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#Health

Articles tagged with "Health" - explore health, wellness, and travel insights.

1,212 articles
9 min read

Why the US hasn’t embraced “clean food”—and what Thailand can learn for healthier families

news nutrition

A new wave of research suggests that the United States is still far from fully embracing the clean-food philosophy, despite its promises of better health and a lighter environmental footprint. The lead from the latest coverage argues that even as more Americans hear about “clean eating,” the actual menus in schools, hospitals, and long-term care facilities often remain heavy with highly processed items and ingredients whose origins aren’t clearly disclosed. The paradox is striking: the public pats itself on the back for choosing more transparent labels, while the people who rely on institutional meals see little of that promise reflected on their plates. Health experts warn that the disconnect between intent and practice could slow progress toward reducing diet-related illness and climate impacts at a moment when both problems are urgent.

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

Runners’ quad strength may hinge on single-leg work, not bodyweight squats, coach says

news fitness

A popular run coach is challenging a long-standing gym staple among runners: bodyweight squats. In recent guidance, the coach argues that squats performed with both feet shoulder-width apart and without added resistance do not optimally load and strengthen the quadriceps the way endurance runners truly need. Instead, the coach champions targeted, unilateral (single-leg) exercises and sprint- and plyometric-informed drills that better mirror the demands of long-distance running. For Thai runners who juggle heat, rainy seasons, and crowded training calendars, the advice could reshape how clubs, gyms, and households structure quad-strength training during a season when foot speed and knee resilience often determine a season’s success.

#health #running #fitness +4 more
7 min read

The Vagus Nerve: A Quiet Stress Breakthrough Making Waves in Thailand and Beyond

news mental health

Global researchers are turning to a tiny superhighway in our bodies to tame stress. The long nerve that runs from the brainstem down into the chest and abdomen—the vagus nerve—has become a focal point for new ways to calm the nervous system. From non-invasive devices you wear on the ear or neck to implantable therapies, scientists are probing whether gentle electrical stimulation can shift the body from a state of chronic worry to a more balanced, resilient rhythm. For Thai readers, this line of inquiry arrives at a moment when anxiety and burnout touch families, workplaces, and schools, and when traditional stress management practices like mindfulness and balanced living remain central to coping strategies.

#health #stress #vagusnerve +5 more
7 min read

18-minute interval trick boosts your running health more than a steady jog

news exercise

New research summarized for everyday runners shows that adding short bursts of high-intensity effort to a regular run can deliver bigger health gains in far less time. For busy Thai adults juggling work, family, and heat-saturated commutes, interval running—short, intense sprints mixed with lighter recovery—offers a practical path to stronger hearts, sharper metabolism, and leaner bodies. The message is clear: you don’t need long, grueling cardio to reap meaningful benefits. A few focused minutes can make a difference.

#health #fitness #thaihealth +5 more
8 min read

Cannabis exposure may impair female fertility at the cellular level, study shows

news health

A new international study provides striking evidence that cannabis exposure could affect female fertility at the cellular level and may lower the likelihood of producing chromosomally normal embryos in IVF. The research, published in a leading science journal, combined a retrospective clinical analysis of follicular fluid from patients undergoing IVF with a laboratory investigation using immature human egg cells. In the clinical arm, researchers detected traces of THC, the main psychoactive component of cannabis, in a small but notable portion of follicular fluid samples. In the lab arm, they exposed immature egg cells to THC and examined how these cells mature, how their chromosomes align, and how their gene expression changes. Taken together, the study suggests that cannabis exposure could be linked to changes in oocyte maturation, chromosome segregation, and ultimately the chromosomal health of embryos.

#health #fertility #cannabis +4 more
6 min read

Green Tea and Vitamin B3 Combo Shows Promise for Aging Brain Health, Lab Study Finds

news nutrition

A new laboratory study from the University of California, Irvine, suggests that a simple pairing of natural compounds could rejuvenate aging brain cells and help clear harmful protein clumps linked to Alzheimer’s disease. The combo—nicotinamide, a form of vitamin B3, and epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG), the antioxidant found in green tea—restored energy levels in aging neurons and improved the cells’ ability to clear amyloid beta aggregates in dish-based experiments. While the research is early and conducted in cells, it adds to a growing global interest in metabolic approaches to brain health. For Thai readers, where families often shoulder caregiving duties for aging relatives and where green tea remains a culturally familiar beverage, the study offers a glimpse of potential future directions in nonpharmaceutical strategies to support cognitive well-being.

