KTVN Channel 2 - Reno Tahoe News Weather, Video - Health highlights: Feb. 16, 2012

Health highlights: Feb. 16, 2012

Updated:
© Hemera / Thinkstock © Hemera / Thinkstock
  • Wendy Damonte's Health Watch Reports

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  • Tuesday, May 22 2012 6:04 PM EDT2012-05-22 22:04:02 GMT
    Wendy Damonte Channel 2 News 66-year-old Bill Richards is a prostate cancer survivor. "I was diagnosed with a PSA that began to rise." Now a federal task force is recommending against blood tests
    The blood test used to detect prostate cancer, known as PSA screening, has been a source of controversy for years. Now a federal task force is releasing final recommendations on the test.
  • Monday, May 21 2012 7:14 PM EDT2012-05-21 23:14:06 GMT
    Wendy Damonte Channel 2 News Cyberknife is cutting edge technology that allows doctors to treat tumors without incisions. It's radiosurgery. Reno Cyberknife is a partner with the Saint Mary's Brain
    Find out if Cyberknife is right for your tumor treatment in tonight's Ask the Doctor segment. 
  • Monday, May 21 2012 3:14 PM EDT2012-05-21 19:14:30 GMT
    From the University of Nevada School of Medicine: University of Nevada School of Medicine physicians have teamed up with local doctors to offer low-cost sports participation physicals for high school
    UNR School of Medicine physicians along with local doctors will offer low-cost sports physicals for high school athletes Tuesday.
  • Monday, May 21 2012 3:09 PM EDT2012-05-21 19:09:49 GMT
    Wendy Damonte Channel 2 News 21-year-old Sylvisha Perry has type-2 diabetes and all the health problems that come with it. "This is considered a high blood pressure." Doctors diagnosed her when she
    The number of U.S. teenagers developing type-2 diabetes is rising sharply. That, according to a new study in the journal Pediatrics.
  • Thursday, May 17 2012 7:23 PM EDT2012-05-17 23:23:56 GMT
    Wendy Damonte Channel 2 News The Pearson family was established 2006 when Keith and Amy sealed their love with a Genoa wedding. Their song, You Are My Sunshine, was how they saw each other. By 2009
    Esophageal cancer is the fastest growing cancer diagnosis in the country. As one family found out, symptoms often times don't show up until it's too late.
  • Wednesday, May 16 2012 7:37 PM EDT2012-05-16 23:37:01 GMT
    Wendy Damonte Channel 2 News Cooling off in a swimming pool is one of spring and summer's great joys. But sometimes, running around at the pool creates severe injuries. 13-year-old Joey Rubin found that
    Swimming season is upon us. While most of the safety precautions center around the risk of drowning, other pool injuries put people at serious risk, too.
  • Tuesday, May 15 2012 8:38 PM EDT2012-05-16 00:38:10 GMT
    Wendy Damonte Channel 2 News 22 month old Morgan Sherrill has a chipped tooth. Jackie Sherrill is her mom. "She reached for me and fell forward and hit her face on the ottoman in front of the couch
    Practically all young children use bottles, sippy cups or pacifiers, but they may not be as safe as parents think. And kids are ending up in the ER.
  • Friday, May 11 2012 7:20 PM EDT2012-05-11 23:20:44 GMT
    Wendy Damonte Channel 2 News Research shows the drug Truvada can prevent the spread of HIV in high risk people. A recent three year study found the pill cut the risk of infection over 90 percent in
    An FDA panel is recommending the agency approve the first drug to prevent HIV in healthy people.
  • Thursday, May 10 2012 7:38 PM EDT2012-05-10 23:38:22 GMT
    Wendy Damonte Channel 2 News Sandra Borras' life is about to change. She hoping after a 45 minute procedure she will finally be able to get a full night sleep and work in her yard. "I like to do yard
    Acid reflux can do serious damage, from causing ulcers to cancer. So getting it under control is critical. 

Here are some of the latest health and medical news developments, compiled by the editors of HealthDay:

Experts Discuss Safety of Releasing Bird Flu Research Details

Experts are holding a two-day meeting to discuss whether research on mutant forms of the H5N1 bird flu virus could pose a threat to public safety if it's made public.

Last year, scientists in the United States and the Netherlands found ways to engineer the virus so that it could be transmitted between mammals, including humans, Agence France-Presse reported.

The journals Science and Nature were asked to withhold publication of the controversial research due to fears the information could be used by terrorists to create a flu pandemic that could kill millions.

In early January, the scientists conducting the research agreed to stop their studies for 60 days to allow time for international experts to consider the matter, AFP reported.

Any decision made at the World Health Organization meeting in Geneva is expected to be reported late Friday.

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White House's Move on Coverage for Birth Control Hits New Snag

A new issue has developed in the controversy over the new U.S. health care act's requirement that all employers, including hospitals and universities with religious affiliations, must offer coverage for birth control to women free of charge.

After complaints from religiously affiliated institutions, the Obama administration said it would make insurers cover the costs, rather than the organizations themselves.

But the problem with that compromise is that many religiously affiliated organizations insure themselves rather than hire an outside company, The New York Times reported.

That means that these organizations now have to determine how, or if, they can reconcile their religion-based objections to offering birth control with their role as insurers.

Details about how self-insured institutions will be treated under the new law will be worked out in upcoming meetings with religious leaders.

"This policy will be developed collaboratively so that the ultimate outcome works for religious employers, their workers and the public," an administration official explained, The Times reported.

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Raw Sprouts at Jimmy John's Linked to E. Coli Outbreak

For the fourth time since 2008, raw sprouts from the sandwich chain Jimmy John's have been linked to a foodborne illness outbreak in the United States.

Twelve cases of E. coli poisoning in five states (Iowa, Missouri, Kansas, Arkansas and Wisconsin) have been linked to raw clover sprouts eaten at Jimmy John's restaurants, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Associated Press reported.

The illnesses occurred between Dec. 25 and Jan. 15. Two of the victims were hospitalized.

A year ago, raw alfalfa sprouts from one of the Illinois-based restaurant chain's suppliers were linked to 140 salmonella illnesses. Sprouts eaten at Jimmy John's were linked to a 2009 salmonella outbreak in several Midwestern states and suspected in an E. coli outbreak in Boulder, Colo. in 2008, the AP reported.

The company declined to comment on the latest outbreak.

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Heart Attack Grill Diner May Have Suffered Heart Attack

The Heart Attack Grill in Las Vegas seemed to live up to its name after a customer suffered what may have been a heart attack.

Amateur video shows paramedics wheeling a man out of the restaurant on Saturday evening. Restaurant workers said it appeared the man had a heart attack, the Associated Press reported.

When a waitress told him a customer eating a Triple Bypass burger was sweating and shaking, grill owner Jon Basso thought it was a joke. Basso told a TV station that he heard the man is recuperating.

Details about the man's name and his medical condition weren't released, the AP reported.

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