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Ultra-processed foods linked to higher psoriasis risk

, 2025-05-04 23:52:00 New research links ultra-processed food intake to higher psoriasis risk, even after accounting for genetics, BMI, and lifestyle, highlighting the potential of dietary changes in preventing chronic skin conditions. Study: Ultra-Processed Food Consumption and the Risk of Psoriasis: A Large Prospective Cohort Study. Image Credit: Ekaterina Markelova / Shutterstock.com A recent study published in the…

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Molecular profiling can safely reduce radiation for women with endometrial cancer: Clinical trial results

, 2025-05-04 21:00:00 Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain Endometrial cancer is the most common gynecological cancer in highly-developed countries, most often affecting women after menopause. The majority of women are diagnosed at an early stage, when treatment outcomes are generally favorable. For women with high-intermediate risk disease, adjuvant radiotherapy—particularly vaginal brachytherapy (a form of internal radiotherapy…

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The Policy Trends the Business Group on Health Is Watching

Marissa Plescia , 2025-05-04 21:19:00 There is no shortage of recent policy announcements affecting healthcare, from potential Medicaid cuts to changes in the administration. Several of these announcements have major implications for employers as they develop their health benefits strategies. In a recent interview at the Business Group on Health conference in Nashville, Ellen Kelsay,…

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New radiotherapy technique aims to protect the heart during lung cancer treatment

, 2025-05-04 21:00:00 Credit: CC0 Public Domain A new study presented at ESTRO 2025 introduces the RAPID-RT study, which uses an innovative rapid-learning approach to evaluate the impact of treatment modifications in radiotherapy. The paper also appears in Radiotherapy and Oncology. Traditional clinical trials are often lengthy and are not representative of real-world patient populations…

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The MMR vaccine doesn’t contain ‘aborted fetus debris,’ as RFK Jr has claimed: Here’s the science

, 2025-05-04 19:00:00 Credit: National Cancer Institute Robert F. Kennedy Jr, the United States’ top public health official, recently claimed some religious groups avoid the measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine because it contains “aborted fetus debris” and “DNA particles”. The US is facing its worst measles outbreaks in years with nearly 900 cases across…

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Hospitals’ Costs Are Soaring: 3 Stats to Know

Katie Adams , 2025-05-04 17:20:00 As hospitals brace for rising costs tied to President Donald Trump’s proposed tariffs, a new report from the American Hospital Association reveals that drugs and supplies are just part of the problem.  Overall, hospital expenses are climbing steadily — driven by chronic underpayments from payers, growing administrative requirements and increasing…

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So What’s the Deal with ICHRA?

John Syme , 2025-05-04 14:01:00 Individual Coverage Health Reimbursement Arrangements, colloquially known as ICHRAs, have entered the zeitgeist. ICHRAs allow employers to provide employees a fixed amount of pre-tax money to purchase individual healthcare coverage and pay for health expenses. Recent articles have called out the VC interest in the space with some healthcare players…

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A comprehensive look at what happens in the brain when we’re reading

, 2025-05-04 13:00:00 (a) The functional reading network (n = 163) across all experiments, with contributions of the cerebellum. (b) The functional reading network for individual processing levels, including the main effect of letters (n = 7), words (n = 109), sentences (n = 33) and texts (n = 8). All meta-analytic maps were thresholded at a voxel-wise p < 0.001 and a cluster-wise p < 0.05 FWE-corrected. Credit:…

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US researchers seek to legitimize AI mental health care

, 2025-05-04 09:15:00 Researchers at Dartmouth College, seen here, believe they have developed a reliable AI-driven app to deliver psychotherapy, addressing a critical need for mental health care. Researchers at Dartmouth College believe artificial intelligence can deliver reliable psychotherapy, distinguishing their work from the unproven and sometimes dubious mental health apps flooding today’s market. Their…

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Scientists introduce new engineered drug candidate for Mycobacterium abscessus, a dangerous cousin of TB

, 2025-05-02 14:55:00 Rifamycin screening cascade and optimized leads. Credit: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2025). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2423842122 In a classic example of scientific problem solving, scientists from the Hackensack Meridian Center for Discovery and Innovation (CDI) and colleagues have published a paper introducing a promising new drug candidate they engineered to target…

