Tag: JAMA
Workplace burnout does happen, says WHO, but isn’t a disease
New edition of International Classification of Diseases (ICD-11) brought out by WHO classifies burnout as an occupational phenomenon not a disease
Burnout is included in...
Are eggs good or bad? New study links eggs to heart...
Eating 300 mg of cholesterol or eggs increase risk of heart disease among American adults, reports a new study
Are eggs good or bad ?...
Kidney, liver, heart, cornea – the next horizon is poo transplant
Study shows poo transplant can be a therapeutic option for patients of irritable bowel or ulcerative colitisPoo transplant or "Faecal microbiota transplantation" (FMT) can...
High body fat increases breast cancer risk: JAMA Oncology
In post menopausal women with high BMI high body fat is associated with increased breast cancer risk
High body fat levels could increase breast cancer...
Appetite suppressants to viagra, how supplements bend rules
Nearly 800 food supplements found to use unauthorised products for sexual stimulation, muscle building or weight loss
Days after the US drug regulatory agency issued...
Low-dose aspirin may lower ovarian cancer risk
Long-term heavy use of non-aspirin non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs may be associated with an increased risk of ovarian cancer
Women who use low-dose aspirin (100 mg...
Almost 50% resident doctors report burnout : finds study
Almost half of resident doctors reported burnout symptoms and 14 percent reported regret over their career choice in this new study
In a study of...
Diet control just 2 days/week can reduce blood sugar
Diabetics do not need to follow calorie restrictions every day, study shows
Some good news for diabetics.
Calorie restriction two days per week is almost as...
Increased Govt spending in health key to UHC: JAMA
Unless public financing increases to 2.5%, journey towards universal health coverage will be sluggishDays after health minister J P Nadda reiterated India's commitment to...
Johns Hopkins scientists develop smartphone app for Parkinson’s diagnosis
Current methods are subjective, the evaluators' biases tend to creep inResearchers at the Johns Hopkins University have devised a method in which a smartphone...