Sexual Health - Women's basketball roundup: UConn ends DePaul's 33-game home streak
Women's basketball roundup: UConn ends DePaul's 33-game home streak
The Columbus Dispatch - Jan 29 4:25 AM
Fast. Relevant. Local. In the Spotlight: Health , OSU Plus 7 Days of News. No . 5 Connecticut 84, No . 12 DePaul 75 Barbara Turner scored 24 points and Connecticut ended DePauls 33-game home winning streak last night in a Big East game in Chicago.Save to My Web
Huskies support women's heart health
New Haven Register - Feb 01 12:20 AM
STORRS The coaching staff for the University of Connecticut mens basketball team wore red pins during Tuesdays game against Pittsburgh as part of the American Heart Associations "Go Red For Women" movement, designed to raise awareness for cardiovascular disease.Save to My Web
Mental Disorders Affect Third Of Iraq Vets By Olga Pierce, UPI Health Business Correspondent Washington (UPI) Jan 27,
Space War - Jan 31 12:57 AM
About 40,000 soldiers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan have been found to show symptoms of mental health disorders, a Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) representative said Friday.Save to My Web
Heart test misses disease in women
Baltimore Sun - 2 hours, 28 minutes ago
Plaque in tiny cardiac blood vessels contributes to deaths but might not show up on angiogram Angiography, the gold standard for detecting blocked arteries, does not work in about one in every six women with chest pain - as many as 3 million American women - leading doctors to send many sick women home with a clean bill of health, researchers reported yesterday. Save to My Web
The American Medical Women's Association and the Tea Council of the USA Join Forces to Promote Women's Heart Health
[Press Release] PR Newswire via Yahoo! Finance - Jan 26 3:00 AM
Just in time for the start of National Women's Heart Health Month in February, the American Medical Women's Association and the Tea Council of the USA are teaming up to raise awareness of coronary heart disease and its affect on women by sponsoring "The 2006 Tea Party for Women's Heart Health" that will take place on Thursday, January 26th at George Washington University in Washington, DC.Save to My Web
Consumer Health
UPI - Jan 31 2:42 PM
WASHINGTON, Jan. 31 (UPI) -- Putting to rest the idea that pregnancy alone is enough to lift a woman's mood, a new study shows that depressed women who do not take medication are more likely to fall back into a state of sadness during pregnancy.Save to My Web


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