Connect with us

Health

8 of the biggest health stories of this week: Catch up here on the essentials

Published

on

8 of the biggest health stories of this week: Catch up here on the essentials

Join Fox News for access to this content

Plus special access to select articles and other premium content with your account – free of charge.

By entering your email and pushing continue, you are agreeing to Fox News’ Terms of Use and Privacy Policy, which includes our Notice of Financial Incentive.

Please enter a valid email address.

Having trouble? Click here.

Fox News Digital publishes a range of health pieces every day of the week to keep you up-to-date on the most important wellness news.

Cutting-edge medical research, breakthrough medications, mental health challenges, personal medical dramas and more are all covered.

Advertisement

In case you missed them, here are a few of the biggest health stories from the past week.

CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR HEALTH NEWSLETTER

As always, you can see a full list of recent health pieces at http://www.foxnews/health

Dive into these eight key stories and get completely caught up. 

1. Make sure to have these medicine cabinet must-haves

In the event of aches and pains, allergic reactions or even a minor medical emergency, do you have the necessary supplies? 

Advertisement

Two pharmacists recommended a list of the 9 essential health staples that every household should have on hand. Click here to get the story.

Click to see the nine most important medical staples that every household should have on hand in case of emergency. (iStock)

2. Gene therapy reverses deafness in children

Five children who were born completely deaf have had some reversal of hearing loss after receiving a “groundbreaking” gene therapy. 

Researchers from the clinical trial and the family of one of the children said the experience was “like a miracle.” Click here to get the story.

Five children who were born deaf have had their hearing loss reversed after receiving a “groundbreaking” gene therapy. Check out the amazing story. (Eye & ENT Hospital of Fudan University)

Advertisement

3. Family realizes ‘vision of hope’ with advanced surgery

When Madison Artale was born with congenital cataracts, she was in danger of permanent blindness. Her parents, stationed at Offutt Air Force Base, turned to Children’s Nebraska for help. 

They spoke to Fox News Digital, along with ophthalmologist Dr. Paul Rychwalski, about how three delicate surgeries saved the baby’s sight. Click here to get the story..

Madison Artale, pictured here in both images, was diagnosed with congenital cataracts at just 1.5 months old. (Andrew and Brandee Artale)

4. Popular diet could help women live longer

The Mediterranean diet has long been linked to a bevy of health benefits — and now a new study has revealed it could reduce early mortality in women. 

Nutritionists discussed the potential benefits. Click here to get the story.

Advertisement

Women who adhered to the heart-healthy, plant-focused diet were found to have a 23% lower risk of death from any cause. (iStock)

5. It might be time to rethink drinking and sleeping on planes

Consuming alcohol mid-flight and then falling asleep could lead to a drop in blood oxygen levels and a spike in heart rate, a new study revealed. 

Doctors weighed in on the potential danger. Click here to get the story.

“The study showed that the ability to compensate for cabin oxygen pressure lowering in flight is worsened both by sleep and by alcohol,” a doctor told Fox News Digital. (iStock)

6. It may be illegal to travel with these medications

Some 77% of Americans expect to bring along medication on a trip this summer — but nearly half don’t check to see whether it’s legal to bring these items into other countries. 

Advertisement

A pharmacist shared what to know before packing prescriptions. Click here to get the story.

All medications should be kept in carry-on luggage instead of in checked bags, an expert recommended. That way, if there are unforeseen travel delays, you’ll still be able to access your medications. (iStock)

7. Is artificial intelligence a key to better sleep?

AI could help improve the quality of your slumber, an expert told Fox News Digital. 

See examples of how the technology is helping people sleep, along with the risks and limitations it may present. Click here to get the story.

      

Advertisement

(Artale family/iStock/Eye & ENT Hospital of Fudan University)

8. Florida is first state to allow out-of-hospital C-sections

New Florida legislation allows cesarean sections (C-sections) to be performed outside of hospitals. 

Some believe this could improve access to care, yet others claim it could put mothers and babies in danger. Click here to get the story.

Health

Denise Austin’s 10-Minute Pool Exercises for Weight Loss Melt Fat Fast

Published

on

Denise Austin’s 10-Minute Pool Exercises for Weight Loss Melt Fat Fast


Advertisement





Denise Austin’s 10-Minute Pool Exercises for Weight Loss




















Advertisement





Advertisement


Use left and right arrow keys to navigate between menu items.


Use escape to exit the menu.

Advertisement

Continue Reading

Health

Everyday task may help detect early dementia signs before diagnosis, study finds

Published

on

Everyday task may help detect early dementia signs before diagnosis, study finds

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

A simple writing test could detect cognitive impairment in older individuals before more serious symptoms occur, scientists have discovered.

Writing is a complex, brain-heavy workout that requires the mind to process information, organize thoughts and send precise signals to the fingers all at once, according to experts.

Because writing draws on so many complex mental functions, researchers believe that small changes in how people write could provide early warning signs for cognitive impairment.

FIRST BLOOD TEST FOR ALZHEIMER’S DIAGNOSIS CLEARED BY FDA

Advertisement

Researchers in Portugal wanted to see if analyzing the process of writing — such as how long a person pauses or how they organize their strokes — could catch cognitive changes earlier than traditional paper-and-pencil tests, which usually only grade the final answer.

The study looked at 58 older adults between the ages of 62 and 92 living in care homes, according to a press release.

Researchers hoped to catch cognitive changes earlier than traditional paper-and-pencil tests, which usually only focus on the final output. (iStock)

Among the participants, 38 had already been diagnosed with cognitive impairment. Each volunteer was asked to complete various writing exercises using an ink pen on a specialized digital tablet that tracked their precise hand movements.

The tests covered basic pen control, copying sentences from a flashcard, and writing sentences that others spoke aloud, the researchers said.

Advertisement

DEMENTIA RISK FOR PEOPLE 55 AND OLDER HAS DOUBLED, NEW STUDY FINDS

Simple tasks, like drawing lines or copying text, did not reveal major differences between the two groups. Because these activities rely mostly on basic motor skills, the team hypothesized that they weren’t mentally challenging enough to expose subtle cognitive issues.

CLICK HERE FOR MORE HEALTH STORIES

When writing from dictation, older adults with cognitive impairment had writing patterns that were noticeably slower, more fragmented and less coordinated.

“Dictation tasks are more sensitive because they require the brain to do multiple things at once: listen, process language, convert sounds into written form and coordinate movement,” Dr. Ana Rita Matias, the study’s senior author from the University of Évora, stated in the press release.

Advertisement

When writing from dictation, older adults with cognitive impairment showed noticeably slower, more fragmented and less coordinated writing patterns. (iStock)

As a sentence became more complex, the brain struggled to keep up. Adults with cognitive decline took longer to start writing, paused more frequently and struggled with stroke organization, the study found.

CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR HEALTH NEWSLETTER

Currently, diagnosing cognitive decline often involves expensive brain scans or lengthy psychological testing.

“The long-term goal is to develop a tool that is easy to administer, time-efficient and affordable, allowing integration into everyday healthcare contexts without requiring specialized or expensive equipment,” Matias said.

Advertisement

Researchers did not account for the participants’ medication use, which could potentially impact both handwriting and brain function. (iStock)

The study did have some limitations, including that it was relatively small. As it was limited to 58 older adults living in care homes, larger and more diverse groups need to be tested to confirm the findings, the researchers noted.

TEST YOURSELF WITH OUR LATEST LIFESTYLE QUIZ

The study also did not account for the participants’ use of medications, which could potentially impact both handwriting and brain function.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

Advertisement

The study was published in Frontiers in Human Neuroscience.

Continue Reading

Health

Sleep doctor reveals the brutal health downside of daylight saving time

Published

on

Sleep doctor reveals the brutal health downside of daylight saving time

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

The Trump administration is taking another look at ending biannual clock changes, with an eye toward making daylight saving time (DST), or the “summer clock,” permanent.

On May 21, the House Energy and Commerce Committee advanced legislation that would make daylight saving time permanent in a 48-1 vote, part of a largely bipartisan push to end twice-yearly clock changes.

Although gaining extra winter evening daylight might seem like a win, health experts say permanent daylight saving time could disrupt people’s natural circadian rhythms.

TRUMP CHAMPIONS BID TO NIX CLOCK CHANGES BY ADOPTING PERMANENT DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME

Advertisement

In an interview with Fox News Digital, Dr. Wendy Troxel, a licensed clinical psychologist and senior behavioral scientist at RAND based in Utah, said science is being “misconstrued” in this decision.

