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    Jul 27, 2011 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  1. CDC still listening to youth vaccination debate

    Mediators were dispatched to help keep the conversation civil at a health forum in Chicago last week — a clear sign of the passionate opinions elicited by the debate about whether the federal government should recommend that babies be vaccinated against meningitis.
    Mediators were dispatched to help keep the conversation civil at a health forum in Chicago last week — a clear sign of the passionate opinions elicited by the debate about whether the federal government should recommend that babies be vaccinated...

    Tags: Chemical Industry, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Politics, Parenting, Health

  2. Apr 25, 2012 |Story| Petoskey News
  3. National Infant Immunization Week is April 22-28

    PETOSKEY — National Infant Immunization Week, which runs April 22-28, is an annual observance to highlight the importance of protecting infants from vaccine preventable diseases. Each year, thousands of children become ill from diseases that could...

    Tags: Whooping Cough, Immunization, Preventative Medicine, Vaccines, Polio

  4. Mar 17, 2012 |Story| AM News
  5. SICK OF GOVERNMENT: Danville attorney takes on military in massive poisoned water case

    It was only 18 months ago that Bill Noelker hung out his shingle to practice law and already he has the case of a lifetime.
    tkleffman@amnews.com
    It was only 18 months ago that Bill Noelker hung out his shingle to practice law and already he has the case of a lifetime. “This case is why I went to law school. This gets me excited,” Noelker said last week in his second-floor office...

    Tags: Immune System, Camp Lejeune Water Contamination, Politics, Health, Justice System

  6. Mar 16, 2012 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  7. Dr. John L. Pitts

    Dr. John Leake Pitts, a retired pediatrician who during a long career in public health had been the acting Anne Arundel County health officer, died of cancer Wednesday at his Annapolis Roads home. He was 85.
    Dr. John Leake Pitts, a retired pediatrician who during a long career in public health had been the acting Anne Arundel County health officer, died of cancer Wednesday at his Annapolis Roads home. He was 85. Born in Roanoke, Va., he was the son of John...

    Tags: Anglicanism, General Practitioners, Anne Arundel County, Annapolis, Hospitals and Clinics

  8. Jan 4, 2012 |Story| Daily American
  9. Nurses in schools

    The National Association of School Nurses reports that more than half of American public schools don't have a full-time nurse and a quarter of schools don't have a nurse at all. That is bad for schools, parents and most of all students. Nurses are not...

    Tags: Medical Specialization, Health and Safety at School, Allergies, Asthma, Health

  10. Dec 1, 2011 |Story| Herald Mail
  11. Residents give a range of opinions on mandatory vaccines

    caleb.calhoun@herald-mail.com
    Hagerstown residents offered mixed reactions Tuesday when asked their opinion of whether children should be exempt from certain vaccines. A report by The Associated Press said a growing number of youngsters were skipping school shots in more than half...

    Tags: Flu Vaccine, Chemical Industry, Health, Autism, Diseases and Illnesses

  12. Dec 10, 2011 | Allentown Morning Call
  13. How can I support my daughter's breast feeding decision?

    Lehigh Valley Parenting
    Q: My daughter is pregnant and would like to breast-feed but she has encountered a lot of negative comments about this choice from her peers and has received mixed messages from the medical community. How can I support her and help her navigate through...
  14. Nov 29, 2011 |Story| Daily American
  15. Pennsylvania has low vaccination exemption rate

    In eight states now, more than 1 in 20 public school kindergartners aren't getting all the vaccines required for attendance, an Associated Press analysis found.
    Daily American Staff Writer
    In eight states now, more than 1 in 20 public school kindergartners aren't getting all the vaccines required for attendance, an Associated Press analysis found. Alaska had the highest exemption rate in 2010-11, at nearly 9 percent. Colorado's rate was...

    Tags: Chemical Industry, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Health, Polio, Autism

  16. Aug 27, 2011 |Story| Daily Pilot
  17. Editorial: It's important to immunize

    A new school year is just around the corner here in Newport-Mesa, and education officials are alerting parents that a new law requires students entering grades 7-12 to get a whooping cough booster shot. Incidents of whooping cough have exploded in the...

    Tags: File Sharing, Health Insurance Cost, Autism, Health, Polio

  18. Sep 7, 2011 |Story| WGN-AM
  19. Home of the Creide 5k Run/Walk

    Buck's 17 Racing Inc. NFP, is hosting another 5k Run/Walk to support children with leukemia and other life threatening disease. This 5th annual race will take place on Saturday, September 17, 2011 at 6pm.
    Staff reporter
    Buck's 17 Racing Inc. NFP, is hosting another 5k Run/Walk to support children with leukemia and other life threatening disease. This 5th annual race will take place on Saturday, September 17, 2011 at 6pm. Buck's 17 racing is organizing the even to help...

    Tags: Cancer, Ronald McDonald House Charities, Health, Diseases and Illnesses

  20. Jun 18, 2011 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  21. Low vaccination rates in some schools raise outbreak risks

    Clusters of children without their required vaccinations in about 200 Illinois schools are raising the chances of school-based outbreaks of serious preventable diseases such as measles and whooping cough, a Tribune analysis of state data has found.
    Clusters of children without their required vaccinations in about 200 Illinois schools are raising the chances of school-based outbreaks of serious preventable diseases such as measles and whooping cough, a Tribune analysis of state data has found. The...

    Tags: U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Hospitals and Clinics, Polio, Health, Communicable Diseases

  22. Oct 10, 2011 |Story| AM News
  23. Forkland Festival brings back old-timers in Living History Program

    Sgt. Leonard Taylor, born in 1757, served in the Continental Line during the Revolutionary War, and will be among early settlers represented during a Living History Character Program to be presented Oct. 14-15 at the Forkland Heritage Festival & Revue.
    Contributing Writer
    Sgt. Leonard Taylor, born in 1757, served in the Continental Line during the Revolutionary War, and will be among early settlers represented during a Living History Character Program to be presented Oct. 14-15 at the Forkland Heritage Festival & Revue....

    Tags: University of Kentucky, Arts and Culture, History (tv network), Festive Events, Diseases and Illnesses

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Childhood Diseases and Illnesses Photos
Pediatricians are fighting back against the growing num...
(July 8, 2011)
Get your kids vaccinated -- or get out, say some pediatricians
Mothers-to-be Jayne Thompson, left, the governor's wife...
(April 19, 2010)
Mothers for well babies