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Type 1 diabetes: UK approves first drug for delaying onset

Kate Bowie , 2025-08-15 14:55:00 The UK’s medicines regulator has approved the first immunotherapy to be licensed to delay the progression of type 1 diabetes in patients who are in the early stages of the disease. The Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) said teplizumab (Tzield), manufactured by Sanofi, can be given to adults…

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Respiratory viruses awaken dormant breast cancer cells and raise relapse risk

, 2025-08-15 03:16:00 New research reveals how common respiratory viruses can flip dormant breast cancer cells back into growth mode, uncovering an immune-driven pathway that heightens relapse risk and pointing to new prevention strategies. Study: Respiratory viral infections awaken metastatic breast cancer cells in lungs. Image Credit: crystal light / Shutterstock In a recent study published in…

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More Pregnancies With Weight Loss Before IVF

, 2025-08-15 19:15:00 Women with obesity who lost weight prior to in vitro fertilization (IVF) had increased pregnancy rates, especially unassisted conceptions, a systematic review and meta-analysis has found. The studies reviewed were small and heterogeneous, making it difficult to determine which weight loss interventions had the most efficacy, according to the authors. Still, they…

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Consultant Haematologist, Londonderry

brendan , 2025-08-13 07:05:00 Western Health and Social Care Trust Consultant Haematologist Location: Altnagelvin Area Hospital, Londonderry Salary: £106,424 – £139,920 pa pro rata Reference No: 55075424 Closing date: Friday 05 September 2025 @ 3:30pm For full criteria, job description and application form for the above please visit Jobs.hscni.net and apply online. A waiting list…

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Insmed drug to treat lung disease bronchiectasis approved in U.S.

Elaine Chen , 2025-08-12 16:35:00 Insmed on Tuesday received Food and Drug Administration clearance for the first treatment for a chronic lung disease, opening the biotech up to what could be a multibillion-dollar product. Insmed will sell the daily pill, brensocatib, under the brand name Brinsupri for bronchiectasis. The approval comes after the treatment succeeded…

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The politics of plenty: why food insecurity persists in a world of abundance

Hashim Hounkpatin, Tinashe Goronga, Sherifath Mama Chabi, Aime Yedenou , 2025-08-11 10:01:00 Hashim Hounkpatin1, research doctor, Tinashe Goronga2, research doctor, Sherifath Mama Chabi3, researcher, Aimé Yedenou1, research doctor 1Centre de recherche en reproduction humaine et en démographie, Benin 2Center for Health Equity, Zimbabwe 3University d’Abomey-Calavi, Benin The global health community has an important role in…

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FDA Approves Zongertinib for HER2-Mutated NSCLC

, 2025-08-08 21:23:00 The FDA has granted accelerated approval to zongertinib (Hernexeos, Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals, Inc.) for certain adults with unresectable or metastatic nonsquamous non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Specifically, the TKI was approved for patients whose tumors harbor HER2 (ERBB2) tyrosine kinase domain-activating mutations as detected by an FDA-approved test and who have received…

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Risk of gaps in rabies treatment due to transfer of services

Michael McHale , 2025-08-08 07:30:00 Dr Seamus O’Dea, who carried out vital services for patients with rabies, botulism and diphtheria on national level for several years, retired in July The process of transferring services for treating rabies, botulism and diphtheria to health regions poses risks for potential gaps that may lead to vulnerable patients being…

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Budgeting for Medical Bills: Protecting Your Financial Health

MNB Guest , 2025-08-08 12:55:00 Unexpected healthcare costs can upend even the best-prepared family budget. Whether it is a sudden medical procedure or an extended treatment regimen, the expense of care can deliver an unpleasant financial jolt. For households or individuals that live paycheck to paycheck, such occurrences can put enormous strain on everyday expenditures….

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Total and specific potato intake and risk of type 2 diabetes: results from three US cohort studies and a substitution meta-analysis of prospective cohorts

Seyed Mohammad Mousavi, Xiao Gu, Fumiaki Imamura, Hala B AlEssa, Orrin Devinsky, Qi Sun, Frank B Hu, JoAnn E Manson, Eric B Rimm, Nita G Forouhi, Walter C Willett , 2025-08-06 22:31:00 Cohort analyses Study population and design This analysis involved participants from three ongoing longitudinal cohort studies: NHS, NHSII, and HPFS. NHS was initiated…

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NICE Urges Ongoing Support After Obesity Treatment

, 2025-08-05 15:34:00 The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) has released updated guidance recommending that healthcare providers offer structured, ongoing support to patients after they complete obesity treatment or stop taking weight-loss medications.  This includes regular follow-up care, tailored action plans, and social support to help patients maintain their weight loss and…

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Healthcare’s Poor Data Infrastructure Is Hindering AI Innovation in the Field, CEO Says

Katie Adams , 2025-08-05 01:03:00 The hype around AI in healthcare is undeniable. AI startups are dominating the digital health investment market, companies like Abridge and Ambience Healthcare are surpassing unicorn status, and the White House recently issued an action plan to advance AI’s use in critical sectors like healthcare. However, one digital health executive…

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RCPI Faculty of Paediatrics Spring Conference

Editorial Staff , 2025-08-01 11:48:00 L-R: Prof Helen Heneghan; Dr Ellen Crushell, Deputy CMO; Prof Mary Horgan, CMO; Prof Donal O’Shea; Dr Judith Meehan, Dean of the Faculty of Paediatrics, RCPI; Dr Sinead Murphy; Dr Orla Walsh; Prof Philip Dodd, Deputy CMO; Dr Billy White; and Dr Diarmuid O’Shea, President,…

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Who is involuntary commitment for?

