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The new page emphatically promotes a theory that many scientists question. Meanwhile, basic information about COVID testing and vaccines has disappeared.
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While Food and Drug Administration inspectors who make sure food and drugs meet quality standards were spared in recent cuts, key support staffers were dismissed.
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A 'Family Fun Night' at the school will offer workshops and games meant to help students stay focused on their futures and avoid gun violence.
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Residents who live near the former St. Vincent Charity Medical Center said the news of the building's planned demolition made them doubt other health care services will return to the neighborhood.
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A report did not determine whether the former CEO was right to take the bonuses in the way he did, only that there was not enough evidence to prove he knowingly deceived the board of trustees in taking the payments.
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Journalist Annie Lowrey has a rare disease that causes a near-constant itch that doesn't respond to most treatments. She likens the itchiness to a car alarm: "You can't stop thinking about it."
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Painesville-based Sub Zero Mission started a program on Veterans Day to take veterans from unhoused to stability in housing, finances, health and well-being within two years.
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A study of cells from 84 brains finds that Alzheimer's has two distinct phases, and that one type of neuron is especially vulnerable.
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More people are getting cancer in their 20s, 30s, and 40s, and surviving, thanks to rapid advancement in care. Many will have decades of life ahead of them, which means they face greater and more complex challenges in survivorship. Lourdes Monje is navigating these waters at age 29.
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University Hospitals asked staff for ideas to conserve IV fluids, following a reduction of 60% from their supplier, whose factory was impacted by Hurricane Helene. Officials found the new ideas prevented waste and patients preferred them.
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The acquisition between Health Assurance Transformation Corporation, or HATCo, and Summa Health, was finalized Thursday.
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Ohio’s infant mortality rate has improved slightly in the past decade. But Black babies in the state are dying at a rate more than twice as high as white infants.