‘Female Viagra’ finds difficult path at FDA
Some groups and members of Congress worry about latent attitudes toward women and sex.
Another reason to eat well, lose weight and get in shape
New evidence on how weight, diet and exercise can help reduce cancer risk.
Neb. judge’s decision may delay Keystone XL work
The judge rules that legislature violated state constitution by transferring siting power to governor.
Latest headlines
More Health and Science news
Another ex-Obama official backs Keystone pipeline
Marcia McNutt, now editor-in-chief of the journal Science, says pipeline is preferable to added trucks and trains.
H1N1, source of 2009 global flu pandemic, returns
Health officials report a dramatic rise in deaths in young and middle-aged adults and in children.
Would you eat a three-year-old pizza?
Military researchers develop a long-lasting pie in response to demands by soldiers in the field.
A baby boy, buried 12,600 years ago, sheds light on history
DNA from the boy, found in Montana, reveals the oldest genome ever recovered from the New World.
Scientists to map genome of English king Richard III
Remains and samples taken from them are to be reinterred, although when and where is being disputed.
New veggies without the Frankenfood factor
Monsanto uses crossbreeding, Wired reports. Also: Will humans cause the next mass extinction?
Teens are more stressed-out than adults these days
School is the main cause for most teens, many of whom aren’t getting much stress-reducing exercise.
I never wanted to be a cancer expert. Then my wife got sick.
A colon cancer diagnosis changed our lives. I never expected our story to end as it did.
Multimedia
Hugh Turvey’s X-ray photography
Photographer Hugh Turvey’s photographs fuse visible-light photography with X-ray technology.
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Other news
Need help for a gotta-go problem?
A new patch may help women with overactive bladder, but here are some reasons not to rush out and buy it.
Doctor questions the diagnosis of ADHD
We’ve been looking at symptoms, not causes, he says, which could be indications of many other illnesses.
For sustained weight loss, pay attention to weekdays
Study finds those who didn’t lose weight during the workweek had a harder time keeping pounds off.
Readers discuss heroin, mental illness, Kris Kristofferson
‘I applaud Ben Cimons on his efforts to break his addiction and to have the courage to discuss it publicly.’
How a writer used math to find love online
Also: A new book offers a stark assessment of the Fukushima disaster.
Kaiser Health News
AnyBODY
Cellphones aren’t the only dangerous driving distraction
Comparing the many things that drain a driver’s focus: Radio, audiobooks, passengers.
Protecting yourself against medical identity theft
Be careful about giving out insurance and other health information — especially online.
Are popular green drinks as healthful as you think?
Some of them, yes. But others are more a glorified dessert, experts say. Be careful what you put in them.
How & Why/EcoLOGIC
How heroin changes the brain of an addict
It’s not just a willpower issue. The drug affects the part of the brain that responds to pleasurable things.
How does my app know how long my trip will take?
No company has entirely figured out a way to get real-time information to frustrated drivers sitting in traffic.
How to convince your friends to believe in climate change
Never mind the eye-rolling. First, frame it as a management issue. Then try scare tactics.
Urban Jungle
The cardinal and the tuliptree
As winter advances, choice foods become scarce and eating grows riskier and less efficient.
Medical Mysteries
Intractable depression — or something else?
Drugs and shock treatments failed to treat a woman’s worsening mental illness.
Health, Science & Environment Videos
Obamacare's silver lining?
For all of the issues surrounding the rollout of the President's signature health care law, one part seems to be working pretty well—the expansion of Medicaid. Close to 400,000 Americas have learned they are now eligible to enroll, but some states haven't embraced the expansion.Can a November surge help Obamacare?
The Affordable Care Act saw a surge in the month of November with 173,000 people signing up in their state-run marketplaces. But will young people sign up in the numbers needed to support the program?Three Obamacare fixes explained
Wonkblog’s Sarah Kliff breaks down three proposals that would help Obama make good on his promise.Kliff Notes: How did Obamacare change?
Wonkblog's Sarah Kliff explains how Obamacare is changing after many insurance policies were canceled, and how the president plans to un-cancel some of them.Kliff Notes: Will Obamacare cancel my plan?
Wonkblog's Sarah Kliff explains why a lot of people's health insurance policies might get cancelled.Kliff Notes: HealthCare.gov's 3 problems
Wonkblog's Sarah Kliff walks through the three main problems bogging down the Affordable Care Act's online marketplace.Kliff Notes: Obama's health care speech
Wonkblog's Sarah Kliff shares her "Kliff Notes" for President Obama's remarks defending his signature health care law.Obamacare Q&A: Are all marketplaces created equal?
Wonkblog's Sarah Kliff explains why the Affordable Care Act's health insurance marketplaces are different from state to state.Obamacare Q&A: Who doesn't have to enroll?
Wonkblog's Sarah Kliff explains the exceptions to the Affordable Care Act's individual mandate.The Post Most: National
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1A snowy-owl bonanza, thanks to a little, stubby-legged Arctic rodent: The lemming
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2San Diego Sheriff will not seek 9th Circuit en banc in Peruta right to carry case.
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3Ole Miss police seek to question three students in noose case
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4Tornadoes tear through Midwest, leaving widespread power outages
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5Motorists stuck in traffic scramble to save baby
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Carolyn Hax
Chat transcript
I want to stay home when we have a baby, but my husband doesn’t respect stay-at-home moms. How can I convince him?