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News Headlines: October 1, 2009 - October 31, 2009

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Saturday, October 31

• House calls as cost-saver in health care reform?
• Anemia Drug May Raise Stroke Risk in Kidney Patients
• Side effects not always due to swine flu shot
• Study finds stroke risk from anemia drug Aranesp

Friday, October 30

• Pregnancy complications tied to kids' poor thinking
• Rheumatoid Arthritis Treatment Doesn't Promote Cancer
• Treating mild iodine deficiency boosts brain power
•  The push for public medical insurance presses on
• Surgery, Illness Not Linked to Mental Decline in Seniors
• Swaziland battles twin plagues of HIV, TB
• Obama lifts ban on U.S. entry of those with HIV/AIDS
• US to end travel ban on HIV/AIDS patients: Obama
• CDC: Swine flu kids' deaths jump to 114
• Kenya to conduct AIDS control study among gays
• Veggies in Pregnancy Lowers Child's Diabetes Risk
• Experts: HS football concussions merit more study
• Flu Shot in Pregnancy Protects Baby
• Aid group seeks $4 billion for life-saving vaccines
• WHO experts: Single dose swine flu vaccine enough
• Some who get vaccine not in high-risk groups
• Health experts: Kids should get seasonal flu shot

Thursday, October 29

• When moms get flu shot, babies benefit too: study
• CDC: Up to 6 million swine flu cases in few months
•  Shopping for supplemental health insurance can be simple when one researches the options
•  When choosing health care coverage, consider the benefits of a PPO
• Obama girls' vaccine: Favoritism or good example?
• NSAIDs tied to reduced death after colon cancer
• 17,000 Child Deaths Linked to Lack of Insurance
• Mecca-bound pilgrims prompt swine flu precautions
• Tracking how flu evolves — it has sticky tricks
• Study: Cholesterol drugs may improve flu survival
• Russia policies slammed at HIV conference
• Getting enough sleep? They aren't in West Virginia
• Lack of health care led to 17,000 US child deaths
• Pelosi: New health care bill is 'historic moment'
• Tai Chi May Help Ward Off Knee Pain in Seniors
• Novartis says on track to deliver US vaccine order
• Diet, Exercise Thwart Diabetes: Study
• Pelosi hopes new health plan is poised to pass

Wednesday, October 28

• Diabetes can be delayed with diet, exercise
• Size matters when it comes to AIDS defense
• FDA panel backs first non-drug asthma treatment
• One embryo nearly as good a multiples for pregnancy
• Testicular Cancer Survivors Face Other Ills
• Swine flu prompts hundreds of schools to close
• Children learn their part in swine flu prevention
• Caribbean sees drop in HIV, AIDS cases
• Scientists say curry compound kills cancer cells
• Medicare reverses billing change on Genentech drug
• AIDS experts say Russia needs new HIV strategy
• Gene-patching damaged lungs for transplanting
• Neurotic? It could lead to asthma
• House Democrats prepare to unveil health bill
• Sperm May Play Role in Transmission of HIV
• Let Kids Sleep Late on Weekends to Fight Fat: Study
• Meditation May Reduce Stress in Breast Cancer Patients
• Painkiller safe and effective in children: review
• Glaxo gives price pledge as malaria shot holds hope
• 'Darwinian medicine' in focus at World Health Summit
• Health Tip: Exercise During Pregnancy
• Arzerra Approved for Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia
• Why Halloween Terrifies Some Kids
• Mapping the Link Between Alcohol, Cancer
• Study says combined therapy helps head, neck cancer
• Democrats struggle to find unity on health plan

Tuesday, October 27

• Adding Chemo Helps Head, Neck Cancer Patients
• Antipsychotic Drugs Spur Dramatic Weight Gain in Kids
•  Choosing dental Insurance plans can prove to be a difficult process
•  Many Americans will still need to consider different medical plan options
• Alarming weight gain seen in kids on psych drugs
• Antipsychotics cause rapid weight gain in youth
• US swine flu vaccine outlook improving, CDC says
• Constant Light Linked to Symptoms of Depression
• Thyroid cancer a risk after childhood cancer
• CDC: Swine flu vaccine outlook improving
• Preventable diseases kill 300,000 Sudan children yearly: UN
• Blacks at Greater Risk for Colorectal Cancer
• House leader applauds Reid public option move
• Health Tip: Foot Care for People With Diabetes
• Health Tip: Recovering After Childbirth
• No guarantees on Senate health bill's public plan

