USA Today (Society for the Advancement of Education)
View more issues: August 2006, Sept 2006, Nov 2006
Articles in Oct 2006 issue of USA Today (Society for the Advancement of Education)
- The incidence of melanoma
- Prevention prevails on the playing field
- Small intestine controls bile output
- Designer peptides provide treatment
- Caregivers of those under psychological or physical stress, as well as those with the condition themselves, should not overlook their oral health, according to a study by the American Academy of Periodontology, Chicago
- Toppling TVs felling youngsters
- Anorexia, bulimia prove gene related
- Why is cornea free of blood vessels?
- Emergency room visits soaring
- Most people accurately can tell a person's age by viewing only their hands, suggests a study by the American Society of Plastic Surgeons, Arlington Heights, Ill
- Women dominate care for disabled
- Pounds may disappear yet cellulite remains
- Malnutrition kills stricken patients
- Will prescription meds slow airline travel?
- Pomegranate slows cartilage deterioration
- Stop targeting healthy short children
- Doing battle with hospital infections
- Don't end up fathering by default
- Pain relievers are new drug of choice
- Clinicians apparently are getting better at diagnosing autism in young children
- Will molecular tracking reveal virus' secrets?
- Secondhand smoke damages babies' lungs
- Patients receiving subpar care
- Extending DST will promote healthy bones
- First treatment for drug-resistant HIV
- Molecular switch may hold key to cure
- Knee implants designed for women.. Southwestern Medical Center
- New test developed for B-12 deficiency
- Flu season typically lasts
- New look at influenza virus
- Bridging the gap through the world of art., The Bridge
- System discourages physician disclosure
- Symptoms classically tied
- Hollywood story lines hinder cooperation
- Periodontal therapy may lower blood sugar
- Up in smoke
- Nanotechnology aids in cancer fight
- Virulent smallpox stymied as a weapon
- Diabetics who were prescribed newer medications to control their illness were more likely to take these drugs as instructed than were patients who were prescribed drugs that have been on the market for several decades, states a study from Ohio State Unive
- These drugs are as good as gold
- Liver linked to deadly disease
- Elective surgery patients growing older
- Women who suffer from "transformed migraine" experience a significant reduction in headache frequency and intensity after taking simple steps to improve their sleep behaviors, a University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, study has found
- Concussions promote dementia in gridders
- Old remedies work just fine
- African-American men at higher risk
- Illuminating offending proteins fluorescently