October 28, 2015 What you need to know about the flu this year Dr. Siegel answers your questions about this year's flu strainÂ
October 28, 2015 Woman Ends Up in Coma After Overdosing on Bok Choy An 88-year-old Chinese woman, who was eating large amounts of bok choy in hopes of controlling her diabetes, ended up in a coma after 'overdosing' on the vegetable, according to a report in the New England Journal of Medicine.
October 28, 2015 Later retirement may help prevent dementia, study shows New research boosts the "use it or lose it" theory about brainpower and staying mentally sharp. People who delay retirement have less risk of developing Alzheimer's disease or other types of dementia, a study of nearly half a million people in France found.
October 28, 2015 Harvard study finds food expiration labels are misleading Americans throw out billions of pounds of food every year because they falsely believe "sell-by" and "best-before" dates on package labels indicate food safety, researchers have found.
October 28, 2015 New laser technology could detect and destroy brain diseases A new technology that uses only light could one day detect and annihilate disease-causing proteins in the brain, researchers say
October 28, 2015 Drinking coffee may lower suicide risk Good news for coffee lovers: Drinking the caffeinated beverage may lower suicide risk in both men and women by as much as 50 percent.
October 28, 2015 How Weight Can Tip the Scales of Your Marriage How much does your weight actually affect your marriage? Well, results of a new study may surprise you
October 28, 2015 Nothing to sneeze at: Cats worse than dogs for allergies If you have pet allergies, chances are it is Fluffy rather than Fido that's making you sneeze. While an estimated 10 percent of people are allergic to household pets, cat allergies are twice as common as dog allergies
October 28, 2015 Walk this way: How acting happy can make it so Happy people walk differently from people who are unhappy, and scientists are finding that taking a certain stride may give your mood a boost.
October 28, 2015 Mumps outbreak traced to face-to-face schooling, study suggests A face-to-face educational method used among Orthodox Jews apparently led to a U.S. outbreak of mumps in 2009 and 2010 even though most of those infected had been properly vaccinated, according to a U.S. study