Health & Medicine
Rethink your daily multivitamin: Most vitamin supplements likely useless at preventing cancer or strokes
There is not enough evidence to recommend for or against taking most vitamin and mineral supplements to prevent heart disease, ...
Hate brussels sprouts but love potato chips? Your genes shape what your taste buds like
Scientists have been studying the way genetics influence perception of taste for years, but they are getting closer to understanding ...
Why are you less hungry after vigorous exercise? Credit the ‘anti-hunger molecule’
Scientists are calling it the “anti-hunger” molecule. New research shows that a compound induced by intense exercise travels to the ...
Not getting enough sunlight? Vitamin D-boosted gene edited tomatoes could improve nutrition for a billion nutrient-deficient people
Tomatoes (yes, they’re technically a fruit, though the U.S. government considers them a vegetable for “nutritional and culinary purposes”) can be genetically-engineered to ...
From the Environmental Working Group to the Pesticide Action Network, food activists claim we face killer risks from chemicals. Here’s why scientists don’t agree
E coli in ready-to-eat salads? Salmonella in seafood? Spoiled ground beef? Listeria in vegetables? Pesticide traces in… everything? Each year ...
Should COVID sufferers avoid Paxlovid because of symptom rebound reports?
Paxlovid is an oral two-drug combination regimen that treats COVID-19. One drug is nirmatrelvir, an antiviral, while the second, ritonavir, ...
With climate change accelerating spread of aflatoxin mold in Midwest corn, farmers look to genetically modified seeds as key solution
Climate change is expanding the reach of aflatoxin, a chemical produced by a gray-green mold that infects corn crops and ...
Is melatonin a safe and risk-free sleep aid — as many doctors contend? Think twice
Melatonin poisoning in kids is on the rise, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. From 2012 to ...
New COVID Omicron variants become dominant strains in US, especially in South
The United States appears to be in the midst of another biological baton pass between Covid-19 variants. The Omicron lineage ...
Is short better: Can height predict your risk for certain diseases?
Over the years, scientists have examined a person’s height as a non-modifiable risk factor for certain diseases. Past research shows ...
COVID risk genes: 1370 gene variants predispose people to severe virus and even death
Researchers from the University of Sheffield and Stanford University in the US have discovered there are specific genetic signals in ...
How politics can impact health: ‘Stark partisan divide’ in premature death rates among Democrat and Republican voters
In an ideal world, public health would be independent of politics. Yet recent events in the U.S., such as the ...
Is Singapore’s mosquito-borne dengue emergency a harbinger of climate change disruptions ahead?
Singapore says it is facing a dengue “emergency” as it grapples with an outbreak of the seasonal disease that has ...
Antibiotics that kill gut bacteria can ravage athletes’ motivation and endurance
New research demonstrates that by killing essential gut bacteria, antibiotics ravage athletes’ motivation and endurance. The UC Riverside-led mouse study ...
Here’s how abortion pills mifepristone and misoprostol work
Today mifepristone is often used in combination with another drug, misoprostol, and together the pair are more than 95 percent ...
Why aging often accelerates at 70
A groundbreaking theory of ageing that explains why people can suddenly become frail after reaching their 70s has raised the ...
Elixirs of life: Search for what turns out to be crank treatments to extend our limited time on Earth takes desperate people to exotic destinations
While science has made some promising breakthroughs in studying the causes and implications of ageing, real solutions are some way ...
How scientist-athletes are pushing edge of human performance
Rachel Baxter uses many of the usual tools of athleticism when she gets ready for a pole vaulting competition: track ...
Proline and mental health: Link found between common protein and depression
Depression is a common mental health issue for many people around the world today. The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates ...
COVID ad infinitum: Why the coronavirus could be part of our lives for a very long time
Experts knew from early on that, for almost everyone, infection with this coronavirus would be inevitable. As James Hamblin memorably ...
A transgender woman says she’s breastfeeding her daughter during the formula shortage. Is that possible?
As America's baby formula shortage continues to inspire scammers and politicians alike, parents have become desperate for solutions. Sometimes they get so creative ...
Can foods boost your immune system?
It’s easy to fall prey to marketing gimmicks deployed by food brands. After all, it’s comforting to think that there ...
GLP Podcast: Will we ever solve the obesity crisis? Science writer Mark Schatzker
Americans are getting heavier and experts aren't sure what to do about it. Cutting fat and carbs out of our ...
Viewpoint: Here is why Canada is deregulating gene edited foods — and why consumers will benefit
The importance of, and reliance upon, evidence-based regulations was reaffirmed [recently] in Canada! It was very welcomed news when Health ...
Video: Viewpoint — Why GMOs are good for us
Activists have convinced Americans that "organic" food is better—healthier, better-tasting, life-extending. As a result, poor parents feel guilty if they ...
Vitamin-A enhanced Golden Rice saga illustrates destructive legacy of anti-GMO hysteria
Even though 5.2 million children suffer with vision impairment and a potential death sentence, Golden Rice, a contributory answer to ...
Vagal hype: What’s behind the ‘natural health’ community’s focus on healing effects of ‘resetting’ vagus nerve?
The vagus nerve is a darling of the all-natural healing crowd. Its complex arborescence makes it the ideal nerve on ...