#harvard-health-publishing

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#gut-health
Health
fromHarvard Gazette
14 hours ago

Guide to a healthy gut - Harvard Gazette

40 percent of Americans find bowel movements disruptive to daily life, according to a Harvard gastroenterologist.
Medicine
fromHarvard Gazette
3 weeks ago

Are your bathroom habits normal? - Harvard Gazette

Trisha Pasricha's book addresses gut health and bowel movements with humor and aims to provide accurate information on often-embarrassing topics.
Health
fromHarvard Gazette
14 hours ago

Guide to a healthy gut - Harvard Gazette

40 percent of Americans find bowel movements disruptive to daily life, according to a Harvard gastroenterologist.
Medicine
fromHarvard Gazette
3 weeks ago

Are your bathroom habits normal? - Harvard Gazette

Trisha Pasricha's book addresses gut health and bowel movements with humor and aims to provide accurate information on often-embarrassing topics.
Mental health
fromForbes
21 hours ago

What Many Mental Health Clinics Get Wrong About Content Marketing

Mental health clinics struggle with patient engagement due to unclear messaging that fails to address the hesitance of potential clients.
Information security
fromHarvard Gazette
5 days ago

Got personal financial, medical data you'd like to keep private? Good luck.Got personal financial, medical data you'd like to keep private? Good luck. - Harvard Gazette

New AI models may increase the risk of cybercriminals breaching secure systems, exposing personal data.
#alzheimers-disease
Medicine
fromHarvard Gazette
6 days ago

Blood test has potential to detect earliest signals of Alzheimer's disease - Harvard Gazette

Higher levels of pTau217 can predict faster Alzheimer's progression years before symptoms or brain scan changes appear.
Medicine
fromHarvard Gazette
6 days ago

Blood test has potential to detect earliest signals of Alzheimer's disease - Harvard Gazette

Higher levels of pTau217 can predict faster Alzheimer's progression years before symptoms or brain scan changes appear.
Public health
fromHarvard Gazette
6 days ago

Dangers coming from inside the house - Harvard Gazette

John D. Spengler's research significantly advanced indoor air quality awareness and led to smoking bans on airplanes and improved childhood asthma understanding.
US politics
fromHarvard Gazette
1 week ago

What it will take to turn things around - Harvard Gazette

The U.S. needs a unifying leader and a functional government to address political divisiveness and foreign policy issues.
Intellectual property law
fromNature
1 week ago

US lawmakers intensify scrutiny of scientific-publishing practices

US lawmakers are increasingly addressing issues in scientific publishing, including high publishing fees and the impact of 'paper mills' on research integrity.
Health
fromwww.businessinsider.com
4 days ago

A top doctor doesn't use fitness trackers, but is obsessed with one health metric

Fitness trackers are generally unnecessary, but tracking step count can encourage daily activity.
Higher education
fromHarvard Gazette
1 week ago

'This is not about Harvard. It is about higher education.' - Harvard Gazette

The partnership between U.S. universities and government is threatened, risking a brain drain similar to post-war Europe.
#health
Arts
fromHarvard Gazette
2 weeks ago

Getting to know your colleagues' creative side - Harvard Gazette

Harvard's annual Staff Art Show showcases the artistic talents of 215 staff members across multiple campus locations.
#wellness-culture
Wellness
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago

Love or hate the wellness craze? Here's why.

Wellness culture influences behavior changes but can also provoke defensiveness and resistance due to perceived inadequacies.
fromThe New Yorker
3 months ago
Humor

Diagnosis: Wellness Guru

Obsession with wellness trends is framed as an escalating, diagnosable condition that begins with harmless tips and leads to extreme lifestyle rituals.
Wellness
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago

Love or hate the wellness craze? Here's why.

Wellness culture influences behavior changes but can also provoke defensiveness and resistance due to perceived inadequacies.
fromBoston.com
2 weeks ago

Mass. House passes bill restricting teen social media and phones in schools

"The harmful impacts of unregulated technology on our children are something our educators and librarians have long been concerned about," said Jessica Tang, president of the American Federation of Teachers, Massachusetts.
Boston
Medicine
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

How Cognitive and Social Forces Shape Medical Decisions

Medical decisions are influenced by how options are framed, presented, and the dynamics of the situation.
Public health
fromThe Nation
2 weeks ago

Public Health Needs to Get Off the Laptop and Into the Streets

Transformational experiences in South Africa with TAC emphasized the importance of community engagement and effective communication in health education.
Science
fromHarvard Gazette
2 weeks ago

