Public Health

Australia to Dry up?

An anti-binge-drinking ad campaign directed toward Australian youth begins this month, part of Prime Minister Kevin Rudd's national strategy to...

The Czech Republic's Meth Crackdown

Prague, capital of the Czech Republic, is cracking down on the sale of medicines made with ephedrine and pseudoephedrine in...

Questions About HPV Vaccine Risks

A new vaccine to eliminate the Human papillomaviruses (HPVs) -- which is linked to some cervical cancers -- will soon...

Alzheimer's Effects Linked to Career, Culture

A pair of new articles identify education, career, ethnicity and other socio-economic factors as having an influence on the effects...

Children Left Behind

News media have paid a lot of attention to the growing obesity epidemic among children all over the developed world,...

A Different Shade of Green Revolution

While much of the developed world is talking about environmentally sustainable "green" technology, Africa is desperately seeking a green revolution...

PTSD Hits the British Armed Forces

Roughly 24,000 British veterans returning from duty in Iraq or Afghanistan are now battling the UK's criminal justice system and...

India's Recipe for school success? Add three eggs

In India, there apparently is such a thing as a free lunch. The World Press Review reports that the government...

Women Claim Space at AIDS Conference

Circumcision, female condoms and sex work grabbed attention at the International AIDS Conference in Mexico City last week. Researchers at...

Dogs Could Guide Humans in Vision Study

Norwegian scientists believe dachshunds might hold the key in discovering the root of hereditary blindness in humans, according to the...

Europe: Birthrate Down, Maternity Wards Packed

While much has been made in recent years over declining birthrates in Europe and other parts of the industrialized world,...

Medical Bills Spur India Suicide Plan

A woman stricken with kidney disease and her husband have petitioned a municipal official in Kolkart, India, to allow them...

Doctors Resign as Life-Support Lawsuit Drags On

A Canadian hospital is facing a shortage of doctors, who are resigning rather than continue to care for an elderly...

U.K. Faces Diabetes "Explosion"

A new report predicts a 46 percent increase in diabetes in the United Kingdom by 2025, driven primarily by eating...

Callbacks on the Cell Phone Cancer Story

The long running debate over whether cell phones cause cancer is heating up again. The latest round of press came...

King Tobacco, Balkan Crime Lord

Cigarette counterfeiting and smuggling in the Balkans is one of the primary drivers of crime and corruption in the region,...

Transplant Shortage Hits Minorities

Doctors all over the world are having difficulty finding matching donors for bone marrow transplants - a lifesaving operation for...

Nigeria's Smoke Out

Claims that international tobacco companies are targeting young people in Nigeria have spurred a $43 billion government lawsuit against Phillip...

Japan's Health Care Crisis

It is a leader of the industrialized world, a scientific and technological powerhouse with a robust economy, a vigorous democracy...

Lupus Linked to Petroleum Exposure

Scientists in Boston and New Mexico have shown that exposure to petroleum is linked to the deadly auto-immune disease lupus....

Autism's Spread Brings a Mystery and a Lawsuit

A new report finds that one in every 60 boys in New Jersey has autism -- nearly twice the national...

Contraception & Abortion: A Morning After for Chile, North Dakota

Chile's President Michelle Bachelet has issued an executive order legalizing free "morning after" contraception to teens without parental consent. The...

Plastics & Your Health

By Martin Leatherman & Newsdesk.org staff New studies of chemicals used in plastics reveal potential health problems, including miscarriages and...

Genetically Engineered Food: Safety Research

Read the main article. Although the FDA does not conduct safety testing on genetically engineered foods, research is ongoing throughout...

FDA Critics Cite Biotech Food Safety

[Sidebar: Biotech Food Safety Research] By Robert Mullins, Newsdesk.org Stymied by legal setbacks and a lack of public interest, critics...

Budget Said to Shortchange Veterans
Mental Health Services May Fall Short

By Michael Standaert According to a recent Pentagon estimate, 30 percent, or about 100,000 troops, have or will develop mental...

FOCUS:
Mad cow scare stirs markets, food safety doubts

Appetite undiminished The latest mad cow scare sent markets into a schizophrenic spin, first crashing, and then rebounding on the...

A Stem Cell Controversy Comes to California
Ballot initiative would give $3 billion to research

By Sheila Riley
Advocates say Prop. 71 could save lives and earn big. Critics say there's an all-too-human cost.

U.S. Seniors Face Increased Poverty
Budget woes hit women, minorities hardest

By Stephanie L. Freid; additional writing and reporting by the editors
A looming federal deficit may squeeze already tight elder-care budgets, as baby boomers age en masse.

Terror Fears Bring New Health Funding
Priorities, budget gaps in question

By Judith Scherr; additional writing and reporting by the editors
Bioterrorism fears bring a flood of federal health funding. But can it save a crumbling public-health system?

The Witness as Victim
New domestic violence focus on children

By Yumi Wilson
The idea that witnessing violence harms children has caused a small revolution in domestic violence prevention.

A New Push for 'Health for All'
People's Health Movement targets the neediest

By Yumi Wilson
The People's Health Movement sets an ambitious goal for global health care.