Imaging Study Sheds Light on How Deep Brain Stimulation Acts on Parkinson's Disease
A year‑long imaging study of 14 Parkinson's patients receiving deep brain stimulation (DBS) revealed that the therapy normalizes communication between key motor and globus pallidus circuits. Researchers used simultaneous 3‑T MRI, functional, structural and diffusion scans across five timepoints, comparing results with 27 healthy controls. The data showed that individual variations in cortical connectivity predict clinical improvement, offering a mechanistic view of DBS effects. The investigators have released the extensive dataset to support personalized neuromodulation strategies.
Microaxial Flow Pump Does Not Improve Outcomes for High-Risk Heart Attack Patients without Cardiogenic Shock: Trial
The STEMI‑Door to Unload (DTU) trial evaluated the Impella CP microaxial pump in 527 anterior STEMI patients without cardiogenic shock, comparing delayed PCI with left‑ventricular unloading to immediate PCI. Infarct size measured by cardiac MRI was marginally lower (30.8% vs 31.9%...
KKR Postpones Sale of Majority Interest in MPIC Hospital Group
KKR & Co. and Singapore sovereign‑wealth fund GIC have postponed the sale of their 80% stake in Metro Pacific Health, the Philippines’ largest private hospital group. The delay stems from an inability to achieve the valuation the investors seek, a...

What Will Separate Healthcare AI Winners From Losers?
Healthcare AI startups are flooding the market, but long‑term winners must embed their tools directly into clinical workflows, generate actionable outcomes, and build defensible data assets. Veerappan of Flare Capital emphasizes that frictionless integration—exemplified by ambient AI scribes—drives rapid physician...

Increasing Burdens Of Medical Debt And Bankruptcy Are Uniquely American
Medical debt remains a uniquely American crisis, affecting roughly 100 million people and causing catastrophic expenses for 7.4% of households. The burden drives about 530,000 personal bankruptcies each year, representing two‑thirds of all filings, and disproportionately harms low‑income, Black, Hispanic, and...
New AI Tool Predicts Whether Aggressive Small Cell Lung Cancer Will Respond to Treatment
A new AI‑driven pathology tool called PhenopyCell can forecast whether patients with extensive‑stage small cell lung cancer will benefit from platinum‑based chemotherapy using only the diagnostic biopsy slide. The retrospective study examined 281 patients across Roswell Park, Emory’s Winship Cancer Institute,...
AI Could Transform Patient Education in Eye Care, New Research Shows
Researchers at the University of East London have created a multilingual, voice‑enabled AI chatbot to educate patients about retinal detachment, a sight‑threatening condition that often requires urgent surgery. The system leverages retrieval‑augmented generation to pull answers from a clinician‑curated knowledge...
A Silent Strike by the Young Physicians in Japan
Japan’s young physicians are quietly abandoning core specialties, with trainee numbers under 30 dropping 48% in internal medicine, 36% in general surgery, and 17% in paediatrics since 2006. At the same time, entry into cosmetic medicine has exploded 16‑fold, luring...

Diabetes Rates Are Lower in High-Altitude Environments — and Scientists May Have Discovered Why
A new mouse study shows that low‑oxygen (hypoxic) conditions cause red blood cells to absorb far more glucose and convert it into a molecule that eases oxygen release, effectively acting as a glucose sink. Mice exposed to 8% oxygen displayed...

Join the Fight Against Chronic Pain: It’s Time for Breakthrough Legislation in Congress
More than 60 million U.S. adults endure chronic pain, a condition that often forces reliance on opioids despite their safety risks. Financial and administrative hurdles such as step‑therapy mandates and prior‑authorizations have limited access to emerging non‑opioid treatments. The bipartisan Relief...
Poor Diet Linked to Heart Disease, but Australia Has Seen Improvements in the Last 30 Years
A new Nature Medicine analysis of 204 countries links suboptimal diet to over 4 million ischemic heart disease deaths and nearly 97 million disability‑adjusted life years in 2023. The study identifies low intake of whole grains, omega‑6 fatty acids, nuts and seeds,...

