Wednesday, March 16, 2016

Quitting cigarettes abruptly is the best way to go, study says and other top stories.

  • Quitting cigarettes abruptly is the best way to go, study says

    Quitting cigarettes abruptly may be more effective than gradually abandoning smoking habits, says a new study that analyzed cigarette consumption patterns of almost 700 people. Results were published Monday in the Annals of Internal Medicine. Just in the U.S., 68.8% of adults smokers want to quit. The study was conducted in England, with the collaboration of nearly 700 participants who were extremely addicted to smoking and wanted to quit the habit. Researchers divided them into two groups. One..
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  • DuPage ranked as healthiest county in state

    DuPage ranked as healthiest county in state
    DuPage County residents can say they live in the healthiest county in Illinois.The 2016 County Health Rankings lists DuPage as No. 1 among the 102 counties in the state, beating out nearby Kendall County, which placed in second for the third year in a row. Kane and Will counties ranked 13th and 14th respectively while Cook came in at No. 64.The annual rankings released Wednesday are a collaboration between the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the University of Wisconsin Population Health Inst..
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  • Alcohol abuse common among med students, study finds

    Alcohol abuse common among med students, study finds
    WEDNESDAY, March 16, 2016 -- Medical students may be more at risk for problem drinking, a new study says, citing burnout and school debt as two possible reasons why. "Our findings clearly show there is reason for concern," said study senior author Dr. Liselotte Dyrbye, an internist at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn. "We recommend institutions pursue a multifaceted solution to address related issues with burnout, the cost of medical education and alcohol abuse," she said in a Mayo news rele..
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  • Refugees Are At Terrifyingly High Risk Of Developing Psychotic Disorders, Study Says

    Refugees Are At Terrifyingly High Risk Of Developing Psychotic Disorders, Study Says
    As if fleeing one's war-ravaged home and searching for a new one wasn't traumatic enough, new research suggests that refugees are at an elevated risk of developing schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders. In Sweden, where the research took place, refugees are 66 percent more likely to experience schizophrenia and certain other disorders than non-refugee migrants from the same region, and 3.6 times more likely than Swedish-born people, according to a study published Tuesday in the medical jou..
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  • 3-year-old with cancer gets postcards from around the world

    3-year-old with cancer gets postcards from around the world
    A 3-year-old girl with terminal brain cancer may be too sick to travel but she's seeing the world with the help of complete strangers.A month ago, Ellie Walton's parents, Kyle and Sarah, shared a Facebook post asking others to send postcards so Ellie and her big sister Ava could make a scrapbook."This little girl has been fighting brain cancer for almost three years now, and her one wish is to get postcards from all over the world!! So far, we have thirty," they write. "We are hoping that you a..
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  • New dengue vaccine shows promise

    New dengue vaccine shows promise
    Although another dengue vaccine recently became available in Mexico, Brazil, the Philippines and El Salvador, it may not be appropriate to use in countries such as the United States. That licensed vaccine, called Dengvaxia, has been found to reduce the rates of severe dengue cases in adults and older children in Asia and Latin America, but many of them had probably already had a dengue infection in their lives. In contrast, Dengvaxia could increase the risk of dengue disease among young children..
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  • Healthy heart may also mean healthy brain

    Healthy heart may also mean healthy brain
    Reuters Health - If you eat right, exercise and take care of your heart, you may also be doing good things for your brain, a U.S. study suggests. Researchers assessed memory, thinking and brain processing speed in more than 1,000 New York City residents and found people did much better on these tests when they had heart-healthy habits like avoiding cigarettes, maintaining a normal weight and keeping blood pressure and cholesterol in check. “Our findings reinforce current recommendations for ca..
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  • How likely are birth defects from Zika virus? New study finds clues

    How likely are birth defects from Zika virus? New study finds clues
    Scientists say there's more evidence supporting a link between the Zika virus and a serious birth defect.Researchers report that one in every 100 pregnant women infected with the virus during the first trimester will give birth to a baby with microcephaly -- an abnormally small head and the potential for neurological issues.The new risk analysis did have one important caveat, however."The findings are from the 2013-14 outbreak [of Zika] in French Polynesia, and it remains to be seen whether our..
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  • Women with Alzheimer's may keep verbal skills longer than men

    Women with Alzheimer's may keep verbal skills longer than men
    WEDNESDAY, March 16, 2016 -- In the early stages of Alzheimer's disease, women tend to remember words better than men do, which could delay diagnosis in women, new research suggests. The difference exists even though women and men have similar amounts of shrinkage in brain areas that show the earliest evidence of Alzheimer's disease, according to the study involving hundreds of people. "One way to interpret the results is that because women have better verbal memory skills than men throughout ..
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A large lost flamingo landed in Hialeah traffic Monday. (Courtesy ... .Investigation Into Aubrey McClendon Crash Finds High Speeds, No Health Emergency .
Bryan Lavastida, agradecido de Hialeah y su gente .Hialeah man accused of beating 7-year-old son at after-school... .

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