Friday, January 29, 2010

Emergency care standards needed in wake of Ont. teen's death, say ER doctors

TORONTO - The death of an Ontario teen while being rushed to hospital should be a wake-up call for Canadians that emergency care standards are needed across the country, said a group representing ER doctors. Injured in a car crash, 18-year-old Reilly Anzovino died Dec....More

Canada, Gates Foundation agree not to go ahead with planned HIV vaccine plant

TORONTO - Sources say the federal government and the Gates Foundation have agreed not to proceed with plans to fund construction in Canada of a facility to make pilot lots of experimental HIV vaccines....More

Canada gives WHO 5 M doses of H1N1 vaccine, mulling options for remaining excess

TORONTO - Canada has revealed what it will do with a portion of the country's large H1N1 vaccine surplus, announcing Thursday that it is giving five million doses to the World Health Organization....More

Canada donates 5 million doses of excess H1N1 vaccine to WHO for redistribution

TORONTO - Canada has revealed what it will do with a portion of the country's large H1N1 vaccine surplus, announcing Thursday that it is giving five million doses to the World Health Organization....More

Canada donates 5 million doses of excess H1N1 vaccine to WHO for redistribution

TORONTO - Canada has finally revealed what it will do with a portion of the country's large H1N1 vaccine surplus, announcing it will give five million doses to the World Health Organization....More

ATM-like kiosks to fill prescriptions in Ont. hospitals, remote areas

TORONTO - Large green and white kiosks that resemble bank machines but instead take prescriptions and dispense medicine 24 hours a day are coming to hospitals and remote communities in Ontario....More

Alberta lowers generic drug costs after talks with pharmacy chains

EDMONTON - Alberta is reducing the price of generic drugs after having to compromise on a new price structure in negotiations with pharmacies and drug makers....More

Bill Gates makes $10 billion pledge to develop vaccines for poorest countries

DAVOS, Switzerland - Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates and his wife, Melinda, say their foundation will donate $10 billion US over the next decade to research new vaccines and bring them to the world's poorest countries....More

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Rebranding of cancer charities strengthens message, could bring in new donors

TORONTO - For decades, the enduring image of the Canadian Cancer Society has been the gently nodding spring flower, the daffodil. And while that bright yellow symbol of hope and renewal isn't being abandoned, the venerable charity is now taking a much bolder approach....More

Obama implores Congress to save health care overhaul, takes part of blame for near collapse

WASHINGTON - President Barack Obama is imploring lawmakers not to abandon his sweeping health care overhaul, and he's also taking part of the blame for its near collapse....More

Hospital budgets won't be frozen in the spring, says McGuinty

TORONTO - Ontario hospitals won't be facing a budget freeze in the spring budget, but they won't see a big cash injection either, Premier Dalton McGuinty said Wednesday....More

Government gets failing grade on food safety from union, consumers' group

OTTAWA - The government hasn't improved the food-safety system six months after the fatal listeriosis outbreak, food inspectors and a consumers group said Wednesday....More

Fees in hospital emergency rooms not in the cards for Albertans: health minister

EDMONTON - Alberta Health Minister Gene Zwozdesky says the government isn't planning to bring in fees for visits to hospital emergency rooms. The minister told a radio talk show Wednesday that Albertans should talk about the idea in discussions about health care....More

Congressional leaders slow down health overhaul push, searching for answers on how to proceed

WASHINGTON - Congressional leaders are taking health care legislation off the fast track as Democratic lawmakers, wary of unhappy voters ahead of November elections, look to President Barack Obama for guidance in his State of the Union address....More

Beating the odds: Cancer survivor gives back to fight back in ads, online videos

TORONTO - When Dom Sitas learned he had advanced colorectal cancer more than four years ago, life as he and his family had known it was irrevocably changed....More

Albertans want cheap drugs, long-term care:NDP

EDMONTON - Alberta's New Democrats say the public wants lower drug costs for seniors, more long-term care centres and better access to abortions....More

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Inuit infant mortality three times Canadian average; children go hungry: Study

Inuit infants die at well over three times the rate of other Canadian babies, according to a massive new study published Monday in the Canadian Medical Association Journal....More

China pulls more melamine-tainted milk products from store shelves in a southern province

BEIJING - Melamine-tainted dairy products were pulled from convenience store shelves in southern China more than a year after hundreds of thousands of children had been sickened in a massive milk safety scandal, a government spokeswoman said Monday....More

Assessing injuries after a fall: Is it broken? In doubt, have it checked

TORONTO - Sticks and stones may break your bones - and the same can often be said for taking a tumble from playground equipment, wiping out at the hockey rink or spectacular crashes on a ski slope....More

'Perfect storm' of heart disease looming with boomers and young adults at risk

TORONTO - Canada faces a "perfect storm" of cardiovascular disease, with younger adults at increased risk of earlier onset of heart disease and with the huge baby boom generation approaching their senior years, the Heart and Stroke Foundation warned Monday....More

Metro recalling Selection brand Iced Chocolatey Donuts sold in Ont. and Que.: CFIA

OTTAWA - The Canadian Food Inspection Agency and Metro Inc. are warning people with allergies to milk or egg not to consume Selection brand Iced Chocolatey Donuts. The affected product contains milk and egg which are not declared on the label....More

