Thousands of BART riders were potentially exposed to measles after an infected UC Berkeley student rode the train last week. Anyone who rode on BART between February 4 and February 7 in the morning or late evening could have been exposed.
A Mystery Illness Is Causing Starfish to Rip Themselves Into Pieces

Tens of thousands of starfish in the Pacific are dying from a mysterious illness that causes their arms to walk away from them until they rip out.
First Princeton, and now the University of California Santa Barbara. The California school is having a meningitis outbreak. There have been four reported cases so far, and it's pretty serious. One infected lacrosse player had to have his feet amputated last month.
California Lawmakers Reject Mandatory Condom Use in Porn
Porn participants will continue to go raw for the foreseeable future — even as four performers tested positive for HIV in the last month — after California lawmakers rejected a bill that would make condom use mandatory during filming.
Florida is Being Overrun By Herpes-Infected Monkeys
A colony of Herpes-infected Rhesus monkeys, flinging their feces and viral loads through Florida, now pose an official public health threat to the Sunshine State.
Porn Moratorium Reinstated After Third Porn Actor Tests HIV-Positive
Another US-based adult film actor tested positive for HIV this week, making the unidentified performer the third porn actor to test positive in the last month. Adult film actress Cameron Bay tested positive at the end of August, and her boyfriend, actor Rod Daily, announced on Tuesday via Twitter that he also tested…
The Centers for Disease Control says that more than 250 people in six states have come down with a stomach bug from an unidentified source. The cyclospora infection — which causes diarrhea and other flulike symptoms — has been reported in Iowa, Nebraska, Texas, Wisconsin, Georgia and Connecticut, and could be a…
A Disease Without A Cure Is Spreading In The Western United States
An airborne fungal disease without a cure, coccidioidomycosis — also known as valley fever or cocci — is affecting more people than ever in the Southwest, where more than 20,000 cases have been reported this year.