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Social Networks' Sway May Be Underestimated
Dimanche 25 Mai 2008 - 21:00 - 5 mois, 4 semaines depuis - 24 lectures - Presse généraliste - The Washington Post (health) Facebook, MySpace and other Web sites have unleashed a potent new phenomenon of social networking in cyberspace. But at the same time, a growing body of evidence is suggesting that traditional social networks play a surprisingly powerful and underrecognized role in influencing how people behave. |
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News: Retroviruses Cross Little Bridges to Infect New Cells
Lundi 12 Février 2007 - 10:00 - 1 année, 9 mois depuis - 24 lectures - Cancer - Scientific American Researchers at Yale University's School of Medicine have discovered a novel mechanism by which viruses infect neighboring cells. Their discovery, appearing in this week's Nature Cell Biology could lead to new antiviral therapies. |
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Report Criticizes FDA Over Spinach Packers
Mercredi 12 Mars 2008 - 21:00 - 8 mois, 1 semaine depuis - 24 lectures - Presse généraliste - The Washington Post (health) Since 2001, nearly half of all federal inspections of facilities that package fresh spinach revealed serious sanitary problems, but the Food and Drug Administration did not take "meaningful" enforcement action, a House committee report released yesterday found. |
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News: News Bytes of the Week--Airline safety data down in flames
Vendredi 04 Janvier 2008 - 17:00 - 10 mois, 3 semaines depuis - 24 lectures - Presse spécialisée - Scientific American NASA dares anyone to examine airline safety data |
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Scientific American Magazine: Second Thoughts on Fluoride
Dimanche 16 Décembre 2007 - 16:00 - 11 mois, 1 semaine depuis - 24 lectures - Presse spécialisée - Scientific American Long before the passionate debates over cigarettes, DDT, asbestos or the ozone hole, most Americans had heard of only one environmental health controversy: fluoridation. Starting in the 1950s, hundreds of communities across the U.S. became embroiled in heated battles over whether fluorides--ionic compounds containing the element fluorine--should be added to their water systems. On one side was a broad coalition of scientists from government and industry who argued that adding fluoride to drinking water would protect teeth against decay; on the other side were activists who contended that the risks of fluoridation were inadequately studied and that the practice amounted to compulsory medication and thus was a violation of civil liberties. |
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Preparing the European Union for the next pandemic – half way there
Samedi 05 Janvier 2008 - 07:11 - 10 mois, 3 semaines depuis - 24 lectures - Presse spécialisée - Eurosurveillance In early 2005, the institutions and member states of the European Union (EU), together with the other European Economic Area (EEA) member states of Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway, started preparing in a concerted manner for the next influenza pandemic.... |
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Why a burden of disease study?
Samedi 05 Janvier 2008 - 07:11 - 10 mois, 3 semaines depuis - 24 lectures - Presse spécialisée - Eurosurveillance From the time I was appointed as Director of the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) in 2005, I and the ECDC Governing and Advisory Bodies faced the task of tackling the 46 diseases under mandatory notification in the European Union (EU), as well as severe acute respiratory syn... |
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A Suspect Diagnosis
Lundi 03 Mars 2008 - 22:00 - 8 mois, 3 semaines depuis - 24 lectures - Presse généraliste - The Washington Post (health) Whenever doctors told Ruben Galiano that his wife, Olga, had multiple sclerosis, he tried not to look as though he didn't believe them. To the former hotel cook, her symptoms resembled those he had seen in stroke patients. And the MS medication she had been taking hadn't done a thing. |
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* L’ASCOMA dénonce : Ces huiles qui peuvent tuer - Journal Le Républicain (maliweb.net)
Jeudi 03 Janvier 2008 - 18:26 - 10 mois, 3 semaines depuis - 23 lectures - Presse généraliste - Google santé france C’est le docteur Ibrahima Sangaré, vétérinaire hygiéniste de l’Association des consommateurs du Mali qui nous avertit : “Aujourd’hui, il ya des risques pour la santé du consommateur qui ne sont pas gérés. Parmi ces risques, il y en a un qui est devenu ... |
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L'OMS favorise le traitement à domicile des enfants atteints de ... - XINHUA
Vendredi 04 Janvier 2008 - 17:23 - 10 mois, 3 semaines depuis - 23 lectures - Presse généraliste - Google santé france GENEVE, 4 janvier (Xinhua) -- Il est tout aussi efficace de soigner les enfants atteints de pneumonie sévère à domicile que de les soigner en milieu hospitalier, indique jeudi l'Organisation mondiale de la Santé (OMS) en citant une étude. ... |
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