Workers at over 100 companies experienced greater job satisfaction and slept better once they switched to a shorter work schedule with no pay cut, researchers found.
A new study suggests that certain brain activity patterns may be linked to feeling less groggy in the morning.
People who took semaglutide over a slower, more flexible schedule were significantly less likely to experience nausea and to discontinue use.
More people under 50 are being diagnosed with GI cancers, with rates rising particularly rapidly in the U.S.
The birds could provide important scientific insights, according to Kennedy.
RFK Jr.'s super PAC could be laying the groundwork for MAHA in the White House, a recent report suggests.
The children, born using IVF that replaces a mother's damaged mitochondrial DNA with a donor's, show no signs of disease.
The Medicaid changes caused by the now-signed law will cause more deaths, job losses, and rural hospital closures, researchers concluded.
The rule was expected to improve the credit scores of 15 million Americans.
New research published Tuesday concludes that the rising rate of extreme childhood obesity—well above the usual BMI cutoff—has become a "public health emergency."
New research finds that yoga, walking, and other exercises could help you sleep longer and avoid daytime fatigue.
New research finds that men taking a GLP-1 for their obesity or type 2 diabetes often experience a rise in testosterone levels.
Gabapentin is routinely used to treat nerve pain and restless leg syndrome, but it might be riskier to our brain health than currently thought.
Shifts in the weather are known to trigger migraines. Here's what you can do to ease the pain.
A new approach is urgently needed to address the prevention and treatment of speedballing, the risky—and often deadly—combination of stimulants and opioids.
Ticks and the diseases they carry are only becoming more common. But new treatments and vaccines might not be too far off.
Vaccine experts have developed an antibody that, when applied to the nose, intercepts allergens before they can trigger a reaction.
A third of kissing bugs collected across the state carried Trypanosoma cruzi, new research finds.
A new study shows wearable data can be used to predict whether kids will get sick again after having their appendix removed.
Would you get a one-time genetic modification such that you'd never have to take a GLP-1 drug for weight loss ever again?