Group of Canadian volunteers in Haiti struggles to save one life at a time

LEOGANE, Haiti - Imagine trying to save the life of a seven-year-old boy. To do that, you need to amputate his mangled, infected leg. You explain to his parents that without this operation, the boy will almost certainly die....More

FDA announces recall of 2 million defective needles

WASHINGTON - Federal health officials are announcing a recall of two million needles because of a risk they can push bits of silicone into patients' bodies. The Food and Drug Administration said Miami-based Nipro Medical Corp....More

Canada pledge to poor country health care at G8 meeting could cost $2B: UNICEF

OTTAWA - The Conservative government's G8 commitment to maternal and child health in poor countries could cost up to $2 billion, says the United Nations children's fund....More

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Weight training improves seniors' cognitive abilities: research

TORONTO - We're not talking about bulking up like a champion weightlifter, but research shows resistance training can be good for seniors, slowing cognitive decline while improving their strength and mobility....More

Study will put to test growing evidence linking high blood pressure to dementia

WASHINGTON - If the cardiologist's warnings don't scare you, consider this: Controlling blood pressure just might be the best protection yet known against dementia....More

Rising number of Canadians young and old at risk for heart disease: report

TORONTO - Canada faces a "perfect storm" of heart disease, with younger adults at increased risk of earlier onset of heart disease and the huge baby boom generation approaching their senior years, the Heart and Stroke Foundation warned Monday....More

Parents choose fewer calories for kids' meals when calories listed: study

Parents who choose fast-food meals from a menu that also lists calories tend to order food with fewer calories, a new study indicates....More

Inuit infant mortality three times Canadian average; children go hungry: Study

Inuit infants die at well over three times the rate of other Canadian babies, according to a massive new study published Monday in the Canadian Medical Association Journal....More

China pulls more melamine-tainted milk products from store shelves in a southern province

BEIJING - Melamine-tainted dairy products were pulled from convenience store shelves in southern China more than a year after hundreds of thousands of children had been sickened in a massive milk safety scandal, a government spokeswoman said Monday....More

Assessing injuries after a fall: Is it broken? In doubt, have it checked

TORONTO - Sticks and stones may break your bones - and the same can often be said for taking a tumble from playground equipment, wiping out at the hockey rink or spectacular crashes on a ski slope....More

'Perfect storm' of heart disease looming with boomers and young adults at risk

TORONTO - Canada faces a "perfect storm" of cardiovascular disease, with younger adults at increased risk of earlier onset of heart disease and with the huge baby boom generation approaching their senior years, the Heart and Stroke Foundation warned Monday....More

Monday, January 25, 2010

Democrats ponder health-care options after losing Kennedy's crucial Senate seat

WASHINGTON - Shortly before his death last summer, Ted Kennedy described his efforts to reform the U.S. health-care system as "the cause of my life....More

Verdict expected today for Ontario raw milk advocate Michael Schmidt

NEWMARKET, Ont. - Michael Schmidt should find out today whether he is permitted to continue operating his raw milk co-op. The Durham, Ont., farmer defended himself last year against 20 charges for dispensing milk straight from the cow....More

Study: Smokers with early lung cancer could double survival chances if they quit

LONDON - People with early lung cancer who quit smoking could double their chances of surviving, a new study says. Until now, there has been little proof that quitting smoking after developing lung cancer makes any difference to survival....More

Study shows U.S. birth weights inching down, but researchers can't say why

WASHINGTON - U.S. newborns are arriving a little smaller, says puzzling new Harvard research that can't explain why. Fatter mothers tend to produce heavier babies, and obesity is soaring....More

New genetic analyzing tool helps trace superbug MRSA's origins: study

TORONTO - Researchers have used a "revolutionary" genetic profiling tool to distinguish between closely related strains of the potentially deadly superbug MRSA and even pinpoint when and where in the world the mutated bacteria first arose....More

Study: Combat injuries not the leading reason US soldiers are medically evacuated from wars

LONDON - American soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan were more likely to be medically evacuated for health problems such as a bad back than for combat injuries, a new study says....More

WHO says critics who claim swine flu is fake pandemic are 'irresponsible'

GENEVA - The World Health Organization has rejected as "irresponsible" allegations that swine flu is a fake pandemic. WHO also dismissed claims it colluded with drug companies to bring economic benefit to the industry by playing up the danger of the new H1N1 influenza strain....More

China pulls more melamine-tainted milk products from store shelves in a southern province

BEIJING - Melamine-tainted dairy products were pulled from convenience store shelves in southern China more than a year after hundreds of thousands of children had been sickened in a massive milk safety scandal, a government spokeswoman said Monday....More

Friday, January 22, 2010

Fingertip amputations prompt Graco stroller recall

WASHINGTON - About 1.5 million Graco strollers sold at Wal-Mart, Target and other major retailers are being recalled after some children's fingertips were amputated by hinges on the products. The recall by Graco Children's Products Inc....More

Experts warn that too much sitting could be deadly - even for people who exercise

LONDON - Here's a new warning from health experts: Sitting is deadly. Scientists are increasingly warning that sitting for prolonged periods - even if you also exercise regularly - could be bad for your health....More

Democrats ponder health-care options after losing Kennedy's crucial Senate seat

WASHINGTON - Shortly before his death last summer, Ted Kennedy described his efforts to reform the U.S. health-care system as "the cause of my life....More