The Algorithm Won’t Hold Your Mother’s Hand
The article warns that AI‑driven elder‑care solutions are expanding amid a looming geriatric workforce shortage, with only about 7,000 board‑certified geriatricians for 70 million baby boomers. The AI‑in‑aging‑care market is projected to hit $322 billion by 2034, but many family caregivers lack...
Finnish Sauna Heat Exposure Induces Stronger Immune Cell than Cytokine Responses
Researchers examined the acute impact of a single 30‑minute Finnish sauna session at 73 °C on immune function in 51 middle‑aged adults. Body temperature rose from 36.4 °C to 38.4 °C, prompting a significant increase in total white blood cell count that persisted...
Supreme Court Clears Path For Extremely Dangerous Practice — And Now More Young People Will Die
The U.S. Supreme Court voted 8‑1 to overturn Colorado’s ban on conversion therapy, ruling that such prohibitions violate the First Amendment. The majority opinion argues the ban infringes on free‑speech rights, while Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson warned it undermines states’...
Vietnam’s Medical Tourism Services Eye Nearly $4B in Revenue by 2033
Vietnam’s Ministry of Health aims to grow its medical‑tourism market from roughly $700 million in 2024 to nearly $4 billion by 2033, an 18% compound annual growth rate. Five cities – Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City, Da Nang, Quang Ninh and Khanh Hoa – will pilot integrated hospital‑hotel‑travel...
The Four Types of Dementia Most People Don’t Know Exist
The Conversation article highlights four lesser‑known dementia subtypes—posterior cortical atrophy, Creutzfeldt‑Jakob disease, FTD‑MND, and progressive supranuclear palsy—explaining how each diverges from the classic memory‑loss profile of Alzheimer’s. Together, these rare forms account for roughly 40% of all dementia cases, yet...
Re: RSV Vaccination Programme Expanded to 3 Million More Older People
The UK health authorities have announced an expansion of the RSVpreF (Abrysvo) vaccination programme to include an additional three million adults aged 60 and older. Clinical trial data published in the New England Journal of Medicine confirm the vaccine’s ability...

Pharmaceutical Logistics in Demand as War Rattles Supply Chains
DHL’s health‑logistics campus near Frankfurt, spanning 14 football fields and powered by solar panels, is becoming a critical hub for temperature‑controlled pharmaceutical shipments amid heightened supply‑chain risks from the Middle‑East conflict. The site, which can store 140,000 pallets and maintain...
U.S. Drug Tariffs Seen as Sparing Taiwan Prices, Supply
The United States has issued an executive order imposing up to 100% tariffs on patented drugs manufactured abroad, while offering a 20% rate for firms that relocate production to the U.S. Taiwan officials say the measure will not raise drug...

2014 JKN Rollout Dented Private Insurance Uptake, ANU Study Finds
An ANU study using Indonesia’s Susenas data finds that the 2014 rollout of the National Health Insurance (JKN) program cut private health‑insurance enrollment by about 30 percent. The effect was strongest among middle‑income households, whose coverage value fell sharply relative to...
Whole-Body MRI Predicts Ovarian Cancer Treatment Outcomes
Researchers published a study in the British Journal of Cancer showing that whole‑body diffusion‑weighted MRI performed after neoadjuvant chemotherapy can accurately forecast whether advanced ovarian cancer patients will achieve complete tumor resection during interval debulking surgery. Quantitative diffusion metrics, especially...
Real-World Safety of Second-Line Diabetes Drugs in Elderly
A 2026 Nature Communications study examined real‑world safety of second‑line diabetes drugs in patients 65 and older after metformin. Using electronic health records and claims data, the researchers compared sulfonylureas, DPP‑4 inhibitors, SGLT2 inhibitors and GLP‑1 agonists with propensity‑score matching....
Covering Global Health as Billions of Dollars of Aid Are Cut From Programs
U.S. foreign aid is being slashed by billions of dollars, prompting NPR correspondent Fatma Tanis to investigate the fallout in Uganda. On the ground, locals still see American aid symbols, but Chinese-built infrastructure and new “small and beautiful” projects are...
Higher Testosterone Linked to Increased Suicide Risk in Depressed Teenage Boys
Researchers examined 1,227 hospitalized teenage boys with major depressive disorder in Beijing and found that higher serum testosterone levels were significantly associated with suicidal thoughts or behaviors. A validation cohort of 579 similar patients confirmed the same pattern, while no...
Monday Morning Update 4/6/26
The Washington Post published a first‑person account of severe liver failure and a subsequent transplant after using a compounded GLP‑1 weight‑loss product. The story highlights the safety risks of off‑label, non‑FDA‑approved formulations that are increasingly marketed alongside AI‑driven GLP‑1 therapies....
California Kids Are Going without Vision Care, and the Problem Is Getting Worse
Vision problems are rising among California children, yet only 16% of Medi‑Cal‑covered school‑age kids received a comprehensive eye exam between 2022 and 2024, down from 19% eight years earlier. The decline is statewide, with rural counties such as Colusa falling...

