By Ralph NaderSep 6, 2012
Every week, 2,000 Americans, or about 100,000 men, women and children a year, die from mostly preventable hospital-borne infections in the United States, and the toll may even be higher once the Centers for Disease Control updates its figures. Dig deeper ( 4 Min. Read )
Alexander Reed Kelly / TruthdigSep 5, 2012
Some 67 million Americans -- about a third of the adult population -- have high blood pressure, and about half of them do not have it under control, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Elevated blood pressure is a major factor in heart disease and strokes. Dig deeper ( 1 Min. Read )
Alexander Reed Kelly / TruthdigAug 22, 2012
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention counts 1,118 cases of West Nile virus in the U.S. through the third week of August in what is shaping up to be the worst year ever for the disease since it was first detected in the country in 1999. Forty-one people have died from the virus so far this year. Dig deeper ( 1 Min. Read )
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Alexander Reed Kelly / TruthdigAug 11, 2012
Gonorrhea is showing resistance to all but one antibiotic drug used against it, U.S. health officials announced this week. Dig deeper ( 1 Min. Read )
Staff / TruthdigMay 20, 2012
Did you know? May 19 is “National Hepatitis Testing Day” and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is recommending that all baby boomers, the group believed to account for 75 percent of hepatitis C infections in the United States, get checked. Dig deeper ( 1 Min. Read )
Staff / TruthdigMar 30, 2012
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, there has been a significant uptick in autism diagnoses in several areas of the country that were part of a study published Thursday in the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. Dig deeper ( 1 Min. Read )
Staff / TruthdigDec 15, 2011
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention concludes from a nationwide study that 18.3 percent of American women have been raped and, of that group, more than half were victimized by an intimate partner. Dig deeper ( 1 Min. Read )
Staff / TruthdigNov 20, 2011
Here’s a bit of bad news for the sexually active: Chlamydia infections in the U.S. reached an all-time high in 2010 with 1.3 million cases reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That's the largest number ever reported for any condition, the agency says. (more) Dig deeper ( 1 Min. Read )
Staff / TruthdigAug 3, 2011
The incidence of HIV infection among young, black American males who have slept with men shot up 48 percent between 2006 and 2009, according to a new report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (more) Dig deeper ( 1 Min. Read )
Staff / TruthdigApr 6, 2010
There weren't as many children having children in the U.S. in 2008. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the rate of teen pregnancies dropped by 2 percent that year, hopefully signaling a downward trend, after climbing over the two previous years. Dig deeper ( 1 Min. Read )
Staff / TruthdigDec 10, 2009
According to a consortium of anti-smoking organizations, U.S. state governments are raking in more money than ever from tobacco companies but aren't spending as much as they had in recent years on preventing their constituents from starting to light up or on helping them quit. Dig deeper ( 1 Min. Read )
Staff / TruthdigNov 13, 2009
Blame it on the recession? Cigarette smoking among American adults had been on the decline for about 15 years, but in 2008 the smoking rate rose, bumping up slightly from 19.8 percent the previous year to just under 21 percent, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Dig deeper ( 1 Min. Read )
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