#health #neuroscience #aging +5 more
7 min read

Thailand Emerges as a Global Sanctuary for Mind, Body & Spirit

news thailand

Thailand is positioning itself as a premier haven for wellness travelers, with a concerted push from the Tourism Authority of Thailand to highlight a holistic experience that blends ancient healing traditions with modern health and hospitality. The latest wellness narrative casts the country as more than a leisure destination; it frames wellness as a lived journey that connects body, mind, and community. From mountain retreats in the north to pristine beach escapes in the south, Thailand offers a mosaic of experiences that resonate with Buddhist values, family life, and a long history of hospitality. The message is clear: wellness here is not a trend but a strategic fusion of culture, sustainability, and world-class service.

#health #wellness #thailand +5 more
6 min read

A single high-intensity workout may slow breast cancer cell growth, study finds

news exercise

A finding with immediate relevance for Thai cancer care: a single session of intense exercise can release protective molecules into the blood that slow the growth of breast cancer cells in the lab. The study followed 32 women who had completed breast cancer treatment and compared two strenuous exercise approaches—high-intensity interval training and weightlifting. Blood drawn after these sessions, when added to cultured cancer cells, repeatedly slowed or halted tumor growth, whereas blood drawn before exercise had no effect. The most potent anticancer signals appeared after interval training, led researchers, with a notable rise in a molecule known as IL-6, which influences immune responses and inflammation. In short, exercise does more than improve fitness—it seems to trigger a direct, beneficial biological response that can influence cancer biology.

#health #cancer #exercise +4 more
6 min read

Early childhood exercise habits predict healthier adulthood, study finds

news exercise

A growing body of research suggests that establishing healthy exercise routines in early childhood can shape physical health outcomes well into adulthood. The latest findings indicate that habits formed in adolescence—beginning as early as age 11—may set the stage for lifelong fitness and health, with those who build active routines more likely to enjoy better cardiovascular health and lower obesity risk later on. The implications are clear: what children do in their first decade can ripple forward, influencing not only their own well-being but also the long-term resilience of families and health systems.

#health #education #thailand +3 more
6 min read

A Simple Floor Habit Could Boost Mobility, Early Research Finds

news fitness

A recent personal experiment inspired by Netflix’s Blue Zones documentaries suggests that a tiny lifestyle shift—sitting on the floor for about 30 minutes a day for a month—can yield noticeable gains in mobility, flexibility, and leg strength. The idea grew from watching stories about Okinawan and other long-lived communities, where floor seating is common and daily movement remains a natural habit. While this is not yet a formal clinical trial, early observations are aligning with a growing wave of research exploring how habitual daily activities influence musculoskeletal health as we age. The takeaway for Thai readers is simple: everyday choices about how we sit and move could have meaningful impacts on mobility and quality of life in later years.

#mobility #health #aging +3 more
6 min read

Cannabis Use Linked With Chromosomal Abnormalities in IVF Eggs: Hard-Hitting Implications for Thai Couples Considering IVF

news health

A groundbreaking study from the University of Toronto raises a cautionary flag for anyone undergoing in vitro fertilization (IVF): high levels of cannabis exposure may be linked to chromosomal abnormalities in eggs used for IVF. Researchers tested 1,059 samples of follicular fluid—the fluid surrounding developing eggs—and found that 62 samples contained tetrahydrocannabinol, the main psychoactive component of cannabis. In fluids with detectable THC, immature egg cells tended to show more chromosomal abnormalities, and these eggs tended to mature faster than those without THC. The researchers then repeated some experiments with eggs from 24 consenting patients and observed a similar pattern: unfertilized eggs exposed to THC concentrations higher than the study’s average exhibited nearly 10 percent more chromosome errors and reached maturation more quickly. While the findings point to a potential reproductive risk, the study authors caution that the small sample size means other factors, most notably age, could influence results and were not fully controlled.

