U.S. adults with cerebral palsy aren’t getting adequate physical therapy, according to a new study. While they’re more likely than other adults in community-living situations to have debilitating pain from musculoskeletal disorders, those with cerebral palsy receive significantly less physical therapy, a Michigan Medicine-University of Michigan team found. For the study, the researchers analyzed four… read on > read on >
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As Teen, He Made News Opposing Anti-Vax Mom. Now, He’s Urging COVID Shots for Youth
Ethan Lindenberger knows what it’s like when you have anti-vaxxer parents: At 18, he gained national notoriety when he sought vaccines in defiance of his mother’s fervent wishes. Now, the 20-year-old has some advice for teens facing a similar dilemma posed by the pandemic — how to convince their anti-vaxxer parents to let them get… read on > read on >
U.S. Set to Send Millions of COVID Vaccines to Countries in Need
The United States will soon be sending millions of coronavirus vaccine doses around the world, including Latin America, Secretary of State Anthony Blinken said Tuesday. Still, exactly where those doses will go and when they will be delivered to countries that desperately need them was still unclear. “Sometime in the next week to two weeks,… read on > read on >
Blood Sugar Tests Using Sweat, Not Blood? They Could Be on the Way
A new quick and painless sensor that measures blood sugar in human sweat may mean far fewer finger pricks for the millions of people who live with diabetes. Monitoring blood sugar to make sure it remains in the target range is the cornerstone of diabetes management, but the pain and inconvenience of daily finger pricks… read on > read on >
Aortic Tears Are Even More Deadly for Women, Study Finds
Women may have different symptoms and are more likely to die after acute aortic dissection than men, a new study finds. Up to 40% of patients die instantly from this spontaneous tear in one of the body’s main arteries, and the risk of death increases about 1% for every hour of delay in diagnosis and… read on > read on >
Global Warming to Blame for 1 in 3 Heat-Related Deaths Worldwide
Human-caused global warming is responsible for more than one-third of heat-related deaths worldwide, but the proportion is much higher in certain countries, a new study finds. Researchers analyzed data gathered between 1991 and 2018 from 732 locations in 43 countries. They concluded that 37% of all heat-related deaths in recent summer periods were attributable to… read on > read on >
Scientists Discover Rare Form of ALS That Can Strike Kids
A new form of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) that affects children has been discovered by an international team of researchers. They used advanced genetic techniques to identify 11 such cases in children who had mysterious neurological disorders. Most cases of ALS — also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease — are diagnosed in people between the… read on > read on >
JAMA Journals’ Editor-in-Chief Steps Down After Deputy’s Racism Comments
Because of controversial statements about racism made by a staff member, the editor-in-chief of JAMA and JAMA Network will step down on June 30, the American Medical Association (AMA) announced Tuesday. Dr. Howard Bauchner, JAMA‘s chief since 2011, has been on administrative leave due to a JAMA podcast and tweet about structural racism in medicine… read on > read on >
Americans’ Lung Health: The Poor Suffer Most
The health of your lungs may have a lot to do with the size of your bank account, a new, large study indicates. The finding follows a six-decade look at lung disease risk among more than 215,000 American children and adults. In general, poorer Americans continue to have worse lung health than their wealthier peers.… read on > read on >
U.S. Blood Supply Is Safe From Coronavirus, Study Finds
COVID-19 does not pose a threat to the safety of the United States’ blood supply under existing donor screening guidelines, researchers report. For the study, the investigators reviewed the results of tests for the presence of SARS-CoV-2 in nearly 18,000 pools of donated blood, representative of over 257,800 single blood donations that were collected between… read on > read on >