function dap(pg, width, height) { var randomId = "dapAd" + Math.floor(Math.random() * 10000000000); document.write("
"); dapMgr.enableACB(randomId, false); dapMgr.renderAd(randomId, pg, width, height); }Texomas Allergy Outlook: This allergy forecast is divided into four categories: trees, grasses, weeds and mold. This is a general look to see how active the pollen/mold from each source is for today. The levels of activity include no activity, low, medium, high and very high.Here's how you use it Full story
Texomas Allergy Outlook: This allergy forecast is divided into four categories: trees, grasses, weeds and mold. This is a general look to see how active the pollen/mold from each source is for today. The levels of activity include no activity, low, medium, high and very high.Here's how you use it Full story
Drugmaker Merck & Co. says the Food and Drug Administration is reviewing its second application to sell a new type of allergy treatment meant to gradually reduce allergic reactions over time, rather than just relieving sneezing, itching and other symptoms temporarily. Full story
A new report is raising questions about the safety of trendy false eyelashes, saying the adhesives and solvents used to remove them can cause eye infections and irritation. NBC’s Andrea Canning reports.
A Swedish study published in the journal Pediatrics found children exposed to their parents’ saliva were less likely to develop allergies than those who weren’t. NBC’s Brian Williams reports.
A new report from the Centers for Disease Control found one in 20 American kids have food allergies, a 50 percent increase from 1997 to 2011. NBC’s Anne Thompson reports.
It seems like everything you hear these days is “the best” or “the worst” or “the most.” Do people really mean that, or have we become a nation of embellishers and truth stretchers? NBC’s Jenna Wolfe investigates.
In a yearly ranking of the most difficult places to live if you have spring allergies, several northern cities are in the top 30. Some say it’s due to rising temperatures that increase pollen counts and experts recommend seeing an allergist now before the seasons gets worse. NBC’s Dr. Nancy Snyderma
woman, sick, allergies, nose, sneeze, tissue, cold, flu, allergen, pollen, msnbc stock photography
Susan Weissman and her 9-year-old son, Eden. He is allergic to peanuts, milk and eggs.