- Climate Change Is Pushing More People to Get X-rays, CT Scans
- Judge Declares Wyoming’s Abortion Bans Unconstitutional
- Why Alarm Is Easing Over a Rise in Pancreatic Cancer Among the Young
- More Than Half of U.S. Adults Could Be Candidates for Ozempic
- U.S. Alcohol-Linked Deaths Doubled in 20 Years
- There’s Been a Big Improvement in Lung Cancer Survival
- Newer Blood Thinner Cuts Odds for Stroke After Heart Valve Surgery
- Most of the World’s Cities Lack Enough Trees to Cool, Calm Residents
- Ablation Best Treatment for Rapid Heartbeat in Heart Attack Survivors
- Want to Lower Chemical Exposures in Pregnancy? Quit Nail Polish, Makeup and Hair Dye
Health Highlights: April 4, 2014
Here are some of the latest health and medical news developments, compiled by the editors of HealthDay:
New Law Funds Childhood Cancer Research
A new law that eliminates taxpayer funding for political conventions and redirects the money to study pediatric cancer and other childhood health disorders was signed Thursday by President Barack Obama.
Over the next decade, the law will provide $126 million in funding to the National Institutes of Health for those areas of research, the Associated Press reported.
The Gabriella Miller Kids First Research Act is named after a 10-year-old girl who died of brain cancer last October. Before she died, Gabriella posted an emotional video to YouTube in which she told politicians: “Stop talking and start doing.”
Gabriella’s parents and brother were on hand to witness Obama sign the bill, the AP reported.
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Mali Reports Suspected Ebola Cases
Three suspected cases of the deadly Ebola virus have been reported in Mali near it’s border with Guinea, and Mali officials have implemented tight controls on people entering the capital, Bamako, from the border area, according to BBC News.
For example, passengers at the airport in Bamako are being screened with thermal-imaging cameras to detect any signs of fever.
The Ebola outbreak in Guinea has killed 86 people. Neighboring Liberia has had six deaths in 12 suspected cases, and suspected cases have also been reported in Sierra Leone. Senegal has closed its border with Guinea, BBC News reported.
On Friday morning, an Air France plane that arrived in Paris from Guinea was quarantined for two hours because the crew suspected a passenger was infected with Ebola. A test on the passenger found no evidence of the virus, according to an airline spokesman.
There is no vaccine or cure for Ebola, which kills 25 to 90 percent of people who are infected with the virus, BBC News reported.
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