Once a patient becomes terminally ill, relationships between patients, their caregivers and their primary doctors can change. Now a study offers an unusual glimpse of what patients and their doctors are thinking as the end of life approaches -- and it shows that patients sometimes feel abandoned.
HIV/AIDS Numbers Rise In Washington, D.C.
A new report finds that 3 percent of D.C. residents have HIV or AIDS — a 22-percent increase since 2006. Shannon Hader, the HIV-AIDS administration director for the District of Columbia, offers her insights.
Don Imus says he has prostate cancer
Don Imus has prostate cancerand confidence in a full recovery.
Researchers may have cure for life-threatening peanut allergies
A handful of children once severely allergic to peanuts now can munch them without worry. Scientists retrained their bodies to tolerate peanuts by feeding them tiny amounts of the very food that endangered them.
ENVIRONMENT-PAKISTAN: Save the Indus Plead Delta Folk
KETI BANDAR, Sindh , Mar 16 (IPS)"There was a time when we used to cast our nets into the river [Indus] and haul in no less than 400 to 500 ‘palla’ fish at one go," says 70-year-old Hamzo Jat.
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