Sign in
NetworkOfCare.org
NPR Health Blog
Blog Help
NPR Health Blog
Home
Syndication
RSS for Posts
Atom
RSS for Comments
Recent Posts
Geneticists Breach Ethical Taboo By Changing Genes Across Generations
How Does The Polio Vaccine Reach A Remote Corner Of The World?
The Sick Turn To Crowdfunding To Pay Medical Bills
Meningitis From Tainted Drugs Puts Patients, Doctors In Quandary
Insurers Revive Child-Only Policies, But Cost Is Still An Issue
Tags
Cancer
Children
Congressional activity
Consumers
Costs
Doctors
FDA
Food Safety
Health Overhaul
Heart disease
Hospitals
Insurance
Medicare
Mental Health
Nutrition
Obesity
Personal Health
Pharmaceuticals
Prevention
Public Health
Radiology
Research
Swine Flu (H1N1)
Vaccines
Women's health
View more
Archives
October 2012 (78)
September 2012 (74)
August 2012 (78)
July 2012 (90)
June 2012 (79)
May 2012 (85)
April 2012 (76)
March 2012 (97)
February 2012 (88)
January 2012 (81)
December 2011 (74)
November 2011 (69)
October 2011 (75)
September 2011 (80)
August 2011 (98)
July 2011 (83)
June 2011 (87)
May 2011 (87)
April 2011 (81)
March 2011 (87)
February 2011 (79)
January 2011 (82)
December 2010 (84)
November 2010 (87)
October 2010 (83)
September 2010 (81)
August 2010 (82)
July 2010 (86)
June 2010 (83)
May 2010 (83)
April 2010 (105)
March 2010 (102)
February 2010 (86)
January 2010 (100)
December 2009 (106)
November 2009 (103)
October 2009 (87)
Sort by:
Most Recent
|
Most Viewed
|
Most Commented
Watch Out For Bogus Swine Flu Remedies Online
By Scott Hensley If you're worried about swine flu, resist the temptation to stock up on dubious medicines being hawked online. Stick with the genuine article. (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images) Stick with the genuine article. (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images...
Published
Fri, Oct 16 2009 8:47 AM
by
NPR Blogs: NPR Health
Filed under:
Swine Flu (H1N1)
Carbon Monoxide Takes Turn As Treatment
By Scott Hensley Here's an experiment you definitely should not try at home: breathing low levels of the poisonous gas carbon monoxide to fight disease. Flame on! carbon monoxide researchers. (iStockphoto.com) ?s=12" alt="flame logo."...
Published
Fri, Oct 16 2009 6:48 AM
by
NPR Blogs: NPR Health
Filed under:
Research
Family Doctors Sign Educational Deal With Coca-Cola
By Maggie Mertens When health questions crop up, the first resource for answers is often the family doctor. But if eating right is on your mind, how would you feel if the doctor's professional society is taking money from the soft-drink industry?...
Published
Thu, Oct 15 2009 2:01 PM
by
NPR Blogs: NPR Health
Filed under:
Doctors
,
Public Health
,
Ethics
Raising Eyebrows Gets Handwashing Results
By Kathleen Masterson Just because mom always taught you to wash up after doing your business doesn't mean you heed her sound advice. Now some British researchers have found the next best thing to mom looking over your shoulder in the bathroom may...
Published
Thu, Oct 15 2009 12:46 PM
by
NPR Blogs: NPR Health
Filed under:
Public Health
,
Prevention
Smoke Gets In Your Heart
By Richard Knox Almost four decades after the Surgeon General first suggested secondhand smoke causes heart attacks, the National Institute of Medicine says there's no doubt about it. Snuff 'em out, if you've got 'em. (iStockphoto.com...
Published
Thu, Oct 15 2009 12:09 PM
by
NPR Blogs: NPR Health
Filed under:
Public Health
,
Heart disease
,
Tobacco
Stolen Laptop Held Data On Thousands Of Doctors
By Scott Hensley Here we go again. Another stolen laptop, and a whole bunch more personal data that could be used for no-good. What's up, doc? Maybe your personal data online. ( iStockphoto.com) (iStockphoto.com) --> A computer belonging to an...
