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.
In a joint effort to curb the illegal sales of food products containing delta-8 THC, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and the Federal Trade Commission said Tuesday they have warned five companies to stop marketing such products.
Because the packaging for these THC edibles mimics that of popular snack foods, the FDA said it is concerne...
Just two years after the launch of the nation's three-digit crisis hotline, more than 10 million calls, texts and chat messages have been fielded by counselors, U.S. health officials announced Tuesday.
Introduced in July 2022 to simplify emergency calls and help counter a burgeoning mental health crisis in the United States, 988 was toute...
Many couples may be painfully familiar with the scenario: One partner snores loudly all night long, so the other partner seeks better sleep in another bed.
Now, a new survey from the American Academy of Sleep Medicine (AASM) shows just how common the practice of "sleep divorce" is: 29% of Americans have opted to sleep in another bed in t...
Bicycling to work can vastly improve your health and reduce your risk of death, a new study shows.
People who bike commute have a 47% lower overall risk of an early death, researchers found.
They also are less likely to develop heart disease, cancer and mental health problems, results show.
Walking to work also conferred some h...
Exercise near bedtime won’t necessarily wreck a person’s sleep, a new study says.
Intense exercise is typically discouraged as bedtime approaches, since such activity can disturb sleep by increasing body temperature and heart rate, researchers said.
But short resistance exercise "activity breaks" at regular intervals can actually...
It's a little known health condition that can become a nightmare: Regular and sudden episodes of intense nausea and vomiting.
Now, new clinical guidance urges people to take notes and speak up if they think they have the condition, known as cyclic vomiting syndrome (CVS).
About 2% of people experience CVS, but it can take years befor...
Autopsies of deceased boxers and pro football players have long confirmed that repeat head injuries can lead to a devastating brain condition known as chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE).
Now, research supports the notion that contact sports can also raise the odds for a Parkinson's-like disease, called parkinsonism, in athletes already...
Most salmonella outbreaks linked to poultry are caused by just a few strains of the diarrhea-causing bacteria, a new study finds.
There are more than 2,600 different types of salmonella bacteria, but only three strains are most likely to cause illness in humans, researchers report.
Interestingly, one of the most common types found in...
Defiance, tantrums, aggression: All signs of a condition called conduct disorder, which Mental Health America says affects up to 16% of boys and 9% of girls.
Now, research is revealing real differences in the brain structure of children and youths with conduct disorder, compared to those without the condition.
Specifically, the study...
Dropping weight prior to competition is a common practice among athletes.
But starving oneself prior to an intense athletic event is likely a wrongheaded, self-defeating practice, a new study warns.
Triathletes who ate less prior to competition lost more muscle mass and performed poorly, compared to their function after they followed...
Food tends to taste bland in space, astronauts have reported, making it tough for them to eat enough to stay healthy.
Focusing on foods' smell might help overcome this problem, a new study says.
Aroma plays a big role in the flavor of food, and researchers found that certain scents might be more powerful in the cramped confines of a ...
Being regular is good for you, a new study shows.
Predictable bowel movements could be tied to your long-term health, allowing your body to absorb essential nutrients without producing harmful organ-damaging toxins, researchers found.
The “Goldilocks zone” of bowel movement frequency, once or twice a day, is associated with bette...
Hormone therapy for breast cancer might reduce a woman’s later risk of dementia and Alzheimer’s disease, a new study finds.
Overall, hormone therapy is associated with a 7% lower risk of developing Alzheimer’s or a related dementia later in life, according to findings published July 16 in the journal JAMA Network Open.
As millions of American teens continue to struggle with their mental health, a new survey reveals a sizable gap between how much support teens say they get and how much support their parents think they are getting.
In the report, published Tuesday by the National Center for Health Statistics, just over a quarter of teens said they always ...
People's odds for Long COVID appear to be declining with the advent of new variants of the virus, along with repeat infections and vaccinations, new research shows.
That suggests that the average person's chances of developing long-term symptoms is falling over time, concluded a team from Germany.
"Although the cause of post-COVID-1...
An experimental blood test could help detect pregnant women at increased risk for preeclampsia, a serious high blood pressure condition that can harm both mother and child.
Researchers report the test looks at genetic markers found in tiny particles called extracellular vesicles that transfer information between human cells.
Women wi...
There's good news and bad for stroke survival in the United States: New research shows that Americans are now more likely to survive long-term, but that's more true for whites than for Black Americans.
At least for a sample of people living in the greater Cincinnati area, "we saw that there clearly has been an improvement in five-year mort...
Early exposure to antibiotics might increase a kid’s risk of asthma by altering their gut bacteria, a new mouse study finds.
Antibiotics could specifically lower gut production of indole propionic acid (IPA), a biochemical that's crucial to long-term protection against asthma, researchers reported July 15 in the journal Immunity...
The stress of living in a poor neighborhood might contribute to higher rates of aggressive prostate cancer in Black men, a new study warns.
Black men are more than twice as likely to die from prostate cancer than white men, and more likely to develop it as well, the researchers noted.
This could be due in part to living in disadvanta...
An experimental blood test might be able to predict whether glaucoma patients will continue to lose their vision following treatment, researchers report.
A biochemical called nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) tends to be lower in people with glaucoma compared to those without the eye disease, researchers found.
What’s more, g...