Quantcast
Channel: CommonHealth
Browsing all 2224 articles
Browse latest View live

Some ADHD Drugs Slightly Raise Risk Of Heart Birth Defects, Major Study Finds

About 10 in every 1,000 babies are born with heart defects. Among mothers who take methylphenidate -- Ritalin and Concerta -- for ADHD, that rises to 13 per 1,000, the study finds.

View Article


Return Of Medical Device Tax Causing A Stir

The failure of Republicans in Congress this year to repeal the Affordable Care Act means that a controversial tax on medical device sales will return in 2018 unless legislators intervene in the next...

View Article


Baker Administration Preparing To Stretch CHIP Dollars As It Waits For Congress

Unless Congress acts, Massachusetts will run out of money for the Children's Health Insurance Program by the mid-January.

View Article

How One Family Tackled The 'Team Sport' Of Tough Prostate Cancer Choices

Cancer experts say the rise of "active surveillance" for some tumors is a major step forward, but one family's reaction is a reminder that for many, cancer is still the bogeyman.

View Article

Mass. General Hospital Raises Red Flag About National Shortage Of I.V. Fluids

"We spend a ton of money on the national strategic oil reserves, but there’s no such thing in health care, and maybe we should think about that," says Massachusetts General Hospital Chief Medical...

View Article


Nurses And Tufts Medical Center Agree On Contract

If all goes as planned, nurses at Tufts will start 2018 with a new contract in hand, after 20 months without one.

View Article

Mass. Researchers Seek Funding To Keep Testing Diphtheria Treatment

Diphtheria is a respiratory disease that thickens the membrane in the nose and throat, and that can result in suffocation.

View Article

'People Really Want To Live': Samaritans Volunteers Guide Callers, Texters...

What does it take to volunteer to answer the suicide hotline at Samaritans? A kind word, an open mind -- and the ability to listen.

View Article


Beyond 'Man Flu': There May Be Real Differences In How Men And Women Respond...

A recent medical journal article about "man flu" is mostly a joke -- but the differences in how men's and women's immune systems respond to infection are worth serious study.

View Article


The Biggest Cancer News Of 2017? 'CAR-T Cells, Hands Down'

The FDA this year approved two "CAR-T" treatments that re-engineer the patient's own T cells to fight cancer, adding a new weapon to the anti-cancer arsenal -- though at this point they can help only...

View Article

Before You Resolve To Lose Weight In 2018, Consider These Reality Checks

A New Year's sampling of food for thought about weight loss and how very hard it is -- and what we now know about the difficulty.

View Article

Mass. Employers Face New Health Care Assessments In 2018

The new year will bring with it mixed financial news for Massachusetts employers, with $200 million in new health care assessments and unemployment insurance rate relief both scheduled to take effect.

View Article

Opioid Epidemic Continues As Major Issue In 2017

Looking back on 2017, the opioid epidemic was again a major issue. And there were some significant developments this year.

View Article


Why So Many Fat Cats And Dogs? Pet Obesity Specialist Points To Human-Animal...

Over half the dogs and cats around the world are overweight, a pet obesity specialist writes, and the key lies in the relationship between pet and owner.

View Article

WBUR Invitation: Ask Leaders Your Big-Picture Questions On Cancer

To cap our year-long cancer series, This Moment In Cancer, we'll host a free event on Jan. 11 in which two cancer leaders answer your lingering questions.

View Article


Promise Seen In Personal Vaccines Made Just To Treat Your Cancer

Researchers are developing a new weapon against cancer: a "personal vaccine" made just for you. It trains a patient's immune system to respond to a tumor's specific DNA.

View Article

Cancerphobia: Our Changing Emotional Relationship With 'The Big C'

Cancerphobia has been with us for a long time. David Ropeik, an author on the gaps between how risky things are and how much we fear them, says it's time to put it to rest.

View Article


Not All Cancer Kills: Researchers Study Active Surveillance For 'Stage Zero...

Researchers have long known that many prostate cancers grow so slowly that they'll never cause any harm. Now, they're realizing that many breast and thyroid cancer patients are also better off being...

View Article

Suicide Emerges In Understanding The Opioid Epidemic

Last year, Massachusetts began recognizing that some opioid overdose deaths are suicides.

View Article

Cancer Patients Asking Doctors About Marijuana Still Get Little Help

Although medical marijuana has been legal in Massachusetts for six years, most doctors aren’t able to guide cancer patients navigating the system and using it for their symptoms.

View Article
Browsing all 2224 articles
Browse latest View live