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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.

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.

26 Jan

Red Light Therapy Shows Promise in Protecting Football Players’ Brains

In a small, new study, college football players who used a special red light device during their entire season saw no increase in brain inflammation and injury over 16 weeks.

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...

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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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One Simple Step At Bedtime Might Help Fight Glaucoma, Experts Say

One Simple Step At Bedtime Might Help Fight Glaucoma, Experts Say

One simple step at bedtime can help people with glaucoma slow the progression of their eye disease, a new study says.

Sleeping without pillows might help lower patients’ internal eye pressure, which when elevated in glaucoma can cause optic nerve damage and irreversible vision loss, researchers reported Jan. 27 in the British Jou...

  • Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 28, 2026
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Night Owls Have Worse Heart Health, Study Finds

Night Owls Have Worse Heart Health, Study Finds

Do you prefer to stay up late, living it up through the night while everyone else is snoozing away?

You might be doing your heart health a disservice, a new study says.

Middle-aged and older night owls appear to have worse heart health, likely due to unhealthy lifestyle choices, researchers reported today in the Journal of the Am...

  • Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 28, 2026
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Cutting Salt In Prepared Foods Can Protect Nations' Heart Health, European Studies Find

Cutting Salt In Prepared Foods Can Protect Nations' Heart Health, European Studies Find

You might not notice a pinch of salt missing from your bread, sandwich or pizza, but your body definitely will, according to a pair of new European studies.

Efforts to lower sodium levels in packaged and prepared foods are expected to improve heart health in both France and the U.K., researchers write in the February issue of the journal <...

  • Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 28, 2026
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Early Language Intervention Helps Most Non-Speaking Children With Autism

Early Language Intervention Helps Most Non-Speaking Children With Autism

Early treatment can help most non-speaking children with autism gain some verbal ability, a new study says.

Following early intervention, about two-thirds of non-speaking kids with autism gained the ability to use single words, researchers recently reported in the Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology.

What&rsq...

  • Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 28, 2026
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Red Light Therapy Might Protect Football Players From Brain Damage

Red Light Therapy Might Protect Football Players From Brain Damage

Red light therapy might be able to protect football players from brain damage caused by frequent head impacts, a new small-scale study says.

College football players treated with red light therapy over the course of a season wound up with much less brain inflammation than others provided a placebo treatment, researchers recently reported i...

  • Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 28, 2026
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Airports Step Up Screenings After Nipah Virus Cases in India

Airports Step Up Screenings After Nipah Virus Cases in India

Health officials across parts of Asia are stepping up disease checks after several people in India were diagnosed with Nipah virus, a rare but deadly infection that can spread from animals to humans.

So far, five people have tested positive, Thai officials confirmed. India’s National Center for Disease Control said the outbreak is &l...

  • I. Edwards HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 27, 2026
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More Spring & Mulberry Chocolates Recalled Due To Possible Salmonella

More Spring & Mulberry Chocolates Recalled Due To Possible Salmonella

A growing recall of specialty date-sweetened chocolates is now affecting more products across the U.S., after testing found possible Salmonella contamination.

Spring & Mulberry announced Jan. 14 that it has expanded its voluntary recall to include several additional chocolate flavors. 

The Raleigh, North Carolina&nd...

  • I. Edwards HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 27, 2026
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Doctors Turn to Pediatric Group's Vaccine Schedule After CDC Changes

Doctors Turn to Pediatric Group's Vaccine Schedule After CDC Changes

Many children’s doctors say they will follow vaccine guidance from the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), after the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) narrowed its own recommendations this month.

On Monday, the AAP updated its recommendations for what shots kids should get. While the changes were small, includin...

  • I. Edwards HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 27, 2026
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Burning Wood Indoors May Be a Bigger Health Risk Than You Think

Burning Wood Indoors May Be a Bigger Health Risk Than You Think

Lighting a fire on a cold winter night can feel cozy. But a new study suggests it may also harm your health, even if you don’t burn the wood yourself.

Researchers at Northwestern University found that home wood burning is responsible for about 22% of outdoor fine particle pollution (PM2.5) during winter across the U.S.

That&rsq...

  • I. Edwards HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 27, 2026
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Breakdown In Federal Health Tracking Leaves U.S. Vulnerable To Outbreaks, Pandemics, Experts Warn

Breakdown In Federal Health Tracking Leaves U.S. Vulnerable To Outbreaks, Pandemics, Experts Warn

The United States is more vulnerable to future outbreaks, pandemics and health crises due to a breakdown in federal disease tracking, a new study says.

Nearly half of once-routinely updated health surveillance databases maintained by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) stopped or delayed updates in 2025, researchers r...

  • Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 27, 2026
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A Lifetime Of Heavy Boozing Raises Colon Cancer Risk

A Lifetime Of Heavy Boozing Raises Colon Cancer Risk

Heavy drinking increases a person’s risk of colon cancer over their lifetime, a new study says.

People who routinely have 14 or more drinks a week have a higher risk of colon and rectal cancer compared to those who partake in little to no alcohol, researchers reported Jan. 26 in the journal Cancer.

It also appears that...

  • Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 27, 2026
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Exercise Fends Off Middle-Age Stress, Study Shows

Exercise Fends Off Middle-Age Stress, Study Shows

People who don’t get enough exercise are more likely to be stressed out by middle age, a new study warns.

Middle-aged adults had a higher risk of chronic stress if they consistently failed to meet minimum recommended levels of physical activity, researchers will report in the February issue of the journal Psychoneuroendocrinology...

  • Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 27, 2026
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Gout Drugs Might Also Help Heart Health, Researchers Find

Gout Drugs Might Also Help Heart Health, Researchers Find

Gout patients could be getting some heart-healthy added benefits from managing their condition effectively, a new study says.

Drugs that lower uric acid levels in the blood also appear to reduce a person’s risk of heart attack and stroke, researchers reported Jan. 26 in JAMA Internal Medicine.

“People with gout a...

  • Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 27, 2026
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Grandparenting Good For The Aging Brain, Study Finds

Grandparenting Good For The Aging Brain, Study Finds

Grandkids are a blessing in more ways than one for seniors, a new study says.

Grandparenting is good for the aging brain, potentially serving as a buffer against cognitive decline, according to findings published Jan. 26 in the journal Psychology and Aging.

Seniors who provide childcare for their grandchildren score higher o...

  • Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 27, 2026
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Women On Menopause Hormone Therapy Lose More Weight With Zepbound, Study Finds

Women On Menopause Hormone Therapy Lose More Weight With Zepbound, Study Finds

Good news for women taking hormone therapy for menopause: You might find that weight-loss drugs are more effective.

Women on hormone therapy lost 35% more weight while taking Zepbound (tirzepatide), researchers recently reported in The Lancet Obstetrics, Gynecology & Women’s Health.

“The magnitude of this dif...

  • Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
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  • January 27, 2026
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