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From a very early age, we learn that optimism is the key to happiness. Unfortunately, when people catch a disease, especially an incurable one, they tend to lose their optimism and fall into depression, and this only aggravates their condition. Even though this attitude is perfectly explainable, as being ill is the essence of human suffering, [...]
Posted by Andrei Dina on Wednesday, May 15, 2013 at 12:01 am
Filed under Health · Tagged Andrei Dina, benefits, cancer, disease, fear, Health, Malaria, memory, muscles, orgasms, savant, TopTenz
In most developed nations across the globe, it is required for infants and certainly adults to be immunized against a variety of diseases. Really – who wants measles? Or how about chicken pox? These vaccinations were created to stem the tide of deaths that occurred throughout history from these diseases. Face it – medical practices [...]
Posted by William O'Dell on Friday, January 11, 2013 at 12:01 am
Filed under Health · Tagged aluminum, autism, brain damage, brain disorders, disease, flu, flu shot, influenza, injections, Jenny McCarthy, Mercury, misconceptions, myth, prenatal influenza shots, Schizophrenia, shots, vaccination, vaccines, well baby
2011 was an exciting time for the medical industry, with thousands of scientific breakthroughs bringing hope to patients and health experts across the world. Here, we give you our top 10 weird and wonderful medical developments of 2011: 10. Squalamine Virus killer found in sharks In September it was reported that a new compound found [...]
Posted by Shell Harris on Friday, February 10, 2012 at 12:01 am
Filed under Health, Science · Tagged Abdominal pain, Alzheimer's disease, Antioxidants, brain tumors, Brain Tumours, cancer, cancer vaccine, cfs cure, chemotherapy, chronic fatigue syndrom cure, chronic fatigue syndrome, Colorectal cancer, Curcumin, disease, Gene Test, hepatitis B, irritable bowel syndrome, Monoamine oxidase inhibitors, prostate cancer, skin cancer, targeted cancer, tumor, Turmeric, vaccine shrunk breast tumors
In the world of comics, iconic figures such as Superman, Spider-man, Batman and the like; have made their indelible impression on both the mythos of heroes in general and the comic book genre specifically. Yet, there are other characters, perhaps not as well known, who nevertheless contributed to the love and appreciation we share for [...]
Posted by Lee Standberry on Wednesday, January 4, 2012 at 12:01 am
Filed under Comics · Tagged African American, Al Simons, All-American Air Force, America, Archie Goodwin, architect, artist, Avengers, Black Panther, Bruce Lee, Captain, Christmas, Christopher Priest, comics, Dark Knight Detective, Dave Cockrum, dc comics, DC Comics Inc., Dennis O'Neal, depression, disease, Dwayne McDuffie, emerald energy, emissary, Facebook Inc, falcon, Falcon Stewart, Fiction, Foxy Brown, Freedom City, Gene Golan, green lantern corps, hal jordan, hereditary symbol, Isabella, Jack Kirby, jim starlin, JLA, John Rameta Jr., John Stewart, Justice League, King, Kung Fu, Latino, leader, Legion of Superheroes, Len Wein, Mark Tereira, marvel comics, Neal Adams, one of the founders, pilot, Princess, printing, queen, Richard Dominquez, school teacher, Secret Avengers, Shang-Chi, Stan Lee, steve englehart, Storm, Superfly, Superhero, the Avengers, The Black Cat, the Defenders, Todd McFarland, Tony Isbella, United States, writer, x-men
No one wants to get sick. Don’t we all wrap up warm in winter to insulate ourselves from the cold and be extra careful around snot-nosed ill people? Only a few of us, though, ever get really serious about it. For instance, have you ever spent a day picking up everything with a tissue? Or [...]
Posted by Kevin Forde on Friday, October 28, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Animals, Bizarre, Health, Television · Tagged Abigail Breslin, Abnormal psychology, acclaimed writer and critic, adolf hitler, Andy Warhol, charles darwin, disease, Florence Nightingale, fragile writer, Glen Gould, Hans Christian Anderson, hypochondriacs, Hypochondriasis, illness, Jennifer Hudson, Marcel Proust, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder, pains, paranoia, Parkinson’s disease, People, Psychology, sickness, St. Thomas’ Hospital in London, the Avant Garde, The Snow Queen, The Ugly Duckling
Eighteen is a special time in a person’s life. In most countries, 18-years-old is when an individual is legally considered an adult and can assume control over their actions and decisions. As we move into the 21st century, the age of maturity has risen. A 15-year-old boy living in the Middle Ages had greater responsibilities [...]
