Medicine

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fromwww.theguardian.com
7 hours ago

NHS to trial potentially life-saving treatment for deadly liver disease

Thirteen major hospitals will use a device that cleans patients' blood that has become corrupted by toxins as a result of them developing acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF). ACLF is a severe and hard-to-treat form of liver disease linked to obesity, alcohol and hepatitis, in which patients suddenly deteriorate and have to be admitted to intensive care. Three out of four people affected are only diagnosed when it has already become life-threatening.
Medicine
fromTravel + Leisure
1 day ago

The Worst Mistakes Travelers Make After a Bee Sting-and How to Treat It the Right Way

A popular myth is that you should try to suck out the venom, but that can actually make things worse, according to Jared Ross, a board-certified emergency medicine physician and professor at the University of Missouri. Ross explains that sucking doesn't create enough suction to remove venom and instead increases blood flow to the area, which can cause the venom to spread.
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fromBusiness Insider
1 day ago

Corporate types are clamoring for a new kind of plastic surgery using dead people's fat

alloClae uses donor cadaver fat as a body filler for quick, low-downtime cosmetic augmentations favored by executives, costing up to $100,000.
Medicine
fromFortune
1 day ago

Meet the Gen Xer who lives on a boat-she supercommutes to California every few weeks for her $100-an-hour job. Just eight shifts cover all her bills | Fortune

A nurse funds a decade-long nomadic life aboard a sailing yacht by flying to San Francisco periodically to work high-paid per diem neonatal ICU shifts.
Medicine
fromThe New Yorker
2 days ago

The Role of Doctors Is Changing Forever

Clinicians must reclaim a healer role as patients increasingly bypass traditional medicine for A.I., telehealth, supplements, and wellness influencers.
#alzheimers-disease
Medicine
fromSlate Magazine
1 day ago

The Trump Administration Might Actually Do Something Good About a Chronic Disease-Unless RFK Jr. Gets in the Way

Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s leadership risks mixing conspiracy-driven misinformation with expanded Lyme research funding, threatening scientific credibility and patient care for chronic Lyme.
fromThe Atlantic
2 days ago

The Botched Rollout of Trump's Autism Miracle Drug

If President Donald Trump wanted Americans to take away one message about autism, it was this: Blame Tylenol. During his September press conference on the subject, Trump warned pregnant women more than a dozen times not to take the drug, even though two massive studies had found no meaningful association with the disorder in children. He also spread false rumors that "essentially no autism" can be found in Cuba or among the Amish.
Medicine
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

How Cannabis Hijacks the Teen Brain

Whatever mixture of genetics, temperament, trauma, and environment leads someone to use cannabis daily, such frequency almost inevitably results in addiction, that seemingly mysterious bending of the will and reward toward continued cannabis use despite adverse consequences. For example, money might be rewarding as a means to buy more cannabis, but no longer be very rewarding in and of itself. Or being high might become more desired than good grades or excelling at sports. The mind bends toward getting high as its preferred state.
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fromwww.dw.com
1 day ago

Not just hocus pocus: when words were used to treat the sick DW 12/19/2025

Incantations historically personified illnesses as demons or body parts and were used alongside physical remedies to expel disease.
#glp-1-agonists
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

What will your life look like in 2035?

In 2035, AIs are more than co-pilots in medicine, they have become the frontline for much primary care. Gone is the early morning scramble to get through to a harassed GP receptionist for help. Patients now contact their doctor's AI to explain their ailments. It quickly cross-checks the information against the patient's medical history and provides a pre-diagnosis, putting the human GP in a position to decide what to do next.
Medicine
fromIndependent
2 days ago

'Rita loved Christmas and getting the perfect present for everyone' - Maura Derrane on losing her sister and her 30-year TV career

Maura Derrane has been on our screens for three decades and has spent the last 14 co-hosting the 'Today' show with Dáithí Ó Sé - she talks to Kirsty Blake Knox about the programme's success and why Christmas is hard after losing her sister to cancer For many experiencing grief and loss, Christmas can be a challenging time. And that's something broadcaster Maura Derrane knows well.
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fromHarvard Gazette
2 days ago