#health #fertility #ivf +5 more
6 min read

Gentle workouts shine after a bad night’s sleep, sleep neurologist says

news exercise

A sleep neurologist is drawing a clearer line between what you do in the gym and how well you recover after a poor night’s sleep. In the latest guidance gaining attention for its practical tone, the recommendation is to lean toward light, restorative movements rather than intensity-packed sessions. The rationale is simple: sleep loss compounds fatigue and alters physiology in ways that can make hard workouts less safe and less effective the next day. For many Thai readers juggling long commutes, family responsibilities, and rising urban stress, a gentler approach may feel not only wiser but also more sustainable.

#sleep #health #exercise +4 more
6 min read

No. 1 reason you gain weight while exercising and eating healthfully: muscle, hydration, and fluid shifts

news exercise

If you’ve started a new exercise routine or cleaned up your meals and found the scale creeping up, you’re not alone. A growing body of research and practical experience point to a simple truth: gaining weight on the scale while you’re building strength and eating well often signals positive changes inside your body, not failure. The leading explanation is a mix of increased muscle mass, shifts in body fluids, and the way your body stores energy in the form of glycogen and water. For Thai readers juggling busy work, family meals, and wellness goals, understanding these factors can turn the scale into a more informative ally rather than a source of discouragement.

#health #fitness #nutrition +4 more
7 min read

Birth Control May Do More Than Prevent Pregnancy: New Study Links Hormonal Contraceptives to Changes in Emotions and Memory

news sexual and reproductive health

A recent study led by researchers at Rice University suggests that hormonal birth control does more than prevent pregnancy. In a diverse group of 179 women, scientists found that hormonal contraceptives may influence how the brain processes emotions and how memories of emotional events are formed, stored, and accessed. The findings add a new layer to the ongoing conversation about contraceptive choices, mental health, and everyday life—topics that touch millions of women around the world, including many in Thailand.

#health #thailand #birthcontrol +5 more
8 min read

Brisk walks, cycling and more: latest research points to the best exercises to lower blood pressure

news fitness

New research syntheses released in the past few years converge on a clear message: regular physical activity—especially aerobic exercise—consistently lowers blood pressure, with additional gains from resistance training and, for some people, short bursts of higher-intensity workouts. This latest wave of studies builds on a long line of evidence and offers practical guidance for Thai families seeking safer, sustainable ways to protect heart health in a country facing rising hypertension and related risks. The news matters here because the Thai public health challenge is closely tied to urban lifestyles, aging populations, and the everyday realities of work, school, and family life. Transforming a habit of daily movement into a simple, repeatable routine could meaningfully reduce the burden of high blood pressure across communities.

#health #thailand #bloodpressure +5 more
6 min read

Dairy’s New Dialogue: Science Reframes Fat in Dairy as Part of a Whole Diet, Not a Simple Yes-or-No

news nutrition

A quiet but consequential shift is ripening in nutrition science: the simple equation of “fat equals bad” for dairy is being questioned, and policy makers are being urged to consider the full dairy fat matrix and the diet as a whole. The latest rounds of research suggest that saturated fat from dairy may not behave the way older guidelines assumed, and that different dairy products—milk, yogurt, cheese, butter—do not all carry the same health signals. For Thai readers, this matters because dairy is becoming a more visible part of daily meals, and health messages need nuance rather than blanket rules.

#health #nutrition #dairy +5 more
6 min read

How Knowing Your Personality Could Help You Pick Workouts You’ll Actually Enjoy

news exercise

A growing body of research suggests that our personality may be the compass that guides us to exercise we’re more likely to stick with. Instead of forcing a one-size-fits-all routine, scientists are pointing to a future where a quick personality check helps people choose activities they genuinely enjoy and can maintain over weeks, months, and even years. That insight matters in Thailand, where busy lives, family expectations, and community culture shape how people move every day.

#health #fitness #thailand +4 more
7 min read

Most people measure blood pressure wrong; experts show the right method

news health

A new study highlights a surprising truth: many people are not measuring their blood pressure correctly. The findings, reported in a recent health feature, point to a cascade of simple but critical mistakes that can shift readings by tens of points and quietly derail hypertension management. The researchers propose a straightforward, standardized approach that converts a routine home check into reliable data. For Thai readers who carry the burden of hypertension in their families and communities, these insights could transform everyday health routines and, ultimately, outcomes.

