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Adults between 18-29 see the largest increase in mental health issues during the pandemic.

The investigators did not find psychiatric comorbidities that moderate the association between dementia and suicide attempts.

An expert physician in cardiology and metabolic management walks through a presentation on identifying, addressing, and continually treating for heightened cardiometabolic risk.

Continuing treatment results in a nearly 8% reduction in weight during a 48 week period.

The investigators monitored any retinopathy events in hepatitis C patients, including those that were untreated and those being treated with PegIFN/RBV.

Sessions show promise helping alleviate stress and concern for COVID-19.

The approval is based on results from Phase 3 trials showing high efficacy in adult and pediatric populations.

An expert writes on the scope of the next great COVID-19 vaccine challenge: pediatric assessment and administration.

Evening and late-night preferences of women with GDM is linked to a significantly greater risk of preeclampsia and NICU treatment.

At the 76-week mark, reductions in the amyloid plaque level were 85.06 centiloids with donanemab than with placebo.

NAFLD can be common among those with diabetes or those who are obese.

Telemedicine has allowed ADHD patients to continue care during the pandemic.

The majority of previous studies have focused on this link in the male population.

In recent years there has been a larger rise in overdose deaths in urban counties as opposed to rural counties.

Researchers comb through the data from more than 50,000 liver cirrhosis patients in Japan.

BBT was compared to assisted referral to community outpatient mental health care.

Patients in mature adulthood may have different risk factors for recurrent C diff infection than their elderly counterparts.

The US ranks first in the world in vaccines administered.

Headache was the most prominent link between COVID-19 and depression.

The US has an underreported and perpetuating issue with clinician burnout and suicidality. Frontline caregivers consider what 1 year of a pandemic may have done to worsen it.

Researchers see differences in how COVID-19 attacks the brain in comparison to the influenza virus that caused the 1918 pandemic.

COVID-19 has provided an opportunity for clinicians and specialists to reevaluate what it truly means to bring care to their patients.

The pandemic had an immediate effect on patient care, and in pivoting to adapt to the quarantine, some changes may have created potentially permanent ways to deliver health care.

The launch of a My Retina Tracker dramatically increased testing rates, which could help lead to better clinical trials and therapies.

Researchers test new model with 2 existing models utilizing baseline data for suicidal thoughts and actions.



































































