Health A-Z News & Updates
- CDC Warns of Mpox Resurgence This Summer
May 16, 2023 — A resurgence of mpox (formerly called monkeypox) this summer could be larger than last year’s caseload, the CDC said in a warning to public health officials this week.
- Will AI Perpetuate or Eliminate Health Disparities?
May 15, 2023 — As AI algorithms ramps up, should patients be raging against the machine or encouraged that they might eventually be treated equally?
- CDC Looking into New Cases of Monkeypox
May 11, 2023 — The CDC said this week it is investigating several new cases of mpox, formerly called monkeypox. Most of the people infected had been previously vaccinated.
- CDC Says Walensky Will Step Down as Director in June
May 5, 2023 — CDC Director Rochelle Walensky, MD, MPH, will step down from her position at the end of June, 2 ½ years after assuming the role during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.
- The Amazing Things We Can Learn From Hospital Clowns
May 4, 2023 — Research shows that hospital clowns, aka medical clowns, therapeutic clowns, or clown doctors, can enhance patients’ quality of life and healing. We found a clown to show us how it’s done.
- Cleaning and Personal Products Contain Dangerous Chemicals
May 4, 2023 — Dangerous chemicals are found in dozens of everyday consumer products, according to a new survey. The chemicals were found in more than 100 products commonly used in homes and workplaces.
- Is ChatGPT in Your Doctor’s Inbox?
May 3, 2023 — What happens when a chatbot slips into your doctor’s direct messages? Depending on who you ask, it might improve outcomes. On the other hand, it might raise a few red flags.
- The Doctor’s Visit of the Future: Less Touching, More Tech
April 27, 2023 — The COVID-19 pandemic helped untether the primary care visit from the doctor’s office, empowering patients to demand access to their primary care doctors via video or other virtual means. Experts took notice.
- Turns Out Cranberries Really Can Prevent Some UTIs, Research Shows
April 25, 2023 — Researchers have determined that cranberries in juice, tablet or powder form may lower the risk of repeated, symptomatic urinary tract infections based on the results of 50 trials involving almost 9,000 people.
- Chronic Drinking Can Increase Pain Sensitivity, Study Says
April 24, 2023 — Research on mice led scientists to conclude that chronic alcohol consumption can make people more sensitive to pain in two ways – through alcohol intake and alcohol withdrawal, says a study just published in the British Journal of Pharmacology.
- Is This a New Era of Medical Marijuana Breakthroughs?
April 20, 2023 — For years, research into cannabis’s health effects has been severely limited. That’s finally changing, slowly. The results could alter the future of medicine and improve public health.
- Strep Throat Cases Up 30% This Season
April 20, 2023 — Cases of strep throat surged this past winter, breaking a pre-pandemic trend that had been predictable since 2017, a new report says.
- Study Calls Poverty a ‘Major Risk Factor for Death in the U.S.’
April 19, 2023 — Poverty rates may help explain lower life expectancy, according to a research letter.
- Ozzy's Wearable Cyborg May Be The Future of Physical Therapy
April 17, 2023 — Hybrid assistive limb technology, which senses the movement you want to perform and then helps you do it, is starting to catch on in the U.S.
- CDC Warns U.S. Doctors of Marburg Virus Amid Outbreaks in Africa
April 7, 2023 — The CDC has issued a health advisory about an outbreak of the Marburg virus disease in two African nations, saying U.S. doctors should be aware of the chance of imported cases.
- Vaccine Trial Shows Promise Against Candida Fungal Infection
March 29, 2023 — Although relatively rare, C. auris infections can lead to death for between 30% to 70% of those at higher risk.
- Most Retailers Give Receipts Containing Chemicals Like BPA
March 26, 2023 — Most major chain stores still give receipts that have potentially toxic chemicals on them that can easily transfer to people’s skin, a new study shows. Studies have shown possible effects on the brains of fetuses, infants, and children, plus potential links to blood pressure, Type 2 diabetes, heart disease, and childhood behavior.