Published
Thu, Oct 15 2009 8:56 AM
by
NPR Blogs: NPR Health
Filed under:
Doctors
Mask Skirmish Marks New Front In Swine Flu Battle
By Richard Knox So when the swine flu hits, should the doctors and nurses at your local hospital make do with regular old surgical masks to keep the new H1N1 virus at bay or go with a beefier and more costly respirator? N-95 masks, like this one being...
Published
Thu, Oct 15 2009 6:57 AM
by
NPR Blogs: NPR Health
Filed under:
Swine Flu (H1N1)
Abortions Decline, Despite More Liberal Laws Worldwide
By Brenda Wilson Abortions are becoming less common around the world, even as more countries ease abortion laws. In a report looking at abortion trends around the world, the Guttmacher Institute, a non-profit reproductive rights organization, estimates...
Published
Wed, Oct 14 2009 2:25 PM
by
NPR Blogs: NPR Health
Filed under:
Women's health
Radiation Overdoses At Cedars-Sinai Prompt Investigation
By Maggie Mertens Only after a patient complained in August about losing some hair following a CT scan did Cedars-Sinai Medical Center realize more than 200 people had been exposed to excessive radiation from diagnostic tests performed there in the last...
Published
Wed, Oct 14 2009 11:57 AM
by
NPR Blogs: NPR Health
Filed under:
Hospitals
Get Your Flu Shots, Health Pros
By Scott Hensley We've heard plenty of civilians questioning whether to get vaccinated against swine flu. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says the answer is pretty much, "Yes, you should." For those on the fence, new data...
Published
Wed, Oct 14 2009 9:17 AM
by
NPR Blogs: NPR Health
Filed under:
Swine Flu (H1N1)
With Senate Vote, Overhaul Critics Dig In
By Scott Hensley There's nothing quite like a landmark Senate vote to focus the minds of folks worried about how changes to the nation's health system could hurt their livelihoods. Karen Ignagni, president of America's Health Insurance Plans...
Published
Wed, Oct 14 2009 6:50 AM
by
NPR Blogs: NPR Health
Filed under:
Health Overhaul
Swine Flu Packs Punch For Healthy, Too
By Scott Hensley Good health is no guarantee swine flu won't put you in the hospital. Swine flu can knock out just about anyone. ( Michael Krinke/iStockphoto.com) (Michael Krinke/iStockphoto.com) --> Nearly half of adults hospitalized with swine...
Published
Tue, Oct 13 2009 2:28 PM
by
NPR Blogs: NPR Health
Filed under:
Swine Flu (H1N1)
Snowe Says Yes To Baucus Bill!
By Scott Hensley Maine Republican Olympia Snowe ended the suspense and said she would vote yes on the Senate Finance Committee's health bill. Sen. Olympia Snowe (R, Maine) beams after saying she would vote for the Senate Finance Committee's bill...
Published
Tue, Oct 13 2009 11:38 AM
by
NPR Blogs: NPR Health
Filed under:
Health Overhaul
,
Congressional activity
Humans Beat Robots On Prostate Surgery Side Effects
By Scott Hensley Scan highway billboards, flick on your TV or listen very long to the radio and you'll probably come across an ad from a hospital touting robot-assisted surgery as the way to go for treating prostate cancer. A surgeon hunches over...
Published
Tue, Oct 13 2009 10:30 AM
by
NPR Blogs: NPR Health
Filed under:
Doctors
,
Cancer
,
Quality
Snowe On Health Bill: Will She Vote Yes?
By Scott Hensley Just about everybody, including us, is pretty sure the Democrats on the Senate Finance Committee will all vote to move along the health bill championed by Chairman Max Baucus. That should get the procedural job done. Sen. Max Baucus talks...
Published
Tue, Oct 13 2009 7:21 AM
by
NPR Blogs: NPR Health
Filed under:
Health Overhaul
« First
...
< Previous
208
209
210
211
212
Next >