Ocean vacations remain the safest and most fun family adventures, says a hospitality expert. But with outbreaks of the disease showing yearly increases, precautions are necessary.
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Federal workers say they feel overwhelmed, have obtained or considered seeking psychiatric care and medication, and are anxious about paying their bills. And soon, their health insurance will run out.
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Pam Beitlich describes the women who founded Sarasota's first hospital 100 years ago, plus stories of women rising up in a male-dominated workplace.
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Experts tend to focus on the kinds of foods you can eat to improve your health. But the speed at which you devour your dinner matters just as much.
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Love's death has brought renewed attention to an aggressive form of brain cancer that killed her at age 49. Diagnosed in 2022, she said her doctors estimated she had only 10 to 15 months to live.
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Improving cognitive function doesn’t need to be time consuming. Therese Huston, a cognitive scientist, shares practical ways to prevent burnout and keep our brains sharp.
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NPR's Ailsa Chang speaks with Dr. Donald Ingber of the Wyss Institute at Harvard University, about the impact of the stop-work orders that went out this week for federally-funded research.
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A study in JAMA says young women, age 18 to 25, are binge drinking slightly more than men the same age. The good news: Drinking is down for both young men and women compared to earlier generations.
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Two new studies suggest that Parkinson's disease can potentially be treated with stem cells placed in a patient's brain.
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