Health NewsHealth News

News Video
Find, view and share videos about news and entertainment from around the Web.
See Videos »

News Alerts

The latest updates sent straight to your inbox.

Get AOL News Alerts »

Diarrhea, Pneumonia Top Child Killers

Diseases such as HIV and malaria often get the most attention for the toll they take on young people globally, but two age-old illnesses are far more deadly for children. Diarrhea and pneumonia kill an estimated 3.5 million kids under 5 each year.
Full Coverage »

GOP Blasts 'Bait and Switch' Health Bill

Republican senators and governors slam the Democrats' newly minted health care legislation. "It makes no sense at all and affronts common sense," says Sen. Judd Gregg of New Hampshire. Despite the criticism, Democrats appear likely to prevail on an initial Senate showdown set for Saturday night. Also See: Bill Includes 'Botax'
Skip over this content


Full Coverage »

Diabetic's Rare Condition Baffles Docs

Skip over this content
Alice Halstead
ZUMA
A British teen may have to sleep in a hospital bed for the rest of her life due to an extreme form of diabetes that baffles doctors. Alice Halstead requires round-the-clock care because her blood sugar fluctuates wildly.
Full Coverage »

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.
Full Coverage »
Sphere

Critics Blast Advice About Mammograms

Skip over this content
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
Full Coverage »
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.
Skip over this content
Full Coverage »
More Stories on Next Page
« »
1 2 3 4 5 6 7

More Health News

When pregnant Cambodian women suffer morning sickness, they often reach for an unlikely source of relief: a wad of chewing tobacco. Read More

Hospitals are giving faster care to lots more heart attack patients, a speed-up sure to be saving lives. Read More

A robotic hand has been successfully connected to an amputee, allowing him to feel sensations in the artificial limb and control it with his thoughts, a group of European scientists said Wednesday. Read More

South Africa announced ambitious new plans Tuesday for earlier and expanded treatment for HIV-positive babies and pregnant women, a change that could save hundreds of thousands of lives in the nation hardest hit by the virus that causes AIDS. Read More

U.S. health regulators have warned Tyson Foods about unsanitary conditions at a Texas plant that makes seafood soups. Read More

Consumers are increasingly turning to the Web to compare medical fees as the economy and less generous health benefits squeeze household budgets. Read More

Drug giant GlaxoSmithKline says one of its swine flu vaccines has been certified by the World Health Organization, making it available for donors to buy for developing countries. Read More

Swine flu infections seem to be dropping, but the number of children who died with the illness rose by about 30, according to a government report released Monday. Read More

Learning anatomy with cadavers is a centuries-old rite of passage that once again is getting a face-lift as medical schools struggle to mix this core knowledge with an explosion of new information from the genetics revolution. Read More

Color-coded denim cloths cover the row upon row of black body bags atop cold metal tables. Blue means a body that eventually will go into a common grave. Tan, the family wants those remains back for burial, eventually. Read More

The first rigorous study of behavior treatment in autistic children as young as 18 months found two years of therapy can vastly improve symptoms, often resulting in a milder diagnosis. Read More

People infected with the virus that causes AIDS should start treatment earlier than currently recommended, the World Health Organization said Monday. Read More

Some common strategies employers are using or planning to limit the spread of swine flu among their work force and keep operations going normally: Read More

Maybe you've been reading the health care bill in your spare time. Then perhaps you can answer this question: Read More

The estimate was startling, and made headlines around the country: Almost half of all U.S. kids will be on food stamps at some time during childhood. Read More

The young invincibles. That's what the insurance industry calls them. Read More

Thousands of drivers on the nation's roads don't carry auto insurance, despite laws in all but two states requiring it. Critics of President Barack Obama's health overhaul plan ask: What are the chances scofflaws will treat a requirement to carry health insurance any differently? Read More

Thailand has issued rules making sex change surgery more difficult _ including a requirement that potential candidates cross-dress for a year _ over fears that some patients are rushing into the operation, a medical association said Thursday. Read More

The World Health Organization says isolated cases of drug-resistant swine flu in Britain and the United States have not changed the agency's assessment of the disease. Read More

There's no evidence that the swine flu vaccine is causing any serious side effects, U.S. health officials said Wednesday, in their first report on the safety of the new vaccine. Read More






Health News u2013 latest news on health, cancer, pregnancy, nutrition, health care, weight loss, health insurance, medical research and more. Get tips on losing weight, eating right, and living a healthy lifestyle.