Saturday, March 18, 2017

Your nose looks the way it does because of the climate and other top stories.

  • Your nose looks the way it does because of the climate

    Your nose looks the way it does because of the climate
    If you love (or hate) your nose, you can thank wherever your ancestors decided to settle. Noses evolved into shapes that were conducive to local climates, according to a new study published in PLOS Genetics. Researchers at Pennsylvania State University said the study supported a popular theory from the 1800s, called Thompson’s Nose Rule. Introduced by British anthropologist and anatomist Arthur Thompson, the theory suggested that wider nostrils developed in warmer climates, while narrower nostr..
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  • Colorectal cancer rates rising sharply among Gen X and millennials

    Colorectal cancer rates rising sharply among Gen X and millennials
    Rates of colorectal cancer, which overall have been declining for decades in the United States, are instead rising sharply among young and middle-aged adults, according to a new study that startled researchers and is sparking questions about whether screening should start earlier than age 50. The study, published recently in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, found that between the mid-1980s and 2013, colon cancer rates increased about 1 to 2 percent per year for people in their 20s ..
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  • 'Match Day' for Foreign Medical Students Runs Into US Travel Ban

    'Match Day' for Foreign Medical Students Runs Into US Travel Ban
    WASHINGTON —  For some medical students, getting a yes or no Friday was more important than finding the right life partner. Friday was "Match Day," the annual day when medical students find out which U.S. medical institution has accepted them for a residency program. It is a competition, of sorts: 32,000 training slots are available for 42,000 applicants, according to this year's data. A residency, three to five years of practical experience and training in a student's chosen medical specialty,..
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  • Company recalls 21000 pounds of frozen pizza sold at Walmart over potential listeria

    Company recalls 21000 pounds of frozen pizza sold at Walmart over potential listeria
    A California-based company is recalling more than 21,200 pounds of frozen pizza sold at Walmart retail stores in 11 states due to potential listeria contamination. RBR Meat Company Inc. issued the recall for its Marketside Extra Large Supreme Pizza after possible listeria was discovered during routine sampling. The product was available for purchase in Walmart store locations across California, Colorado, Nevada, Washington state, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Utah, Wyoming, Alaska and Hawaii. Accordi..
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  • Donald Trump's Budget Is Universally Unloved

    Donald Trump's Budget Is Universally Unloved
    WASHINGTON ― Over the course of the last three years, a bipartisan group of lawmakers made painstaking attempts to pass a major restructuring of biomedical research in America. Known as the 21st Century Cures Act, the bill streamlined regulatory policy at the Food and Drug Administration. It also called for billions more to be spent on key functions at the National Institutes of Health, such as combating the opioid epidemic and undertaking then-Vice President Joe Biden’s cancer moonshot. When ..
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  • 'Prioritize' Privately Insured Patients, Mayo Exec Says

    'Prioritize' Privately Insured Patients, Mayo Exec Says
    Mayo Clinic employees should "prioritize" privately insured patients over those in Medicare and Medicaid when they seek care for similar conditions to "have income at the end of the year," the health system's leader told employees in a speech last year. The videotaped speech has come under fire in some quarters as conflicting with the famed institution's stated mission of "providing the best care to every patient." Dr Noseworthy's comments perturbed the Minnesota Department of Human Services..
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  • These people eat monkeys and piranhas. They also have the lowest rates of heart disease ever measured.

    These people eat monkeys and piranhas. They also have the lowest rates of heart disease ever measured.
    A Tsimane father and son hunt fish in a river. (Michael Gurven) The Tsimane people dwell in thatched huts in a remote corner of Bolivian jungle, and at dinner, the main meal sometimes consists of monkey. Capuchins or howlers. Other days, a hog-nosed coon, or with some luck and a grueling all-day hunt, a man might take a peccary, a kind of wild pig. Some find piranha or catfish in local rivers. For sides, the Tsimane may gather wild fruits and nuts, or harvest small farm plots, where they gro..
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  • A father went to the hospital with stomach pain. He left without his hands and feet.

    A father went to the hospital with stomach pain. He left without his hands and feet.
    Kevin Breen, 44, contracted an extremely rare case of strep throat that nearly killed him. (Courtesy of Breen family) When Kevin Breen first complained about feeling achy and tired, his wife couldn't help but wonder whether he was trying to wiggle out of a busy day of family responsibilities. It was Christmas Day, and Breen — an active 44-year-old whose idea of relaxing is going water skiing on Lake Michigan or playing pickup basketball — is rarely short on energy. But Breen, of Grand Rapids..
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  • Cholesterol drug prevents heart attacks — at $14000 a year - Sarasota Herald

    Cholesterol drug prevents heart attacks — at $14000 a year - Sarasota Herald
    Kaiser Health News WASHINGTON — For the first time, research shows that a pricey new medication called Repatha not only dramatically lowers LDL cholesterol, the “bad cholesterol,” it also reduces patients’ risk of dying or being hospitalized.Repatha, a man-made antibody also known as evolocumab, cut the combined risk of heart attack, stroke and cardiovascular-related death in patients with heart disease by 20 percent, a finding that could lead more people to take the drug, according..
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  • My Unlovely Lady Lump: When MRSA Is Ugly, But Not Life-Threatening

    My Unlovely Lady Lump: When MRSA Is Ugly, But Not Life-Threatening
    Wounds infected with antibiotic-resistant staph often heal, but the bacteria can remain inside a person's body and cause future infections. Michelle Kondrich for NPR hide caption toggle caption Michelle Kondrich for NPR Wounds infected with antibiotic-resistant staph often heal, but the bacteria can remain inside a person's b..
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One man dead, two juveniles injured in east Columbus triple shooting .One dead in tanker fire that closed Route 33 and I-270 .
Apple resolves the MacBook Pro battery life issues found in Consumer Reports testing .'Bodies come flying out': Four killed, dozens injured when train smashes into senior center charter bus in Miss. .

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