Cancer screening

Doctor with stethoscope

Want to be healthier? Try seeing your doctor less

Medicine

It has long been accepted that seeing your doctor on a regular basis and getting regular screenings is good for your health. That’s not necessarily true, a doctor and professor says in a new book.

Cancer’s New Battleground: In India, a simple test of vinegar makes all the difference

Health & Medicine

Mammograms around the world

Health & Medicine
Clinic in Haiti

Part II: Pink Ribbons to Haiti

Health & Medicine
A medical team at Tata Memorial Hospital.

Part III: An Ounce of Prevention

Health & Medicine
The World

When health care science and intuition collide

Global Politics

The Senate will take up debate on its health care reform bill this week. At the center of that discussion will be how best to cut costs and still maintain good care. What happens when the science clashes with people’s feelings about their own care?

The World

Health screening recommendations causing anger, confusion among women

Health & Medicine

Dr. Andrea Price, an OBGYN, says some of her patients are confused and dismayed by these new recommendations from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force and the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology. We hear what she recommends.

The World

When less is more: some health screenings deemed risky

Health & Medicine

A government-backed physicians’ group, the U.S. Preventive Service Task Force, recommended this week that women delay their yearly breast exams until age 50. The recommendation has quickly sparked a national debate.

The World

Mammograms around the world

Global Politics

Most women should start regular breast cancer screening at age 50, not 40, according to new U.S. guidelines. International guidelines also start at age 50. Jeb Sharp talks with David Dershaw at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. From PRI’s The World.