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09 Feb

Caffeinated Coffee and Tea Linked to Lower Dementia Risk. But What About Decaf?

A new study finds caffeinated coffee and tea are significantly associated with lower dementia risk. The link wasn’t there with decaf.

06 Feb

One Family Habit Linked to Less Teen Drinking and Drug Use

A new study finds family meals that include real conversation and fewer digital distractions lead to sharply lower rates of teen substance use.

05 Feb

Mediterranean Diet Linked to Lower Stroke Risk in Women

In a new study, women who followed the Mediterranean diet most closely had a much lower risk of all types of stroke, including those caused by bleeding in the brain.

NFL Launches Contest To Redesign Football Helmet Facemasks To Cut Concussion Risk

NFL Launches Contest To Redesign Football Helmet Facemasks To Cut Concussion Risk

The National Football League is asking inventors, engineers and researchers to help make football helmets safer, starting with the facemask.

At a Super Bowl innovation event last week, the league announced a new HealthTECH Challenge focused on redesigning helmet facemasks to better protect players from head injuries. 

The compet...

AI-Powered Stethoscope Doubles Detection Of Heart Problems

AI-Powered Stethoscope Doubles Detection Of Heart Problems

An artificial intelligence (AI)-enabled stethoscope more than doubles a doctor’s ability to detect heart murmurs, a symptom of severe heart disease, a new study says.

Doctors armed with the AI-powered stethoscope accurately identified heart valve disease 92% of the time, versus 46% when using a traditional stethoscope, researchers re...

Young People At Risk From Psychiatric Drug Combos, Study Says

Young People At Risk From Psychiatric Drug Combos, Study Says

About 1 in 4 young people could be at risk from prescription medicines they’re taking for psychiatric conditions, new research shows.

About 26% of children and young adults taking these meds have been prescribed a combination that could cause serious drug interactions, researchers reported in the Journal of the American Academy o...

Experimental Pill Slashes 'Bad' Cholesterol Levels

Experimental Pill Slashes 'Bad' Cholesterol Levels

A daily experimental pill can slash levels of “bad” LDL cholesterol, a new clinical trial has found.

Enlicitide cut people’s LDL cholesterol levels by up to 60%, according to results published Feb. 4 in The New England Journal of Medicine.

“These reductions in LDL cholesterol are the most we have ever...

Therapy Dogs Ease Loneliness Among People Hospitalized For Mental Illness

Therapy Dogs Ease Loneliness Among People Hospitalized For Mental Illness

Regular visits by a therapy dog can aid the healing of people hospitalized for treatment of mental disorders, a new study says.

Therapy dogs eased the loneliness and isolation of patients in a hospital for psychiatric care, helping their treatment, researchers recently reported in the journal Frontiers in Psychiatry.

“...

Statin Drugs Are Safer Than Warnings Suggest, Evidence Shows

Statin Drugs Are Safer Than Warnings Suggest, Evidence Shows

Packaging for cholesterol-lowering statin drugs come with a disturbingly long list of potential side effects.

But don’t be scared — statins cause hardly any of the side effects listed in these warnings, a new evidence review says.

Taking a statin didn’t cause any meaningful increase in memory loss, dementia, depress...

Water-Damaged Homes, Heavy Air Pollution Increase Asthma Risk In Kids

Water-Damaged Homes, Heavy Air Pollution Increase Asthma Risk In Kids

Children are more likely to develop asthma if they are raised in damp homes or neighborhoods with heavy air pollution, a new study says.

On the other hand, having a dog in the home reduces a child’s risk of asthma, researchers found.

“Our research shows that to truly understand and prevent childhood asthma, we need to loo...

What to Know About Nipah Virus After New Cases in India

What to Know About Nipah Virus After New Cases in India

Reports of new Nipah virus cases in India have raised worries about yet another deadly outbreak. 

Nipah is a rare virus that can cause severe brain swelling and breathing problems, and there are no approved vaccines or treatments.

Health officials say the latest cases appear to be contained. Still, several Asian countries, inclu...

Watching the Super Bowl? Doctors Warn About Hidden Health Risks for Fans

Watching the Super Bowl? Doctors Warn About Hidden Health Risks for Fans

Planning to watch the Super Bowl this weekend as the Seattle Seahawks face off against the New England Patriots? 

Doctors say the big game can also bring big health risks, from heart strain to food poisoning and alcohol-related emergencies, especially for folks with underlying medical conditions.

Experts from Rutgers New Jersey ...

Air Ambulances Linked to Higher Survival After Severe Injuries

Air Ambulances Linked to Higher Survival After Severe Injuries

People with life-threatening injuries may have a better chance of surviving if care arrives by helicopter, a new U.K. study suggests.

