Health News

Features

  • Community Care Sponsored by Central Florida Health Care

    Community Care Sponsored by Central Florida Health Care

    Help for Uninsured Patients With Hepatitis C

  • Hot Topic

    Hot Topic

    Area Doctors Help Us Clear Up Common Summer Skin Care Myths by TERESA SCHIFFER Summer is officially here and it’s time to catch some rays! Here in Central Florida, we don’t really need to do much in order to get our daily dose of vitamin D from the sun, but many folks still enjoy heading…

  • Why Detection Is Key

    Why Detection Is Key

    Prostate Cancer Very Treatable If Diagnosed Early by TERESA SCHIFFER  Prostate cancer is among the most common types of cancer found in men (second only to non-melanoma skin cancer), and the second-leading cause of cancer death among men in the U.S., claiming over 34,000 lives each year nationwide. Though this may seem grim, it’s not…

Columns

  • Medical Advice: Your flu prevention to-do list

    Medical Advice: Your flu prevention to-do list

    AS YOU GATHER your “to-do” lists and prepare for the holiday season ahead, the Florida Department of Health in Polk County recommends you add one more important step — get a flu shot! The flu shot is the best way to protect our families and communities against the spread of influenza. When you make it…

  • Family Health: Flu shots for seniors

    Family Health: Flu shots for seniors

    HE FLU is nothing to sneeze at. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, approximately 200,000 people will be hospitalized this year with the influenza virus, and it has been estimated that 50 to 70 percent of those hospitalized are people age 65 and older.

  • Word of Mouth: Your dentist is key to early cancer detection

    Word of Mouth: Your dentist is key to early cancer detection

    IT SEEMS LIKE you hear about many different kinds of cancers these days, but one that isn’t being talked about enough is oral cancer. Cancer in the mouth and throat are diagnosed in nearly 50,000 Americans a year, and statistics show that only 57 percent of those diagnosed still will be living in five years.

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