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Health

Articles in the Health category.

1,221 articles
3 min read

Simple Daily Habits That Could Extend Thai Lifespan: A Practical Guide for Healthy Aging

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A renowned longevity expert says that real progress in healthy aging comes from a handful of everyday actions. Dr. Joseph Antoun, CEO of L-Nutra, emphasizes that science is moving toward practical steps—like optimizing nutrition timing and stress management—that can meaningfully slow biological aging. This straightforward approach aligns with both ancient wisdom and modern medical consensus: nurture relationships, eat well, move regularly, manage stress, and sleep soundly.

For Thailand, the guidance arrives at a timely moment. The country is aging rapidly, with life expectancy around 73 for men and 79 for women. As families shift from multi-generational households to more urban living, questions about aging well become both personal and policy-driven. Dr. Antoun’s recommendations, rooted in international research, offer a clear path for individuals and communities across the Kingdom.

#longevity #healthyaging #thaihealth +6 more
4 min read

Stem Cell Therapy for Parkinson’s Disease Approved for Phase 1 US Trials, Raising Hopes for Regenerative Treatments

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Thai patients and their families living with Parkinson’s disease received hopeful news this week after the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved a first-of-its-kind stem cell therapy, XS-411, for Phase 1 clinical trials in the United States. Developed by biotech firm Xellsmart, this innovative therapy harnesses induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) to regenerate the healthy, dopamine-producing neurons lost in patients with Parkinson’s. This marks a milestone in neurodegenerative disease treatment and offers a look toward the future of regenerative medicine, not only in the US but potentially in Thailand as global clinical research expands (Parkinson’s News Today).

#ParkinsonsDisease #StemCellTherapy #RegenerativeMedicine +7 more
6 min read

Surge in Colon Cancer Among Gen Z and Millennials: Leading Doctor Highlights Five Key Warning Signs

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A leading internal medicine specialist has sounded the alarm on the “alarming rise” of colon cancer in Generation Z and Millennials, urging young people to look out for five critical warning signs as diagnoses soar worldwide. Dr. Zion Ko Lamm, whose insights have attracted nearly a million followers on social media, emphasizes that colon cancer is not just an “old person’s disease”—incidence among the under-50s has jumped by 80% over the past thirty years, even as rates in older adults have declined or stabilised. This alarming trend, detailed in a recent article by the Daily Mail (source), raises urgent questions for Thai healthcare and society, where rapid lifestyle changes could echo Western patterns.

#ColonCancer #GenZ #Millennials +7 more
4 min read

Surging Colon Cancer Rates Among Gen Z and Millennials Prompts Thai Health Call to Action

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A leading internal medicine specialist warns that colon cancer is rising among Gen Z and Millennials worldwide, urging younger people to watch for five critical signs. Dr. Zion Ko Lamm, whose insights have captivated nearly a million followers, stresses that colon cancer is not confined to older adults. In fact, incidence among those under 50 has climbed about 80% over thirty years, even as rates in older populations have declined or stabilized. This trend raises urgent questions for Thailand, where rapid lifestyle changes may mirror Western patterns.

#coloncancer #genz #millennials +7 more
6 min read

The Science of Longevity: Doctor’s Simple Habits May Hold the Key to a Healthier, Longer Life

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What if the secrets to a longer, healthier life came down to a handful of everyday habits? According to longevity expert Dr. Joseph Antoun, bridging the gap between cutting-edge research and practical action is the next frontier in healthy aging. Dr. Antoun, CEO of L-Nutra and a respected voice in the field, told the Daily Mail that the true science of longevity “is becoming democratized as more research demonstrates that simple interventions—from nutrition timing to stress management—can profoundly impact biological aging” (Daily Mail, 2025). These essential habits, as he describes them, are surprisingly accessible and align closely with both ancient wisdom and modern medical consensus: nurture meaningful relationships, eat well, exercise regularly, manage stress, and prioritize good sleep.

#Longevity #HealthyAging #ThaiHealth +7 more
6 min read

Unpacking the Science Behind RFK Jr.'s Claims on Measles, Autism, and Diet: What the Latest Research Reveals

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Recent headlines have focused public attention on Robert F. Kennedy Jr., now serving as the U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services, after he made sweeping statements about measles, autism, vaccines, and the impact of diet on health—claims that have sparked controversy internationally and resonate even among Thai readers navigating similar public health debates. As widespread measles outbreaks and concerns over rising autism rates draw renewed focus on medical facts and myths, a thorough examination of the latest research provides crucial context for Thai families, educators, and policymakers.

