Wednesday, April 6, 2016

Diabetes was once a problem of the rich. Now it belongs to the poor. and other top stories.

  • Diabetes was once a problem of the rich. Now it belongs to the poor.

    Diabetes was once a problem of the rich. Now it belongs to the poor.
    A woman fills a syringe as she prepares to give herself an injection of insulin at her home in California. (Reed Saxon/AP file) As the global diabetes rate soared over the past quarter-century, the affected population transformed: What was once predominantly a rich-country problem has become one that disproportionately affects poorer countries. That's one of the many conclusions of the World Health Organization's first global report on the chronic disease. Worldwide, diabetes rates nearly do..
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  • White House finds temporary fix in Zika funding fight

    White House finds temporary fix in Zika funding fight
    WASHINGTON The White House said on Wednesday it will redirect $589 million in funds to prepare for the Zika virus before the mosquito that carries it begins to emerge in the continental United States, but urged Congress to act quickly on its request for more money.White House budget director Shaun Donovan said the use of money previously provided for fighting another health crisis, the Ebola virus, was only a temporary fix for Zika funding.Donovan said some measures to fight Zika would have to..
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  • Inflectra Approved as 'Biosimilar' to Remicade

    Inflectra Approved as 'Biosimilar' to Remicade
    By Scott Roberts, HealthDay ReporterWEDNESDAY, April 6, 2016 (HealthDay News) -- The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved its second-ever "biosimilar" drug, Inflectra, for adults with Crohn's disease, rheumatoid arthritis or chronic plaque psoriasis, among other prescribed uses. In a media release, the agency said Inflectra was biosimilar to Janssen Biotech's Remicade (infliximab), first licensed in 1998. A biosimilar drug is sanctioned based on its maker's ability to show that it is ..
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  • DEA to decide within months whether to change federal status of marijuana

    DEA to decide within months whether to change federal status of marijuana
    The Drug Enforcement Administration says it plans to decide within the next several months whether to change the federal status of marijuana, according to a letter sent to lawmakers this week.Marijuana is currently classified as a Schedule I drug, alongside the likes of LSD and heroin, which means it is deemed to have a high potential for abuse and no current accepted medical use. Rescheduling of marijuana could open the floodgates for research on potential medical uses of the drug, a move that..
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  • No Long-Term Benefit from RT Escalation in Low-Risk Prostate Ca

    No Long-Term Benefit from RT Escalation in Low-Risk Prostate Ca
    Action Points Note that this meta-analysis of studies examining dose-escalation of radiation therapy for prostate cancer found that the modality does reduce the risk of biochemical failure, but has no effect on overall mortality.Be aware that the study involved only men with localized prostate cancer. A review of 12 randomized controlled trials from 1990 or later of escalating external-beam radiation therapy (EBRT) in 6,884 men with localized prostate cancer found improvement in free..
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  • Should You Really Choose Low-Fat Dairy?

    Should You Really Choose Low-Fat Dairy?
    If you're worried about your health, you may be reaching for low-fat dairy products when you go shopping. After all, that's what the US Dietary Guidelines and many health organizations recommend. Well, it turns out that there isn't much evidence to back those recommendations up. And now two new studies out this week call into question the wisdom of that advice. The first study looked at the relationship between the development of diabetes and dairy fat levels in the blood in participants fr..
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  • Why Do I Choose Not To Sleep?

    Why Do I Choose Not To Sleep?
    "If I go to sleep now, I can still get a solid 4 hours..." I can't even tell you how many times I've used this line to tell myself that my behavior is okay. I've also attempted to sharpen my mental math skills trying to figure out the latest possible time I can go to sleep to get four hours of rest. It's a minimum I've determined myself, a number of how many hours I believe I personally need to function. But I can never seem to get it right because I make these decisions when I'm already sleep-..
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  • Janice Dickinson Opens Up About Her Cancer Battle Ahead

    Janice Dickinson Opens Up About Her Cancer Battle Ahead
    Just days after revealing that she has breast cancer, Janice Dickinson opened up about the battle ahead. "I used to obsess over image. I'm the world's first supermodel. I've been in front of cameras. I will never keep quiet when something is bothering me.
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  • Port worker died in tank because company cut corners, OSHA says

    Port worker died in tank because company cut corners, OSHA says
    Routine safety precautions might have saved the life of a worker at the Port of New Orleans who suffocated inside of a chemical tank, federal investigators have concluded. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration is proposing $226,000 in fines against Armond Stack's employer, Dedicated Tank Cleaning Services, in connection with nine safety violations. Armond StackRobert McClendon, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune  The Illinois company, which has a history of flouting safety rules, sent A..
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2 Killed After Tree Falls On Car In Abington .More flights will be allowed at Newark Airport .
Weeks before killing, man accused of choking woman in front of their ... .Town: Ex-cop found 'unfit for duty,' should remain fired .

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