Tuesday, June 21, 2016

Exclusive: In Zika-struck Puerto Rico, trouble delivering donated contraceptives and other top stories.

  • Exclusive: In Zika-struck Puerto Rico, trouble delivering donated contraceptives

    Exclusive: In Zika-struck Puerto Rico, trouble delivering donated contraceptives
    NEW YORK Only a small fraction of contraceptives donated in Puerto Rico to prevent Zika-related birth defects are expected to get to the women who need them this month, public health officials told Reuters.The donations - tens of thousands of intrauterine devices and birth control pill packs - came from major healthcare companies as the virus spreads rapidly through the island. The delivery delays illustrate the struggles of Puerto Rico’s healthcare system, which is faltering amid the commonwe..
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  • Experimental Zika vaccine approved for clinical trials for first time in US

    Experimental Zika vaccine approved for clinical trials for first time in US
    The Food and Drug Administration on Monday for the first time approved a clinical trial for an experimental vaccine for Zika virus, an early but significant step in the effort to combat a disease that has quickly emerged as a global health threat.The first people could be injected within a few weeks, said Inovio President and CEO Dr. Joseph Kim. Inovio, of Plymouth Meeting, Pa., and GeneOne Life Science, of Seoul, South Korea, will make the vaccine. Advertisement “We were the first to constr..
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  • Almost 2 Million U.S. Kids Get Concussions a Year: Study

    Almost 2 Million U.S. Kids Get Concussions a Year: Study
    MONDAY, June 20, 2016 (HealthDay News) -- Close to 2 million U.S. children and teens may suffer concussions annually, say researchers who add that the prevalence of head injuries among American youth has been underestimated for years.Using data from hospitals, doctor visits and athletic trainers, the investigators estimated between 1 million and 1.9 million concussions occur annually among kids aged 18 and younger due to sports and recreation injuries.But more than half a million of these head ..
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  • Dear Science: What does sunscreen SPF mean, and what happens if you mix them?

    Dear Science: What does sunscreen SPF mean, and what happens if you mix them?
    (Rachel Orr/The Washington Post) Dear Science: I'm gearing up for a summer vacation, and I've been burned before — so I want to make the most of all these half bottles of sunscreen left in my cabinet. If you mix equal amounts of SPF 10 sunscreen and SPF 30 sunscreen, do you get SPF 10, 20, 30 or 40? And what SPF should I be aiming for?  Here's what science has to say: Step away from the mixing bowl, friend. Mixing sunscreens is a no-no. But it's important to understand why. First, let's get ..
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  • Google Sharpens Search Results for 'Skin Rash,' 'Tummy Ache' and Other Symptoms

    Google Sharpens Search Results for 'Skin Rash,' 'Tummy Ache' and Other Symptoms
    Updated June 20, 2016 6:15 p.m. ET Google has a health problem. Its search results for medical symptoms aren’t very useful at best, and in many cases are alarmingly off base, frustrating patients and doctors alike. The Alphabet Inc. GOOGL 0.27 % -owned search giant says it has developed a cure. On Monday, it rolled out a new feature called symptom search. The next time you use the Google search app for iPhone and Android to look up something like “my tummy hurts,” “skin r..
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  • Colorado family says pharmacy error killed their son

    Colorado family says pharmacy error killed their son
    A Colorado family says a local pharmacy’s mix-up on their son’s hyperactivity medication contributed to his June 8 death. Jake Steinbrecher, 8, had taken Clonidine for three years and was hospitalized once before after a pharmacist prescribed 1,000 times the dosage he needed, The Denver Channel reported. “He immediately started having reactions to it,” Caroline Steinbrecher, Jake’s mom, told the news station. According to the National Institutes of Health (NIH), clonidine can be used alone or i..
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  • Are Commercial Brain-Training Programs Worth It?

    Are Commercial Brain-Training Programs Worth It?
    MONDAY, June 20, 2016 (HealthDay News) -- Brain-training programs like Lumosity or NeuroNation frequently tout scientific studies that show their products can truly sharpen a person's intellect.But at least some of these alleged benefits might be due to a fleeting placebo effect, a new study suggests.If people are told they are participating in a brain-boosting study, they wind up performing 5 to 10 points better on follow-up IQ tests than those left in the dark about the possible mental benefi..
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  • Firefighters support Relay for Life

    Firefighters support Relay for Life
    Buy PhotoMarion City Fire Fighter P.J. Titus applauds as cancer survivors walk by during the Relay For Life held at River Valley High School on Friday. Titus, a leukemia survivor, suited up in his full firefighter gear along with others from the Marion City Fire Department.(Photo: Matthew Hatcher/The Marion Star)Buy PhotoMARION - A firefighter's job isn't just tough; it's life threatening.Every day, men and women across the United States strap on 60 to 80 pounds of gear, rush into burning buildi..
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  • When Does HIV Become AIDS? - News

    When Does HIV Become AIDS? - News
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  • Free meals for doctors sway their drug prescribing, study says

    Free meals for doctors sway their drug prescribing, study says
    Doctors who were fed meals costing less than $20 later prescribed certain brand-name pills more often than rival medicines, according to an analysis of federal data published on Monday. And in most cases, costlier meals were associated with still higher prescribing rates for Medicare Part D drugs made by the same companies that provided the food.The findings, published in JAMA Internal Medicine, are likely to intensify an ongoing debate over the extent to which ties between drug makers and doct..
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Project: Eats draws thousands to Jersey City food festival .George Bengal, animal cruelty crusader of PSPCA, dies at 69 .
Jersey City man shot in foot early Friday, police say .Union workers rally in support of stalled Jersey City bills .

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