Verdict expected today for Ontario raw milk advocate Michael Schmidt

NEWMARKET, Ont. - Michael Schmidt should find out today whether he is permitted to continue operating his raw milk co-op. The Durham, Ont., farmer defended himself last year against 20 charges for dispensing milk straight from the cow....More

Study: Smokers with early lung cancer could double survival chances if they quit

LONDON - People with early lung cancer who quit smoking could double their chances of surviving, a new study says. Until now, there has been little proof that quitting smoking after developing lung cancer makes any difference to survival....More

Study shows U.S. birth weights inching down, but researchers can't say why

WASHINGTON - U.S. newborns are arriving a little smaller, says puzzling new Harvard research that can't explain why. Fatter mothers tend to produce heavier babies, and obesity is soaring....More

New genetic analyzing tool helps trace superbug MRSA's origins: study

TORONTO - Researchers have used a "revolutionary" genetic profiling tool to distinguish between closely related strains of the potentially deadly superbug MRSA and even pinpoint when and where in the world the mutated bacteria first arose....More

Study: Combat injuries not the leading reason US soldiers are medically evacuated from wars

LONDON - American soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan were more likely to be medically evacuated for health problems such as a bad back than for combat injuries, a new study says....More

Thursday, January 21, 2010

U.S. maker issues safety warning for strollers with hinged canopies

TORONTO - The manufacturer of several children's strollers is warning that hinges on the products' canopies pose a danger of injury to children's fingers, including cuts, bruises and even amputation. Graco Children's Products Inc....More

New treatment for potentially deadly C. difficile shows promise: researchers

TORONTO - A new, double-barrelled approach to treating C. difficile appears to dramatically reduce recurrence of the debilitating and potentially deadly infection, preliminary testing suggests....More

New health minister halts hospital bed closures in Edmonton and Calgary

EDMONTON - Alberta's new health minister has ordered a halt to hospital bed closures in Edmonton and Calgary while he reviews whether this was a wise move. A public outcry erupted in September when Alberta Health Services announced a three-year plan to close 300 acute care beds....More

Government-appointed review panel calling for patient charter in Alberta

EDMONTON - A government-appointed review panel is recommending a patient charter be created to guide Albertans on what to expect from the health system. The report says the patient charter should be developed in consultation with Albertans....More

Fingertip amputations prompt Graco stroller recall

WASHINGTON - About 1.5 million Graco strollers sold at Wal-Mart, Target and other major retailers are being recalled after some children's fingertips were amputated by hinges on the products. The recall by Graco Children's Products Inc....More

Experts warn that too much sitting could be deadly - even for people who exercise

LONDON - Here's a new warning from health experts: Sitting is deadly. Scientists are increasingly warning that sitting for prolonged periods - even if you also exercise regularly - could be bad for your health....More

Democrats ponder health-care options after losing Kennedy's crucial Senate seat

WASHINGTON - Shortly before his death last summer, Ted Kennedy described his efforts to reform the U.S. health-care system as "the cause of my life....More

Verdict expected today for Ontario raw milk advocate Michael Schmidt

NEWMARKET, Ont. - Michael Schmidt should find out today whether he is permitted to continue operating his raw milk co-op. The Durham, Ont., farmer defended himself last year against 20 charges for dispensing milk straight from the cow....More

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Spring will bring US agency hearing on stronger warnings about cancer and tanning beds

WASHINGTON - The U.S Food and Drug Administration will debate how to toughen warnings that tanning bed sunlamps pose a cancer risk. Yes, sunburns are particularly dangerous. But there is increasing scientific consensus that there is no such thing as a safe tan, either....More

Mexican tycoon Carlos Slim gives $65M for genetic research on cancer, diabetes, kidney disease

MEXICO CITY - Telecommunications mogul Carlos Slim pledged $65 million Tuesday for genetic research on cancer, type 2 diabetes and kidney disease....More

Court adjourns case of Alta. couple fighting to keep infant on life support

EDMONTON - Little Isaiah May has been give more time to live so lawyers and medical experts can review whether he should remain hooked up to a hospital ventilator....More

Britain restricts drinking contests at boozy bars, but resists minimum pricing for alcohol

LONDON - Officials will ban drinking contests in bars and force pub owners to offer patrons tap water in a bid to help tackle Britain's boozy culture, the government said Tuesday....More

Brazil boy stuck by needles to be released from hospital after nearly a month

SAO PAULO, Brazil - A 2-year-old Brazilian boy stuck by his stepfather with dozens of sewing needles will be released from the hospital Friday with five needles still on his body....More

Alberta health committee recommends creating own health act, patient charter

EDMONTON - A government-appointed committee is recommending that Alberta create its own health act and a patient charter. The Canadian Press has learned that a key recommendation to be released Wednesday is the creation of an Alberta Health Act....More

7,600 Dorel Asia drop-side cribs recalled in Canada over concern the drop-side can detach

OTTAWA - More than 7,000 drop-side cribs distributed by Dorel are being voluntarily recalled in Canada over concerns the drop-side can detach, creating a space where a child can be trapped....More

Fingertip amputations prompt Graco stroller recall

WASHINGTON - About 1.5 million Graco strollers sold at Wal-Mart, Target and other major retailers are being recalled after some children's fingertips were amputated by hinges on the products. The recall by Graco Children's Products Inc....More

