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Diabetes drug could slash risk of fatal heart condition in one group, scientists reveal
A diabetes drug could help lower the risk of heart failure in certain patients. A new study published in Nature Medicine analyzed how SGLT2 inhibitor dapagliflozin, a medication used to treat type 2 diabetes, could help prevent heart failure in people with rare genetic variants linked to cardiomyopathy (a progressive disease of the heart muscle).Using data from the DECLARE-TIMI 58 trial, researchers from Harvard Medical School, Mass General Brigham and MIT looked at more than 12,000 adults...
One fat helped pancreatic cancer grow while another cut disease in half
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Why Trump reversed course to fast-track psychedelic drugs for mental healthcare
Marie Phelan said she had never heard of MDMA before spotting a flyer seeking veterans suffering from post traumatic stress disorder. Now, she says the psychoactive drug more commonly known as ecstasy or molly has changed the trajectory of her life. "My experience of MDMA was that it just cracked my heart wide open," said Phelan who enlisted in the U.S. Army Reserve in 1999 and was deployed to Iraq in 2003.
7 things all women should know about their heart health
7 things all women should know about their heart health Women’s cardiovascular health has long been overlooked and understudied. Here are some things to keep in mind. Heart disease kills more women than all cancers combined.
The (AI) doctor will see you now: Inside the Trump-led push to get robots into diagnosing health problems
The (AI) doctor will see you now: Inside the Trump-led push to get robots into diagnosing health problems AI supporters see the move as the answer to America’s medical woes, but critics warn the technology is not advanced enough yet - Bookmark - CommentsGo to comments The Trump administration is paving the way for AI chatbots to provide diagnoses and medication to patients, but experts have already warned the technology could be fraught with problems. Amy Gleason, the head of DOGE and...
Inside the fight against the global $6 trillion lead poisoning problem
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PFAS in ski wax: Despite bans, these forever chemicals linger in wax rooms—so does their health risk
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Autonomous AI screening flags unreliable Lyme test results, boosting sensitivity to 95.7%
Autonomous AI screening flags unreliable Lyme test results, boosting sensitivity to 95.7% Andrew Zinin Lead Editor Computational point-of-care sensors can significantly improve access to diagnostics by enabling rapid patient testing outside centralized medical facilities. These tests rely on machine learning models to make diagnostic predictions, but such inference models are susceptible to hallucinations and may produce erroneous outcomes. As a result, their limited reliability has...
The Painful Truth About Long Covid
Nothing about long Covid adds up. Consider prevalence rates: How could one study find it affected 3.3 percent of the population of the UK but others an alarming 51 percent of South Americans and 86 percent of Egyptians? Or treatment methods: The BMJ’s systematic review of ways to treat long Covid lists two as supported by moderate evidence, cognitive behavioral therapy and physical exercise.
Smoke engulfed their cities. Did it make their children sick?
Mothers fear children's chronic illnesses are linked to bushfire smoke during pregnancy Sun 31 May 2026 at 5:16am Six years after Black Summer bushfires, parents and doctors face an unsettling question: What does bushfire smoke do to babies in the womb? This story is a collaboration between the ABC's climate team and climate media organisation Grist. They never thought the fires would reach them.