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Swedish Anorexia Patients Targeted by Modelling Agencies

A Stockholm treatment center for eating disorders on Thursday said talent scouts from modelling agencies had approached their patients outside the clinic, hoping to recruit them.

"They were outside the building and waited for the girls to go out for a walk," the director of the public institution, Anna-Maria af Sandeberg, told Swedish news agency TT, without naming the agencies.

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Suicides, Murders Rise as Greek Austerity Takes Health Toll

When Greece's economy took a plunge, murders and disease rates soared, according to a study published Thursday that suggests the impact of the European nation's austerity cuts may be worse than expected.

Suicide and murder rates climbed from 2007 to 2009, particularly among men, and unusual outbreaks of malaria, West Nile virus and HIV took clinicians by surprise, said the findings in the American Journal of Public Health.

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Measles Outbreak Hits Vulnerable Britain

A measles outbreak has hit over 800 people in Britain, a country in which up to two million schoolchildren are believed to be unprotected due to a scare which linked the vaccine with autism, figures revealed Thursday.

The outbreak is centered on the south Wales town of Swansea but health experts warn there is a serious risk that the virus could spread, particularly in London.

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In Switzerland, Healers Enjoy Rude Health

Denis Vipret moves around the circle of 20 people waiting for his healing touch, touching their shoulders and pumping his right hand lightly to transfer its energy to each patient.

Vipret is a star among a soaring number of healers in Switzerland, and during his lightning visit to Geneva he expects to treat some 300 people eager to experience the "magic" in his hands.

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Experts Unclear How China Bird Flu Infects Humans

Almost three weeks after China reported finding a new strain of bird flu in humans, experts are still stumped by how people are becoming infected when many appear to have had no recent contact with live fowl and the virus isn't supposed to pass from person to person.

The uncertainty adds to challenges the Chinese government is facing in trying to control the spread of the H7N9 bird flu virus that has already killed 17 people and infected 70 others in the country, mostly along the eastern seaboard.

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Dutch Court Rejects Bid to Halt Mass Meat Recall

A Dutch court on Thursday rejected a bid by a meat wholesaler to quash an order recalling 50,000 tonnes of beef potentially contaminated with horsemeat.

"The court rejects the request for a preliminary injunction," on Dutch food authority NVWA's recall of meat handled by Willy Selten, judge Reinier van Zutphen said at the commercial court in The Hague.

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U.S. Says Generic OxyContin Must be Anti-Abuse

U.S. regulators have ruled that any generic forms of OxyContin must include the abuse-curbing properties of a reformulated version of the highly addictive painkiller released two and a half years ago.

Manufacturer Perdue Pharma discontinued original OxyContin (oxycodone hydrochloride) in 2010 after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved a new version of the drug that is more difficult to snort or inject.

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Mom and Dad Equally Good at Recognizing Baby's Cry

French researchers dealt a blow to folklore that says mothers are better than fathers in recognizing their baby's cry.

The "maternal instinct" notion gained scientific backing more than three decades ago through two experiments, one of which found that women were nearly twice as accurate as men in identifying the cry of their offspring.

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5 French Execs in Breast Implant Scandal on Trial

Hundreds of women who received faulty breast implants are gathering in the south of France for the fraud trial of five executives accused of using cheap industrial silicone to fill tens of thousands of implants around the world.

Jean-Claude Mas, who founded and ran implant-maker Poly Implant Prothese, is among those on trial beginning Wednesday in the southern city of Marseille. The now-defunct company had claimed exports to more than 60 countries and was one of the world's leading implant makers.

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3 Cancer Scientists Awarded $500K Nmedical Prize

Three scientists at universities in Pennsylvania, Illinois and Oregon whose research has helped transform cancer treatment will share one of the richest prizes in medicine and biomedical research.

Dr. Peter Nowell of the University of Pennsylvania, Dr. Janet Rowley of the University of Chicago and Dr. Brian Druker of Oregon Health and Science University will receive the $500,000 annual Albany Medical Center Prize in Medicine and Biomedical Research next month, the medical center announced Tuesday. The prize, one of the largest in medicine and science in the United States, is awarded to those who have changed the course of medical research.

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