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Time.com: Do Breast Self-Exams Do Any Good?

A new report questions their usefulness, finding that they don't save lives and may lead to twice as many unneeded biopsies

Do you want to be a guinea pig?

They want to pay me for the use of my body. No, I'm not vain, nor is anyone trying to push me into prostitution. They want me (and you) to be subjects in medical studies.

CNNMoney: FDA to take key step in stem cell research

The Food and Drug Administration looks like it's bowing to the inevitable this week and drawing the blueprint for the first-ever human experiments with human embryonic stem cells.

Tips for savvy medical Web surfing

When Mary Ryan's 4-year-old nephew, Nick, landed in the hospital with a serious infection, her brother called her in a panic. Ryan isn't a doctor. She's not a nurse. She's a librarian.

CNNMoney: Antidepressants may not work - report

Patients and doctors alike may have received some fuzzy truth about the effectiveness of antidepressant medication.

How to save your own child

Early one summer's evening, five parents gathered at a suburban Boston home. They had wine and fruit tarts, cheese, crackers, and fresh fruit. Laughter and hugs filled the room.

All sides in stem cell debate claim vindication

All sides involved in the controversy over the use of embryonic stem cells in research claimed vindication Tuesday after two teams of researchers reported having reprogrammed human skin cells to act like the stem cells, which have the potential of morphing into other cells and thereby curing disease.

Fortune: John Edwards and the drug spending myth

Some myths just never die. Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards helped to propagate a whopper at a stump speech in Laconia, New Hampshire on Sunday: That is, that drugmakers spend more on sales and advertising than on scientific research.

Guantanamo doctors 'ignore abuse'

The U.S. medical establishment appears to have turned a blind eye to the abuse of military medicine at the Guantanamo Bay prison in Cuba, doctors from around the world said in a letter published Friday in a prestigious British medical journal.

Made-for-the-military products put brakes on bleeding

The solution to curb severe bleeding was the same three years ago as 3,000 years ago -- gauze, applied with pressure.

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