Does sitting for long periods of time in small airplane seats increase your risk for blood clots? CBS News medical contributor Dr.
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Feed SubscriptionFor Healthy Cities, Government and Business Need to Reverse Roles
Okay, I have to be honest with you. I love a city, and a downtown with walkways and tunnels and bus stops that tell me where my buses are via GPS and everything else, but sometimes you can just have more connectivity than you need. Remember the internet-connected toaster, that singed the weather forecast into your morning toast?
Read More »For Healthy Cities, Government and Business Need to Reverse Roles
Okay, I have to be honest with you. I love a city, and a downtown with walkways and tunnels and bus stops that tell me where my buses are via GPS and everything else, but sometimes you can just have more connectivity than you need.
Read More »Video: Channing Tatum on "The Vow," wife Jenna Dewan
Actor Channing Tatum discusses his role in the new movie "The Vow," his rise to stardom and his marriage to actress Jenna Dewan with the "CBS This Morning" co-hosts.
Read More »Video: Medical tests: Do you really need all of them?
Healthcare costs in the U.S. have ballooned, in part, because of unnecessary medical tests.
Read More »Video: Posture problems linked to cell phones
Smartphones help us connect with the world, but are we bending too much to accommodate them? "CBS This Morning" contributor Lee Woodruff reports on the link between cell phones and posture problems.
Read More »Luxury cruise ship rescues Atlantic rowers
How's this for an upgrade: Two men competing in a trans-Atlantic rowing challenge were rescued this morning by Crystal Serenity after a huge swell sunk their boat 480 miles southwest of the Canaries.
Read More »Video: Plan B morning after pill sales restricted
CBS News correspondent Wyatt Andrews reports on the decision of Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sibelius to restrict the sale of the morning after pill, Plan B - against the recommendation of the FDA that the drug be sold over-the-counter.
Read More »Video: Morning-after pill axed for young teenagers
In a surprise decision by the Obama administration, young teenagers will not be allowed access to Plan B, the morning-after emergency contraception pill, without a prescription. Wyatt Andrews reports on what's behind the controversial move.
Read More »Reflections from Occupy Wall Street
As the tents are carted away from Zuccotti Park this morning, just blocks away from Inc. Magazine's headquarters, I've been reflecting on the "Occupy" movement. As the tents are carted away from Zuccotti Park this morning, just blocks away from Inc
Read More »Oil Pipeline Protesters Surround the White House Today
Some people, like Joe Romm , want more coverage on climate change. For me, climate change is one of those subjects that I actually try to ignore.
Read More »Protein May Make UV Exposure Safer In Morning
The early bird gets the worm--and may avoid skin cancer. Because a new mouse study suggests that, for humans, tanning in the mornings may be less likely to permanently damage DNA and cause skin cancer.
Read More »Protein May Make UV Exposure Safer In Morning
The early bird gets the worm--and may avoid skin cancer. Because a new mouse study suggests that, for humans, tanning in the mornings may be less likely to permanently damage DNA and cause skin cancer
Read More »NASA Climate Satellite Faces Big Job After "Absolutely Perfect" Launch
The launch of NASA's newest Earth-observing spacecraft today (Oct. 28) could not have gone more smoothly, researchers and officials said. The $1.5 billion NPP weather and climate satellite blazed a white-hot trail through the predawn California sky this morning, ticking off milestones like clockwork as it climbed.
Read More »Italian Seismologists on Trial-for Failing to Communicate Well?
The ground shook violently in L'Aquila, Italy, early in the morning of April 6, 2009, more violently than it had during the tremors the area had been experiencing for months. After the dust settled and the recovery effort was over, 308 people were dead. Now the local prosecutor is charging the scientific committee responsible for predicting earthquakes with failing to give the people of L'Aquila adequate warning.
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