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26 Feb

Daily Aspirin Doesn’t Protect Against Colon Cancer in Average-Risk Adults

A major, new evidence review finds taking a daily aspirin has little to no benefit for people at average risk of colorectal cancer, but it can cause dangerous bleeding and possibly stroke.

25 Feb

Cancer and Mental Health: A Critical First Year That May Impact Survival

A new study finds cancer patients who develop a new mental health condition are at increased risk of mortality in the first one to three years after diagnosis.

24 Feb

Lower Plaque Levels May Not Protect Women from Heart Disease

While women have less artery-clogging plaque on average, a new study finds it doesn’t lower their risk for serious heart events.

Crash Course Might Speed Brain Stimulation Treatment For Depression, Study Suggests

Crash Course Might Speed Brain Stimulation Treatment For Depression, Study Suggests

A brain stimulation therapy for depression can show results in as little as a workweek, a new study says.

Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) typically requires daily clinic visits over six to eight weeks, a rather rigorous schedule for people grappling with depression.

But patients can see benefits in as little as five days if t...

Wildfire Smoke Linked To Increase In Violent Assaults

Wildfire Smoke Linked To Increase In Violent Assaults

It’s a fact that people become “crazy from the heat,” but a new study suggests that “crazy from the smoke” might also be a phenomenon.

Skies choked with smoke from wildfires are linked to an increase in violent assaults, a new study has found.

Assaults increased by nearly 4% in Seattle on smoke-filled da...

Why Turning 19 Spikes Medicaid Loss for Millions

Why Turning 19 Spikes Medicaid Loss for Millions

For most teens, turning 19 is a milestone of early adulthood. But for those relying on Medicaid, it often triggers a birthday cliff where health insurance simply vanishes.

A new study from the University of Chicago highlights a systemic issue: The moment a person is no longer classified as a child by the government, their risk of becoming ...

Blood Test Can Predict Short-Term Survival Among Seniors

Blood Test Can Predict Short-Term Survival Among Seniors

An experimental blood test can predict whether seniors have long to live, a new study says.

The genetics-based blood test predicted two-year survival with accuracy as high as 86% among hundreds of seniors, researchers reported Feb. 24 in the journal Aging Cell.

The test is based on PIWI-interacting RNA (piRNA), a class of ge...

Democrat-Led States Sue Trump Administration Over Cuts to Childhood Vaccine Schedule

Democrat-Led States Sue Trump Administration Over Cuts to Childhood Vaccine Schedule

A group of 15 states is suing the Trump administration over recent changes to federal vaccine guidelines for kids.

The lawsuit, announced this week, aims to reverse a decision made in January that reduced the number of diseases kids are routinely vaccinated against from 17 to 11. 

The suit also challenges the removal and replace...

CDC Vaccine Advisory Panel To Revisit COVID Shot Safety Next Month

CDC Vaccine Advisory Panel To Revisit COVID Shot Safety Next Month

COVID vaccines are back under review and the move is raising concern among some health experts.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices is slated to discuss COVID vaccine injuries at a March meeting and may vote on future vaccine recommendations, according to a notice posted ...

Frozen Blueberry Recall Issued Across Four States for Listeria

Frozen Blueberry Recall Issued Across Four States for Listeria

Close to 56,000 pounds of frozen blueberries have been recalled after testing raised concerns about possible Listeria monocytogenes contamination, according to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

The recall involves blueberries made by Oregon Potato Company, which also operates as Willamette Valley Fruit Company in Salem,...

Could Drone-Delivered Defibrillators Save Lives?

Could Drone-Delivered Defibrillators Save Lives?

Can a high-tech drone be the difference between life and death if you go into cardiac arrest?

That’s the question a groundbreaking clinical trial in a corner of North Carolina and Virginia is setting out to answer.

"By integrating drone technology into emergency care, we’re working to close the critical gap between cardia...

  • Carole Tanzer Miller HealthDay Reporter
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  • February 26, 2026
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Inflammation Linked To Brain Damage, Memory Problems Among Football Players

Inflammation Linked To Brain Damage, Memory Problems Among Football Players

Inflammation caused by repetitive head impacts might help explain why some former football players develop brain problems later in life, a new study says.

Higher levels of inflammation are associated with damage in the brain’s white matter, according to a study of former college and professional football players published Feb. 25 in ...

Disasters Can Affect Mental Health A Decade Later, Review Finds

Disasters Can Affect Mental Health A Decade Later, Review Finds

Disasters and violent events echo in the minds of people for years afterward, contributing to mental illness that can surface as much as a decade later, a new evidence review has found.

