marilynn marchione: Live & Latest News Updates : Vimarsana.com
Marilynn Marchione
FILE - This Aug. 23, 2018 file photo shows an arrangement of aspirin pills in New York. A large study finds that low-dose and regular-strength aspirin seem equally safe and effective for preventing additional heart problems in people who already have heart disease. (AP Photo/Patrick Sison, File) May 15, 2021 - 8:27 AM
An unusual study that had thousands of heart disease patients enroll themselves and track their health online as they took low- or regular-strength aspirin concludes that both doses seem equally safe and effective for preventing additional heart problems and strokes.
But thereâs a big caveat: People had such a strong preference for the lower dose that itâs unclear if the results can establish that the treatments are truly equivalent, some independent experts said. Half who were told to take the higher dose took the lower one instead or quit using aspirin altogether.
United-kingdomNew-yorkUnited-statesHoustonTexasBaylor-college-of-medicineColin-baigentSchuyler-jonesMarilynn-marchioneSalim-viraniPatrick-sisonUniversity-of-oxford Marilynn Marchione
This January 2020 photo provided by the family shows Josselyn Kish of Las Vegas. As a baby, Josselyn suffered rashes, painful shingles and frequent diarrhea, said her mother, Kim Carter. âÄúDay care was calling me a couple times a week to come get her because she was always getting fevers.âÄù After the gene therapy, âÄúshe was better right away,âÄù Carter said. Now, âÄúshe rarely, rarely gets sick at allâÄù and has been able to recover whenever she has. (Family photo via AP) May 11, 2021 - 3:01 AM
A gene therapy that makes use of an unlikely helper, the AIDS virus, gave a working immune system to 48 babies and toddlers who were born without one, doctors reported Tuesday.
CaliforniaUnited-statesUnited-kingdomTexasWashingtonLondonCity-ofAmericanBritishDonald-kohnKim-carterLos-angelesIndians turn to black market, unproven drugs as virus surges
ANIRUDDHA GHOSAL and NEHA MEHROTRA, Associated Press
April 29, 2021
FacebookTwitterEmail 9
1of9FILE- In this April 8, 2021 file photo, people wait in queues outside the office of the Chemists Association to demand necessary supply of the anti-viral drug Remdesivir, in Pune, India. As India faces a devastating surge of new coronavirus infections overwhelming the health care system, people are turning to desperate measures to keep loved ones alive.APShow MoreShow Less
2of9A health worker takes a nasal swab sample of a woman as others wait to test for COVID-19 in Hyderabad, India, Thursday, April 29, 2021.Mahesh Kumar A/APShow MoreShow Less
IndiaBhopalMadhya-pradeshKanpurUttar-pradeshUnited-statesNew-delhiDelhiAmericanStuti-bhardwajRajat-shrivastavaMarilynn-marchione Aniruddha Ghosal And Neha Mehrotra
FILE- In this April 8, 2021 file photo, people wait in queues outside the office of the Chemists Association to demand necessary supply of the anti-viral drug Remdesivir, in Pune, India. As India faces a devastating surge of new coronavirus infections overwhelming the health care system, people are turning to desperate measures to keep loved ones alive. (AP Photo, File) April 29, 2021 - 4:40 AM
NEW DELHI - Ashish Poddar kept an ice pack on hand as he waited outside a New Delhi hospital for a black market dealer to deliver two drugs for his father, who was gasping for breath inside with COVID-19.
IndiaBhopalMadhya-pradeshKanpurUttar-pradeshUnited-statesNew-delhiDelhiAmericanStuti-bhardwajRajat-shrivastavaMarilynn-marchioneIndians turn to black market, unproven drugs as virus surges
ANIRUDDHA GHOSAL and NEHA MEHROTRA, Associated Press
April 29, 2021
FacebookTwitterEmail 9
1of9FILE- In this April 8, 2021 file photo, people wait in queues outside the office of the Chemists Association to demand necessary supply of the anti-viral drug Remdesivir, in Pune, India. As India faces a devastating surge of new coronavirus infections overwhelming the health care system, people are turning to desperate measures to keep loved ones alive.APShow MoreShow Less
2of9A health worker takes a nasal swab sample of a woman as others wait to test for COVID-19 in Hyderabad, India, Thursday, April 29, 2021.Mahesh Kumar A/APShow MoreShow Less
IndiaBhopalMadhya-pradeshKanpurUttar-pradeshUnited-statesNew-delhiDelhiAmericanStuti-bhardwajRajat-shrivastavaMarilynn-marchione