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Genetic analysis of all-women extreme divers finds changes linked to blood pressure and cold tolerance

, 2025-05-02 15:00:00 Divers haul the day’s catch out onto shore. Credit: Melissa Ilardo A new analysis of a group of all-women extreme divers off the coast of Korea has uncovered genetic differences that could help them survive the intense physiological stresses of free-diving—and could ultimately lead to better treatments for blood pressure disorders. The…

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Editing Parkinson’s disease—discovery of an inflammatory RNA editing enzyme

, 2025-05-02 15:00:00 Schematic diagram of the inflammatory RNA editing model in Parkinson’s disease. Credit: Science Advances (2025). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adp8504 Parkinson’s disease (PD) is a neurodegenerative disorder in which the α-synuclein protein abnormally aggregates within brain cells, causing neuronal damage. Through international collaboration, researchers at KAIST have revealed that RNA editing plays a crucial role…

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Lactate mediates training of our innate defenses, research shows

, 2025-05-02 15:04:00 Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain The BCG vaccine protects against tuberculosis, but by inducing trained immunity it also protects against many more respiratory infections. International research led by Radboud University Medical Center shows how this process works. Lactate, a product of scaled-up energy production, appears to play a leading role. The immune system…

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Pertussis vaccination during pregnancy found to increase quantity and quality of antibodies protecting the baby

, 2025-05-02 15:19:00 Longitudinal changes in frequency of pertussis-specific IgG-secreting memory B-cell responses according to infant group and study timepoint. Credit: The Lancet Infectious Diseases (2025). DOI: 10.1016/S1473-3099(25)00072-6 Researchers at the University of Turku have participated in a study in which vaccinating women with acellular pertussis vaccine in pregnancy boosted the quantity and quality of…

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Object recognition shaped by prior experience as brain adapts to new visual information, study shows

, 2025-05-02 15:27:00 Illustration based on figure from the paper. Credit: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2025). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2406684122 Our brains begin to create internal representations of the world around us from the first moment we open our eyes. We perceptually assemble components of scenes into recognizable objects thanks to neurons in the…

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New research maps similarities and differences between insomnia, anxiety, and depression

, 2025-05-02 15:39:00 Associations of brain morphology and severity of insomnia, depression and anxiety symptoms. Credit: Nature Mental Health (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s44220-025-00412-8 Insomnia, depression, and anxiety are the most common mental disorders. Treatments are often only moderately effective, with many people experiencing returning symptoms. This is why it is crucial to find new leads for…

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Sun safety declining in Canada amid rise in skin cancer cases

, 2025-05-02 15:55:00 Credit: Photo By: Kaboompics.com from Pexels Despite decades of public health messaging, Canadians are spending more time in the sun and using less sun protection—raising alarms among researchers as melanoma cases continue to climb. That trend is highlighted in a McGill University-led study that analyzed national survey data collected between 2011 and…

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Early transcatheter aortic valve replacement reduces cardiovascular events in asymptomatic aortic stenosis patients

, 2025-05-02 16:03:00 Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain New analysis from the EARLY TAVR trial showed patients between the age of 65 and 70 years old derived the most benefits of a strategy of early intervention with transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) compared to other age groups, especially in regards to stroke risk, and in regards…

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Balloon-assisted procedure found safe and effective for patients undergoing transcatheter mitral valve replacement

, 2025-05-02 16:04:00 Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain New data from a large, international registry showed balloon-assisted anterior mitral leaflet modification (BATMAN) was safe, effective, and resulted in shorter procedure times among patients undergoing transcatheter mitral valve replacement (TMVR). The data were presented today as late-breaking clinical research at the Society for Cardiovascular Angiography & Interventions…

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RNA editing enzyme found to trigger neuroinflammation in Parkinson’s

, 2025-05-03 05:33:00 Parkinson’s disease (PD) is a neurodegenerative disorder in which the α-synuclein protein abnormally aggregates within brain cells, causing neuronal damage. Through international collaboration, researchers at KAIST have revealed that RNA editing plays a crucial role in regulating neuroinflammation, a key pathology of Parkinson’s disease. KAIST (represented by President Kwang-Hyung Lee) announced on…