Depression and anxiety linked to increased risk of heart attack or stroke - Harvard Gazette

Stress-related brain activity, nervous system dysregulation, and chronic inflammation link depression and anxiety to higher cardiovascular disease risk, with combined conditions increasing risk further.
Medicine
fromwww.bbc.com
3 days ago

People fake weight to obtain skinny jabs, says GP

Patients falsify weight measurements to obtain online prescriptions for Wegovy and Mounjaro, prompting calls for tighter checks and raising health and regulation concerns.
Medicine
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
3 days ago

ExcerptThe Great Shadow, by Susan Wise Bauer

Sickness exposes human vulnerability, abruptly reshaping individual lives, beliefs, and social responses while prompting urgent questions about cause, avoidance, and resistance.
fromScienceDaily
3 days ago

AI detects cancer but it's also reading who you are

A pathologist studies an extremely thin slice of human tissue under a microscope, searching for visual signs that reveal whether cancer is present and, if so, what type and stage it has reached. To a trained specialist, examining a pink, swirling tissue sample dotted with purple cells is like grading a test without a name on it -- the slide contains vital information about the disease, but it offers no clues about who the patient is.
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fromLondon Business News | Londonlovesbusiness.com
2 days ago

Are pre and post-surgical physiotherapy programmes worth it? - London Business News | Londonlovesbusiness.com

Pre- and post-surgical physiotherapy improves mobility, strengthens vulnerable areas, teaches safe movement, reduces complications, and supports faster, more confident long-term recovery.
fromNature
3 days ago

Publisher Correction: Covalent targeted radioligands potentiate radionuclide therapy - Nature

Beijing National Laboratory for Molecular Sciences, Radiochemistry and Radiation Chemistry Key Laboratory of Fundamental Science, Key Laboratory of Bioorganic Chemistry and Molecular Engineering of Ministry of Education, College of Chemistry and Molecular Engineering, Peking University, Beijing, P. R. China Xi-Yang Cui, Yu Liu, Zihao Wen, Changlun Wang, Junyi Chen, Mengxin Xu, Yiyan Li, Jingyue Gao & Zhibo Liu Changping Laboratory, Beijing, P. R. China Xi-Yang Cui, Hao Meng, Mengxin Xu & Zhibo Liu
Medicine
fromwww.aljazeera.com
3 days ago

Gaza doctors use 3D tech to save limbs shattered by Israel from amputation

Gaza medics use solar-powered 3D printers and recycled materials to manufacture low-cost external fixators, treating complex wartime fractures and preventing amputations.
Medicine
fromenglish.elpais.com
2 days ago

Six guidelines for keeping your brain young (and aging better)

Prioritizing healthy sleep and regular exercise preserves cognitive function and reduces neurodegenerative risk during aging.
fromThe Walrus
4 days ago

Is Everyone Else Grinding Their Teeth Too? | The Walrus

I was twenty-three and-as I was prone to doing in those years-hadn't eaten anything all day. When I arrived at the downtown hotel room where a friend was hosting a birthday party, the tangy chips beckoned. I crunched on them by the fistful. But by the time I'd emptied the bag, something felt terribly wrong. It wasn't just my cheeks puckering from the acerbity. My jaw stiffened. My ears rang.
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fromNature
4 days ago

Mazdutide versus dulaglutide in Chinese adults with type 2 diabetes - Nature

Lixin Guo and Bo Zhang contributed equally to the work, with Wenying Yang listed as the corresponding author.
Medicine
fromFast Company
3 days ago

How this kidney donor pilot program in Pennsylvania is using social media to save lives

A pilot program pairs dialysis patients with volunteer "angel advocates" who use social media to find living kidney donors, improving hope and early outcomes.
Medicine
fromwww.nature.com
4 days ago

Author Correction: Neuroimmune cardiovascular interfaces control atherosclerosis

Extended Data Fig. 8 contained an inadvertent duplication of two image panels; the upper-left 3-day panel was duplicated and has been replaced.
fromNature
4 days ago

