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Stand up for your right to be healthy and happy
"If you don't stand for something, you will fall for anything," (Alexander Hamilton, maybe). And ... "When you stand for something, you have to stand for it all the way, not halfway" (Kevin Gates, singer/songwriter).
Those sentiments are certainly true when it comes to how you carry yourself. That's because when your posture hasn't got you ...Read more
Understanding What Hyperbaric Oxygen Can Do For Hearing Loss
DEAR DR. ROACH: I was just diagnosed with sudden sensorineural hearing loss. They gave me a steroid injection into the ear and more steroids by mouth, but they say it's up to me whether I want to try hyperbaric oxygen.
Do you have any opinion on it? How does breathing pure oxygen at 2 atmospheres help anything? Is there some underlying theory...Read more

California veterans fight to fast-track study of 'lifesaving' psychedelic therapy
For years after his service in Afghanistan and Iraq, U.S. Army Special Forces veteran Joe Hudak fought a daily battle against a voice inside his head screaming anxious, dark and dangerous thoughts.
He lost multiple team members in combat during his two-decade career in the Green Berets and tried everything he could to treat his post-traumatic ...Read more

Colorado health officials brace for layoffs amid loss of federal funding from Trump administration
DENVER — Colorado’s health department is bracing for several layoffs early next month for workers focused on cancer and heart disease prevention, thanks to the apparent loss of nearly $2 million in federal grant funding and the state’s own bleak fiscal outlook.
The Department of Public Health and Environment initially said 11 positions ...Read more

4 new measles cases reported in Kentucky
LEXINGTON, Ky. — Four new cases of measles have been reported in Kentucky this week, including three in one household in Woodford County.
The fourth case is in Todd County and is not related to the other three cases, the Cabinet for Health and Family Services said Friday. That person was exposed to someone with measles while traveling ...Read more

California will see 'devastating' health care cuts under GOP bill, Newsom says
As many as 3.4 million Californians could lose their state Medi-Cal health insurance under the budget bill making its way through the U.S. Senate, Gov. Gavin Newsom said Friday.
Newsom said the proposed cuts to health care in the “ one big, beautiful bill,” a cornerstone of President Donald Trump’s second-term agenda, could force the ...Read more

California's much-touted IVF law may be delayed until 2026, leaving many in the lurch
California lawmakers are poised to delay the state’s much-ballyhooed new law mandating in vitro fertilization insurance coverage for millions, set to take effect July 1. Gov. Gavin Newsom has asked lawmakers to push the implementation date to January 2026, leaving patients, insurers, and employers in limbo.
The law, SB 729, requires state-...Read more

Kennedy's vaccine advisers sow doubts as scientists protest US pivot on shots
As fired and retired scientists rallied outside in the Atlanta heat, an advisory panel that Robert F. Kennedy Jr. handpicked to replace experts he’d fired earlier met inside the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s headquarters to plan a more skeptical vaccine future.
The new members of the Advisory Committee on Immunization ...Read more

As federal health grants shrink, memory cafes help dementia patients and their caregivers
Rob Kennedy mingled with about a dozen other people in a community space in Clarks Summit, Pennsylvania.
The room, decorated with an under-the-sea theme, had a balloon arch decked out with streamers meant to look like jellyfish and a cloud of clear balloons mimicking ocean bubbles.
Kennedy comes to this memory cafe twice a month since being ...Read more

On Nutrition: America's food
When our recent road trip across three states concluded, a stockpile of random popcorn kernels littered the floor of our vehicle. It happens every time we take a long trip. And it probably won’t change, especially since it’s a food that got its origins in the Americas.
According to information from USDA’s National Agricultural Library, ...Read more

Mayo Clinic Q&A: 8 common myths about back pain
DEAR MAYO CLINIC: My back's been bothering me, and everyone seems to have ideas what's causing the pain. Can you help?
ANSWER: Back pain is more common than homeownership in the U.S. While about 65% of adults own a home, nearly 80% of adults will have back pain at some point. Despite how common this type of pain is, myths about it persist. ...Read more
Neurologist Advises Patient To Take 2,000 Mcg Of Vitamin B12
DEAR DR. ROACH: I am 73, and I was worried about dementia. Turns out, I am "normal." However, the neurologist told me to take 2,000 mcg of B12 daily. My multivitamin has 100 mcg, which is 4,167% of the daily value (DV). As I understand the recommended DV is 2.4 mcg, and for those over 50 years old, it is 25-100 mcg.
I raised the question with...Read more
Vitamin D's anti-aging powers revealed
Telomeres, those protective caps on the ends of your chromosomes, tell tales about your biological aging process. The unhealthier your lifestyle habits, the more premature damage occurs to them, leading to an inability to make more stem cells that repair your cells and organs, an increased risk of disease-causing genetic mutations, and damage to...Read more

Measles on the rise in California: More cases so far this year than all of 2024
LOS ANGELES — California has already reported more measles cases this year than in all of 2024, a worrisome development that comes as the nation is suffering its largest outbreak of the super-infectious disease in decades.
The extent of the national outbreak has rocketed measles from a back-of-mind issue — one rarely, if ever, encountered ...Read more
Getting The Rubella Vaccine Is Not Required For Woman In Her 70S
DEAR DR. ROACH: You recently wrote that "nearly everybody born before 1957 had measles and mumps (but not rubella)." I was born in the early 1950s, so I fall into this category. A few years ago, at my request, my primary care physician did a test to check for immunity for the MMR diseases.
While the mumps and measles tests came back ...Read more
The impact of testosterone on men and women's osteoarthritis
Testosterone has a reputation for fueling macho behavior, but in truth, it's an essential hormone that both males and females produce. In women, it impacts sex drive, bone and muscle health, mood and energy, and the menstrual cycle and fertility. In men, it also regulates sex drive and bone and muscle mass and strength -- plus it impacts the ...Read more

UK probes genetic link between obesity drugs and pancreas damage
The U.K. is asking patients whose pancreas became dangerously inflamed after taking obesity drugs like Wegovy and Zepbound to come in for tests to understand whether there’s a genetic risk for the condition.
The country’s drug regulator, alongside Genomics England, is investigating whether a person’s genetics might make them more ...Read more

Connecticut man accused of threatening Bristol Health CEO
HARTFORD, Conn. — A man with a history of allegedly making threats directed at Bristol Hospital was arrested and accused of threatening its CEO.
Richard Stark, 58, faces charges of second-degree threatening and second-degree breach of peace, according to Lt. Ulric Berube of the Bristol Police Department.
Berube said employees of the hospital...Read more

Bacteria that can cause vomiting, diarrhea gets kids' cough syrup recalled
Parents, guardians and all who care for kids should check their medicine cabinets after a children’s cough syrup was recalled for a foodborne bacteria that can cause myriad problems.
And, in extreme cases, cause death.
Medtech Products’ recall notice, posted to the FDA website, said it recalled five lots of Little Remedies Honey Cough ...Read more

Stanford Medicine ends surgeries for transgender minors amid pressure from Trump administration
LOS ANGELES — Stanford Medicine has stopped performing gender-affirming surgeries on patients younger than 19, joining Children's Hospital Los Angeles in scaling back healthcare for transgender youth amid growing political pressure from the Trump administration.
"After careful review of the latest actions and directives from the federal ...Read more
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