More than 1 in 5 survivors (22%) will develop a mental health problem after living through their ordeal, researchers report in the Harvard Review of Ps...

AI Chatbots Can Contribute To Worsening Mental Illness, Study Finds

AI Chatbots Can Contribute To Worsening Mental Illness, Study Finds

THURSDAY, Feb. 26, 2026 (HealthDay News) – AI chatbots used for cheap therapy are liable to make mental illnesses worse, a new study warns.

People with diagnosed mental conditions wound up with worse delusions, increased mania, suicidal thoughts and aggravated eating disorders after relying on an AI chatbot for help, researchers foun...

Early Birds, Active Folks Less Likely To Develop ALS

Early Birds, Active Folks Less Likely To Develop ALS

Early birds and active folks are less likely to develop the degenerative brain disease called amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a new study says.

People who are early birds had a 20% lower risk of ALS — also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease — compared to night owls, according to research slated for presentation at an upco...

Study Highlights Unique Parenting Struggles of Younger Patients With Heart Disease

Study Highlights Unique Parenting Struggles of Younger Patients With Heart Disease

As heart disease increasingly strikes 30-, 40- and 50-somethings, a new challenge has emerged that traditional medicine often overlooks: How to heal a heart while raising a family.

A study published today in the Canadian Journal of Cardiology reveals that younger heart patients face a double burden. They aren't just fighting for t...

Newborns Exposed to More ‘Forever Chemicals’ Than Once Thought

Newborns Exposed to More ‘Forever Chemicals’ Than Once Thought

Babies are entering the world with a significantly higher chemical burden than scientists suspected.

Using advanced data science and chemical detection, researchers have discovered that newborns are exposed to a much broader array of "forever chemicals" before birth than earlier testing methods could capture. 

The findings &mdas...

Nicole ‘Snooki’ Polizzi Shares Cervical Cancer Diagnosis, Urges Women To Get Pap Tests

Nicole ‘Snooki’ Polizzi Shares Cervical Cancer Diagnosis, Urges Women To Get Pap Tests

Reality TV star Nicole "Snooki" Polizzi said an early pap smear may have saved her life.

In a video shared on TikTok, the 38-year-old said she was diagnosed with stage one cervical cancer after doctors found adenocarcinoma during a routine pap test.

"Obviously not the news that I was hoping for, but also not the worst news just becau...

Novo Nordisk Cuts Prices of Ozempic and Wegovy Starting January 2027

Novo Nordisk Cuts Prices of Ozempic and Wegovy Starting January 2027

Some of the most popular diabetes and weight-loss drugs in the U.S. will soon cost a lot less.

Novo Nordisk announced Tuesday that it will cut U.S. list prices of Ozempic and Wegovy by up to 50% starting next year.

The lower prices will take effect Jan. 1, 2027, the same time that reduced prices begin under Medicare plans for older f...

Lindsey Vonn Says Olympic Crash Nearly Cost Her a Leg

Lindsey Vonn Says Olympic Crash Nearly Cost Her a Leg

Olympic ski star Lindsey Vonn says a serious crash at the Milan Cortina Olympics nearly cost her a left leg.

In an Instagram post shared Monday, the 41-year-old skier revealed that her injuries were far worse than first reported after she crashed during the women’s downhill event on Feb. 8, just 13 seconds into her run.

After c...

Nearly 6 In 10 Women Expected To Develop Heart Disease

Nearly 6 In 10 Women Expected To Develop Heart Disease

Nearly 6 out of 10 U.S. women will have some type of heart disease during the next 25 years, a trend driven by rising rates of high blood pressure, a new American Heart Association report says.

Almost 60% of women could have high blood pressure by 2050, up from about 50% in 2020, according to results published today in the journal Circ...

Scientists' Push For a Universal Vaccine Takes a Key Step Forward

Scientists' Push For a Universal Vaccine Takes a Key Step Forward

If you avoid getting vaccinated because you dread one needle stick after another, there’s hopeful news from scientists at five major U.S. universities.

They’ve taken a major step toward developing a nasal spray that could one day protect against everything from influenza and COVID-19 to bacterial pneumonia and even common aller...

  • Carole Tanzer Miller HealthDay Reporter
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  • February 25, 2026
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Doomscrolling Affecting Many Americans' Sleep, Poll Finds

Doomscrolling Affecting Many Americans' Sleep, Poll Finds

Doomscrolling is taking a toll on many Americans’ rest, a new survey says.

More than a third of U.S. adults (38%) say using their phone or tablet to read the news before bed is making their sleep slightly or significantly worse, according to the new poll from the American Academy of Sleep Medicine (AASM).

Only 14% of Americans ...

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