Mazdutide versus placebo in Chinese adults with type 2 diabetes - Nature

Department of Endocrinology, The Affiliated Hospital of Xuzhou Medical University, Xuzhou, China Xuan Chu Department of Endocrinology, Xuanwu Hospital Capital Medical University, Beijing, China Shuangling Xiu Department of Endocrinology, Jilin Province FAW General Hospital, Changchun, China Chengwei Song Department of Endocrinology and Metabolism, The Fourth Affiliated Hospital, Harbin Medical University, Harbin, China Zhifeng Cheng Department of Endocrinology and Metabolology, Chengdu Fifth People's Hospital, Chengdu, China Hongyi Cao
Medicine
fromNature
4 days ago

Transient hepatic reconstitution of trophic factors enhances aged immunity - Nature

Replenishing thymus-derived factors (DLL1, FLT3-L, IL-7) via liver-expressed mRNA restores immune function in aged mice, improving vaccine and cancer immunotherapy responses.
fromNature
4 days ago

Restoring youth to old immune cells: mRNA therapy turns back the clock.

A twice-weekly cocktail of three messenger RNAs can rejuvenate the weary immune systems of aged mice and boost responses to vaccination and cancer treatments, a study has found. The treatment provides a needed boost to immune cells called T cells, which coordinate immune responses and kill infected cells. As people age, their ability to produce T cells wanes, and the ones they have become less effective.
Medicine
#retatrutide
Medicine
fromwww.independent.co.uk
3 days ago

Doctors say the system is breaking' as they begin five-day strike over pay row

Resident doctors in England began a five-day strike over jobs and pay, prompting warnings of NHS disruption amid rising winter illnesses.
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

The Psychology of Erectile Dysfunction in Young-Adult Men

Erections result from relaxation of the arteries that carry blood into the penis. As those arteries relax, they expand, allowing extra blood to flow into the organ, which produces an erection hydraulically. Starting in the 1980s, researchers showed that ED was often a result of cardiovascular disease (CVD), arterial narrowing that reduces blood flow around the body. When CVD limits blood flow through the heart, the result is heart disease, in the brain, stroke, and in the penis, ED.
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Medicine
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Donald Trump and the Goldwater rule | Letter

Responsible clinical observation of a public figure's documented behaviour, within ethical boundaries, should be allowed and can inform national understanding.
fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

She has stage four cancer. Her husband is a federal worker. Will she survive the Trump administration?

Michaela felt a sharp pain shoot from her hip while she bent over to water some plants in early May 2025. Then she fell over and couldn't get back up. Her husband called an ambulance and she spent the night in a hospital, where, at 57, she found out she had a mass on her spine. It was metastatic breast cancer.
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Medicine
fromBusiness Insider
4 days ago

I spent years trying to hide my face. Now I know that my differences have given me strength.

Brooke Parrish was born with Pfeiffer syndrome causing early bone fusion affecting her skull, limbs and digits, and she now embraces her facial differences.
Medicine
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
5 days ago

Heart and Kidney Diseases, plus Type 2 Diabetes, May Be One New Syndrome Treatable with New Drugs

Cardio‑kidney‑metabolic syndrome links heart, kidney, and metabolic diseases through shared biological mechanisms often originating in dysfunctional fat cells.
Medicine
fromBusiness Matters
5 days ago

The Making of a Scientific Leader: An Interview with Dr. Chun Ju Chang

Chun Ju Chang built an international cancer research and education career through rigorous training, leadership, publications, and mentoring.
Medicine
fromIrish Independent
5 days ago

'She dreams of a life full of possibilities' - Community rallies for Clare child's 'life changing' treatment

A three-year-old girl, Emma, with cerebral palsy and aortic stenosis is receiving widespread community support to fund specialised rehabilitation in the UK.
Medicine
fromresund Startups
6 days ago

World's First: FDA Approves Flow Neuroscience Device as First At-Home Brain Stimulation Treatment for Depression

Flow Neuroscience's FDA-approved at-home tDCS device provides a prescribable non-drug treatment option for adults with moderate to severe major depressive disorder.
Medicine
fromwww.npr.org
6 days ago

What's behind the wellness claims for the synthetic dye methylene blue?

