A California company has recalled several brands of soft cheeses after they were linked to 24 illnesses around the U.S. over the last five years, including a 2012 death in Ohio.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Friday that Karoun Dairies, Inc., has voluntarily recalled and stopped production of several cheeses, including those sold under the brand names Karoun, Arz, Gopi, Queso Del Valle, Central Valley Creamery and Yanni.
Full Story
The Republican-led U.S. House of Representatives passed two anti-abortion measures Friday, highlighting intense efforts to inject the controversial issue into a spending debate two weeks before a potential government shutdown.
Lawmakers voted largely along party lines to halt federal funding for Planned Parenthood, the nation's largest women's health care services provider, for a year while Congress conducts investigations on the organization.
Full Story
The experimental Ebola drug ZMapp has been granted fast-track status by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, which could speed its arrival on the market, the drug-maker said Thursday.
Larry Zeitlin, president of LeafBio and Mapp Biopharmaceutical, described the decision by the FDA as an "important milestone."
Full Story
Cuban and U.S. diplomats hailed a "historic opportunity" on Thursday to work together to improve Haiti's dilapidated health care system.
Havana and Washington restored diplomatic ties earlier this year, following a five-decade freeze, and now are looking to take fast-improving relations into the medical field.
Full Story
Dying of a brain tumour, Frederik van den Broek had one last wish on his "bucket list": serving as his own guinea pig to build a smartphone app for fellow cancer patients.
Now Dutch neurologists say the input from Van den Broek, who died late last month aged 41, has been invaluable in creating what is believed will be the world's most advanced mobile-based app for cancer patients.
Full Story
Cancer is the leading cause of death among Hispanics living in the United States, according to a report Wednesday by the American Cancer Society.
While heart disease is the top killer in the nation as a whole, cancer kills more often among Hispanics, the largest minority group in the United States, making up 17.4 percent of the population.
Full Story
Children who live near traffic-choked roads run a 30 percent higher risk of developing a very rare type of blood cancer, researchers said.
Among the roughly 140 new cases of acute myeloblastic leukemia (AML) in France each year, three can be linked to car exhaust, according to results published on Tuesday in the American Journal of Epidemiology.
Full Story
Malaria deaths worldwide have fallen by 60 percent since 2000, the UN said Thursday, with improved diagnostic tests and the massive distribution of mosquito nets aiding dramatic progress against the disease.
Fifteen years ago, an estimated 262 million malaria cases killed nearly 840,000 people.
Full Story
A French startup working with a top government lab says it has developed in-vitro human sperm, claiming a breakthrough in infertility treatment sought for more than a decade.
Researchers with Kallistem had announced the discovery previously, but they and French government lab CNRS described how it works for the first time Thursday.
Full Story
Australia Wednesday introduced a "no jab, no pay" law which would block parents who refuse to vaccinate their children from accessing some government benefits.
The new legislation introduced to parliament was announced by the government in April.
Full Story


