NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Women who stay active after being diagnosed with breast cancer -- and even those who take up exercise for the first time after diagnosis -- have a better chance of surviving the disease, a new...
By Anne Harding NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - "I think that there is a lot of excitement about the use of androgens ('male' hormones) to treat low sexual desire in women that is based on evidence that looks better than it really...
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Female college soccer players can help protect themselves from injuring the key stabilizing ligament of the knee joint with a series of exercises that can be done in less than a half-hour, a new...
By Anne Harding NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - People with epilepsy are up to 19-times more likely to drown than people without the condition, according to a new analysis of existing research. While people with epilepsy should not...
By Anne Harding NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Older women with higher concentrations of vitamin D in their blood are less likely to sustain hip fractures, according to research published in the Annals of Internal Medicine. The...
By Anne Harding NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Boston researchers have launched a study to examine how three "poorly understood" risk factors contribute to falls among older people. Dr. Suzanne G. Leveille of Harvard Medical...
AN4 Group: AN4 Group Helps Simple Investments Increase Productivity with Proofpoint On-Demand Email Solution; Deployment of hosted email security system reduces spam, speeding up communications and enabling employees to work...
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Parents now have another reason to shoo their kids outdoors to play, along with making sure they get enough fresh air and exercise. In a study, Australian researchers found evidence that children who...
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Parents now have another reason to shoo their kids outdoors to play, along with making sure they get enough fresh air and exercise. In a study, Australian researchers found evidence that children who...
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Obesity may be contagious because most people feel good about themselves if they are about as heavy as the people around them, according to new research from an international team of economists.