Monday, October 26

• Nearly one in three people with HIV do not know: EU
• Jews who survived wartime Europe have more cancer
•  Insurers finding ways to provide low cost health insurance
•  Schwarzenegger saves some money for California child health insurance
•  Health insurance companies move forward with new care models
• Treat Kids to a Safe Halloween
• Exposure to Holocaust May Have Raised Cancer Risks
• Bowel Disease Treatment May Raise Skin Cancer Risk
• Does Diabetes Slow Alzheimer's?
• New York study says menu labeling affects behavior
• Obese women often gain too many pregnancy pounds
• Burundi: polio vaccinations begin for 1.5 million children
• AFL-CIO head flexible on taxing high-value plans
• Low-fat eating best after skin cancer: study
• HHS' Sebelius: Ample flu vaccine will be available
• 'Green' technology should be shared: Indian PM
• 6 Million U.S. Kids Lack Enough Vitamin D
• Tips on hormone use, coping with menopause
• Clock ticking on Democrats' health care reform
• 1 in 5 kids get little vitamin D, study says
• GAO: FDA fails to follow up on unproven drugs

Sunday, October 25

• AP sources: Senate likely to cut employer mandate
• Senator: Public option is close to gaining votes
• RI tracking swine flu through electronic records
• 'Bioidenticals' not FDA-approved, contain estrogen

Saturday, October 24

• Gene therapy cures congenital form of blindness
• Obama declares swine flu a national emergency
• Orexigen obesity drug shows added benefits: studies
• New study suggests humans are still evolving
• US swine flu deaths surpass 1,000

Friday, October 23

• Health reform moves to close U.S. Medicare drug gap
• Michelle Obama highlights breast cancer awareness
•  Health insurance quote research could benefit those looking to avoid taxes
• Bad Reaction No Good Reason to Avoid Future Shots
• Statin drugs might slightly boost diabetes risk
• After Tonsillectomy, Short-Term Antibiotics Effective: Study
• Radiation Treatments Made Safer for Cancer Patients
• Babies Spot Human Speech at 5 Months
• Stubborn asthma may signal poor use of meds
• Diabetes drug helps obese adults loss weight
• Glaxo H1N1 shot works on children after one dose
• People with schizophrenia rarely kill strangers
• Thoughts of suicide long after childhood cancer
• Swine flu pediatric deaths in US rise to 95
• Human Evolution: Are Humans Still Evolving?
• Diabetes Drug May Boost Weight Loss in Obese Patients
• N.Y. officials rescind mandatory H1N1 flu shot order
• WHO: nearly 5,000 swine flu deaths worldwide
• Scientists seek origins of obesity in the womb
• NY officials rescind mandatory H1N1 flu shot order
• Mexico pushing for homegrown swine flu vaccine

Thursday, October 22

• Diabetes drug also helps weight loss for obese: study
•  Democrats hope to expand unemployment insurance
•  Congressional leaders aren't sure if health plan reform meets needs of small firms
• Guidelines Urge Use of Erectile Dysfunction Drugs
• FDA warns: Swine flu scams lurk on the Internet
• Most who die from new H1N1 flu had conditions: CDC
• Red-Grape Compound May Improve Diabetes
• AIDS: Are the wilderness years over for vaccine research?
• Abuse of moms may stunt kid's growth
• Africa should protect children from AIDS: Machel
• Ambulances start charging extra for obese patients
• CDC: 1 in 5 kids had flu this month
• Long-acting insulin boosts diabetes care: study
• African states urged to curb child AIDS infections
• Swine flu scams lurk on the Internet, FDA warns
• Rotavirus Vaccine Cutting Infection Rates Among Kids
• Experts study thriving HIV "controllers" in vaccine search
• American Cancer Society Stands By Cancer Screening Guidelines
• Health Tip: Signs of an Asthma Attack in Your Child
• Former KISS drummer: men get breast cancer too

