Highlights
A collection of news and information related to Arthritis published by this site and its partners.
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It's Lyme season [Editorial]
With some exceptions, any illness can strike anyone at any time. One of the more dangerous to emerge in recent decades is Lyme disease. Harford County, as many of us know either first-hand or because of someone we know, is not immune from the tick-borne...Tags: Rheumatoid Arthritis, Disease Prevention, Lyme, Diseases and Illnesses, Lyme Disease
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Columbia Digest
Ski club meets The Columbia Ski Club meets at 7 p.m. Monday, May 13, at Union Jack's, 10400 Little Patuxent Parkway. New members enjoy a 50 percent reduction in fees. Light appetizers will be provided. Open to the public. Information: 410-740-5225. 'The...Tags: Vantage Point (movie), Music, Yoga, Wii, Physical Fitness and Exercise
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Every dog (and tortoise) has its day at March for the Animals
A lot of humans had their hands full at Sunday's 18th annual March for the Animals in Druid Hill Park. Adam Mittadam, 30, of Canton, held fast to the leashes of six French bulldogs — Mango, Kiwi, Coconut, Scooter, Vespa and Moped — all...
Tags: Music, Pets, Michael Jackson, Rowing, Senator Theatre
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Cleansing can be good if not too extreme
Does eliminating specific foods from the diet, such as sugar or wheat, provide health benefits? Such cleansing has become a popular way for people to lose weight, boost energy and eat more healthfully. Liz Lipski, academic director for the Master of...
Tags: Lactose Intolerance, Organic Foods, Migraine, Prescription Drugs, Drugs and Medicines
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Cockeysville doctor named top humanitarian by orthopaedic academy
A lifetime of selfless service was rewarded last month when retired Johns Hopkins Hospital surgeon and Cockeysville resident Dr. David Hungerford was given the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons' Humanitarian Award at the association's annual meeting...Tags: Johns Hopkins Hospital, Charity, Hospitals and Clinics, Ghana, Kenya
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Contestant tips 'Jeopardy!' cap to cheering crowd
It's not whether you win or lose, it's how you play the game — in this case, the game show "Jeopardy!" Tom Lynn, of Radnor-Winston, played so well that a crowd of 50 family members, friends and former colleagues and classmates gave him a...
Tags: Pearl Jam (music group), Game Shows, Teaching and Learning, Van Halen (music group), Roland Park
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Cases handled by officer convicted of drug charges in jeopardy
When Brenda Brown stood before a judge, she figured she had only one real option: plead guilty. She had been caught with three bags of marijuana in her pocket in Northwest Baltimore. She didn't know that Kendell Richburg, the arresting officer, had lied...
Tags: Rod J. Rosenstein, Punishment, Heroin, Police Arrests, University of Baltimore
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Md. health insurers' 'fail first' policies jeopardize patient health
Absent from the critical debate in Maryland over how to rein in health care spending has been a serious examination of the dangerous and expensive policies that some Maryland health insurers have enacted in the name of cost containment, and their...
Tags: Hemophilia, Lupus, Drugs and Medicines, Maryland General Assembly, Epilepsy
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Former Food Network's 'The Next Iron Chef' contestant helps with arthritis fundraiser
On Friday, Feb. 1, award-winning New York chef, restaurateur and cookbook author Seamus Mullen joined mystery writer, columnist and book reviewer Jennifer Vido, of Harford County, for her 8th Annual Author Dinner for Arthritis. Vido has been living with...Tags: Rheumatoid Arthritis, Arthritis Foundation, Diseases and Illnesses, Food Network (tv network), Harford County
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'The Walking Dead' recap, episode 311: 'I Ain't a Judas'
This was one of those "bridge" episodes. Nothing really happened, but it set up a bunch of stuff. Listen people: it's not my favorite thing either, but it's a thing. So I don't need to give a spoiler alert here, because there isn't really anything...
Tags: The Walking Dead (tv program), Tom Waits, David Morrissey, Regional Authority, Asthma
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Laurel healing institute receives university accreditation
Maryland will soon be home to a new university — one in which students can train in acupuncture, Chinese herbs and other forms of integrative medicine. The Tai Sophia Institute, a Howard County holistic health training center, has received state...
Tags: Colleges and Universities, Drugs and Medicines, Teaching and Learning, Acupuncture, Laurel
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Rottweiler dispute resolved in Howard
Hazel Sanders and her Rottweiler service dog, Jurnee, are preparing to move into an apartment she can afford after the management company agreed to drop objections based on the Maryland Court of Appeals decision earlier this year defining pit bulls as...
Tags: Housing and Urban Planning, Jessup (Anne Arundel, Maryland), Rentals, Civil Rights, Interior Policy
May 14, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
May 10, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Apr 22, 2013
|Story| Patuxent Homestead
Apr 3, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Apr 2, 2013
|Story| Patuxent Homestead
Mar 26, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Mar 24, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Mar 11, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Mar 6, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Feb 24, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Feb 11, 2013
|Story| Baltimore Sun
Dec 19, 2012
|Story| Baltimore Sun
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