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Word: bladders (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

Auckland's "hospital without walls" is aimed not so much at eliminating hospitalization as at shortening it. Barring unforeseen complications, patients who have undergone gall-bladder operations, for example, are sent home only five days after surgery-compared with a typical ten-day hospital stay in the U.S. For these Auckland patients, however, hospital care continues at home. Nurses pay them regular visits. Family members are trained to meet their special needs. Patients may even borrow hospital equipment. It may be an everyday item like a bedpan or cane-or more complicated gear: a respirator, wheelchair or even...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: On the Track of a Shifty Bug | 4/25/1977 | See Source »

...results from a Canadian study linking the sugar substitute with bladder cancer in rats. The Delaney Amendment, which prohibits the addition of any substance to food if studies show the substance to cause cancer in human or animals, requires the bans...

Author: By Omar E. Rahman, COMPILED FROM WIRE DISPATCHES | Title: FDA OFFICIALLY BANS SACCHARIN AS FOOD ADDITIVE TODAY | 4/14/1977 | See Source »

Most saccharin users think the FDA's action is silly, a gratuitous Government act reminiscent of the cyclamate ban more than seven years ago, which left saccharin as the only FDA-approved artificial sweetener. In recent Canadian tests, some rats that were fed enormous doses of saccharin developed bladder cancer. To take in an equivalent amount of saccharin, a human would have to drink at least 800 cans of diet soda every day. Under the law, however, the FDA had no choice: the so-called Delaney amendment of 1958 to the Food, Drug and Cosmetics Act forces...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: REGULATION: The Sour Taste of a Sweetener Ban | 3/28/1977 | See Source »

After recent tests conducted in Canada found that large doses of saccharin caused bladder cancer in rats, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) proposed a ban on the artificial sweetener to take effect within 120 days...

Author: By William B. Trautman, | Title: Benefits of Saccharin Outweigh Risks | 3/24/1977 | See Source »

...Canadian experiment "unequivocally" showed a carcinogenic effect, but there are no reported cases of saccharin-induced bladder cancer in humans in the 70 years that saccharin has been on the market, Brown said...

Author: By William B. Trautman, | Title: Benefits of Saccharin Outweigh Risks | 3/24/1977 | See Source »

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