The Wall Street Journal
Health & Wellness
The Wall Street Journal
Health & Wellness
The hybrid skin-care treatment-color makeup combines multiple benefits and claims in a single tube. Manufacturers are humming to keep up with demand but wonder, Will it cannibalize sales of other products?
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The FCC is expected to vote to open up spectrum, easing patient monitoring and making corporate product development less risky.
A study confirms that long-acting forms of contraception such as intrauterine devices are better than birth control pills and patches at preventing pregnancies, giving doctors new ammunition to recommend these methods.
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A federal advisory panel narrowly voted against expanded use of Johnson & Johnson's and Bayer's anticlotting drug Xarelto
Football players bristle at a new rule meant to slow them down. Plus: Will the Warriors stink less in San Francisco?; the L.A. Kings remain hockey's hottest team.
More parents are fighting back against videogames and cellphones by encouraging unstructured, hands-on creativity.
People with scoliosis have new choices for treating curvature of the spine, and for figuring out whether it will get worse. But what causes the condition is still unclear.
Scientists are developing more ways to diagnose Alzheimer's in the early stages. But with no way to prevent or cure the disease, do patients really want to know?
Research into the rare eye condition Stargardt disease is raising hopes that sufferers could gain an effective treatment, like patients with another rare and poorly treated disorder resulting from a defective gene: cystic fibrosis.
![[COOKMAN]](http://si.wsj.net/public/resources/images/RV-AG986_COOKMA_C_20120518160600.jpg)
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![[CANCER]](http://si.wsj.net/public/resources/images/MK-BU390_CANCER_C_20120516174033.jpg)
![[0516control2]](http://si.wsj.net/public/resources/images/OB-SZ276_0516co_C_20120516134338.jpg)




Touchscreen devices like iPads are much loved by little tykes. But parents worry about how it may affect their development. Is it better or worse than television?
People who like aggressive dogs are less aggreeable than people who like milder breeds, but they aren't delinquents.
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Matt Ridlley on the lifesaving role of micronutrients and how a dispute over rice is depriving the poor.
In this column: No altruism at sea; catch that yawn, Rover; truth-telling texters; and humorless self-deluders.
In "The Cost of Hope," Amanda Bennett weaves a memoir of a volatile but loving marriage with the tale of a journey through the cancer-treatment system.
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