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Late-Breaking Analysis In Hypertension Shows That Antihypertensive Treatments Differ In Their Ability To Preserve Lives

STOCKHOLM, August 30, 2010 /PRNewswire/ -- According to the results of a late-breaking analysis...

Clinical Results For New Treatment Of Bacterial Vaginosis Infection

The Swedish company Laccure AB recently got CE marking as a Class IIa medical device product for...

88 Percent Of UK Doctors Believe Whiplash Claims Are Exaggerated

AXA, a UK car insurer, has surveyed UK doctors as part of its ongoing campaign to understand the...

On Facebook, Women Are More Plentiful But Men Are Better Ad Targets

Global digital marketing companies Resolution Media and Kenshoo Social published a new report today...

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Anna OhldenRSS Feed of this column.

Media Relations Executive, PR Newswire Europe... Read More »

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HARROGATE, England, March 30, 2011 /PRNewswire/ -- The largest survey of its kind in the UK provides insight into just how teenagers and parents perceive teenagers with acne.  The results of the survey confirm that teenagers with acne are consistently perceived very differently as compared to teenagers without acne. Respondents generally felt that teenagers with acne would be less sociable and less successful. Teenagers with acne suggested that they would offer a lot in return for not having acne; one in two teenagers would stay off facebook for a year if they could get rid of their acne forever!

An Open Letter to UK Prime Minister David Cameron has been signed by a host of politicians, scientists, academics, wildlife experts and celebrities. The letter calls on the UK Government to dissociate itself from purchasing offspring of wild-caught primates for research and was published today in the Times and Guardian newspapers.