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| 3 hours ago | How to take a watermelon smash to the face | | A giant slingshot. A watermelon. And a woman's face. It'll all make sense after you watch this video from CBS's "The Amazing Race." But the clip left us wondering: How do you come back from a watermelon smash to the face?!
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| 6 hours ago | Video: Vitamin B could help prevent Alzheimer's | | British researchers found that the pills halved the rate at which the brains of elderly people shrunk in size - one of the first symptoms of dementia. ITN's Nina Nannar reports. (Nightly News)
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| 6 hours ago | A whole different Playboy channel — for the blind | | While a text-only Braille edition of Playboy has been available for decades, volunteers at Taping for the Blind, Inc., in Houston record descriptions — in great detail — of the latest issue of the magazine for the blind.
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| 6 hours ago | Screwy in the city? Urban living is nuts! | | Turns out city living makes us a little bit crazier. But why? Is it the stress? The poverty? The drug use? The crime? Is it that guy on the #2 bus who constantly clips his toenails?
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| 9 hours ago | B vitamins found to slow progression of dementia | | Daily tablets of large doses of B vitamins can halve the rate of brain shrinkage in elderly people with memory problems and may slow their progression toward dementia, data from a British trial showed on Wednesday,
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| 9 hours ago | Too little sleep raises obesity risk in children | | NEW YORK (Reuters Life!) - Children aged four and under who get less than 10 hours of sleep a night are nearly twice as likely to be overweight or obese five years later, according to a U.S. study. |
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| 9 hours ago | Tween boys tackle obesity: One family's story | | Health experts say that the soda-swilling, video-watching habits of boys ages 6 to 19 mean that about 15 percent are now extremely obese, up from about 9 percent a decade ago. That includes kids like Garrett and Nathaniel Uterhark, whose mom stepped in to help.
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| 21 hours ago | HIV spread 'out of control' among French gay men | | Transmission of the AIDS virus seems to be "out of control" among gay men in France despite an overall fall in the number of new HIV cases in the country, according to a study published on Thursday. |
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| Yesterday | Kids eligible for, absent from, U.S. health programs | | An estimated five million uninsured children in the United States were eligible for Medicaid or the Childrens Health Insurance Program (CHIP) but were not enrolled in either plan, according to a new report. |
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| Yesterday | More evidence ties smoking, decreased fertility | | If you're looking to make a baby, you might want to put out your cigarette before getting down to business: There's now more evidence linking smoking with decreased fertility in men and women — and their offspring. |
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| Yesterday | U.S. court asked to keep stem cell money flowing | | The Obama administration is asking a U.S. appeals court to lift an order blocking federal funding for some stem cell research, a day after being turned down by the judge who issued the order. |
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| Yesterday | Newsweek: Why DDT won't stop bedbugs | | Some critics have blamed environmentalists for the current bedbug plague, arguing that the 1972 ban on DDT is a root cause. But there is virtually no demand, including from the pest-control industry, to bring back DDT to use against bedbugs, and widespread agreement that, environmental concerns aside, it wouldn’t work. |
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| Yesterday | Troubled teens find new way to self-harm | | There's another teenage behavior to alarm American parents. Doctors have come across a little-reported form of deliberate self-injury by teenagers — embedding objects ranging from glass to needles to wood under their own skin. |
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| Yesterday | Drug maker used ghostwriters for journal articles | | Drugmaker Wyeth used ghostwriters to play up the benefits and downplay the harm of hormone replacement therapy in articles published in medical journals, a U.S. researcher said on Tuesday. |
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| Yesterday | Burning eyes? Cows may be to blame | | When a crowd of about 50 Aussies started pawing at their suddenly burning, aching eyes, panic set in. Did somebody release poison gas? No, it’s so, so much worse. |
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| Yesterday | Two gene mutations mark deadly ovarian cancer | | Researchers have identified two new genetic mutations that cause a significant number of the hardest-to-treat kinds of ovarian cancer, and say they point to a new "on-off" switch for tumors. |
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| Yesterday | Chronic drinking is bad; suddenly quitting is worse | | But chronic drinking has been linked to high levels of the stress hormone cortisol , which can be dangerous to health. But stopping suddenly can cause the brain's neurons to degenerate, research shows. |
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| Yesterday | Teen's 'laser show' prank zaps eyeballs | | Turns out mom was right. You can put your eye out playing with unsafe toys. The “toy” in this case was a handheld laser, purchased from the Internet by a 15-year-old Swiss boy.
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| Yesterday | Grassley seeks answers to USDA's role at egg farms | | Iowa Sen. Charles Grassley is asking Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack to address accusations that federal workers ignored complaints about conditions at two Iowa farms involved in the recall of salmonella-tainted eggs. |
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| Yesterday | Back in business after peanut deaths | | The peanut industry executive whose filthy processing plants were blamed in a salmonella outbreak two years ago that killed nine people and sickened hundreds more is back in the business. |
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| Yesterday | Survey: Most of us think we're hotter than average | | We’re fatter than we’ve ever been; at the same time, our idea of the “ideal” body has gone from lean to impossibly leaner. Still, we’re pretty damn pleased with the way we look, a new survey suggests.
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