Blog Heap o'Links
Just random links galore
filed under the
Blog Heading
of
Blog Heap o'Links filed under the Blog Heading of

Healing Ourselves

Displaying 61 - 90 of 92
breitbart.com • Fri 2009 May 8, 2:00pm

PigCancel plans for that "swine flu party": a top US health official says deliberately trying to get infected with the A(H1N1) flu virus as protection against a future more virulent strain is a bad idea.

newsok.com • Tue 2009 May 5, 2:09pm

PigCenters for Disease Control and Prevention have confirmed a case of swine flu in Oklahoma, and testing is being done in Atlanta on four other suspected cases. ... a Pontotoc County woman....

sciencedaily.com • Sun 2009 May 3, 10:44pm

Despite the common perception that total hip replacements last about 10 years, researchers at Rush University Medical Center have found that the devices are extremely durable, even 20 years after surgery.

boston.com • Fri 2009 May 1, 2:36pm

A United Airlines flight from Munich to Washington made a two-hour stop at Logan International Airport this afternoon so a female passenger who had complained of flu-like symptoms could be removed and taken to a hospital for treatment.

mcclatchydc.com • Fri 2009 May 1, 12:57pm

A Washington state biosurveillance firm raised the first warning about a possible outbreak of swine flu in Mexico more than two weeks before the World Health Organization offered its initial alert about a public health emergency of international concern.

motherjones.com • Thu 2009 Apr 30, 9:27pm

It's been interesting to watch the media ramp-up to hysteria over the new influenza strain and now drop it like spoiled news because it's not deadly enough for the headlines. Too bad that's wrong twice.

spiegel.de • Thu 2009 Apr 30, 3:02pm

When a container holding swine flu exploded on a Swiss train on Monday, it could have led to a nightmare scenario. Luckily the virus was not the mutated swine flu that has killed around 150 people in Mexico and that has already spread to parts of Europe.

latimes.com • Thu 2009 Apr 30, 1:04pm

As the World Health Organization raised its infectious disease alert level Wednesday and health officials confirmed the first death linked to swine flu inside U.S. borders, scientists studying the virus are coming to the consensus that this hybrid strain of influenza -- at least in its current form -- isn't shaping up to be as fatal as the strains that caused some previous pandemics.

reuters.com • Thu 2009 Apr 30, 1:04pm

"The claim of the conspiracy theorists is that this new combination could not have occurred naturally, but this is not true," the New Scientist's biology editor Michael Le Page wrote. "Flu viruses consisting of a mixture of human, swine and bird strains have been found before." Sound science, however, is no match for the Internet and unsubstantiated media reports when it comes to providing a forum for ideas that have forced responses from governments and companies alike.

wcbstv.com • Thu 2009 Apr 30, 1:03pm

The WHO says the phase 5 alert means there is sustained human-to-human spread in at least two countries. It also signals that efforts to produce a vaccine will be ramped up.

alertnet.org • Wed 2009 Apr 29, 7:53pm

The World Health Organization said on Wednesday the world is at the brink of a pandemic, raising its threat level as the swine flu virus spread and killed the first person outside of Mexico, a toddler in Texas.

timesonline.co.uk • Wed 2009 Apr 29, 9:33am

The boss of Ryanair has claimed only people living in 'slums' will be affected by swine flu. Michael O'Leary's comments came as a four-year-old boy from a small Mexican village was identified as the earliest confirmed victim of the illness.

reuters.com • Wed 2009 Apr 29, 9:32am

Alarmed by the spread of a new swine flu virus, airports around the world have rushed to install temperature scanners to pick out the sick, but the microbe is proving too clever for modern technology.

wtop.com • Wed 2009 Apr 29, 9:30am

AirTran Airways Flight 85 from Cancun, Mexico radioed ahead to the airport about the two men, said airport spokesman Jonathan Dean. They had fevers and were sick to their stomachs.... the men just had too much to drink.

breitbart.com • Wed 2009 Apr 29, 9:30am

Egypt began slaughtering the roughly 300,000 pigs in the country Wednesday as a precautionary measure against the spread of swine flu even though no cases have been reported here yet ... The move immediately provoked resistance from pig farmers. At one large pig farming center just north of Cairo, farmers refused to cooperate with Health Ministry workers who came to slaughter the animals and the workers left without carrying out the government order....

