Health News

Empowering your wellness journey with the latest health news, trends, and research from Creative Media News.

Pfizer halts gene therapy trial after child’s sudden death

Creative Media News

Pfizer has suspended its drug trial for a rare muscle-wasting disease in response to the untimely death of a child.  A year ago, the child, ranging in age from two to four years, experienced cardiac arrest after undergoing the unique gene therapy.  The precise cause of the death and whether or not it was a result of the treatment, fordadistrogene movaparvovec, remain unknown to Pfizer.

50,000 childhood asthma incidents related to gas and propane stoves

Creative Media News

Tens of thousands of cases of childhood asthma may have been caused by gas and propane furnaces, according to one study.   After measuring nitrogen dioxide levels in over a hundred kitchens in the United States with stoves on, researchers from California and Boston determined how the chemical dispersed to other rooms when the appliances were turned off.

Could your doctor Google you? Requests to curb unspoken habits

Creative Media News

Advocacy groups stated today that physicians should not look up additional information about their patients' lifestyles and medical histories via Google.   A crackdown has been demanded by authorities on the unspoken practice.  Dennis Reed, director of the over-60s advocacy organization Silver Voices, stated that searching for patients online is never justifiable.

People revolted by ‘waffle stomping’ shower habit revelation

Creative Media News

Social media users were appalled to discover that 'waffle stomping' was deemed 'unhygienic' and 'an error' by medical professionals.'   Andrew Carpenter, an Australian attorney, recirculated a Reddit post in which a man describes his wife's revolting bathing habit, sparking considerable online discussion.  The male stated in the original 2022 post that their wife poops in the shower and then stomps it down the drain. 'This is no comedy.'

Over a quarter of Brits still use sunbeds regularly

Creative Media News

Their association with skin cancer has been recognized for years.  A study reveals, however, that more than a quarter of adults continue to use sunbeds, with many being oblivious to the dangers involved. Young people, who aspire to have tanned bodies like those of contestants on reality television programs like Love Island, are at the top of the list.

Why 15% don’t lose weight on Ozempic—’non-responders’ identified

Creative Media News

Ozempic and comparable fat-burning injections have been a boon for the millions of obese Americans.  A minimum of 5.6 million individuals in the United States have been prescribed the injection to reduce their body mass and, by doing so, their risk of a variety of diseases by 20%.  According to large-scale clinical trials, the medication, which functions by inhibiting appetite signals, may assist patients in losing as much as 15 percent of their body weight in just over a year.

Beware: ‘vampire facials’ pose HIV risk, Brits cautioned

Creative Media News

Individuals in the United Kingdom who desire to appear more sprightly are advised against visiting unregulated beauty clinics for "vampire facials" due to the potential transmission of HIV.  A patient receives platelet-rich plasma (PRP) injections, which involve the administration of blood samples that have been centrifuged to separate the protein-rich plasma purported to have the ability to rejuvenate the epidermis, according to aestheticians.

$1 diabetes pill, Easter Island chemical – anti-aging potential

Creative Media News

Researchers are exploring potential remedies for anti-aging, ranging from a $1 pill used to treat diabetes to an enigmatic chemical discovered on Easter Island.  Numerous initiatives have attempted to extend an individual's lifespan, whereas others have proposed the possibility of cell rejuvenation that would render the epidermis appear thirty years younger.

Acid reflux meds like TUMS, Prilosec up migraine risk 70%

Creative Media News

According to one study, the use of common over-the-counter gastritis medications such as TUMS or Prilosec can increase the likelihood of developing migraines by as much as 70 percent.  A cohort of 11,800 individuals was analyzed by researchers from the University of Maryland, of which 2,100 were users of over-the-counter anti-heartburn medications.

‘Ozempic babies’ risk birth defects from weight-loss jabs

Creative Media News

Doctors have cautioned that weight reduction injections used by women striving to conceive may result in congenital abnormalities. A number of women who were prescribed medications containing semaglutide, the active ingredient in Wegovy and Ozempic, reported becoming pregnant unexpectedly.

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