Wednesday, October 21

• For Obese, Weight Gained in Pregnancy May Not Leave
• Sex of Twins May Affect Outcomes
• Gene Behind Gaucher Disease a Player in Parkinson's
• Production of swine flu vaccine is way behind
•  Reform bills call for expanded children's dental insurance
•  Many Americans worry about keeping group health insurance coverage
• Votrient Approved for Advanced Kidney Cancer
• Alternative Treatments May Boost IVF Success
• Super Obesity Ups Risk of Dying After Weight-Loss Surgery
• Cancer Drug May Help Scleroderma
• Shellfish may raise diabetes risk: study
• Full Results of AIDS Vaccine Trial Confirm Modest Benefit
• 'Green spaces' tied to better health
• Poorest children missing out on vaccination boom
• Data confirms 'modest' AIDS vaccine breakthrough
• Tests show flu spreads from schools
• Antidepressant improves recovery from spine injury
• Global immunizations hit record but miss millions
• Panel backs vaccine as cervical cancer alternative
• Safety board issues wake-up call on sleep disorder
• WHO: Nearly 1 in 5 babies still missed by vaccines
• Risque British backpackers live riskily Down Under
• CDC concedes vaccine production behind schedule
• Sugar cereals are 'Smart Choices'? FDA not so sure

Tuesday, October 20

• Healthy lifestyle benefits those with diabetes
• Drugs for Inflammatory Bowel Might Increase Cancer Risk
• More fruit, fewer calories urged for school lunches
•  Consumers may want to watch online health insurance quotes for price jumps
•  Medicare Advantage plans continue new offerings, but prices may change with reform
• Study: Heart failure drug guidelines often ignored
• Sperm donor passed on sudden death heart defect
• Med school enrollment edges up; 11th year in a row
• Medco plans to compare Plavix, Effient in study
• New info shows swine flu still hardest on young
• Review confirms AIDS vaccine may have worked
• School Meals Need to Get Healthier: Report
• More Doctors Need to Learn to Spot Skin Cancers
• Taiwan haemophiliacs appeal over HIV-tainted drug
• Clues to Hypertension in Kids May Be Seen in Bones
• Car seats, out of cars, a hazard for U.S. kids
• Less money for AIDS research, treatment?: experts
• Childhood ADHD Linked to Criminal Behavior in Adults
• Hardness is the way to happiness: sex survey
• Pot advocates: Looser guidelines leave questions
• Full results show AIDS vaccine is of modest help

Monday, October 19

• Touch of green trumps the blues: study
• Car seats, out of cars, injured 43,000 U.S. kids
• Somers' new target: conventional cancer treatment
• Don't flag on support, AIDS chiefs say at vaccine conference
• Why are preemies more likely to develop autism?
• Mercury levels similar in kids with, without autism: study
•  Nelson works to ensure seniors receive affordable health insurance in Florida
•  Low cost health insurance could play a role in personal financial solvency
• Low income linked to poorer breast cancer survival
• PSA 'Nanotest' May Spot Prostate Cancer's Return After Surgery
• Mercury Levels Not Abnormal in Autistic Children
• Study: Mercury levels no higher in autistic children
• Hospitals restricting visitors to stop swine flu
• Feds to stop prosecuting medical marijuana users
• PR group tests syringe vending machine for addicts
• Bowel disease drugs increase cancer risk: study
• Patients test for HIV exposure at Fla. hospital
• Johnny wants a pet turtle? Just say no
• Study reaffirms benefit of car booster seats
• U.S. won't go after medical marijuana in states where legal
• Feds issue new medical marijuana policy
• USDA confirms H1N1 in Minnesota pigs
• Childcare Centers-- and Parents-- Brace for Flu Season
• Should Parents of Overweight Kids Lose Custody?
• Mice study gives clue to how breast cancer spreads
• Feds to issue new medical marijuana policy
• Largest turtle-linked salmonella outbreak detailed

Sunday, October 18

• Cancer drug crosses key hurdle in brain: study
• Veterans find healing on the water
• Wounded US troops return to Iraq to find closure
• Cervarix Approved to Help Prevent Cervical Cancer
• Take the Sting Out of Your Child's Flu Shots

Saturday, October 17

• U.S. OKs Glaxo's cervical cancer shot
• Minn. pigs may have tested positive for swine flu
• Hitting early, swine flu claims 11 more kids in US

Friday, October 16

• Obesity May Affect Fertility in Young Women
• Strides Made in Tonsil Cancer Repair
•  Healthcare reform stirs up price hike fears in individual health insurance
•  Health insurance companies ramping up inoculation and prescription benefits
• 11 More Children Die From Swine Flu: CDC
• Breast Cancer Gene Tied to Diagnosis at Younger Age
• Swine flu vaccine delivery delayed as US deaths climb
• U.S. approves Glaxo's cervical cancer vaccine
• US regulators approve GSK cancer vaccine: company
• Exercise eases fatigue in cancer patients on chemo
• China to relocate 15,000 from lead-poisoned area
• US drug safety watchdog warns of bogus swine flu meds
• Gov't: Swine flu linked to 11 more child deaths
• Stem Cells Being Tested to Fight Pancreatic Cancer
• Tylenol May Weaken Effectiveness of Kids' Vaccines
• Some poor nations succeeding in fighting hunger

