to add one dime to the deficit," Reid promises.
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Ex-Kiss Drummer Has Breast Cancer

Peter Criss has been in gangs and a famous rock band. Now the former drummer for Kiss is active in a less traditionally masculine sort of cause: Spreading the message that men, too, can get breast cancer.
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Drug Industry Back in Vaccine Business

The lure of big profits for drug makers may lead to a faster turn-around for new vaccines for diseases like AIDS, Alzheimer's and herpes. Just this fall and early next year, the H1N1 vaccines are expected to bring in billions.
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Study Links Folic Acid to Cancer Increase

A Norwegian study of heart patients finds that taking large doses of folic acid and vitamin B12 supplements can lead to a slightly increased rate of cancer, as well as death from other causes. But an American scientist questions the study.
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The virus that causes AIDS is now spreading fastest in China through heterosexual sex, a trend demanding new strategies to stave off a rebound in the epidemic after years of progress in containing it, a United Nations report said. Read More

Let us give thanks _ and pass the Purell. Read More

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Canadian doctors have been advised not to use a batch of 170,000 swine flu vaccines after six reports of serious allergic reactions among recipients, but there are no similar reports from other countries, pharmaceuticals company GlaxoSmithKline PLC said Tuesday. Read More

The number of people worldwide infected with the virus that causes AIDS — about 33 million — has remained virtually unchanged for the past two years, United Nations experts said Tuesday. Read More

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A man who emerged from what doctors thought was a vegetative state says he was fully conscious for 23 years but could not respond because he was paralyzed, his mother said Monday. Read More

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Lawmakers broke along party lines on a new aspect of the health care debate Sunday as a former National Institutes of Health chief urged women to ignore guidelines that delay the start of breast cancer screenings. Read More

The former director of the National Institutes of Health is advising women to ignore new guidelines that delay the start of routine mammogram testing for breast cancer. Read More

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In a Nov. 17 story about drug interactions between heartburn medications and the blood thinner Plavix, The Associated Press misidentified Johnson & Johnson's Mylanta as part of the H-2 blocker drug family. Mylanta is an antacid. Read More

Babies squirmed and wailed as needles plunged into their chubby thighs at a public health clinic on the outskirts of Hanoi on Friday. Like little ones everywhere, the reaction to the sting was never pretty. Read More

When the nation's swine flu vaccination program began in early October, health officials predicted it was going to be "messy." They were right. Read More

China's health ministry said it will punish officials who underreport cases of swine flu after a doctor famous for exposing the extent of the 2003 SARS epidemic said he believes the true number of swine flu deaths is being covered up. Read More






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