#HealthNews #Autism #Vaccines +10 more
3 min read

US Study Finds Advanced Cancer Diagnoses Return to Pre-Pandemic Levels — A Reassuring Benchmark for Thailand

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A major new analysis offers relief to the global cancer community: advanced cancer diagnoses in the United States have largely returned to pre-pandemic levels after a spike during the COVID-19 crisis. The study, published in Cancer, examined U.S. cancer statistics and found that disruptions to screening did not cause a lasting rise in late-stage cancers or cancer deaths. This insight provides guidance for policymakers and health planners in Thailand as the country redoubles its screening efforts.

#cancerscreening #covid19impact #thailandhealth +7 more
4 min read

US Syphilis Surge Raises Alarm After Federal STI Lab Closure with Lessons for Thailand

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A recent report by The Guardian has drawn attention to a dramatic surge in syphilis cases in the United States, a public health crisis made worse by a decision during the Trump administration to shutter a key federal Sexually Transmitted Infection (STI) laboratory within the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) The Guardian. This controversial move, now under sharp scrutiny, has come at a pivotal moment as syphilis infections in the US hit record highs. For Thailand, this development is a stark warning of the critical importance of sustained investment in public health infrastructure—and offers valuable insights into local disease prevention strategies.

#Syphilis #STI #PublicHealth +7 more
5 min read

Vitamin D and Colorectal Cancer: What Thai Readers Should Know

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Emerging studies suggest keeping vitamin D levels in a healthy range may reduce colorectal cancer risk. A broad review of more than 50 adult studies, including data summarized in Nutrients, shows that people with vitamin D deficiency have a higher likelihood of developing colorectal cancer than those with sufficient levels. This topic resonates in Thailand where cancer awareness and vitamin D deficiency are receiving growing attention.

Colorectal cancer remains a major health challenge in Thailand, ranking among leading causes of cancer death, especially for men and women over 50. Worldwide, about 1.2 million new cases are diagnosed each year. In Thailand, urbanization, shifts toward processed foods and red meat, and an aging population contribute to rising numbers. Awareness of preventive behaviors and regular screenings varies, particularly outside major cities. At the same time, vitamin D deficiency—often called the sunshine vitamin due to sun-driven production—has become more common, even in sunny Southeast Asia. Urban indoor work, air pollution, skin-protective practices, and diets lacking vitamin D-rich foods contribute to this gap. Global data indicate 30–50 percent of people may not get enough vitamin D, with higher deficiency among women, older adults, and individuals with darker skin.

#vitamind #colorectalcancer #cancerprevention +7 more
3 min read

Wastewater Signals Mpox Presence: What Thai readers should know about early warning

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Wastewater testing in Greenville, North Carolina has detected Mpox, specifically the clade I strain, in samples collected from late March to early April. While no clinical Mpox cases have been officially reported in the area, health officials stress vigilance among clinicians and rapid reporting of suspected infections. This development underscores wastewater-based surveillance as a powerful tool for early outbreak detection.

Thailand and other countries watching infectious diseases should take note. Wastewater-based surveillance (WBS) gained prominence during the COVID-19 era and continues to reveal hidden viral activity by capturing signals from individuals who are pre-symptomatic or have mild infections. According to experts in North Carolina, the presence of clade I mpox virus in wastewater suggests the virus may be circulating locally, even without confirmed cases.

#mpox #wastewatersurveillance #publichealth +7 more
3 min read

Genetic Reality: Why Race Isn’t a Biological Fact—and What Thai Readers Should Know

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A scientific consensus now makes a clear point: there is no meaningful biological basis for racial categories. Yet the social significance of race remains powerful in health, education, and policy around the world. For Thai audiences navigating conversations about ethnicity, heritage, and health, understanding what genetics actually shows is essential.

The Human Genome Project, completed about a quarter of a century ago, transformed how we view human variation. Genetic differences do not cluster into neat racial groups. Instead, most variation exists within any given population, and groups share more similarities than differences. This underscores that race, as a strict biological category, is a social construct shaped by culture and history, not DNA.

#genetics #race #medicine +6 more
6 min read

Genetics Disproves Biological Race: What Science Really Says and Why It Matters for Thailand

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Genetics has delivered a powerful verdict in the ongoing discussion about “race”: there is no meaningful biological basis for racial categories, even as their social significance continues to impact lives worldwide. This scientific clarity comes at a time when political and cultural debates, such as recent US presidential orders attacking museum exhibitions that deny race is a biological reality, reignite age-old controversies. For Thai readers navigating conversations on ethnicity, heritage, and health, understanding what genetics truly reveals about human difference is more important than ever.

