1,011 results on '"Dockser Marcus, Amy"'
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2. After diagnosis, a new dilemma: what to tell boss? Mr. Bandler, who has MS, hid his illness at work; worrying about an attack
3. The Loneliness Of Fighting A Rare Cancer
4. At 32, a decision: is cancer small enough to ignore? Mr. MacMahon's tests found signs in very early stages; screening younger patients
5. A patient's quest to save new drug hits market reality; Ms. Grubesich felt treatment helped her, but company found tests unconvincing
6. Sickness and health: a wife's struggle with cancer takes an unexpected toll; as Lizzie O'Donnell recovered, tensions rose in marriage; angry words in the ICU; learning to cope differently
7. Survival strategy: new approach to lung cancer: being aggressive; with few options, Ms. Monroe tries several surgeries; debating when to stop; 'the bravest person I know'
8. The link between cancer and birth defects; though not fully understood, connection is already prompting clinical trials, treatment shifts
9. Independent study: a medical student takes on a rare disease - his own; Andy Martin donates tissue, then struggles to grow tumor cells in a lab dish; bouncing a ball for 24 hours
10. Folic acid's benefits go beyond birth; raising vitamin's intake may cut risk of cancer and heart attacks in adults
11. Nonprescription drugs could pose risk in pregnancy; doctors raise concerns amid rising use of OTC pills by expectant mothers
12. Heart surgeons try using the power of suggestion; major hospitals play tapes for people under anesthesia; addressing patients' fears
13. The decision: as medical choices for sick kids grow, hardest is; no more; at 5, Molly was diagnosed with serious brain tumor; new trial or time at home? Hunting online for new hope
14. Birth control could be easy as counting beads
15. 'Two, four, six, eight ... this pill works great!' Doctors try placebo effect to boost power of real drugs; manipulating the patient
16. The real drug problem: forgetting to take your meds; as many as half of patients fail to follow their regimen; a pillbox that can nag
17. Why low cholesterol may not protect you; cardiologists broaden focus to other heart-attack risks; weighing the benefit of drugs
18. Taking pills to prevent cancer; controversial approach targets healthy but at-risk patients; concern over side effects
19. Leap of faith: child's rare illness leaves her parents with a dilemma; couple did lots of research on treatment - and found conflicting opinions; picking a transplant for Molly
20. Careful, your HMO is watching; in shift, insurers monitor patients and nag them to get more tests, see specialists
21. It's not just what you take, it's when you take it; new research shows drugs work best at certain times; popping Advil at noon
22. Extreme transplants; doctors try radical approaches to combat organ shortage; splitting a liver in two
23. Saying no to the knife: new research questions need for some common surgeries; antibiotics instead of scars
24. Guys, your clock is ticking, too
25. Sorry, only half of that surgery is covered; some policies quit paying for key parts of treatment; pacemakers now excluded
26. Finding a cheaper way to make a baby; in vitro fertilization is offered without drugs to lower costs, but some say it is less effective
27. More doctors steer patients away from all kinds of medicines; rethinking phlegm
28. The case against twins; fertility clinics try new way to curb risky multiple births; but will it cut success rates?
29. Painful choices; as survivors age, debate breaks out on Holocaust funds; most restitution money now goes to victims; what about education? Leon Scher skips his medication
30. New hope for people waiting for a kidney; latest approach can prevent rejection of a donor organ; next front: heart and liver
31. Breast cancer in young is new focus; once-overlooked group may hold clues to triggers that boost risk of disease
32. Key report on fertility clinics is under fire; doctors say success rates in CDC survey are unreliable; how to find the right facility
33. The higher cost of sneezing; as nonprescription Claritin hits shelves, insurers jack up prices of other allergy drugs
34. What's cold, clammy and out of date? The era of the stethoscope is passing as GE, others push pricey high-tech alternatives
35. Anxious parents pay labs for extra tests on newborns; pressure mounts on states to test for more diseases; a new gift at baby showers
36. Test to detect ovarian cancer is on the way; by next year, $125 screening may be added to annual exam, but some fear false positives
37. You can make them pay; new ways to appeal make it easier to take on health insurers and win
38. New at the mall: one-hour fetus photo; moms love new high-tech ultrasounds, but doctors fear overuse
39. Congregation's vow to help dying man presents moral test; with medical costs soaring, Mr. Reich's patrons ask if caring has its limits; the rabbi's talmudic parable
40. Blood supply hits lowest level in years; surgeries canceled
41. Curing prostate cancer - without side effects; surgery preserves potency, but HMOs put up barriers; finding the right doctor
42. Can a machine diagnose depression?
43. New hope for preventing miscarriages; growing number of women seek blood cocktail, but it's controversial and expensive
44. Gene could affect fertility in humans
45. Hiring your own scientist to find a cure
46. Fertility clinic set to open first commercial egg bank; controversial facility will target women waiting for Mr. Right
47. When Janie Came Marching Home
48. Where brotherhood is buried
49. Mideast Conflict; Archaeology doesn't have to be a new battle
50. A LOOK AT . . . The Politics of Archaeology; WHILE POLITICIANS WRANGLE OVER THE FUTURE of the Middle East, archaeologists are finding that the past is an endless source of conflict.; Land Can Be Divided. Histories Cannot
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