Methylene blue shows mitochondrial and neurological benefits in lab and animal studies but human evidence remains limited while online biohackers promote it for wellness.
Medicine
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

Estrogen Finally OK'd (Again) By FDA

Estrogen therapy safely relieves menopausal symptoms and reduces midlife risks of heart disease, osteoporosis, and dementia for most women.
fromFortune
5 days ago

Female libido pill gets expanded approval for menopause by FDA | Fortune

U.S. health officials have expanded approval of a much-debated drug aimed at boosting female libido, saying the once-a-day pill can now be taken by postmenopausal women up to 65 years old. The announcement Monday from the Food and Drug Administration broadens the drug's use to older women who have gone through menopause. The pill, Addyi, was first approved 10 years ago for premenopausal women who report emotional stress due to low sex drive.
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Medicine
fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

Why did doctors reject Wes Streeting's offer? It still fails to treat us with respect | Jack Fletcher

Current government offer fails to increase frontline doctor numbers, repurposes posts, deepens the training bottleneck, and risks further NHS staff loss and patient harm.
fromIndependent
6 days ago

Lung cancer awareness: I had prepped myself for bad news, but I'll never forget the words 'Orla, you have a massive tumour'

"I was sent to hospital straight away with a referral letter and was waiting for 16 hours," she says. "I had X-rays, bloods and all the usual checks done, and afterwards I was told that I was fine, that there was nothing to worry about, and that it was just viral. I went home happy, thinking that it would pass soon and that I was just being dramatic."
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Medicine
fromwww.theguardian.com
6 days ago

Is it true that wearing heels changes the shape of your feet?

Regular, prolonged wearing of high heels and tight shoes deforms and weakens feet over time, causing bunions, hammer toes, pain, and eventual arthritis; moderation advised.
Medicine
fromPsychology Today
6 days ago

Detox-Withdrawal and Pain in Substance Use Disorders

Short-term withdrawal from nicotine and other addictive substances commonly causes increased pain sensitivity and higher postoperative analgesic needs.
Medicine
fromFuturism
1 week ago

Huge Study Finds Very Worrying Results for Medical Marijuana Patients

Medical cannabis shows minimal benefit for acute pain and insomnia, and about one-third of medical users meet criteria for cannabis use disorder.
Medicine
fromPsychology Today
6 days ago

Hyperemesis Gravidarum Is Not Just Morning Sickness

Hyperemesis gravidarum causes severe, prolonged pregnancy nausea and vomiting leading to weight loss, hospitalization, and significant psychological harm often dismissed as morning sickness.
fromBusiness Insider
1 week ago

A 42-year-old CEO was diagnosed with colon cancer. It pushed her to trade perfectionism for vulnerability.

When Jennifer Goldsack woke up after emergency surgery last Christmas, she was waiting to hear she had a stress ulcer. Maybe appendicitis. But not this. The surgeon had news that made no sense to her, as a 42-year-old CEO and former athlete: late-stage cancer. Goldsack had always prided herself on being able to get anything done - Olympic training schedules, corporate roadmaps, back-to-back meetings. Cancer forced her into a new, uncertain kind of leadership: one built on vulnerability, delegation, and uncertainty.
Medicine
fromScienceDaily
6 days ago

Harvard gut discovery could change how we treat obesity and diabetes

A research project supported by FAPESP and carried out at Harvard University in the United States has identified a set of metabolites that move from the intestine to the liver and then on to the heart, which distributes them throughout the body. These circulating compounds appear to influence how metabolic pathways function within the liver and how sensitive the body is to insulin. The findings point to potential new strategies for treating obesity and type 2 diabetes.
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Medicine
fromPsychology Today
6 days ago

The New Diet Drugs vs. Exercise: Which Works Better?

