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20Mar
2023

Pentagon Study Finds Higher Cancer Rates Among Pilots, Ground Crews

Pentagon Study Finds Higher Cancer Rates Among Pilots, Ground CrewsMONDAY, March 20, 2023 (HealthDay News) – Military pilots and the ground crews who fuel and maintain their aircraft have higher rates of certain types of cancer, a new study shows. The Pentagon researched cancer cases in nearly 900,000 military members who served between 1992 and 2017, comparing them to the general U.S. population. The study “proves that it’s well past time for leaders and policy makers to move from skepticism to belief and active assistance,” retired Air Force Col. Vince Alcazar, a member of the Red River Valley Fighter Pilots Association, told the Associated Press. Congress required the study as part of the defense bill in 2021, the AP reported. Now, the new findings will necessitate an even bigger review.Overall, the study found that air crews had a 24%...

Hepatitis Outbreak Spurs Recall of Frozen Strawberries...

20 March 2023
Hepatitis Outbreak Spurs Recall of Frozen Strawberries Sold at Costco, Trader Joe`s, AldiMONDAY, March 20, 2023 (HealthDay News) – Frozen organic strawberries packaged under a variety of names and sold at stores including Costco, Trader Joe’s and Aldi have been recalled as part of a hepatitis A outbreak investigation.In a notice filed Friday, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration cautioned against eating, selling or serving certain frozen organic strawberries packaged by Scenic Fruit of Gresham, Ore.The recall also includes strawberries packaged by California Splendor of San Diego and sold at Costco stores in Los Angeles and Hawaii, and to two San Diego business centers.The companies share a common supplier, farms located in Baja California, Mexico. To see if you have purchased a recalled item, see the full list of recalled products.Both companies have issued voluntary...

IUDs, Contraceptive Implants Tough to Access for Women...

20 March 2023
IUDs, Contraceptive Implants Tough to Access for Women on MedicaidMONDAY, March 20, 2023 (HealthDay News) -- People covered by Medicaid insurance may not have easy access to some of the most effective, longer-acting birth control methods, new research claims.Investigators found that while about 48% of physicians who treat Medicaid patients provided prescription contraception like the birth control pill, only 10% offered longer-acting methods like IUDs and implants. Birth control is considered an essential health service.“This study is first of its kind and uses a national dataset of all Medicaid claims filed in the U.S,” said lead author Mandar Bodas, a research scientist at George Washington University's Milken Institute School of Public Health in Washington, D.C.“In our analysis, we found that a physician’s characteristics -- including...

Your Body Clock Knows When It's Time for Dinner: Study

20 March 2023
Your Body Clock Knows When It`s Time for Dinner: StudyMONDAY, March 20, 2023 (HealthDay News) -- Do you ever wonder why you typically feel hungry when it’s time for dinner?Researchers say that’s not just a habit, but a physiological drive, with the human body able to predict the timing of regular meals.“We often get hungry around the same time every day, but the extent to which our biology can anticipate mealtimes is unknown. It is possible that metabolic rhythms align to meal patterns and that regularity of meals will ensure that we eat at the time when our bodies are best adapted to deal with them,” said study author Jonathan Johnston. He is a professor of chronobiology and integrative physiology at the University of Surrey in the United Kingdom.To investigate if the human circadian system anticipates meals, the researchers...

Certain Carbon Monoxide Alarms Sold on Amazon May Not Work, Feds Warn

20 March 2023
Certain Carbon Monoxide Alarms Sold on Amazon May Not Work, Feds WarnMONDAY, March 20, 2023 (HealthDay News) -- If you bought a carbon monoxide detector on Amazon and it was sold under the names GLBSUNION and CUZMAK, stop using it.The U.S. Consumer Protection Safety Commission issued a warning because these detectors may fail to alert consumers to the presence of deadly CO, which is odorless and colorless. The detectors have a digital display.More than 200 people in the United States die every year from accidental, CO poisoning associated with consumer products.If an elevated level of the deadly gas is in the home and the detector isn’t working, injury or death are likely, CPSC noted.Sensitivity tests performed by the commission on the GLBSUNION and CUZMAK detectors found that they failed to alert when exposed to predetermined concentrations of CO in...
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