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Diabetes Cases, Costs Expected to Soar

The number of Americans with diabetes will nearly double by 2034, and the costs of treating them will triple, says a University of Chicago report. The authors say that today's price tag for treating the disease, about $113 billion annually, will rise to $336 billion annually.
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Stifling Anger Tied to Heart Attacks

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Don't keep your anger bottled up at work. A Swedish study finds that men who don't express their anger over work-related conflicts are more than twice as likely to have a heart attack.
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Holiday Could Spread H1N1, CDC Warns

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AP
Just as the spread of the swine flu seems to be losing steam, government health officials warn that people traveling and gathering with family and friends for Thanksgiving could lead to an increase in cases of the virus.
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Doctors Treat ADHD with Marijuana

In California, a growing number of children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, or ADHD, are being treated with marijuana. This fact has sparked a heated debate. But as some doctors point out, the two most commonly prescribed medications for ADHD, Ritalin and Aderall, are essentially amphetamines. One expert even speculated that pot may prove to be a "wonder drug" for such patients.
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HIV Outbreak Peaked in 1996, UN Says

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AIDS pills
MCT
The number of people worldwide infected with the AIDS virus has remained flat for two years at 33 million, and the worldwide epidemic likely reached its apex in 1996, United Nations experts say. There are now 4 million people being treated with AIDS drugs around the globe, up 10 times from five years ago.
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Man in Coma for 23 Years: I Was Alert

A Belgian man crashed his car in 1983 and doctors said he was in a vegetative state. But Ron Houben says he was conscious all the while -- but unable to speak or even cry out. Doubtful of the doctors' diagnosis, his mother found a physician who put her son through a PET scan that indicated he could touch and feel.
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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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