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Magnetic Discs Could Kill Cancer Cells
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College Requires Fitness Course
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Mother's Instinct Saves Daughter
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Kangaroos May Hold Skin Cancer Cure
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Diabetes Cases, Costs Expected to Soar
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Stifling Anger Tied to Heart Attacks
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Colon cancer deaths could drop dramatically in the next decade because of better screening and treatment, according to an optimistic new prediction by top researchers. Read More
Pet frogs are being blamed for a national salmonella outbreak that sickened at least 48 people. Read More
Federal health regulators are investigating reports of dangerous radiation levels at two more California hospitals, following earlier unsafe medical scans at a Los Angeles facility. 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
Talk about unnecessary misery: One in five Medicare patients winds up back in the hospital within a month _ even worse, one in four patients with heart failure. Read More
Swine flu infections continue to wane, just as vaccine is becoming plentiful enough that some communities are allowing everyone to get it, not just those in priority groups. Read More
Doctors and hospitals should stop using a device from Steris Corp. to sterilize surgical tools after reports of malfunction, according to the Food and Drug Administration. Read More
Two Brazilian officials accompanying President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva on a trip to Germany have been diagnosed with swine flu. Read More
Pharmaceutical executives laid out plans Friday to prevent the misuse of prescription painkillers, under pressure from regulators trying to stop hundreds of fatal overdoses each year. Read More
It was a story meant to captivate the United Nations: A dozen Cuban children with heart defects were forced to endure unnecessary surgery because the U.S. embargo blocked them from receiving American-made catheters. Read More
The European Medicines Agency warns that young children given GlaxoSmithKline's swine flu shot may get a fever after their second dose. Read More
Health officials are warning the public about fake e-mails inviting people to sign up for swine flu vaccine registrations. Read More
The new U.S. Surgeon General on Thursday called for stepped-up efforts in increasing the number of minority physicians. Read More
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
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
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
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