Dr. David Shlaes, American Council advisor and infectious disease expert, has been blogging about antibiotics since 2009. His latest entry concerning the FDA is rather encouraging, but it's also a bit disturbing.
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A mammogram might do more than just screen for breast cancer. A recent study says the test might also help detect a women's risk of heart disease by assessing what's called breast arterial calcification. BAC levels are highly correlated with coronary artery calcium deposits, a key indicator of heart disease.
While on first glance this story appears to be an April Fool's joke, it isn't. Really. The giant African pouched rat may be the latest weapon in the fight to eradicate tuberculosis. It's already proved its usefulness in detecting landmines, and the rodent is now being trained to detect TB.
For more than a decade New York City schools have offered "Breakfast in the Classroom," a program that had hoped to boost academic performance as well as school attendance. However, the BIC program fell short on both counts, according to a study that concluded that there was no evidence of success for the initiative.
When it comes to environmental politics, history and improved scientific understanding often fail to inform. And according to guest writer Angela Logomasini, an author and Senior Fellow at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, alarmism and irrationality are prominent in the current debate involving flame retardant chemicals.
When a company selling a naturalistic fallacy has to claim that the cleaning agent in a regular product, as compared to the one in a Whole Foods version, are different -- saying that the Whole Foods version “is plant-based and not the same” -- you know science has left the discussion.
Night owls, we all know one, or we are ourselves. Humans show variable preference in diurnal phase – meaning late risers. These individuals could be diagnosed with delayed sleep phase disorder (DSPD) which accounts for nearly 10 percent of all patients seen in sleep clinics.
Millions of Americans are, mistakenly, big believers in the power of dietary supplements. At the same time many remain completely ignorant about the inherent risks associated with them, especially since they can interfere with prescription drug medications. And in some cases combining the two can have severe consequences.
Brad Harris, owner of Novus Health Care Services, Inc., in Frisco, Texas, which says it "offers hospice and home health-care services", regularly directed nurses to give hospice patients overdoses of drugs to speed up their deaths, according to FBI documents filed to obtain a search warrant.
The FBI says he sent text messages like, "You need to make this patient go bye-bye."
Cat-haters are always eager to find reasons to bad-mouth our feline friends. The latest is road rage — blaming a cat-carried parasite for aggressive behavior. But that concept just doesn't hold water. Ailurophobes, or those who fear cats, will just have to try harder to malign them.
The Federal Trade Commission and 58 law enforcement groups across the United States have shut down four sham cancer charities that bilked over $187 million from consumers.
Valeant Pharmaceuticals seems to be trying to cement its place as the worst company in the world. After doing virtually everything wrong over the past year, its officials have taken it to an even lower level — price gouging dying patients who have chosen to end their lives.
A recent published study by researchers at NYU Langone Medical Center claims that 16,000 premature births are linked to air pollution, with costs exceeding $4 billion. But how accurate are these estimates? What's more, studies like this are rarely able to prove causation.
The topic of concussions has been much in the news of late, and it’s been concerning that the condition can be difficult to discern. But a new blood test may make that diagnosis much simpler and more accurate.
Internet headlines abound with a study's findings that claim tattoos may make its recipient less prone to illness. The headlines are bad enough, so we took a look as to whether there's a sound basis for any of this. And even they might be somewhat true, how accurate is the study? Ready for a laugh?
A new study finds that a vegetarian diet likely led to a mutation, which may make people more likely to get heart disease and colon cancer.
A recent study published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine reveals that increased sitting time is an independent predictor of premature mortality, irrespective of moderate to vigorous daily physical activity. By reducing sitting time, increases in life expectancy were observed.
Alarming new data suggests that heart attack victims today are unhealthier and much younger than in decades past. And while the likelihood of surviving a heart attack continues to improve, there's been a disturbing increase in unhealthy behaviors as well as a growing neglect of risk factors.
Who do you trust when it comes to information about food production? Unfortunately, according to a recent survey, over the last four years the public's trust in sources that are more likely to be scientifically-informed -- like government agencies -- seems to have eroded.
There are two opioid crises in the world today. One is the epidemic of abuse and misuse, present in many countries but rising at an alarming rate in the United States. The other crisis is older and affects many more people around the world each year: too few opioids.
Credit: Belle News
Robert De Niro forced to pretend to accept science
The recent Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, published by the CDC, indicates that after 20 years of consistent decline the incidence of tuberculosis infection has leveled off. This indicates a very real need for global and domestic efforts to detect, treat and prevent TB.
Thanks to a really idiotic Vermont law, food companies all over the U.S. are scrambling to make thoroughly useless changes to their labels, specifying whether any GM ingredients are in their products. Providing no scientific merit, the law seems to be designed simply to benefit Vermont. Guess who will pay the higher prices for this nonsense?
Many organs in our bodies depend on calcium to function, so it's important we get enough of it. And most of us already do. So when it comes to calcium supplements, some researchers say, less is more.
Black and white Americans, especially men, differ with respect to their risk of lung cancer from smoking exposure. But depending on the metric used, the reasons for this difference is not clear. A new study uses a more detailed computation of exposure to help clarify the different exposure levels.
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