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Get Healthy!

Recent health news and videos.

Staying informed is also a great way to stay healthy. Keep up-to-date with all the latest health news here.

29 Jan

Sleeping Without Pillows May Help Protect Vision in Glaucoma Patients

A new study finds sleeping without pillows may lower internal eye pressure in people with glaucoma, the leading cause of irreversible blindness worldwide.

28 Jan

Night Owls Face Higher Risk for Heart Problems

A new study finds people who are naturally ‘evening types’ have worse overall heart health and a higher risk of heart attack and stroke.

27 Jan

Hormone Replacement Therapy May Not Ease Memory and Mood Problems Related to Menopause

A large, new study finds menopause is associated with brain changes and poorer mental health — whether or not women use hormone therapy.

Salty Drinking Water Increases High Blood Pressure Risk, Review Concludes

Salty Drinking Water Increases High Blood Pressure Risk, Review Concludes

People whose drinking water contains more salt have an increased risk of high blood pressure, a new evidence review says.

Particularly in coastal regions, salt in drinking water could be an overlooked contributor to elevated blood pressure, researchers reported recently in the journal BMJ Global Health.

Higher salt in drinki...

  • Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 30, 2026
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Afternoon Naps Are Good For The Brain — And Researchers Now Know Why

Afternoon Naps Are Good For The Brain — And Researchers Now Know Why

Having trouble powering through your afternoon workload?

A brief nap can rejuvenate your brain power, a new study says.

Even a short afternoon nap helps the brain recover and improve its ability to learn, researchers recently reported in the journal NeuroImage.

Napping helps reorganize connections between nerve cells c...

  • Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 30, 2026
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AI-Assisted Mammograms Catch More Hard-To-Detect Breast Cancers, Clinical Trial Shows

AI-Assisted Mammograms Catch More Hard-To-Detect Breast Cancers, Clinical Trial Shows

Artificial intelligence (AI) can help reduce the number of breast cancers found between mammogram screenings, clinical trial results show.

There was a 12% reduction in cancer diagnoses in the years following AI-supported breast cancer screening — a key test of effectiveness, researchers reported Jan. 29 in The Lancet.

...

  • Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 30, 2026
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Approved Immunotherapy Shrinks, Eliminates Rare, Aggressive Melanoma, Clinical Trial Finds

Approved Immunotherapy Shrinks, Eliminates Rare, Aggressive Melanoma, Clinical Trial Finds

An already-approved immunotherapy drug can dramatically shrink — or even eliminate — tumors associated with a rare and aggressive form of melanoma, a new clinical trial has found.

About 71% of desmoplastic melanoma patients treated with pembrolizumab (Keytruda) had no detectable cancer remaining when it came time to surgically ...

  • Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 30, 2026
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Tylenol Safe For Babies, Clinical Trial Finds

Tylenol Safe For Babies, Clinical Trial Finds

Both acetaminophen and ibuprofen are safe for babies during the first year of life, a groundbreaking study has found.

Researchers found no link between using these over-the-counter painkillers and health problems like eczema or lung ailments, researchers reported Jan. 27 in The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health.

“Ou...

  • Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 30, 2026
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Medicare to Negotiate Lower Prices for Botox and 14 Other Major Drugs

Medicare to Negotiate Lower Prices for Botox and 14 Other Major Drugs

Fifteen prescription medications, including Botox and the diabetes drug Trulicity, will be the focus of federal price negotiations that could lower prices for Medicare patients.

An outgrowth of the U.S. Inflation Reduction Act of 2022, the talks aim to lower costs for some of the most expensive treatments used by seniors. Results of the fi...

  • Deanna Neff HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 29, 2026
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South Carolina Measles Outbreak Now the Largest in Recent U.S. History

South Carolina Measles Outbreak Now the Largest in Recent U.S. History

A fast-growing measles outbreak in South Carolina has eclipsed last year’s record-setting Texas surge.

As of Tuesday, South Carolina’s outbreak had reached 789 confirmed cases, the state Department of Public Health announced this week. (In all, 762 people were sickened in the 2025 Texas outbreak).

The new South Carolina t...

  • Deanna Neff HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 29, 2026
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Common Parasite Hiding in Many People Is More Complex Than Scientists Thought

Common Parasite Hiding in Many People Is More Complex Than Scientists Thought

A parasite that lives inside as many as 1 in 3 people worldwide may be much harder to treat than once believed, according to new research from the University of California, Riverside.

The study, published Jan. 24 in the journal Nature Communications, found that Toxoplasma gondii hides inside the body in far more complex w...

  • I. Edwards HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 29, 2026
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Freshly Brewed Tea May Support Long-Term Health, Research Shows

Freshly Brewed Tea May Support Long-Term Health, Research Shows

If green tea is already part of your daily routine, you may be giving your health a boost without even realizing it.

New research suggests that drinking tea, especially green tea, is linked to a lower risk of heart disease, obesity, diabetes and several types of cancer. 

It may also help protect the brain, slow muscle loss in ol...

