Staying informed is also a great way to stay healthy. Keep up-to-date with all the latest health news here.
20 Oct
More teens are quitting HS sports saying they don’t look right for the sports based on what they see in the media and social media, according to a new study.
19 Oct
In a new study, participants recently infected with COVID-19 were six times more likely to develop Guillain-Barré syndrome, where the immune system attacks the nerves.
18 Oct
A new study finds adults with ADHD are nearly 3 times more likely to develop dementia compared to those without the condition.
Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter June 14, 2024
In half of American homes containing a loaded gun, that gun is kept unsecured and ready for potential use, often with children in the home, new research shows.
The finding is especially troubling given the link between gun accessibility and accidental child deaths, as well as rising rates of gun-related suicides in the United States, resea... Full Page
Robin Foster HealthDay Reporter June 14, 2024
The two top officers of a telehealth company that began to distribute ADHD drugs widely during the pandemic have been charged with health care fraud, the U.S. Department of Justice announced Thursday.
The arrests will likely worsen ongoing shortages of Adderall and another ADHD medications, Vyvanse, experts said.
“Th... Full Page
Robin Foster HealthDay Reporter June 14, 2024
COVID vaccine makers will be advised to update their shots to target the KP.2 variant, an offshoot of the JN.1 variant that spread widely last winter, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration announced Thursday.
It's a turnaround for the agency: The new recommendation follows an FDA advisory panel vote last week that unanimously recommended C... Full Page
Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter June 14, 2024
Many younger workers feel stressed, isolated and unappreciated at their jobs, a new survey has found.
The 2022 Work in America survey, conducted by the American Psychological Association (APA), found that young adults are struggling in the workplace:
Nearly half (48%) of workers ages 18 to 25 feel people not close to their ag... Full Page
Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter June 14, 2024
Taking a cutting-edge weight-loss drug could help extremely obese patients drop enough pounds to be eligible for bariatric surgery, a new study shows.
Patients with extreme obesity -- a BMI of 70 or more -- are at higher risk of complications from surgery compared to people who weigh less.
Weight loss prior to surgery can lower that ... Full Page
June 14, 2024
Dolphins living off the coasts of Georgia and Florida have elevated levels of mercury in their bodies, new research shows.
That could have implications for people, said a team led by Colleen Bryan, a research biologist at the National Institute of Standards and Technology in Charleston, S.C.
“As a sentinel species, the bottlenose d... Full Page
Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter June 14, 2024
You don't consider yourself a lonely person generally, but sometimes have days where feelings of loneliness set in.
If you're one of those people, even that transient loss of connection with others could be impacting your physical health, a new study finds.
“A lot of research is focused on loneliness being a binary trait -- eithe... Full Page
Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter June 14, 2024
Animal studies are often considered a first step in finding new drugs and treatments for human diseases, but a new review has discovered that precious few actually produce real-world therapies.
Only 5% of therapies tested in animals wind up being approved by regulators for human use, according to an analysis of 122 articles involving 54 di... Full Page
Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter June 14, 2024
A new form of psychotherapy appears to work even better at treating chronic pain in older adults than gold-standard cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), a new study finds.
U.S. veterans who received emotional awareness and expression therapy (EAET) experienced a longer and more significant reduction in chronic pain than those who underwent ... Full Page
Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter June 14, 2024
Spinal cord injuries can cause the body to go haywire, with misfiring nerves causing dangerous “fight-or-flight” responses.
This makes typical and normally harmless problems like having a full bladder prompt life-threatening complications like heart attack, stroke and severe infections like pneumonia.
But researchers think they�... Full Page
Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter June 13, 2024
The first two cases of a diphtheria-like illness being transmitted in the United States between people and their pets have been reported in Utah and Colorado.
The respiratory illnesses occurred in 2022 and 2023 and involved the Corynebacterium ulceran bacterium, which is closely related to the germ that causes diptheria. One rece... Full Page
Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter June 13, 2024
The U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday threw out a case that aimed to curb access to the controversial abortion drug mifepristone, saying the plaintiffs who brought the case to the court had no legal standing to do so.
In a unanimous vote, the nine judges ruled that a group of doctors and other medical professionals -- represented by the conse... Full Page
Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter June 13, 2024
In countries where gender equality is becoming more of a reality, men's meat consumption tends to rise relative to women's, a new study shows.
The phenomenon was seen mainly in richer countries in North America and Europe, and was not seen at all in large but less affluent China, India and Indonesia.
Why? Researchers believe it's du... Full Page
Robin Foster HealthDay Reporter June 13, 2024
Two human cases of "dual mutant" strains of H1N1 flu have been reported by U.S. health officials.
Unfortunately, the genetic changes appear to render the leading flu antiviral, Tamiflu, less effective, researchers from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention noted.
The new analysis, published Wednesday in the ag... Full Page
Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter June 13, 2024
Climate change is harming the heart health of people around the world, a new review warns.
Extreme temperatures, hurricanes and other dangerous weather events all contribute to an increased risk of heart disease and heart-related death, researchers reported June 12 in the journal JAMA Cardiology.
“Climate change is already... Full Page
Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter June 13, 2024
Shelter dogs do better with a buddy, a new study finds.
Dogs show fewer signs of stress and are adopted more quickly if paired up with another canine rather than housed by themselves, researchers found.
“Despite being a social species, dogs are often housed alone in shelters to reduce disease transmission and possible injury from i... Full Page
Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter June 13, 2024
Robot-guided radiation therapy can improve treatment for age-related macular degeneration, the leading cause of vision loss and blindness among American seniors, a new study shows.
Precisely targeted radiation treatment reduced by a quarter the number of routine injections needed to treat wet-type age-related macular degeneration (AMD), th... Full Page
Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter June 13, 2024
Women who deliver low-birth-weight babies could be more likely to have memory and thinking problems later in life, a new study warns.
As seniors, these women had brain test scores that indicated one to two years of additional aging in their memory and thinking skills, compared with women who delivered normal-weight babies, according to res... Full Page
Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter June 13, 2024
People with type 1 diabetes are 25% less likely to die early now than they were in 1990, a new global tally finds, and the number of people who've lived into their senior years with the autoimmune illness keeps rising.
The new findings suggest that type 1 diabetes "is no longer a contributory factor in decreased life expectancy owing to i... Full Page
Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter June 13, 2024
Bipolar disorder doesn't have to be a lifelong challenge, a new study says.
Nearly 1 in 4 people with bipolar disorder wind up achieving complete mental health, researchers found.
Further, more than 2 in 5 become free from bipolar symptoms over time, results show.
“Most research on individuals with bipolar disorder has failed... Full Page