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Skin-to-skin contact improves breastfeeding but not cognitive outcomes in very preterm infants: Clinical trial

, 2025-05-03 13:50:00 Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain Researchers led by the Trondheim University Hospital in Norway report that two hours of immediate skin-to-skin contact between mothers and very preterm infants after birth does not improve cognitive, motor, or language development by age 2 to 3 years. Infants receiving the intervention did show significantly improved breastfeeding…

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New gene editing tool enables precise control of mitochondrial mutation load

, 2025-05-03 05:51:00 Mitochondrial diseases affect approximately 1 in 5,000 people worldwide, causing debilitating symptoms ranging from muscle weakness to stroke-like episodes. Some of these conditions result from mutations in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), the genetic material housed in these organelles. For patients with the common m.3243A>G mutation, which can cause MELAS syndrome (mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy,…

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Spanish Healthcare Slowly Recovers From National Blackout

, 2025-05-02 07:25:00 On April 28, the Spanish Iberian Peninsula experienced a general blackout starting at 12:33 PM Central European Summer Time (CEST). Despite the disruption, hospitals across the country maintained urgent medical care thanks to independent power systems and the efforts of healthcare professionals. Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez confirmed that emergency services continued…

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Two decades of research lead to treatment for rare, painful skin condition

, 2025-05-03 14:00:00 Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain Patients with severe dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa, or EB, have skin so fragile, the slightest touch can lead to blistering and, eventually, large, open wounds that never heal, causing immense pain. A treatment developed at Stanford Medicine, skin grafts, can treat those large, open wounds. Genetically engineered from a…

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Nearly One Third of Dementia Cases Tied to Hearing Loss

, 2025-05-02 07:48:00 TOPLINE: Audiometry-measured hearing loss in older adults accounted for up to 32% of incident dementia cases over 8 years in new research, significantly larger than previously reported estimates. Investigators found larger dementia prevalence estimates in people aged 75 years or older, women, and White individuals, whereas self-reported hearing loss was not associated…

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National initiative boosts heart failure treatment across US hospitals

, 2025-05-03 06:48:00 About 6.7 million adults in the U.S. are living with heart failure, and that number is expected to increase to more than 8 million by 2030. A new analysis published in Circulation: Heart Failure shows hospitals participating in the American Heart Association’s multiregional IMPLEMENT-HF™ initiative significantly improved adherence to guideline-directed medical therapy for patients hospitalized with heart failure…

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What Drives Readmission After CRC Surgery?

, 2025-05-02 07:51:00 TOPLINE: Almost 12% of patients with colorectal cancer (CRC) had unplanned readmissions within 31 days after surgery. Multiple risk factors were identified, including older age, comorbidities, advanced tumor stage, postoperative complications, and tumor location in the rectum, whereas female sex emerged as a protective factor. METHODOLOGY: The high rate of unplanned readmissions…

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Meta-analysis links intimate partner violence among sexual minority men to mental health outcomes

, 2025-05-02 16:20:00 Credit: Pixabay from Pexels Sexual minority men on the receiving end of intimate partner violence also have worse mental health outcomes including depression, suicide ideation, and suicide attempts, according to a new meta-analysis by UConn professor Chenglin Hong. “Looking at the larger context, intimate partner violence as a public health issue is…

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Medicaid unwinding may have put opioid recovery care at risk

, 2025-05-03 07:00:00 The massive national effort to return the Medicaid enrollment process to its pre-pandemic rules starting in April 2023 may have disrupted the care of people receiving treatment for opioid addiction, a new University of Michigan study suggests. The researchers call this finding concerning, because the disruption may increase the risk of overdose…

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One in Four Report Errors in NHS Medical Records

, 2025-05-02 08:03:00 Almost 1 in 4 adults in England have found inaccuracies or missing information in their medical records, new research has shown.  The findings come from a nationally representative poll carried out by BMG Research on behalf of Healthwatch England in March this year. Researchers surveyed 1800 adults in England online. Of those,…

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