Ocean vacations remain the safest and most fun family adventures, says a hospitality expert. But with outbreaks of the disease showing yearly increases, precautions are necessary.
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Our panel of medical experts – Dr. Tina Ardon, Dr. Andrew Southerland and infection control specialist Chad Neilsen – discusses the past month's biggest health care stories.
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New filings relaunched the landmark legal case seeking to overturn the state law, which bans some social media accounts for teens younger than 16, or for 14- and 15-year-olds without a parent’s permission.
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Sanctuary Cannabis' failed challenge centered on a new state Department of Health formula that dramatically increased costs for marijuana companies.
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After leaving his job to launch his own business, an Illinois man opted for a six-month health insurance plan. When he needed a colonoscopy, he thought it would cover most of the bill. Then he learned his plan’s limited benefits would cost him plenty.
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In a study of macaques, researchers find that a pregnant mother’s exposure to environmental stress affected the growth of the HPA axis, a key player in deciding how organisms cope with stress.
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The Trump administration is reinterpreting a key word in the Endangered Species Act that could have big consequences for the habitats of species at risk.
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Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. says autism is "epidemic" and he's launching research to identify an "environmental toxin" for blame. Independent scientists and advocates are skeptical.
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NPR's Michel Martin speaks with Helen Tager-Flusberg, director of Boston University's Center for Autism Research Excellence, about CDC findings that autism rates have increased among children.
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