Low-Salt Diet Ineffective, Study Finds. Disagreement Abounds.
By GINA KOLATA
Officials at the Centers for Disease Control publicly criticized a European study that found low-salt diets increased the risk of death from cardiovascular ailments.
Officials at the Centers for Disease Control publicly criticized a European study that found low-salt diets increased the risk of death from cardiovascular ailments.
A new government study says nearly one in 10 children and almost one in 12 Americans of all ages now has asthma.
Interviews provide a grim look at abuses occurring in Iraq and their crushing effects on individuals and families.
Top these crackers with a Middle Eastern spice mix — or make your own.
Eating more foods like cayenne pepper and pureed vegetables can suppress appetite and lead to the consumption of fewer calories.
Treatment that could reduce the risks of spontaneous early births could have a significant impact on public health.
A questionnaire given to parents at their child’s 1-year checkup can detect signs of autism and other developmental delays but comes with a high rate of false positives.
Men with the highest blood D.H.A. levels were more likely to develop high-grade prostate cancer than those with the lowest D.H.A. blood levels, researchers have found.
A new study suggests that meditation may modulate brain waves called alpha rhythms, which help regulate the transmission of sensory input from the surrounding environment.
From physics and psychology to aesthetics, genetics and even treatment for the miserably, terminally annoyed, a new book covers all the terrain.
Just in time for Mother’s Day, tell us about your mother, someone else’s mother or motherhood in general in just six words
Primary progressive aphasia is one of several forms of brain disease lost in the medical shadow of a much better known relative, Alzheimer’s disease.
No one really knows how to explain the connection, but studies do show a link between the surgery and weight gain.
In the news: Armadillos, exercise and a cancer on the rise. Test your knowledge of this week’s health news.
If a young child suddenly stops speaking, is autism to blame?
The Times's fitness guinea pig, Karen Barrow, reviews a gravity-defying form of yoga.
Transplants, lotions, pills: what’s next in the search for a thick head of hair? Cloning, says one doctor.
A confidential review of a continuing lung cancer study involving more than 50,000 patients found that doctors could not locate 90 percent of the patients’ consent forms.
Use a little butter to make these crackers; with only olive oil, the crackers will be too dry.
A half million children with autism will enter adulthood in the next decade. How will they be cared for?
Articles in this series examine issues arising from the increasing use of medical radiation and the new technologies that deliver it.
First-person accounts of patients' everyday challenges.
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