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CNN —Homeowners in France have discovered a skeleton in the attic of an outbuilding while undertaking renovation work. The body is thought to belong to the former occupant of the property, which is located in Erstroff in eastern France, who disappeared in 2009, according to a statement from the local prosecutor’s office published Monday. The remains were found in a small room immediately under the roof accessible only by a trapdoor that was “almost invisible,” according to the statement. The discovery is thought to be linked to the former owner, a man born in 1927, who disappeared in 2009. In December 2021, he was declared legally dead by a local court, the statement added.
Persons: CNN’s Caroline Baum Organizations: CNN, Homeowners, Strasbourg Institute, Forensic Medicine Locations: France, Erstroff
Morgan Stanley reiterates Live Nation as overweight Morgan Stanley raised its price target on the stock to $140 per share from $120. Bank of America reiterates Apple as buy Bank of America says it sees "limited" impact to Apple earnings regardless of the Presidential outcome. Bank of America reiterates Palantir as buy The firm says Palantir is an AI "juggernaut" following earnings on Monday. Bank of America reiterates Arista Networks as buy Bank of America says it sees share gains ahead for the networking equipment company. Morgan Stanley reinstates Krispy Kreme as equal weight Morgan Stanley says Krispy Kreme has a balanced risk/reward right now.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, it's bullish, Eli Lilly, Palantir, Bernstein, Eaton, Deutsche, there's, Jefferies, Rick Dreiling, MTZ, Morgan Stanley reinstates Krispy, Krispy Kreme Organizations: Bank of America, Boeing, JPMorgan, RBC, Microsoft, " Bank of America, Broadcom, Apple, Republicans, Arista Networks, Arista, Meta, Deutsche Bank, eBay, Barclays, Energy, Infrastructure, Communications, Resources, IDA Locations: San Antonio, Redmond , WA
Symptoms like rectal bleeding, unexplained weight loss, and constipation or diarrhea can be warning signs of colon cancerMany symptoms of colon cancer can also indicate more mundane illnesses. AdvertisementAbdominal pain, unexplained weight loss, and fatigue can also be symptoms of colon cancer. Another unique indicator of colon cancer is the feeling of being unable to empty the bowels, according to the Mayo Clinic. AdvertisementThe first-line treatment for colon cancer at stages zero or one is surgery to remove the affected part of the colon. The American Cancer Society recommends that all adults over 45 be tested regularly for colon cancer, even if they have no symptoms.
Persons: , Rebecca Siegel, James Van Der Beek, actpr Chadwick Boseman, Chadwick Boseman, David Greenwald Organizations: Service, American Cancer Society, Mayo Clinic ., gastroenterology, Icahn School of Medicine Locations: Mount
Why social media shouldn’t be your therapist
  + stars: | 2024-11-04 | by ( Kara Alaimo | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +6 min
Her book “Over the Influence: Why Social Media Is Toxic for Women and Girls — And How We Can Take It Back” was recently published by Alcove Press. It’s easy to see why: There’s a shortage of mental health providers, and it’s often expensive and difficult to get an appointment, whereas social media is at everyone’s fingertips. But it’s generally not a good idea to try to diagnose your problems on social media. Misleading posts and misdiagnosesSelf-help posts on social media often serve up simple solutions to complex problems. That’s why experts said answers are likelier to be found on an old-fashioned therapist’s sofa than social media.
