WHTM Harrisburg on MSN
What’s Going Around: Pneumonia, croup, colds
WellSpan Pediatric Medicine Physicians across the Midstate are seeing adenovirus and rhinovirus, which is the cause of the common cold. “Children are presenting with fevers, vomiting, diarrhea and ...
Mortality rates for pneumonia and pulmonary fibrosis have declined since 1999, but disparities persist by sex, race, and ...
As temperatures continue to drop, one thing people need to be aware of is the risk of catching pneumonia. One prominent ...
A vaccine that tackles the bacteria that cause up to 200 million childhood infections every year could be possible, experts ...
Preventative measures decrease the possibility of contracting pneumonia altogether and the progression of illness. According to Pryor, “getting the vaccine dramatically decreases your risk of ...
Dear Savvy Senior, With a longtime vaccine critic leading the nation’s health departments, can you give me updated ...
MedPage Today on MSN
Added Glucocorticoids for Pneumonia Tied to Reduced Deaths in High-Risk Region
Adjunctive glucocorticoids could be a low-cost intervention to reduce the high case fatality rate in sub-Saharan Africa. Adding low-dose glucocorticoids to standard care for community-acquired ...
Money Talks News on MSN
1.7 million older Americans die like this every year. What can you do to survive the 10 top causes of death?
More Americans than ever now live long enough to retire. But even as longevity improves, certain risks continue to shape what ...
News-Medical.Net on MSN
Latest findings can lead to the development of a vaccine to protect against common ear infection
Owwww, howls your child while holding its ear and crying. Recent findings can lead to the development of a vaccine to protect against a very common type of ear infection.
Discover why vaccination is crucial for healthy ageing, preventing illness, reducing financial strain, and maintaining ...
News-Medical.Net on MSN
Global study suggests potential for universal vaccine against Haemophilus influenzae
A vaccine that tackles the bacteria that cause up to 200 million childhood infections every year could be possible, experts say.
Two landmark international studies led by Professor Ignacio Martin-Loeches have been recently published in The Lancet and Nature Medicine — placing Irish critical care research firmly on the global ...
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