
The virtual version of cognitive behavioral therapy could yield significant healthcare cost savings.

The virtual version of cognitive behavioral therapy could yield significant healthcare cost savings.

Patients with obesity can be referred to an established weight loss program before surgery to reduce the risk of mortality.

Despite patients being off treatment for an average of 23 months, patients treated with Eisai’s BAN2401 remained amyloid PET negative in an open-label extension preliminary analysis.

Both inflammatory bowel disease and celiac disease share similar risk factors.

New research has found use of medication alone was noninferior to using medication and graduated compression socks for preventing VTE following non-emergency surgery.

New research suggests there may be a link between elevated fasting blood glucose levels and cognitive decline after a stroke.

Use of the checklists is associated with a reduction in the rate of complications, reoperations, and readmissions.

Social distancing measures could increase the risk of psychotic symptoms.

New research suggests consuming just one sugar-sweetened beverage per day increases risk of CVD by nearly 20% in women.

New research suggests a residual shunt following PFO closure puts patients at a much greater risk of recurrent stroke or TIA.

More studies are needed to discover the true impact of head impacts, not just concussions, for athletes.

Investigators find individuals with asthma who slept less than 5 hours per night had increased asthma attacks and overnight hospitalizations.

Despite being advised in clinical guidelines, fewer than 2% of COPD patients initiate pulmonary rehabilitation within 90 days of hospitalization.

A new research letter has found declines in rural areas have not been as pronounced as declines in metropolitan areas.

Investigators find bowel wall abnormalities in 31% of CT scans conducted in a 412 patient study.

New research suggests a group of 6 cancer biomarkers was associated with all-cause mortality and HF hospitalizations.

A discussion on unanswered questions and concerns among clinicians related to sickle cell disease and the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

Because symptoms can manifest differently in each patient, some individuals with schizophrenia have handled social isolation better than others.

Since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic most non-urgent medical appointments have been conducted using telehealth.

The findings highlight the importance of improving emergency department preparedness.

The latest scientific statement from the association highlights the importance of healthy diet at a young age on preventing CVD later in life.

With the majority of the scientific research community focused, a COVID-19 vaccine could be on the horizon.

AI tools and health tech can be used to help the healthcare system treat patients.

While recent data regarding remdesivir has been positive, there is still a need for medications in pill form to treat COVID-19 infections.

How community, prevention, and research-based practice could be influenced by the pandemic.

Panagis Galiatsatos, MD, MHS, joins to discuss the underlying issues and potential solutions to COVID-19 patient disparities.

A combination of medications and therapy is viewed as the most effective method of treating schizophrenia.

Why the virus is burdening US populations similar to other diseases.

The dermatologist fields questions on possible symptoms and signs of infection that his colleagues have observed.

The Florida-based clinician shares perspective and insight into what should be prioritized or revised in specialty care.