- Taking a GLP-1 Medication? Here’s Tips to Holiday Eating
- Bird Flu Virus in Canadian Teen Shows Mutations That Could Help It Spread Among Humans
- Flu, COVID Vaccination Rates Remain Low as Winter Nears
- ’10 Americas:’ Health Disparities Mean Life Expectancy Varies Across U.S.
- Short-Term Hormone Therapy for Menopause Won’t Harm Women’s Brains
- Could a Vitamin Be Effective Treatment for COPD?
- Woman Receives World’s First Robotic Double-Lung Transplant
- Flavored Vapes Behind Big Surge in U.S. E-Cigarette Sales
- Reading Beyond Headline Rare For Most on Social Media, Study Finds
- Meds Like Ozempic Are Causing Folks to Waste More Food
Health Highlights: July 28, 2021
Here’s some of HealthDay’s top stories for Wednesday, July 28:
FDA advisor who panned new Alzheimer’s drug speaks out. Dr. G. Caleb Alexander was one of 10 advisors on an 11-member FDA panel who voted against approval of the controversial new Alzheimer’s drug, Aduhelm. The agency approved the drug anyway. Alexander tells HealthDay Now why that decision was wrong, and reveals some questionable moves behind it. Read more
Biden could mandate ‘vaccine or testing’ for federal workers. Faced with tough resistance by many Americans to COVID vaccination, and a surge in cases driven by the Delta variant, President Joe Biden is mulling mandatory vaccination or weekly testing for all civilian federal government employees. Read more
Only Republican ‘elites’ will change the minds of some anti-vaxxers. America is in an ‘epidemic of the unvaccinated,’ with many of these holdouts embracing right-wing political views. A new study finds their views on vaccination might still be altered, but only by high-profile Republicans. Read more
Fraudulent cancer care info common on social media. ‘Chemo doesn’t work,’ ‘Baking soda cures prostate cancer,’ — bogus claims like these can be found in a third of social media articles about cancer, a new study finds. All that misinformation can pose real dangers, experts warn. Read more
Primary care doctors often miss heart failure in women, Black patients. It’s a major killer of older Americans, but a new study finds that — despite clear symptoms — many primary care physicians don’t spot the illness, especially in women and Black patients. Read more
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