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Fathers’ Mental Health May Predict Poor Child Development

, 2025-06-25 08:41:00 When fathers struggle with mental health at the time their children are born, their offspring experience developmental challenges throughout life, according to a new meta-analysis published in JAMA Pediatrics. Researchers said the findings should be a call to better support fathers as they transition into parenthood. “Becoming a parent is a significant…

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Why Safety Must Be the Heart of Modern Healthcare

, 2025-06-24 06:52:00 Every day, millions of people place their lives in the hands of healthcare providers. They walk into hospitals expecting healing, not harm. Yet, medical errors remain one of the leading causes of death globally, a sobering reality that challenges the very foundation of medicine: “First, do no harm.” Despite the dedication of…

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What the New CMS Strategy Signals for Rehab Professionals

Susan Lofton , 2025-06-24 13:05:00 After 15 years without major change, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has issued a bold new strategic direction for the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation (CMMI). Framed around three clear pillar — evidence-based prevention, patient empowerment, and expanded provider choice — this shift signals a new…

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STAT+: Radical transparency at the FDA, and a pivotal moment for vaccines

John Wilkerson , 2025-06-24 16:23:00 You’re reading the web edition of D.C. Diagnosis, STAT’s twice-weekly newsletter about the politics and policy of health and medicine. Sign up here to receive it in your inbox on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Health, faith-based, and anti-hunger organizations are undertaking a “relay fast” to protest Republicans’ budget reconciliation bill. That’s an interesting tactic…

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Fusion genes found to be pivotal players in cancer development

, 2025-06-25 06:19:00 Fusion genes, arising from abnormal chromosomal rearrangements, are gaining recognition as pivotal players in cancer development. These genetic alterations result in the creation of hybrid genes with altered functions, often driving tumor progression. The latest review highlights their significant role across various cancers, including hematological malignancies, lung cancer, thyroid cancer, and prostate…

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Routine Checks for Cancer Metastases: A Help or Harm?

, 2025-06-25 05:56:00 Patients who have undergone a full course of curative-intent cancer treatment are often monitored for years with imaging scans and blood tests to identify recurrences early. For some solid tumors, scans are recommended as frequently as every 6 months over 5 years.  However, there are longstanding concerns about the value of surveillance…

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5 Signs of Mental Health Struggles No One Should Ignore

, 2025-06-24 06:55:00 Mental health challenges can be notoriously difficult to recognize, even for the person who is struggling emotionally and cognitively. That’s why it’s critical to recognize and acknowledge the earliest signs of a potential mental health problem or disorder. Without intervention, mental health issues can worsen and make everyday tasks and relationships seem…

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How Smarter Metrics Can Unlock AI’s Potential in Healthcare

Updesh Dosanjh , 2025-06-24 13:50:00 Artificial intelligence is no longer a futuristic concept in healthcare. It’s here and it is already being integrated into everyday operations, including streamlining pharmacovigilance workflows, analyzing unstructured data, predicting operational disruptions and personalizing care delivery. Yet, despite growing investment and adoption, organizations still struggle to define what AI success looks…

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FDA clears sutureless peripheral nerve repair device

Veronica Paulus , 2025-06-24 17:32:00 A sutureless device for peripheral nerve repair could be available on the market in the coming months. The Food and Drug Administration has authorized a polymer-based device developed by medical technology company Tissium. The authorization, announced Tuesday, will give physicians a new method for treating peripheral nerve injuries. “This approval…

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How a novel reaction in E. coli helps recycle plastic into paracetamol

, 2025-06-25 03:13:00 Scientists harness a new-to-nature reaction in E. coli to turn discarded plastics into life-saving medicines, charting a sustainable path for chemical manufacturing. a, A comparison of strategies for C–N bond formation via Lossen rearrangement in synthetic organic chemistry or via chorismate pathways in cellular metabolism. b, The proposed merging of non-enzymatic Lossen rearrangement…

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Semaglutide Shows Benefits for PAD Across T2D Subgroups

, 2025-06-24 19:58:00 CHICAGO — Use of the GLP-1 receptor agonist semaglutide improved walking capability in patients with peripheral arterial disease (PAD) and type 2 diabetes (T2D), regardless of duration of diabetes, BMI, or glycemic control, a post-hoc analysis of phase 3 double-blind randomized STRIDE showed. “PAD remains a recalcitrant problem in people living with…

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Dr. Chobanian’s Approach to Facial Harmony

, 2025-06-24 06:56:00 True beauty isn’t about perfection—it’s about proportion, alignment, and harmony. In the world of aesthetic medicine, no one understands this better than Dr. Susan Chobanian. As a board-certified cosmetic surgeon, Dr. Chobanian has built her reputation on creating results that are subtle, refined, and naturally balanced. Her work isn’t about drastic changes—it’s…

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The Hospital Word Has Become a Tale of the Haves and Have-Nots

Katie Adams , 2025-06-25 01:26:00 Health system performance has splintered into three distinct groups — leaders, strugglers and those stuck in the middle, according to Fitch Ratings’ Kevin Holloran. At the HFMA Annual Conference, he and Mayo Clinic CFO Dennis Dahlen discussed how technology and innovation are accelerating this divide. The post The Hospital Word…

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LOL: June 24, 2025

Dr Leslie O’Looney , 2025-06-24 07:30:00 Welcome to this week’s issue of The Week in Medicine – a round-up of all the happenings in the world of Irish medicine Kudos to the Mater Hospital on becoming the first hospital in Ireland to establish a Centre for AI and Digital Health. Ireland still lags well behind…

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The deadly reality of abortion bans is unfolding in the US—like it once did in Ethiopia

