St. John’s Wort: Usefulness and Safety – National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health (.gov)
St. John’s Wort: Usefulness and Safety National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health (.gov) >View original article Contributor:
St. John’s Wort: Usefulness and Safety National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health (.gov) >View original article Contributor:
More than $800 million in N.I.H. grants canceled as of early May — nearly half of those terminated to date — covered the health of sexual and gender minority groups, The Times found. View original article Contributor: Benjamin Mueller
Clinicians at the Department of Veterans Affairs say the president’s return-to-office order is forcing many of them to work from makeshift spaces where sensitive conversations can be overheard. View original article Contributor: Ellen Barry and Nicholas Nehamas
A new training program teaches aides to stop baby talk and address older people as adults. View original article Contributor: Paula Span
For the past four years, we’ve been studying how running with a stroller affects gait and the risk of overuse injuries. View original article Contributor: Allison Altman Singles, Joseph M. Mahoney
RFK Jr. calls for CDC plan for alternative measles treatments Axios >View original article Contributor:
The millions of people who suffer from seasonal allergies each year are too familiar with symptoms like sneezing, wheezing, and sniffling. But many don’t realize there are lots of other, more unusual ways allergies can show up. “People have a preconceived notion of what allergies are, but there’s so much outside just itchy eyes or … Read more
Kennedy has warned of an epidemic of chronic disease, but the budget blueprint would close the C.D.C. center focused on prevention. View original article Contributor: Apoorva Mandavilli and Roni Caryn Rabin
US measles total passes 900 as CDC responds to alternative treatment push CIDRAP >View original article Contributor:
Decades of research have turned up no miracle treatment for measles, but studies show the M.M.R. shot is 97 percent effective in preventing the disease. View original article Contributor: Teddy Rosenbluth