Just 245,900 foreign tourists visited Japan in 2021, the lowest number since records started in 1964.
People with gum disease or missing teeth were more likely to develop cognitive decline and dementia, researchers found.
Monkeypox cases are declining, and the new White House czar is eminently qualified for the job, but the right can't stop tweeting about his shirtless Instas.
The milestone comes nearly 70 years after the first successful transplant of a kidney in Boston.
A discovery in Borneo pushes back the earliest known medical amputation by tens of thousands of years.
Doctors detail how nitrous oxide use caused a degenerative spinal condition, though the man did eventually recover.
Experimental therapies are coming down the pipeline, while existing and recently approved drugs are providing people with more options for keeping their hair.
Researchers say their oral dissolvable tablet can deliver insulin intact to the liver, at least in studies with rats.
New research in flies makes blue light sound awfully scary, but there's little evidence that humans are being harmed by light from our devices.
The new generation of boosters, which protect against the latest Omicron variants as well as the original coronavirus, will likely be available within weeks.
The victim was reportedly severely immunocompromised, and officials are still investigating whether monkeypox contributed to their death.
Customers under 21 can still buy cans of whipped cream, just not nitrous oxide chargers.
Heart attack survivors who took a combination of three generic drugs at once were less likely to have future cardiovascular problems, the study found.
The Massachusetts-based company claims that Pfizer and BioNTech lifted two key pieces of its mRNA vaccine platform without proper compensation.
It's the world's first documented case of co-infection with all three diseases.
The country's top public health official is retiring in December after decades of helping to manage major disease outbreaks, including the covid-19 pandemic.
There have been 29 cases and nine hospitalizations linked to the same strain of E. coli in Michigan and Ohio.
From gene therapies to generics, many treatments in the U.S. carry an outrageous sticker price.
Harmful PFAS pollutants, which are everywhere from the air to our drinking water, don't degrade on their own. But now, there's a glimpse of solution.
At least two people in NYC have contracted the mosquito-spread virus this year, which can be deadly to humans and birds.