Jan 12 - By Mike Celizic, msnbc.com - Only on msnbc.com
The choice was stark: Either allow a once-active young boy’s body to continue to deteriorate painfully, or let a surgeon try a risky brain procedure that could cure him, cause further damage — or kill him.
Jan 12 - By Lauran Neergaard, AP Medical Writer
Emergency planners are struggling to identify growing millions who need fast rescue when the lights go out: A power outage also shuts down their life-supporting home medical equipment.
Jan 11 - By Eve Tahmincioglu
Marian Robinson quit her job in 2007 to help raise her grandchildren.
Jan 11 - By Mike Stobbe, AP Medical Writer
Children who want to be vegetarians need to "fill in the blanks" of their low-protein diets by eating alternatives to red meat, fish and poultry, experts say.
Jan 11 - By Mike Stobbe, AP Medical Writer
Sam Silverman is co-captain of his high school football team — a safety accustomed to bruising collisions. But that's nothing compared with the abuse he gets for being a vegetarian.
Jan 9 - By Mike Stobbe, AP Medical Writer
The woman who led the nation's top public health agency for more than six years is leaving the post with a mixed legacy.
Jan 9 - By Ronald Blum, AP Baseball Writer
Baseball authorized nearly 8 percent of its players to use drugs for ADHD last season, which allowed them to take otherwise banned stimulants.
Jan 9 - By Jeff Barnard, Associated Press Writer
There are so many parents in this free-spirited, unconventional small town who won't get their kids vaccinated that federal researchers are paying money just to hear their side of things. On Saturday, 80 locals will get $50 apiece to talk about their worries over the risks of childhood shots.
Jan 9 - By Eve Tahmincioglu
After the initial shock of being fired wears off, some people start to feel angry and sure that their former employer is trying to screw them out of what they’re entitled to, such as severance or vacations days.
Jan 9 - By Associated Press
China's top food and drug regulator has ordered a halt to the sale and production of the weight-loss drug fenfluramine hydrochloride, citing its harmful side effects.
Jan 8 - By Tini Tran, Associated Press Writer
China plans a major revamp of its public hospitals — criticized for their lack of access, huge fees and poor doctor services — as part of its long-awaited reform of the national health care system.
Jan 8 - By Maria Cheng, AP Medical Writer
Anti-psychotic drugs commonly used to treat Alzheimer's disease may double a patient's chance of dying within a few years, suggests a new study that adds to concerns already known about such medications.
Jan 8 - By Tom Curry, msnbc.com - Only on msnbc.com
- While tax cuts are an integral part of President-elect Barack Obama’s stimulus plan, the newly convened Congress and the incoming commander in chief are nonetheless preparing for a tax hike.
Jan 8 - By Mike Celizic, msnbc.com - Only on msnbc.com
It is not panic time for the Boston Celtics, not with the season less than half over and the Big Three still operating at a high level. Somebody has to get that message through to Danny Ainge in the front office before he does something blindingly stupid, like acquiring Stephon Marbury.
Jan 7 - By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar, Associated Press Writer
The nation's largest medical lab company says it recently discovered and fixed a problem that led to inaccuracies in a small number of tests for vitamin D deficiency.
Jan 7 - By Stephanie Nano, Associated Press Writer
Babies do better after a scheduled Caesarean section if they're born no sooner than seven days before their due date, a new large study of U.S. births shows. Those delivered earlier had more complications, including breathing problems, even though they were full term, the researchers reported in Thursday's New England Journal of Medicine. Even just a few days made a difference, they said.
Jan 7 - By Mike Stobbe, AP Medical Writer
Federal officials have not yet identified the cause of a salmonella outbreak striking almost 400 people in 42 states, but state officials in Minnesota said Friday they believe peanut butter may be involved. On Friday, the Minnesota Department of Health said preliminary laboratory testing found salmonella bacteria in a 5-pound container of King Nut brand creamy peanut butter. The tests have not linked it to the type of salmonella in the national outbreak, but additional results are expected early next week.