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Female Incontinence: What Works?
February 8, 2008 Most women have mixed incontinence even if stress incontinence is dominant. Sometimes it is useful to treat the OAB-DO first to see if a minor degree of stress incontinence is tolerable if the ... > full story -
Very Young Found To Process Fear Memories In Unique Way
February 6, 2008 Very young brains process memories of fear differently than more mature ones, new research indicates. The work significantly advances scientific understanding of when and how fear is stored and ... > full story -
Child Psychology
Children's Health
Child Development
Attention Deficit Disorder
Accident and Trauma
Infant's Health
Preschoolers' Exposure To Terrorist Attacks, Other Trauma Linked To More Severe Behavioral Problems
February 4, 2008 Preschool children exposed to both the World Trade Center attacks and another traumatic event were more likely to experience behavioral problems than children exposed only to one event or to none, ... > full story -
Weapons Technology
Accident and Trauma
Infant's Health
Chronic Illness
Children's Health
Workplace Health
Croatian Children Have Higher Weapons-Related Death Rate During And After Homeland War
February 4, 2008 The Homeland War in Croatia, which occurred from 1991 to 1995, led to an increase in weapon-related deaths of children during and five years after the end of the war, according to a new ... > full story -
Key Factor In Stress Effects On The Brain Identified
January 23, 2008 Acute and chronic stress can have devastating effects on the brain, and researchers have now pinpointed one receptor that plays a key role in that harmful cycle. Uncontrollable stress is a major ... > full story -
When Stress Makes You Bitter: The Embitterment Disorder
January 17, 2008 The term 'posttraumatic embitterment disorder' (PTED) was recently introduced to describe a subtype of adjustment disorders, characterized by prolonged embitterment, severe additional ... > full story -
Post Traumatic Stress Has Tripled Among Combat-Exposed Military Personnel
January 16, 2008 There has been a threefold increase in new cases of self reported post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms among combat-exposed military personnel since 2001, according to a new study. Concerns have ... > full story -
Sept. 11 Stress Increases Risk Of Heart Problems, Study Suggests
January 7, 2008 Stress and fear in the aftermath of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks may be making Americans sicker, according to a groundbreaking new study. Participants who reported high levels of acute stress ... > full story -
Some Brain Injuries Reduce Likelihood Of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, Study Suggests
December 24, 2007 A new study of combat-exposed Vietnam War veterans shows that those with injuries to certain parts of the brain were less likely to develop post-traumatic stress disorder. The findings, from the ... > full story -
Chronic Illness
Today's Healthcare
Health Policy
Mental Health Research
Workplace Health
Accident and Trauma
Where Vets Served Affects Frequency Of ER Visits But Not Hospital Stays
December 17, 2007 Five years post-conflict, individuals who served in the 1990-1991 Persian Gulf War were 25 percent more likely to visit an emergency department than veterans of the same era who were not deployed, ... > full story
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