|  New Diet Pill Wins FDA Panel's Backing      (HealthDay)    Posted: 08 Dec 2010 06:03 AM PST HealthDay - TUESDAY, Dec. 7 (HealthDay News) -- An expert advisory panel  recommended on Tuesday that Contrave, a new weight-loss pill that combines  an antidepressant with an anti-addiction medication, be approved by the  U.S. Food and Drug Administration. | 
  |  Study links receipts, cash to cancer and obesity      (AFP)    Posted: 08 Dec 2010 12:59 AM PST  AFP - Cash register receipts and paper money have been found to contain high levels of bisphenol A (BPA), a chemical linked to cancer, obesity and early puberty, a study published Wednesday says.
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  |  FDA panel recommends approval for Contrave      (AP)    Posted: 07 Dec 2010 09:28 PM PST AP - A Food and Drug Administration panel on Tuesday recommended that the agency approve Orexigen Therapeutics Inc.'s weight loss drug Contrave, making it the first in group of competitors to get a positive nod from experts. | 
  |  Co-Opting Technology for the Sake of Weight Loss      (HealthDay)    Posted: 07 Dec 2010 08:47 PM PST HealthDay - TUESDAY, Dec. 7 (HealthDay News) -- Might technologies and gadgets so  popular with today's young adults be corralled to help them lose  weight? | 
  |  U.S. advisers back first new diet pill in a decade      (Reuters)    Posted: 07 Dec 2010 05:14 PM PST Reuters - The first new weight-loss pill in a decade moved closer to U.S. approval on Tuesday, when a panel of expert advisers backed Orexigen Therapeutics's Contrave despite heart risk concerns. | 
  |  US panel approves first obesity drug in a decade      (AFP)    Posted: 07 Dec 2010 04:09 PM PST  AFP - An advisory panel to the US Food and Drug Administration on Tuesday gave its approval to an anti-obesity drug, in what could be the first new approved drug for losing weight in more than a decade.
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  |  More than half of European adults overweight: study      (AFP)    Posted: 07 Dec 2010 10:25 AM PST  AFP - More than half of European adults are now overweight and too many children smoke or are obese, raising the risk of cancer or heart attacks, a European health report showed Tuesday.
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