A student of Mizzou diagnosed with tuberculosis

[ad_1] COLUMBIA, Missouri – A student from the University of Missouri has recently been diagnosed with tuberculosis. A university spokesman said on Monday that the school was working with the Columbia County and Boone County Public Health and Social Services Department to identify other students who might be tested for HIV. disease. Dr. Susan Even, … Read more

Reported outbreak of hepatitis throughout the state continues

[ad_1] Copyright 2019 Nexstar Broadcasting, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, disseminated, rewritten or redistributed. More coverage COLUMBUS, Ohio (WCMH) – The Ohio Department of Health has declared an outbreak of hepatitis A throughout the state after seeing an increase in cases related to certain risk factors since the beginning of … Read more

Mistrust of vaccines contributes to measles outbreaks around the world

[ad_1] Despite the growing number of cases of measles and the official desire to strengthen vaccinations, Alexandre Cerqueira and his partner, Nhep Srey Mom, are determined not to vaccinate their two young children against the disease. Mr. Cerqueira lives in the country of Louis Pasteur, the French biologist who discovered the principles of vaccination in … Read more

Questions about wine that you are too embarrassed to ask

[ad_1] TO CLOSE Sharon Sevrens of Amanti Vino teaches Rebecca King how to taste wine and answers "silly" questions from the Mixed Case series. Anne-Marie Caruso, North Jersey This is for all those who have already stared at a restaurant's wine list and who panicked inside their appearance to look like an idiot in front … Read more

Gene therapy first to "stop" the most common cause of blindness

[ad_1] Copyright of the image Fergus Walsh Legend Janet Osborne hopes to continue gardening if her eyesight is stopped An Oxford woman has become the first person in the world to benefit from gene therapy in an attempt to put an end to the most prevalent form of blindness in the Western world. Surgeons have … Read more

Japan approves world's first trial using iPS cells to treat spinal cord injury

[ad_1] The Ministry of Health on Monday approved the first clinical trial in the world in which artificially derived stem cells will be used to treat patients with spinal cord injuries. A team of researchers from Keio University, who requested the test from the ministry, will inject neuronal cells produced from so-called induced pluripotent stem … Read more

Fruits of weight loss: these 9 fruits are in perfect shape

[ad_1] Losing weight is not an easy task. It takes a lot of patience, work and determination to lose fat. An ideal weight loss plan is a combination of good food and the right type of exercise. Both are also important for a perfect figure. Fruits are an important part of a weight loss diet. … Read more

Doctors' dilemma: to see or not to see unvaccinated children

[ad_1] Vaccinate or do not vaccinate. This is a problem that occurs many times, despite evidence of the effectiveness of vaccination in the fight against the disease. The use of vaccines around the world has eradicated smallpox and almost did the same for polio. In the United States, diphtheria, bacterial flu, measles, mumps, rubella, tetanus … Read more

Did we fail to memorialize Spanish flu because women were the heroes?

[ad_1] Walter Reed Hospital in D.C. during the great pandemic influenza of 1918-19. Harris & Ewing / Library of Congress Being Suicidal Does not Necessarily Mean You're Mentally Ill I Had a Late-Term Abortion. President Trump and Pro-Lifers Have No Right to Call Me a Murderer. We're Getting a Period Emoji. Sort Of. Northam's Yearbook … Read more