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- Can Sweating Really Help You Beat a Cold?
- Strengthening Your Relationship: Practical Strategies
- Skip Storing This Everyday Product in the Fridge Door
- Green Tea + B3 Pairing May Boost Brain Health
- Navigating Your Midlife Crisis: Embracing New Possibilities
- City Raccoons Showing Signs of Domestication
- Mapping the Exposome: Science Broadens Focus to Environmental Disease Triggers
- One Week Less on Social Media Linked to Better Mental Health
- Your Brain Changes in Stages as You Age, Study Finds
All posts by LadyLively
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Persistent Inflammation Could Drive Brain Issues in Former Football Players
The repeat head injuries suffered by football players, boxers and other athletes appear to affect brain health long after players have given up their sport. New research from Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore could explain why: The...
- Posted December 1, 2023
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Watch or Remove? Study Finds One Option May Be Better for Abnormal Cervical Lesions
Key Takeaways Cervical lesions are sometimes found on gynecologic exams, and they can later become cancerous A new study finds the longer-term risks of leaving the lesions intact while watching them might outweigh any benefit Decisions on...
- Posted December 1, 2023
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Treatment Used on Donated Hearts May Be Useless, Even Harmful: Study
A technique doctors use to preserve donated organs is actually doing no good, and might even be harming the organs, a new study reports. Physicians routinely dose deceased organ donors with thyroid hormones, in a bid to...
- Posted December 1, 2023
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Baseball Puts Kids’ Elbows at Risk, Study Shows
FRIDAY, DEC. 1, 2023 (Healthday News) — Millions of American kids and teens love to play the game of baseball, but the sport can leave many with elbow pain and injuries, new research finds. “When we look...
- Posted December 1, 2023
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U.S. Gun Suicides Keep Rising; Now Make Up Half of All Suicides
The latest national data show that when it comes to suicide, Americans are increasingly resorting to firearms as their method of choice. An analysis by researchers at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention finds that...
- Posted November 30, 2023
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New Clues to What Might Drive Tinnitus
Tinnitus, or “ringing in the ears,” affects up to 1 in every 10 people and can be disabling for some. Now, scientists at the Massachusetts Ear and Eye Infirmary believe they may have discovered a key cause...
- Posted November 30, 2023
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Does Social Media Raise Teens’ Odds for Drug Use, Risky Sex?
Teens glued to Instagram, TikTok and other social media are more likely to drink, take drugs, smoke and engage in risky sexual behaviors, a new review warns. For example, spending at least two hours a day on...
- Posted November 30, 2023
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‘Couch Potato’ Lifestyle Could Raise Women’s Odds for Fibroids
Women in a Chinese study who sat for more than six hours each day faced substantially higher odds of developing uterine fibroids before menopause, a new study has found. Overall, more sedentary women had double the risk...
- Posted November 30, 2023
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EPA to Require Removal of All Lead Pipes From U.S. Water System
THURSDAY, Nov. 30, 2023 (Healthday News) — The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency announced Thursday that it plans to require the removal of all lead pipes from the country’s water systems. The proposed rule, an ambitious effort that...
- Posted November 30, 2023
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Day Cares Aren’t COVID ‘Super Spreaders,’ Study Finds
- Posted November 30, 2023




