Persons: Kara Alaimo, , Thomas Milam, Iris Telehealth, Lindsay Liben, , Milam, Liben, he’s, ” Milam, ” Liben Organizations: Fairleigh Dickinson University, Women, Press, CNN, Getty, Autism, Canadian, of Psychiatry, app’s, Virginia Tech’s Carilion, of Medicine, American Psychiatric Association, American Psychological Association, Centers for Disease Control, PBS Locations: TikTok, Virginia, New York City
In October, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommended that high-risk adults get a second updated Covid vaccine to bolster their protection against the virus. No other vaccines are given at such a high frequency, but experts say there’s no reason to believe that the vaccines — and in particular, the mRNA vaccines from Pfizer and Moderna — aren’t effective. Pfizer’s and Moderna’s vaccines were the first to use mRNA technology to induce immunity to a virus, an approach that proved critical in the early days of the pandemic because mRNA vaccines can be developed much faster than traditional vaccines. Despite the CDC recommending an additional shot, there’s no evidence that the mRNA vaccines aren’t working as expected, said Akiko Iwasaki, a professor of immunology at the Yale School of Medicine. In a perfect world, the Covid vaccines would be able to be updated much faster to match the strains in circulation.
Persons: Akiko Iwasaki, Iwasaki, , , Ashish Jha, ” Jha, , Jha, I’ve, “ Topping, John Wherry, ” Wherry, Anna Durbin, ” Durkin, we’ll Organizations: Centers for Disease Control, Pfizer, Moderna, CDC, Yale School of Medicine, Emory University, Brown University School of Public Health, White, University of Pennsylvania, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Nor, he said, was he motivated by the claim that UNRWA perpetuates Palestinian refugee status. AFP/Getty ImagesThe entrance to Aida Refugee Camp, near Bethlehem, in the occupied West Bank. “If they shut down UNRWA, that means there is no Palestinian refugee cause. Dawoud Abo Alkas/Anadolu/Getty ImagesAn UNRWA school in al-Am'ari Refugee Camp, in Ramallah, in the West Bank. Nur Shams refugee camp near Tulkarm, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, after an Israeli raid in September.
Persons: Jerusalem CNN — Benjamin Netanyahu, , , Nikki Haley, , Israel –, Donald Trump’s, Netanyahu –, Trump’s, Works Agency for Palestine Refugees – Netanyahu, , Boaz, Hani Alshaer, Israel, ” –, Netanyahu, Aaron David Miller, Mick Krever, ” Philippe Lazzarini, they’re, Diana Buttu, ’ Saleh Shunnar, “ Israel, Miller, Mahmoud Issa, Deir, Abd Abu Amra, Dawoud Abo, Issam, Chris Sidoti, Nadav Tamir, , Nur Shams, Mohamad Torokman, Jerusalem –, don’t, ” Tamir, Zeena, Abeer Salman, Mohammed Al, Shira Gemer Organizations: Jerusalem CNN, US, United, UN, United Nations Relief, Works Agency for Palestine Refugees, West Bank, UNRWA, Israel Defense Forces, Qassam, Anadolu Agency, Getty, Washington Post, Assembly, CNN, Refugees, UNHCR, Reuters, Dawoud, Dawoud Abo Alkas, East, UN’s Independent International Commission of, Geneva Convention, Anadolu, J, Israel Locations: Jerusalem, Israel, American, Gaza, , Hamas, Be’eri, British, Palestine, AFP, Bethlehem, Swiss, , Deir Al, Palestinian, Gaza City, Anadolu, al, Ramallah, Lebanon, Jordan, Syria, East Jerusalem, Australian, Palestinian Territory, “ Israel, Geneva, New York, Tulkarm
Candace Fails screamed for someone in the Texas hospital to help her pregnant daughter. Fails, who would have seen her daughter turn 20 this Friday, still cannot understand why Crain’s emergency was not treated like an emergency. Passed nearly four decades ago, it requires emergency rooms to stabilize patients in medical crises. Eight years earlier, the Texas Medical Board found that he had failed to diagnose appendicitis in one patient and syphilis in another. Last year, he sent a letter threatening to prosecute a doctor who had received court approval to provide an emergency abortion for a Dallas woman.