New GLP-1–based weight-loss drugs markedly reduce appetite, increase fullness, and drive large weight loss primarily through caloric reduction rather than exercise.
Medicine
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

The kindness of strangers: I was so ill I couldn't walk when a man virtually carried me to the toilets

A stranger rescued a fainting commuter and helped her to safety during a severe bout of nausea from a tummy bug.
Medicine
fromenglish.elpais.com
1 week ago

Max Hodak: Patients go from being almost blind to being able to read every letter on an eye chart and do crossword puzzles'

PRIMA ocular prosthesis restored reading ability for several severely visually impaired patients, enabling letter recognition and even full-page reading.
fromScienceDaily
1 week ago

New discovery offers real hope for rare genetic disease

"In this paper, instead of trying to pursue hypoxia to slow or postpone the disease as a therapy, we simply used it as a trick. We used it as a laboratory tool with which to discover genetic suppressors,"
Medicine
fromwww.mediaite.com
1 week ago

Scott Adams Says Trump-Assisted Cancer Drug for Him Stalled

"I'm still in Kaiser hospital. Day 2. Haven't pooped in 4-5 days and lost all ability to control my lower body since yesterday. I don't know if this is permanent or if it is growing. Legs have feeling and reflex but I have no control over them except the slightest toe wiggle. This is mostly from worsened since yesterday, but the leg numbing condition started over a month ago, Adams wrote in an X post."
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Medicine
fromBuzzFeed
1 week ago

This Is The Scary Reason Urgent Care Doctors Want You To Think Twice Before Walking In

Use urgent care for mild-to-moderate conditions; seek the emergency room for severe, life-threatening symptoms such as chest pain, severe abdominal pain, stroke signs, or trauma.
fromBusiness Insider
1 week ago

My parents moved in with us to care for my husband when he was diagnosed with Alzheimer's at 46.

My husband, Francisco - known as Pako - has always been professional, kind, and considerate to everyone. However, in the fall of 2020, I began to notice changes in his behavior, including skipping meals, struggling to find the right words in conversation, and difficulties managing his finances. I called him the human calculator because he had been in charge of our income and outgoings from before we got married in 2010, but all of a sudden, he would buy strange things.
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Medicine
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

My cultural awakening: The Lehman Trilogy helped me to live with my sight loss

Retinitis pigmentosa caused progressive tunnel vision, triggering identity loss, social withdrawal, and later emotional reconnection through a theatre experience that restored a sense of seeing.
Medicine
fromwww.bbc.com
1 week ago

Why are sperm donors having hundreds of children?

A small share of screened men donate sperm, yet a few donors can father unusually large numbers of children across many countries.
Medicine
fromFuturism
1 week ago

Scientists Discover Strong Upside for Men Getting Castrated

Surgically preventing reproduction, such as castration in males and sterilization or contraception in females, is associated with longer lifespans across mammals, including humans.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Johnson & Johnson ordered to pay $40m to women who said talc to blame for cancer

The jury in Los Angeles superior court awarded $18m to Monica Kent and $22m to Deborah Schultz and her husband after finding that Johnson & Johnson knew for years its talc-based products were dangerous but failed to warn consumers. Erik Haas, Johnson & Johnson's worldwide vice-president of litigation, said in a statement the company plans to immediately appeal this verdict and expect to prevail as we typically do with aberrant adverse verdicts.
Medicine
fromwww.npr.org
1 week ago

Testosterone levels have declined in men. Here's what the FDA wants to do about it

A Food and Drug Administration panel of health experts convened Wednesday to discuss and promote the health benefits of testosterone treatments for men. FDA Commissioner Martin Makary told Morning Edition that low testosterone is believed to be associated with symptoms in roughly one-third of men who have it, though he said the evidence and data are not fully defined. Symptoms can include "reduction in mood and vitality," Makary said.
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Medicine
fromHarvard Gazette
1 week ago

