Spring Sale: Get 1 Year, Save 58%

Showing results for: diabetes (page 18)

Forced pregnancy and childbirth are violence against women — and also terrible health policy

Tamara Kay, Susan L. Ostermann
Forcing unwanted pregnancies to continue is traumatic sexual abuse — it will destroy lives. That's fact, not theory

Matt Gaetz’s inaccurate diagnosis of rising insulin costs

Colleen DeGuzman, Victoria Knight
Health economists and diabetes experts weigh in on Gaetz’s faulty cause-and-effect argument that "doesn't exist"

Rest doesn’t just mean sleep: What “downstate” means, and why you need more of it

Mary Elizabeth Williams
Author Sara C. Mednick explains what "downstate" is, and how it's different from sleep

Jimmy Kimmel compares Tucker Carlson to “prostitutes,” accuses him of lying about vaccine status

Jon Skolnik
"This is like selling Girl Scout cookies outside a diabetes clinic" 

Scott Galloway on big tech, doctor’s offices and why “free college is a dumb idea”

Mary Elizabeth Williams
The CNN+ host appeared on "Salon Talks" to discuss his "unfiltered" new show and how COVID prompted innovation

“The control I thought I had was one big fat illusion”: When crisis makes you not yourself anymore

Mary Elizabeth Williams
"Bomb Shelter" author Mary Laura Philpott talks about love, hope, loss, and learning from turtles

Many Ukrainians will experience lasting psychological wounds

Arash Javanbakht
The psychological toll of the ongoing Russian invasion could remain for generations

Vegan Fridays for all? More schools offer plant-based meals

Steve Holt
Despite many challenges, schools are focusing on equity and nutrition in an effort to feed kids more options

Remote work could bring health benefits to night owls

Krishna Sharma
The pandemic has challenged sleep scientists to think about the relationship between work schedules and sleep

Mosquitoes are happy with climate change

Melissa Bailey
Scientists expect West Nile transmission to increase on a warming planet, posing a threat to public health

4 tips for eating healthier without counting calories or using a scale

Natural Gourmet Center
March is National Nutrition Month, a great opportunity to reassess our relationship with food

A doctor’s impassioned critique of Big Pharma

Troy Farah
In “Sickening,” Harvard professor John Abramson chronicles the deceptive marketing practices of the drug industry

The true story behind the Midge Maisel-Sophie Lennon rivalry

Gwydion Suilebhan, Steven Gimbel
While it's no secret that Midge is inspired by Joan Rivers, her rival is a composite of two '50s-era comics

Why fasting can make you feel “high”

Mary Elizabeth Williams
There's a well-established link between fasting and religious ecstasy. The reason may be neurochemical

In a new stem cell study, a cure for Type 1 diabetes appears tantalizingly close

Nicole Karlis
One researcher called the stem cell study's findings "transformational"

Why pregnant people were left behind while vaccines moved at “warp speed” to help the masses

Liz Szabo
Clinical trials of COVID vaccines excluded pregnant people, which left many wondering whether to get vaccinated

Americans can’t seem to get enough sleep — and it’s wreaking havoc on our brains

Matthew Rozsa
A celebration of "prolonged wakefulness" is terrible for our health, experts say

Inmates who died asked for release before falling ill with COVID

LJ Dawson
The deaths of three imprisoned women expose a federal prison system plagued by problems exacerbated by the pandemic

Covid-recovered patients are seeing a huge rise in heart-related issues

Nicole Karlis
Experts are shocked by the tremendous rise in cardiovascular events long after the body clears the virus

The kids are not alright: Data suggests 10% of children with COVID-19 become “long-haulers”

Kari Dequine Harden
Doctors around the world estimate one in ten children with COVID-19 have long-term side effects

Conflicting reports over Neil Gorsuch’s mask-wearing roil typically genial Supreme Court

Brett Bachman
Trump appointee Neil Gorsuch chose to remain the high court's only unmasked member — causing a flurry of drama

To skirt air pollution oversight, states can play hide and seek

Nancy Averett
Some researchers say ground monitors don’t capture an accurate picture of air quality. People of color suffer most

Why omicron stalled the effort to vaccinate young children

Rachana Pradhan, Hannah Recht
Just 18% of 5- to 11-year-olds are fully vaccinated, with rates varying significantly across the country
« Previous
Page: 18
Next »