Torie Bosch , 2025-08-02 11:00:00 First Opinion is STAT’s platform for interesting, illuminating, and provocative articles about the life sciences writ large, written by biotech insiders, health care workers, researchers, and others. To encourage robust, good-faith discussion about issues raised in First Opinion essays, STAT publishes selected Letters to the Editor received in response to…

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Bacterial cellulose-based dressing offers rapid bleeding control for burn wound care

, 2025-08-02 15:00:00 In vitro coagulation performance of BC and T-BC dressings observed 1 minute after blood application. Credit: Advanced Materials (2025). DOI: 10.1002/adma.202420338 In a study published in Advanced Materials, a research team developed an innovative bacterial cellulose (BC)-based hemostatic dressing that enables rapid and sustained bleeding control. Burn injuries are a kind of…

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Deep learning method enhances vessel and plaque segmentation in stroke diagnosis

, 2025-08-01 16:25:00 Stroke is the second leading cause of death globally. Ischemic stroke, strongly linked to atherosclerotic plaques, requires accurate plaque and vessel wall segmentation and quantification for definitive diagnosis. However, conventional manual segmentation remains time-consuming and operator-dependent, whereas current computer-aided tools fall short in achieving the accuracy required for clinical applications. These technological…

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Time Your Meals, Tune Your Metabolism

, 2025-08-01 19:40:00 New research from UC San Diego has revealed fascinating insights into how timing our meals might significantly affect our metabolic health by aligning with our body’s natural microbial rhythms. Just as our bodies follow circadian rhythms, our gut microbes have their own daily patterns, with certain beneficial activities increasing during our active…

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South Korean government restarts talks with trainee doctors after mass resignation in medical school places row

Flynn Murphy , 2025-07-29 15:06:00 South Korea’s new government has restarted talks with junior doctors and medical students, raising hopes for an end to a 17 month impasse over a plan to steeply increase medical school admissions, which drove 90% of Korea’s resident doctors to resign.1 The new consultative body, which includes health ministry and…

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Centauri Therapeutics receives an additional $5.1 M from CARB-X to progress ABX-01 lead compound to first in human clinical trials

, 2025-07-29 11:58:00 Centauri Therapeutics Limited (‘Centauri’), an immunotherapy company with a unique and proprietary platform technology applicable across a wide range of therapeutic indications, announced today that CARB-X (Combating Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria Biopharmaceutical Accelerator) has provided an additional $5.1 M in funding for the development of their lead compound. The funds will contribute to the…

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HTO May Slow Knee OA Progression in Bowlegged Patients

, 2025-07-28 21:01:00 High tibial osteotomy (HTO) slows articular cartilage damage in individuals with bowlegs and medial compartment knee osteoarthritis (OA) compared to nonsurgical management alone, according to a new study.   Patients who underwent HTO also reported less pain and higher overall knee function. “To our knowledge, this is the first study to show…

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Utilization: The Hidden Revenue Leak in VBC

Dana McCalley , 2025-07-28 13:48:00 Two topics dominate almost every conversation about value-based care (VBC): risk adjustment and quality. They are, without question, foundational. Risk adjustment sets the financial baseline for each patient population, while quality metrics confirm we are delivering the right preventive and chronic-care services. Yet there is a third pillar that too…

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New Hip and Knee Osteoarthritis Pathway transforms patient care

Editorial Staff , 2025-07-28 13:02:00 By helping patients manage their condition in the community, the programme not only improves lives but is aligned with the Sláintecare principles of right place, right time, right person Osteoarthritis is one of the leading causes of disability in Ireland, particularly among adults aged 50 years and older. Joint stiffness,…

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Understanding the Health Benefits of Corrective Eye Procedures

MNB Guest , 2025-07-23 16:11:00 Clear vision impacts your life because basic activities, such as reading, require it. Performing such routine tasks is frustrating unless you have visual aids like glasses. Nonetheless, even these visual aids may interfere with your comfort. Hence, corrective eye procedures help you regain control over daily life without having to…

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Republicans Call Medicaid Rife With Fraudsters. This Man Sees No Choice but To Break the Rules.

Katheryn Houghton and Oona Zenda , 2025-07-23 09:00:00 Katheryn Houghton and Oona Zenda Illustration by Oona Zenda MISSOULA, Mont. — As congressional Republicans finalized Medicaid work requirements in President Donald Trump’s budget bill, one man who relies on that government-subsidized health coverage was trying to coax his old car to start after an eight-hour shift…

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Physically restricting mental health patients can often harm them. New study suggests compassion could change that

, 2025-07-23 15:49:00 Credit: Marko Garic from Pexels Restrictive practices in mental health settings—such as physical restraint and seclusion—are meant to be a last resort, used only when patients pose a risk to themselves or others. In 2021 and 2022 alone, NHS England reported that 6,600 mental health patients were subjected to physical restraint, and…

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A Step Toward a Diagnostic Test?

, 2025-07-23 09:08:00 A large-scale global study has identified genetic variants that are risk factors for long COVID, a discovery that helps researchers better understand the biological systems involving the disease and one small, early step toward the elusive goal of developing a long COVID diagnostic test. International researchers with the Long COVID Host Genetics…

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