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1,386 articles z TIME
- title
- TIME
- tags
- description
- TIME's top stories about science and health
- last updated
- July 29, 2010 (11:00)
- homepage
- http://www.time.com/health
- feed url
- http://feeds.feedburner.com/time/scienceandhealth
- date added
- September 3, 2007 (21:13)
- meta
- alexa, technorati, rojo
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MONDAY 3. SEPTEMBER, 2007
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It's not an artifact of marketing. A new study says girls may be hard-wired to prefer pink shades -- and boys, blue
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Two people on the Indonesian tourist mecca have died of bird flu in a month, sparking new fears that it could spread
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Screwcapped wines are quickly gaining popularity, and it's got cork producers coming up with new ways to stay on top
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Crime-fighting "tinkerers" are figuring out how to get all the inside dope about you from your supposedly trusted gadget
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A fabled fossil goes on view for the first time in decades -- and ignites a controversy
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Scientists find an enormous empty swath in space. How does it change what we know about the origins of the universe?
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A new study suggests that popular cholesterol-lowering drugs like Lipitor may help not just the heart, but the brain as well
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A new report says gestational diabetes is strongly linked to childhood obesity -- but there's a lot you can do to treat the condition
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Researchers are still figuring out the dangers and benefits of hormone replacement therapy, but two new studies give a boost to estrogen as a defense against dementia
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The FDA has approved the vaccine only for girls and women up to age 26. Now a medical debate is raging over whether older women should get it too
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Scientists peek into a newly forming solar system 1,000 light years away and discover five times the water on Earth -- plus some unexpected tidbits about our own solar system's past
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Three studies examine Americans' sleep deprivation, pointing to cellphones and work as chief culprits, and the consequences of sleeplessness for kids
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WEDNESDAY 5. SEPTEMBER, 2007
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Even elite athletes find it tough to work out: a new study shows that a surprising number of them suffer from exercise-induced asthma
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A new study shows that a standardized test of doctor communication skills can help create a nicer, better doctor of the future
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Australia's conservative, anti-Kyoto prime minister has pushed climate change to the top of the agenda for this week's APEC forum. But can the U.S. and China be brought onboard this time?
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THURSDAY 6. SEPTEMBER, 2007
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We're all guilty of using our cell phones in off-limits areas. But a new study shows that in hospitals they can be hazardous to medical equipment
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In the first study of its kind, researchers pit human toddlers head-to-head against baby apes. The human kids won -- but what's important is why
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FRIDAY 7. SEPTEMBER, 2007
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A new British study finds the clearest evidence yet that common food colorings and preservatives can trigger hyperactivity in normal children
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TUESDAY 11. SEPTEMBER, 2007
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A new report shows that people who take a daily dose of the vitamin are less likely to die from any cause
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Kevin Everett's life-threatening spinal injury raises anew concerns about the dangers of the gridiron
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WEDNESDAY 12. SEPTEMBER, 2007
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Breast milk is best for babies' health and well-being, but a new study finds it doesn't help prevent asthma or allergies
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THURSDAY 13. SEPTEMBER, 2007
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Growing evidence suggests that pollutants in car exhaust may trigger heart attacks
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A series of earthquakes in Indonesia bring back haunting memories of the 2004 tsunami, and prompt concerns over whether we're ready to handle another disaster
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TUESDAY 18. SEPTEMBER, 2007
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German researchers are testing a highly controversial theory, using a low-carb, high-fat diet to help the sickest of cancer patients
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Sometimes less is more. But when it comes to exercise for diabetics, researchers find, the more you do, the better it is
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THURSDAY 20. SEPTEMBER, 2007
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As police and lawmakers continue the fight against substance abuse, researchers are working on new ways to gauge America's addictions
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A new report says gynecomastia, or male breasts, occurs in nearly half of all men. But most of the time, it's nothing to worry about
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SATURDAY 22. SEPTEMBER, 2007
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Some of Greenland's residents want independence and full rights to the island's natural resources. Will they get it?
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TUESDAY 25. SEPTEMBER, 2007
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While much was said at the United Nations summit on global warming, the world is still a ways from taking concrete action
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A study finds that many of them are high in phthalates EM] chemicals that have been linked to adverse health effects in high doses
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WEDNESDAY 26. SEPTEMBER, 2007
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How good are the newest artificial hips? I'll say this much: you can survive a dislocation with no medication -- if you've spent a lifetime quaffing Greek wine.
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Our crushing appetite for carnivorous fish like salmon and tuna depletes the oceans of smaller, feeder fish, and endangers the planet's marine ecology
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SATURDAY 29. SEPTEMBER, 2007
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Celebrities and businesses -- Bill Clinton, Brad Pitt and Wal-Mart -- are pledging millions to fill the void of the government's inaction on climate change. Is it enough?
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MONDAY 1. OCTOBER, 2007
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Danish statistician Bjorn Lomborg sat down with TIME to discuss his new book, Cool It: the Skeptical Environmentalist's guide to Global Warming
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THURSDAY 4. OCTOBER, 2007
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Once a disease of the Western world, breast cancer has become a global concern. How women, doctors and communities are fighting back and bringing hope to those in need
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A new study suggests that legalizing assisted suicide does not make the practice more common in vulnerable groups
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FRIDAY 5. OCTOBER, 2007
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Once a disease of the Western world, breast cancer has become a global concern. How women, doctors and communities are fighting back and bringing hope to those in need
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MONDAY 8. OCTOBER, 2007
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Once a disease of the Western world, breast cancer has become a global concern. How women, doctors and communities are fighting back and bringing hope to those in need
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Overgrazing has turned big swaths of China's lush grasslands into desert, but recent efforts to rejuvenate the land may help sustain the country as a whole
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TUESDAY 9. OCTOBER, 2007
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For critically ill patients, blood transfusions can endanger their lives instead of saving them. A new study suggests we can bank blood better.
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The U.S. has spent billions on new high-risk bio-labs since 2001, but experts worry that ongoing bioterror research has made Americans even less safe than before.
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WEDNESDAY 10. OCTOBER, 2007
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The horrific rainy season in Africa has led to the drowning of 10,000 wildebeest, one percent of the animals on the continent.
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Studies show that chronic stress contributes to heart attacks and other disease, and researchers think it's time to make stress reduction a medical priority
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Which prostate cancer treatment is right for you? A new study suggests surgery may increase your chances of survival
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THURSDAY 11. OCTOBER, 2007
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The once vanished gray wolf has made a comeback in the Northern Rockies. The fight is over whether to remove them from the Endangered Species list and let hunters have at them
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FRIDAY 12. OCTOBER, 2007
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Two studies show that chemotherapy doesn't work equally well for all cancers, raising hopes of tailoring the treatment
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SATURDAY 13. OCTOBER, 2007
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A new study reveals that the typical American steroid user is not necessarily an elite athlete, but just a guy who wants to look good
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Cholesterol-lowering statins may help stave off lung deterioration in the elderly, and even in patients with emphysema and COPD
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SUNDAY 14. OCTOBER, 2007
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The civil war in Congo has cut off the rare silverback mountain gorilla from the conservationists who are trying to save it
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TUESDAY 16. OCTOBER, 2007
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A small California drug company hopes to extract the next cancer cure from Chinese herbs
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