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

N.S., N.L. co-operate on program to track breast screening results and followup

HALIFAX, N.S. - The Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation has created a new partnership between the breast screening programs of Nova Scotia and Newfoundland and Labrador....More

Diabetes rates for aboriginals rising, especially among young women

TORONTO - Rates of diabetes among aboriginals have risen at an alarming rate over the last several decades, especially for women of child-bearing age, a long-term study has found....More

Conjoined Arizona girls who share heart preparing for separation surgery at Seattle hospital

MESA, Ariz. - Conjoined twins from Arizona have already defied medical expectations by living past their third birthdays. Now their parents hope the girls will become one of the first sets of twins sharing a heart to be successfully separated....More

Colorado surgery technician describes how she stole painkiller meant for patients

DENVER - A surgery technician who infected three dozen people with hepatitis C and may have exposed thousands of others by switching used syringes with ones filled with a powerful painkiller says she got careless while at two Colorado hospitals and doesn't expect to be forgiven....More

China to expand smoking bans as health awareness rises in world's largest tobacco consumer

BEIJING - China is tightening smoking regulations to ban lighting up in any indoor public spaces in seven provincial capitals, the latest sign of rising health awareness in the world's largest tobacco-consuming nation....More

Bargaining continues as hospital workers set up picket lines in rural N.S.

TRURO, N.S. - Health care workers in rural Nova Scotia set up picket lines early Monday after their union and the provincial government failed to hammer out a tentative contract deal....More

Alberta Health approves moving geriatric mental patients from Alberta Hospital

EDMONTON - Alberta will transfer geriatric patients from a mental hospital in Edmonton to a new facility, but has dropped plans to move others in a decision that could cure one of Premier Ed Stelmach's lingering political headaches....More

Britain restricts drinking contests at boozy bars, but resists minimum pricing for alcohol

LONDON - Officials will ban drinking contests in bars and force pub owners to offer patrons tap water in a bid to help tackle Britain's boozy culture, the government said Tuesday....More

Monday, January 18, 2010

Exercise, getting together with friends, exposure to light all help winter blues

TORONTO - Whether or not you subscribe to a claim that the most depressing day of the year occurs on the third Monday of January, it's not a bad time to take stock and address the winter blues if you're feeling down, experts say....More

US task force says screen school-age kids for obesity, intensive treatment works

CHICAGO - An influential advisory panel says school-aged youngsters and teens should be screened for obesity and sent to intensive behaviour treatment if they need to lose weight - a move that could transform how doctors deal with overweight children....More

Two hours after walking off job, hospital workers reach deal with N.S. gov't

TRURO, N.S. - More than 4,000 health care workers in rural Nova Scotia have a tentative contract deal, bringing a swift end to their strike. Picket lines went up at 6 a.m....More

Term 'concussion' leads some docs, parents to underestimate severity of injury

TORONTO - The medical diagnosis of "concussion" may be leading parents and even doctors to underestimate the possible severity of brain injuries in children, some Canadian researchers contend in a paper that argues the term should be scrapped....More

Outbreaks of disease could cause more deaths in earthquake-ravaged Haiti

Still reeling from the devastation wrought by this week's earthquake, the people of Haiti now face another foe, unseen but potentially just as deadly....More

Colorado surgery technician describes how she stole painkiller meant for patients

DENVER - A surgery technician who infected three dozen people with hepatitis C and may have exposed thousands of others by switching used syringes with ones filled with a powerful painkiller says she got careless while at two Colorado hospitals and doesn't expect to be forgiven....More

China to expand smoking bans as health awareness rises in world's largest tobacco consumer

BEIJING - China is tightening smoking regulations to ban lighting up in any indoor public spaces in seven provincial capitals, the latest sign of rising health awareness in the world's largest tobacco-consuming nation....More

Bargaining continues as hospital workers set up picket lines in rural N.S.

TRURO, N.S. - Health care workers in rural Nova Scotia set up picket lines early Monday after their union and the provincial government failed to hammer out a tentative contract deal....More

Friday, January 15, 2010

Fitness levels among Canadians have plummeted since 1981: StatsCan

OTTAWA - A new survey says the fitness levels of Canadian children and youth, as well as those of adults, declined significantly between 1981 and 2009....More

Canadians fatter, less fit than in 1981; trends don't bode well: experts

TORONTO - Canadians of all ages have become substantially fatter and less fit over the last few decades, with all age groups packing on pounds while at the same time losing strength, endurance and flexibility, an important new survey has revealed....More

Belgian doctors give woman a new windpipe after implanting it into her arm

LONDON - For more than 2 1/2 years, Linda De Croock lived with constant pain from a car accident that smashed her windpipe....More

UK gov't apologizes to people harmed by anti-nausea drug Thalidomide

LONDON - The British government apologized Thursday to people who were harmed in the womb when their mothers took the anti-nausea drug Thalidomide....More

Online questionnaire helps students evaluate their drinking habits

TORONTO - Laura Adamarczuk was initially blase when asked to complete an online questionnaire to evaluate her drinking habits. The survey was compulsory for residence dons at the University of Western Ontario, but the 21-year-old felt the exercise had minimal value....More

Mass. doctor accused of faking painkiller studies charged with federal health care fraud

