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UK study suggests problem gambling quadruples the risk of suicide among young people four years later

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  • 2025-09-17 04:00 event
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UK study suggests problem gambling quadruples the risk of suicide among young people four years later
New research has shown how harmful gambling is clearly linked to a marked and long-lasting increase in suicide attempts among young people in the UK.

205. How stigma can impact individuals with traumatic brain injury-related disability

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More than 5 million Americans are living with permanent TBI-related disability related to traumatic brain injury, which can severely impact quality of life. Unfortunately, people with TBI are often socially stigmatized because of their disability.

206. AI can predict complications from surgery better than doctors

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A new artificial intelligence model found previously undetected signals in routine heart tests that strongly predict which patients will suffer potentially deadly complications after surgery. The model significantly outperformed risk scores currently relied upon by doctors.

207. People on Ozempic who eat to regulate emotions less likely to lose weight, research reveals

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GLP-1 receptor agonists like Ozempic can be a lifeline for people with diabetes—helping stabilize blood glucose and lose weight, which contributes to diabetes complications. But not everyone benefits equally.

208. Bout of cystitis may signal presence of urogenital cancers in middle-aged adults

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A bout of the common bladder infection, cystitis, may signal the presence of urogenital cancers—which affect parts of the body involved in reproduction and excretion—in middle-aged adults, suggests research published in the open access journal BMJ Public Health.

209. Patients in least developed countries three times more likely to die after abdominal trauma surgery, study reveals

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Mortality after emergency abdominal surgery is more than three times higher in the least developed countries compared to the most developed. Yet among those who undergo surgery, injuries tend to be less severe—raising concerns that those most critically injured are not even reaching the operating theater.

210. Lack of soap most reported barrier to effective hand hygiene in shared community spaces

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A lack of soap is the most often reported barrier to effective hand hygiene—key to curbing the spread of infection—in shared community spaces, such as households, schools, and public places, finds a systematic review of the available research, published in the open access journal BMJ Global Health.

211. Beyond the surface: Atopic eczema linked to significantly higher risk of suicidal thoughts, large study finds

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A new international study presented at the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology (EADV) Congress 2025 reveals that adults with atopic eczema (AE) are significantly more likely to experience suicidal thoughts, with researchers uncovering the key factors driving this elevated risk.

212. After weight loss, regular exercise rather than GLP-1 drug reduces leading cause of heart attacks and strokes

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Maintaining weight loss with regular exercise rather than the glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist (GLP-1RA) liraglutide, a drug used to treat type 2 diabetes and obesity, seems to reduce atherosclerosis development in adults with obesity—a leading underlying cause of cardiovascular disease.

213. Semaglutide provides powerful protection against diabetic retinopathy, study suggests

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GLP-1 receptor agonist drugs protect against diabetic retinopathy, a common complication of diabetes that can lead to sight loss, suggests new research being presented at the annual meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD) in Vienna, Austria (15–19 September) and published in the journal Pharmaceutics.

214. UK study suggests problem gambling quadruples the risk of suicide among young people four years later

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New research has shown how harmful gambling is clearly linked to a marked and long-lasting increase in suicide attempts among young people in the UK.

215. RFK Jr.'s vaccine panel expected to recommend delaying hepatitis B shot for children

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A key federal vaccine advisory panel whose members were recently replaced by Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is expected to vote to recommend delaying until age 4 the hepatitis B vaccine that's currently given to newborns, according to two former senior Centers for Disease Control and Prevention officials.

216. Promising drug combinations for immunotherapy-resistant melanoma may also help reactivate immune system

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Researchers at Sutter's California Pacific Medical Center (CPMC) in San Francisco, Calif. have identified potential new therapeutic strategies for patients with advanced melanoma who no longer respond to immunotherapy—an aim representing one of the most pressing clinical challenges in cancer care today.

217. IL-10 is a small protein with a big part in preventing pulmonary fibrosis

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For a long time, physicians and scientists believed our lungs were sterile (germ-free). But modern science indicates otherwise. Now we know they contain allergens, bacteria or viruses we inhale, such as influenza or SARS-COV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. When those contaminants combine with inflammation, it can lead to chronic lung disease.

218. Pain-detecting nerve cells could yield new way to manage lung scarring

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Researchers at the University of Calgary studying a lethal lung disease called pulmonary fibrosis have found that neurons known to help detect pain are also critical for reducing harmful lung inflammation that leads to the disease.

219. AI-powered CRISPR could lead to faster gene therapies

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Stanford Medicine researchers have developed an artificial intelligence tool to help scientists better plan gene-editing experiments. The technology, CRISPR-GPT, acts as a gene-editing "copilot" supported by AI to help researchers—even those unfamiliar with gene editing—generate designs, analyze data and troubleshoot design flaws.

220. Drug used for motor neuron diseases holds promise for spinal cord injury, finds study

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A drug called riluzole, commonly used to treat amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and other motor neuron diseases, could also assist in recovery from spinal cord injuries, according to research from the University of Toronto's Temerty Faculty of Medicine.

221. Vision-saving eye surgery may also improve survival in patients with rare eye cancer, study finds

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A UCLA-led study has found that a surgical technique developed to protect vision in patients with uveal melanoma, a rare cancer that arises inside the eye, may also lower the risk of the disease spreading and improve survival—a development researchers say could change the way the cancer is treated.

222. Psychotherapy can be readily integrated into brief 'med-check' psychiatry visits

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Abbreviated, 15- to 30-minute medication visits have become common in psychiatry now that many insurers model their reimbursement patterns on internal medicine and surgery. To support practicing psychiatrists, a series of four columns in the Journal of Psychiatric Practice, describes how to feasibly combine brief psychotherapy with longitudinal pharmacotherapy. The final installment appears in the September issue.

223. Decline in rescue breathing CPR linked to higher death rates for children

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Cardiac arrest happens when the heart stops pumping blood properly, cutting off oxygen to the brain and other vital organs. In these emergencies, cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) can help keep blood and oxygen moving until medical help arrives. For children, CPR usually needs both chest compressions and rescue breaths, because many cases are caused by breathing problems such as drowning, choking, or serious illness.

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