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A new study finds just one to two cups of coffee a day may significantly lower your risk of cirrhosis, liver cancer and death from liver disease.
Researchers conducted a secret shopper study, evaluating 49 websites offering GLP-1 medications, to assess prescribing practices, clinician involvement, and quality of care.
A new review of 21 randomized clinical trials suggests artificial sweeteners may affect blood sugar regulation and metabolism.
An E. coli outbreak linked to frozen blueberries has sickened 12 people, four of them seriously enough to require hospital care, federal health officials say.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FD...
The best thing about your morning coffee may not be the caffeine kick.
A study just published in the journal Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology suggests as little as one to two cups a day may lower your risk of serious liver disease.
The study includ...
U.S. teens are seriously underestimating how lethal the synthetic opioid fentanyl can be, a new study says.
More than half of American eighth-graders don’t think it’s dangerous to experiment with fentanyl, researchers reported July 7 in JAMA Network Open<...
More men die from cancer than women, and a new study suggests one potential reason why.
Men are more likely than women to be diagnosed with advanced cancer that has spread to other parts of the body, researchers report in the July issue of the journal Cancer Epidemio...
Caring for a loved one with dementia can be incredibly stressful — and a great deal of that stress could be coming from caregivers second-guessing themselves, a new study says.
Caregivers who dwell on difficult problems, negative thoughts or distressing events can ...
A targeted training program can help young female soccer players avoid torn knees and other injuries, a new study says.
Girls who play soccer have a higher risk of leg and ankle injuries compared to boys, due to differences in strength and balance, researchers said in ba...
A parasite that causes severe, watery diarrhea is spreading across the United States, and health officials in Michigan are racing to explain an unusual surge in cases.
Michigan's outbreak has grown fast. It has recorded 572 cases of cyclosporiasis as of July 4, up from 1...
Weight loss surgery can be a lifesaver for people with severe obesity, but they will need to watch the booze from then on, a new study says.
People who undergo gastric bypass or gastric sleeve tend to absorb alcohol more rapidly afterward, researchers reported recently i...
People who’ve been severely injured in an accident might have a lower risk of death if doctors pump them full of vitamin C, a new evidence review says.
High doses of intravenous (IV) vitamin C appear to reduce the risk of death and sepsis in trauma patients, resear...
Fatty liver disease can fuel the most aggressive form of colon cancer, a new study says.
People with fatty liver disease are more prone to have their colon cancer travel to their liver as well, causing their survival odds to plummet, researchers reported recently in the ...
Exercise can boost a smoker’s odds of successfully quitting, a new evidence review says.
Smokers taking part in exercise programs were more likely to either quit or cut back on cigarettes, researchers reported recently in the Journal of Sport and Health Science...
Shoppers in California will no longer see "sell by" dates on their groceries.
A first-in-the-nation law that took effect July 1 bans the "sell by" labels, which lawmakers say tell retailers how long to display products but say nothing about whether food is safe to eat, r...
For decades, artificial sweeteners have been promoted as a healthier alternative to sugar. But new research suggests they may have unexpected effects on your metabolism.
"What makes our analysis notable is that by focusing on non-caloric comparators, we better isolated t...
Men might benefit if doctors quit referring to low-risk prostate cancer as cancer at all, a new study says.
Referring to the lowest-risk type of prostate cancer — Grade Group 1 (GG1) — as cancer does more harm than good, researchers argued recently in the jou...
Planning an epic TV binge, or a long session of video gaming?
If you take hourly breaks to get up and stretch your legs, you’ll lower the risk of cancer posed by sedentary behavior, a new study says.
Each hour of prolonged, uninterrupted sitting around in a p...
Is your teenager thinking about taking a Spanish or French class?
Tell them there’s a hidden benefit to picking up another language — their brain might age slower, a new study says.
People who speak additional languages have brains that appear six ...
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has authorized marketing of 20 ZYN nicotine pouch products as a lower-risk option than cigarettes, a decision that drew immediate criticism from anti-cancer advocates worried about youth use.
Nicotine pouches are placed in the ...
Many people with long COVID suffer from “brain fog,” finding it difficult to remember things, think on their feet or pay attention.
But this symptom can be addressed by rehab, according to a new study.
Ten weeks of cognitive rehabilitation helped long C...
Why is your right hand so much better at everyday tasks like writing, throwing or using tools if you’re a righty, but your left hand if you’re a lefty?
A new study argues that your dominant hand is made, not born — in other words, practice determines wh...
Here’s more pressure for harried mothers — a sluggish response to baby’s coos and babbles might increase their risk of childhood psychiatric problems.
Moms who respond within one second of their baby’s vocalizations appear to lower the child&rsquo...