Health Advice
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Environmental Nutrition: Marvelous mangos
The mango fruit is the essence of tropical. Shades of red, orange, yellow, and green surround sunny flesh that may be soft and sweet or crisp and tart.
The folklore
Known as the “king of fruits,” this global gem originated in India more than 4,000 years ago and is the national fruit of India, Pakistan, and the Philippines, and the national...Read more

Plan for higher health care costs in 2026
Medicare premiums and deductibles typically increase annually. Part B premiums are expected to rise 11.6% in 2026, nearly double the six percent jump in 2025, according to the 2025 Social Security and Medicare Trustees Report (page 204). The report projects a $206.50 monthly premium for next year, up $21.50 or 11.6% from 2025 and the largest ...Read more

Tomatillos are the secret to summer soups, sauces and salads
If you’ve ever had the pleasure of eating Mexican chile verde or salsa verde, you’ve probably experienced the tangy, fruity flavor of the tomatillo. While they’re often mistaken for green tomatoes, tomatillos are different fruits entirely. Here, we’ll tell you what they are and how to prepare them.
What are tomatillos?
Also known as ...Read more

How is metastatic prostate cancer detected and treated in men over 70?
National guidelines on prostate cancer screening with the PSA test are set by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF). This independent panel of experts in preventive and primary care recommends against screening for prostate cancer in men older than 70.
Why? Prostate cancer tends to be slow-growing. Men in this age group are more ...Read more

Mayo Clinic Q&A: Penicillin allergy or not? Why you should find out
DEAR MAYO CLINIC: As a kid, I remember having a rash after taking penicillin. To this day, my doctor prescribes something other than penicillin if needed when I am ill. I have heard that people who think they are allergic to penicillin may not be. Should I check whether I truly am allergic?
ANSWER: Penicillin refers to two things. One is a ...Read more

AI searches gave scarily specific self-harm advice to users expressing suicidal intent, researchers find
A few months ago, Northeastern University computer scientist Annika Schoene was playing around with ChatGPT when she found a troubling gap in its safeguards against harmful content.
The usage policies of OpenAI, creator of ChatGPT, state that users shouldn't employ the company's generative artificial intelligence model or other tools to harm ...Read more

Tribal groups assert sovereignty as feds crack down on gender-affirming care
ELKO, Nev. — At the Two Spirit Conference in northern Nevada in June, Native Americans gathered in support of the LGBTQ+ community amid federal and state rollbacks of transgender protections and gender-affirming health care.
“I want people to not kill themselves for who they are,” said organizer Myk Mendez, a trans and two-spirit citizen ...Read more

Commentary: How Trump could make it harder for you to see a doctor
The Trump administration’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act puts so many people at risk of losing their health insurance and food assistance, it’s hard to focus on other fires set by the new law. And yet — there’s one crucial conflagration I hope the state of California will fight.
The budget bill contains multiple changes in federal student ...Read more

Many Minnesotans in sober homes just lost housing. Where will they go?
A dozen men left Nick Carchedi’s St. Paul sober home last week as the housing dollars they relied on came to an abrupt halt.
He worries about what the displacement will mean for their recovery — and for the sober home he started last year, which was left with just two residents.
“These people are going to be out on the street or doing ...Read more

US Health Department pulls back on funding mRNA vaccines
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services is ending contracts to develop vaccines using messenger RNA technology, another step in the agency’s changing practices toward vaccines under Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
The agency is terminating 22 contracts worth almost $500 million, according to a statement Tuesday.
The move comes as ...Read more

Harm reduction techniques being phased out under Trump
WASHINGTON — The Trump administration is escalating its push against what has become a key part of the way states, localities and communities respond to the overdose epidemic: harm reduction.
A public health approach aimed at mitigating the negative health effects associated with drug use, harm reduction aims to prevent overdoses and ...Read more

2 dead, 58 sick amid Legionnaires' disease outbreak in New York City
NEW YORK — A second person has died and 58 others have fallen ill amid an outbreak of Legionnaires’ disease wreaking havoc in the Harlem area, New York City health officials announced.
It marks an increase from previous figures released by the New York City Health Department on Thursday, when there was a total of 22 reported cases and a ...Read more

Historically redlined communities have slower EMS response times
Residents of historically redlined communities experience slower response times from emergency medical services, according to a study published Tuesday in JAMA Network Open.
Redlining refers to the discriminatory practice under which the federal government and banks systematically denied mortgages to Black and Hispanic residents. The practice ...Read more

Stigma still keeps police from seeking mental health care, study finds
Police officers may face hundreds of traumatic incidents over the course of their careers, but many still hesitate to seek mental health support when they need it.
Despite growing investments in wellness programs by law enforcement agencies across the country, a recent study of just over 100 surveyed officers from the Fargo Police Department in...Read more

Commentary: Erosion of democracy threatens our health
Even before the Trump administration’s headline-grabbing assaults on public institutions, our democracy was showing alarming signs of distress. A 2023 Brookings Institution report found that the United States “is experiencing two major forms of democratic erosion in its governing institutions: election manipulation and executive overreach.�...Read more

California man in dire need of a kidney transplant finds 1-in-100,000 match: His wife
LOS ANGELES — For much of his adult life, Jim Irish was a self-proclaimed bachelor — moving cities every few years, too busy as a business executive and entrepreneur to devote much time to romantic endeavors.
By the time he was in his mid-50s, he had pretty much given up on the idea of finding a life partner.
But fate had other plans.
...Read more

'Relentlessly debilitating': The chronic symptoms of Lyme disease
LOS ANGELES — Grammy award-winning pop star Justin Timberlake, 44, recently took to Instagram to share his diagnosis of Lyme disease, a bacterial infection that he said was "relentlessly debilitating, both mentally and physically." His statement comes on the heels of criticism from fans who felt he was under-performing during his recent world ...Read more

Ask the Pediatrician: Everyday ways to talk about mental health: Tips for families
Mental health is health. We keep track of our child's physical growth and milestones such as learning to walk or talk. But we also need to check in on their mental health and how they are feeling.
Talking about mental health can take practice; the more we do it, the easier it gets. Having these conversations even while things are going well is ...Read more

Student loan caps might worsen the national doctor shortage, critics say
Twenty-eight-year-old Michaela Bonner has been working 12-hour shifts as an emergency medical technician in Norfolk, Virginia, for the past four years, while attending and paying for college to finish her prerequisites for medical school.
But now that President Donald Trump’s signature tax and spending law bars students from borrowing more ...Read more

Commentary: Ending LGBTQ+ health research will leave science in the dark
In recent months, the Trump administration has terminated thousands of federally funded medical research grants, gutting $9.5 billion in critical health science efforts. More than half of those cuts — 1,246 grants worth $5.5 billion — targeted studies focused on LGBTQ+ health. These cuts don’t just reflect shifting policy priorities. They ...Read more
Popular Stories
- US Health Department pulls back on funding mRNA vaccines
- 2 dead, 58 sick amid Legionnaires' disease outbreak in New York City
- 'Relentlessly debilitating': The chronic symptoms of Lyme disease
- Many Minnesotans in sober homes just lost housing. Where will they go?
- California man in dire need of a kidney transplant finds 1-in-100,000 match: His wife