BOSTON - Federal prosecutors announced Thursday that they have filed a health care fraud charge against a doctor accused of faking research for a dozen years in published studies that suggested after-surgery benefits from painkillers including Vioxx and Celebrex....More

Claims H1N1 is a fake pandemic are scientifically wrong and irresponsible: WHO

TORONTO - The World Health Organization's top flu expert has struck back at criticism about the agency's handling of the H1N1 pandemic, saying claims that the outbreak was a false alarm are scientifically wrong and irresponsible. Dr....More

Chalk River medical isotope reactor may be down longer than expected

OTTAWA - The troubled Chalk River nuclear reactor may not be up and running until April, further delaying the return to a full supply of isotopes for vital medical tests. Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd....More

Thursday, January 14, 2010

MedGenesis, Biovail to work together on a treatment for Parkinson's disease

VICTORIA, B.C. - MedGenesis Therapeutix Inc. says it's collaborating with Biovail Corp. (TSX:BVF), Canada's largest publicly traded pharmaceutical company, on developing a new way to treat Parkinson's disease. The two companies have also struck licence agreements with Amgen Inc....More

Another chain pulls cadmium-tainted kids' jewelry

LOS ANGELES - A second international chain store said it is pulling from shelves jewelry that lab tests show contained high levels of the heavy metal cadmium, and Chinese regulators said they will investigate dangerous levels of the toxin in children's jewelry being exported to the United...More

Study: Quickly giving wounded troops morphine cuts the risk of developing PTSD

TRENTION, N.J. - Quickly giving morphine to wounded troops cuts in half the chance they will develop post-traumatic stress disorder, according to a provocative study that suggests a new strategy for reducing the psychological fallout of war. Researchers at the U.S....More

Small study casts doubt on sports injury injections reportedly used by Woods

CHICAGO - New research casts doubt on increasingly popular blood-based injections reportedly used by Tiger Woods and other athletes to speed recovery after orthopedic surgery....More

Sleeping in? Study finds it may give false sense of security after sleeplessness

WASHINGTON - Sleeping in on Saturday after a few weeks of too little shuteye may feel refreshing, but it can give a false sense of security. New research shows chronic sleep loss cannot be cured that easily....More

Fitness levels among Canadians have plummeted since 1981: StatsCan

OTTAWA - A new survey says the fitness levels of Canadian children and youth, as well as those of adults, declined significantly between 1981 and 2009....More

Canadians fatter, less fit than in 1981; trends don't bode well: experts

TORONTO - Canadians of all ages have become substantially fatter and less fit over the last few decades, with all age groups packing on pounds while at the same time losing strength, endurance and flexibility, an important new survey has revealed....More

Belgian doctors give woman a new windpipe after implanting it into her arm

LONDON - For more than 2 1/2 years, Linda De Croock lived with constant pain from a car accident that smashed her windpipe....More

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

New Jersey Legislature approves bill to make state 14th with medical marijuana

TRENTON, N.J. - The Legislature on Monday approved a bill that would make New Jersey the 14th state to allow chronically ill patients access to marijuana for medical reasons. Democratic Gov....More

Institute of Medicine urges steps to battle liver-damaging hepatitis B and C

WASHINGTON - They're the overlooked viruses: Hepatitis B and C together infect three to five times more Americans than the AIDS virus does, and most don't know it. In the next 10 years, these two liver-damaging infections will kill about 150,000 people in the U.S....More

AP INVESTIGATION: Tests reveal toxic cadmium in kids' jewelry from China; US to investigate

LOS ANGELES - Moving swiftly, U.S. product safety authorities say they are launching an investigation into the presence of the toxic metal cadmium in children's jewelry imported from China after disclosure of lab tests showing that some pieces consisted primarily of the dangerous substance....More

Survey finds that almost half of China's moms-to-be have caesarean sections

HANOI, Vietnam - Nearly half of moms-to-be surveyed in China were delivering by caesarean sections, the world's highest rate recorded by the World Health Organization, which warned Tuesday that a boom in unnecessary surgeries is jeopardizing women's health....More

Study shows popular PRP therapy no better than placebo for tendon injury

TORONTO - An expensive and increasingly popular therapy used by elite and recreational athletes to speed healing works no better than a placebo when it comes to treating a tricky tendon injury, a new study shows....More

Nearly half of Chinese births are C-sections; WHO warns unnecessary surgeries pose risk

HANOI, Vietnam - Nearly half of all births in China are delivered by cesarean section, the world's highest rate, according to a survey by the World Health Organization - a shift toward modernization that isn't necessarily a good thing....More

MedGenesis, Biovail to work together on a treatment for Parkinson's disease

VICTORIA, B.C. - MedGenesis Therapeutix Inc. says it's collaborating with Biovail Corp. (TSX:BVF), Canada's largest publicly traded pharmaceutical company, on developing a new way to treat Parkinson's disease. The two companies have also struck licence agreements with Amgen Inc....More

Another chain pulls cadmium-tainted kids' jewelry

LOS ANGELES - A second international chain store said it is pulling from shelves jewelry that lab tests show contained high levels of the heavy metal cadmium, and Chinese regulators said they will investigate dangerous levels of the toxin in children's jewelry being exported to the United...More

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

US consumer regulators launch campaign against cadmium in children's jewelry from China