Thursday, October 15

• Acetaminophen May Weaken Effectiveness of Kids' Vaccines
• FDA to study negative effects of Lasik eye surgery
• Giving babies Tylenol may blunt vaccines' effects
• Swine flu 6 months later: Relief, but winter looms
•  Small business insurance and the public option, a love-hate relationship
•  Fighting the "Battle of the Bulge" could help HMOs reduce costs
• Blood thinner may cause problems after an injury
• Scientists grow mice heart muscle strip that beats
• Probiotics may reduce skin condition in some kids
• Race Not a Factor if Breast Cancer Chemo Succeeds
• Smog Tougher on the Obese
• Health Tip: When to Call the Pediatrician
• SAfrica to limit trans fats as heart disease rises
• Democrats work to finalize health legislation
• Study: Gene therapy shows promise for treating Parkinson's
• 2 swine flu vaccine doses for kids under 10 likely

Wednesday, October 14

• No support for routine pancreatic cancer screening
• Aggressive treatments for frail elderly questioned
• Studies: Some nursing home elderly get futile care
•  Some California health plans earning recognition for eliminating language barriers
• Gene Therapy Shows Promise for Parkinson's
• Community clinics have key role in health reform
• Long-term monkey tests back Oxford's gene therapy
• Jury orders Glaxo to pay $2.5M in Paxil case
• Can fish for dinner lead to diabetes?
• Under 10s may need two swine flu shots: Sanofi
• Modern Moms: More Work, More Guilt
• Doctors hail world first as comatose German gives birth
• Diarrhoea causes 1.5 mln infant deaths a year: UN
• Large waist hard on the lungs: study
• Chinese herbs show promise for diabetes prevention
• Kids under 10 may need 2 swine flu vaccine doses
• Health Tip: Manage Pain Without Drugs
• Report: Unsafe abortions kill 70,000 annually
• VA to ease way for vets to get stress disability
• Minn. town gets healthy, adds longevity, together
• HIV/AIDS Vaccine Trial Questioned As Experts Check Data
• Swine flu less deadly than seasonal flu: official
• Health care legislation back behind closed doors

Tuesday, October 13

• New prostate surgery not necessarily better: study
• Impotence, Incontinence Risk Casts Doubt on High-Tech Prostate Surgery
•  Health plans still face bipartisan consensus on some reform initiatives
• Study Suggests Link Between Cell Phones and Brain Tumors
• Sleepiness from sleep apnea linked to diabetes
• Sinus Infections Push Millions to U.S. Doctors Each Year
• Green tea may curb risk of some cancers
• Pros and cons with "easier" prostate cancer surgery
• Common Antioxidant Might Slow Parkinson's
• Dogs Helping to Advance Cancer Research
• Near half of swine flu patients otherwise healthy
• Mastectomy Not First Choice for Most Breast Cancer Patients
• Minority kids less apt to take asthma meds
• Robotic prostate surgery may mean big trade-off
• HIV Patients More Prone to 7 Kinds of Cancer
• With Hormone Therapy, Tender Breasts May Signal Cancer Risk
• J&J posts 1 percent profit rise despite sales drop
• Baucus: 'Time to get the job done' on health care
• Soothing Imagery May Help Rid Some Kids of Stomach Pain
• Women's Empowerment: 'Men Are Interested'
• Dems scramble after warning from health insurers

Monday, October 12

• For women on HRT, tenderness may be warning sign
• Researchers: Sidewalks, parks, farm markets cut diabetes risk
• "Healthy" neighborhoods cut type 2 diabetes risk
• Drop in Certain Visual Skills May Precede Alzheimer's
•  California child health insurance reform has room to improve
• Childhood cancer survivors less likely to marry
• Mother's Cancer Can Pass to Fetus
• Could vision problems be linked to earlier death?
• Egypt says developing own H1N1 flu vaccine for 2011
• Ohio wife, husband both battling breast cancer
• Swine flu and kids: Heed warning signs, MDs say
• Day care next frontier in fighting kids' obesity
• Seniors lobby challenges health insurance report
• Sickest swine flu cases in Canada, Mexico detailed
• Health Tip: Why Don't You Exercise?
• CDC official downplays risk from swine flu vaccine
• Police probe disease exposure at Fla. hospital
• Discreet sex education breaks Indian taboo

