Skip to content
WeeklyMD
Primary Navigation Menu
Menu
  • Home
  • A-Z Health
    • Addiction
    • Alcoholism
    • Allergy / Respiratory
    • Alzheimers
    • Alternative Medicine
    • Arthritis, Bones & Joints
    • Asthma
    • Back & Spine
    • Bladder Health
    • Blood and Blood Disorders
    • Blood Pressure
    • Cancer
    • Care Giving
    • Circulatory System
    • Cold & Flu
    • Contraceptives
    • Cosmetic
    • Cystic Fibrosis
    • Dental / Oral
    • Diabetes
    • Dieting
    • Diseases
    • Doctors and Health Care
    • Eating Disorders
    • Environmental
    • Eye Care / Vision
    • Family Health
    • Fatherhood
    • Fitness & Exercise
    • Food and Health
    • Foot Care
    • Gastrointestinal Problems
    • General Health
    • Genetics and Genetic Disorders
    • Head & Neck
    • Health & Technology
    • Health Care
    • Health Insurance
    • Health News
    • Healthy Living
    • Hearing
    • Heart / Cardiovascular
    • Hormones and Disease
    • Infectious Disease
    • Kids’ Health
    • Medical Disorders
    • Men’s Health
    • Mental Health
    • Multiple Sclerosis
    • Nervous System
    • Neurological
    • Nutrition / Vitamins
    • Obesity
    • Organs
    • Pain and Pain Management
    • Parenting
    • Psoriasis
    • Public Health
    • Respiratory Health
    • Seniors
    • Sexual Health
    • Skin Care
    • Sleep Disorders
    • Social Issues
    • Special Needs
    • Thyroid
    • Urinary System
    • Video
    • Vitamins / Drugs
    • Wellness
    • Women’s Health
  • Men’s Health
  • Fitness & Exercise
  • Health & Technology
  • Seniors
  • Sign Up
  • Contact
  • About
WeeklyMD > Blog > General Health

General Health (Page 55)

U.S. Immigrants’ Premiums, Taxes Exceed Health Care Expenditures: Study

2022-11-10
By: Exporter
On: November 10, 2022
In: General Health, Health Insurance, Public Health

THURSDAY, Nov. 10, 2022 (HealthDay News) — In a finding that challenges the notion that immigrants are freeloaders in the American health care system, a new study shows they are paying a lot more through health care premiums and related taxes than they actually use in care. In fact, theContinue Reading

Targeting Key Cells in Spinal Cord Got Paralyzed Patients Walking Again

2022-11-09
By: Exporter
On: November 9, 2022
In: Arthritis, Bones & Joints, General Health, Neurological

WEDNESDAY, Nov. 9, 2022 (HealthDay News) — In an advance in treating spinal cord injuries, researchers have pinpointed nerve cells that are key to allowing people with paralysis to walk again. The findings come, in part, from nine patients involved in an ongoing Swiss study that is seeking to restoreContinue Reading

Kidney Disease Is Tougher on Men Than Women, and Researchers Now Know Why

2022-11-09
By: Exporter
On: November 9, 2022
In: General Health, Urinary System

WEDNESDAY, Nov. 9, 2022 (HealthDay News) — Women tend to be better able than men to recover from kidney injury, but why? Apparently women have an advantage at the molecular level that protects them from a form of cell death that occurs in injured kidneys, a new study in miceContinue Reading

CDC Issues New Guidance on Prescribed Opioids for Pain

2022-11-03
By: Exporter
On: November 3, 2022
In: General Health, Pain and Pain Management, Vitamins / Drugs

THURSDAY, Nov. 3, 2022 — U.S. doctors prescribing opioids for pain relief now have a new — and more nuanced — set of guidelines from the federal government. Issued by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Thursday, the new recommendations incorporate new science developed since the lastContinue Reading

Another Reason to Keep Daylight Saving Time: Fewer Deer-Car Collisions

2022-11-03
By: Exporter
On: November 3, 2022
In: General Health, Public Health

THURSDAY, Nov. 3, 2022 (HealthDay News) — Motorists are more likely to plow into a deer on U.S. highways after the annual “fall back” end of daylight saving time (DST), a new study shows. That’s because frisky deer in the middle of their mating season (also known as rut) areContinue Reading

