News for Healthier Living
Virtual vs. In-Person Visits for New Neurology Patients and the Impact on Future Care
For people who see a neurology clinician for the first time, a new study has found that being seen virtually vs. in-person made no difference in how soon they needed more care. The study was published April 22, 2026, in Neurology(r), the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.
April 22, 2026
April 23 2026April 22 2026April 21 2026 - Anxiety Regulated by Key Signal in Brain Immune Cells
- Cellular Neighborhoods Inside Tumors May Predict Which Patients with Melanoma Benefit From Combination Immunotherapy
- National Asthma and Allergy Awareness Month, World Asthma Day
- UChicago Hosts International Meeting to Develop Unified Classification for Blood Cancers
- FDA 'Healthy' Label Encourages Healthier Snack Choices and Influences What Consumers Are Willing to Pay, According to New Study
- Federal Housing Assistance May Lead to Improved Two-Year Survival Among Older People with Prostate Cancer
- Children's Hospital Los Angeles Opens In-Hospital Family Pantry, Offering Nutritious Food and Expanding Access to Accept SNAP/EBT
- C. Diff Study Enrolling Patients Over 65 at Increased Risk of Infection
- Drug Lifts 'Brain Fog' From Lupus Patients: Clinical Trial
- Redo Surgical Mitral Valve Replacement Shows Long-Term Survival Advantage Over Transcatheter Valve-in-Valve
- Children’s Activity Cubes Recalled Over Choking Hazard Risk
- Study Finds AI Chatbots Can Give Misleading Health Advice
- Former Surgeon General Backs CDC Nominee, But Questions Remain on Vaccines
- Cantaloupes Recalled in Four States Due to Salmonella Risk
- Bullying and Adverse Social Climate Take Measurable Toll on Mental Health of Gender-Diverse Youth
- AACR: Novel Approach Prevents Cancer Progression, Spares Surgery for Majority of Patients with Precancerous Oral Lesions
- JMIR Report: Can Remote Monitoring Fix Hospital Overcrowding?
- Less-Dangerous Painkiller Still Has High Risk For Drug Interactions
- Black Women Hit Hardest By Pandemic-Related Rise In Pregnancy-Related Deaths
- Powerful Antibiotic Combo Not Necessary For Simple Sinus Infections, Study Shows
- Service Dogs Perform Tasks Akin To Human Caregivers, Researchers Say
- A Third Of Young Adults Are Couch Potatoes, Their Parents Say
- Smoking, Vaping Weed Increases Risk Of Asthma Attacks Among Young Adults, Study Finds
- Silence in Healthcare Still Kills: Communication Failures Continue to Threaten Patients and Healthcare Innovation
- Gaps in Pediatric Burn Care Must Be Addressed
April 20 2026April 19 2026April 18 2026April 17 2026April 16 2026 - University of Kentucky Study Finds Barriers to Hormone Therapy for Patients with Cervical Cancer
- Reproductive Justice Framework Essential to Addressing Inequities in High-risk Pregnancy Care
- mRNA Vaccines Follow Unconventional Immune Path to Destroy Tumors
- Mayo Clinic Researchers Present Advances in Immunotherapy, Biomarkers and Tumor Biology at AACR 2026
- Programming the Immune System to Manufacture Its Own Therapeutic Proteins
- Will Artificial Intelligence Replace Human Scientists?
- For Regrowing Human Limbs, This Salamander Gene Could Hold the Key
- New Children's Hospital Los Angeles Study Explores Expanded Diagnostic Capabilities of Aqueous Humor Liquid Biopsy
- Cutting Calories to Slow Aging--Without Compromising Health
- Overlooked Brain Connections Hold Clues to Cognition and Mental Health
- Beyond the Dialysis Machine: Shaping the Future of Kidney and Cardiovascular Health
- After the ICU, Some Older Adults Less Likely to Receive Home-Based Rehabilitation
- One Lot of Xanax Recalled Nationwide Over Quality Issue, FDA Says
- Rising ACA Costs Leave Many Unable To Pay for Coverage
- Cough Drops From Several Brands Being Recalled, FDA Says
- CDC May Get New Leader as Officials Consider Erica Schwartz
- Neurobiologists Hack Brain Circuits Tied to Placebo Pain Relief
- New Mapping Model Can Help Cities Efficiently Deploy Blood Resources to Patients Most in Need
- New Alzheimer's Drugs Provide No Meaningful Benefit, Major Evidence Review Concludes
- Mayo Clinic Q&A: Diet Tips During Cancer Treatment
- This Simple Step Could Improve The Benefits From Your Regular Workouts
- E-Bikes And E-Scooters A Growing Menace On City Streets, Study Says
- Why Walking Remains Unsteady After Partial Spinal Cord Injury
- Study Says Stress, Weight And Hormones Alter Timing of Puberty in Girls
- Air Pollution and Weather Tied to Migraines
- Neurons Store and Burn Lipids, Not Just Glucose
- Study Challenges Decades-Old Puzzle About Childhood Body Fat
- First-Line Targeted Therapy Shows Antitumor Activity in Patients with Advanced Lung Cancer
- How Gut Bacteria and Acute Stress Are Linked
- UCLA Scientists Identify Zombie Immune Cells as a Driver of Fatty Liver Disease, Inflammation and Aging
April 15 2026April 14 2026April 13 2026April 12 2026April 11 2026April 10 2026
|
|
|
|
|