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Could expiring health insurance subsidies be revived retroactively?
WASHINGTON — There is still hope for getting help with health care premiums for Obamacare policies next year.
Though enhanced subsidies for the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare, policies are ending Wednesday, there’s a possibility Congress and President Donald Trump can apply them in 2026 so they wind up helping people all year.
“While ...Read more
Salmonella outbreak tied to raw oysters reaches Maryland
BALTIMORE — A Maryland resident is among at least 64 people in 22 states who have fallen ill after being infected with the same strain of salmonella linked to raw oysters, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Of those sickened nationwide, 20 people were hospitalized as of Tuesday. No deaths have been reported. Federal ...Read more
Georgia requests $1.4 billion to transform rural health care
ATLANTA — By New Year’s Eve, the Trump administration is scheduled to award one-time grants to states to “transform” their rural health care, and Georgia is asking for $1.4 billion.
Gov. Brian Kemp’s administration has submitted an application with a long list of proposed pilot projects, including drop-in telehealth “pods,” health...Read more
Guns marketed for personal safety fuel public health crisis in Black communities
PHILADELPHIA — Leon Harris, 35, is intimately familiar with the devastation guns can inflict. Robbers shot him in the back nearly two decades ago, leaving him paralyzed from the chest down. The bullet remains lodged in his spine.
“When you get shot,” he said, “you stop thinking about the future.”
He is anchored by his wife and child ...Read more
States advance medical debt protections as federal support turns to opposition
Lawmakers in several states are working to expand medical debt protections for patients, even after the Trump administration reversed course and told states they don’t have authority to take action on credit reporting.
In Alaska and Michigan, legislators are nonetheless advancing bills to keep medical debt off consumer credit reports.
The ...Read more
Commentary: US health care in 2025: Chaos, costs, and controversy without real progress
The year 2025 has been one of the most turbulent years in modern U.S. health care. The headlines were explosive, the rhetoric dramatic, and the controversies nonstop. Yet for all the hoopla and upheaval, the medical care Americans receive now, month in and month out, looks no better than what they experienced on Jan. 1 — but far more expensive...Read more
A year of discovery: 10 Mayo Clinic research breakthroughs moving medicine forward
ROCHESTER, Minn. — From AI-powered drug discovery to regenerative therapies and next-generation neurology tools, Mayo Clinic researchers made significant strides in 2025 toward predicting, preventing and treating some of the world's most serious and complex diseases.
These discoveries reflect progress across three major innovation ...Read more
Patient Discovers That He Has ITP After Low Blood Platelet Count
DEAR DR. ROACH: What can you tell me about the cause and treatment of immune thrombocytopenia purpura (ITP)? I am a 71-year-old male, and after lab results showed a low blood platelet count, I underwent a spleen and liver scan as well as a bone marrow biopsy. They all showed normal function, and no infection (viral or bacterial) has been found. ...Read more
Warm up to speed up
Do you feel sluggish and stiff when you start your workouts? Here's a simple way to get loose -- and have more stamina.
A study published in the Journal of Sport and Health Science found that you can power up your muscles' performance with passive warmups (using heating pads or a hot shower) or active warmups (10 minutes on the stationary bike ...Read more
Why X-Rays Aren't Used To Screen Patients For Cancer
DEAR DR. ROACH: When I was about 6 years old in the early '40s, my 16-year-old brother was sent to a sanitarium for tuberculosis patients. He was there for 18 months and was a survivor.
During this period of time, we (the family) went regularly for chest X-rays and some kind of test that involved a needle in my forearm. Why aren't X-rays done...Read more
Two more reasons to eat a healthy diet
You know how important it is to eat a healthy diet. Yet only about 12% of Americans eat the recommended amount of fruits every day, and only 10% get the recommended amount of vegetables. So, I keep dishing up evidence of how important it is in the hopes that more of you will decide to have at least seven (nine is better) servings of fruits and ...Read more
Public health emergency declared for Washington after flooding
SEATTLE — U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. declared a public health emergency for Washington after dozens of communities across the western side of the state were pummeled by flooding.
The declaration, issued Christmas Eve, is meant to address ensuing health impacts caused by the flooding, back-to-...Read more
'Truly an amazing act': Idaho doctor donates year's salary to cure blindness
BOISE, Idaho — One Treasure Valley doctor is putting off his retirement and doing something “profound” with his last year in the emergency room.
Stuart Clive, who was a longtime St. Luke’s Medical Center emergency room physician, is donating an entire year’s salary in an effort to cure blindness for thousands of people.
Clive works ...Read more
Massachusetts' health department warns residents about possible measles exposures in multiple locations
BOSTON — An out-of-state adult visitor who spent time in the region earlier this month has been diagnosed with measles, according to health officials who are warning the public of possible exposures in multiple locations.
The visitor arrived at Boston Logan airport on American Airlines flight 2384 from Dallas-Fort Worth on Dec. 11 at 2:39 p.m...Read more
Salmonella linked to raw food sickens people across 22 states
The Centers for Disease Control has issued a warning about consuming raw oysters, citing an ongoing salmonella outbreak.
In total, 64 people have reported getting sick with 20 hospitalizations across 22 states, the CDC said.
Pennsylvania and New York both have the most cases with 17 total.
“The true number of sick people in this outbreak is...Read more
States eager for final decisions on $50 billion health care fund
WASHINGTON — States are expecting clarity within days for a key feature of Republicans’ signature budget reconciliation law — a $50 billion rural health care fund that has an end-of-year deadline for the administration to announce its plans.
The wide-ranging law reduces health spending by about $1 trillion over a decade, primarily from ...Read more
A 5-step plan for parents of children with special needs, from a financial planner
Raising a child with special needs presents unique and long-term financial planning considerations.
Parents need to focus on ensuring their child has the care, resources and support they require — today, and, quite often, well into adulthood and their own retirement.
This level of planning often involves complex financial decisions and, in ...Read more
Environmental Nutrition: Understanding dates
Q: What’s the difference between expiration dates and “best by” or “sell by” dates?
A: The terms expiration date, “best by,” and “sell by” are often confused, but they do have different meanings and purposes.
Expiration: This is the last date the manufacturer recommends using the product for safety reasons.
Best By/Best ...Read more
The best cool-season vegetables to enjoy all winter long
Colorful, nutritious winter vegetables — crops that thrive in the cooler months or are harvested in the fall and maintain their flavor and health benefits throughout the winter — play an important role in the eating-seasonally movement. This lifestyle trend, which promotes packing your plate with food grown naturally at that time of year in ...Read more
Try this: Winter skin care
Here’s how to prevent and treat dry skin during the cold-weather months.
Use a humidifier to pump moisture into dry indoor air. Set it to around 60%, a level that should be sufficient to replenish moisture in the skin.
Limit yourself to one 5- to 10-minute bath or shower daily. Bathing for too long will strip away some of the skin’s ...Read more
Inside Health Advice
Popular Stories
- Mayo Clinic Q&A: 5 things to know about stroke
- A year of discovery: 10 Mayo Clinic research breakthroughs moving medicine forward
- Commentary: US health care in 2025: Chaos, costs, and controversy without real progress
- Georgia requests $1.4 billion to transform rural health care
- Guns marketed for personal safety fuel public health crisis in Black communities






















