-
What is Move It?
Deciding to exercise is easy -- it's the follow-through that gets hard! 'Move It' is intended to help you get fired up about getting healthy.
-
Move It! Email Form
Do you have a story idea or recipe for Move It? Send us your ideas and they could be used on-air or online!
-
Ticker toll: Heart attacks may have risen when the stock market was falling, study suggests
ATLANTA (AP) — Stock market slides may hurt more than your savings. New research suggests they might prompt heart attacks. more
-
Special court rejects claims that vaccines with mercury preservative caused autism
WASHINGTON (AP) — The vaccine additive thimerosal is not to blame for autism, a special federal court ruled Friday in a long-running battle by parents convinced there is a connection. more
-
Study: Women who took the birth control pill starting in the late 1960s lived longer
LONDON (AP) — Women who took the birth control pill beginning in the late 1960s lived longer than those never on the pill, a new study says. more
-
Studies: People with variable blood pressure could be at risk of a stroke
LONDON (AP) — People with occasional spikes in their blood pressure could be at higher risk of having a stroke than those with regularly high blood pressure, new studies said Friday. more
-
Experts say Americans getting too many medical tests, maybe even President Obama Photo
CHICAGO (AP) — Too much cancer screening, too many heart tests, too many cesarean sections. A spate of recent reports suggests that many Americans are being overtreated. Maybe even President Barack Obama, champion of an overhaul and cost-cutting of the health care system. more
-
Are some medical tests overused? Some guidelines are scaling back on frequency, timing
Recent reports and guideline changes suggest some medical tests should be delayed, avoided, or done less often: more
-
Govt panel finds too many women denied chance to avoid repeat C-section, urges policy change
WASHINGTON (AP) — Too many pregnant women who want to avoid a repeat cesarean delivery are being denied the chance, concludes a government panel that urged doctors to rethink litigation-spurred policies that have swung the pendulum back toward the days of "once a C-section, always a C-section.... more
-
Study suggests too many low-risk patients given invasive heart tests, docs need better methods Photo
NEW YORK (AP) — A troublingly high number of U.S. patients who are given angiograms to check for heart disease turn out not to have a significant problem, according to the latest study to suggest Americans get an excess of medical tests. more


