Health News
Dear valued AOL News reader: Sphere.com is now the place for top news from the AOL News team, with original reporting, analysis and commentary from our ever-growing cast of top-notch journalists. Get Sphere News Now
Health Benefits Set to Expire for Laid-Off
posted: 20 DAYS 6 HOURS AGOcomments: 71
filed under: Health News, National News
Loneliness Is Contagious, Study Finds
posted: 21 DAYS 3 HOURS AGOcomments: 50
filed under: Health News, National News
Magnetic Discs Could Kill Cancer Cells
posted: 21 DAYS 21 HOURS AGOcomments: 137
filed under: Health News, Science News
College Requires Fitness Course
posted: 22 DAYS AGOcomments: 259
filed under: Health News
Mother's Instinct Saves Daughter
posted: 22 DAYS 2 HOURS AGOcomments: 253
filed under: Health News
Kangaroos May Hold Skin Cancer Cure
posted: 22 DAYS 2 HOURS AGOcomments: 23
filed under: Health News
More Health News
A dog in suburban New York is the first in the nation confirmed to be carrying the same strain of swine flu that is infecting humans, experts said Tuesday. Read More
A new Harvard poll finds that concern about swine flu has waned along with the number of new cases being reported. Read More
Emergency health alerts for the Facebook generation? The nation's ambulance crews are pushing a virtual medical ID system to rapidly learn a patient's health history during a crisis _ and which can immediately text-message loved ones that the person is headed for a hospital. Read More
A Maine legislator wants to make the state the first to require cell phones to carry warnings that they can cause brain cancer, although there is no consensus among scientists that they do and industry leaders dispute the claim. Read More
If you've had a heart attack or a bypass operation, there's an easy way to help prevent another one: stick with rehab. Read More
As Congress gets closer to a final health care bill, many Americans want to know: What's in it for me? Read More
An extremely rare infection has been passed from an organ donor to at least one recipient in what is thought to be the first human-to-human transfer of the amoeba, medical officials said Friday. Read More
The government's top public health agency frequently failed to police its outside experts for conflicts of interest, according to a new government report released Friday. Read More
Procter & Gamble Co. is recalling 700,000 packs of Vicks DayQuil capsules because they are not childproof. Read More
About 1 in 110 children have autism, according to the government's latest estimate released Friday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Read More
Austria's health ministry says the contraceptive morning-after pill is now available in pharmacies without a prescription. Read More
After weeks of shortages, swine flu vaccine is plentiful enough that nearly half the states now say everyone can get it, not just people in high-risk groups. Read More
A British medical journal has published findings saying a mistress of 16th-century French King Henry II may have died from consuming too much drinkable gold. Read More
The World Health Organization plans to start shipping swine flu vaccine to Azerbaijan, Afghanistan and Mongolia in the next few weeks, flu chief Keiji Fukuda said Thursday. Read More
Yes, Virginia, there really is a Santa Claus. And he's a public health menace. Read More
Sex researchers who tracked teenage girls in Indianapolis found that half of those studied had at least one sexually transmitted infection within two years of first having sex. Read More
Hundreds of thousands of swine flu shots for children have been recalled because tests indicate the vaccine doses lost some strength, government health officials said Tuesday. Read More
Thirteen patients with healthy new kidneys from what's believed to be the world's largest kidney exchange met the donors who made it happen Tuesday -- including three who are sure to face the question, "Why?" Read More
Malaria cases appear to have been slashed by half in more than a third of countries battling the disease following a renewed push by the United Nations to eradicate it, the World Health Organization said Tuesday. Read More
A decade-long decline in teens' use of pot has stalled and some teen attitudes on how harmful marijuana can be may be softening, according to a federal survey on teen drug use released Monday. Read More
Hottest Health Features
- Cellulite Cures
- Clues He Won't Cheat
- Health Fixes by Sign
- Twitter Yourself Thin
- Warnings from Your Nails
More from AOL Health
Sports
- AP Player of the Year: Suh scores one for the D
- Serena Williams is 2009 AP Female Athlete of Year
- Braves send Javy Vazquez Yankees for Cabrera
- Union challenges revenue-sharing cut
- Fiancee of Bengals' Henry speaks at his funeral
Money
- Court bans sale of Word; Microsoft has fix ready
- Holiday stragglers find shortages of hot items
- Strong economic rebound depends on more than Santa
- Stocks rise for 3rd day after jump in home sales
- Recovery likely strengthening after weaker 3Q
Technology
- Facebook: Forget Connecting, In the UK, It's All About Divorce
- Citigroup Denies Rumors of Cyber-Attack, FBI Investigation
- Firefox 3.5 Becomes World's Most Popular Browser
- Cat Strapped to GPS, Tracked by Owner
- Need a Silent Night? Doze Deep With These Dreamy Devices
Entertainment
- Murphy's Husband Lists Few Meds in House; Coroner Notes Say Otherwise
- Vote: What Was the Biggest Factor in Brittany Murphy's Death?
- Lily Cole on 'Imaginarium' and the 'Grotesque' Heath Ledger Effect
- Rachel Uchitel Fights Back Against Pregnancy Rumors
- Girls on Pop: Wrapping Up the '00s
Politics Daily
More News
- Senate sets final health care vote for Thursday morning
- Kercher killer's sentence reduced
- Special deals keep health bill afloat
- Court orders men's ears, noses cut off
- Brittany Murphy's husband mourns
- More Stories
- Gunmen Kill Family of Mexican Drug War Hero
- Economy Growing, But Less Than Expected
- Ruling on U.S. Boy's Fate Looms in Brazil
- Women and Heart Health
- Druids, Pagans Mark Solstice at Stonehenge
- More Stories






