By CARRIE PEYTON DAHLBERG, Sacramento Bee

Cash-strapped patients volunteering for medical research

Retirement slammed Carole Jacko. Raising two grandchildren, she's too young for Medicare and too strapped to pay $600 a month for health insurance.
So when a trip to the emergency room ended with a diagnosis of diabetes, Jacko found a creative solution.

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ER nurses try listening to drunken teens in Calif. study

SACRAMENTO, Calif. -- For emergency room nurses who have seen too many kids so drunk they are barely able to breathe, a research project gearing up in Sacramento holds out tantalizing hope.Perhaps asking those youngsters about their own needs and motives, even for just a few minutes, could give them tools they'll need to stay safer next time.

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Depression in moms-to-be linked to premature births

SACRAMENTO, Calif. -- Being depressed during pregnancy might be bad for the baby, a study of California patients suggests.Expectant mothers with symptoms of severe depression are more than twice as likely to give birth prematurely as those with no signs of depression, according to the study, published today in the journal Human Reproduction.

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Proper disposal of old drugs is changing in California

Hoping to keep streams and groundwater cleaner, the people who run sewage plants around California want to change the way we get rid of old medicines.The toilet is out. The hazardous-waste site is in. Except where it's not.Then there's the trash.

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Q&A with equine specialists on racehorse safety

University of California-Davis equine specialists were among those who watched in shock, either on television or at the track, when Eight Belles pitched nearly head first into the dirt after coming in second in Saturday's Kentucky Derby. The filly, who had broken both ankles, was euthanized.

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Nanoparticles in no-smell socks studied for hazard

In the unknowns of emerging nanotechnology, researchers are wondering if the science behind trendy no-smell socks, underwear and hunting gear might create unintended consequences in the environment.

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Where's the recalled beef? Everywhere

A single purchaser of recalled beef resold it to about 2,500 other vendors, California health officials said this week.That one example hints at how far the beef at the center of last week's recall has traveled through the food supply.

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Beef in massive recall proves tough to trace

The meat being swept up in the nation's biggest beef recall probably won't kill you or even make you sick -- which is a good thing since there's no quick, easy way to tell if any of it is in your kitchen.

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Drug research hampered by dearth of minority participants

Our bodies are not created equal. A particular lung cancer treatment can be riskier for people of Japanese ancestry. And there's a new heart failure drug that helps African Americans more than other racial groups.

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