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East Lansing resident Laura Mann, a medical technologist at Olin Health Center, processes specimens Wednesday inside Olin’s laboratory.
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East Lansing resident Laura Mann, a medical technologist at Olin Health Center, processes specimens Wednesday inside Olin’s laboratory.
An extra vodka shot might not be enough to put students behind bars for drunken driving if Michigan lawmakers fail to pass preventative legislation.
Sex no condom = a higher risk of pregnancy.
With the winter season in full swing, more cases of the flu have been spotted. Unfortunately, I am one of those cases. Like many students living in the dorms, the tight quarters and easy-to-catch flu virus has gotten the best of me.
Lansing’s Sparrow Hospital opened the doors of the East Lansing Urgent Care clinic Wednesday, providing students and East Lansing residents access to another health care site within blocks of campus.
Second semester is starting to take off. Professors are beginning to assign homework and projects, and the last thing anybody wants now is to get sick—especially with the flu.
Economics senior Adam Mitchell said hasn’t been serious about quitting smoking before, but this time he quitcold turkey.
As a deadly flu strain hits Michigan, pharmacies in the East Lansing area are dealing with increasing demand for vaccinations.
Adam Lanza, age 20. James Holmes, 25. Seung-Hui Cho, 23.
Registered nurse Barbara Beatty prepares a flu vaccine for The State News on Jan. 9, 2013 at Olin Health Center. The Olin Health Center also has prepackaged flu vaccinations. Photo illustration by Julia Nagy/The State News
With about 285 confirmed cases of a flu strain that killed four children and adults in Michigan, health professionals said everyone who can get a flu vaccination should.
When zoology senior Amanda Ureña chose to go to college 2,221 miles away from Los Angeles where she grew up, she had to adjust to more than just being far away from her family and friends.
Although HIV often can seem like a topic easier to avoid than to address, the issue specifically is something college-aged students should start becoming more aware of, according to a recent study.
Tuesday night, members of the MSU group Spartan Body Pride took action to try and promote a positive view of students’ body image through Operation Beautiful.
Catching a cold or flu can negatively impact a student’s academic and social life, and with the flu season fast approaching, MSU students now have an extra opportunity to take the proper precautions to stay healthy.
At its monthly meeting Friday, the MSU Board of Trustees voted to approve an authorization to plan for a new Multicultural Center and North Campus Neighborhood Engagement Center in the Union.
On a warm summer night in early August, Jane Hombach — an MSU senior who requested to use an alias to protect her identity — sat on her friend’s bed wearing shorts and a T-shirt. It was what she described as a very “typical summer night.”
When professor Robert LaDuca heard about mathematics professor John McCarthy’s public breakdown last week, he knew he had to step into the light and publicly announce a secret that has festered within his private life for more than a decade.
Med tech Nancy Nagele scans the barcode on samples for chlamydia on Tuesday, Oct. 9, 2012 in the Olin Health Center Laboratory. Nagele was repeating a run to ensure the sample was actually positive for chlamydia. Julia Nagy/The State News
Editor’s Note: The possible health consequences of having a sexually transmitted infection inadvertently was attributed to Erica Phillipich, a health educator for the Center for Sexual Health Promotion at MSU.