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Research shows employer-based weight management program with access to anti-obesity medications results in greater weight loss
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Cleveland Clinic Achieves Global Healthcare Accreditation for a Second Term
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NEW YORK, May 11, 2021 /PRNewswire/ A new Parade Media/Cleveland Clinic/Ipsos poll finds that 48% of Americans surveyed experienced a change in their physical health, and 47% reported a shift in their mental/emotional health, as compared to before the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic more than one year ago.
The 2021 Healthy Now Practicing Prevention Survey of 1,000 U.S. adults revealed that women and adults ages 18-34 years old were the most likely to experience negative physical and mental health effects vs. prior to the pandemic. The survey also noted that while 81% of respondents rated their overall health as good or excellent, a sizeable proportion struggle with making healthy food choices, getting enough sleep and loneliness and isolation. Many Americans also lacked knowledge of key information about their personal health.
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IMAGE: A research team led by Dr. Thaddeus Stappenbeck of Cleveland Clinic Lerner Research Institute has discovered a new tissue infection associated with Crohn s disease. view more
Credit: Cleveland Clinic
March 11, 2021, CLEVELAND: A Cleveland Clinic-led team of researchers has discovered a new tissue infection associated with Crohn s disease. According to study results published in
Science, a type of yeast commonly found in cheese and processed meat is elevated in areas of unhealed wounds in Crohn s disease patients, a discovery that may point to new treatment or prevention approaches for the common inflammatory bowel disease.
The work was led by Thaddeus Stappenbeck, M.D., PhD., chair of Cleveland Clinic Lerner Research Institute s Department of Inflammation and Immunity. The team, which also included researchers from Washington University, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center and Dartmouth College, found that levels of the yeast Debaryomyces hansenii are higher