Staying informed is also a great way to stay healthy. Keep up-to-date with all the latest health news here.
15 Apr
A new study finds popular chatbots frequently provide misleading or incomplete medical information, highlighting the need for stronger oversight.
14 Apr
A new study finds people who consume large amounts of ultra-processed foods have more fat in their thigh muscles, a change that may raise the risk of knee osteoarthritis.
13 Apr
A new study finds women who live in homes with high levels of radon, a naturally occurring radioactive gas, have a significantly higher risk of developing ovarian cancer.
Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter April 16, 2026
New anti-amyloid drugs approved to treat Alzheimer’s disease have no clinically meaningful positive effects for patients, a major evidence review has concluded.
Drugs like Leqembi (lecanemab) and Kinsula (donanemab) have little to no effect on patients’ cognitive decline and dementia, according to results published by the C... Full Page
Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter April 16, 2026
People might get more from their workouts if they time their exercise to their sleep schedule, a new study says.
“Early birds” and “night owls” who timed their exercise to when they were most alert wound up with lower blood pressure, blood sugar and “bad” LDL cholesterol levels, researchers reported Apri... Full Page
Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter April 16, 2026
Battery-driven bicycles and scooters are becoming a public hazard, endangering both riders and pedestrians, a new study reports.
E-bike and e-scooter crashes now account for more than half of bike- and scooter-related trauma cases treated at a major New York City hospital, up from less than 1 in 10 a handful of years ago, researchers repor... Full Page
Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter April 16, 2026
People who’ve recovered from a spinal cord injury enough to walk continue to have trouble standing, balancing or moving smoothly – and researchers now think they know why.
The way the human body compensates for a spinal injury appears to result in herky-jerky movement on the muscular level, researchers recently reported in the ... Full Page
Deanna Neff HealthDay Reporter April 16, 2026
For decades, doctors have noticed that girls are entering puberty at increasingly younger ages without a clear reason to explain it.
While many have pointed to diet or environment, a new Columbia University study points to a complex triple threat: High stress, hormones and body mass index (BMI, an estimate of body fat based on height and w... Full Page
HealthDay Staff HealthDay Reporter April 15, 2026
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has paused decisions on uses for dozens of "forever chemicals," also known as PFAS.
The delay includes proposed changes regarding how several of these chemicals can be used, according to one of two people familiar with the situation who spoke to The Washington Post. The two commented ... Full Page
HealthDay Staff HealthDay Reporter April 15, 2026
Buying or selling wild animals, whether for food, pets or other uses, may increase the risk of diseases spreading to people, a new study finds.
Researchers looked at more than 40 years of global wildlife trade data and thousands of mammal species. They found that animals involved in the trade were 50% more likely to carry germs that can in... Full Page
Dr. David Stukus HealthDay Reporter April 15, 2026
When I was training to be a board-certified allergist 20 years ago, a running joke cropped up every spring. Local media outlets loudly proclaimed the worst pollen season ever!
Spring is when trees release microscopic pollen into the air, causing misery for the tens of millions of people living with seasonal allergies and asthma.
We... Full Page
HealthDay Staff HealthDay Reporter April 15, 2026
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has told Eli Lilly to study possible heart, liver and other risks tied to its new obesity drug Foundayo, according to an approval letter released Tuesday.
Foundayo was approved earlier this month through an FDA pilot program designed to speed up drug reviews.
It is the second oral GLP... Full Page
Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter April 15, 2026
An Epstein-Barr virus infection that results in a case of mono appears to triple the risk of one day developing multiple sclerosis, a new study says.
Epstein-Barr, a herpes virus, is the most common cause of infectious mononucleosis, researchers said.
Now, it seems that one-two punch might increase the risk of the degenerative brain ... Full Page
Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter April 15, 2026
A blood test can predict Alzheimer’s disease progression in a person’s brain years before they show any symptoms of decline, a new study says.
The test, which looks for a form of toxic tau protein in the blood, reveals Alzheimer’s risk long before brain scans start to show signs of deterioration, researchers reported Apri... Full Page
Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter April 15, 2026
People with a common heart rhythm disorder have a tripled risk of heart failure, even if they aren’t showing any symptoms, a new study says.
Patients whose silent atrial fibrillation was caught during a health screening had nearly 3.2 times higher odds of suffering from heart failure, researchers reported at a meeting of the European... Full Page
Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter April 15, 2026
Your child just took a hard hit on the playing field.
Maybe they’re lying on the ground, maybe they’re stumbling around, maybe they look just fine.
You need to know, as soon as possible – do they have a concussion?
There are indeed specific signs of concussion in children that can be used to quickly suss out w... Full Page
Deanna Neff HealthDay Reporter April 15, 2026
For the 6 million Americans recovering from heart failure, the most difficult time for their health often starts the moment they leave the hospital.
Patients often struggle with complex medications and a lack of access to nutritious food once back at home.
However, a new study led by UT Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, su... Full Page
Deanna Neff HealthDay Reporter April 15, 2026
WEDNESDAY, April 15, 2026 (HealthDay News) —For many patients with sickle cell disease, a trip to the emergency room has an unwanted side-effect: In their search for relief from agonizing pain, they are often dismissed as drug-seekers.
A new study from the University of Chicago Medicine suggests that clinician bias, fueled larg... Full Page
HealthDay Staff HealthDay Reporter April 14, 2026
A new survey from two food industry groups shows growing interest in meat as a "healthy" food choice, even as doctors warn that too much red meat can raise health risks.
More than 75% of U.S. consumers now see meat and poultry as part of a healthy diet. That's up from 64% in 2020.
The report — from FMI — The Food Industry... Full Page
HealthDay Staff HealthDay Reporter April 14, 2026
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has issued a Class I recall for Nuts.com’s Espresso Malted Milk Balls after finding the product contains undeclared wheat and soy, two major allergens.
In all, 10,190 pounds of the candy are affected, according to an enforcement report from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).... Full Page
HealthDay Staff HealthDay Reporter April 14, 2026
About 18,000 pairs of Member’s Mark Children’s Valentine SS Notch Collar Pajama Sets have been recalled because they do not meet federal flammability standards for kids' sleepwear.
The Valentine’s-themed pajama sets were sold online at Sam's Club between December 2025 and January 2026 for about $14, the U.S. Consumer Prod... Full Page
HealthDay Staff HealthDay Reporter April 14, 2026
You know the kind of conversation: That random chat on an elevator, in a long line at the store or centered on a topic you couldn’t care less about.
You might think chatting about a mundane topic isn’t worth your time, but new research, published recently in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology suggests tho... Full Page
Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter April 14, 2026
Long-term opioid prescriptions have declined dramatically in the United States, reflecting progress made against America’s opioid epidemic, a new study says.
Patients on active long-term opioid treatment – defined as 90 days or longer – fell by nearly a quarter (24%) between 2015 and 2023, researchers recently reported in... Full Page