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Apr 22 2026HEALTH

The Invisible Link Between Love and Caregiver Health

Taking care of a spouse with memory loss isn’t just about managing medication and daily routines. The new study shows it’s also about how the couple felt about each other before the diagnosis. Researchers studied 264 people married to partners with dementia, tracking their stress levels not just thr

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Apr 22 2026HEALTH

AI health advice: When ‘quick answers’ can be risky

A study released in 2026 put five popular chatbots under the microscope, checking how they answered everyday health questions. Nearly half the replies contained some kind of flaw—either missing key details or steering users toward unverified treatments. About one in every three responses had minor g

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Apr 21 2026HEALTH

Asian Hate and Mental Health: A New Look

A study used data from a large national survey and FBI records to see how hate against Asian people during the COVID‑19 pandemic affected adults’ anxiety and depression. The researchers followed 6, 552 people for more than a year, looking at how changes in the number of hate incidents each month rel

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Apr 21 2026SCIENCE

American Science Faces a Quiet Crisis

A woman named Katherine Burns, who runs a lab on endometriosis at the University of Cincinnati, has been dealing with intense anxiety. She is not just a scientist; she also lives with the disease her research aims to understand. The problem began when federal funding for science started shrinking un

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Apr 21 2026HEALTH

Cancer in Keyport: A Neighborhood’s Growing Concern

A local man began tracking cancer cases on his old street, noticing a disturbing pattern. He marked each affected home with an X and eventually mapped 28 cases on First Street alone, plus another 41 across the town. The numbers sparked alarm among residents and health experts who said the rate se

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Apr 21 2026HEALTH

Bringing Backbone Care to Community Clinics

Health centers that serve low‑income neighborhoods are doing a great job with basic checkups, but they miss one big piece: help for back and joint problems. These issues are a top reason people end up on pain medicine, especially opioids. If clinics could add spinal specialists to their teams, pa

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Apr 21 2026POLITICS

Gavin Newsom Questions Trump’s Psychedelic Push With a Quick Reply

Gov. Gavin Newsom of California reacted to President Donald Trump’s new mental‑health initiative by sharing the White House post and adding a single, sharp question. The original message on X claimed that Trump’s order would speed up medical treatments for serious mental illness by loosening rules a

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Apr 21 2026POLITICS

Federal Health Data Plan Sparks Privacy Outcry

The Trump administration has asked the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) to gather detailed medical claims from insurers for more than 8 million federal workers, retirees and their families. The request would let OPM access names, diagnoses and drug information that normally stay private. Health

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Apr 21 2026HEALTH

Weather Stress and Health Risks for Young Women in Kenya

Extreme weather, like floods or droughts, can make life harder for young people in Kenya. When food and water become scarce, girls and women often face more health problems. One common issue is urinary tract infections (UTIs), which many report without a doctor’s visit. A study looked at gi

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Apr 21 2026HEALTH

Rethinking Surgery Risks: A Fresh Approach to Patient Safety

Every year, thousands of patients face unexpected problems after surgery that could have been avoided. Many of these issues aren't just painful—they can lead to longer hospital stays, higher costs, and even life-threatening situations. Current methods for tracking and reporting complications often m

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