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- Loneliness Can Shorten Lives of Cancer Survivors
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- Healthier Hearts in Middle Age Help Black Women’s Brains Stay Strong
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- Which Patients and Surgeries Are ‘High Risk’ for Seniors?
Health Highlights: July 14, 2017
Here are some of the latest health and medical news developments, compiled by the editors of HealthDay:
Jimmy Carter Suffers Dehydration While on Habitat for Humanity Build in Canada
Former U.S. president Jimmy Carter was hospitalized for dehydration in Winnipeg, Canada on Thursday while helping build a Habitat for Humanity home.
Carter, 92, collapsed after working in the sun for about an hour, using a handsaw to cut wood for a staircase, a Habitat volunteer told CBC News.
He was taken by ambulance to St. Boniface Hospital for rehydration and observation, a Habitat for Humanity spokesperson said.
Carter told organizers he is feeling fine.”He’s asked us to continue with our day,” Jonathan Reckford, CEO for Habitat for Humanity International, said Thursday, CBC News reported.
Any further information on the former president’s condition will have to come from the Carter Center, Reckford said.
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Man’s Toe Transplanted to Replace Lost Thumb
An Australian man’s toe was surgically transplanted onto his hand to replace a thumb he lost earlier this year.
Zac Mitchell, 20, suffered the thumb injury in April while working on a farm in Western Australia. Attempts to save the thumb failed, BBC News reported.
He had the whole toe transplant surgery at the Sydney Eye Hospital two weeks ago. He’ll require more than 12 months of rehabilitation but plans to return to farm work.
It’s rare to transplant a complete toe, but partial toe transplants are more common, according to the hospital.
“It is a bit of a crazy idea – they [patients] do not want to be injured in another part of their body,” said lead plastic surgeon Dr. Sean Nicklin, BBC News reported.
“[However] even if you have got four good fingers, if you do not have something to pinch against them, your hand has lost a huge amount of its function,” he explained.
“A lot of people think their balance and walking is going to be significantly affected which it generally isn’t,” Nicklin said.
Doctors said Mitchell should be able to return to his hobby of bull riding, BBC News reported.
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