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Centers for Disease Control, diseases, disease, chronic wasting disease, alzheimers disease, centers for disease control and prevention, heart disease, lyme disease, sexually transmitted diseases, parkinsons disease

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Articles: 5,014 results from the past year. For older articles, see advanced options. (displaying first 500 matches)

How did 'Little House' sister really become blind?
Any fan of Laura Ingalls Wilder's beloved "Little House" books knows how the author's sister Mary went blind: scarlet fever. But turns out that probably wasn't the cause, medical experts say, upending one of the more dramatic elements in the classic stories.
Monday, February, 04, 2013 - Associated Press - Accent

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Vegetarians may have lower risk of heart disease
Previous research has also suggested that non-meat eaters have fewer heart problems, said researchers publishing in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, but it wasn’t clear if other lifestyle differences, such as exercise and smoking habits, might also play into that.
Monday, February, 04, 2013 - Reuters - Accent

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VIDEO: Researchers fit deer with radio-collars
Game and Fish Department study aims to learn more about deer in northeast part of state — but first, research crews have to trap 20 additional adult does and fit them with radio-collars. That sometimes is easier said than done.
Sunday, February, 03, 2013 - Grand Forks Herald - Outdoors

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Egypt 'bodyguards' take stand against sex assault
Amid a growing number of brutal attacks on women protesters in Egypt, one stood out: A mob of men on Cairo's Tahrir Square raped a 19-year-old woman with a sharp object, cutting her genitals in an attack that forced her to undergo emergency surgery.
Saturday, February, 02, 2013 - Associated Press - News

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Ed Koch, mayor who became a symbol of NYC, dies
Ed Koch's favorite moment as mayor of New York City, fittingly, involved yelling. Koch died at 2 a.m. Friday from congestive heart failure, spokesman George Arzt said. He was 88. The funeral will be Monday at Temple Emanu-El in Manhattan.
Friday, February, 01, 2013 - Associated Press - News

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Flu season in Minnesota has peaked; more deaths reported
With the number of hospitalizations and outbreaks down for the third week in a row, the illness has peaked, said Kris Ehresmann, director of Infectious Disease Epidemiology at the Minnesota Department of Health.
Friday, February, 01, 2013 - Minnesota Public Radio News - News

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CBS to air special on Houston's death and Grammys
CBS says it will air a behind-the-scenes look at how Whitney Houston's death affected the 2012 Grammy Awards.
Friday, February, 01, 2013 - - Accent

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Officials: Flu season has peaked in Minnesota
Health officials say the worst of the flu season is likely over in Minnesota. Kris Ehresmann, the state Health Department's infectious disease director, said Thursday the illness has peaked in Minnesota.
Thursday, January, 31, 2013 - - News

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TB testing held at Grand Forks elementary school
Tuberculosis tests administered to students and staff at a Grand Forks school show that one person was exposed to the disease, but it doesn't mean the individual is infectious with TB.
Thursday, January, 31, 2013 - - News

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Beulah mom hopes others can learn from son’s struggle with mental illness
Colter Dallman was 21 years old and attending North Dakota State University when he came home acting suicidal. His mother, Carolyn Woodruff, of Beulah, N.D., drove him back to Fargo, where he agreed to admit himself into a hospital for treatment. But, she said, “he was very, very ashamed and very afraid of what other people would think of him.”
Wednesday, January, 30, 2013 - Forum News Service - News

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N.D. measure would bump tax for pack of cigarettes
Rep. Eliot Glassheim, D-Grand Forks, told the House Finance and Taxation Committee on Tuesday that his aim is to “give an extra incentive to help people quit smoking.”
Wednesday, January, 30, 2013 - - News

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Adult smoking rate climbs in Minnesota
The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report shows the state's ranking for adult smoking fell from 7th to 11th place among all states. The last time the CDC compared states was 2009.
Tuesday, January, 29, 2013 - - News

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Whitney Houston's mother slams Bobby Brown in new book
In “Remembering Whitney,” the mother of the late Whitney Houston writes that from the start she had doubted whether Brown was right for her daughter. And she thinks that Whitney might not have ended up so “deep” into drugs had they not stayed together.
Tuesday, January, 29, 2013 - - Accent

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Barbara Walters hospitalized with chickenpox
Barbara Walters would probably like to hit the reset button on 2013. She's got the chickenpox and remains hospitalized more than a week after going in after falling and hitting her head at a pre-inaugural party in Washington on Jan. 19.
Monday, January, 28, 2013 - - Accent

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As Minnesota moose population declines, DNR says annual hunt remains biologically sound
A growing number of Minnesotans are wondering why, in the face of such a decline, moose are still being hunted.
Monday, January, 28, 2013 - Forum News Service - News

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Local, national health care providers crack down on employees refusing flu shots
Across the nation, some hospital employees who refused to be vaccinated against the flu have been fired, as health care providers move toward stricter policies aimed at ensuring patient safety.
Monday, January, 28, 2013 - Grand Forks Herald - Accent

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Health Matters: Influenza then and now
Dr. Raymond Goldsteen answers questions about the flu and how it's effect on people has changed.
Monday, January, 28, 2013 - Grand Forks Herald - Accent

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Corn's popularity growing fast in North Dakota and Minnesota
Howard Person remembers a time when raising corn wasn’t a good option in northwest Minnesota’s Pennington County. The growing season was too short and receiving adequate precipitation was a concern.
Monday, January, 28, 2013 - Agweek - News

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TALKIN WITH DOKKEN: Epizootic hemorrhagic disease in deer
Brad Dokken answers the question: "What is Epizzotic hemorrhagic disease and how is it spread?
Sunday, January, 27, 2013 - Grand Forks Herald - Outdoors

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Health answers sought about burned-off war garbage
J.D. Williams didn't think much about the smoke cloud that often shrouded his air base in Iraq. Not when it covered everything he owned with black soot or when his wheezing and coughing made it difficult to sleep at night.
Saturday, January, 26, 2013 - Associated Press - News

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