While scratching worsens inflammations, it also protects us from some infections, as new research suggests.
Alexandra Sowa's new book The Ozempic Revolution is intended to be the "first comprehensive user guide" to GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic.
A new study shows that the mortality rate of SUID has increased significantly in the U.S. since 2020.
It's the first time that highly pathogenic avian influenza H5N9 has been found in U.S. poultry.
Dozens of active and latent TB cases have been linked to the outbreak dating back to last year, local health officials say.
The CIA says both a natural origin and a lab leak "remain plausible" as potential sources of covid-19, following a review of the pandemic's origins.
Diagnosed ADHD has been associated with reduced life expectancy for both men and women.
A new review of the evidence shows that the 21-day rule isn't a rule after all.
This week, the FDA expanded the approval of Johnson & Johnson's ketamine-based nasal spray, Spravato.
The communications pause could be an early sign of things to come under a renewed Trump White House.
40-year-old Ruvimbo Kaviya is the first person in the UK to have ever received the minimally invasive procedure.
The brain–computer interface allowed the participant to control the drone with six times the accuracy of EEG-based systems.
From bird flu to polio, the U.S. leaving the WHO would weaken global public health in ways big and small.
Moderna's Phase III trial will test out its experimental vaccine in 25,000 people over the next two years.
There is a real but nuanced scientific debate ongoing about the risks and benefits of fluoridation.
People who stayed on a 7.2 milligram weekly dose of semaglutide lost around 20% of their body weight over 72 weeks.
The new brain-computer interface device goes "beyond anything that has been done before," the researchers claim.
Thankfully, the woman recovered fully once doctors "delicately" removed the creepy-crawly passenger.
Say farewell to Red No. 3, a dye linked to thyroid cancer in rats and hyperactivity in children.
An international and widely supported group of experts is pushing doctors to avoid the exclusive use of BMI to decide whether someone has obesity, alongside other major changes.