The questions that keep scientists up at night - Harvard Gazette

Major unanswered questions in various scientific fields continue to challenge researchers, highlighting the limits of current knowledge and the potential impact of future discoveries.
Exercise
fromScienceDaily
4 weeks ago

Just a few minutes of effort could lower your risk of 8 major diseases

Just a few minutes of vigorous activity daily can significantly reduce the risk of major diseases like heart disease and dementia.
Mental health
fromwww.bbc.com
3 weeks ago

Men's group hopes to eases strain on NHS services

Moreton Men Sports Group provides informal mental health support through sports, helping men combat loneliness and connect with their community.
Health
fromHarvard Gazette
2 weeks ago

Expanding the fight against heart disease - Harvard Gazette

New guidelines emphasize lifelong heart disease prevention starting in childhood, integrating advanced risk assessment tools and targeting high-risk populations.
from24/7 Wall St.
1 month ago

Wave Life Sciences Slips as Obesity Data Fails to Convince

The INLIGHT interim readout reported a 14.3% placebo-adjusted reduction in visceral fat six months after a single dose, alongside preservation of lean muscle mass - a differentiated profile compared to GLP-1 therapies that often reduce muscle alongside fat.
Cancer
Education
fromHarvard Gazette
1 month ago

How high school shapes future success - Harvard Gazette

Higher 10th-grade test scores and college plans correlate with better long-term educational and earning outcomes for students.
fromHarvard Gazette
1 month ago

New study links more immigrants with lower elderly mortality - Harvard Gazette

"This result is very supportive of the value that foreign-born workers add to the health of our population. When you have an increase in immigration, you end up with more long-term care workers. It's additive, not substitutive."
Healthcare
Health
fromHarvard Gazette
4 weeks ago

Rethinking what it means to age - Harvard Gazette

Living longer does not equate to living healthier, as many older adults face chronic health conditions.
Medicine
fromHarvard Gazette
1 month ago

Study suggests healing skin without scarring may be possible - Harvard Gazette

Researchers have discovered a way to reactivate embryonic skin regeneration mechanisms in mice, potentially allowing for scar-free healing in humans.
fromHarvard Gazette
1 month ago

Hope for hard-to-treat heart disease

Some 1 million patients in the U.S. live with a type of heart disease called heart failure with preserved ejection fraction, or HFpEF, caused by a stiffening of a chamber of the heart that makes it much more challenging to distribute blood throughout the body. The condition has few approved therapies and high mortality rates.
Miscellaneous
Higher education
fromHarvard Gazette
2 months ago

How academia can help America heal - Harvard Gazette

An educational 'caste system' privileges elite-university graduates, restricts social mobility, and fuels populist resentment and distrust of institutions.
Alternative medicine
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
1 month ago

Taking a multivitamin could slow some signs of aging, new study suggests

A two-year multivitamin-multimineral study found modest slowing of biological aging markers by 1.5 to two months per year, though effects varied across different epigenetic clocks measured.
Boston
fromBoston.com
1 month ago

Boston-area hospitals rank among the world's best, Newsweek says

Fourteen Massachusetts hospitals ranked among the world's top 250 hospitals for 2026, with Massachusetts General Hospital placing fifth globally and Brigham and Women's Hospital ranking 18th.
Business
fromHarvard Business Review
2 months ago

Stop Promoting the Wrong People into Manager Roles

Organizations face significant management effectiveness shortfalls, with low satisfaction and trust in mid-level and frontline managers among HR leaders and employees.
fromExchangewire
2 months ago

Experian: "New Year, New Me" Is Now a Year-Round Wellness Mindset

In the first two weeks of January 2026, overall spend on health and wellbeing rose by 3.9% year-on-year, despite customer numbers falling by 2.8%. Spend per customer increased by 6.8%, showing that those who continue to prioritise health are committing more of their budget to it. The data suggests that January is no longer viewed as a reset period, reflecting how health and wellbeing is now prioritised within household budgets throughout the year rather than treated as discretionary spend.
Marketing
Relationships
fromHarvard Gazette
2 months ago

Did I say too much? - Harvard Gazette

Purposeful personal disclosure builds trust, deepens relationships, increases likeability, and can be learned when done at the right time with appropriate social risk.
Miscellaneous
fromBoston.com
1 month ago

Massachusetts joins insurers cutting coverage for popular weight-loss drugs

Massachusetts ended GLP-1 weight loss drug coverage for 460,000 state employees in a 10-7 vote to reduce $46 million in annual costs and control state budget strain.
Health
fromBoston.com
1 month ago

People are spending hundreds of dollars at IV drip bars in Boston. Are they worth the hype?

