Adults Unintentionally Make It Easy for Young Children to Eat Dangerous Pills
Each year there are about 400,000 poison center calls and 50,000 ER visits as a result of young children ingesting medications when adults weren’t paying attention.
WordPress database error: [Table 'acdlpb3_wp339.wpe5_wpsecure_login' doesn't exist]SHOW COLUMNS FROM wpe5_wpsecure_login LIKE "country"
WordPress database error: [Table 'acdlpb3_wp339.wpe5_wpsecure_login' doesn't exist]ALTER TABLE wpe5_wpsecure_login ADD country VARCHAR(150)
WordPress database error: [Table 'acdlpb3_wp339.wpe5_wpsecure_login' doesn't exist]ALTER TABLE wpe5_wpsecure_login ADD city VARCHAR(100)
Each year there are about 400,000 poison center calls and 50,000 ER visits as a result of young children ingesting medications when adults weren’t paying attention.
Nearly 1 in 5 adolescents aged 12-18 years, and 1 in 4 young adults aged 19-34 years, are living with prediabetes, according to a new CDC studyexternal icon published today in JAMAexternal icon Pediatrics.
On April 7, CDC launched the Know:BRCA education initiative to build awareness about how BRCA gene mutations affect risk for breast and ovarian cancer, and increase knowledge of breast health and breast cancer among women, particularly among those under age 40 and those at higher risk for developing the disease.
When Pam Bryant was diagnosed with breast cancer at only 43 years old, she was disappointed, but not surprised. Several close family members had been diagnosed with breast cancer at an early age.
“Because of my family history, I’m at high risk.” Breast cancer survivor Pam Bryant shares her story.