What Are Peptides, Are They Safe and Is There Evidence to Back up the Hype?
Peptides—short chains of amino acids—are gaining popularity for weight loss, anti‑aging, and injury recovery. While prescription drugs like semaglutide and tirzepatide are FDA‑approved, most products marketed online are experimental, unregulated compounds such as BPC‑157, TB‑500, and CJC‑1295. Scientific reviews show...
Hong Kong Hospital Authority Apologises for Data Breach Involving 56,000 Patients
Hong Kong’s Hospital Authority announced a data breach that exposed the personal and medical records of more than 56,000 patients from hospitals in Kowloon East. The unauthorized retrieval included names, identification numbers, contact details and health information. Hong Kong’s privacy...
Impact of Non-Intubated Spontaneous Breathing Versus Intubated General Anesthesia in Thoracoscopic Surgery on Postoperative Venous Thromboembolism
A retrospective study at Jinhua Central Hospital compared non‑intubated anesthesia with conventional endotracheal intubation in 55 lung‑cancer patients undergoing thoracoscopic surgery. The non‑intubated group showed earlier ambulation, more stable postoperative coagulation, and a reduced incidence of venous thromboembolism (VTE). No...
Targetable Markers Define Antiprogestin-Resistant Breast Cancer
A new study in the British Journal of Cancer identifies a molecular triad—nuclear fibroblast growth factor‑2 (FGF2), androgen receptor (AR), and Wnt pathway activation—that defines a targetable subset of antiprogestin‑resistant luminal breast cancer. The researchers demonstrated that nuclear FGF2 cooperates...

Binge Drinking Just Once a Month May Triple Your Risk of Liver Scarring
Researchers at Keck Medicine of USC found that adults with metabolic dysfunction‑associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) who engage in episodic heavy drinking—four or more drinks for women, five for men at least once a month—are about three times more likely...
Mizuho Lowers Its Price Target on Autolus Therapeutics Plc (AUTL) to $10 From $12
Mizuho Securities lowered its price target for Autolus Therapeutics plc (NASDAQ:AUTL) to $10, down from $12, while keeping an Outperform rating. The adjustment follows Autolus' Q4 earnings, which posted a loss per share of $0.34 versus a $0.43 consensus estimate...
Ore. County EMS Academy Gives Teens a Hands-On Look at Emergency Care
Clatsop County’s Emergency Medical Services Academy launched a free, four‑day summer program for 20 high‑school students, offering hands‑on training in CPR, ride‑alongs, and hospital tours. Funded by the Oregon Health Authority, the pilot immerses teens in ambulance, fire, and air‑medical...

Vietnam’s Infectious Diseases: A Progress Paradox Explored
Vietnam has dramatically reduced its infectious disease burden, cutting malaria cases by 78% and dengue hospitalizations by 45% over the past decade. The government pledged roughly $2 billion in U.S. dollars to modernize disease surveillance and expand vaccination programs. Despite these...
Evaluation of Large Language Models for Medical Applications: Theoretical Foundations, Empirical Performance and Clinical Implementation Frameworks
The MedHELM framework, built by Stanford’s CRFM, Stanford Healthcare, and Microsoft, introduces a clinician‑validated, 121‑task benchmark that evaluates large language models across the full spectrum of medical work. It replaces USMLE‑style exams with multi‑turn, longitudinal case vignettes covering decision support,...

For Many Patients Leaving the I.C.U., the Struggle Has Only Just Begun
Joseph Masterson, a 63‑year‑old lawyer, survived a cardiac arrest and spent 18 days in the intensive care unit, including 14 on a ventilator. During his stay he developed delirium, required antipsychotics, and lost weight despite tube feeding. After discharge he...

Journalists Capsulize Weight Loss News and ACA Premium Pressures
KFF Health News spotlighted two pressing health issues this spring. On April 2, editor‑at‑large Céline Gounder discussed the FDA’s approval of a new weight‑loss pill during a CBS Mornings interview, outlining its clinical promise and market potential. A week earlier, Southern correspondent...