CVS, Walgreens Announce $10 Billion Opioid Settlements

2022-11-02
By: Exporter
On: November 2, 2022
In: General Health, Public Health, Vitamins / Drugs

WEDNESDAY, Nov. 2, 2022 (HealthDay News) — Years of litigation over the opioid epidemic could end soon, as the national pharmacy chains CVS and Walgreens announced Wednesday that each company has agreed to a nearly $5 billion settlement. While neither of the companies admitted wrongdoing, the settlements are part ofContinue Reading

New Bill Would Ensure Free Exams for Sexual Assault Victims

2022-10-27
By: Exporter
On: October 27, 2022
In: General Health, Mental Health

THURSDAY, Oct. 27, 2022 (HealthDay News) — After a sexual assault, some victims are charged for the initial treatment and collection of evidence, even though U.S. federal law requires those services to be free. Now, a new federal bill aims to change that by requiring private insurance companies to coverContinue Reading

Many Urban Seniors Rely on ‘Broken’ City Transit to Get to Medical Appointments

2022-10-27
By: Exporter
On: October 27, 2022
In: Care Giving, General Health, Seniors

THURSDAY, Oct. 27, 2022 (HealthDay News) — More than 700,000 older Americans rely on public transportation to get to and from their medical appointments. That’s roughly 1 in 10 seniors who live in cities. But when individuals were frail, or used a wheelchair, or sidewalks along their route were damaged,Continue Reading

400-Year-Old Mummy Reveals a Nobleman’s Child, Kept From the Sun

2022-10-26
By: Exporter
On: October 26, 2022
In: General Health, Kids' Health, Nutrition / Vitamins

WEDNESDAY, Oct. 26, 2022 (HealthDay News) — A “virtual autopsy” of a mummified 17th century Austrian infant has shed new light on Renaissance childhood — as well as the importance of vitamin D to health. The researchers used CT scans to examine the remains, which had been found in anContinue Reading

As Young Doctors’ Work Hours Rise, So Do Odds for Depression

2022-10-24
By: Exporter
On: October 24, 2022
In: General Health, Mental Health

MONDAY, Oct. 24, 2022 (HealthDay News) — Training to become a doctor can be grueling, and now a new study finds a direct correlation between longer work hours and depression symptoms in first-year residents. Medical residency — the training that new doctors undergo at hospitals or clinics — is infamousContinue Reading

Posts navigation

Previous 1 … 54 55 56 … 320 Next

Search

Men’s Health

Advanced Prostate Cancer Cases Rising as Fewer Men Are Screened, New Report Says

On: September 4, 2025

ESPN’s Jay Harris Diagnosed With Prostate Cancer

On: June 6, 2025

Biden’s Prostate Cancer Likely Grew Undetected for Years, Experts Say

On: May 23, 2025

Sexual Health

Single-Dose Penicillin Effective Against Early Syphilis

On: September 4, 2025

Shingles Vaccine Might Protect Against Heart Attack, Stroke

On: August 29, 2025

Heart Patients Urged To Seek Vaccination For Common Infectious Diseases

On: August 27, 2025

Health & Technology

Same-Day Cataract Surgery On Both Eyes Safe And Effective

On: September 12, 2025

Talk Therapy Alters Brain Structure, MRI Scans Show

On: August 27, 2025

FDA Approves Ketamine Product, KETARx, for Surgical Pain Management

On: August 18, 2025

General Health

Raw Cat Food Linked to H5N1 Virus After Infected Cat Is Euthanized

On: September 5, 2025

Community Hospitals Failing To Transfer Injury Patients To Better Facilities

On: September 4, 2025

FDA Calls for Child-Resistant Packaging on Nicotine Pouches

On: September 3, 2025
  • Home
  • Sign Up
  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • CA Privacy Notice
  • Terms of Use
  • Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information

© 2021 WeeklyMD.com - All Rights Reserved.