Disease

Coverage of infectious and chronic diseases — their causes, mechanisms, epidemiology, prevention strategies, and the latest science on how the body fights back.

Isn't it odd that Florida has so many people living with Alzheimer's Disease? If Erin Brockovich was investigating the case, she probably would conclude that it's something in the water.
The latest outbreak of the plague in Madagascar is worrisome. Since late August, the World Health Organization (WHO) has reported 501 cases of plague on the island. Even more concerning is the 11% death rate of those cases. 
People swear that popping a few vitamin C tablets when their throat starts to feel sore is a surefire method to prevent a cold.
A recent study published in the British Medical Journal, regarding approved cancer drugs in the European Medicines Agency from 2009-2013 has found that most of them did not signi
Proper functioning of the human body relies on microbial partners.
Scientists in China have just provided one major piece that is the Zika puzzle.  Proponents of the "all natural" movement ought to look at this virus and recognize that nature can be a bitch.
Ever since the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) trials of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) for post-menopausal women was halted early because of an observed increased risk of breast cancer, there has been confusion about the positive and negative
It's pretty common knowledge that obesity increases the chance that a woman will develop breast cancer, and how her excess adiposity is distributed on her body can be a clue to her risk.
Fifty or so years ago a woman diagnosed with breast cancer was almost sure to be treated aggressively — with a radical mastectomy.
An aggressive type of cancer surgery that's grown increasingly popular – and controversial – during the last decade is largely determined by patient preference, and not necessarily by sound medical reasoning.