Sunday, October 11

• Want Leaner Kids? Parents May Need to Toe the Line

Saturday, October 10

• CDC: 76 children dead of swine flu as cases rise

Friday, October 9

• Truckers Trailed By Risky Behaviors: Study
• Officials: Food stamps swapped for booze, Viagra
• Health Tip: Testing for Allergies
• Stressful childhood may mean earlier death
• Skin cancer can be inherited, two new studies say
• Pfizer halts enrollment in lung cancer trial
• Ex-NFL Players Hold Their Own Health-Wise
• As kids' swine flu deaths spike, vaccine reaches public
• Ibuprofen or Tylenol with codeine for broken arms?
•  Online health insurance quotes may be needed if reform mandates are passed
• HPV Tied to Rare Head-and-Neck Cancer
• Are obese people less likely to commit suicide?
• 'Good' dietary fats trim body fat in diabetic women
• Healthy baby born in Germany to woman in coma
• US child deaths from swine flu 'shoot up': official
• New US law helps ill students keep health coverage
• CDC: 37 states report widespread swine flu cases
• Miscarriage Treatment Won't Harm Future Fertility: Study
• Health Tip: Help Prevent Listeriosis During Pregnancy
• Calif. doc who hailed herbal cancer cure arrested
• Youth push for louder conversation about suicide
• Giving Gardasil to boys not cost effective: study
• Study finds many childhood cancer survivors never marry
• Fat city: W.Va. town braces for TV show depiction
• US, other nations stop counting pandemic flu cases

Thursday, October 8

• Feds: Food stamps swapped for Viagra, booze, porn
• Swine flu put many hospitalized patients into ICU
•  PPO companies may benefit from adapting to employer's changing needs
•  Some HMOs showing enrollment growth in California and Ohio
• Study links virus to chronic fatigue syndrome
• Exercise boosts well-being after breast cancer
• Study: Alcohol abstainers at higher risk of depression
• INSIDE WASHINGTON: GOP raising money from docs
• Rite Aid alters flu-shot policy for pregnant women
• Senate committee health care vote planned Tuesday
• Long-term risks of Viagra use unclear
• Health Tip: Understanding Gestational Diabetes
• Breakthrough hope for breast cancer treatment
• Many Childhood Cancer Survivors Never Marry
• As Teens Plug In, Parents Fret
• Tiny device could speed breast cancer detection: study
• More attention, better treatment for concussions

Wednesday, October 7

• SAfrica HIV caseload stable, still too high: health minister
• Stem Cell Research Offers Hope for Colon Cancer Vaccine
• Liver Cancer Patients May Get Hope
• Tiny chip can measure estrogen in breast tissue
• Cancer, bowel drugs on FDA safety scrutiny list
•  Preventive care a key feature in new dental insurance plans
•  Small business insurance choices could include reform-minded plans
• Rising Heat, Humidity Raise Risk of Asthma Flares
• Health Tip: Reduce Your Risk of Skin Cancer
• AP Poll: Third of parents oppose swine flu vaccine
• Chip measures breast estrogen with just a poke
• India's mothers risk life to give birth: report
• Two anti-malaria drugs have fewer side effects
• Health Tip: Before You Take an NSAID
• Web tool helps advise when flu needs a doctor
• Sebelius: Americans must get swine flu vaccination
• Study: 2 million babies and mothers die at birth

Tuesday, October 6

• Kids' weight a factor in hospital admission
•  Health care cards may improve access to affordable health insurance in Florida
• Antioxidants may raise diabetes risk: study
• Gene Test Might Predict Tamoxifen's Effectiveness
• Burn Rate in Kids Has Dropped, But Still Causes Concern
• Exercise in Adolescence May Cut Risk of Deadly Brain Tumor
• CDC: Spray is here; swine flu shots come next week
• Vision loss in diabetics becoming less common
• Non-AIDS-Related Cancers Growing Among HIV Patients
• Prominent US general Petraeus treated for prostate cancer
• Weather shifts may spark asthma attacks in kids
• Health Tip: Soothing a Colicky Baby
• Experts find 'faulty' gene linked to cancers
• Most Childhood Cancer Survivors Have Healthy Babies
• Childhood Stress Cuts Life Short, Study Suggests
• FDA sees no safety issues with Pfizer HIV drug
• Inhaler may up risk of asthma in some children
• Higher Rate of Autism in Children: Is New Number Real?