smh.com.au • Wed 2009 Apr 29, 9:09am

A member of the World Health Organisation (WHO) has dismissed claims that more than 150 people have died from swine flu, saying it has officially recorded only seven deaths around the world.

javno.com • Tue 2009 Apr 28, 11:49am

a photograph of the most distant object in the universe -- a smudge 13 billion light-years away. ... the most distant object ever seen by humanity...

innovationwatch.com • Tue 2009 Apr 28, 11:47am

The swine flu epidemic crossed new borders Tuesday with the first cases confirmed in the Middle East and the Asia-Pacific region, as world health officials said they suspect American patients may have transmitted the virus to others in the U.S.

politico.com • Mon 2009 Apr 27, 10:50pm

Obamawithout a secretary of Health and Human Services or appointees in any of the department's 19 key posts.... has not yet chosen a surgeon general or the head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. His choice to run the Food and Drug Administration awaits confirmation.... Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano...

breitbart.com • Mon 2009 Apr 27, 10:50pm

A deadly swine flu virus strain could unleash a new global pandemic, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon warned Monday, after the probable death toll from the disease rose to 149 in Mexico. "We are concerned that this virus could cause a new influenza pandemic. It could be mild in its effect or potentially be severe," Ban told reporters. "We don't know yet which way it will go but we are concerned that in Mexico most of those who died were young and healthy adults."

nytimes.com • Sun 2009 Apr 26, 6:22pm

Responding to what some health officials feared could be the leading edge of a global pandemic emerging from Mexico, American health officials declared a public health emergency on Sunday as 20 cases of swine flu were confirmed in this country, including eight in New York City.

ottawacitizen.com • Sun 2009 Apr 26, 6:22pm

Canadian health officials reported six "mild" cases of swine flu on Sunday — the first confirmed cases in Canada since an outbreak of the illness began in Mexico several days ago — and warned there could be more cases in the days ahead.

breitbart.com • Sun 2009 Apr 26, 6:22pm

Churches stood empty Sunday in predominantly Roman Catholic Mexico City after services were canceled, and health workers screened airports and bus stations for people sickened by a new strain of swine flu that experts fear could become a global epidemic.

bloomberg.com • Sat 2009 Apr 25, 4:59pm

Authorities have canceled school at all levels in Mexico City and the state of Mexico until further notice, and the government has shut most public and government activities in the area

msnbc.msn.com • Sat 2009 Apr 25, 4:56pm

has spread to Kansas and likely to New York City.... Wichita... a mix of human, pig and bird strains ... The Spanish flu pandemic, which killed at least 40 million people worldwide in 1918-19, also first struck otherwise healthy young adults.... Health officials are puzzled at why all U.S. victims have recovered while dozens stricken in Mexico died...

breitbart.com • Fri 2009 Apr 24, 9:41pm

US medical authorities expressed strong concern Friday about an unprecedented multi-strain swine flu outbreak that has killed at least 60 people in Mexico and infected seven people in the United States. "It's very obvious that we are very concerned. We've stood up emergency operation centers," Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) spokesman Dave Daigle told AFP.

reuters.com • Tue 2009 Apr 21, 6:21pm

lab mice bred to develop breast cancer had a significantly lower risk of breast cancer if fed the human equivalent of a handful of walnuts a day. "Walnuts are better than cookies, french fries or potato chips when you need a snack,"

blog.wired.com • Thu 2009 Mar 26, 7:16pm

The first phase of the Pentagon's plan to regrow soldiers' limbs is complete; scientists managed to turn human skin into the equivalent of a blastema — a mass of undifferentiated cells that can develop into new body parts. Now, researchers are on to phase two: turning that cellular glop into a square inch of honest-to-goodness muscle tissue.

cbs13.com • Sun 2009 Mar 15, 4:00pm

SpiderHe's been confined to a wheelchair for 20 years. Now a paraplegic man is walking again. And his doctors call it a miracle. ... A Brown Recluse sent him to the hospital, then to rehab for eight months. "I'm here for a spider bite. I didn't know I would end up walking...."

Pages