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Ex-Kiss Drummer Has Breast Cancer

Peter Criss has been in gangs and a famous rock band. Now the former drummer for Kiss is active in a less traditionally masculine sort of cause: Spreading the message that men, too, can get breast cancer.
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Drug Industry Back in Vaccine Business

The lure of big profits for drug makers may lead to a faster turn-around for new vaccines for diseases like AIDS, Alzheimer's and herpes. Just this fall and early next year, the H1N1 vaccines are expected to bring in billions.
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Study Links Folic Acid to Cancer Increase

A Norwegian study of heart patients finds that taking large doses of folic acid and vitamin B12 supplements can lead to a slightly increased rate of cancer, as well as death from other causes. But an American scientist questions the study.
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Heart Disease Found in Mummies

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mummy CAT scan
AP
Using modern scanning technology, scientists discover evidence of heart disease in ancient Egyptian mummies. Experts often blame coronary illness on such modern vices as smoking, processed sugars and saturated fats. Now they may take a second look at that thesis, and explore the possibility that clogged arteries are part of our genetic makeup.
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Sphere

Food Allergies on the Rise Among Kids

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A new study from the National Center for Health Statistics says that the number of children with food allergies is rising at an alarming rate. Between 1997 and 2007, the study indicates, allergies to such foods as peanuts, eggs, milk and wheat jumped by 18 percent. "We honestly don't know why there has been this increase," says one scientist.
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Doctors Separate Conjoined Twins

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Conjoined twins Trishna and Krishna
Getty Images
Doctors in Australia separate 2-year-old twin girls who were joined at the head. The marathon operation lasts 25 hours, and hospital officials say the girls are doing "very well." Sphere: Past Cases Offer Hope
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Big businesses are spending serious time and money trying to limit the swine flu pandemic's impact on operations, from bankrolling video on good hygiene to training employees to cover for co-workers with critical jobs. Read More

Some common strategies employers are using or planning to limit the spread of swine flu among their work force and keep operations going normally: Read More

Maybe you've been reading the health care bill in your spare time. Then perhaps you can answer this question: Read More

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Thailand has issued rules making sex change surgery more difficult _ including a requirement that potential candidates cross-dress for a year _ over fears that some patients are rushing into the operation, a medical association said Thursday. Read More

The World Health Organization says isolated cases of drug-resistant swine flu in Britain and the United States have not changed the agency's assessment of the disease. Read More

There's no evidence that the swine flu vaccine is causing any serious side effects, U.S. health officials said Wednesday, in their first report on the safety of the new vaccine. Read More

China has detected eight people infected with mutated forms of the swine flu virus, a health official said Wednesday, but flu drugs and vaccines still work against it. Read More

Let us give thanks _ and pass the Purell. Read More

The virus that causes AIDS is now spreading fastest in China through heterosexual sex, a trend demanding new strategies to stave off a rebound in the epidemic after years of progress in containing it, a United Nations report said. Read More

China has detected eight cases of swine flu mutation, a health official said Wednesday, amid longstanding concerns among scientists that the virus could change into a more dangerous form. Read More

Just as the swine flu pandemic seems to be waning around the country, some health officials are worried that Thanksgiving gatherings could lead to more infections. So the government has launched a new travel-health campaign. Read More

Canadian doctors have been advised not to use a batch of 170,000 doses of swine flu vaccine while authorities investigate reports of allergic reactions among recipients, drug maker GlaxoSmithKline PLC said Tuesday. Read More

Canadian doctors have been advised not to use a batch of 170,000 swine flu vaccines after six reports of serious allergic reactions among recipients, but there are no similar reports from other countries, pharmaceuticals company GlaxoSmithKline PLC said Tuesday. Read More

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

Schoolteacher Kinzi Blair makes only $46,000 a year, but she has what many would consider a "Cadillac" health plan, now targeted for a big tax increase by health reformers. Read More

A man who emerged from what doctors thought was a vegetative state says he was fully conscious for 23 years but could not respond because he was paralyzed, his mother said Monday. Read More

Parents who thought their preschoolers were spending time in home-based day cares, taking naps, eating healthy snacks and learning to play nicely with others may be surprised to discover they are sitting as many as two hours a day in front of a TV, according to a study published Monday. Read More






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