#Genetics #Race #MedicalScience +8 more
2 min read

Measles Resurgence in 2025: What Thai Families Can Learn from Virginia’s First Confirmed Case

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A first measles case in Virginia for 2025 has drawn renewed attention to the return of a vaccine-preventable disease. Health officials in Virginia announced the case on 19 April 2025, underscoring the need to keep immunization rates high. This development is relevant for Thai families and healthcare providers amid global travel, vaccine hesitancy, and evolving infectious disease risks.

Measles remains one of the most contagious viruses, spreading through the air and causing fever, cough, runny nose, red eyes, and a distinctive rash. Complications can be severe, including pneumonia and brain inflammation, particularly for young children and those with weakened immune systems. Global health authorities warn that declining vaccination rates and disruptions to routine immunizations during the COVID-19 era have contributed to pockets of outbreaks across multiple regions. Data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention indicate that most recent measles cases in the United States were unvaccinated or under-immunized, highlighting a persistent risk where gaps exist.

#measles #vaccination #publichealth +7 more
5 min read

New Insights on Alcohol: How Just One Drink a Day Can Affect Your Body and Mind

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Recent scientific findings are challenging the long-held belief that moderate alcohol consumption is harmless, with robust evidence now demonstrating that even small amounts of alcohol can have significant health effects. For Thai readers who enjoy a social drink, the latest research urges a more cautious approach, echoing a global recalibration of alcohol guidelines in light of rising health concerns (STAT News, Harvard Health Blog). This news resonates in Thailand where alcohol is woven into celebrations and social rituals, yet mounting health issues tied to drinking have stoked concern among health professionals.

#AlcoholAwareness #ThaiHealth #CancerRisk +7 more
3 min read

Rethinking One-Drink Reality: What Small Amounts of Alcohol Do to the Body and Mind in Thailand

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New scientific findings challenge the idea that moderate drinking is harmless. Emerging evidence shows that even small amounts can impact health more than previously thought. For Thai readers who enjoy social beverages, researchers urge caution as global guidelines shift in response to rising health concerns. These developments echo Thailand’s ongoing conversations about how alcohol affects society and everyday life.

Alcohol is deeply embedded in Thai culture, from family gatherings to city nightlife. Data summarized for a U.S. audience indicate that consuming more than seven drinks per week—roughly one standard drink per day—significantly raises the risk of death from alcohol-related causes. This aligns with a growing call for stricter global recommendations. Meanwhile, early studies that once suggested cardiovascular benefits from moderate drinking are being reassessed. Recent reviews and analyses point to risks across several diseases, including certain cancers, even at light to moderate levels of consumption. This marks a shift in how health experts view alcohol’s overall impact.

#alcoholawareness #thaihealth #cancerrisk +7 more
3 min read

Thailand Faces Invisible Threat: Microplastics Found in Everyday Products and Foods

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A mounting wave of scientific warnings highlights a hidden danger: microplastics—tiny plastic particles smaller than five millimeters—are showing up in ordinary products, food, and water. Research warns that exposure can occur after a single use, prompting both policy scrutiny and personal vigilance in Thailand as urban life embraces takeout culture and packaged goods.

Microplastics have infiltrated daily life, appearing in air, water, and food. Data from the U.S. National Ocean Service show they originate from the breakdown of larger plastics, wear from synthetic fibers, and microbeads once used in cosmetics. Despite steps to curb the problem, including bans on microbeads, microplastics remain a rising health and environmental concern. Thailand is not immune, as packaging sectors and consumer habits intersect with rising plastic pollution.

#microplastics #thailand #health +7 more
5 min read

Urgent Warning as Microplastics Found in Everyday Products: The Invisible Threat Demanding Action

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A wave of urgent scientific warnings has gripped international health and environmental communities as researchers uncover the pervasive contamination of everyday products with “invisible” microplastics—tiny particles of plastic less than five millimeters in size that can easily enter food and drinking water, impacting people after just a single use. This silent invasion, previously believed to be a concern mainly with overused or degraded plastic items, is now recognized as an immediate health issue, requiring both policy responses and personal vigilance, including here in Thailand (Yahoo News).

#microplastics #Thailand #health +7 more
4 min read

US Sees Measles Resurgence in 2025: What Thai Families Can Learn from Virginia’s First Confirmed Case

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The US state of Virginia has reported its first confirmed measles case for 2025, raising fresh concerns about the resurgence of vaccine-preventable diseases. Health officials at the Virginia Department of Health announced the case on 19 April 2025, emphasizing the critical need to maintain high immunization rates. This news is not only significant for Americans, but offers urgent lessons for Thai families and healthcare providers in an era marked by global travel, vaccine hesitancy, and infectious disease risks.

