Vol. 143 No. 2833, October - October 2014
Index
- High school rate has more than doubled.
- What's good for the goose is good for the gander.
- Puerto Ricans remain at high risk.
- As college students embark on their freshman year.
- Halloween will be the kickoff date.
- In a dynamic mind-body interaction.
- In an unexpected finding, researchers have linked the activation of a stress gene in immune-system cells to the spread of breast cancer to other parts of the body..
- Participation in school athletics.
- Pitchers' weak core linked to missed days.
- The American Cancer Society.
- Goebbels and Ginsburg give their endorsement.
- Immediate testing can save newborns.
- The benefits of folic acid before pregnancy.
- Cure for most lethal gynecologic cancer?
- Depression in preschool a problem for teachers.
- Fishy advice from the FDA and EPA.
- Training your brain to prefer healthy foods.
- Environmental food cues may be trigger.
- Quick nutritional fixes for a healthy heart.
- Taxing our way to better eating.
- Rates rise with noninvasive test.
- Shigella flexneri can do what E. coli cannot.
- Vitamin D deficiency a heavy burden for obese.
- Whole grain pasta on hold--for now.
- Ebola outbreak traced to animal reservoir.
- Safety study of new candidate underway.
- How protective gear is removed poses risk.
- Potential new target for antibiotics found.
- Caring for horses eases symptoms of dementia.
- War follows too many vets home.
- Brain structure could predict risky behavior.
- Nasal test developed for prion disorder.
- New imaging technique shows MS's effect.
- Vaccine in works for recurring brain tumors.
- New vaccine's robust antibody response.
- Poor memory and slow walk predict dementia.
- Seeking relief from that pounding pain.
- Disasters demand mental health services.
- Setback in treatment for IPF patients.
- Sudden 'dystextia' can be sign of stroke.
- Unique therapeutic peptide identified.
- "Magic mushrooms" help smokers quit.
- About 1,650,000 deaths linked to sodium.
- New custom-designed treatment option.
- HCV will be a rare disease in 22 years.
- Protein keeps cancer idling, not hitting gas.
- Recently discovered protein may hold key.
- Journey to the microscopic world of "life: magnified".