Monday, October 17, 2016

Americans take fewer multivitamins but more vitamin D, omega-3s and other top stories.

  • Americans take fewer multivitamins but more vitamin D, omega-3s

    Americans take fewer multivitamins but more vitamin D, omega-3s
    The study appears in the latest edition of the Journal of the American Medical Association.Americans spent about $34.9 billion on supplements in 2013 alone, according to National Institutes of Health research. There were an estimated 50,000 supplement products to choose from in the 2012 market.Among American adults, 52% had taken a dietary supplements in the past 30 days, according to data from 2011-12 surveys. That's about the same as it has been since 1999-2000. There had been an increase in t..
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  • CardioBrief: FDA Reaffirms Safety and Efficacy of Rivaroxaban

    CardioBrief: FDA Reaffirms Safety and Efficacy of Rivaroxaban
    Following a year of controversy and uncertainty relating to the anticoagulant drug rivaroxaban (Xarelto, Johnson & Johnson), the FDA has reaffirmed the drug's safety and efficacy. Rivaroxaban is approved for stroke reduction in patients with atrial fibrillation. The indication is based on results of the ROCKET-AF trial, which compared rivaroxaban to warfarin. New questions about the trial emerged last year when it became known that the portable device used to adjust warfarin usage in the trial ..
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  • Here's Why Big Cities are Healthier

    Here's Why Big Cities are Healthier
    Big cities win out over smaller communities when it comes to healthy, happy residents, and it's largely because of sidewalks, parks and good public transport, according to a new survey. The top five cities in the report might not immediately shriek "healthy living" to the average Americans, but they score high on important health measures, the report from Gallup and Healthways found. Woman exercising. Shutterstock The cities include: Boston, San Francisco, Chicago, New York and Wa..
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  • World health officials want super-size tax on soda and sugary drinks, but are countries ready to swallow that?

    World health officials want super-size tax on soda and sugary drinks, but are countries ready to swallow that?
    The World Health Organization is backing a controversial remedy to reverse the global rise in obesity and type 2 diabetes — a 20% to 50% soda tax.The recommended tax should not be limited to soda, the WHO said Tuesday. It should apply to all sugar-sweetened beverages, a category that includes sports drinks, energy drinks, fruit punch, sweetened iced tea, vitamin waters and lemonade. “If governments tax products like sugary drinks, they can reduce suffering and save lives,” Dr. Douglas Bettcher..
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  • Park Ridge businesses give back for annual walk against breast cancer

    Park Ridge businesses give back for annual walk against breast cancer
    As Park Ridge prepares to host the Making Strides Against Breast Cancer Walk this Saturday, some local businesses are bringing out the pink.At Holt's, 43 S. Prospect Ave., it's The Pink Drink that is being served up throughout the month of October, with $2 from each $8 cocktail going to Making Strides in support of the American Cancer Society. Brad Doyle, managing partner of Holt's, said the drink is made from Nolet gin, fresh muddled raspberries, demerara syrup and soda water."It's got a real..
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  • After 2 deaths, patients warned about heart defibrillators' failed batteries

    After 2 deaths, patients warned about heart defibrillators' failed batteries
    According to the US Food and Drug Administration, 398,740 of St. Jude Medical's implantable cardioverter defibrillators, known as ICDs, and cardiac resynchronization therapy defibrillators, known as CRT-Ds, are affected with premature battery depletion. The defibrillators were manufactured before May 2015. Both CRT-Ds and ICDs are implanted under the skin, in the patient's upper chest area. The devices have wires called leads that attach to the heart and regulate the rhythm of the muscle. Defibr..
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  • 5 Stories To Read For International Day Of The Girl

    5 Stories To Read For International Day Of The Girl
    Enlarge this image Today is International Day of the Girl. Don't know what that is? That's alright; it's pretty new. The day was created by the United Nations five years ago to spread awareness and spark discussion about the unique challenges confronting the world's 1.1 billion girls. Those challenges are many, and education is a common theme. Millions of girls around the world aren't in school, and nearly two-thirds of the world's illiterate people are female, according to a recent UNESCO..
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  • Latino Voters Grow in Numbers, but Fewer Certain They Will Turn Out

    Latino Voters Grow in Numbers, but Fewer Certain They Will Turn Out
    Latino voters have the potential to swing the presidential election and several Senate races in November, but the group’s turnout remains a big question. A new Pew Research Center poll found that fewer Latino registered voters are “absolutely certain” to...
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  • As babies stricken by Zika turn 1, health problems mount

    As babies stricken by Zika turn 1, health problems mount
    RECIFE, Brazil –  Two weeks shy of his first birthday, doctors began feeding Jose Wesley Campos through a nose tube because swallowing problems had left him dangerously underweight. Learning how to feed is the baby's latest struggle as medical problems mount for him and many other infants born with small heads to mothers infected with the Zika virus in Brazil. "It hurts me to see him like this. I didn't want this for him," said Jose's mother, Solange Ferreira, breaking into tears as she cradled..
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Official: Moto Z Series Launching In India On October 4th .China Hunts for Scientific Glory, and Aliens, With New Telescope .
Mystery solved: Melatonin makes these fish sing at night .Separatists attack on Indian army base in Kashmir kills one - Al .

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