Posted by Bryan Johnson on Monday, September 19, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under History · Tagged Actor, advocate for AIDS research and public education, After You've Gone, AIDS, Akhenaten, Akhetaten, alabama, Alabama,United States, Alexander Severus, Allied Control Council, Antioch, artist, Aruba, BBC, Berlin, Berlin,Germany, Beths Grammar School, bishop, blood product, brain death, Britain, Britain's Got Talent, British Broadcasting Corporation, British Columbia, British Columbia,Canada, Caracalla, carpenter, Charles Carlton, Checkpoint Charlie, Chile, club Carlos'n Charlie, Colorado, Colorado,United States, Columbine High School, communist government, Cultural anthropology, denmark, Denver, Denver,Colorado,United States, Disappeared people, disease, disorder, Dylan Klebold, East Germany, Edmund, egypt, Elton John, Emaji, emperor, Eric Harris, Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold, Erich Schreiber, F-16, factor, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Flores Ramírez, Food and Drug Administration, France, gene therapy, George Herbert, Germany, Great Britain, Greta Van Susteren, Hamilton Heights High School, Harry Potter, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, head, Helmut Kulbeik, Hemophilia A, Henry Frederick, Henry Frederick Stuart, hereditary blood coagulation disorder, HIV, HIV/AIDS, Howard Carter, Ichinomiya Hospital, Ichinomiya Hospital in Japan, Inc., Indiana, Indiana,United States, injury, Ireland, ITV police, James M. Wilson, Jamie, Japan, Jesse Gelsinger, Joran van der Sloot, Jordan, Jordan van der Sloot, Julia Maesa, Julia Soaemias, Kansas, Kansas,United States, Karl Norman Bishop, Kent, Kevin, Kimberly Bergalis, King, King Arthur, Kinjirareta Mariko, Knowledge, Kokomo, Kokomo,Indiana,United States, lead researcher, Lima, Lima Superior Court, Lima,Lima Region,Peru, Littleton, Littleton,Colorado,United States, London, London,Greater London,United Kingdom, Magic Johnson, Malaria, manager, Marcus Belby, Marcus Opellius Macrinus, Mary, media coverage, Mercedes, Metro Bar, Michael Jackson, minor injuries, Mountain Brook, Mountain Brook High School, Mountain Brook,Alabama,United States, murder, musician, Natalee Holloway, New York, New York City, New York City,New York,United States, New York,United States, Nippon Television, Nippon Television Network Corporation, ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency, Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania,United States, peru, Peter Fechter, Peter-Fechter-Stelle memorial, pharaoh, Phil Donahue, phrase Yukko Syndrome, physician, Plattsburgh, Plattsburgh,New York,United States, pneumonia, Praetorian camp, Praetorian Guard, prince, Prince of Wales, prosecutor, queen, Queen of Scots, R&B musician, recently Filipino actor, reported missing in Lima, REpublic of Ireland, Rob Knox, Rolf Friedrich, Roman pantheon, Ronnie Caldwell, Rookie of the Year, Ryan White, Scotland, Second Presbyterian Church on Meridian Street in Indianapolis, services, severe disease, Singer, Sol Invictus, Soviet Union, spokesman for AIDS research, Stephany Tatiana Flores Ramírez, Sun Music, Sun Music Agency building, Sun Music building, teacher, teenage bricklayer, The Bill, the University of Pennsylvania, Third Legion, Tokyo, Tokyo,Japan, treatment for infants born with severe disease, Trevor McDonald, Trust, Tutankhamun, typhoid fever, U.S. Congress, United Kingdom, United States, University of Colorado, University of Pennsylvania, USA Today, wales, Wayne Harris, West Germany, Westminster Abbey, Wichita, Wichita,Kansas,United States, X-linked genetic disease, Yukiko Okada
Everyone has secrets. But while they may be terribly embarrassing or humiliating to the people who keep them buried year after year, their exposure rarely makes a ripple beyond the outer boundaries of their lives. But people aren’t the only ones who carry secrets. Powerful institutions like governments and business also sometimes have information they [...]
Posted by Geoff Shakespeare on Wednesday, April 27, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Business, People, Politics · Tagged Afghanistan, Al Pacino, America, American government, Archer Daniels Midland, Archers Daniel Midland, Army, Associate Director, Atomic Energy Commission, Atomic Workers Union, Bradley Manning, Carl Bernstein, Cherly Eckard, Cheryl Eckard, Coleen Rowley, company poisoning, Congress, contaminated testing equipment, Daniel Ellsberg, Detective, disease, diseases, Federal Bureau of Investigation, film, food additives, food industry giant, Frank Serpico, Geoff Shakespeare, Glaxo Quality Assurance Manager, GlaxoSmithKline, GLAXOSMITHKLINE PLC, Harvard, intelligence analyst, International Olympic Committee, Iraq, J.Edgar Hoover, Japan, Julian Assange, Karen Silkwood, Kerr-McGee, Kerr-McGee Corporation, Knapp Commission, Lady Gaga, Major, Marc Hodler, Marine Lieutenant, Mark Whitacre, Mass media, Matt Damon, Nagano, Nagano Prefecture, New York, New York City, New York Police Department, Official, Oklahoma, Pentagon, Peter Buxton, Peter Buxtun, Plastic surgery, president, president of their Bioproducts Division, Puerto Rico, RAND Corporation, researcher, Richard Nixon, Robert McNamara, Robert Woodward, Salt Lake City, Secretary of Defense, shock, Silkwood, ski coach, Swiss mountains, syphilis, testing equipment, the 2002 Winter Games, The Informant, The New York Times, The New York Times Co, the Olympics, the Salt Lake City Games, the Washington Post, The Washington Post Company, U.S. Attorney’s Office, U.S. Public Health Service, United States, untreated syphilis, US government, USD, Utah, venereal disease, venereal disease investigator, W. Mark Felt, Washington, White House, worker, World Trade Center, Zacarias Moussaoui
The Influenza pandemic of 1918 caused more deaths than the four years of the Bubonic Plague. Not only did the pandemic kill more people than died in World War I, but it killed more people than all the wars of the 20th century combined. It is believed that the influenza pandemic of 1918 killed 25 [...]
