Acne help can be as close as your back yard. One friend’s daughter came home from university with a face full of pimples. “Okay,” said my friend, skilled in the natural healing arts, “off to the clay cave with you.”
Acne help can be as close as your back yard. One friend’s daughter came home from university with a face full of pimples. “Okay,” said my friend, skilled in the natural healing arts, “off to the clay cave with you.”
THURSDAY, Sept. 9 (HealthDay News) -- Here's yet another reason
to avoid obesity throughout your life: Doing so may improve your chances
of survival if you're diagnosed with colon cancer.
Here are some of the latest health and medical news developments,
compiled by the editors of HealthDay:
All patients in a study of a Johnson & Johnson drug for advanced prostate cancer will be offered the medicine after an independent monitoring committee found it demonstrated an improvement in patient survival.
U.S. reforms will slightly accelerate the rise in healthcare spending, according to a survey released on Thursday, handing Republicans more ammunition as they attack the Obama administration's legislative victory.
A U.S. appeals court granted on Thursday an Obama administration request for a temporary stay that lifts a judge's ban on federal funding of research involving human embryonic stem cells.
(HealthDay News) -- Here are the latest clinical trials, courtesy
of ClinicalConnection.com:
THURSDAY, Sept. 9 (HealthDay News) -- Two new studies provide
evidence that smoking can harm sperm - both in smoking men who may become
fathers, and in sons born to women who smoked during pregnancy.
(HealthDay News) -- Acne, the most common skin disease, is not a
dangerous condition. But it can lead to permanent scarring.
THURSDAY, Sept. 9 (HealthDay News) -- Americans who have health
insurance through large, employer-sponsored health plans will see a number
of plan design changes in 2011, and they'll be paying more for that
coverage, employers and benefits ...
THURSDAY, Sept. 9 (HealthDay News) -- Different risk factors
contribute to indoor and outdoor falls among the elderly and these
differences need to be incorporated into fall prevention programs, a new
study suggests.
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