#health #thailand #hypertension +4 more
7 min read

Regular exercise can boost mood and mind: latest research spells out mental health payoffs for Thai families

news exercise

A wave of new research confirms what many doctors and fitness advocates have long said: routine physical activity does more than strengthen muscles and heart. It also significantly improves mental health, reducing symptoms of depression and anxiety, boosting mood, and even sharpening thinking. For Thai families juggling work, school, and daily stress, the findings offer a simple, practical prescription that aligns with enduring cultural values of care, family welfare, and mindful living.

#health #mentalhealth #physicalactivity +4 more
7 min read

Two decades of exercise metabolism breakthroughs reshape Thai health

news exercise

A landmark review published in early September 2025 offers a sweeping view of how two decades of molecular biology and omics-based approaches have transformed our understanding of exercise metabolism. The piece highlights three innovative human metabolic studies that together map the body’s intricate fuel economy during exercise, from skeletal muscle to other organs. While the findings are rooted in cutting-edge science, the implications are far-reaching for Thai health, education, and everyday activity. In short, researchers are moving from describing what happens in muscle during exercise to explaining how a person’s unique biology, lifestyle, and environment shape the benefits they receive from physical activity.

#health #education #thailand +4 more
7 min read

Antidepressants and violence: New science shows no causal link—what Thai families should know

news mental health

In the aftermath of a tragic school shooting in the United States, a wave of questions about mental health treatment and public safety has surged again. The latest expert consensus, echoed by a chorus of psychiatrists and public health researchers, is clear: there is no proven causal or even consistent correlational link between antidepressants and violence toward others. For Thai readers, this matters beyond headlines. It speaks to how families, clinicians, and schools approach treatment, support, and the pragmatic realities of managing depression, anxiety, and other conditions in everyday life.

#health #mentalhealth #thailand +4 more
6 min read

Bacterial vaginosis can be passed from men to women, study finds; Thai health experts weigh in on the implications

news sexual and reproductive health

A startling finding from an international clinical trial shows that bacterial vaginosis, a common vaginal condition, can be transmitted through sexual contact with men, and that treating male partners alongside women dramatically reduces recurrence. In the study’s 12-week follow-up, recurrence dropped from about six in ten women when their partners were not treated to roughly one in three when both partners received therapy. The result has jolted long-held assumptions in sexual and reproductive health and raises immediate questions for Thai clinics and families dealing with BV, a condition already known to be widespread and often stubbornly recurrent.

#health #publichealth #thailand +5 more
9 min read

Is It Healthy to Eat the Same Breakfast Every Day? Dietitians Weigh In

news nutrition

In most Bangkok kitchens and Thai offices, breakfast is a practical ritual rather than a grand nutrition debate. Yet a growing conversation among dietitians asks a simple, timely question: is it healthy to eat the same breakfast every day? While a recent media piece highlighted that some people thrive on steady, familiar morning meals, experts caution that the real issue isn’t repetition itself but the overall balance and nutrient adequacy of the breakfast and the week as a whole. For Thai families juggling early work starts, school runs, and temple routines, the answer carries practical implications: should morning meals feel dynamic or can a dependable staple serve health goals as long as it’s well designed?

#health #nutrition #breakfast +5 more
6 min read

New Research Highlights Health Perks of Loving Relationships, with Thai Context Matters

news psychology

A wave of recent research is reinforcing a familiar idea many Thai families hold close: being in a supportive, loving relationship can be good for your health. While researchers caution that the strongest health benefits come from high-quality, stable partnerships rather than the mere presence of romance, the emerging evidence points to a range of potential advantages. From lower stress and better sleep to more resilient immune responses and healthier lifestyle choices, the science is painting a nuanced portrait of how romantic bonds may influence physical and mental well-being. In Thailand, where family and faith traditions shape everyday life, these findings carry particular resonance for couples, caregivers, and policymakers seeking to promote healthier communities.

#health #relationships #thaihealth +5 more