Health News

Features

  • Digesting the facts

    Are you at risk for stomach cancer? There is really no way to know for sure if you are going to get stomach cancer. Certain risk factors may make you more likely to get it than another person. However, just because you have one or more risk factors does not necessarily mean you will get…

  • Q&A on preterm labor

    Q&A on preterm labor

    What are the facts about preterm labor and births? Preterm birth is defined as those infants delivered prior to the completion of 37 weeks of an expectant mother’s pregnancy. Preterm birth occurs in approximately 12 percent of pregnancies. Preterm births occur spontaneously in the following cases: 40 percent after preterm labor 35 percent after preterm…

  • Why the HPV Vaccine?

    Every two minutes, a woman dies of cervical cancer worldwide Cervical cancer and the HPV vaccine have entered the political debates around the country as well as discussions in the household. The current media firestorm surrounding the HPV vaccine has caused parents to question whether this new vaccine is right for their kids, or where…

Columns

  • The Heart of the Matter: Recommendations from the USPSTF for low-dose aspirin use

    The Heart of the Matter: Recommendations from the USPSTF for low-dose aspirin use

    LOW-DOSE ASPIRIN has long been a therapy for those with a risk of cardiovascular disease, and studies have shown it to be effective at lowering the risk of colorectal cancer as well. However, aspirin also has been shown to have health dangers, such as increasing the risk for bleeding in the stomach and intestines and…

  • Healthy Cook: Adding on calories when your senior loved one is too thin

    Healthy Cook: Adding on calories when your senior loved one is too thin

    BEING A FEW POUNDS overweight can be a pain in the patootie. That can often be solved by using the simple food equation: calories in versus calories out. On the other hand, people who are too slim and can’t gain weight often have no patootie to speak of. Their challenge of putting on a few…

  • Surgery Facts: Answering the question: ‘Doc, do I need my gallbladder?’

    Surgery Facts: Answering the question: ‘Doc, do I need my gallbladder?’

    AS A SURGEON, I am asked this question all the time, usually right after I inform a patient that their abdominal pain is due to gallstones. There is an aura of mystery surrounding this little green organ, with a lot of folks unclear as to its exact role in our bodies and our health. Gallbladder…

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