Urgent Care Hacks: How to Save Time and Avoid the ER
Urgent care centers offer a faster, lower‑cost alternative to emergency rooms for non‑life‑threatening conditions such as minor fractures, cuts, and infections. By leveraging online check‑in tools, patients can reserve a spot and skip paperwork, cutting wait times dramatically. Visiting during...
How to Treat a Dental Implant Infection at Home
Dental implant infections present early warning signs such as swelling, pain, bleeding, pus, or implant mobility. The article outlines safe home remedies—including salt‑water rinses, alcohol‑free antibacterial mouthwash, gentle brushing, cold compresses, and over‑the‑counter pain relievers—to manage mild cases. It also...

AR Tech Prepares Patients for Endometriosis Surgery
Chelsea and Westminster Hospital in London has become the first UK facility to employ an augmented reality system during pre‑surgical consultations for endometriosis. The AR platform, created by Medical iSight, projects anatomically accurate 3‑D models onto a headset, allowing patients...

Egg Freezing in the UK: The Real Costs, Side-Effects and Odds – and What I Wish I’d Known Before Starting
Egg freezing has moved from a niche procedure to a growing option for UK women in their 20s and 30s, with private clinics charging roughly $4,500‑$8,300 per cycle plus annual storage and later IVF fees that can push total costs...
[Editorial] Childhood Cancer: Progress, but Not Enough
The CONCORD‑4 study shows that 68 countries have met or exceeded the WHO 60 % five‑year survival target for childhood cancer, with high‑income nations reaching 85‑90 % survival. However, 85 % of the 377,000 new cases in 2023 and 94 % of deaths occur...
[Comment] Childhood Cancer: An Equity Test for Global Health
A new Global Burden of Disease (GBD) analysis provides the first comprehensive estimates of childhood cancer incidence, mortality and DALYs from 1990 to 2023. The study highlights that only 21% of the world’s population lives in regions with population‑based cancer...
[Comment] 10 Years After NOBLE: More Nuance in Left Main Revascularisation
The recent 10‑year follow‑up of the NOBLE trial re‑examines revascularisation of unprotected left‑main coronary disease, finding no significant mortality difference between percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) and coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG). However, PCI continues to be associated with higher rates...

Hong Kong: Advancing Smart Therapeutics, Translational MedTech
Hong Kong is positioning itself as a regional hub for biopharmaceutical innovation, focusing on advanced therapeutic products (ATPs) such as cell therapy. Invest Hong Kong is attracting mainland and international firms to set up R&D in the city, backed by...
Pharma Tariffs Pressuring Smaller Companies to Do MFN Deals
BioCentury’s website now outlines a comprehensive cookie framework that classifies cookies into five distinct groups: strictly necessary, functional, marketing, advertising, and analytics. Each category serves a specific purpose, from enabling authentication and core site functions to gathering anonymous usage metrics...
[Correspondence] Suicidal Crisis: First Regulatory Approval of IV Racemic Ketamine
In March 2026 France became the first country to grant regulatory approval for intravenous racemic ketamine as a treatment for adult severe suicidal crisis. Clinical trials have shown that a single 0.5 mg/kg infusion over 40 minutes can blunt suicidal ideation...
[Correspondence] War Economies and Collapsing Health Systems
Rising defence budgets are crowding out public health financing, with a 1 % increase in military spending cutting health budgets by 0.62 % globally and 0.96 % in low‑income nations. Conflict‑related destruction, supply‑chain blockades and sanctions have already caused tens of millions of...
[Correspondence] Sound Mind, Sound Place: Ibasho and Post-Disaster Mental Health
The correspondence argues that post‑disaster mental health must move beyond acute symptom checklists toward community‑based recovery, highlighting Japan’s *ibasho*—a locally‑led place that embeds individuals in social networks and meaningful roles. Data from the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake show that...
FTC Lauds PBM, Insulin Efforts As Triumphs To Justify 2027 Budget Request
The Federal Trade Commission has submitted a FY2027 budget request of $426.7 million and 1,183 full‑time positions. The request emphasizes continuing its consumer‑protection agenda, notably the 2024 administrative complaint accusing pharmacy‑benefit managers (PBMs) of inflating insulin prices. It also funds an...