Persons: ProPublica, Candace, , Nevaeh Crain, Crain, , Sara Rosenbaum, Dr, Jodi Abbott, they’re, Biden, GYNs, Dara Kass, it’s, Elizabeth, Lillian, Danielle Villasana, ’ Crain, Randall Broussard, they’d, Broussard, , wasn’t retching, Elizabeth ., William Hawkins, ” Broussard, Hawkins, Elise, Kass, Crain’s, Marcelo Totorica, couldn’t, GYN, Melissa McIntosh, Totorica, “ Dr, ultrasounds aren’t, Abbott, ’ ”, Tony Ogburn, Totorica’s, ” Crain, Lillian Faye Broussard, Ken Paxton, Paxton, Donald Trump, Roe, Wade, James Wesley Hendrix, ” Paxton, Kurt D, Engelhardt, Sanjay Gupta, Mariam Elba, Cassandra Jaramillo, Andrea Suozzo Organizations: George Washington University, Boston University School of Medicine, OB, Department of Health, Human Services, Baptist, Southeast, Christus, Baptist Hospitals, Texas Medical Board, New, Staff, Boston OB, Texas, Biden, U.S, Supreme, Labor, Medicare, District, Trump, U.S ., Appeals, Circuit, CNN, CNN Health Locations: Texas, New York, Southeast Texas, Christus Southeast Texas St, Vidor , Texas, Tennessee, Christus St, San Antonio, Buna , Texas, Washington, Dallas, Southern Texas
The clock will strike 1 a.m. twice Sunday morning as daylight saving time once again comes to an end. Here’s what you need to know about daylight saving time and why the U.S. changes clocks twice a year. Daylight saving time began March 10 and ends Nov. 3. In 2025, daylight saving time starts on Sunday, March 9, and ends on Sunday, Nov. 2, when it’s time to repeat the process. In the Northern Hemisphere, most of the countries that observe daylight saving time are in Europe and North America.
Persons: Karin Johnson, Kin Yuen Organizations: U.S, Astronomical, Department, Pew Research Center, U.S . Senate, Protection, National Conference of State Legislatures, UMass Chan Medical, NBC News, University of California, American Academy of Sleep Locations: U.S, Hawaii, Arizona, Europe, North America, Southern, San Francisco
Lindsay Roselle transformed her view on motherhood after an ayahuasca retreat in the Amazon. AdvertisementThis as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Lindsay Roselle, a 42-year-old entrepreneur and mom from Colorado who attended an ayahuasca retreat and started microdosing psilocybin. Then in 2022, I was flying to a remote part of the Amazon for a three-day ayahuasca retreat, where I ingested a plant-based psychedelic used for medicinal, spiritual, and ceremonial purposes. My mom contributed to my negative idea of motherhoodGiving up my entrepreneurial career was never an option for me. The first one would be the biggest: a three-day ayahuasca ceremony held during a two-week trip to the Amazon.
Persons: Lindsay Roselle, , That's, they're, I've, Tess Martinelli Organizations: Service Locations: Colorado, Peru, tmartinelli
Now 72, Greg Ho has run 43 marathons and plans to make that 100 before he turns 100. He had very little time to devote to exercise due to what he described to Business Insider as his "high-stress job" as the president of Spring Mountain Capital. Spring Mountain Capital and West Harlem Innovation NetworkThe marathon training program Ho embarked on "was miserable, and it hurt," he said. Running helps Ho to maintain his lifestyle"Physically and mentally, running enables me to perform while I get little sleep," he said. Spring Mountain, Ho's firm, backs the West Harlem Innovation Network, which develops new businesses and entrepreneurial talent in the underserved NYC neighborhood.
Persons: Greg Ho, , Ho, he'd, Robin Hood, Ho didn't, he's, we're Organizations: New York VC, Service, Business, Spring, Robin Hood Foundation, York, Robin, West Harlem Innovation, West Harlem Innovation Network, PLoS Medicine Locations: New York, Capital
Here are their best tips for a good night's rest. Thankfully, there are simple steps you can take to get better sleep now — and well after election day. It's something some sleep experts are calling "electsomnia." "I'm a sleep doctor, and I don't sleep perfectly every single night." The more nights of good sleep that you're able to get, the better, but don't become overly concerned with getting the best sleep every night, she said.
