Want to get fit without hitting the gym? Follow these tips
By Jason Kornwitz
News at Northeastern
Here are five gymfree workout tips to help you build a fitter physique, with insight from Rui Li, an associate...
Birth control pills may increase the risk of stroke: Experts
By Vivek Singh Chauhan
New Delhi--Apart from obesity, birth control pills and additional factors such as smoking, high blood pressure or diabetes may put women...
Existing Covid vax enough, no need to tweak for Omicron: Fauci
Washington-- Existing vaccines and booster shots against Covid are sufficient to prevent Omicron infections, said top infectious disease expert Dr Anthony Fauci, as he...
Smoking pot raises risk of stroke, heart failure
New York -- Marijuana use may lead to 26 per cent increase in the risk of stroke and a 10 per cent increase in...
Pfizer to offer all its drugs not-for-profit to 45 lower-income countries
Davos-- Pfizer has announced it is to supply all its current and future patent-protected medicines and vaccines on a not-for-profit basis to 45 lower-income countries...
Taking daily multivitamins? You can stop now
By Julie Corliss
Harvard Health Blog Contributor/The Harvard Gazette
Are you among the one in three Americans who gulps down a multivitamin every morning, probably with...
Over 1 in 3 Americans live in areas with unhealthy air quality: Report
Washington-- Nearly 120 million people in the US, or more than one in three, live in areas with unhealthy air quality, and people of...
Healthy internet use may help protect against dementia, reveals study
New Delhi-- Scientists have found that regular internet use can reduce the dementia risk and healthy online engagement may help develop and maintain cognitive...
Study finds new genes that may contribute to congenital heart diseases
New York-- Researchers have found new genes that contribute to hypoplastic left heart syndrome (HLHS), a rare, life-threatening heart disease that occurs in infants.
In...
Stop Binge-Watching Coronavirus News: Why Overconsuming Bad News is Bad for Your Health
Hoboken, NJ—Joe McCormack says the coronavirus is bad for your health. What makes him different from the many experts with their grim statistics and...