LOS ANGELES - Federal and state watchdogs opened a new front Monday in the campaign to keep poisons out of Chinese imports, warning Asian manufacturers not to substitute other toxins for lead in children's jewelry and beginning an inquiry into cadmium found in the products around the United...More

Study: More of today's US youth have serious mental health issues than previous generations

CHICAGO - A new study has found that more high school and college students are dealing with mental health issues in the U.S. than people the same age did during the Great Depression....More

Study finds that UNICEF program in Africa fails to save more children

LONDON - A UNICEF program that spent $27 million to decrease child deaths from disease in West Africa has failed, according to a new study that found a higher survival rate in some regions that weren't included in the program. The U.N....More

Rabies shots no longer necessary for bat-in-the-bedroom encounters

TORONTO - Over the last decade or so, thousands of people in North America have had to endure rabies shots after waking up to discover an uninvited roommate - a bat....More

NYC officials ask food manufacturers to cut salt content; program voluntary

NEW YORK - City health officials have battled trans fats and high-calorie fast food. Now, they're taking on salt....More

New Jersey Legislature approves bill to make state 14th with medical marijuana

TRENTON, N.J. - The Legislature on Monday approved a bill that would make New Jersey the 14th state to allow chronically ill patients access to marijuana for medical reasons. Democratic Gov....More

Institute of Medicine urges steps to battle liver-damaging hepatitis B and C

WASHINGTON - They're the overlooked viruses: Hepatitis B and C together infect three to five times more Americans than the AIDS virus does, and most don't know it. In the next 10 years, these two liver-damaging infections will kill about 150,000 people in the U.S....More

AP INVESTIGATION: Tests reveal toxic cadmium in kids' jewelry from China; US to investigate

LOS ANGELES - Moving swiftly, U.S. product safety authorities say they are launching an investigation into the presence of the toxic metal cadmium in children's jewelry imported from China after disclosure of lab tests showing that some pieces consisted primarily of the dangerous substance....More

Monday, January 11, 2010

Fire chiefs say some legal marijuana grow-ops are a safety hazard

VANCOUVER, B.C. - Medical marijuana may be legal, but the way some approved Canadian growers are producing their pot is not, say fire chiefs in the country's two most prolific weed-producing provinces....More

Awareness of colon cancer screening high, uptake of simple test still low

TORONTO - Despite a high level of awareness about the benefit of being routinely screened for colorectal cancer, less than half of Canadians in the targeted age group of 50-plus are getting tested, a national survey suggests....More

Toronto-area hospital network sees two 'unexpected' pediatric deaths within 24-hour period

TORONTO - Lakeridge Health says there have been two "unexpected" pediatric deaths at its hospital network east of Toronto. The health network says the two died within 24 hours of each other....More

Police investigate two 'unexpected' pediatric deaths at Toronto-area health network

TORONTO - Police are investigating the "unexpected" deaths of two children at a hospital network east of Toronto. Lakeridge Health says the two died within 24 hours of each other....More

Ont. family doctors who join team practices see salaries jump 40% in five years

TORONTO - Ontario's push to have family doctors work in collaborative teams with other health professionals is paying off financially for the physicians and is resulting in better patient care, according to the New England Journal of Medicine....More

Doctors concerned a further delay at Chalk River would be 'extremely serious'

OTTAWA - Canadian doctors are concerned any further delay in getting the Chalk River reactor up-and-running will have serious consequences for the country's hospitals....More

Study: More of today's US youth have serious mental health issues than previous generations

CHICAGO - A new study has found that more high school and college students are dealing with mental health issues in the U.S. than people the same age did during the Great Depression....More

AP INVESTIGATION: Tests reveal toxic cadmium in kids' jewelry from China; US to investigate

LOS ANGELES - Moving swiftly, U.S. product safety authorities say they are launching an investigation into the presence of the toxic metal cadmium in children's jewelry imported from China after disclosure of lab tests showing that some pieces consisted primarily of the dangerous substance....More

Friday, January 08, 2010

Inuit newborns at risk because Nunavut gov't won't distribute drug: researcher

A prominent health researcher says Inuit newborns are at risk of serious illness and even death because the Nunavut government won't distribute a drug to all infants in remote communities. In a recent article for the Canadian Polar Commission, Dr....More

Studies: Switching antiseptic prep, screening patients cut post-op infections

NEW YORK - Looks like doctors aren't the only ones who should scrub before surgery. Bathing patients with an antiseptic and squirting medicated ointment up their noses dramatically cut the rate of dangerous staph infections afterward, researchers found....More

Patients to seek approval of $17.5M settlement over breast cancer errors in Feb.