- New Study Links Eating Meat to Urinary Tract Infections
March 24, 2023 — At least half a million urinary tract infections are caused by eating meat contaminated with E.coli bacteria, a new study reports.
- Cases of Invasive Group Strep A Rising in Parts of Country
March 23, 2023 — The CDC says cases of invasive group A strep infections, which rose in December after a pandemic lull, have remained high so far this year, ABC News reports.
- DNA From Beethoven’s Hair Offers Clues on Composer’s Ailments
March 23, 2023 — Nearly 200 years after his death, researchers continue to try to grant a dying wish of composer Ludwig Van Beethoven to study his health problems. Progressive hearing loss beginning in his early 20s left him deaf at his time of death, and he complained of chronic stomach problems.
- Cases of Potentially Deadly Fungus Jump 200%: CDC
March 21, 2023 — Cases of a potentially deadly and increasingly treatment-resistant fungus called Candida auris have skyrocketed 200% since 2019, prompting the CDC to issue a warning to healthcare facilities about the rising threat.
- Old-School Printer Helps Scientists Spot Bacteria in Blood
March 20, 2023 — A faster way to identify bacterial infection in blood combines nanoparticles, AI, and ink-jet printer technology.
- Frozen Strawberries Recalled Due to Hepatitis A Outbreak
March 19, 2023 — A nationwide recall of organic frozen strawberry products is underway. The FDA is advising people who ate the products to get vaccinated against hepatitis A to prevent liver infection and symptoms like nausea and jaundice.
- New Proposal to Limit 'Forever Chemicals' in Drinking Water
March 15, 2023 — The EPA on Tuesday announced the proposal for six substances commonly known as PFAS, which are human-made chemicals that are used as oil and water repellents and coatings for common products including cookware, carpets, and textiles.
- Zombie Viruses: Fascinating and a Little Frightening
March 10, 2023 — As researchers revive 48,000-year-old “zombie” viruses and other microbes from Siberian permafrost, what does it mean for pandemic-weary humans encountering things our modern immune systems have never seen?
- FDA Considers Two Drugmakers for First RSV Vaccine
February 28, 2023 — An FDA advisory panel is considering two drugmakers to make the first respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) vaccine. Pfizer and GSK seek to lead the market that could be worth between $5 billion and $10 billion.
- Controlled Substance Prescriptions to be Limited Using Telehealth
February 26, 2023 — The DEA plans to make changes to the prescribing criteria for ADHD medications and highly addictive drugs like opioids, the agency announced.
- Former President Jimmy Carter, 98, Enters Hospice Care
February 19, 2023 — Former President Jimmy Carter will forgo further hospital care and will enter hospice care at his home in Georgia, the Carter Center in Atlanta announced.
- Bird Flu Is Infecting More Mammals. What Does That Mean for Us?
February 16, 2023 — The bird flu currently poses a low risk to the public, but experts worry that the virus could gain mutations that help it more easily spread among humans.
- Bruce Willis Now Diagnosed With Dementia, Family Says
February 16, 2023 — Bruce Willis, who rose to stardom in the 1980s on the TV series “Moonlighting” and in movies such as “Die Hard,” has frontotemporal dementia, the actor’s family announced in a statement Thursday.
- Is $3.5 Million a Fair Price for a Lifesaving Gene Therapy?
February 15, 2023 — Here's why gene therapies are the most expensive drugs in the world —and how these groundbreaking treatments could severely strain our health care system.
- Expelled From High School, Alister Martin Became a Harvard Doc
February 13, 2023 — It’s not often that a high school brawl with gang members sets you down a path to becoming a Harvard-trained doctor. But that’s exactly how Alister Martin’s life unfolded.
- New Report Says Suicide Rates Rising Among Young Black People
February 12, 2023 — The rising national suicide rate is being driven by increases among younger people and among people of color, according to a new report. Significant increases in suicide occurred among Native American, Black and Hispanic people, with a startling rise among young Black people.
