3 Things You Can Do to Stay on Track With Your Health Journey

Maintaining a healthy lifestyle is a struggle, especially when you’re surrounded by temptations and distractions. It may be easier at first to say that you’re switching to a healthy lifestyle or diet, but it can become more difficult during the process. You need to adapt to a new lifestyle, change your diet, and follow a

WHO: 2nd COVID booster for most vulnerable offers benefits

An expert group convened by the World Health Organization says there may be some benefit in giving a second booster dose of coronavirus vaccine to the most vulnerable people amid the continuing global spread of omicron and its subvariants. In a statement issued on Tuesday, the United Nations health agency said there was “a growing

Hostile behaviour toward people with a visible difference on the rise – study

The charity’s research also found just over a quarter of people with a visible difference have been stared at whilst at work, while nearly one in five reported that they have been passed over for development opportunities, promotion, wage increases or client/customer contact in the workplace. Source link

Just How Accurate Are Rapid Antigen Tests? Two Testing Experts Explain The Latest Data

As of May 2022, the U.S. is experiencing another uptick in the number of COVID-19 cases. High rates of infection in Europe and Asia, along with the continued emergence of new sub-variants, such as omicron BA.4 and BA.5, raise concerns that another surge could be on the way. Even though demand for COVID-19 tests greatly

Risk of breast cancer in males may be associated with male infertility

Three-dimensional culture of human breast cancer cells, with DNA stained blue and a protein in the cell surface membrane stained green. Image created in 2014 by Tom Misteli, Ph.D., and Karen Meaburn, Ph.D. at the NIH IRP. The risk of invasive breast cancer in men may be associated with self-reported infertility in the male partner,

Study suggests the seasonal H1N1 flu virus may be a direct descendant of the 1918 influenza strain that caused a global flu pandemic

Medical and historical reports suggest that 50 to 100 million people died worldwide during the 1918 influenza A (H1N1) pandemic. The disease was first identified in the summer of 1918 across several continents, peaked during the autumn of 1918, and continued till the winter of 1919. Exceptionally high mortality was reported in 20 to 40

Most Men With Low-Risk Prostate Tumors Now Forgoing Treatment

The number of men with prostate cancer who opted for active surveillance (AS)   doubled nationally between 2014 and 2021, according to experts who say the dramatic increase reflects a growing understanding among both researchers and patients that low-grade prostate tumors can be safely watched for years without requiring treatment. Dr Matthew Cooperberg Roughly 60% of

Best Places to Work in Healthcare – 2022 (alphabetical list)

AKASA South San Francisco Aledade Bethesda, Md. All Star Healthcare Solutions Deerfield Beach, Fla. Amedisys Baton Rouge, La. Aspen RxHealth Tampa, Fla. Aya Healthcare San Diego b.well Connected Health Baltimore Bailey Medical Center Owasso, Okla. Baxter Regional Medical Center Mountain Home, Ark. Beach Cities Health District Redondo Beach, Calif. Beaumont Emergency Hospital Beaumont, Texas Blue

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