Persons: it's, Shelby Harris, Harris, Louis, Abhinav Singh, Singh Organizations: CNBC, American Psychological Association, Washington University, Indiana Sleep Locations: Sleepopolis, St
Mary Ní Lochlainn researches the habits that lead to better health in older age. She does strength training, takes vitamin D, and does intermittent fasting. But the habits that Ní Lochlainn, 34, thinks are most important for healthy aging aren't expensive. Related storiesShe takes vitamin D supplements because people in the UK, where she lives, don't tend to get enough. AdvertisementNí Lochlainn takes vitamin D. Science Photo Library/Getty ImagesIntermittent fastingNí Lochlainn does intermittent fasting by not eating between her dinner and her breakfast in the late morning.
Persons: Mary Ní Lochlainn, , , Ní Lochlainn Organizations: Service, King's College London, Trinity College Dublin, Kings College London, National Cancer Institute, Getty
“What’s scary and embarrassing is that I can see people come to help me, but I’m unable to respond.”Horsnell has narcolepsy, a sleep disorder that makes it hard to stay awake for long periods. In fact, it’s estimated that only 25% of people who have narcolepsy are diagnosed and receive treatment, according to the Narcolepsy Network. “But the terrifying thing was, I’m lying in a puddle of my sweat and I’m hearing everybody whisper, ‘Is he OK? Horsnell’s experience with narcolepsy hallucinations, however, is quite different. As a trained speaker for Project Sleep’s Rising Voices of Narcolepsy leadership program, he visited the White House in 2023 to raise awareness about narcolepsy and sleep disorders.
Persons: Matthew Horsnell, , Horsnell, , ” Horsnell, Jennifer Mundt, Mundt, ” Mundt, “ There’s, aren’t, orexin, Heather Lill, it’s Organizations: CNN, Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine, Narcolepsy, cataplexy, , Narcolepsy Network, Scientists, US Food and Drug Administration, Society, Behavioral Sleep, Sleep Research Society, American Academy of Cardiovascular Sleep, White House Locations: Chicago, United States
The company did not respond to a detailed list of questions about Barnica’s care. When Barnica’s husband arrived, she told him doctors couldn’t intervene until there was no heartbeat. The law did not account for the possibility of a future emergency, one that could develop in hours or days without intervention, doctors told ProPublica. As the hours passed in the Houston hospital, Barnica couldn’t find relief. Meanwhile, Lima was pulling up Barnica’s medical chart to make an addition to her records.
Persons: ProPublica, Josseli Barnica, Barnica’s, , , Barnica, Susan Mann, Amber Thurman, Candi Miller, Brian Kemp, Donald Trump, Sen, Ted Cruz, Roe, Wade, Greg Abbott, Ken Paxton, Paxton, ” Paxton, , ” Barnica, couldn’t, Shirley Lima, Steven Porter, Leilah, hadn’t, Rosa Elda Calix, Lima, Joel Ross, abetted, Dobbs, Jackson, Biden, Dr, Sanjay Gupta, Sherif Zaafran, doesn’t, can’t, he’s, Mariam Elba, Doris Burke, Lizzie Presser Organizations: Barnica’s, Houston Healthcare, Healthcare, Harvard University, Georgia Gov, Fox News, U.S, Supreme, El Salvadoran, OB, , HCA Healthcare, HCA, GYN, Texas Medical, CNN, CNN Health Locations: Houston, Texas, Massachusetts, Ohio, Ireland, United States, Georgia, , U.S, Honduras, Cleveland, But Texas, Tennessee, Colorado, America, Dallas, El Salvador
AdvertisementSummer is over, and this Sunday it's time to turn back the clocks, ending daylight-saving time for the year. "That's how fragile and susceptible your body is to even just one hour of lost sleep," sleep expert Matthew Walker, author of "How We Sleep," previously told Business Insider. Some lawmakers want permanent DST — others want standard time year-roundThe political debate over DST is fierce, unscientific, and deeply divided. In the 2018 midterms, voters opted to get rid of the annual clock change, to be in permanent daylight-saving time. Switching to permanent DST requires a green light from Congress, but states do not need federal approval to switch to permanent standard time.