- U.S. to Test Vaccine in Poultry as Bird Flu Deaths Rise
February 10, 2023 — Every state has found bird flu in wild birds and 47 states have found it in poultry flocks, including 18 states in the last 30 days, the USDA said.
- Norovirus Cases Are on the Upswing, CDC Says
February 10, 2023 — There were 225 norovirus outbreaks reported to the CDC between Aug. 1, 2022, and Jan. 8, 2023, compared to 172 outbreaks during the same period the previous season, according to CDC data.
- Black, Hispanic Dialysis Patients Have Higher Infection Rates
February 7, 2023 — Black and Hispanic people on dialysis have higher rates of staph bloodstream infections than White people, with Hispanic patients having a 40% higher risk of staph bloodstream infections, a report released by the CDC said.
- Pill for Postpartum Depression Submitted for FDA Review
February 6, 2023 — A pill that could change the way postpartum depression is treated has been submitted to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for priority review, pharmaceutical companies Sage Therapeutics and Biogen announced.
- Warmer Temperatures Could Be Helping Dangerous Fungi Spread
February 4, 2023 — Scientific evidence suggests “dangerous fungal infections are on the rise.” As temperatures have risen, some fungi are adapting to higher heat, including within people, the newspaper wrote.
- Avian H5N1 Flu Outbreak Now Spreading to Mammals
February 3, 2023 — The U.S. Department of Agriculture and its counterpart in the United Kingdom say the bird flu has been detected in mammals such as raccoons, foxes, bears, skunks, and even a cat in France.
- Three Wild Technologies About to Change Health Care
February 3, 2023 — If you thought AI was remarkable, just wait until you see these.
- Brain Scans Show Effect of Poverty, Stress on Black Children
February 1, 2023 — Childhood stress can change the brain negatively, according to a new study that says Black children are affected more because they experience more poverty and adversity.
- Teens Used Pot Less When Pandemic Hit, Study Finds
January 31, 2023 — Teenagers used marijuana less in the first year of the pandemic, a new study shows, while adult use of cannabis, illegal drugs and alcohol stayed the same or increased.
- Despite High Spending, U.S. Ranks Last in Health Outcomes: Study
January 31, 2023 — The U.S. spends dramatically more on health care than other high-income nations but has the worst health outcomes on nearly every metric, a new report shows. Despite the high health care spending rate, affordability of health care was the top reason Americans gave for skipping or delaying care.
- New Book Explores Why Trust Is Vital For Doctors, Patients
January 31, 2023 — In How Medicine Works and When It Doesn't, F. Perry Wilson, MD, guides readers through the murky and often treacherous landscape of modern medicine.
- Gut Microbiome May Control Body Temperature, Study Says
January 30, 2023 — Gut microbiome appears to play a big role in regulating body temperature, both in long-term health and during life-threatening medical situations such as sepsis, according to a study from the University of Michigan.
- Coffee With Milk May Fight Inflammation, Preliminary Research Shows
January 30, 2023 — The combination of polyphenols and amino acids was seen to be twice as effective at fighting inflammation as polyphenol alone, in preliminary research suggesting that coffee with milk could be an anti-inflammatory.
- FDA Proposes Gender-Inclusive Questions for Blood Donor Screenings
January 29, 2023 — The FDA has proposed updating blood donor screening questions to be gender-inclusive, in a long-sought move away from uniform exclusions for gay men and men who have sex with men.
- FDA Wants New Regulatory Framework for CBD Use
January 27, 2023 — The federal government denied three citizen petitions for guidance on the use of CBD in food and supplements.
- Newly Discovered Genetic Disease Is More Common Than Expected
January 25, 2023 — VEXAS syndrome, which causes multiple symptoms, may affect tens of thousands of U.S. men
- Toxic ‘Forever Chemical’ PFOs Found in Freshwater Fish Across U.S.
January 17, 2023 — Freshwater fish caught in the nation’s rivers and the Great Lakes had dangerous levels of a toxic additive -- PFOs -- that has leached into the nation’s drinking water, a new study says.