Dessert, Laid-Back and Legal
By CATHERINE SAINT LOUIS
Dietary supplements promoted as reducing stress and insomnia are easy to buy, but some doctors warn of their harmful effects.
Dietary supplements promoted as reducing stress and insomnia are easy to buy, but some doctors warn of their harmful effects.
Labels proclaiming health benefits of foods almost shout out in the aisles of supermarkets. But shoppers, and regulators, have their hands full trying to sort it all out.
New research suggests the sting of social rejection may be more like the ouch! of physical pain than previously understood.
As awareness of the disease grows, more restaurants see the value of making their offerings of baked goods, pasta and even beer safe.
Companies continue to press for higher premiums, saying they need protection against any sudden uptick in demand once people have more money to spend on their health.
Victrelis, from Merck, is the first of a new generation of drugs that promise to increase the cure rate while shortening the treatment time.
Inflammation, and not necessarily infection, is the common theme in chronic sinusitis.
Use any kind of barley, brown rice or arborio rice in this Provençal gratin.
Induced pluripotent stem cells appear to have the healing potential of embryonic stem cells without the controversy, but when given to mice, they didn’t survive the immune response.
The estimates, in the annual report by the Medicare trustees, were immediately swept up into the already inflamed political battle over federal spending, debt and the future of entitlement programs.
Undiagnosed, the disorder can wreak havoc on relationships and one’s self-esteem. But getting a proper diagnosis can be costly.
A new analysis adds to the evidence that people who use proton pump inhibitors for acid reflux are more likely to fracture bones.
A support group gives caregivers something science and doctors can’t: collective experience, a priceless resource.
An effort to come to terms with the unknown consequences that synthetic chemicals may hold for consumers.
If human bodies become taller, bigger and longer-living -- is that progress?
In the news: pregnancy, allergies and the “disease of kings.” Test your knowledge of this week’s health news.
Experts discuss biofilms and the underlying causes of chronic sinusitis.
The number of Americans with gout is rising steadily as the population ages, becomes heavier and is exposed to foods that can precipitate the disorder in susceptible people.
Many allergy sufferers believe that a daily spoonful of locally produced honey can act like a vaccine and alleviate symptoms.
The Times's fitness guinea pig, Karen Barrow, reviews a gravity-defying form of yoga.
All that is left to make medical marijuana legal in Delaware is the signature of the governor, who has said he will make it law.
A new study reports that breast cancers detected between screenings are more aggressive than tumors missed during a regular screening.
This easy skillet dish is filled with sweet spring vegetables.
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.
Epilepsy | Alzheimer's | Migraines | Psoriasis | Alopecia | See All »