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NDSU Extension Specialist: Sheep susceptible to polio
Polioencephalomacia (polio) is a disease that can become a problem in some sheep flocks, North Dakota State University Extension Service sheep specialist Reid Redden warns. It is characterized by the death of brain cells and is different from human...Tags: Diets and Dieting, Dietary Supplements, Diseases and Illnesses, Vitamin B1, Vitamin Therapy
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Rosenthal: Roger Ebert wrote a business script worth following
We all knew Roger Ebert. Even those who knew Roger only through his words and insights felt a bond. That was one of Ebert's many gifts, and with his death leaving such a profound void, it is easy to overlook all that we still have from him. Beyond the...
Tags: New Products, Chicago Loop, Social Media, Journalism, Twitter, Inc.
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Air quality levels unhealthy for some in Calexico
Digital Media News EditorAn air quality alert for the Calexico area has been issued, with levels of particulate matter 2.5 reaching unhealthy levels for some sensitive to air quality issues. Air quality levels reached 106 on the air quality index at noon today, according to the...Tags: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Symptoms, Diseases and Illnesses, Environmental Pollution, Heart Disease
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Simple changes that won't overwhelm
Green is everywhere. It's the "new black." It's a mantra heard from the grocery store to the gas pump to the automobile showroom. Given so much advice, where should we start?
Our choices may depend on our own personal styles. Some people are more...Tags: Connecticut, New Products, The Clorox Co., Lifestyle and Leisure, Foods and Beverages
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Charges filed in fatal beating at Green Line station
Tribune reportersAnthony Q. Jackson and Sanchez Mixon didn't know each other when they met at the Green Line station in Bronzeville on the South Side. Within minutes, Mixon lay dying on the platform and Jackson was gone. That's about the only thing both sides in the case...Tags: Michigan Avenue, Criminals, Prosecution, Crime, Law and Justice, Lawyers
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A life unfulfilled: Regrets of the dying
marieg@herald-mail.comIt wasn’t how much money they made or how quickly they climbed the ladder of success. It wasn’t the big homes or expensive cars, membership in the right social clubs or having a closet full of designer clothes. In the end, none of that...Tags: Diabetes, Health and Medical Professionals, Heart Attack, Authors, Disneyland Park
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Study: Radiation for breast cancer can harm hearts
Women treated with radiation for breast cancer are more likely to develop heart problems later, even with the lower doses used today, troubling new research suggests. The risk comes from any amount of radiation, starts five years after treatment and lasts...
Tags: High Blood Pressure, Radiation Therapy, Cancer, MRI (imaging), Medical Procedures and Tests
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A healthy dose of data
The daily broadcast of medical reports, scientific studies and sociological statistics can cause your ears to ring. Sometimes a report will contradict the findings of another issued just days earlier. More often, compelling snapshots of the American...Tags: Research, Physical Fitness and Exercise, American Medical Association, Veterans Affairs, Mumps
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Supplements we take mostly not ordered by doctors, study says
There is oh, so much publicity about fish oil pills, calcium and vitamin D – let alone the many more unusual dietary supplements. Are Americans persuaded? About half of U.S. adults use dietary supplements, and less than a quarter of the people who...
Tags: Research, American Medical Association, Mineral Supplements, Arthritis, Medical Research
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Racial gaps remain in cancer rates
Cancer death rates among African American men declined faster than those of white men in the last decade, even though overall survival rates for black men and women remained the lowest of all racial groups for most types of cancer, according to a recent...
Tags: Breast Cancer, Lung Cancer, Colon Cancer, American Cancer Society, Prostate Cancer
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Outdoor smoking bans may be coming to South Florida beaches, parks
If you enjoy the freedom to light up at a park or beach — or if you gag at the stench of the second-hand smoke — change could be coming. With a push from a Palm Beach County high school senior motivated by her grandfather's death from lung...
Tags: Fort Lauderdale, Palm Beach County, Lung Cancer, Wilton Manors, Civil Laws
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Women have caught up to men on lung cancer risk
New research finds that women who smoke today have a much greater risk of dying from lung cancer than they did decades ago compared to those who never smoked. That is partly because they are starting younger and smoking more than women used to. Women...
Tags: Lung Cancer, Medical Research
Apr 12, 2013
|Story| Aberdeen News
Apr 7, 2013
|Column| Chicago Tribune
Mar 26, 2013
|Story| Imperial Valley Press Online
Mar 25, 2013
|Story| South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Mar 20, 2013
|Story| Chicago Tribune
Mar 13, 2013
|Story| Herald Mail
Mar 14, 2013
|Story| Petoskey News
Mar 6, 2013
|Story| Chicago Tribune
Feb 5, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Feb 5, 2013
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Jan 28, 2013
|Story| South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Jan 23, 2013
|Story| KWCH
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