The first uterus transplant in the United States was successfully performed Wednesday at the Cleveland Clinic. The nine hour surgery used a uterus from a ...
Read More »NBA Players Put Their Hearts Into Medical Research
Professional basketball players have the highest rate of sports-related cardiac arrest in the United States, and a new study lays the groundwork for scientists to ...
Read More »Elementary Math, Spelling Scores Increase With ‘Physically Active’ Lessons
Schoolchildren may have an easier time learning if exercise is part of their math and spelling lessons, a new study suggests. Dutch researchers found that ...
Read More »Cell Phones and Emotion Play Huge Roles in Distracted Driving Car Crashes
In a finding that demonstrates how crucial it is to pay attention when behind the wheel, researchers report that video taken inside cars showed drivers ...
Read More »Gastric Balloons: New Treatment Option for Mild to Moderate Obese
It is predicted that by 2030 a whopping 42 percent of Americans will be obese – a nearly 20 percent increase from just six years ...
Read More »Vaccine Has Cut HPV Infection Rate in Teen Girls by Two-Thirds
Ten years of vaccinating against human papillomavirus (HPV) has cut infections from this cancer-causing virus by 64 percent among teen girls, U.S. health officials report. ...
Read More »How To Give Your Child Healthy Teeth and Gums
There are a number of things parents can do to help their children enjoy a lifetime with healthy teeth and gums, a dental expert says. ...
Read More »Supreme Court Vacancy Creates Confusion For Future Of Reproductive Rights
The death of Associate Justice Antonin Scalia has complicated the fate of many major cases before the Supreme Court this term. But few issues face ...
Read More »Doctor Urges Openness About Superbug Infections, But Omits His Own Hospital
As superbug outbreaks raised alarm across the country last year, a prominent doctor at a Philadelphia cancer center wrote in a leading medical journal about ...
Read More »Skin Infections Common in High School Wrestlers
Wrestlers are much more likely to suffer skin infections than other U.S. high school athletes, new research shows. The study authors examined five years of ...
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