Once-weekly efsitora noninferior to degludec for type 2 diabetes
By
HealthDay News
Sep 13, 2024
Once-weekly efsitora was noninferior to once-daily degludec for a decrease in the mean glycated hemoglobin level.
Time-restricted eating helps to improve diabetes outcomes
By
HealthDay News
Sep 15, 2024
The findings were independent of energy intake and based on an eight-hour eating window, regardless of time of day.
Greater adherence to MIND diet linked to reduced cognitive impairment
By
HealthDay News
Sep 18, 2024
In a fully adjusted model, greater adherence was linked to a reduced risk for cognitive impairment in women, but not in men.
Racial differences seen in pain Rx for older adults with hip fracture
By
HealthDay News
Sep 12, 2024
Black beneficiaries have lower average doses in the first 90 days.
FDA expands use of breast cancer drug Kisqali
By
HealthDay News
Sep 18, 2024
The medication already was approved for advanced disease.
Study looks at sex differences in melanoma incidence
By
HealthDay News
Sep 17, 2024
Melanoma incidence is highest on the trunk in men; incidence is historically highest on limbs in women, but recent increases were seen in truncal melanoma.
Predictive models for HTN screening developed using speech recordings
By
HealthDay News
Sep 13, 2024
Accuracies were up to 84 percent for women and 77 percent for men using HTN threshold of SBP ≥135 mmHg and DBP ≥85 mmHg
Statin therapy cost-effectively improves health outcomes for ≥70s
By
HealthDay News
Sep 12, 2024
The lifetime use of a standard statin increased quality-adjusted life years by 0.24 to 0.70, with further increase seen for higher-intensity statins.
Many US adults with uncontrolled HTN are unaware of HTN status
By
HealthDay News
Sep 13, 2024
70.8%t of those who were aware of their high blood pressure status and met the criteria for meds had uncontrolled hypertension.
Current national prevalence of diagnosed a-fib, 10.55 million
By
HealthDay News
Sep 18, 2024
AF patients became relatively younger over time, were less likely to be female or White, and were more likely to have HTN, diabetes