Science
Birth-Control Pills Reduce Cancer, Lengthen Women's Lives in 40-Year Study Birth-control pills may lead to
longer lives for women, according to a 40-year study that showed
users were less likely to die of heart disease, cancer or a
range of other medical ailments.
Unlocking Cancer Drug Mechanism May Avoid Birth Defect Risks, Study Says Scientists have uncovered how a
drug used in blood cancer medicines leads to short or missing
limbs in babies, moving closer to developing treatments without
the risk of these birth defects.
Fat Surgery Urged for Obese Kids May Boost Allergan Sales, Trim Liability David Ludwig, director of the
obesity program at Children’s Hospital Boston, was against
weight-loss surgery for kids, he says, because it ignored the
real problem, a “toxic environment” jammed with junk food.
Family DNA Maps May Speed Discoveries of Rare Disease Links, Doctors Say Fewer genetic mutations are
inherited than scientists previously thought, according to two
family-based studies that promise to speed the discovery of so-
called disease genes.
Personalized Genetic-Based Medicine Spurred by Medco's Cost-Saving Tests Medco Health Solutions Inc., the
second-biggest U.S. manager of drug benefits, is encouraging
doctors to use genetic tests to determine whether drugs will
work for particular patients -- saving money and reducing harm
caused when prescriptions are wrong.
Heart Angiograms Show No Disease in Almost 40% of Patients, Research Shows Doctors may be sending patients too
quickly for elective angiograms to detect heart disease,
exposing them to radiation and driving up U.S. health-care
costs, a study suggests.
Family Genome Sequence Shows Parents Pass Fewer Mutations to Children The gene sets of a four-member
family were analyzed in research that suggested parents pass
fewer gene mutations than thought to their offspring.
Merck's Stromectol Wipes Out Head Lice as Researchers Seek New Medicines Merck & Co.’s Stromectol tablet
worked better than lotion at clearing up hard-to-treat head
lice, a study found, as the infestations become increasingly
resistant to current medicines.
Sex Life Ends at 70 for Most Americans Due to Poor Health, Researchers Say The average person’s sex life ends
by the age of 70, according to a report published today in the
British Medical Journal.
Kidney Donors Don't Shorten Their Lives by Giving Up Organ, Research Shows People who donate a kidney in the
U.S. don’t die any faster than nondonors long term, according to
a large study that looked at donors over 15 years.