Researchers looked at nearly a decade of data from an air ambulance service in southeast England and found that trauma patients treated by helicopter crews survived at higher rates than expected.

The f...

FDA Makes It Easier for Foods to Say 'No Artificial Colors'

FDA Makes It Easier for Foods to Say 'No Artificial Colors'

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) will now allow food labels to claim products have “no artificial colors” as long as they avoid petroleum-based dyes.

Before this change, announced Wednesday, food companies could usually make that claim only if a product had no added color at all, even if the color came from natural s...

American Medical Association Says Gender Surgeries for Minors Should Wait

American Medical Association Says Gender Surgeries for Minors Should Wait

Another major medical group says most gender-related surgeries for minors in the U.S. should be postponed until adulthood.

The American Medical Association (AMA) said Wednesday that surgical interventions for children and teens seeking gender-related care should usually be deferred until patients are adults. AMA is the nation’s large...

Norovirus Sickens 13 Finnish Hockey Players, Postpones Canada Match

Norovirus Sickens 13 Finnish Hockey Players, Postpones Canada Match

A fast-spreading stomach virus has sidelined the Finnish women’s hockey team, forcing officials to postpone a highly anticipated Olympic matchup against Canada.

The Finnish Ice Hockey Association confirmed that 13 players were either sick or placed in quarantine amid a norovirus outbreak. Olympic officials said delaying the game was ...

Surgical 'Add-On' Lowers Risk Of Ovarian Cancer

Surgical 'Add-On' Lowers Risk Of Ovarian Cancer

A simple surgical add-on can dramatically reduce a woman’s risk of ovarian cancer, a new study says.

Proactively removing the fallopian tubes during routine gynecologic surgeries like hysterectomy or tubal ligation can reduce the risk of ovarian cancer by nearly 80%, researchers reported Feb. 2 in JAMA Network Open.

&l...

Americans Optimistic About Heart Health Prospects, But Face An Uphill Battle, Survey Suggests

Americans Optimistic About Heart Health Prospects, But Face An Uphill Battle, Survey Suggests

Americans could be facing an uphill battle when it comes to protecting their heart health as they age, a new Cleveland Clinic poll reveals.

Nearly 3 of 4 Americans (72%) feel confident in their ability to maintain heart health as they age, the survey found.

But nearly as many (69%) also report that they have at least one known risk f...

Keto Diet A Potential Treatment For Depression, Trial Shows

Keto Diet A Potential Treatment For Depression, Trial Shows

The keto diet might help ease depression in people who aren’t responding to antidepressants, a new study reports.

People prescribed a keto diet had slightly lower symptoms of depression after six weeks compared to others encouraged to eat more plant-based foods, researchers reported Feb. 4 in JAMA Psychiatry.

“A ...

Born to the Beat: Newborns Show Innate Understanding of Musical Rhythm

Born to the Beat: Newborns Show Innate Understanding of Musical Rhythm

Even before they can crawl or speak, infants are essentially "wired" for music.

A new study reveals that humans enter the world with a built-in ability to anticipate musical beats, though the capacity to track a melody takes a bit more practice and time to develop.

The research, published Feb. 5 in PLOS Biology, explored whe...

Redesigned Sunscreen Aims to End the 'Chalky' Look for Good

Redesigned Sunscreen Aims to End the 'Chalky' Look for Good

For many people, the best defense against skin cancer comes with a frustrating side effect: A ghostly, chalky white film.

Now, researchers at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) have developed a mineral sunscreen that solves this cosmetic problem by simply changing the shape of its active ingredient.

Dermatologists have ...

A 'Natural' Option For IVF Is As Effective In Producing Healthy Babies, Trial Shows

A 'Natural' Option For IVF Is As Effective In Producing Healthy Babies, Trial Shows

A slightly more complicated method of in vitro fertilization (IVF) might produce better results for mother and baby, a new Chinese clinical trial has found.

Timing implantation of a frozen embryo to a woman’s natural ovulation cycle is as effective at achieving a healthy baby as current standard IVF, which involves using hormone trea...

Diabetes Drug May Slow Kidney Aging, Study in Fast-Aging Fish Finds

Diabetes Drug May Slow Kidney Aging, Study in Fast-Aging Fish Finds

A group of medications often used to treat diabetes may also help protect aging kidneys, according to a new study.

Published recently in the journal Kidney International, the study tested drugs called SGLT2 inhibitors in African turquoise killifish, a small fish that lives only 4 to 6 months. 

Because the fish age so qu...

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