Cancer isn't just a modern-day affliction. A new archaeological analysis suggests malignant growths in medieval Britain were not as rare as we once thought.
Category: Infections | Pediatrics | Psychiatry | News Back to Health News Last Updated: April 30, 2021.By Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter Comments: (0) Tell-a-Friend FRIDAY, April...
The vaccine for human papillomavirus (HPV) is recommended in the United States for all young people up to age 26 to help prevent certain deadly cancers. Today,...
The World Health Organisation has listed Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine for emergency use, the agency said on Friday, the fifth to be given the status meant to...
Largest study so far of more than 17 million adults in England confirms that minority ethnic groups had a higher risk of testing positive, hospitalisation, admission...
Some minority ethnic populations in England have excess risks of testing positivefor SARS-CoV-2 and of adverse COVID-19 outcomes compared with the White population,...
Like everything in this pandemic, the information we have about how COVID-19 affects pregnancy complications has changed since we initially
A cluster of people who came down with symptoms possibly linked to covid-19 vaccines likely actually experienced a brief bout of anxiety, researchers with the Centres...
Brazilian activists protesting the governments response to COVID-19 are using mock graves and body bags on Rio de Janeiro’s Copacabana Beach to represent those who have...
This study builds on decades of work showing that the protein IL-24 attacks cancer broadly, and is the first to deliver the protein using T cells....