Drug Companies Win Two Supreme Court Decisions
By ADAM LIPTAK
One of the Supreme Court rulings limits suits from people injured by generic drugs and another strikes down a law on prescription data.
“So many people have begged me to come forward, and I just thought — well, I have to do this. I owe it to them. I cannot die a coward,” said Marsha M. Linehan, a psychologist at the University of Washington.
Marsha M. Linehan works with seriously suicidal people, having faced the same struggles when she was younger.
Scientists say that the combination may be what made the outbreak among the deadliest in recent history.
One of the Supreme Court rulings limits suits from people injured by generic drugs and another strikes down a law on prescription data.
The proposed medication, from Bristol-Myers Squibb and Pfizer, prevents more strokes with less bleeding risk than existing treatment. It needs F.D.A. approval.
Activists say there is an acute need for care in makeshift refugee camps scattered on the Syrian side of the border.
Nine images — one of a corpse and another of a man with a tracheotomy opening in his neck — are to appear on cigarette packages next year.
Senator Max Baucus, Democrat of Montana, said reports that doctors on Medtronic’s payroll might have hidden side effects were “deeply troubling.”
British lawmakers agreed on Wednesday to consider outlawing smoking in private vehicles carrying children, to reduce exposure to second-hand smoke.
The new FICO Medication Adherence Score can predict which patients are at highest risk for skipping or incorrectly using prescription medications, the company says.
Studying the nervous system of the roundworm is a promising approach for understanding the human brain.
These crepes make a wonderful main course for a vegetarian dinner party.
Because his care givers relied too much on assumptions, a drug user who served time in jail spent eight years in treatment for H.I.V. infection, needlessly.
In the news: Credit scores, pets and a new tick hazard. Test your knowledge of this week’s health news.
New federal regulations on sunscreen labeling are set to take effect next year, but you shouldn’t wait to do all you can to protect your skin.
Many parents worry that keeping a dog or cat in the home increases a child's chance of developing pet allergies.
An unimaginable diagnosis is followed by worry, fear and tough decisions. Six people speak about how childhood cancer changed their lives.
Experts discuss biofilms and the underlying causes of chronic sinusitis.
On a vote of 78 to 66, the British House of Commons agreed Wednesday to consider outlawing smoking in private vehicles carrying children in an effort to reduce exposure to second-hand smoke.
The implantable device is designed to correct the irregularity in contractions of the heart’s ventricles that sometimes occurs in people with heart failure.
This dish is an Italian classic from the Lombardy region.
Inflammation, and not necessarily infection, is the common theme in chronic sinusitis.
Articles in this series examine issues arising from the increasing use of medical radiation and the new technologies that deliver it.
First-person accounts of patients' everyday challenges.
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