Send Us Feedback

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 »

Now Hear This: Don't Remove Earwax

The old saying of "don't put anything smaller than your elbow in your ear" is still good advice. According to new medical guidelines, earwax has a useful purpose and should typically just be left alone. But does anyone really want to hear that?

Full Coverage »

Woman Detects Cancer From Tot's Photo

A Florida mom learns her 1-year-old daughter has eye cancer thanks to an alert cyber-pal who spotted the tumor in a photo sent over the Internet. Because of early detection, the toddler's prognosis is good.
Full Coverage »

Advance May Help Restore Hearing Loss

Scientists say they have succeeded in regrowing tiny hairs in the inner ears of mice. Those hairs are key to hearing. The finding may lead to ways to restore hearing loss in humans.
Full Coverage »

Sleep Helps Preserve Emotional Memories

Sleep tends to help people better remember aspects of a negative event while allowing memory of background information to fade, researchers say. This suggests that the brain makes decisions about what to remember and what to forget. You might say that sleep is actually working at night to decide what memories to hold on to and what to let go of," said Harvard Medical School's Dr. Jessica D. Payne.

Full Coverage »

Throat Cancer Rising Among Whites in US

Throat cancer rates have risen more than 330 percent among white women and more than 450 percent among white men over the last three decades, a report says. Risk factors for the cancer -- also known as adenocarcinoma of the esophagus -- include gastroesophageal reflux disease and obesity, experts say.
Full Coverage »
ADVERTISEMENT

Skin Cancer May Up Risk of Other Cancers

Most patients breathe a huge sigh of relief when they're told that their skin cancer is non-melanoma, but researchers in South Carolina say the non-fatal form of the disease may be a "warning sign" that they're more cancer-prone in general. A study finds that people who have non-melanoma are twice as likely to develop other, more serious types of cancer.

Full Coverage »
More Stories on Next Page
« »
1 2 3 4 5 6 7

More Health News

Scientists for the first time have peered into people's brains to directly measure the ebb and flow of a substance notorious for its role in Alzheimer's disease. Read More

Almost 12 percent of the deaths among American Indians and Alaska Natives are alcohol-related _ more than three times the percentage in the general population, a new federal report says. Read More

In an Aug. 26 story about a new TV ad linking hot dogs with cancer, The Associated Press, relying on figures provided by a nutrition adviser to the American Institute for Cancer Research, erroneously reported average risks for colon cancer and how eating hot dogs affects those risks. Karen Collins said she misstated the average adult's lifetime risk for getting colorectal cancer, which is about 5 percent, not 5.8 percent. Read More

Talk about an extreme makeover: Scientists have transformed one type of cell into another in living mice, a big step toward the goal of growing replacement tissues to treat a variety of diseases. Read More

A Palestinian couple locked their disabled son and daughter away for decades out of fear they would ruin the marriage prospects of a healthy child if discovered, police said Wednesday. Read More

New data show New York City residents are contracting the virus that causes AIDS at three times the national rate. Read More

What does a company do when there's anecdotal evidence that two of its drugs are equally effective in treating a leading cause of blindness in the elderly, one costing patients $60 per treatment and the other $2,000? Read More

Government regulators on Wednesday cleared the way for broader use of a blood test that can spare heart transplant patients the ordeal of repeated biopsies to check if their bodies are rejecting the new organ. Read More

A new TV commercial shows kids eating hot dogs in a school cafeteria and one little boy's haunting lament: "I was dumbfounded when the doctor told me I have late-stage colon cancer." Read More

A new TV commercial shows kids eating hot dogs in a school cafeteria and one little boy's haunting lament: "I was dumbfounded when the doctor told me I have late-stage colon cancer." Read More

Infections may play a bigger role in premature birth than doctors have thought, says a new study that found almost one in seven women in preterm labor harbored bacteria or fungi in their amniotic fluid. Read More

It's one of the biggest frustrations of life with food allergies: That hodgepodge of warnings that a food might accidentally contain the wrong ingredient. Read More

Transplanting faces may seem like science fiction, but doctors say the experimental surgeries could one day become routine. Two of the world's three teams that have done partial face transplants reported Friday that their techniques were surprisingly effective, though complications exist and more work is still needed. Read More

Transplanting faces may seem like science fiction, but doctors say the experimental surgeries could one day become routine. Two of the world's three teams that have done partial face transplants reported Friday that their techniques were surprisingly effective, though complications exist and more work is still needed. Read More

Measles cases in the U.S. are at the highest level in more than a decade, with nearly half of those involving children whose parents rejected vaccination, health officials reported Thursday. Read More

Consumers worried about salad safety may soon be able to buy fresh spinach and iceberg lettuce zapped with just enough radiation to kill E. coli and a few other germs. Read More

Federal drug safety regulators said Thursday they are investigating whether the cholesterol-lowering drug Vytorin can increase patients' risk of developing cancer. Read More

An expensive vaccine aimed at preventing cervical cancer makes sense for young teens when it comes to cost-effectiveness, but not for women in their 20s, contends a new report. Read More

A new analysis of government data is the first to link low-level arsenic exposure, possibly from drinking water, with Type 2 diabetes, researchers say. The study's limitations make more research necessary. And public water systems were on their way to meeting tougher U.S. arsenic standards as the data were collected. Read More

The best path to a clogged heart may be through the wrist. About a million artery-clearing angioplasties are performed in the United States each year, and the usual route is to thread a tube to the heart through an artery in the groin. Read More

News Makers

NewsmakersOh, how he's changed from his Jackson 5 days. The King of Pop turns 50.1 of 6

News Makers

Health News Quiz

Orange juice Chicago Tribune / MCT

Do some fruit juices impact the potency of drugs?




* Want the latest Hot Seat polls delivered to your Vista desktop? Hot Seat Vista Gadget »

Top Photos

Top PhotosMichael Sohn, AP

Russian boxer Nikolai Valuev, left, and U.S. boxer John Ruiz face off in Berlin, Friday. Click through the gallery and vote on your favorite photos.

Star Bloggers

Ada Calhoun
Dinesh D'Souza
The Young Turks