| | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | |
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Surgery for cataracts can help older drivers see the road more clearly, and may get some former drivers behind the wheel again, new research shows.
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - For women with genital herpes, taking oral contraceptives can double the likelihood of actively shedding the virus and so passing on the infection, a new study shows.
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - After someone has had a brain-damaging stroke, playing virtual reality games seems to encourage the brain to reorganize to compensate for the damage, and this may have a beneficial effect on recovery of movement, according to a new report.
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - In a study of sexually active black and Hispanic teenage girls, researchers found that a 'skills-based' safer sex program offered at an adolescent health clinic helped cut the rate of sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) among girls who participated.
LONDON (Reuters) - Treatments such as chemotherapy and hormonal therapy have greatly improved the survival of women diagnosed with early breast cancer, scientists said on Friday.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Embryos that have died during test-tube baby attempts, cells taken from embryos without harming them or even recharged adult skin cells might provide alternatives to embryonic stem cells for research, White House ethics advisers said on Thursday.
CAPE TOWN (Reuters) - South Africa's most influential activist group took prominent AIDS 'dissident' Matthias Rath to court on Friday to stop a campaign to vilify the group and discredit AIDS drugs.
JAKARTA (Reuters) - Bird flu has infected pigs in Indonesia, the Agriculture Ministry said on Friday, raising fears of a wider outbreak in the world's fourth-most populous country and Southeast Asia's biggest economy.
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Since the introduction of the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine in the UK in 1988, there has been no increase in the occurrence of the inflammatory bowel condition, Crohn's disease, according to a brief report in this week's British Medical Journal.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Two U.S. Senate Democrats called for an investigation on Thursday into whether a memo from a Christian doctor influenced regulators' rejection of over-the-counter sales of a 'morning-after' contraceptive.
ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters Health) - For postmenopausal women with hormone-driven breast cancer, follow-on treatment with Femara is more effective in preventing recurrence of cancer than is tamoxifen, a study shows.
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Trampoline-related injuries are on the rise once again among children and adolescents, new study findings show.
ORLANDO (Reuters Health) - Combining magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with mammography is the best way to detect breast cancer in women who are genetically predisposed to develop the disease, according to a new study.
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Insulin is produced by islet cells in the pancreas, but scientists have been able to persuade adult liver cells to do the same thing. Moreover, insulin production goes up in response to glucose levels, mimicking what happens in the body.
ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) - An experimental vaccine against nicotine helped smokers kick the habit, Swiss researchers reported on Saturday.
ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) - A drug used to treat breast cancer may also help prostate cancer from developing in men who have precancerous lesions, researchers reported on Saturday.
ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) - Pfizer Inc.'s experimental drug Sutent improved survival and reduced tumor growth in patients with a type of stomach cancer, according to a pivotal-stage trial the company unveiled this weekend.
ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) - Many U.S. cancer patients are getting delayed or substandard care for their disease and are dying earlier as a consequence, according to several studies released on Sunday.
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - The way a medication comes wrapped may make a difference in how well people follow their prescriptions, researchers said Monday.
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - A tiny swallowable camera-in-a-capsule is more effective than standard imaging methods in identifying intestinal polyps in the small intestine, according to results presented at Digestive Disease Week in Chicago.
| | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | |