Patient Resources
Get Healthy!
Recent health news and videos.
Staying informed is also a great way to stay healthy. Keep up-to-date with all the latest health news here.
Ultra-processed Foods Linked to Increased Risk of Lung Cancer
A new study finds people who eat a lot of ultra-processed food are significantly more likely to develop lung cancer.
Lifestyle Changes Can Slow Cognitive Decline As You Age (U.S. Pointer Study)
Researchers say they’ve found a “formula and recipe to improve brain health” and cognition in people at high-risk for dementia.
Serious Liver Disease From Heavy Drinking Has More Than Doubled
A new study finds the risk of liver disease from heavy drinking has more than doubled in the U.S. -- even though alcohol intake has remained steady overall.
U.S. Senate Confirms Infection Expert as New CDC Director
- Carole Tanzer Miller HealthDay Reporter
- July 30, 2025
- Full Page
After months with an appointed caretaker, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) finally has an official director.
Dr. Susan Monarez, who became the agency’s acting director in March after anti-vaccine skepticism tanked President Donald Trump&rsq...
EPA Moves to Cancel Key Climate Regulations That Limit Pollution
- I. Edwards HealthDay Reporter
- July 30, 2025
- Full Page
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is looking to remove the legal underpinning for most regulations against climate change.
If approved, the EPA’s proposal would rescind the 2009 decision that set forth a legal basis to regulate greenhouse gases as poll...
Wisconsin Reports First West Nile Virus Case of the Year
- I. Edwards HealthDay Reporter
- July 30, 2025
- Full Page
Health officials have confirmed Wisconsin’s first human case of West Nile virus in 2025.
The case was found in Barron County, the Wisconsin Department of Health Services (DHS) said. Mosquitoes collected in both Milwaukee and Lafayette counties have also tested posi...
Deion Sanders Shares Bladder Cancer Journey, Urges Others to Get Checked
- I. Edwards HealthDay Reporter
- July 30, 2025
- Full Page
University of Colorado football coach Deion Sanders says he is now cancer-free after an unexpected battle with bladder cancer. Now he’s encouraging others to take charge of their health.
Sanders, 57, spoke openly Monday at a news conference about what he went throu...
Firefighters at Higher Risk for Many Cancers
- Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter
- July 30, 2025
- Full Page
Firefighters work hard saving lives, and in process put their own lives at heightened risk from skin, kidney and other types of cancers, a new American Cancer Society (ACS) study finds.
“Although this isn’t favorable news, this study shines a spotlight on the...
Cardiac Rehab Is Safe for Folks With A-Fib, And Might Even Help Ease It
- Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter
- July 30, 2025
- Full Page
If you’ve had a heart attack or are in heart failure, doctors often prescribe cardiac rehabilitation to strengthen your heart.
A new study contends that these programs are also appropriate for folks with the common irregular heartbeat known as atrial fib...
Blood-Based Colon Cancer Tests Work, But Many Patients Skip Follow-Up
- Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter
- July 30, 2025
- Full Page
You try one of the new blood-based tests for colon cancer, and unfortunately, the results come back “abnormal.”
Those are alarming findings, of course. But for too many U.S. patients, no further steps are taken, a new study finds.
“Blood-bas...
'Ultra-Processed' Foods Could Hike Your Odds for Lung Cancer
- July 30, 2025
- Full Page
Experts already know that high consumption of ultra-processed foods is bad news for your health, and new research suggests these foods can raise risks for a major killer: lung cancer.
Besides the fact that ultra-processed foods are often high in salt, sugar and fat, peop...
Over 60? Healthy Lifestyle Change May Help Boost Your Brain
- Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter
- July 30, 2025
- Full Page
Two years’ involvement in programs focused on healthy eating, regular exercise and “brain training” exercises appears to have helped a wide range of older adults — even those at heightened risk for Alzheimer’s — avoid cognitive decline, a ne...
'Tongue Swallowing Prevention': The Wrong First Move When Cardiac Arrest Strikes
- Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter
- July 30, 2025
- Full Page
When a person collapses from cardiac arrest, many on the scene first try to prevent them from swallowing their tongue, believing it to be necessary in helping them to breathe.
Experts call that a potentially fatal misconception that could delay lifesaving CPR.
...Federal Judge Halts Plan to Defund Planned Parenthood Through Medicaid
- I. Edwards HealthDay Reporter
- July 29, 2025
- Full Page
Planned Parenthood clinics across the country will continue to receive Medicaid funding, at least for now.
On Monday, a federal judge blocked a new federal rule that could have shut many of them down.
The ruling, issued Monday by U.S. District Judge Indira Talwani ...
The Gut-Healthy Secret Weapon Hiding in Your Sauerkraut
- I. Edwards HealthDay Reporter
- July 29, 2025
- Full Page
A small scoop of sauerkraut every day may do more than add crunch to your meal.
It could also protect your gut.
In a new study from the University of California- Davis, researchers found that fermented cabbage, also known as sauerkraut, may help support the gut lin...
Cowboys Guard Rob Jones Breaks Neck Bone, Out Up to 3 Months
- I. Edwards HealthDay Reporter
- July 29, 2025
- Full Page
Dallas Cowboys guard Rob Jones will miss about two to three months after breaking a bone in his neck during the team’s first padded practice of training camp, a new report from the team shows.
Jones, 26, told the team’s website Monday that he got hurt early i...
Words Used During Prenatal Ultrasound Might Affect Parenting Later
- Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter
- July 29, 2025
- Full Page
An ultrasound is typically a parent-to-be’s first glimpse of their child.
New research suggests that the words hospital staff use to describe the fetus during an ultrasound can have an impact on later parenting — for good or ill.
For example, if a...
Dementia Diagnosis Typically Comes 3.5 Years After Symptoms
- Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter
- July 29, 2025
- Full Page
It takes an average of three-and-a-half years for typical dementia symptoms to lead to a diagnosis, a new report finds.
Diagnosis often comes even later for early-onset dementias.
Speeding up the process is important, because “timely diagnosis can improve acc...
Is It Chronic Fatigue? Listen to Your Gut, Research Suggests
- Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter
- July 29, 2025
- Full Page
Artificial intelligence (AI) may be guiding doctors towards a gut-focused means of accurately diagnosing chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS), new research shows.
The illness appears to disrupt relationships between a person’s gut microbiome, immune system and metabolism...
Most Liver Cancers Are Preventable, Study Says
- Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter
- July 29, 2025
- Full Page
Liver cancer: In most cases, it doesn’t have to happen, a new global study finds.
Research suggests that 60% of cases of this often deadly disease are preventable by avoiding or treating big risk factors.
Those risk factors include viral hepatitis infec...
Walking for Health? A Faster Pace Boosts Benefits
- Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter
- July 29, 2025
- Full Page
Want to cut your odds of an early death by almost 20%? Take just 15 minutes out of your day for a brisk walk, researchers advise.
While it’s known that regular walking is healthy, the new study suggests maintaining a peppy pace is key.
“Individual...
Surrogate Moms More Apt To Suffer Mental Illness
- Ernie Mundell HealthDay Reporter
- July 29, 2025
- Full Page
Women who carry a baby for someone else — also known as gestational carriers or “surrogate moms” — may be at higher risk for mental illness during and after the pregnancy, new research shows.
“Our findings underscore the importance of ...
RFK Jr. May Remove Top Panel on Preventive Services Task Force
- I. Edwards HealthDay Reporter
- July 28, 2025
- Full Page
U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is considering removing all 16 members of an advisory group that helps decide which preventive services, like cancer screenings and HIV medications, should be fully covered by insurance.
The group, known as the U.S. Preventive ...
