Health Advice
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WA small businesses struggle to keep up with health insurance hikes
Every year, Kris Bullinger braces herself for insurance sticker shock.
Bullinger is a co-owner of Olympic Truck Service, a diesel repair shop in Tumwater, Washington. Health coverage for the company’s 17 employees has long been one of her fastest rising and most unpredictable expenses.
The same coverage costs more every year," she said.
...Read more
End of enhanced Obamacare subsidies puts tribal health lifeline at risk
Leonard Bighorn said his mother tried for two years to get help for severe stomach pain through the limited health services available near her home on the Fort Peck Reservation in northeastern Montana.
After his mom finally saw a specialist in Glasgow, about an hour away, she was diagnosed with stage 4 colon cancer, Bighorn said.
Now, 16 years...Read more
At-home care keeps his life steady. Missouri budget cuts could upend it
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — When it snows in Parkville, Missouri, Harrison Long often stops in his tracks.
“Avalanche,” he shouts, even if only a few flakes are falling. It’s a line he memorized from a cartoon, one of the many TV show and movie quotes that have become commonplace in the Long household.
Harrison has also started singing again, ...Read more
Mayo Clinic Q&A: What to know about pregnancy and heart valve disease
DEAR MAYO CLINIC: I found out during my pregnancy that I have mitral valve stenosis. How common is valve disease, and what should I know about it?
ANSWER: Valve disease affects how blood moves through the heart, and pregnancy is often a time when symptoms first appear or become more noticeable. Learning about a heart valve condition during ...Read more
From 8 measles cases in 34 years to a historic outbreak. What happened in SC?
COLUMBIA, S.C.— South Carolina is at the epicenter of the nation’s largest measles outbreak in more than a quarter-century.
As of Friday, 950 people across six counties — most of them unvaccinated children — had been infected with the highly contagious virus since October, and hundreds more have had to quarantine due to exposure.
No ...Read more
Trump team's planned ACA rule offers its answer to rising premium costs: catastrophic coverage
The Trump administration has unveiled a sweeping set of regulatory proposals that would substantially change health plan offerings on the Affordable Care Act marketplace next year, aiming, it says, to provide more choice and lower premiums. But it also proposes sharply raising some annual out-of-pocket costs — to more than $27,000 for one type...Read more
Florida among states in 'drug-resistent' salmonella outbreak linked to moringa
MIAMI — Moringa powder capsules have been recalled as a CDC and FDA investigation links the capsules to a new form of salmonella outbreak that the CDC calls “unusual and highly concerning.”
“The salmonella strain associated with this outbreak is resistant to all first-line and alternative antibiotics commonly recommended for the ...Read more
Mayo Clinic Minute: Are the yips just nerves or something more?
Almost every golfer has experienced it. You're lined up on the green for that perfect putt, when an easy tap-in shot is foiled by a mysterious twitch. Golfers refer to it as " the yips." And researchers at Mayo Clinic believe they've found a neurological cause to explain some instances.
Jason Howland has more in this Mayo Clinic Minute.
Drive ...Read more
Ask the Pediatrician: Winter blues and seasonal affective disorder
Some of us may experience the "winter blues" – feeling sad from short days, climbing into bed earlier and resenting waking up on dark mornings. That’s different than seasonal affective disorder (SAD), a term used to describe a type of depression that follows a seasonal pattern.
The most common form of seasonal affective disorder occurs in ...Read more
Predicting cancer: This AI startup aims to upend cancer treatment
PITTSBURGH — The best shot at curing cancer is catching it early, doctors say, but that doesn't always happen.
Between 80% and 85% of pancreatic cancer cases aren't diagnosed until the aggressive and lethal disease has already reached advanced stages, according to a 2023 study in the open access medical journal Cureus. Lung and liver cancer ...Read more
This hospital, flooded by Hurricane Helene, will be rebuilt for $44 million in a flood plain
A small Tennessee hospital that was destroyed by a surging river during Hurricane Helene will soon be rebuilt on low-lying farmland that could face several feet of flooding in a much smaller storm, risking another disaster if the new facility is not built to withstand extreme weather, according to a KFF Health News analysis.
Ballad Health ...Read more
Bariatric surgery programs face upheaval amid growing GLP-1 use for weight loss
PHILADELPHIA -- At Roxborough Memorial Hospital in Philadelphia, surgeon Piotr Krecioch has his hands full launching a program offering surgical interventions to treat obesity.
One in three Philadelphians are living with obesity, putting them at higher risk of chronic conditions like diabetes and heart disease, but these days fewer are seeking ...Read more
After stalled health deal, voters want Congress to deliver
WASHINGTON — As Congress spent months arguing over COVID-19-era enhanced premium tax credits that many people on the Affordable Care Act used to subsidize their health insurance, a relatively narrow debate over a single policy grew into a much broader and more complicated discussion about how to lower health care costs.
Concerns about those ...Read more
The intensity and perfectionism that drive Olympic athletes also put them at high risk for eating disorders
Olympians – athletes at the top of their sport and in prime health – are idolized and often viewed as superhuman. These athletes spend their lives focusing on building physical strength through rigorous training and diets that are honed to provide the nutrients necessary to excel at their sport.
However, athletes are at ...Read more
Colorectal cancer is increasing among young people, James Van Der Beek’s death reminds – cancer experts explain ways to decrease your risk
An increasing number of people are dying of colorectal cancer at a young age, including those as young as 20. Actor James Van Der Beek, who was diagnosed with colorectal cancer in 2023, died at age 48 on Feb. 11, 2026, bringing the disease back into the limelight.
The Conversation U.S. asked gastrointestinal oncologist Christopher ...Read more
Editorial: RFK Jr.'s vaccine skepticism is entering a new phase
The stability of the U.S. vaccine market rests on an obscure $4 billion fund known as the National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., long a critic of the fund, now appears intent on dismantling it.
Vaccine production can be a fickle business. Unlike other pharmaceutical products, ...Read more
How bad is junk food for your heart? A new study has an answer
Junk food like sodas, potato chips, packaged snacks and processed meats has long been linked to higher risks of diabetes and hypertension.
Now, an increasing body of research is also tying ultra-processed foods to cardiovascular disease.
The latest is a study by researchers at Florida Atlantic University, which found those who consumed more ...Read more
Judge blocks Trump administration move to cut $600 million in HIV funding from states
A federal judge on Thursday blocked a Trump administration order slashing $600 million in federal grant funding for HIV programs in California and three other states, finding merit in the states’ argument that the move was politically motivated by disagreements over unrelated state sanctuary policies.
U.S. District Judge Manish Shah, an Obama...Read more
Alert for blood monitor sold by Walmart, Publix, others after injuries and death
After more than 11 years of injuries and a death, the manufacturer of blood glucose monitors has issued a correction to the instructions directing actions when the glucose might be dangerously high.
These True Metrix monitors are sold under the store brands of the nation’s largest pharmacies and grocers, including Walmart, Kroger, CVS, ...Read more
FDA rejects Moderna’s mRNA flu vaccine application - for reasons with no basis in the law
The Food and Drug Administration has refused to review an application from the biotech company Moderna to approve its mRNA-based flu vaccine.
The agency’s decision, which Moderna announced in a press release on Feb. 10, 2026, is the latest step in efforts by federal health officials under Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F...Read more
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