IV vitamin infusion clinics are expanding across Massachusetts, charging hundreds of dollars for vitamins and supplements available cheaply in pill form, despite unproven health benefits and concerns about drawing nurses from understaffed medical facilities.
fromHarvard Gazette
1 month ago

American heart health worsening - Harvard Gazette

Many other higher-income countries are grappling with rising obesity and diabetes, but the U.S. stands out for how consistently those risks translate into worse cardiovascular outcomes, and how wide the gaps are by income, race, ethnicity, and geography.
Public health
Wellness
fromwww.nytimes.com
2 months ago

24 Tips for Better Health and Wellness

Simple, evidence-based mantras—train the mind, prioritize sleep and gut health, accept aging, and use less parental control—capture core physical and mental wellness principles.
fromJezebel
2 months ago

MAHA Wellness Influencer Shows Off How Well She Can Dodge Questions During Surgeon General Hearing

"Do you believe that the abortion pill mifepristone is safe and should be prescribed without an in-person visit with a physician?" Sen. Bill Cassidy asked. "I think that every medication has risks and benefits," Means replied. "I think that all patients need to have a thorough conversation with their doctor and have true informed consent before taking any medication."
US politics
#jeffrey-epstein
Mental health
fromHarvard Gazette
1 month ago

Is social media responsible for what happens to users? - Harvard Gazette

A Los Angeles jury will determine whether Meta's Instagram and Google's YouTube are intentionally designed to be addictive and cause mental health harm to teenagers, potentially reshaping tech platform liability under a 1996 law.
fromAol
1 month ago

How Americans are rethinking wellness in 2026

Instead of chasing fleeting fads, people have been responding to a deep-seated burnout fueled by economic instability and the relentless demands of hybrid work. This exhaustion is steering many away from generic fitness trends and toward the precision of wearables, health apps, and AI-driven tools.
Wellness
Medicine
fromBoston.com
1 month ago

Baystate Health doctor on probation after lewd behavior inside his office

A Springfield neurologist received five-year probation after being caught masturbating in his office visible to cancer center employees, with his license initially suspended but later reinstated under conditions.
Public health
fromNature
2 months ago

Are health influencers making us sick?

Internet and social-media platforms are reshaping health information, often prioritizing engagement and commerce over reliable, evidence-based medical guidance.
fromBuzzFeed
2 months ago

Doctors, Nurses, And EMTs Are Sharing Body Facts They Wish Everyone Knew Sooner

You get sick from staying inside, breathing the same germ-filled air. Open your windows, even for five minutes, to circulate the old air out and let in fresh air. Also, if you're taking your child to the doctor, don't wait to treat their fever because you want 'the provider to see the fever.' Your child might wait two hours to be seen, meanwhile their temperature goes up, and they might have a seizure. If you say they've been having fevers, we believe you.
Public health
Health
fromHarvard Gazette
1 month ago

Which is worse, a soda or a beer? - Harvard Gazette

Water is beneficial; sugary drinks are harmful; alcohol offers mixed health effects requiring moderation, with cardiovascular benefits potentially outweighing cancer risks at low consumption levels.
Medicine
fromHarvard Gazette
2 months ago

Drinking 2-3 cups of coffee a day tied to lower dementia risk - Harvard Gazette

Drinking two to three cups of coffee daily or one to two cups of caffeinated tea reduces dementia risk and slows cognitive decline.
fromBoston.com
2 months ago

Can shoveling snow trigger heart attacks? Here's what Boston's cardiologists had to say

I think this is a fairly recognized phenomenon,
Public health
Medicine
fromHarvard Gazette
2 months ago

An Alzheimer's breakthrough 10 years in the making - Harvard Gazette

Lithium is a natural brain element whose depletion contributes to Alzheimer's and lithium orotate prevented and reversed Alzheimer's pathology and memory loss in mice.
fromHarvard Gazette
2 months ago

Six cancers rising faster in younger adults than older ones - Harvard Gazette

The work, published in November, painted a disturbing yet complex picture that varies globally according to cancer type, sex, and national context. The study examined cases that occurred between 2000 and 2017 and found 13 cancers on the rise in those under 50 in at least 10 countries, and six cancers - colorectal, cervical, pancreatic, prostate, kidney and multiple myeloma - rising faster in younger adults than in older adults in at least five.
Health
Health
fromHarvard Gazette
1 month ago

Warning signs of alcohol-use disorder relapse - Harvard Gazette

Long-term sobriety relapse risk involves biological, psychological, social, and treatment support changes, with pain and recreational drug use being strongest predictors.
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