Abebe Shibru, , 2025-06-24 13:31:00 Abebe Shibru,, country director MSI Reproductive Choices Ethiopia, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia US decision makers must lean on evidence to support better maternal outcomes for women—and that means reversing abortion bans, writes Abebe Shibru I read with dismay and devastation a recent report from the Gender Equity Policy Institute. The report…

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Life-saving childhood vaccination coverage has stalled in recent decades, leaving millions of children at risk

, 2025-06-24 22:30:00 Credit: CDC from Pexels The world has made unprecedented progress in vaccinating children against life-threatening diseases since WHO established the Expanded Program on Immunization (EPI) in 1974. Despite the progress of the past 50 years, the last two decades have also been marked by stagnating childhood vaccination rates and wide variation in…

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Unhealthy teen diets reshape the brain and drive lifelong eating habits, study finds

, 2025-06-25 00:58:00 New research reveals how junk food during adolescence rewires critical brain regions, increasing the risk for poor decision-making and obesity well into adulthood. Study: Adolescent nutritional influences on the brain: implications for eating behaviors. Image Credit: Yuriy Golub / Shutterstock Researchers have recently reviewed the existing literature to understand how an adolescent’s eating behavior…

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COVID’s Long Shadow

, 2025-06-24 20:17:00 John Bolecek, 41, of Richmond, Virginia, was diagnosed with long COVID in 2022 after a mild case of acute COVID. Since then he’s experienced a heavy and unrelenting fatigue that has cost him his job and most of his hobbies. In a recent interview, the former urban planner, husband, and father of…

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How Male Excel Makes Hormone Therapy Accessible and Effective

, 2025-06-24 06:57:00 As hormone therapy becomes more personalized and accessible through telemedicine, companies are reshaping the future of preventive healthcare for men worldwide. In the United States, less than 3% of healthcare spending is directed toward prevention, with the vast majority devoted to reactive care. Nowhere is this more evident than in men’s health,…

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You might be interested in…Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Dr Ray O’Connor , 2025-06-24 07:30:00 Dr Ray O’Connor takes a look at the latest clinical articles on inflammatory bowel disease Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a condition impacting various body systems including musculoskeletal, ocular, skin, hepatobiliary, pulmonary, cardiac, and haematological systems. The extraintestinal manifestations of IBD are frequent, common in both ulcerative colitis (UC)…

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Global progress on childhood vaccinations is slowing down

Veronica Paulus , 2025-06-24 22:30:00 Childhood vaccination coverage has made leaps since 1980. But progress has significantly slowed in the last two decades. That is according to a study published in The Lancet Tuesday, which found stagnation and wide variation in childhood vaccination rates since 2010. The study, which estimated childhood vaccination coverage between 1980…

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Emotional demands and confrontation in person-contact roles linked to heightened type 2 diabetes risk

, 2025-06-24 22:30:00 Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain The emotional demands and confrontation inherent in person-contact roles, involving direct face-to-face or voice-to-voice interaction with external parties, are linked to a heightened risk of type 2 diabetes, suggests research published online in Occupational & Environmental Medicine. And inadequate social support from managers and colleagues at work seems…

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5 takeaways from health insurers’ new pledge to improve prior authorization

, 2025-06-24 19:37:00 Nearly seven months after the fatal shooting of an insurance CEO in New York drew widespread attention to health insurers’ practice of denying or delaying doctor-ordered care, the largest U.S. insurers agreed Monday to streamline their often cumbersome preapproval system. Dozens of insurance companies, including Cigna, Aetna, Humana, and UnitedHealthcare, agreed to…

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Blood-Based KRAS Testing Fails in Ovarian Cancer

, 2025-06-24 20:33:00 Blood-based circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) testing has proven to be insufficient for detecting KRAS mutations in patients with low-grade serous ovarian cancer (LGSOC), according to a study. The findings of the new research suggest that treatment decisions should continue to rely on traditional tumor tissue analysis rather than liquid biopsies for this…

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Nektar’s Novel Eczema Drug Meets Trial Goals, But Differentiation From Dupixent Remains Unclear

Frank Vinluan , 2025-06-24 19:26:00 A Nektar Therapeutics drug has met the skin clearance goals of a closely watched mid-stage clinical trial in atopic dermatitis. While these preliminary results bring validation to the therapy’s novel approach to the immune response driving the disease, analysts note the market for atopic dermatitis drugs is crowded and it’s…

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Ollie the therapy dog brings joy to young patients

Editorial Staff , 2025-06-24 07:30:00 Meet Ollie, the first four-legged team member in the Paediatric Unit at University Hospital Galway (UHG). Every Thursday after a thorough brushing and grooming, the eight-year-old Malshi puts on his Irish Therapy Dog uniform and trots through the doors of the Paediatric Unit at UHG, where his calming and comforting…

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PD-L1 Did Not Predict Immunotherapy Benefit in CC

, 2025-06-24 17:51:00 Findings of the BEATcc trial suggest PD-L1 status is not a reliable biomarker for guiding immunotherapy selection in patients with recurrent or metastatic cervical cancer, potentially simplifying treatment decisions for clinicians managing this patient population. A post-hoc analysis of the phase 3 trial demonstrated that the addition of atezolizumab to chemotherapy plus…

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New method aims to bring novel Alzheimer’s treatments to patients sooner

Michael McHale , 2025-06-24 07:31:00 Irish researchers develop mapping model that can compare results from multiple Alzheimer’s studies Irish researchers have helped develop a first-of-its-kind method for comparing research findings into potential new treatments for Alzheimer’s to improve outcomes for patients with the disease. The research and scientific community have seen significant developments in recent…

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