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US Doctors Save Burned Afghan Girl

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Razia Aziz
AP
Razia Aziz, 8, heads home after more than 15 surgeries and three months at a U.S. military hospital in Bagram, Afghanistan. American doctors helped pull the girl back from the brink of death after she was badly burned in a military operation in March. Disfigured for life, she assures the hospital staff she is ready to be reunited with her family.
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600 Neighborhoods Have Toxic Air

New data from the Environmental Protection Agency finds that there are millions of Americans living in nearly 600 neighborhoods where the air pollution puts them at a much higher risk for getting cancer.
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States With Toxic Air
Click through the gallery to see the states with the largest populations living in neighborhoods where the EPA considers the air pollution unacceptable.

Rank 1: New York
Stan Honda, AFP / Getty Images
Stan Honda, AFP / Getty Images
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Boy With Cancer Angry About Treatment

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Stomach Stapling May Lower Cancer Risk

Women who go through weight-loss surgery may cut their risk of cancer by as much as 40 percent, a new study finds. Researchers can't figure out why the surgery didn't have the same effect in men.
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Baby Survives After Life Support Dropped

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Incredible Medical Stories
British parents Emily Ashurst and Pete Vincent expected their baby, Grace, to die when she was taken off life support at 6 weeks old after spending four days in intensive care for group B streptococcus meningitis. But the baby kept breathing on her own and has been released from the hospital, London's Daily Mail reported.
SWNS
SWNS
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Bad Test Results Often Go Unreported

A new study finds that doctors failed to tell their patients about abnormal test results 1 out of 14 times. "It really does happen all too often," says the study's lead author.
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More Health News

Some swine flu cases in Michigan are raising questions about obesity's role in why some people with infections become seriously ill. Read More

One in three breast cancer patients identified in public screening programs may be treated unnecessarily, a new study says. Karsten Jorgensen and Peter Gotzsche of the Nordic Cochrane Centre in Copenhagen analyzed breast cancer trends at least seven years before and after government-run screening programs for breast cancer started in parts of Australia, Britain, Canada, Norway and Sweden. Read More

Eat less, live longer? It seems to work for monkeys: A 20-year study found cutting calories by almost a third slowed their aging and fended off death. This is not about a quick diet to shed a few pounds. Scientists have long known they could increase the lifespan of mice and more primitive creatures _ worms, flies _ with deep, long-term cuts from normal consumption. Read More

Arthritis supplements bought by millions of pet owners for their dogs, cats and horses sometimes skimp on the ingredients the makers claim can help aching paws and aging joints, and some contain high amounts of lead, an independent laboratory found. Read More

A form of ebola virus has been detected in pigs for the first time, raising concerns it could mutate and threaten humans, scientists report. Read More

The World Health Organization has approved a second cervical cancer vaccine, this one made by GlaxoSmithKline, meaning U.N. agencies and partners can now officially buy millions of doses of the vaccine for poor countries worldwide. Read More

Roughly a fourth of American women getting early abortions last year did so with drugs rather than surgery, statistics show, as a new study reported improved safety in using the so-called "abortion pill." Read More

An experimental drug helped monkeys and rabbits survive anthrax in a series of studies, suggesting it could be useful in case of another anthrax attack. Read More

A transplant surgeon who completed an unprecedented eight-way kidney swap this week said Tuesday he believes such intricate, multistate exchanges can drastically reduce the number of patients waiting for eligible donors. Read More

A Food and Drug Administration panel has recommended limits on Tylenol and other drugs containing acetaminophen because of risks for liver failure. Maximum recommended doses for over-the-counter Tylenol would be reduced. Percocet and Vicodin, two narcotic prescription drugs containing acetaminophen, would be banned. Read More

Proposed limits on Tylenol, a painkiller as common as pain itself, have left many consumers fearful, confused and wondering where to turn for relief. The potential government crackdown on acetaminophen, Tylenol's main ingredient, would affect everyone from occasional pill poppers to chronic pain sufferers who rely on daily doses to make their lives more bearable. Read More

Baby Riley Matthews wheezed noisily on the exam table. "He's belly-breathing," the emergency-room doctor said worriedly _ Riley's little abdomen was markedly rising and falling with each breath, a sign of respiratory distress. Read More

Sleepless people sometimes use the Internet to get through the night. Now a small study shows promising results for insomniacs with nine weeks of Internet-based therapy. Read More

The United Nations may need more than $1 billion this year to help poor countries fight the global swine flu epidemic, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said Monday. Read More

As President Barack Obama pushes to overhaul the American health care system, the role of government is at the heart of the debate. In Europe, free, state-run health care is a given. Read More

When carpenter Greg Douglas rolled his pickup truck, his toolbox hit him and smashed his ribs and collarbone. After a month in the hospital, the medical bills hit him even harder, totaling $165,000. Read More

A federal investigation has found that heart attack survivors enrolled in a study of a controversial alternative medicine treatment were not told enough about potential dangers from the drug being tested, including death. Read More

With swine flu continuing to spread around the world, researchers say they have found the reason it is _ so far _ more a series of local blazes than a wide-raging wildfire. The new virus, H1N1, has a protein on its surface that is not very efficient at binding with receptors in people's respiratory tracts, researchers at the Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology report in Friday's edition of the journal Science. Read More

Attorney General Eric Holder had emergency oral surgery Thursday to remove a cracked tooth. Read More

In a perverse twist of medical fate, Farrah Fawcett has become the poster girl for anal cancer, a rare disease often linked to a sexually transmitted virus. Read More



Health News Quiz

Split showing a person on a plane, someone running and someone eating Getty Images

What activity can more than double your chance of getting a blood clot?