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Haiti Has Surprising Good News on AIDS

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Can Blood Test Predict Success of IVF?

A simple blood test may be able to determine a woman's success or failure in getting pregnant through in vitro fertilization (IVF), researchers say. While experts caution that the findings are still preliminary, they say the results are promising and the test may be used one day.
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Antismoking Proposal Gets Graphic

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New Yorkers may soon see their local grocery stores decorated with gruesome antismoking posters. The city's Department of Health wants to post graphic images of the negative health effects of smoking at the cash registers of cigarette-selling establishments.
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Mississippi Remains Most Obese State

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Obese person
AP
Mississippi holds on to its ranking as the nation's fattest state, with 32.5 percent of its population classified as obese, according to new health statistics. But it faces stiff competition from Alabama, whose obesity rate jumps to 31.2 percent because of a surge in heavy baby boomers. Adult obesity rates rose in 23 states and declined in none, the report says.
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Vaccine Shot Could Stop Type 1 Diabetes

There may be hope for those living with Type 1 diabetes -- doctors are testing a vaccine-like treatment for the disease. Though the experiment is only in the early stages, if the tests are successful, researchers could use the immunosuppressive therapy to treat diabetic children.
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Dr David Finegold administers vaccine injections
Keith Srakocic, AP

Dr. David Finegold administers a vaccine-like injection into patient Tracey Berg-Fulton's abdomen, as part of an experimental therapy for Type 1 diabetes. The blisters forming at the four injection sites are a good sign for the test.

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Panel Urges Smaller Doses of Painkillers

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Tylenol
AP
The maximum daily doses for Tylenol, Excedrin and other painkillers should be reduced to prevent deadly overdoses, a government panel recommends. The medications contain acetaminophen, one of the nation's most widely used drugs and its leading cause of liver failure. The panel also calls for the elimination of Vicodin and Percocet.
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A former surgery technician may have exposed thousands of Colorado patients to hepatitis C when she swapped her own dirty syringes for ones filled with a powerful narcotic, federal authorities said Thursday. Read More

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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

The number of U.S. swine flu cases has reached nearly 34,000, and deaths have risen 34 percent in the past week to 170, federal health officials reported Thursday. 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

When Michael Jackson went into cardiac arrest, rescuers took him to a place known for bringing the dead back to life. A world-renowned surgeon at the UCLA Medical Center has pioneered a way to revive people that most doctors would have long written off, including a woman whose heart had stopped for 2 1/2 hours. Read More

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A handful of typos in a mysterious region of the human genetic code are connected to a slightly higher risk of schizophrenia, new studies show. Read More

A bone growth agent used in thousands of spinal fusion surgeries for neck pain has been linked to complications and higher cost, according to the first nationwide study of the product. Safety questions arose last year about the protein product, BMP, when used in fusion surgeries in the neck region, a use not approved by federal regulators. Read More

For men with fertility problems, some doctors are prescribing a very conventional way to have a baby: more sex. Read More

The doctor had barely pulled away the needle when a blister appeared on Tracey Berg-Fulton's abdomen: An experimental shot was revving up the 24-year-old's immune system -- part of a bold quest to create a vaccine-like therapy for diabetes. Read More

For the first time, a case of swine flu has proven resistant to Tamiflu _ the leading pharmaceutical weapon against the new virus, international health officials said Monday. Read More

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Two new techniques to preserve and transplant ovaries might give women a better chance to fight their biological clocks and have children when they are older, doctors announced Monday. Read More

The government declared an end to a shortage of a childhood vaccine that protects against bacterial meningitis, pneumonia and other serious infections. Read More

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A celebrity like Apple CEO Steve Jobs scores a rare organ transplant and the world wonders: Did he game the system? The rich have plenty of advantages that others don't. But winning the "transplant lottery" involves more than the size of your wallet _ and true medical need. Read More

People exposed to rabies need only four vaccinations, not the five currently recommended, a vaccine advisory committee said Wednesday. In the past, rabies shots were dreaded almost as much as the disease itself. Until the 1970s, an encounter with a rabid animal led to at least 14 shots in the abdomen. But vaccines have improved, and five shots in the arm or thigh have been the U.S. standard for more than 20 years. Read More



Health News Quiz

Split showing a dog, bird and hamster Getty Images

Which kind of pet was linked to the infectious superbug?