Showing results for: diabetes (page 33)
What “Roseanne” gets wrong about opioid addiction
Kevin Doyle
The depiction of opioid addiction on "Roseanne" isn't doing public health practitioners any favors
Some startups say they can reverse diabetes. Not all scientists agree
Nicole Karlis
Scientists disagree over whether diabetes can truly be reversed. The answer is way more complicated
Diet soda may be hurting your diet
Eunice Zhang
Growing evidence over the last decade show artificial sweeteners can alter healthy metabolic processes
Lack of insurance exposes blind spots in vision care
Michelle Andrews
Falling through the cracks is not an uncommon problem when it comes to vision care
Ban all trans fats by 2023, World Health Organization says
Nicole Karlis
Wealthy countries have taken steps to eliminate trans fats, but it may be more difficult for developing countries
The singularity is not near: The intellectual fraud of the “Singularitarians”
Corey Pein
If technology is the state religion, Singularitarianism is its most extreme and fanatical sect
Marcia Gay Harden preserves her mother’s memories: “I didn’t want her legacy to be Alzheimer’s”
Alli Joseph
The Academy Award-winning actress sat down with Salon to discuss her new memoir of love, family and flowers
Today’s special: Obamacare menu labeling rules ushered in
Phil Galewitz
Restaurants will be required to list calories on all menus and menu boards
Why genetics makes some people more vulnerable to opioid addiction — and protects others
Jill Turner, Fair Vassoler, Kathleen Chiasson-Downs
Is there hope for helping individuals with opioid addiction?
The deadliest drug in America at center of VA nominee withdrawal: Alcohol
Jamie Smolen
Alcohol abuse leads to more deaths each year than opioid addiction
The great gut flora war: Why the bacteria in your gastrointestinal tract matters
Lina Nertby Aurell, Mia Clase
Well-functioning intestinal flora are key to staying healthy. Here's why
Nukes of hazard
Nathanael Johnson
There's something wrong with every source of energy. How do our nuclear nightmares compare?
Night owls may have 10 percent higher risk of early death, study says
Kristen Knutson, Malcolm von Schantz
Night owls, or people who have a hard time waking up in the morning, face health risks as a result
Overeating? It may be a brain glitch
Laurel Mellin
The drive to overeat may be rooted in survival brain circuits
How a drugmaker turned the abortion pill into a rare-disease profit machine
Sarah Jane Tribble
Abortion pill transformed into a rare-disease profit machine
The Coca-Cola invasion is causing Mexico’s slow death by junk food
Tamara Pearson
Mexico's traditional diet of beans and corn has been replaced with pizza and hamburgers
The everyday ethical challenges of self-driving cars
Johannes Himmelreich
Decisions made by engineers today will determine how all cars drive
Humanity’s meat and dairy intake must be cut in half by 2050 to avoid dangerous climate change
Julie Cappiello
Going vegan will help reduce animal suffering, protect your health and halve your carbon footprint.
Six months after Maria, the hardest-hit city in Puerto Rico is still being ignored
AJ Vicens
"Life after Maria has been really sad," says one local resident
The media is lying to you about how to lose weight
Matthew Rozsa
News media love sensationalizing scientific studies about losing weight and miracle diets. Don't trust them
How Medicaid became a go-to funder for schools
Anna Gorman, Carmen Heredia Rodriguez
Begun as a healthcare safety net, Medicaid increasingly underwrites a range of services in America’s public schools
A larger role for midwives could improve deficient U.S. care for mothers and babies
Nina Martin
According to a new study, states with midwives in a greater patient care role have better neonatal care results
The next big storm to rock Puerto Rico: suicide
Kali Holloway
The island hasn't recovered from Maria — and the next hurricane season starts in three months
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