Archives by: Mark Schweizer
Mark Schweizer
2763 Posts
About the author
Mark is 44 years old and passionate nourishing advisor as well as expert in the range health, Fitness and medicine. His area of expertise includes the testing and evaluation of dietary supplements. With great care he publishes his self-tested experience reports, with which he would like to provide for a better clearing-up.
Mark Schweizer Posts
Patients who come to the emergency room with abdominal pain present a diagnostic challenge to doctors — the symptom could be attributed to a number of conditions. A ...
Read more
In an era of instant communication, the American public expects to know the facts about the health of its presidents. So it’s no secret that Barack Obama has ...
Read more
Patients with appendicitis usually have surgery to remove their appendix, but in some cases, it may be safe to use antibiotics as a first-line treatment instead, a new ...
Read more
ATLANTA — Researchers have recently used social media to track the spread of diseases such as influenza, and now they are attempting to use such technologies to tackle ...
Read more
The number of obese people in the world has nearly doubled in the last 30 years, according to a new study examining worldwide obesity trends. Meanwhile, blood pressure ...
Read more
Taking aspirin once a day reduces a person’s risk of dying from cancer, but the benefit may not be as great as was previously thought, a new study ...
Read more
Intro From preventing brain damage to building skin grafts, recent medical breakthroughs have been accomplished thanks to animals or insects. Whether it’s by doctors using their venom or ...
Read more
A single blood test at age 60 accurately predicts the risk of a man dying from prostate cancer in the next 25 years, a new study suggests. The ...
Read more
An influential government panel today recommended against routinely screening healthy men with a blood test for prostate cancer. The U.S. Preventive Task Force said that the widely used PSA test ...
Read more
Frequently screening for prostate cancer may not reduce deaths from the disease, a new study says. In the study, which involved about 76,000 men, those who underwent yearly ...
Read more