ST. JOHN'S, N.L. - Members of a class-action lawsuit settlement in Newfoundland and Labrador's botched breast cancer testing scandal will seek to have the $17.5-million deal approved in court next month....More

Fight against fat goes high-tech: Wireless monitors emerge as tool in obesity research

ALHAMBRA, Calif. - The fight against fat is going high-tech. To get an inside look at eating and exercise habits, scientists are developing wearable wireless sensors to monitor overweight and obese people as they go about their daily lives....More

BC health clinic operator charged for allegedly faking credentials

VANCOUVER, B.C. - The head of a Victoria health services clinic has been charged for inflating his credentials after his expert testimony prompted police to investigate a father for potential abuse....More

Study says restaurant food often has more calories than advertised

Dieters can't believe everything they read: The food at many popular chain restaurants and in the freezer section of the supermarket may contain a lot more calories than advertised. A U.S....More

Fire chiefs say some legal marijuana grow-ops are a safety hazard

VANCOUVER, B.C. - Medical marijuana may be legal, but the way some approved Canadian growers are producing their pot is not, say fire chiefs in the country's two most prolific weed-producing provinces....More

Awareness of colon cancer screening high, uptake of simple test still low

TORONTO - Despite a high level of awareness about the benefit of being routinely screened for colorectal cancer, less than half of Canadians in the targeted age group of 50-plus are getting tested, a national survey suggests....More

Thursday, January 07, 2010

Study shows sharing a hospital room increases your risk of picking up infections

TORONTO - Sharing a hospital room increases your risk of picking up an infection during your stay, a new study shows. The work, by researchers from Queen's University in Kingston, Ont....More

Study says pregnant women having more ultrasounds than recommended

TORONTO - A new Canadian study finds that some women are having more ultrasounds than recommended....More

Inuit newborns at risk because Nunavut gov't won't distribute drug: researcher

A prominent health researcher says Inuit newborns are at risk of serious illness and even death because the Nunavut government won't distribute a drug to all infants in remote communities. In a recent article for the Canadian Polar Commission, Dr....More

Studies: Switching antiseptic prep, screening patients cut post-op infections

NEW YORK - Looks like doctors aren't the only ones who should scrub before surgery. Bathing patients with an antiseptic and squirting medicated ointment up their noses dramatically cut the rate of dangerous staph infections afterward, researchers found....More

Patients to seek approval of $17.5M settlement over breast cancer errors in Feb.

ST. JOHN'S, N.L. - Members of a class-action lawsuit settlement in Newfoundland and Labrador's botched breast cancer testing scandal will seek to have the $17.5-million deal approved in court next month....More

Fight against fat goes high-tech: Wireless monitors emerge as tool in obesity research

ALHAMBRA, Calif. - The fight against fat is going high-tech. To get an inside look at eating and exercise habits, scientists are developing wearable wireless sensors to monitor overweight and obese people as they go about their daily lives....More

BC health clinic operator charged for allegedly faking credentials

VANCOUVER, B.C. - The head of a Victoria health services clinic has been charged for inflating his credentials after his expert testimony prompted police to investigate a father for potential abuse....More

Awareness of colon cancer screening high, uptake of simple test still low

TORONTO - Despite a high level of awareness about the benefit of being routinely screened for colorectal cancer, less than half of Canadians in the targeted age group of 50-plus are getting tested, a national survey suggests....More

Wednesday, January 06, 2010

National plan needed to prepare for expected surge in dementia cases: report

TORONTO - Canada needs a national strategy to prepare for a tidal wave of dementia cases in the coming decades that could swamp the health-care system and put a severe drain on the economy, a new report says....More

Expedition ventures into health-care jungle - without leaving America's backyard

MAYNARDVILLE, Tenn. - The two-hour drive is done, but Hannah and Jack Hurst leave the Honda's engine running. Hannah's prayers have brought them here....More

Evidence lacking for special autism diets, says report

CHICAGO - An expert panel says there's no rigorous evidence that digestive problems are more common in children with autism compared to other children, or that special diets work, contrary to claims by celebrities and vaccine naysayers....More

WHO-led H1N1 vaccine redistribution may be scaled back as countries reassess need

TORONTO - Softening demand for H1N1 vaccine may be spreading to a World Health Organization-led effort to provide developing countries with some pandemic vaccine, a WHO official said Tuesday. Dr....More

Study shows sharing a hospital room increases your risk of picking up infections

TORONTO - Sharing a hospital room increases your risk of picking up an infection during your stay, a new study shows. The work, by researchers from Queen's University in Kingston, Ont....More

Study says pregnant women having more ultrasounds than recommended

TORONTO - A new Canadian study finds that some women are having more ultrasounds than recommended....More

Inuit newborns at risk because Nunavut gov't won't distribute drug: researcher

A prominent health researcher says Inuit newborns are at risk of serious illness and even death because the Nunavut government won't distribute a drug to all infants in remote communities. In a recent article for the Canadian Polar Commission, Dr....More

Fight against fat goes high-tech: Wireless monitors emerge as tool in obesity research

ALHAMBRA, Calif. - The fight against fat is going high-tech. To get an inside look at eating and exercise habits, scientists are developing wearable wireless sensors to monitor overweight and obese people as they go about their daily lives....More

Tuesday, January 05, 2010

China tells health officials to brace for possible fresh wave of swine flu cases at New Year

BEIJING - China is warning officials to brace for a possible new wave of swine flu infections as the country enters the busy Lunar New Year travel period....More

UN praises US and SKorea for lifting HIV/AIDS travel ban, urges 57 countries to follow

The United Nations praised the United States and South Korea on Monday for lifting travel bans on people with HIV and urged 57 other countries with travel restrictions to end them quickly. President Barack Obama announced in October that the U.S....More

Tobacco users who quit need to distract themselves so plans don't go up in smoke

TORONTO - Anyone who quit smoking as a new year's resolution is probably going through a rough period now, dealing with cravings, and more cravings, and a whole host of physical and emotional responses and reactions....More

