Monday, February 22, 2016

Brazilian Legislators Look to Increase Abortion Penalties in the Wake of Zika Outbreak and other top stories.

  • Brazilian Legislators Look to Increase Abortion Penalties in the Wake of Zika Outbreak

    Brazilian Legislators Look to Increase Abortion Penalties in the Wake of Zika Outbreak
    Politicians in Brazil are drafting plans to stiffen existing abortion laws and give jail terms of four-and-a-half years to women who abort fetuses with microcephaly. The move by members of the powerful evangelical caucus in the country’s federal congress comes as it faces international pressure to liberalize its tough abortion laws—including from the United Nations—in the face of the Zika epidemic. It serves as a blunt reminder that, even as the Pope hints at a relaxation in Catholic attitude..
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  • Coffee May Protect Liver From Booze, Study Finds

    Coffee May Protect Liver From Booze, Study Finds
    Drinking more coffee might help reduce the kind of liver damage that's associated with overindulging in food and alcohol, a review of existing studies suggests. Researchers analyzed data from nine previously published studies with a total of more than 430,000 participants and found that drinking two additional cups of coffee a day was linked to a 44 percent lower risk of developing liver cirrhosis. "Cirrhosis is potentially fatal and there is no cure as such," said lead study author Dr. Ol..
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  • Cancer-causing HPV plummeted in teens since vaccine, study finds

    Cancer-causing HPV plummeted in teens since vaccine, study finds
    Researchers at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention compared the rates of HPV infection in women 14 to 34 years of age during the years before the vaccine was recommended, between 2003 and 2006, with the most recent years for which data are available, 2009 to 2012. Among girls 14 to 19 years old, rates of infection with the four types of HPV included in the 4vHPV vaccine decreased from 11.5% to 4.3%. There was also a drop, although smaller, in women 20 to 24 years old, from 18.5% to 12..
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  • Study: Air pollution increases risk for obesity, diabetes

    Study: Air pollution increases risk for obesity, diabetes
    DURHAM, N.C., Feb. 22 (UPI) -- Air pollution can increase the risk for obesity and diabetes, according to a study with lab rats exposed to the highly polluted air of Beijing. Researchers at Duke University found the air caused metabolic dysfunction in rats, leading to obesity and the precursors of diabetes when compared to rats that had not been exposed to the air. The air in China's capital, and the rest of the country, has become an increasing focus of health concerns in recent years and the ..
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  • Geneva group works to fight eating disorders

    Geneva group works to fight eating disorders
    As part of this week's National Eating Disorder Awareness Week, the Geneva-based Tri-City Family Services will provide local agencies and schools with packages containing information about eating disorders.Eating disorders is a subject typically not spoken about, Tegan Vaughn, a Tri-City Family Services therapist, said. Many people also think eating disorders are rare, added Anna McCaffrey, the group's Latino Services coordinator.In the United States, 20 million women and 10 million men will su..
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  • 'GMA' on Safari: Amy Robach Encounters Lions in Tanzania

    'GMA' on Safari: Amy Robach Encounters Lions in Tanzania
    "Good Morning America" co-host Amy Robach got up close in Africa with two orphaned lion cubs who were left motherless because of illegal hunting. Robach met the cubs at an animal orphanage in Tanzania, where they were rescued just days ago.
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  • China research highlights country's excess use of antibiotics

    SHANGHAI Children in China's eastern Jiangsu province are being widely exposed to antibiotics from tainted food and drinking water, potentially harming long-term health, local media reported on Monday, citing research from Shanghai's Fudan University.The study, which tested for 21 common antibiotics, including those used for animals, found traces of at least one type in 80 percent of a pool of 505 schoolchildren in Shanghai, China's modern business hub with a population over 20 million.China s..
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  • Scientists develop simple blood test to improve TB diagnosis, treatment

    Scientists develop simple blood test to improve TB diagnosis, treatment
    In 2014, the World Health Organization (WHO) issued a challenge to researchers— develop better diagnostic tests for active tuberculosis. Now, researchers at Stanford University School of Medicine are one step closer, having identified a distinguishing “signature” for the difficult-to-diagnose disease. Existing diagnostic methods, such as the skin prick test, aren’t able to identify patients with active TB and those who are no longer sick, or have been vaccinated against TB. These older tests ca..
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  • EU approves Bayer's Kovaltry for haemophilia A

    EU approves Bayer's Kovaltry for haemophilia A
    FRANKFURT The European Commission has approved Bayer's haemophilia A drug Kovaltry for the treatment of patients from all age groups, the company said on Monday.Kovaltry will complement Bayer's existing haemophilia business, with Kogenate being the most important product. Haemophilia affects about 400,000 people around the world and is a mainly inherited disorder in which one of the proteins needed to form blood clots is missing or reduced. (Reporting by Jonathan Gould; Editing by Maria Shea..
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