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Need Encouragement to Shed Some Pounds? Blogs May Help.
Lundi 12 Mai 2008 - 21:00 - 6 mois, 3 semaines depuis - 20 lectures - Presse généraliste - The Washington Post (health) Shauna Reid, Gerry Pugliese and Deborah Kosnett don't seem to have much in common. They've never met and live in cities hundreds of miles apart. But they share one activity that has changed their lives: blogging about weight loss. |
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Senate Panel Acts on AIDS Bill
Jeudi 13 Mars 2008 - 12:57 - 8 mois, 3 semaines depuis - 20 lectures - Presse généraliste - The Washington Post (health) WASHINGTON -- The Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Thursday approved the spending of $50 billion over the next five years to combat the health crises posed by AIDS and other diseases in Africa and elsewhere in the world. |
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10 Facts About Nutrition, Fitness and Weight
Mardi 20 Mai 2008 - 21:00 - 6 mois, 2 semaines depuis - 20 lectures - Presse généraliste - The Washington Post (health) Bad: One in four Americans eats fast food at least once a day. |
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Near-Syncope in a 24-Year-Old Man
Mercredi 12 Mars 2008 - 09:00 - 8 mois, 3 semaines depuis - 20 lectures - Presse spécialisée - Medscape family medicine A 24-year-old man presents to the emergency department (ED) after several episodes of nearly blacking out that have occurred 3-4 times over the past 3 days. The patient states that he also felt his heart beating really fast and associated light-headedness. He smokes 2-4 packs of cigarettes per day and has done so for 5-6 years. No history of significant cardiac disease or sudden cardiac death in his family is noted. An electrocardiogram (ECG) is obtained. What is the diagnosis? eMedicine Case Presentations |
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Doctors debate when to declare organ donors dead
Mercredi 13 Août 2008 - 16:42 - 3 mois, 2 semaines depuis - 20 lectures - Presse généraliste - The Washington Post (health) NEW YORK -- A report on three heart transplants involving babies is focusing attention on a touchy issue in the organ donation field: When and how can someone be declared dead? |
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Scientific American Magazine: The Human Instrument
Dimanche 16 Décembre 2007 - 16:00 - 11 mois, 2 semaines depuis - 20 lectures - Presse spécialisée - Scientific American The human vocal system would not receive much acclaim if instrument makers placed it in a lineup of traditional orchestral instruments. Arranged by size, for example, the voice box (larynx)--and the airway it sits in--would be grouped with the piccolo, among the smallest of mechanical music makers. And yet experienced singers compete well with all man-made instruments, one on one and even paired with full orchestras. Recent investigations of how our singing voice generates a remarkable range of sounds have revealed surprising complexity in the behavior of the vocal system’s elements and in the ways they interact. |
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S. Africa Worried About Affordability of AIDS Fight
Vendredi 07 Mars 2008 - 12:25 - 8 mois, 4 semaines depuis - 20 lectures - Presse spécialisée - Medscape HIV AIDS South Africa, which has one of the world's highest rates of HIV/AIDS, is worried a national programme to fight the disease could founder on a lack of financial resources, it said in a report to the United Nations. Reuters Health Information |
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Senate Votes For Safer Products
Jeudi 06 Mars 2008 - 22:00 - 8 mois, 4 semaines depuis - 20 lectures - Presse généraliste - The Washington Post (health) The Senate yesterday approved the most far-reaching changes to the nation's product safety system in a generation, responding to recalls of millions of lead-laced toys that rattled consumers last year. |
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Assessing the Role of Syringe Dispensing Machines and Mobile Van Outlets in Reaching Hard-to-reach and High-risk Groups of Injecting Drug Users (IDUs)
Jeudi 06 Mars 2008 - 09:41 - 9 mois depuis - 20 lectures - Presse spécialisée - Medscape HIV AIDS Syringe dispensing machines and mobile vans are promising modalities of needle syringe programs. Their anonymous and confidential approaches make services attractive, accessible and acceptable. Harm Reduction Journal |
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Les autorités se veulent rassurantes face au rejet d'uranium sur le site de Tricastin
Mardi 08 Juillet 2008 - 20:54 - 4 mois, 3 semaines depuis - 20 lectures - Presse généraliste - Le monde Sciences La consommation d'eau potable, la pêche, la baignade et l'irrigation ont été interdites dans trois communes du Vaucluse après un rejet radioactif accidentel d'uranium, mardi, près du site nucléaire du Tricastin. |
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