Posted by Shell Harris on Monday, April 11, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Health, History · Tagged Africa, AIDS, Animal virology, Army, Asia, Asian Flu outbreak, average flu, Avian influenza, Biology, Boston, brazil, Britain, British Army, bubonic plague, Camp Devens, Camp Funston, chemical structure, cholera, dangerous infectious diseases, dehydration, dengue, disease, epidemic, Epidemiology, Europe, every major influenza A, excess influenza, FDA, federal government, flu, Flu pandemic, Fort Riley, France, Germany, H3N2 influenza, Haskell, Haskell County, highly infectious disease, highly infectious nature, Human flu, illness, immune systems, infection, infectious disease, infectious diseases, influenza, Influenza A, Influenza A virus subtype H1N1, Influenza epidemic, Influenza pandemic, J.S. Oxford, Kansas, Kansas flu, King, La Grippe, Massachusetts, Medicine, Microbiology, milder seasonal flu, North America, oil form, Pandemics, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, plague, pneumonia, president, purulent bronchitis, Russian flu, scientist, seasonal flu, secondary infections, South Pacific, Southeast Asia, Spain, spanish flu, strain, strongest immune systems, The New York Times, The New York Times Co, Typhoid, U.S. Public Health Service, United Kingdom, United States, United States Army, Veteran's Day, well known influenza, woodrow wilson, World Health Organization
The catalog of medical oddities, miraculous recoveries, open questions and unsolved mysteries is so complex and fascinating, that millions of books and articles have been written. While oddities are not particularly desirable, miracles make us happy and strengthen our faith. Unfortunately, many medical mysteries remain unsolved. They are similar to an intriguing puzzle, but with [...]
Posted by Timeea on Wednesday, March 9, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Bizarre, Science · Tagged Allergology, Allergy, anhidrosis, another rare genetic disorder, Aquagenic Pruritus, Aquagenic Urticaria, artificial blood-pumping device, Ashleigh Morris, Australia, Biology, bizarre skin disorder, blisters, brain cancer, Brave Sarah, cardiomyopathy, casablanca, Cheryl Dinges, coma, congenital hypertrichosis, deep coma, dementia, Director of Pediatric Cardiac Surgery, disease, ectopic pregnancy, electricity, Epidermolysis bullosa, Epidermolysis bullosa dystrophica, extremely unusual disease, Fatal Familial Insomnia, fatal genetic sleep disorder, Gertruda, Grand Casablanca, Health_Medical_Pharma, Human Electrical Conductor, infections, injuries, insomnia, Jan Grzebski, Jay Schadler, Jose Rafael Marquez Ayala, Joshua Thurmond, Laura Viddy, Medicine, Melody Gilbert, Miami Holtz Children's Hospital, Michaela Dutton, mobile phones, morocco, New York, New York City, one of the members, Pain, pains, panic attacks, Poland, Prithviraj Patil, railway worker, rare disease, Rare diseases, rash, Ricci, Royal Society of Medicine, Sarah Thurmond, severe head injury, Simmons, Simmons et Simmons, skin disorder, sleep disorders, South Carolina, Supatra Sasuphan, surgeries, syndrome, terrible disease, the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, the NY Daily News, ultrasound, United Kingdom, United States, urticaria, weak and enlarged heart, Werewolf Syndrome, Wolf Kids, Zahra Aboutalib
In today’s world when we think of healing someone, you probably think of medicine, vaccinations, and other common things that every doctor seems to use. However, in the past, before medicine wasn’t nearly as advanced as it is today, there were plenty of bizarre techniques used in order to heal or cure someone. Below is [...]
Posted by Ash Grant on Thursday, October 15, 2009 at 1:40 pm
Filed under Bizarre, Humor, People, Television · Tagged bloodletting, cons, cure, depression, disease, diseases, ECT, Electroshock Therapy, fire cupping, flu, Hirudotherapy, leeches, lobotomies, lobotomy, Maggot Debridement Therapy, maggots, Malaria, malaria drug, medical, Medicine, mental illness, moxibustion, nobel prize, therapy, top 10 bizarre healing techniques, trepanation, vaccination, virus, viruses, Walter Freeman