Around 1 in 7 US adults who smoke may have some degree of disability

Prevalence twice as high among those still puffing away as those who have never smoked Figures suggest that 40% of 25 million adults experience some level of functional difficulty  Around 1 in 7 of US adults who currently smoke may have some degree of disability, suggests the first study of ...

2025-05-30T09:58:14+00:0030 May 2025|Press release, Tobacco Control|

US general military service may lower, rather than heighten, depression risk

Despite relatively high prevalence of condition among active duty and veteran personnel Potentially protective effects challenge some previous assumptions, suggest researchers General service in the US military may lower, rather than heighten, the risk of depression, despite the relatively high prevalence of the condition among active duty and veteran personnel, ...

2025-05-30T09:41:20+00:0030 May 2025|BMJ Military Health, Press release|

Leading doctors from India and Pakistan appeal for “brave first steps” towards peace

Persistent conflict and threats of a nuclear conflagration are major impediments to development, they argue  As India and Pakistan once again step closer to an open conflict, leading pediatricians and healthcare professionals from across the border have come together to urge both countries to take “brave first steps” towards peace. ...

2025-05-28T15:02:07+00:0028 May 2025|Press release, The BMJ|

Why an intersectional gender approach matters for social innovations in health 🌍

Health challenges go beyond clinical interventions—social, cultural, and political factors deeply influence outcomes. Recognising how gender intersects with socio-economic factors is crucial for achieving health equity.   The latest collection in BMJ Innovations, produced in partnership with TDR, explores innovations to ensure interventions are inclusive and responsive to marginalised groups ...

Standardising disposable vape devices may curb young people’s desire to try them

But there is a risk it may lead to fewer people switching from smoking to vaping Standardising the colour and branding of disposable vaping devices may deter young people who have never smoked or vaped from trying them in the first place, suggests a comparative study, published online in the ...

2025-05-21T09:39:46+00:0021 May 2025|Press release, Tobacco Control|

Thousands of young children worldwide still swallowing magnets despite increased regs

Time to bolster restrictions and use better evidence to inform policy, say researchers Thousands of young children worldwide are still swallowing magnets despite an increase in regulations, finds a review of the available evidence, published online in the journal Injury Prevention. With US children among those seemingly most at risk, it’s ...

2025-05-21T09:34:05+00:0021 May 2025|Injury Prevention, Press release|

Cold sore viral infection implicated in development of Alzheimer’s disease

But people treated with antiviral therapy seem to be at lower risk, large US study finds Symptomatic infection with the virus responsible for cold sores around the mouth–herpes simplex 1, or HSV-1 for short—may have a key role in the development of Alzheimer’s disease, suggests a large pharma industry-funded US ...

2025-05-22T16:46:02+00:0021 May 2025|BMJ Open, Press release|

New US dementia cases in decline, but continued rise in people living with the condition

Rates highest among black beneficiaries and those living in more deprived neighborhoods New cases of dementia in the United States declined from 2015 to 2021, but the number of people living with the condition continued to rise due to population ageing, with nearly 2.9 million traditional Medicare beneficiaries (around 12%) ...

2025-05-20T11:08:28+00:0020 May 2025|Press release, The BMJ|

Over 130 health journals call for renewed WHO mandate on health effects of nuclear war

End nuclear weapons, before they end us, warn experts BMJ Group has joined health journals across the world to publish an editorial urging governments to restore a World Health Organization (WHO) mandate to address the health consequences of nuclear weapons and war - and support a new UN study on the effects ...

2025-05-14T16:02:57+00:0014 May 2025|Group news, Press release, The BMJ|

Physical activity + organised sports participation may ward off childhood mental ill health

But clear sex differences in protective effects, depending on condition, findings indicate Physical activity in early childhood, especially taking part in organised sports,may ward off several mental health disorders in later childhood and adolescence, suggests research published online in the British Journal of Sports Medicine. But there seem to be clear ...

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