Persons: , it's, Matthew Walker ,, That's, GOP Sen, Marco Rubio, Rubio, Akinbolaji Organizations: Service, American Medical Association, DST, Sleep Research Society, National Conference of State Legislatures, Protection, GOP, Senate, University of Minnesota Medical School Locations: Germany, Europe, Hawaii, Arizona, Indiana, Finland, California
CNN —A headset worn at home that zaps the brain with the energy of a 9-volt battery could help relieve symptoms of depression, a new study shows. Rebalancing brain activity in depressionThe device is available in the UK, Norway, Hong Kong and countries in the EU. Studies show that people with depression tend to have less brain activity than normal in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and more brain activity than normal in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex. A ‘spicy’ sensation with brain benefitsLeana De Hoyos, a 34-year-old mother of two who lives in Houston, was one of the study participants. Helping people use brain stimulation at homeFu says that when her team started looking at transcranial direct current stimulation for depression, they first reviewed the medical literature.
Persons: , Rodrigo Machado, Vieira, Machado, It’s, it’s overactive, Daniel Mansson, Cynthia Fu, Fu, Leana De Hoyos, De Hoyos, didn’t, ” De Hoyos, I’m, you’ve, , , ” Fu, Dr, Sanjay Gupta, “ We’re, Mansson, hasn’t Organizations: CNN, Nature Medicine, Therapeutics, US Food and Drug Administration, Neuroscience, King’s College London, CNN Health, Locations: UTHealth, Norway, Hong Kong, Swedish, United States, Houston, Europe
They said the swim school failed to protect them from an alleged predator by insisting that they change in an open area instead of providing them with a private changing area. “Goldfish failed in its basic duties and obligations to protect them from such harm,” states the lawsuit, which was filed in the Oakland County Circuit Court. “There’s nothing we can say about this right now,” a woman who identified herself as a manager at the Goldfish Swim School in Rochester said when contacted Wednesday by NBC News. Aejaz, who lives about 2 miles south of the swim school in Rochester Hills, Michigan, is being held on a $2 million bond. Aejaz allegedly placed the cameras in hospital changing rooms, closets, bathrooms and private rooms.
Persons: Oumair, , Megan Bonanni, Jane, Oakland County Sheriff Michael Bouchard, ” Bouchard, it’s, we’re, Aejaz, videotaping, , Karen McDonald, Mariell Lehman, he’s Organizations: Goldfish Swim, Oakland County Sheriff, Oakland, Sheriff’s, Police, Detroit Sinai Grace, Oakland County, Swim, NBC News, Henry Ford Macomb Hospital, Ascension Genesys Hospital Locations: Detroit, Rochester , Michigan, Oakland County, , India, U.S, Dawson , Alabama, Oakland, Rochester, Rochester Hills , Michigan, Clinton Township, Ascension, Grand Blanc
CNN —Giving birth to triplets, quadruplets or even more has become increasingly less common in the United States. It’s not just guidance around embryo transfers that has changed in the past decades, possibly leading to declines in triplets and higher-order births. Separately, she called the new NCHS report, showing a decline in triplets and higher-order multiple births, “fantastic news” for maternal and infant health. But there are many other types of assisted reproductive technology, which could be factors driving these racial disparities, she said. “So we can’t conflate assisted reproductive technology with IVF.
