New research has found that mealtime strategies used by parents of fussy eaters might be inadvertently turning their children into
Month: May 2023
Super low-cost smartphone attachment brings blood pressure monitoring to your fingertips
Engineers at the University of California San Diego have developed a simple, low-cost clip that uses a smartphone’s camera and
71 percent of mpox cases occurred in large central urban areas
About 71 percent of cases of mpox occurred among persons residing in large central urban areas, and 95.7 percent of
CDC encourages mpox vaccination to prevent summer outbreak
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released a report encouraging those at risk for the virus mpox—formerly called monkeypox—and
Black patients with overactive bladder less likely to receive β3-adrenoceptor agonists
Black individuals are significantly less likely than non-Hispanic White individuals to fill a prescription for a β3-adrenoceptor agonist for overactive
Opinion: In BC, Alberta and around the world, forcing drug users into treatment is a violent policy
Intervention without human rights goes by many names—involuntary institutionalization, compulsory drug treatment, “coerced care,” forced abstinence or a combination of all of those
Why pain seems worse at night
As the song from the musical “Les Miserables,” based on the novel by Victor Hugo, says, “But the tigers come
Brain imaging is on the move with wearable scanning development
New research has demonstrated, for the first time, that a wearable brain scanner can measure brain function while people are
Babies crawl, scoot and shuffle when learning to move—here’s what to watch for if you’re worried
Early gross motor (or whole body) movements such as crawling and walking are exciting developments and clear markers for parents
Clinical screening helps identify family members at risk for heart muscle disease
A multi-site study led by researchers at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center and College of Medicine shows the