News

While observational studies have previously pointed to an association, being able to identify causation has been difficult due to overlapping risk factors and confounding variables.
Chris Johnson, MBA, emphasizes that the constantly shifting landscape of Medicaid could further confuse both patients and health care providers, potentially leaving children behind.
Patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) who smoke were less likely to receive tobacco dependence treatment (TDT) if they lived in rural areas or had longer travel times to care, ...
A global analysis showed that absolute deaths and disability-adjusted life-years related to smoking-attributable rheumatoid arthritis have continued to rise since 1990.
A primary care–based collaborative care model significantly cut opioid use, though mental health outcomes remained unchanged.
Strategies that combine ferroptosis inhibition with established antifibrotics could ultimately move treatment from slowing progression to truly reversing fibrosis, new research suggests.
PD-1 blockade has previously shown success in a first-line setting in ES-SCLC, and nab-paclitaxel is albumin-bound and solvent-free, which the investigators explained may minimize the toxicity ...
Close to 40% of patients with right heart failure and pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) who remain critically ill and require admittance to the intensive care unit die within 1 year of that ...
Women with HIV who were Hispanic, Haitian, or African American were more likely to adhere to antiretroviral therapy (ART) if they had culturally sensitive care.
The Mediterranean diet and aerobic exercise significantly reduced weight, liver enzymes, and waist circumference in patients with metabolic dysfunction–associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) and ...
Patients with severe sickle cell disease experienced significant quality of life improvements after receiving exagamglogene autotemcel gene therapy.
Chris Johnson, MBA, discusses how the Medicaid cuts could affect children's eligibility to receive health care.