![radio tower icon in a orange colored box](https://webarchive.library.unt.edu/eot2008/20090114180603im_/http://www.nih.gov/news/lmedia/radiotower_title.gif)
NIH Radio Archive
March 2007 Audio Reports In response to the growing national problem of prescription drug abuse, the National Institute on Drug Abuse has launched a national study evaluating a treatment for addiction to painkillers. April is National Minority Health Month. And the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases is using that fact to focus on health issues of particular importance to the minority community, especially in the area of diabetes. Small steps can lead to big rewards for people seeking to lose weight and avoid Type 2 diabetes. Older mothers with normal pregnancies are more likely to undergo
Caesarean delivery than younger women with similar low-risk pregnancies. Two new studies provided additional insights into comparing treatment options and to what extent antipsychotic medications help people with schizophrenia learn social, interpersonal, and community living skills. New evidence from the Framingham Heart Study shows that people whose parents lived longer were more likely to avoid developing high blood pressure, high cholesterol and other risk factors for cardiovascular disease in middle age than their peers whose parents died at a younger age. The number of American women dying from heart disease is decreasing. Americans in their early to mid-50s currently report poorer health, more pain and more trouble doing every day physical tasks than their older peers reported when they were the same age in recent years. The brains of alcohol-dependent individuals are affected not only by their own heavy drinking, but also by genetic or environmental factors associated with their parents' drinking. ![]() FREE MP3 audio reports from the National Institutes of Health, your reliable health information source. Questions? Contact: This page was last reviewed on
July 29, 2008
.
|