| significant is the current term results below are displayed for. |
ICA Issues New Practice Guidelines
Forwarded by the ICA Meeting in Las Vegas, Nevada in early June, ICA's Board of Directors gathered to celebrate the Association's 74th year of service to the chiropractic profession and the public, and to map out an aggressive set of goals for the coming year. Reporting to the Annual Meeting of...
ica-issues-new-practice-guidelines.html  
|
ICA To Stay A Member Of WFC
Forwarded by the ICA ICA's international growth was the focus of serious planning and developmental discussion, since international membership was on pace to triple within the next calendar year. ICA now has members in 43 nations, as well in all 50 of the United States and every province in Can...
ica-to-stay-a-member-of-wfc.html  
|
Michigan Making Headlines - Ritalin Update
From The Wellness Report and The Michigan Chiropractic Council Back in April of 1998 the Wellness Report featured information about Michigan ranking third in the nation for Ritalin use - 56% higher than the national average. The October 1998 issue told about the children, newborn through age...
michigan-making-headlines-ritalin-update.html  
|
Autism and Mercury Relationship
The following is testimony from a recent ACIP meeting. Thank you to Dr. Rick Hodish for supplying this report. My name is Sallie Bernard. I live in Summit, New Jersey. I am the president and CEO of a market research company and a board member of the Cure Autism Now Foundation, the largest pr...
autism-and-mercury-relationship.html  
|
Recreational Ritalin Use
From ABCNEWS.com comes an article titled: "Recreational Ritalin - Kids Using Prescription Drug for Fun" The article states that, "Authorities fear Ritalin is becoming increasingly popular as a recreational drug among teens and pre-teens." According to the article, a "significant amount...
recreational-ritalin-use.html  
|
Death By Ritalin
An April 16th Nando Media reports that a "medical examiner says years of using Ritalin, a drug used to treat hyperactive children, may have led to a 14-year-old boy's death." The boy had collapsed at his home on March 21 as the result of a heart attack "likely caused by 10 years of taking Rital...
death-by-ritalin.html  
|
One in Five Have Problems With Prescriptions
A recent study in the Journal of General Internal Medicine finds that many patients are suffering from the side effects of prescription drugs. It is estimated the three out of four patients visiting a medical doctor will leave with a prescription drug. The study sought to find out how many of t...
one-in-five-have-problems-with-prescriptions.html  
|
Optimists vs. Pessimists: Optimists Prevail!
A new report published in the February issue of the journal Mayo Clinic Proceedings suggests that a positive mental outlook leads to a longer life. The report suggests that "individuals who profess pessimistic explanations for life events have poorer physical health," according to research...
optimists-vs-pessimists-optimists-prevail-.html  
|
Medical doctor charged with diluting children's vaccines
A Medical doctor in California has been charged with cruelty to children for allegedly using saline solution to dilute vaccines for hepatitis, polio, diphtheria and other diseases.
The Doctor was investigated after one of his nurses reported discrepancies in the serum levels in vaccine vials...
medical-doctor-charged-with-diluting-children-s-vaccines.html  
|
Babies of vaccinated moms more prone to measles, study shows
Source: Nando Times - Infants whose mothers were vaccinated against measles inherit fewer natural antibodies and are far more likely to catch the virus than infants of older, unvaccinated mothers, a study released Monday reveals.
The study confirms what public health officials anticipated wh...
babies-of-vaccinated-moms-more-prone-to-measles-study-shows.html  
|
Prayer may speed heart patient's recovery
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) -- Prayer may reduce the number of complications experienced by hospitalized heart patients, researchers report.
``This suggests that prayer may be an effective adjunct to standard medical care,'' Dr. William Harris of Saint Luke's Hospital in Kansas City, Missouri, ...
prayer-may-speed-heart-patient-s-recovery.html  
|
Did the Rx Kill, or the Father?
Deadly Treatment Judge Cites Hyperactivity Drug in Homicide Acquittal
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) - Ten days after he began taking a widely used medicine called Adderall to control his attention deficit disorder and help him with his college studies, Ryan Ehlis slipped into a psychotic fog and ki...
did-the-rx-kill-or-the-father-.html  
|
Seniors face Medicare HMO cutbacks
Senior citizens who left traditional Medicare and joined an HMO to save money and gain benefits are in for a shock: Premiums, doctor visits and even hospital stays will cost more next year. The changes are the first round of significant benefit cutbacks by Medicare HMO insurers, many of whom say the...
seniors-face-medicare-hmo-cutbacks.html  
|
Do you have to be a health nut to be healthy?
By Darrel Crain, Doctor of Chiropractic Do you have to be a health nut to be healthy? "Health nuts are going to feel stupid someday, lying in hospitals dying of nothing," said Redd Foxx. Good health is something most folks don't even think about until they have lost it. If your good health...
do-you-have-to-be-a-health-nut-to-be-healthy-.html  
|
20th Anniversary of my Licensure as a Chiropractor
by Stew Bittman, DC My life has been overflowing with nostalgia lately. I guess it all started in March; right around the time Hillary (my wife) tried out and made it into the cast of a local production of "Hair". By the time the show actually went into performances, I could've understudied any...
20th-anniversary-of-my-licensure-as-a-chiropractor.html  
|
| Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Next |