Persons: ” Joyce Martin, Micah Hill, Hill, ” Hill, , , it’s, It’s, Amanda Williams, NICU, ” Martin, Michelle Osterman, Nadya Suleman, Asima Ahmad, ” Ahmad, White, ’ Williams, Dr, Sanjay Gupta, ” Williams, conflate, Black, Rachel McConnell Organizations: CNN, US Centers for Disease Control, CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics, National Center for Health Statistics, Society for, Reproductive Technology, American Society for Reproductive Medicine, Vital Statistics, Get CNN, CNN Health, Columbia University’s Vagelos, of Physicians and Surgeons Locations: United States
A pig has tested positive for H5N1 bird flu in a backyard farm in Oregon. The H5N1 bird flu was detected in a pig in Oregon, the first instance of a swine infection in the US, officials announced on Wednesday. Pigs get both bird flu viruses and human flu viruses, making them a genetic mixing bowl where H5N1 could gain genetic mutations that help it spread between humans. AdvertisementWhy pig infection could be a tipping pointPigs play host to both bird flu viruses and human flu viruses. Inside a pig, the H5N1 bird flu virus could pick up genetic mutations that help it adapt to better infect human bodies.
Persons: , Stacey Schultz, Cherry, Jude Children's, Jeremy Farrar, Diego Vara, Florian Krammer, Cynthia Goldsmith, Jackie Katz, Schultz, Richard Webby, Jude, Robert Giroux Organizations: Service, St, Jude Children's Research, World Health Organization, Reuters, US Department of Agriculture, USDA, Icahn, of Medicine, STAT, CDC, AP, WHO Locations: Oregon, South America, Sao Jose, Norte, Brazil, New York, St, New York City
Merck on Thursday reported third-quarter revenue and adjusted earnings that topped expectations as the company saw strong sales from its top-selling cancer drug Keytruda, recently launched treatments and its animal health business. But Merck's vaccine that prevents cancer from HPV, the most common sexually transmitted infection in the U.S., posted another quarter of lighter-than-expected sales. Revenue from the shot, Gardasil, fell 11% compared to the year-earlier period, mainly due to lower demand in China. The company booked $16.66 billion in revenue for the third quarter, up 4% from the same period a year ago. The loss of exclusive rights to the medicine will likely cause sales to fall, forcing the company to draw revenue from elsewhere.
Persons: Keytruda, Curon, Merck Organizations: Merck, LSEG Locations: Rahway , New Jersey, U.S, China
People who lost a significant amount of weight with semaglutide saw major improvements in osteoarthritis knee pain, research published Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine finds. “Any sort of dramatic weight loss will relieve pain,” Bliddal said. In another study led by Bliddal, people with knee osteoarthritis were given an older weight loss drug, liraglutide. The average BMI in that study was about 32, lower than the average in the new study. Most of the people in the study had a BMI over 35, and nearly half had a BMI of over 40.
Persons: semaglutide, Wegovy —, , Daniel Wiznia, Henning Bliddal, David Felson, That’s, ” Wiznia, ” Bliddal, Bliddal, liraglutide, Felson, Wiznia, , ” Felson Organizations: New England, of Medicine, Novo Nordisk, Yale Medicine, University of Copenhagen, Boston University Chobanian, Avedisian School of Medicine, BMI, Food and Drug Administration Locations: Denmark
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton sued an El Paso doctor on Tuesday, accusing him of providing transition-related medical care to nearly two dozen minors in violation of state law. Texas enacted a law, Senate Bill 14, last year banning gender-affirming care for anyone under 18. Laws restricting access to transition-related care for minors exist in 26 states, according to the Movement Advancement Project, an LGBTQ think tank. The Texas lawsuits come just ahead of the presidential election, where transition-related care has become somewhat of a flashpoint. NBC News asked Harris about her position on gender-affirming care last week.
