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HARVARD SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH


So which school is the real 'Harvard of the Midwest'? Student Life
So which school is the real 'Harvard of the Midwest'?,
Top 10 Stories of 2006 by Harvard Health Letter Picks Key Ones for Senior Citizens Senior Journal
December 4, 2006 - The editors of the Harvard Health Letter, and doctors on its editorial board, have chosen the top 10 health stories of 2006. Their number one choice – the HPV vaccine to guard against cervical cancer – is a great development but not necessarily a senior citizen issue.
Kid Fit | Too many calories taking toll Miami Herald
A new Harvard School of Public Health study, released today, found that America's overweight teens consumed an average of 700 to 1,000 calories more than required each day over a 10-year period. The study calls this an ''energy gap,'' referring to the imbalance between the number of calories children consumed each day and the number they should be eating to encourage normal growth, physical
Johns Hopkins Gets a Separate B-School BusinessWeek Online via Yahoo! UK & Ireland Finance
With naming gift in hand, the university is set to launch the Carey Business School in 2007
New York becomes first U.S. city to ban fat Pulse-Journal
NEW YORK — Health officials approved a ban on artificial fats in the Big Apple's thousands of restaurants Tuesday, making New York the nation's first city to outlaw the ingredient linked to heart disease and other illnesses.
Health Commissioner headlines Baltimore speaker series The Greyhound
"Baltimore's Big 3" Lecture Series began with Dr. Joshua Sharfstein, commissioner of health for the City of Baltimore, speaking of the state of healthcare in the city on Wednesday, Nov. 29 According to David Haddad, the vice president of Academic Affairs, Loyola's Council of Academic Deans, Center for Community Service and Justice and Office of Academic Affairs and Diversity developed the
Study shows value of HIV screening in virtually all health settings EurekAlert!
Voluntary screening for HIV should be a routine part of the medical care of all adults, not just those at high risk, according to a study by researchers at the Yale School of Medicine.
Study Shows Value Of HIV Screening In Virtually All Health Settings Medical News Today
Voluntary screening for HIV should be a routine part of the medical care of all adults, not just those at high risk, according to a study by researchers at the Yale School of Medicine.The team reports in the December 5 Annals of Internal Medicine that routine HIV screening is cost-effective, even in communities where as few as two in 1,000 people have undiagnosed HIV infection. [click link for
Diet, Fitness & Exercise: NYC Bans Trans Fats US News & World Report
First cigarettes, now fats. Today, New York City's health department announced that restaurants there will phase out the use of the artificial fats, which are widely used for frying and in baked goods and are bad for the heart.
Chocolate and wine for the sake of health Baltimore Sun
Rob Kasper Iattempted to sin my way to wellness the other day by eating dark chocolate and drinking red wine. harvard+school+of+public+health: , , harvard+school+of+public+health
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