Tuesday, October 4, 2016

Cigarette Smoke Toxins Remain in Home Long After Smoker Quits: Study and other top stories.

  • Cigarette Smoke Toxins Remain in Home Long After Smoker Quits: Study

    Cigarette Smoke Toxins Remain in Home Long After Smoker Quits: Study
    Here are some of the latest health and medical news developments, compiled by the editors of HealthDay:Cigarette Smoke Toxins Remain in Home Long After Smoker Quits: StudyToxins from tobacco smoke persists in smokers' homes for at least six months after they quit and remain a threat to nonsmoking residents, according to researchers.The team studied 65 smokers who were quit smoking and discovered that tiny particles from burning tobacco get into surfaces such as carpets, wallpaper, ceiling tiles ..
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  • Sanofi's dengue vaccine approved in 11 countries

    Sanofi's dengue vaccine approved in 11 countries
    PARIS –  Sanofi Pasteur, Sanofi's vaccines unit, said on Tuesday that its dengue vaccine, Dengvaxia, had received market approval in eleven countries. More on this... To date the vaccine has been approved in Mexico, the Philippines, Brazil, El Salvador, Costa Rica, Paraguay, Guatemala, Peru, Indonesia, Thailand and Singapore, the statement said. Dengue fever is a mosquito-borne disease caused by four virus serotypes (1 to 4) as categorized by the World Health Organisation. Overall, the diseas..
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  • Yoshinori Ohsumi of Japan Wins Nobel Prize for Study of 'Self-Eating' Cells

    Yoshinori Ohsumi of Japan Wins Nobel Prize for Study of 'Self-Eating' Cells
    “I grew very frustrated,” he told the Journal of Cell Biology in 2012. He switched to studying the duplication of DNA in yeast. That work led him to a junior professor position at the University of Tokyo where he picked up a microscope and started peering at sacks in yeast where cell components are degraded — work that eventually brought him, at age 43, to the discoveries that the Nobel Assembly recognized on Monday. Dr. Ohsumi later moved to the National Institute for Basic Biology, in Okazaki..
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  • Democratic and Republican doctors treat patients differently

    Democratic and Republican doctors treat patients differently
    New research says politicized medical issues, like abortion or marijuana use, get different treatment recommendations along physicians' party lines. (Gillian Brockell/The Washington Post) How will your doctor help you deal with issues like pregnancy, drug use or safety? A new study suggests that instead of looking at their résumés or diplomas, you might want to check their voting record. Apparently, Democratic and Republican doctors don’t just vote differently. When faced with hypothetica..
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  • Johnson & Johnson letter on cyber bug in insulin pump

    Johnson & Johnson letter on cyber bug in insulin pump
    The following is the text of a letter mailed to patients on Monday by Johnson & Johnson's Animas diabetes unit describing a cyber security vulnerability in its Animas OneTouch Ping insulin pump:"Dear Valued Animas® OneTouch® Ping® Pump User, Since 2008, the OneTouch® Ping® insulin pump system has been helping people with diabetes perform at their best, and we are committed to providing our customers with safe and reliable products. We have been notified of a cybersecurity issue with the OneTou..
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  • Zika vaccine race spurred by crisis and profit potential

    Zika vaccine race spurred by crisis and profit potential
    NEW YORK –  The race to find protection against the Zika virus is fueled by something often missing from tropical disease research: the potential for big profit. The prospect of a blockbuster vaccine against a mosquito-borne virus has accelerated the pace of development and attracted the interest of big drugmakers, including Sanofi SA , GlaxoSmithKline Plc and Takeda Pharmaceuticals. Although Zika infections are mild or asymptomatic in most people, demand for a vaccine is expected to be strong ..
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  • AM Alert: Will pot legalization have to win over moms?

    AM Alert: Will pot legalization have to win over moms?
    They won’t be able to vote, but kids could be the key to marijuana legalization.Opponents of Proposition 64 have focused on stressing pot’s potential perils for the youth. For example, an ad that draws verbatim from critics' official ballot arguments warns about youngsters seeing weed commercials and trumpets research finding a spike in Colorado kids getting treated for accidentally consuming edible pot. In an opinion piece, Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif, framed her longstanding weed wariness ..
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  • FDA Warns Public About Danger Of Homeopathic Teething Remedies, Provide List Of Products To Be Avoided

    FDA Warns Public About Danger Of Homeopathic Teething Remedies, Provide List Of Products To Be Avoided
    The U.S. Food and Drug Administration or FDA warned the public, especially parents, against the use of homeopathic teething tablets and gels on Friday, Sept. 30. The teething remedies were reported can cause seizure among babies. Teething is the process of growing baby's teeth. This is a very challenging experience among parents, and soon-to-be-parents. When the baby starts teething, it may bring sleepless night to him, and he may cry all-night due to the pain of the process. This is the reason..
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  • Alternative medicine may be linked to lower vaccination rates

    Alternative medicine may be linked to lower vaccination rates
    Children that visit alternative medical practitioners like acupuncturists and chiropractors may be less likely to receive flu shots than their peers, a U.S. study suggests. Roughly 33 percent of kids who saw providers of so-called non-Western medicine for services like acupuncture or homeopathic care got vaccinations for influenza, the analysis of national survey data on about 9,000 kids found. About 35 percent of kids who went to practitioners of what's known as manipulative and body-based the..
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Paris Climate Agreement on the Brink of Full Ratification .Smoking Tied to Shorter Survival With ALS .
Consumer demand for Alaska cruises growing again .When it comes to science, Trump and Clinton have common ground — but not much .

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