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Vaccines

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A collection of news and information related to Vaccines published by this site and its partners.

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    Oct 10, 2012 |Blog| Cars.com
  1. School Sports Make In-Car First-Aid Kit a Must

    KickingTires
    The school sports season is back in swing with baseball diamonds and soccer and football fields once again full of colorful but small uniforms. Along with the season comes many scrapes, bumps, bruises and other more severe injuries that we......

    Tags: Sports, Broken Toe, Benadryl (drug), AAA, Injuries and Wounds

  2. Nov 4, 2011 |Blog| Sun-Sentinel
  3. Low cost rabies shots for your pet

    Crime and Safety - Sun-Sentinel
    Broward County Animal Care and Adoption will host a rabies clinic??Saturday, Nov. 5, from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., at Mary Saunders Park, 4750 S.W. 21 St. in West Park.?? Dogs and cats can be vaccinated for a $15, cash only??fee, and the animals will get a...

    Tags: Fort Lauderdale, Rabies, Diseases and Illnesses, Cat (animal), Dog (animal)

  4. Oct 9, 2009 |Blog| Sun-Sentinel
  5. County taking swine flu vaccination message to Boca Raton school

    Palm Beach Politics - Sun-Sentinel Blogs
    Palm Beach County officials on Tuesday plan to go to Boca Raton Elementary School to draw attention to their call for students to get vaccinated for the swine flu virus. Health Department Director Dr. Alina Alonso and County Commissioner Steven......

    Tags: Sports, Swine Flu, Schools, Flu, Football

  6. Jan 15, 2013 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  7. Flu myths: Know your bug

    The latest flu epidemic has many people in a near-panic. But it's important to know the difference between fact and fiction when it comes to fighting the influenza virus.
    The latest flu epidemic has many people in a near-panic. But it's important to know the difference between fact and fiction when it comes to fighting the influenza virus. "This is one of the worst flu seasons we've seen in Illinois in about a decade,"...

    Tags: Chemical Industry, Diseases and Illnesses, Flu Vaccine, Preventative Medicine, Disease Prevention

  8. Apr 15, 2013 |Column| Baltimore Sun
  9. Doctor whose work saved millions reflects on career

    The publication of Alfred Sommer's new memoir, "10 Lessons in Public Health," comes precisely 30 years after the publication of the most important thing he's ever written: "Increased mortality in children with mild vitamin A deficiency," a report of a medical discovery that has saved an estimated 10 million children from blindness and death.
    The publication of Alfred Sommer's new memoir, "10 Lessons in Public Health," comes precisely 30 years after the publication of the most important thing he's ever written: "Increased mortality in children with mild vitamin A deficiency," a report of a...

    Tags: Diseases and Illnesses, Dietary Supplements, Health Organizations, Family, Arts and Culture

  10. Apr 1, 2013 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  11. Lollapalooza on way to sellout; day-by-day lineups set

    Lollapalooza will put 60,000 single-day tickets on sale Wednesday at 10 a.m. central for the festival Aug. 2-4 in Grant Park. The only question remaining is how fast they’ll sell out.
    Lollapalooza will put 60,000 single-day tickets on sale Wednesday at 10 a.m. central for the festival Aug. 2-4 in Grant Park. The only question remaining is how fast they’ll sell out. The festival’s entire lineup leaked weeks early last...

    Tags: Hot Chip (music group), Band of Horses (music group), Vampire Weekend (music group), The Killers (music group), Thievery Corporation (music group)

  12. Mar 25, 2013 |Column| Daily American
  13. Advances in science are among mankind's greatest achievements

    The pessimist might be tempted to look at mankind's most turbulent history since history began and be discouraged about the future. Many evils have been perpetrated by humans, including wars, genocide and massacres. Despite the sometimes tragic nature...

    Tags: Diseases and Illnesses, Animal Science, Animals, Brucellosis, Preventative Medicine

  14. Mar 24, 2013 |Column| Herald Mail
  15. Bingo event set for April 14

    Hagerstown Day Nursery will hold a Longaberger/Vera Bradley bingo event Sunday, April 14, at the Elks Lodge on Robinwood Drive in Hagerstown. Tickets cost $25 in advance or $30 at the door for 25 games and a meal. Doors open at 11:30 a.m., the meal will...

    Tags: Satellite Technology, Rabies, Museums, Drugs and Medicines, Easter

  16. Mar 19, 2013 |Column| Herald Mail
  17. Pet adoption campaign

    The Humane Society of Washington County is hoping to increase adoptions through its March Madness adoption campaign this month. All adoptable dogs and cats will be available for adoption at half off the normal adoption fee.  The adoption fee for dogs...

    Tags: Rabies, Drugs and Medicines, Arts and Culture, Social Issues, Hagerstown (Washington, Maryland)

  18. Feb 27, 2013 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  19. Sky's the limit for sequester scare tactics

    The sky is falling, the sky is falling. That's the message shrieked by President Barack Obama about those mandated federal spending cuts called "sequestration." And not only is the sky falling, but it's not his fault. He's like the kid standing in front...

    Tags: Budget Control Act of 2011, Barack Obama, White House, Politics, The Washington Post

  20. Feb 26, 2013 |Column| Imperial Valley Press Online
  21. Life Out Here: Getting off the junk

    While I may not be a political junkie, I certainly am an enthusiastic recreational user.
    While I may not be a political junkie, I certainly am an enthusiastic recreational user. But I think I’m ready to quit. I’m tired, I’m disgusted, and I’m saddened that everyone involved is acting so abominably. The body of the...

    Tags: Disease Prevention, Politics, Glenn Beck, Government, Firearms

  22. Feb 13, 2013 |Column| Los Angeles Times
  23. Susan Love, doctor/patient

    And now, she is the patient. For decades, as a surgeon, researcher, professor and medical celebrity of sorts, Susan Love has led the charge against breast cancer and for women's health. She served on President Clinton's cancer advisory board. She set up a research foundation. Her book on breast cancer is on the short shelf for clinicians and counselors. And last June, when, like so many women, she was feeling and doing fine, the diagnosis came. Except it wasn't breast cancer but leukemia. The woman who has battled one kind of cancer on behalf of millions of women finds herself fighting another kind, on her own
    And now, she is the patient. For decades, as a surgeon, researcher, professor and medical celebrity of sorts, Susan Love has led the charge against breast cancer and for women's health. She served on President Clinton's cancer advisory board. She set up a...

    Tags: Nobel Prize Awards, Medical Research, Cancer, Health and Medical Professionals, Women's Health

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Vaccines Photos
Hey, who's the cute boy with the enormous smile on his...
(May 6, 2013)
Noah
Martin is a lovable 4-year-old male cat who came to Hea...
(May 5, 2013)
Martin is a lovable 4-year-old male cat who came to Heartland after being found outside and homeless.
High school senior Aaron Kollasch thrives in two worlds...
(April 30, 2013)
Aaron Kollasch, Neuqua Valley High School