Staying informed is also a great way to stay healthy. Keep up-to-date with all the latest health news here.
23 Mar
A new study finds even brief breaks from GLP-1 medications can increase the risk of heart attack, stroke, and death—highlighting the importance of staying on treatment.
20 Mar
A new study finds deaths from heart disease related to high blood pressure have quadrupled over the past two decades in young women.
19 Mar
A new study suggests people who exercise in the early morning have lower risks of coronary artery disease, high blood pressure, diabetes and obesity.
HealthDay Staff HealthDay Reporter March 23, 2026
A stronger version of the popular weight loss drug Wegovy is on the way after federal regulators signed off on a higher dose.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved a 7.2-milligram dose of Novo Nordisk’s semaglutide, the active ingredient in Wegovy. Until now, the highest approved dose was 2.4 milligrams, taken as a wee... Full Page
HealthDay Staff HealthDay Reporter March 23, 2026
If you have children’s ibuprofen at home, you may want to check the label.
Nearly 90,000 bottles have been recalled over possible contamination, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) said.
The recall affects 89,592 bottles of Children’s Ibuprofen Oral Suspension made by Strides Pharma for Taro Pharmaceuticals USA, I... Full Page
Carole Tanzer Miller HealthDay Reporter March 23, 2026
Detecting the first signs of Alzheimer’s disease may one day be as easy as swabbing the inside of your nose.
An experimental swab, patented by Duke Health, picked up early changes in nerve and immune cells even before thinking and memory problems had emerged.
"If we can diagnose people early enough, we might be able to start th... Full Page
Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter March 23, 2026
A person’s bank statement might predict how fast their brain will age, a new study says.
Money troubles in middle and old age were consistently associated with worse memory scores and faster brain decline, researchers recently reported in the American Journal of Epidemiology.
The link was strongest among folks 65 and o... Full Page
Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter March 23, 2026
Rural residents face an increasingly larger share of cancer deaths in the U.S., with the gap continuing to widen between them and their urban brethren, a new study says.
Rural areas had the highest cancer death rates in 2021 to 2023, while large cities had the lowest rates, researchers reported March 19 in the Journal of the National C... Full Page
Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter March 23, 2026
People with type 2 diabetes struggle to control their disease if their insurance coverage is shaky, a new study says.
Low-income adults who experience insurance “churn” – losing coverage off and on – have poorer blood sugar control and need more diabetes meds than those whose insurance coverage remains steady, resea... Full Page
Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter March 23, 2026
Psychedelic drugs don’t appear to work any better than antidepressants among people with major depression, a new evidence review says.
Despite the hype around using “magic mushrooms” and LSD to treat some mental disorders, psychedelic-assisted therapy did not outperform traditional antidepressants when researchers compare... Full Page
Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter March 23, 2026
Heat waves might endanger some urban-dwelling seniors at temperatures lower than those now used by cities to declare a heat emergency, a new study warns.
The risk of heat stroke and death among some seniors rises dramatically when the heat index reaches 90 degrees or higher for at least two days in a row, researchers reported March 20 in <... Full Page
Carole Tanzer Miller HealthDay Reporter March 22, 2026
Got something important you don’t dare forget — like taking your heart medication, turning off the stove or a big date?
Here’s some friendly advice from Carrie Cuttler, a researcher at Washington State University in Pullman.
"You probably don’t want to be high at the time you need to remember to do it," ... Full Page
Carole Tanzer Miller HealthDay Reporter March 21, 2026
SATURDAY, March 21, 2026 (HealthDay News) — You probably know someone who never loses their cool — even in a situation that would send most folks into a panic.
How come they don’t freak out under pressure?
Chalk it up to something called "psychological flexibility."
"They’re able to change the way t... Full Page
HealthDay Staff HealthDay Reporter March 20, 2026
A new study suggests the true number of COVID-19 deaths in the early days of the pandemic may be much higher than official counts show.
Researchers estimate that as many as 155,000 additional deaths linked to COVID may have gone unrecognized in the United States during 2020 and 2021.
During that same period, about 840,000 COVID... Full Page
HealthDay Staff HealthDay Reporter March 20, 2026
A long-debated plan to block teens from using tanning beds nationwide will not move forward.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) said earlier this week it is withdrawing a proposed rule that would have banned anyone under age 18 from using tanning beds.
The rule, first proposed in 2015, would have also required adults to sign... Full Page
HealthDay Staff HealthDay Reporter March 20, 2026
Rising health insurance costs are pushing some Americans to drop their coverage, a new survey finds.
About 1 in 10 people who had Affordable Care Act (ACA) plans last year are now uninsured, according to a report from the health policy group KFF.
The change follows a sharp increase in premiums following expiration of extra fede... Full Page
HealthDay Staff HealthDay Reporter March 20, 2026
Drugs like Ozempic and Mounjaro are known to lower the risk of heart attack and stroke, but a new study suggests those benefits may not last if people stop taking them.
Researchers found that heart risks begin to rise again within six months after stopping GLP-1 medications, and much of the benefit may be gone within about 18 months.
Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter March 20, 2026
High blood pressure-related deaths are skyrocketing among young women, with rates up more than fourfold during the past two decades, a new study says.
Nearly 5 of every 100,000 deaths among 25- to 44-year-old women in 2023 owed to heart disease caused by high blood pressure, compared to about 1 in 100,000 in 1999, researchers are to report... Full Page
Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter March 20, 2026
A meningitis vaccine does not protect against gonorrhea spread between men, a new clinical trial has concluded.
Experts had hoped that a meningococcal B vaccine called 4CMenB might prevent the spread of gonorrhea, based on an earlier study that linked the vaccine to a 38% reduced risk of the sexually transmitted infection.
But a clin... Full Page
Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter March 20, 2026
“Early bird” exercise provides better health benefits for people, a new study says.
People who regularly exercise in the early morning are significantly less likely to develop clogged arteries, high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes or obesity, researchers are slated to report at the upcoming meeting in New Orleans of the America... Full Page
Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter March 20, 2026
Social media is bad for kids, increasing their risk of depression, self-harm, substance use and behavior problems, a major evidence review has concluded.
The risk social media poses to kids’ health is “comparable with other modifiable lifestyle factors, such as physical inactivity and unhealthy diet,” concluded the resear... Full Page
Deanna Neff HealthDay Reporter March 20, 2026
For millions of teens living with ADHD, the transition into adulthood adds more complexity and temptation to daily life. Substance abuse, on top of ADHD, can become a tricky landscape to navigate.
New research from Penn State College of Medicine reveals that the very patients who could benefit from ADHD medication the most — those al... Full Page
Deanna Neff HealthDay Reporter March 20, 2026
Everybody’s done it: You’re at a noisy party and someone is telling you something in your ear. You squeeze your eyes shut to focus and try to hear what they’re saying.
For generations, the common wisdom has been that turning off our vision frees up brain power to boost our hearing. But a surprising new study suggests that... Full Page
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