Browsing: Health

BOISE, Idaho, October 27, 2025: Idaho has enacted a first-of-its-kind state law that bans nearly all vaccine mandates, a move that has drawn national attention and praise from medical freedom advocates while prompting warnings from public health officials. The Idaho Medical Freedom Act, signed by Governor Brad Little earlier this year, prohibits government entities, schools, daycare centers and most private employers from requiring any individual to receive a vaccine or other medical intervention as a condition of employment, education or access to services. The law, which took effect in July, is considered one of the most sweeping restrictions on vaccine mandates in…

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TEXAS, October 23, 2025: Scientists at the Texas A&M University Health Science Center have identified a hidden cellular mechanism that fuels one of the most aggressive forms of kidney cancer affecting children and young adults. The discovery, published in Nature Communications, reveals how cancer cells exploit RNA molecules to promote tumor growth and describes a molecular method capable of halting the process in preclinical models. The research centers on translocation renal cell carcinoma (tRCC), a rare cancer that accounts for roughly 30 percent of kidney cancers in pediatric and adolescent patients. This malignancy arises from chromosomal rearrangements that create hybrid genes…

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WASHINGTON, Oct. 19: A new investigation by Consumer Reports has found that several widely sold protein powders and shakes in the United States contain high levels of lead and other heavy metals, raising concerns over product safety and consumer health. The nonprofit organization tested 23 protein powder and ready-to-drink products between November 2024 and January 2025, covering dairy, beef, and plant-based varieties. The analysis revealed that more than two-thirds of the products exceeded Consumer Reports’ safety threshold of 0.5 micrograms of lead per serving per day, a level consistent with California’s Proposition 65 standard for daily exposure. Plant-based protein powders showed the highest…

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SAN FRANCISCO, October 7, 2025: A new study led by researchers from Baylor College of Medicine, the Jan and Dan Duncan Neurological Research Institute at Texas Children’s Hospital, and Stanford University School of Medicine has identified how a molecule produced during exercise can reduce appetite, offering new insight into the biological mechanisms behind weight loss. The research, published in Nature Metabolism, found that a compound known as N-lactoyl-phenylalanine, or Lac-Phe, generated during physical activity, directly impacts neurons in the brain that regulate hunger. The study was conducted using mouse models and built on earlier work by the same team, which had previously…

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