Staying informed is also a great way to stay healthy. Keep up-to-date with all the latest health news here.
25 Mar
What you eat greatly impacts your chances of healthy aging. In a new study, just over 9% of U.S. adults made it to the age of 70 free of physical, mental and cognitive impairments, and their diet had a lot to do with it, according to researchers.
24 Mar
HealthDay talks with Dr. Jennifer Davids, Chief of Colon and Rectal Surgery at Boston Medical Center.
21 Mar
A new study suggests alcohol use may be one reason why people who stay up late have a greater risk of depression. Sleep quality could be another.
That stick of gum you’re chewing? It might be minty fresh, but it could also come with a little something extra: tiny bits of plastic.
A new study finds that one piece of gum can release hundreds -- possibly thousands -- of microplastics into your saliva.
And researchers warn it may be a hidden source of plastic exposure ...
Dozens of research projects focused on LGBTQ health have been canceled by the U.S. government, alarming scientists who say the move will harm public health and slow scientific progress.
At least 68 grants to 46 institutions were terminated last week, according to a federal website.
These grants, in total, were worth nearly $40 millio...
Tobacco control measures like anti-smoking campaigns and cigarette taxes have prevented nearly 4 million lung cancer deaths during the past five decades, a new American Cancer Society study estimates.
More than 3.8 million lung cancer deaths were averted due to substantial reductions in smoking, gaining a little more than 76 million years ...
Childbirth is an overwhelming accomplishment, but new mothers would do best not to rest on their laurels following delivery, a new guideline says.
New moms should clock at least two hours a week of moderate to vigorous physical activity in the first months following birth, experts recommend.
Two to four hours of exercise per week can...
Chafing, blisters and sores are common problems for people fitted with an artificial limb.
The artificial limb’s fixed, rigid shape can’t adapt to changes in a person’s body, ultimately causing it to rub against a person’s residual limb.
“Ultimately, no matter how sophisticated the limb itself is, if it ...
Black babies and children are more than twice as likely to die as white kids, and that gap has grown since the 1950s, a new study says.
Black kids died at a rate 2.15 times that of white children in the 2010s, researchers reported in the Annals of Internal Medicine.
That’s up slightly from the 1950s when the death rate...
The first sign of seizures for Amanda Bradbury were auras in her vision that cropped up around age 19.
Then came frequent bouts of anxiety, struggling to maintain focus and follow conversations, forgetting things, and having difficulty speaking or even swallowing.
“One of the things that would happen before a seizure is I'd get...
Colon cancer is a particularly deadly form of the disease, the second most common cause of cancer deaths in the U.S.
But patients diagnosed with colon cancer also need to be concerned about their heart health, especially if they’re younger adults, a new study says.
Colon cancer patients under 50 are 2.4 times more likely to die...
If you’re one of the 15 million people who shared your DNA with 23andMe, stop whatever you're doing.
Experts say now is the time to delete your data.
The genetic testing company filed for bankruptcy March 23 and is looking to sell its assets.
California Attorney General Rob Bonta issued a "consumer alert" on March 21, acc...
President Donald Trump has chosen Susan Monarez to lead the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) permanently. She has served as acting director since January.
If approved by the Senate, Monarez would become the first person without a medical degree to head the CDC in more than 50 years.
She is an infectious disease r...
Novo Nordisk, a Danish pharmaceutical company, has signed a major deal worth up to $2 billion for the rights to a new obesity and diabetes drug, the company announced March 24.
The drug, called UBT251, is being developed by United Bio-Technology (Hengqin) Co., a Chinese pharmaceutical company.
Novo Nordisk will pay $200 million up fr...
A high-tech T-shirt loaded with sensors can help track patients’ vital signs after their release from a hospital, researchers say.
The shirt could help people return home sooner to recover, based on findings from a small group of patients who wore the gadget-filled garment after urological surgery for cancer.
“Our patient...
Statins are very cheap and highly effective cholesterol-lowering drugs -- but high-risk heart patients may have an even better option, a new evidence review says.
Combining statins with another drug, ezetimibe, significantly reduces the risk of death in patients with clogged arteries, according to findings published March 23 in Mayo Cl...
The final days of acclaimed actor Gene Hackman are heart-rending -- a man with Alzheimer’s disease wandering his home for nearly a week after the untimely death of his wife, before collapsing himself.
Experts have speculated that Hackman, 95, might have died from takotsubo syndrome -- more commonly known as “broken heart syndro...
Lifestyle factors like diet, exercise, smoking and blood pressure have a greater impact on the heart health of women than men, a new study says.
Women with poor health have nearly five times the risk of heart disease compared to women with ideal health, according to findings scheduled for presentation Saturday at a meeting of the American ...
Mammograms can be used to screen for more than just breast cancer, researchers say.
The X-ray breast scans also can be used to assess calcium deposits in arteries, which is an indicator of heart health, researchers are scheduled to report Monday at a meeting of the American College of Cardiology in Chicago.
Using artificial intellige...
How should a person eat in middle age to protect their health as they grow older?
One diet came out a clear winner in a 30-year study involving more than 105,000 men and women and eight diets, researchers reported in the journal Nature Medicine.
People whose dietary pattern more closely stuck to the Alternative Healthy Eatin...
A fake web page designed to look like the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) vaccine safety site has been taken down on orders from health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
The site was linked to Children’s Health Defense, an anti-vaccine nonprofit Kennedy founded.
The page copied the CDC’s logo, ...
A rare red meat allergy, usually linked to a bite from the lone star tick, may also be caused by other tick species found in different parts of the U.S., a new report shows.
“Alpha-gal syndrome is relatively rare, but those who have it can have a full-on anaphylactic shock,” Douglas Norris, a professor of molecular microbiology...
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved a new drug for a serious heart condition that affects thousands of people.
The drug, called Amvuttra (vutrisiran), is made by Alnylam Pharmaceuticals and is used to treat transthyretin amyloid cardiomyopathy (ATTR-CM).
ATTR-CM is a disease in which harmful proteins build ...