#Measles #Vaccination #PublicHealth +7 more
5 min read

California Woman’s Sore Throat Leads to ICU Ordeal and Sheds Light on Rare Guillain-Barré Variant

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A routine sore throat took a shocking turn for Vanessa Abraham, a California speech pathologist, whose mysterious illness sent her to the intensive care unit for weeks and left doctors baffled for months. Abraham’s ordeal, recently reported by CBS News, highlights the challenges of diagnosing rare neurological diseases—including a little-known variant of Guillain-Barré syndrome—that have implications both in the United States and here in Thailand, where uncommon health conditions can similarly stump practitioners and families.

#GuillainBarreSyndrome #RareDiseases #ThailandHealth +7 more
5 min read

Cannabis Gets Stronger: New Research Shows THC Potency Quadrupled Since the 1990s

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A wave of recent studies is drawing global attention to a striking trend: the tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) content in cannabis – the primary compound responsible for the drug’s psychoactive “high” – is now far more potent than in previous decades. According to new data reported by Axios, the average THC level in U.S. cannabis has quadrupled since the 1990s, signaling both significant changes for cannabis users and new health concerns for society at large Axios. For Thai readers—whether policymakers, healthcare providers, students, or parents—the global surge in high-potency cannabis raises important questions about public health, legal approaches, and cultural attitudes toward marijuana.

#Cannabis #THC #Health +12 more
3 min read

Groundbreaking Findings Reframe a “Useless” Female Organ as Key to Ovarian Health

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A long-dismissed part of female anatomy may play a vital role in ovarian function and fertility, according to a March 2025 study in eLife. Research on mice reveals that the rete ovarii is active and potentially essential for reproductive health, challenging the view of it as a vestigial remnant. The authors used modern imaging and molecular techniques to map the rete ovarii (RO) and its connection to the ovary, offering new avenues for understanding female fertility.

#womenshealth #ovarianfunction #reproductivescience +7 more
2 min read

Heavy Drinking Linked to Brain Injuries and Alzheimer’s: Urgent Messages for Thailand

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A new study in Neurology links heavy alcohol use to brain changes associated with Alzheimer’s disease and cognitive decline. For Thai readers, the findings come at a time when drinking is deeply woven into social and festival life, making the health implications particularly relevant.

Researchers analyzed 20 years of brain autopsy data from 1,781 people aged 50 or older. Family surveys reconstructed drinking habits three months before death and matched them to neuropathology. The study found that heavy drinkers—eight or more drinks per week—had a 41% higher risk of neurofibrillary tangles, clusters of tau protein linked to Alzheimer’s. Even former heavy drinkers who quit within the last three months showed a 31% higher risk than those who never drank.

#alzheimers #alcoholabuse #brainhealth +5 more
6 min read

Long-Ignored ‘Useless’ Female Organ May Hold Key Role in Ovarian Health, Landmark Study Reveals

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A century-old mystery in female anatomy is being rewritten by new scientific findings: the rete ovarii, long dismissed as a vestigial and “useless” organ, may play a critical role in ovarian function and fertility. This revelation comes from a pioneering mouse study published in March 2025 in the journal eLife, which suggests that this overlooked structure is not only active but potentially essential for reproductive health (Live Science).

The discovery is especially significant for Thai readers, where women’s health issues, particularly regarding fertility and reproductive well-being, remain top concerns for many families and the medical community. For generations, biology textbooks and medical curricula worldwide—including those in Thailand—have listed the ovaries, uterus, and fallopian tubes as the primary organs of the female reproductive tract. The new research now puts the rete ovarii (RO) on the map, suggesting it should be investigated as an additional component crucial to female reproductive function.

#WomensHealth #OvarianFunction #ReproductiveScience +7 more
4 min read

New Study Reveals Heavy Drinking Significantly Raises Risk of Brain Injuries and Alzheimer’s: Implications for Thailand

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A new study published in the journal Neurology has sent shockwaves through the global medical community by firmly linking heavy alcohol consumption to changes in the brain associated with Alzheimer’s disease and cognitive decline (source: Washington Post). For Thai readers, where drinking culture is woven deeply into social and festival life, these findings carry sobering health messages that resonate well beyond laboratory data.

The research, conducted at the University of São Paulo Medical School in Brazil, delved into 20 years of brain autopsy data collected from 1,781 people aged 50 or older at the time of death. By using family surveys, experts reconstructed people’s drinking habits three months before their deaths and matched these to neuropathological findings. The key takeaway: Those consuming eight or more alcoholic drinks weekly—classified as heavy drinkers—had a 41% increased likelihood of developing neurofibrillary tangles, clumps of tau protein in brain cells definitively associated with Alzheimer’s disease. Even former heavy drinkers, who stopped within those last three months, had a 31% higher risk compared to those who never drank.

#Alzheimers #AlcoholAbuse #BrainHealth +5 more