“Ending the biannual clock change is something most sleep scientists and the public would welcome,” she said. “The disruption of springing forward every March is associated with real, measurable harm — spikes in car crashes, heart attacks and sleep deprivation.”

The Trump administration is taking another look at ending semiannual clock changes, with an eye toward making daylight saving time, or the “summer clock,” permanent. (iStock)

However, Troxel noted, implementing permanent daylight saving time is “not supported by science.” Instead, evidence “strongly supports” permanent standard time, or the “winter clock,” according to the expert.

Major sleep medicine organizations, including the American Academy of Sleep Medicine, have previously supported adopting permanent standard time over permanent daylight saving time.

Advertisement

HERE’S WHY 90% OF AMERICANS DON’T SLEEP THROUGH THE NIGHT, ACCORDING TO EXPERT

“Standard time is more closely aligned with human circadian biology, meaning the relationship between light, darkness and our internal clocks remains intact,” Troxel said.

“Permanent DST simply shifts an hour of morning sunlight to the evening, and there are significant health and safety costs of that trade.”

“Standard time is more closely aligned with human circadian biology,” the expert said. (iStock)

The U.S. attempted permanent DST in the early 1970s, but the plan was aborted in part due to these “morning consequences,” according to the sleep expert.

Advertisement

“Within a year, the law was repealed amid public displeasure with commuting to work and school in the dark and increases in morning car crashes, and with no demonstrable impact on energy savings,” Troxel told Fox News Digital.

Why morning sunlight matters

Human circadian rhythms are primarily “anchored” by morning light, Troxel said. Under permanent DST, most people waking up for work or school would be rising before the sun, which forces a “chronic misalignment between the body’s internal clock and the external world.”

FORCING AN EARLY WAKE-UP TIME COULD HARM YOUR HEALTH, SLEEP DOCTORS WARN

“You cannot override that biology by simply shifting external clocks forward,” the expert said. “What you get instead is a population that is effectively waking up in the middle of their biological night, every single day.”

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

Advertisement

The public has typically supported having more daylight in winter evenings, which could alleviate mental health conditions such as seasonal depression.

Supporters of permanent daylight saving time argue that later evening daylight could encourage outdoor activity, recreation and consumer spending after work or school.

Morning light is “crucial to regulate sleep, [boost] alertness and support mental health,” according to a sleep expert. (iStock)

Troxel agreed that light is a “powerful regulator” for sleep and moods, but noted that not all types have the same benefits.

“Morning light is crucial to regulate sleep, alertness and support mental health, and this would be sacrificed with permanent daylight saving time,” she noted.

Advertisement

CLICK HERE FOR MORE HEALTH STORIES

In some areas of the country, like Utah, Americans wouldn’t see the sunrise until about 9 a.m. in the winter, which some research has linked to higher rates of depression and seasonal mood challenges.

TEST YOURSELF WITH OUR LATEST LIFESTYLE QUIZ

“More evening light may feel enjoyable, in part because we equate it with lovely summer evenings, but permanent daylight saving time does not mean permanent summer,” Troxel emphasized. “It just means we will get less morning sunlight and more evening sunlight.”

“Exposure to light in the evening further pushes circadian rhythms later, making it more difficult to fall asleep and harder to wake up in the morning.”

Advertisement

Risks for vulnerable groups

Permanent daylight saving time can intensify people’s habit of “bedtime procrastination,” deepen sleep deprivation and contribute to the widespread public health issue of insufficient sleep already identified by the Institute of Medicine, according to Troxel.

Teens are most at risk of mental health complications if permanent DST extends darkness in the morning. (iStock)

Various studies have shown that people typically sleep less in summer compared to winter. Troxel said this is particularly concerning in a society where one in three people are already getting insufficient shuteye.

“This is especially alarming for teenagers, a population the U.S. surgeon general has identified as being in a mental health crisis,” she cautioned.

CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR OUR HEALTH NEWSLETTER

Advertisement

For example, a teen waking up at 6:30 a.m. for an 8 a.m. school start time under permanent DST would be rising biologically at 5:30 a.m., Troxel noted, which is “in the middle of their biological night.”

“Framing permanent DST as a fix for seasonal depression gets the science exactly backwards,” she added.

Fox News Digital’s Alex Nitzberg contributed to this report.

Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending