The latest news on nutrition, nutritional advancements, and dietary supplements.
| U.S. medical programs missing millions of kids: report |
| An estimated five million uninsured children in the United States were eligible for Medicaid or the Childrens Health Insurance Program (CHIP) but were not enrolled in either plan, according to a new report. |
| Israeli researchers develop promising new HIV treatment |
| Israeli researchers have developed a new treatment for HIV that kills human cells infected with the virus and could lead to a breakthrough in treating AIDS, the Haaretz newspaper said on Friday. |
| Special Report: Outgunned FDA tries to get tough with drug ads |
| It wasn't what you would call a casual get-together. |
| Aqua Bounty biotech salmon OK to eat: FDA |
| Aqua Bounty Technologies Inc's genetically engineered salmon are as safe to eat as normal Atlantic salmon, U.S. regulators said in a preliminary analysis released on Friday. |
| UK booze consumption in biggest fall for 60 years |
| Notorious abroad for their binge-drinking, Britons bucked the trend last year with alcohol consumption in the country showing its biggest fall since 1948, the industry said Friday. |
| Abbott abandons plans to sell vaccines business |
| Drug and medical device firm Abbott Laboratories said Friday it has abandoned plans to sell its vaccines unit, less than three months after exploring sales talks with rival companies. |
| Unvaccinated Teen's Life Forever Changed |
| FRIDAY, Sept. 3 (HealthDay News) -- Carl Buher came home from the football game feeling rotten. |
| Bedbug Nation: Critters Make a Comeback |
| FRIDAY, Sept. 3 (HealthDay News) -- From sunny California to New York City, in flophouses, theaters and high-end offices, bedbugs are popping up in droves although, these days, they're found in a lot more places than just your bed. |
| Health Highlights: Sept. 3, 2010 |
| Here are some of the latest health and medical news developments, compiled by the editors of HealthDay: |
| Protein test ups diabetes diagnoses in some races |
| Efforts to adopt a more accurate test for diagnosing diabetes may have hit a snag. Comparing the age-old oral glucose tolerance test to the newer hemoglobin A1c test confirms earlier evidence that race may influence test results, Danish researcher... |
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