Rebound from rare metabolic disease highlights quest for newborn testing

WASHINGTON - At his first birthday, John Klor couldn't sit up on his own. A few months later, he was cruising like any healthy toddler - thanks to a special diet that's treating the North Carolina boy's mysterious disease....More

National plan needed to prepare for expected surge in dementia cases: report

TORONTO - Canada needs a national strategy to prepare for a tidal wave of dementia cases in the coming decades that could swamp the health-care system and put a severe drain on the economy, a new report says....More

Expedition ventures into health-care jungle - without leaving America's backyard

MAYNARDVILLE, Tenn. - The two-hour drive is done, but Hannah and Jack Hurst leave the Honda's engine running. Hannah's prayers have brought them here....More

Evidence lacking for special autism diets, says report

CHICAGO - An expert panel says there's no rigorous evidence that digestive problems are more common in children with autism compared to other children, or that special diets work, contrary to claims by celebrities and vaccine naysayers....More

Study says pregnant women having more ultrasounds than recommended

TORONTO - A new Canadian study finds that some women are having more ultrasounds than recommended....More

Monday, January 04, 2010

Man can't get the red out after pet tarantula blasts hairs into his eye

When it comes to weird medical injuries, this is really one for the books. A 29-year-old British man was referred to an ophthalmologist after suffering for weeks with a red, watery eye that wouldn't respond to treatment with antibiotics....More

Health Canada posts warning about Tylenol arthritis caplets bought in U.S.

OTTAWA - Health Canada posted a warning Thursday for Canadians who might have purchased Tylenol Arthritis Pain Caplets while in the United States. The caplets aren't sold in Canada, but the U.S....More

CDC confirms strain of anthrax that sickened US woman matches contaminated drums, outlet

CONCORD, N.H. - Medical investigators have confirmed that the strain of anthrax that sickened a New Hampshire woman is the same strain found on an electrical outlet and two drums used at a gathering she attended earlier this month. Dr....More

Put down that glass: report warns that UK's drinking culture is straining health care system

LONDON - Just as Britons brew black coffee to cope with holiday hangovers, they are also digesting a new report that warns the country's notorious drinking culture is putting an unacceptable strain on hospitals and medical staff. The cash-strapped National Health Service - the U....More

China tells health officials to brace for possible fresh wave of swine flu cases at New Year

BEIJING - China is warning officials to brace for a possible new wave of swine flu infections as the country enters the busy Lunar New Year travel period....More

China tells health officials to brace for possible fresh wave of swine flu cases at New Year

BEIJING - China is warning officials to brace for a possible new wave of swine flu infections as the country enters the busy Lunar New Year travel period....More

National plan needed to prepare for expected surge in dementia cases: report

TORONTO - Canada needs a national strategy to prepare for a tidal wave of dementia cases in the coming decades that could swamp the health-care system and put a severe drain on the economy, a new report says....More

Evidence lacking for special autism diets, says report

CHICAGO - An expert panel says there's no rigorous evidence that digestive problems are more common in children with autism compared to other children, or that special diets work, contrary to claims by celebrities and vaccine naysayers....More

Friday, January 01, 2010

Doctors leave 9 needles in body of Brazilian boy allegedly stuck by stepfather in revenge act

SAO PAULO, Brazil - Brazilian doctors have decided not to immediately remove nine of the 31 needles found in a toddler's body because his life is no longer in danger. Doctor Roque Aras said Tuesday that the remaining needles are small and don't pose a significant threat....More

China drops hepatitis B testing for school, employment amid efforts to fight discrimination

BEIJING - China will soon stop mandatory hepatitis B tests for people applying for jobs or admission to schools, the Health Ministry said Tuesday, after years of efforts by civic groups to fight discrimination against carriers of the liver disease....More

H1N1 flu is not as contagious as other pandemic strains except for kids: study

How contagious is swine flu? Less than the novel viruses that have caused big world outbreaks in the past, new research suggests....More

Antibiotic for animals being recalled due to reports of allergic reactions

TORONTO - Health Canada is warning veterinarians, livestock producers and pet owners that one lot of the prescription drug Longisil is being recalled due to an unusually high number of adverse reactions in treated animals....More

US failing to meet most 2010 health targets; getting worse on obesity, blood pressure

ATLANTA - About 10 years ago the U.S. government set some lofty health goals for the country to reach by 2010. By many measures, Americans didn't do so well. There are more obese Americans than a decade ago, not fewer. They eat more salt and fat, not less....More

Man can't get the red out after pet tarantula blasts hairs into his eye

When it comes to weird medical injuries, this is really one for the books. A 29-year-old British man was referred to an ophthalmologist after suffering for weeks with a red, watery eye that wouldn't respond to treatment with antibiotics....More

Health Canada posts warning about Tylenol arthritis caplets bought in U.S.

OTTAWA - Health Canada posted a warning Thursday for Canadians who might have purchased Tylenol Arthritis Pain Caplets while in the United States. The caplets aren't sold in Canada, but the U.S....More

CDC confirms strain of anthrax that sickened US woman matches contaminated drums, outlet

CONCORD, N.H. - Medical investigators have confirmed that the strain of anthrax that sickened a New Hampshire woman is the same strain found on an electrical outlet and two drums used at a gathering she attended earlier this month. Dr....More