LILLY RESEARCH

Jun 18 2026HEALTH

Understanding Brain Age in Multiple Sclerosis: What Affects Disability and Thinking Skills?

Researchers have found that people with multiple sclerosis (MS) often show a brain age that’s older than their actual years. This gap, called brain-predicted age difference (brain-PAD), is linked to worse physical disability and trouble with memory or focus. But here’s the big question: Could certai

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Jun 16 2026HEALTH

Can money alone fix childhood nutrition problems?

Research shows kids from poorer families often eat less healthy food than richer kids. This gap in diet can lead to health problems later in life. A big question is whether better access to grocery stores and fresh food makes a difference. Scientists tested this idea using cash gifts for low-income

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Jun 16 2026HEALTH

Eating Well Under Pressure: How Stress Affects What Male Academics in Nigeria Choose to Eat

Research shows that fast-paced city life and tough work demands often lead people to eat poorly, and Nigerian professionals aren’t immune to this problem. Male academics face a tough balancing act—they spend long hours preparing lectures, grading papers, and attending meetings, leaving little time f

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Jun 15 2026HEALTH

Strength Training Boosts Nerve Speed in Just a Month

Research shows that a month of simple strength exercises can actually speed up how fast the brain talks to muscles—even in older adults. In one study, people aged 18 to 84 tried handgrip training three times a week. After four weeks, their nerve signals traveled faster than before, proving the nervo

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Jun 13 2026EDUCATION

School rules can shape your future brainpower

Researchers followed thousands of American adults and found something surprising. Kids who got kicked out of school often had weaker thinking skills by their 50s. The study didn’t just look at bad grades—it tracked real brain health over decades. Suspensions and expulsions didn’t just feel unfair in

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Jun 13 2026HEALTH

How faith shapes stress and health across different groups

Researchers pulled together data from nearly 5, 000 adults across three long-running U. S. studies. The groups included Hispanic and Latino people, white nurses, and American Indian communities. They wanted to see how everyday stress hits mental and physical health, and whether faith helps or hurts

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Jun 12 2026HEALTH

How Moving Helps Students Feel Better and Connect

Research shows that staying active can boost mental health and help students feel less alone. But when it comes to exercise, does it matter if students work out in person or online? That’s the question behind a study that tracked how different types of physical activity affected college students. T

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Jun 10 2026HEALTH

What makes people happy with online healthcare services?

Researchers looked at why people in India and the UK feel satisfied or frustrated with digital health services. They found that three things matter most: whether the service works without glitches, if users see real benefits in their daily lives, and if they trust the organization behind it. But he

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Jun 10 2026HEALTH

Do daily habits and surroundings affect endometriosis differently in city and country areas?

Researchers wanted to see if where women with endometriosis live changes how the disease shows up in their bodies. They compared women from big cities to those from smaller towns and rural areas across Australia. The study looked at everyday habits, like diet and exercise, as well as things in the e

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Jun 09 2026HEALTH

Morning Moves May Boost Heart Health More Than Evening Workouts

Research suggests that when adults exercise might matter as much as how much they move. A recent study tracked nearly 800 people using wrist devices for a week, measuring not just their activity levels but also when they were most active. Those who hit their peak movement earlier in the day had stro

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