Showing results for: diabetes (page 21)
Moby is happily boring now: “I look at the desperation that I had … I don’t glorify the past”
Mary Elizabeth Williams
The influential artist appeared on "Salon Talks" to discuss his unconventional "Moby Doc" & his true life's calling
Racism derails Black men’s health, even as education levels rise
Virginia Anderson
"At every level of income and education, there is still an effect of race," a Harvard professor says
“Coming out of the closet” with Alzheimer’s: Neurologist Dan Gibbs on his surprise diagnosis
Mary Elizabeth Williams
In "A Tattoo On My Brain," neurologist Dan Gibbs described being diagnosed with Alzheimer's
Proud Boys leader took PPP loans after far-right group formed special unit for Jan. 6
Jon Skolnik
Prosecutors allege that the far-right Proud Boys designated a small group of members to plan for the Capitol event
COVID-19 may increase chance of erectile dysfunction, studies say
Matthew Rozsa
Multiple studies suggest that the disease may have the compounding effect of causing or worsening ED
The “black fungus” that’s infecting COVID-19 patients in India, explained
Nicole Karlis
Doctors in India are seeing vast increases in cases of mucormycosis. Here's what we know
Processed foods, a staple of Western diets, could be making you sick
Matthew Rozsa
A new study sheds light on how processed foods mess with one's gut microbiome, and why
COVID shot in the arm not enough to keep pharmacies in business
Markian Hawryluk
The pandemic lockdowns have exacerbated long-standing economic pressures for independent pharmacies
How UTIs can affect the brain
Mary Elizabeth Williams
New research has revealed how the brain and the urinary tract are intertwined in unexpected ways
Another soda tax bill dies. Another win for Big Soda
Samantha Young
The deep-pocketed industry continues to exert its political influence in California
4 in 10 Americans breathe polluted air, with people of color hit hardest
Alexandria Herr
A new report shows how air pollution is shaped by climate change and racism
COVID spawns “completely new category” of organ transplants
JoNel Aleccia
The upsurge in transplants has been fueled largely by the broad reach of the coronavirus
COVID-19 put remote abortion to the test. Supporters say it passed.
Rebecca Grant
Medication abortion was briefly available online in some states, but a court ruling blocked it
Scientists seek COVID treatment answers in cheap, older drugs
Esther Landhuis
Philanthropies are funding studies of cheap, existing medications as COVID treatments
Clean wine, hard kombucha and the science of “better alcohol”
Bridget Shirvell
Is there really such a thing as better-for-you booze? We investigated
Juia Turshen wrote a healthy cookbook that has nothing to do with weight loss — and it’s mesmerizing
Joseph Neese
"Cooking, when it's at its best, is a way to take care of each other, not compete with each other," Turshen says
Legendary social scientist Robert Putnam: We may be on the cusp of a new Progressive era
Chauncey DeVega
Biden is consciously linking himself to FDR and LBJ — but Putnam says the real lessons are even deeper in history
A new book asks whether capitalism is compatible with public health. (The answer is no)
Matthew Rozsa
Dr. Nicholas Freudenberg says capitalism isn't designed to keep our societies healthy
Daylight saving time could be especially hard this weekend because of COVID-19 sleep loss
Michael S. Jaffee
Sleep loss was an issue even before COVID-19
Your genetics influence how resilient you are to cold temperatures: new research
Victoria Wyckelsma, Peter John Houweling
People with this gene variant shivered less and had a higher core body temperature when exposed to cold water
Many of the inoculated are suffering from “vaccine guilt”
Nicole Karlis
Young people who have gotten vaccinated early, through luck or need, often find themselves mired in anxiety
DeSantis touts lack of vaccine plan as study finds more than 95,000 Floridians may die without one
Jon Skolnik
Gov. Ron DeSantis defended Florida’s open-ended vaccine plan. Then a data firm predicted "complete chaos"
As drug prices keep rising, state lawmakers propose tough new bills to curb them
Harris Meyer
State legislators around the country are pushing bills to penalize drugmakers and cap payments at Canadian levels
Page: 21