Break in the case for long COVID investigators - Harvard Gazette

Persistent chronic inflammation defines long COVID and highlights inflammatory pathways as therapeutic targets beyond antiviral approaches.
Medicine
fromAbove the Law
1 week ago

Brown Rudnick's Global Life Sciences Practice Group Co-Leaders Outline The Opportunities Defining Today's Market - Above the Law

Life sciences firms and investors must combine clinical, transactional, and geopolitical agility to capture growth driven by biologics, immunotherapies, Asia-Pacific expansion, and M&A momentum.
fromwww.bbc.com
1 week ago

'It's amazing' the wonder material very few can make

Lying on your back in a big hospital scanner, as still as you can, with your arms above your head for 45 minutes. It doesn't sound much fun. That's what patients at Royal Brompton Hospital in London had to do during certain lung scans, until the hospital installed a new device last year that cut these examinations down to just 15 minutes.
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#prosthetics
Medicine
fromwww.nature.com
1 week ago

Author Correction: Cancer SLC43A2 alters T cell methionine metabolism and histone methylation

Extended Data Fig. 1j contained a duplicated flow cytometry dot plot (Sup+Ser duplicated from A375 sup); the figure has been corrected in online versions.
Medicine
fromIndependent
1 week ago

Nearly half of GP trainees this year are from universities abroad, amid Ireland's family doctor shortage

Republic of Ireland medical schools provided 54% of July GP training places, while many GP trainees trained abroad despite recent increases in overall places.
Medicine
fromwww.mercurynews.com
1 week ago

Former Stanford and Nets star Jason Collins battling stage 4 brain cancer

Jason Collins, the first openly gay NBA player, is battling stage four glioblastoma that threatens his frontal lobe and is pursuing aggressive, experimental treatments.
Medicine
fromTODAY.com
1 week ago

Woman Gives Birth in Carl's Jr. Parking Lot, Blames Husband: 'He Thought I Was Being Dramatic'

A woman unexpectedly gave birth in a fast-food parking lot after being denied care at a medical center while en route to the hospital.
Medicine
fromwww.bbc.com
1 week ago

Doctor wrote off my hair loss and dizziness as 'just being a tired mum'

Iron deficiency commonly causes extreme fatigue and other symptoms in women, particularly after pregnancy, and can be overlooked despite being treatable.
fromLos Angeles Times
1 week ago

Bakersfield woman with 22-pound ovarian cyst discovers she's pregnant. Baby 'defied all the odds'

"Suze was pregnant, but her uterus was empty, and a giant benign ovarian cyst weighing over 20 pounds was taking up so much space," said John Ozimek, medical director of labor and delivery, in the release. "We then discovered a nearly full-term baby boy in a small space in the abdomen, near the liver, with his butt resting on the uterus. A pregnancy this far outside the uterus that continues to develop is almost unheard of."
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Medicine
fromTODAY.com
1 week ago

Mom Unaware She Was Pregnant Delivers Baby - and Gives Him the Perfect Name

Cryptic pregnancies occur when people don't realize they're pregnant until late gestation or delivery, often resulting in no prenatal care and increased health risks.
Medicine
fromNews Center
1 week ago

Novel Biomarker May Predict Immunotherapy Resistance - News Center

USP22 suppresses MHC-I–mediated neoantigen presentation, driving immune checkpoint blockade resistance and representing a potential therapeutic target to restore antitumor T-cell responses.
Medicine
fromwww.cbc.ca
1 week ago

New stimulant prescriptions up 157% since 2015, Ontario researchers find | CBC News

ADHD stimulant prescriptions in Ontario rose 157% from 2015–2023, accelerating after 2020 with the largest increases among adult females.
Medicine
fromHarvard Gazette
1 week ago

'Consciousness' - Harvard Gazette

Consciousness is dynamic and fluctuates; bedside behavioral criteria can miss signs and neuroimaging reveals covert responsiveness, requiring repeated assessments in critical care.
Medicine
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Campaigners in legal effort to suspend trial of puberty blockers in England

Campaigners seek to suspend an NHS-funded puberty blocker trial claiming it risks harm and lacks robust evidence and safeguards for vulnerable gender-questioning young people.
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Does Tinnitus Cause Dementia?

