From the heart, for the heart The Naperville Sun Thu, 12 Feb 2009 02:07 AM PST Whether wrapped in red paper or packaged in a heart-shaped box, Valentine's Day gifts most often are given with the intent to inspire happiness, love and affection. | Fighter for female cardio health speaks from heart Gurnee Review Thu, 12 Feb 2009 02:01 AM PST Employees of Medline Industries in Waukegan were seeing red Friday, supporting a co-worker's fight to raise awareness of a disease close to her heart. "One in three women will die of heart disease," said stroke survivor Brooke Lannert, 33, of Gurnee. Feb. 6 marked the third year that Lannert engaged her office-mates in participating in the American Heart Association's National Wear Red Day. | Get CPR training on Valentine's Reno Gazette-Journal Thu, 12 Feb 2009 01:53 AM PST The Regional Emergency Medical Services Authority will conduct its second annual Save a Heart free CPR training session and health fair from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday at Scheels in Sparks. CPR awareness courses begin every hour, and a Spanish CPR Awareness course begins at noon. The CPR training is not an official certification course. | Wyo recognizes National Heart Month Casper Star-Tribune Thu, 12 Feb 2009 01:52 AM PST While people are busy exchanging heart-shaped Valentines and handing out candy hearts, the Wyoming medical community encourages people to also take a look at the health of their own hearts. | YOU ARE HERE: Aidsmap Thu, 12 Feb 2009 01:48 AM PST Two studies presented at the CROI Conference in Montreal presented contrasting findings on the relationship between the nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NRTI) drug abacavir ( Ziagen ; also in ( Kivexa ( Epzicom ) and ( Trizivir ). Ever since a relationship was found between current abacavir use and cardiovascular heart disease in 2007 (see Sabin), with abacavir raising the risk by ... | Huge HHS-led study shows atrial fibrillation drug works Hamilton Spectator Thu, 12 Feb 2009 01:37 AM PST (Feb 12, 2009) - Hamilton doctors can calm a heart beating dangerously fast with a new drug expected to drastically improve the chances of surviving a common heart condition. | Issue 111 - 12th January - 14th February Online Recruitment Thu, 12 Feb 2009 01:37 AM PST Individuals returning to work following absence due to a physical condition such as back pain, cancer or heart disease are at risk of mild to moderate depression, yet those who do become depressed worry about telling their employers, according to a new report published by the Mental Health Foundation. | | |
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