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Diet & Weight Loss
Obesity Rates Are Increasing in 16 States
Adult obesity rates increased in 16 states during the past year, and none of the 50 states showed any decline in their rates of obesity, a study shows.
Whey Protein May Be Helpful for Weight Loss
Whey, or milk, protein may offer people who want to slim down a slight edge over soy, a new study shows.
State Obesity Rates Are on the Rise
Despite a steady drumbeat of warnings that obesity causes serious health problems and increases the risk of premature death, it has become a problem in every state, the CDC says in a new report.
How Does Your Brain Respond to Food?
Willpower alone usually is not enough for lasting weight loss; instead, to counter obesity, some experts now recommend focusing on the ways in which the brain responds to food rather than solely on personal choice.
Some Weight Loss Improves Erections in Obese Men With Diabetes
A little bit of weight loss may revive the sex lives and improve the urinary health of men who are obese and diabetic, a new study shows.
Ways to Combat Mindless Eating
Ever eat a whole bag of chips when you’re not even hungry?
Tool Helps Decide When to Get Weight Loss Surgery
Researchers are testing a new tool that helps doctors figure out which overweight and obese patients are most in need of medical treatment and which are likely to remain healthy, even at very large sizes.
Study: Obese People Live as Long as Slimmer People
Obese people who are otherwise healthy live as long as normal-weight people, new research from Canada suggests.
Report: 164 Million Obese Adults by 2030
Half of U.S. adults will be obese by 2030 if current trends continue, a new report shows.
Better Way to Predict Weight Loss?
A new predictive model may give dieters a better idea of the weight they can expect to lose over time.
Study: Weight Watchers Better Than Doctors' Advice Alone
Overweight and obese patients referred to Weight Watchers lost twice as much weight as those treated by their doctors in the U.K., Australia, and Germany.
Obesity in African-American Women Boosts Risk of Death
Overweight and obesity in African-American women increases their risk of death, especially from heart disease, according to a new study.
Weight Regain May Not Be Due to Lack of Willpower
A study suggests that hormones may be responsible for a dieter's failure to keep off lost pounds, rather than lack of willpower.
Exercise Can Overpower the 'Obesity Gene'
Exercise can reduce the effects of the "obesity gene," a study shows.
Red Wine Ingredient May Improve Health of Obese Men
A compound found in trace amounts in grape skins, peanuts, and red wine may defend against harmful changes seen in obesity that often precede diseases like type 2 diabetes, a small new study shows.
FDA Reconsiders Weight Loss Drug Qnexa
The FDA is once again considering approval of an experimental weight loss drug it rejected a year ago over concerns about potential heart problems and birth defects in babies born to women who take it.
Snacking Before Lunch May Sabotage Your Diet
New research shows that older female dieters who have a mid-morning snack lose less weight than their counterparts who ate a healthy breakfast and don’t snack in the AM. The new findings appear in the December issue of the Journal of the American Dietitic Association.
Federal Agencies Act to Remove hCG Weight Loss Products
The FDA and the Federal Trade Commission today took joint action against several companies selling over-the-counter hCG products that falsely and illegally claim to promote weight loss.
Diabetes Medications May Double as Weight Loss Drugs
Two drugs approved to treat type 2 diabetes may also aid weight loss in overweight people with or without diabetes, a new study shows.
Are Americans Getting Fed Up With Obesity?
The growth in the rate of obesity in the United States appears to be slowing and in some groups leveling off, although it is still more than double the government’s goal for 2010, according to new research.
Study: Overweight Ex-Football Players Put Brain at Risk
Being overweight in retirement may be especially dangerous for professional football players exposed to multiple impacts to the head and concussions in the sport.
Does 'The Biggest Loser' Hurt or Help Obese People?
Losing weight and entertaining people at the same time seems like a win-win situation. But such might not be the case for the reality show "The Biggest Loser."
New Weight Loss Strategy: Postponing a Snack
Those who postpone a snack they crave actually desire it less and are able to delay eating it, says researcher Nicole Mead, PhD, an assistant professor at Catolica-Lisbon School of Business and Economics in Portugal.
Weight Regained in Later Years Has More Fat
As you draw up your New Year's resolutions, new research may provide added incentive to not only lose weight, but to keep it off.
Tactics Are Different for Weight Loss, Maintenance
The same tactics that help you lose weight won't necessarily help you keep it off, a study suggests.
Heart Disease
Cardiac Arrest Risk Low in Marathons, Study Finds
4 Simple Steps to a Healthy Heart
U.S. Heart Health: Lots of Room for Improvement
Study Finds Benefits in Selective Use of Drug-Coated Stents
Fat Around Heart May Be Linked to Clogged Arteries
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Fibromyalgia
Muscle Relaxant May Ease Fibromyalgia Pain
Exercise May Improve Memory in Fibromyalgia Patients
New Doubts on XMRV as Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Cause
Virus Theory for Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Discredited
Cancer Drug May Also Treat Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
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Depression
Genetic Link Between Stress and Depression
Parenting Suffers When Dad Has Depression
Treating Depressed Moms Helps Kids’ Depression
Suicides Go Up When Economy Goes Down
Drug May Improve Depression and Sleep
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Cholesterol
A Wake-Up Call: All Children Should Be Tested for High Cholesterol
Americans Don't Do Enough to Cut Hypertension, Cholesterol
Less Cholesterol in Eggs, USDA Says
Higher HDL Cholesterol May Cut Colon Cancer Risk
Lifestyle Changes Reduce Triglycerides
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Sleep Disorders
Preschoolers Who Sleep Less Weigh More by Age 7
When Wives Don’t Sleep, Marriage Suffers
Alcohol at Bedtime May Not Help Your Sleep
Sleepy Americans Put Health at Risk
Sleep and Technology Don't Mix: Sleep Poll
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Migraines
Cosmetic Surgery May Also Treat Migraines
Serene Branson Migraine: Your Questions Answered
'Placebo Effect' May Be Common in Headache Treatment
Do Tinted Glasses Provide Migraine Relief?
Too Many Heart Patients Getting Migraine Drugs
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