  • I. Edwards HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 29, 2026
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Nearly Half Of American Adults Will Be Obese By 2035, Study Warns

Nearly Half Of American Adults Will Be Obese By 2035, Study Warns

Nearly half of American adults – some 126 million people – will be obese within 10 years, a new study projects.

Adult obesity in the U.S. is projected to affect 47% of the population by 2035, researchers reported Jan. 28 in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

And that’s after obesity rates alre...

  • Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 29, 2026
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Opening Up, Sharing Can Be Best Thing For Stroke Survivors, Study Says

Opening Up, Sharing Can Be Best Thing For Stroke Survivors, Study Says

Dr. Dipika Aggarwal found her life turned upside down following her 2019 stroke.

At just 38, the neurologist from Kansas City, Missouri, went from a thriving career to months in intensive rehab, followed by isolation during the COVID lockdown.

“I lost my professional life, my engagement ended and there was no guarantee I’...

  • Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 29, 2026
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Strep Throat: What It Is, Symptoms, Causes, and Living With It

Strep Throat: What It Is, Symptoms, Causes, and Living With It

Strep throat is a common throat infection that often causes a sore throat, fever and trouble swallowing. It tends to come on quickly and may feel worse than a typical cold. While strep throat is most common in children and teens, people of all ages can get it.

The good news is that strep throat is usually easy to diagnose and treat. Gettin...

  • Dr. Sarah Adams, retired primary care pediatrician HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 29, 2026
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Electromagnetic Pulses Aid Stroke Recovery, Trial Results Indicate

Electromagnetic Pulses Aid Stroke Recovery, Trial Results Indicate

Stroke survivors might benefit from electromagnetic pulses that stimulate their brains and spur on their recovery, a new study says.

This treatment — called electromagnetic network-targeted field (ENTF) therapy — significantly reduced disability in stroke survivors when combined with physical therapy, according to findings to b...

  • Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 29, 2026
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Driving Habits Provide Window Into Seniors' Brain Health

Driving Habits Provide Window Into Seniors' Brain Health

Larry Duncan valued driving as part of his independence.

But Duncan — a retired business owner from Pinehurst, North Carolina — started to become more nervous behind the wheel prior to his diagnosis with Alzheimer’s disease in 2023.

“Larry was fine driving in familiar areas, but in new places where he had to m...

  • Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 29, 2026
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Opinion: When Doctors Disagree: Understanding Different Medical Opinions

Opinion: When Doctors Disagree: Understanding Different Medical Opinions

Why can’t doctors agree on what’s best for you? If you’ve ever received mixed advice from doctors or seen differing opinions expressed by professionals in the news, you’re not alone.

One specialist may strongly recommend a screening test, medication or treatment, while another urges caution or even advises against ...

  • Elspeth Davies, Qualitative Researcher, Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences at the University of Oxford HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 29, 2026
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New Discovery Could Change How Asthma Is Treated, Scientists Say

New Discovery Could Change How Asthma Is Treated, Scientists Say

Scientists may have uncovered a new cause of asthma that could change how the disease is treated.

Researchers at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio, say they’ve identified previously unknown molecules that may play a major role in asthma-related inflammation.

The findings suggest these chemicals, called “p...

  • I. Edwards HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 28, 2026
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Thousands of Kaiser Nurses Walk Out in California and Hawaii

Thousands of Kaiser Nurses Walk Out in California and Hawaii

More than 31,000 nurses and health care workers walked off the job Monday morning at Kaiser Permanente facilities across California and Hawaii, calling for safer staffing levels and better pay.

The strike affects at least two dozen hospitals and hundreds of clinics, making it the largest health care worker strike so far this year.

Th...

  • I. Edwards HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 28, 2026
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Slippery Streets After Winter Storms Raise Risk of Falls, Doctor Warns

Slippery Streets After Winter Storms Raise Risk of Falls, Doctor Warns

After a winter storm, sidewalks, parking lots and stairways can quickly turn into slip hazards, even after plows and salt trucks have passed.

"An invisible patch of ice is an accident waiting to happen," Dr. Aleksey Dvorzhinskiy, an orthopedic trauma surgeon at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City and HSS Long Island in Uniond...

  • I. Edwards HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 28, 2026
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Stress Linked to Earlier Deaths Among Black Americans, Study Shows

Stress Linked to Earlier Deaths Among Black Americans, Study Shows

Years of stress linked to racism, hardship and discrimination may explain nearly half the gap in life expectancy between Black and white adults, a new study finds.

The research — published Jan. 26 in JAMA Network Open — shows that long-term stress raises levels of inflammation in the body, and that cuts lives short.

  • I. Edwards HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 28, 2026
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Tobacco Companies Flouting Instagram Restrictions To Target Young People, Study Argues

Tobacco Companies Flouting Instagram Restrictions To Target Young People, Study Argues

U.S. tobacco companies are flouting policies intended to shield young people from pro-tobacco messaging on Instagram, a new study says.

Such messaging is supposed to be “age-gated” on Instagram, with access denied to people under 21, researchers said.

But an Instagram account registered to a fictitious user younger than 2...

  • Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 28, 2026
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