Most Pregnant Women With HIV Don't Get Recommended Vaccinations (MedPage Today) -- Fewer than one-third of women with HIV who were pregnant got recommended routine vaccinations, according to a multicenter cohort study. Among 310 pregnancies in women living with HIV, the tetanus toxoid, reduced diphtheria toxoid... Cat owners could be at higher risk of schizophrenia, study suggests, but more research needed Cat cuddles might seem therapeutic, but a study suggests this could have adverse mental health effects down the road. The study researcher and a psychologist weighed in on the findings. US lawmakers slam UnitedHealth’s cybersecurity, call the company ‘a monopoly on steroids’ A hugely disruptive cyberattack in February exposed clear technology flaws at a UnitedHealth Group subsidiary, lawmakers said. Is walking good for you? Experts explain the mental and physical benefits Making walking a daily habit comes with some impressive health benefits — for your mind and your body. |
Investigating fertilized ACL surgery's impact on return to play in athletes The Marshall University Joan C. Edwards School of Medicine is now accepting applicants for an observational trial focused on fertilized anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction. Larry Young, Who Studied the Chemistry of Love, Dies at 56 Professor Young’s experiments with prairie voles revealed what poets never could: how the brain processes that fluttering feeling in the heart. Georgia governor signs law adding regulations for production and sale of herbal supplement kratom Georgia’s governor has signed a bill putting new regulations on the production and sale of products containing kratom, a plant-based supplement. Halle Berry shouts from the Capitol, ‘I’m in menopause’ as she seeks to end a stigma and win funding Tarot is everywhere. But her fresh decks are 'a little less caftan, a little more rock 'n' roll' Kim Krans' bestselling "The Wild Unknown" has pushed her to the top of the booming divination industry of tarot and divination. There Are New Mammogram Guidelines. But Experts Don’t Think They Go Far Enough. Breast cancer is the second leading cause of cancer death among women, according to the American Cancer Society . In fact, 42,000 women and 500 men in the US die each year from breast cancer, per the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) . And Black women are 40 percent more likely to die from breast cancer than white women , according to the American Cancer Society . Breast cancer scr… |
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