Parents, you might want to rethink searching Google for information regarding infant sleep safety. According to new research, the information that might come may not be so accurate.
A new study has suggested that exercise may be beneficial to people with heart failure who are also depressed.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has cleared an ingestible sensor for marketing as a medical device. The ingestible sensor is part of the Proteus digital health feedback system, an integrated, end-to-end personal health management system that is designed to help improve patients' health habits and connections to caregivers.
Doctors apparently have a hard time spotting drinking problems unless a patient turns up drunk, a study reveals. The study says that if patients are not already intoxicated, GPs on an average can only detect 40 percent of cases of problem drinkers. For the study, an overview of 39 previous studies was conducted by Leicester University researchers, which involved 20,000 patients.
According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1 in 11 school-aged children are diagnosed with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) and new research suggests that the warning signs often appear even before the demands of school begin.
Some 47 million American women are expected to benefit from President Barack Obama's Affordable Care Act starting Aug. 1.
In a surprising twist, new research has suggested that most Americans don't know whether they are gaining or losing weight.
Researchers from University of Warwick have revealed that about 150 million adults across the developing world are suffering from sleep-related problems.
Nearly two million Americans have celiac disease and according to a new survey by researchers at the Mayo Clinic, around 1.4 million of them don't know they have it.
A new study led by a UCSF researcher shows that poor sleep can reduce the effectiveness of vaccines and is the first performed outside a sleep laboratory to show that sleep duration is directly tied to vaccine immune response.
A latest study reveals that people with poor mental health are at higher risk of encountering an early death. The study in UK states that a quarter of adults are at risk even if their problems are mild. It further says that people with depression or other major mental health problems are more prone to lower life expectancy. British researchers have found that those who have 'sub-clinical' anxiety or depression had 20 per cent higher chances of dying over a decade than those who did not, ...
Mood swings are something that almost all women experience owing to the menstrual cycles. However, apart from the happy and the sad days, there are also shopping, eating days for a woman in a month, says a latest research. The study suggests that there are days in a month when a woman is more likely to shop, spend on her appearance or perhaps eat more- all depending on the hormonal fluctuations.
Researchers have suggested that choline supplementation in pregnant women lowers cortisol in the baby by changing epigenetic expression of genes involved in cortisol production.
Psychological scientists, Tara Kraft and Sarah Pressman, from the University of Kansas studied the potential benefits of smiling by looking at how different types of smiling, and the awareness of smiling, affects individuals' ability to recover from episodes of stress.
A latest research cliaims that women who are under stress during pregnancy, could have babies with weak immunity. The children could fall ill often up to the age of four years. If you are pregnant, you better be happy. A latest research says that stress during pregnancy could harm the unborn child's health for years to come. The study revealed that if the expectant mother undergoes major upheaval, such as a separation, it dramatically increased the chances of the baby suffering ill health by...