Monday, October 5

• New Test Assesses Individual Breast Cancer Risk
•  Unemployment insurance needs addressed by groups nationwide
•  Trick or Treat? Medical care plan reform set for Senate-wide debate
• Babies born to abused moms more likely to get sick
• U.S. schools do a little better trimming junk food
• Vaccine-like shots help fight cocaine addiction
• 3 Americans share Nobel medicine prize
• US has no good system to track medical implants
• Swine Flu Shots Safe for People With Weak Immune Systems: Experts
• HIV spreading faster than treatment in Africa: UNAIDS
• Scientists say nanoparticles may help kill tumors
• Burns down in kids, still 120,000 per year in U.S.
• More kids have autism than thought: U.S. study
• Tiny Batteries Can Cause Big Problems for Young Children
• Health Tip: Getting Cancer Support
• Gene Discovery May Advance Head and Neck Cancer Therapy
• Half of U.S. Babies Living Today May Reach 100
• CDC: Fewer schools selling candy, soda
• Bristol-Myers gets EU approval for diabetes drug
• FDA panel backs Schering-Plough cancer drug
• Surrounded by doctors, Obama pitches overhaul
• Ind., Tenn. to begin swine flu vaccinations
• New Classification Proposed for Stomach Cancers
• Autism May Be More Common Than Thought
• Cutting child mortality 'cheap and achievable'
• 3 Americans share 2009 Nobel medicine prize
• Government finds higher autism figure: 1 in 100
• Swine flu vaccine arriving, but don't line up yet

Sunday, October 4

• Report: 13 million babies worldwide born premature
• Stem cell pioneers among Nobel Prize candidates
• Hairstylists Often Privy to Older Clients' Health Issues

Saturday, October 3

• Eating Candy in Childhood Linked to Adult Crime
• Health overhaul closer than ever - and yet far off

Friday, October 2

• Health care overhaul could raise Medicare Rx costs
• New survey suggests Americans keen for H1N1 vaccine
•  California low cost health insurance options are growing for seniors
• Daily Candy in Childhood Linked to Violence in Adulthood
• Texas begins $3 billion quest to cure cancer
• Over 65? Take lots of vitamin D to prevent a fall
• Delaying Weight-Loss Surgery May Leave Teens at Risk
• How health care overhaul could change Medicare
• Health bill fate still in doubt; GOP hits it anew
• 'Prudent' diet linked to lower breast cancer risk
• Levemir does not increase risk of cancer: studies
• Half of U.S. babies living today may reach age 100
• Health Tip: Help Prevent Childhood Migraines
• New diabetes drug hits target in late stage study
• Do Candy-Eating Kids Become Criminal Adults?
• Nasal spray flu vaccine becoming available

Thursday, October 1

• Half of addicts quit after 6 months of treatment
• Most babies born this century will live to 100
• Suppliers face winter flu vaccine delays, cutbacks
•  Group health insurance reform isn't listening to every voice, say some
•  Price of health insurance quotes may hinge on diagnostics availability
• Children Need Seasonal Flu Vaccine, Experts Say
• Overweight mothers linked to infant heart defects
• Indian ethnicity tied to higher diabetes risk
• British girl in cancer jab scare died of tumour: official
• Cancer not cervical cancer vaccine killed UK teen
• FDA tells doctors new heparin formula less potent
• CDC: 25 cities and states order swine flu vaccine
• Novo Nordisk drug does not increase risk of cancer
• Obese mothers more likely to have babies with heart defects
• FDA questions safety of Glaxo kidney cancer drug
• "Substantial" toxicity with PegIntron use: FDA staff
• U.S. FDA staff questions Glaxo kidney cancer drug
• Smoking in pregnancy risks psychotic children
• Seasonal flu vaccine delayed for some US providers
• Report: Flu might fill up hospitals in 15 states
• Daily Sweets Can Turn Kids into Violent Adults, Study Claims
• Health Tip: Reduce the Risk of Preterm Labor
• Health care may hit House, Senate floor mid-month
• Parental Talks Can Make Kids Safer Drivers
• Double hand transplant patient out of hospital

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