Dementia is one of the great fears of aging, especially as rates continue to climb in many countries. So when headlines suggest that tinnitus-a condition affecting nearly one in five adults-may be linked to dementia, people predictably become anxious. I often meet patients more concerned about the fear of cognitive decline than of the ringing itself. In many cases, this fear alone makes their tinnitus worse.
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Medicine
fromIrish Independent
1 week ago

Real Health podcast: The sleep science episode with Professor Andrew Coogan

Maximize bright morning sunlight and minimize blue-rich evening LED light to support healthy sleep; women experience higher rates of insomnia linked to anxiety and depression.
Medicine
fromIrish Independent
1 week ago

Dublin Zoo hippo (18) sees the world for the first time after groundbreaking surgery

Imani, an 18-year-old common hippopotamus, regained sight after the first successful cataract operation performed on a common hippo worldwide.
fromTODAY.com
1 week ago

NICU Twins Meet For the First Time After Birth. What They Did Had Nurses Crying

Nurses put them on my chest, and they randomly locked hands, The nurses all freaked out, and they took the pictures.
Medicine
Medicine
fromBuzzFeed
1 week ago

An 88-Year-Old Woman Was Brought To My ER. When Her Family Told Me Why, I Was Stunned.

Family support and honest communication provide emotional strength during crisis, even when medical news is devastating.
Medicine
fromIndependent
1 week ago

Suzanne Crowe: Extra charges for pharmacy blister packs will hit the most vulnerable in our communities

A proposed measure could reduce medication safety, raising concern among older people and disability organisations.
Medicine
fromBusiness Insider
1 week ago

I went through early menopause at 29. It upended my work and life for nearly two decades - here's what finally helped.

Medically induced early menopause at 29 after hysterectomy caused severe physical and emotional symptoms that complicated full-time nursing and required hormone management.
fromIT Pro
1 week ago

How Dragon Copilot is helping clinicians spend more time with their patients

Maintaining medical records for tens of millions of people in the UK has become a colossal administrative challenge for the NHS. A recent trial of 's AI-driven healthcare tool Dragon Copilot has improved efficiency and enhanced the doctor-patient relationship. One of the essential responsibilities for clinicians (healthcare professionals, such as a doctor or nurse, who provide direct patient care) is accurate record-taking. This adds a substantial administrative burden to each consultation and takes up a considerable amount of time.
Medicine
Medicine
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Corridor care endemic' in UK, doctors say as study reveals scale of problem

One in five A&E patients in the UK receive care in corridors, offices, or other non-routine areas, creating widespread unsafe and undignified conditions.
Medicine
fromScienceDaily
1 week ago

Blood tests reveal obesity rapidly accelerates Alzheimer's progression

Obesity accelerates Alzheimer's-related blood biomarker changes up to 95%, with blood tests detecting changes earlier than brain PET scans.
#pancreatic-cancer
fromNature
1 week ago
Medicine

Therapeutic vaccines can challenge pancreatic cancer before it takes hold

fromNature
1 week ago
Medicine

Therapeutic vaccines can challenge pancreatic cancer before it takes hold

Medicine
fromKqed
1 week ago

Stanford Study Offers Clue to Rare Myocarditis After COVID Vaccination | KQED

Spacing vaccine doses and estrogen-like genistein may reduce vaccine-associated myocarditis while preserving vaccine protection.
fromWIRED
1 week ago

Scientists Thought Parkinson's Was in Our Genes. It Might Be in the Water

Amy Lindberg spent 26 years in the Navy and she still walked like it-with intention, like her chin had someplace to be. But around 2017, her right foot stopped following orders. Lindberg and her husband Brad were five years into their retirement. After moving 10 times for Uncle Sam, they'd bought their dream house near the North Carolina coast. They had a backyard that spilled out onto wetlands. From the kitchen, you could see cranes hunting. They kept bees and played pickleball and watched their children grow.
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