Persons: Ken Paxton, Paxton, Hector M, Granados, Bill, ” Paxton, , May Chi Lau, Lau, Greg Abbott, Abbott, Donald Trump’s, Kamala Harris ’, Trump, Harris Organizations: El, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Movement Advancement, Gov, Republican, U.S, Supreme, American Medical Association, American Academy of Pediatrics, NBC News Locations: Texas, El Paso, “ Texas, , Dallas, Tennessee
UNRWA provides far more than humanitarian aid in the Gaza Strip. Many Palestinians see darker motives, viewing the UNRWA ban as Israel's latest attempt to make their lives unlivable, first imprisoning and bombing them, now taking away their main aid lifeline. Palestinians wait to receive medicines at the UNRWA health center in Khan Younis last month. Despite its endorsements, the United States is yet to resume funding to UNRWA after Israel's Oct. 7 allegations. The Israeli Foreign Ministry has said it will use other agencies, such as the World Food Programme and the World Health Organization, to distribute aid.
Persons: , Scott Paul, Ariel Schalit, ” Mustafa Barghouti, Ahmad Gharabli, Khan Younis, Bashar Taleb, , Matthew Miller, , David Lammy, Hazem Bader, Oren Marmorstein, António Guterres, Philippe Lazzarini Organizations: United Nations, UNRWA —, Hamas, UNRWA, Oxfam America, Palestinian National Initiative, NBC, United Nations Refugee Agency, UNHCR, West Bank, Getty, , British, West, Foreign Ministry, NBC News, Israeli Foreign Ministry, Food, World Health Organization, General Locations: Gaza, Gaza City, Israel, Jordan, Syria, Lebanon, Jerusalem, AFP, Ireland, Norway, Slovenia, Spain, United States, U.S, North Korea, West Bank, Hebron, Israel's
But while she was in the hospital, Becky contracted a bone infection that would ultimately require nine arm operations. “I wish I’d make less money so that I can get more benefits, because I’m actually more in debt now.”The challenge of a high deductibleOf all the reasons a family can face medical debt from childbirth, high deductibles are among the most common. “Many workers used to have zero-deductible health care plans, but that’s less true today. “I’m never going to pay off all of our debt, so add on the hospital debt to it. But other changes, like getting rid of deductibles altogether or even instituting universal health care, feel impractical, if not impossible.
Persons: Jessica, , ” Lauren Crocks, SUI, Becky Munge, Jovie, Becky, Cole, Gavin, Ava, Becky Munge Jovie, ” Becky, “ We’re, we’re, I’m, , Adam Gaffney, Wesley Bruce, Ashley Perez’s, Ashley Perez, Ashley Perez Bruce, Perez, ’ ” Perez, “ I’m, they'd, ” Nick Olson, Sanford Health’s, Becker Organizations: Health, SIU, NBC News, Medicaid, Health Care Cost, D.C, Children’s Health, Mayo Clinic, of Illinois, Cambridge Health Alliance, Sanford Health, NBC Locations: Washington, Morton , Illinois, Rochester , Minnesota, Massachusetts
CNN —People who only exercise on weekends have a similar risk of developing mild dementia to those who work out more frequently, a new study has found. A team of academics from Latin America and Europe set out to determine whether the frequency of exercise affects the risk of developing mild dementia. The finding led the team to conclude that 13% of cases of mild dementia could be avoided if all middle-aged people exercised at least once or twice a week. When compared with the group that did not exercise, the weekend warriors were 13% less likely to develop mild dementia, and those in the regular and combined groups were 12% less likely. I feel quite strongly that the weekend warriors around the world should be told that what they are doing is fine.”He added: “The weekend warrior research is starting to add up now.
Persons: Gary O’Donovan, O’Donovan, , “ I’ve, Chris Russell, Russell Organizations: CNN’s, CNN —, British, of Sports Medicine, School of Medicine, Colombia’s University of the, CNN, Association for Dementia, UK’s University of Worcester, World Health Organization Locations: Latin America, Europe, Mexico, Mexican
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