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Health

  • RFK Jr. Fluoride<br>Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. looks on during a press conference about Utah's new fluoride ban, food additives and SNAP funds legislation, Monday, April 7, 2025, in Salt Lake City. (AP Photo/Melissa Majchrzak)

    Science Weekly
    RFK Jr’s mixed messages on vaccines - podcast

  • A woman sits on a sofa while talking to a doctor

    GPs in England will be able to claim £20 for every time patient is not sent to hospital

  • a man speaking

    RFK Jr contradicts experts by linking autism rise to ‘environmental toxins’

  • street leading to red and ivory building

    Six Massachusetts hospital workers on same floor report getting brain tumors

  • A worker inspects an air conditioning unit outside a building

    Number of UK homes overheating soars to 80% in a decade, study finds

  • Arwa Mahdawi

    You too can have a body like Donald Trump’s. Here’s how

    Arwa Mahdawi
  • A moment that changed me
    A moment that changed me: I was diagnosed with Parkinson’s at 41 – and had to find a new look

  • ASA bans Brazilian liquid butt lift ads from six UK cosmetic treatment providers

  • More bulk billing will ease the cost of living. But what Australia’s health system really needs is genuine reform

    Stephen Duckett
  • British hospitals introduce treatment for heart failure that cuts deaths by 62%

  • Brisk walking linked to lower risk of heart rhythm problems, study finds

  • people walking out of a building displaying a Syngenta sign

    Our unequal earth
    Weedkiller maker moves to settle suit over Parkinson’s disease claims

  • Katy Perry after the Blue Origin mission  on 14 April 2025

    Brief letters
    Katy Perry’s blast-off was a waste of space

  • Guardian documentary - Atomic Secrets, by Zhanana Kurmasheva

    Atomic Secrets: a Chornobyl scientist warns of a toxic future

  • Dmitry Kalmykov is a Ukrainian scientist who has dedicated his life to investigating environmental disasters, first at Chornobyl and now in Semipalatinsk, Kazakhstan - formerly the Soviet Union's primary nuclear weapons testing site. He teaches schoolchildren about how bombs were tested, and how – more than 30 years after the site was decommissioned – the surrounding community is only beginning to comprehend radiation's lasting deadly effects. Against the backdrop of war in Ukraine and the long shadow of a nuclear conflict across the region, Dmitry debates Kazakhstan's nuclear future with its next generation
    12:39

    Atomic Secrets: a Chornobyl scientist warns of a toxic future

  • Revealed: Chinese researchers can access half a million UK GP records

  • ‘She helps cheer me up’: the people forming relationships with AI chatbots

  • UK riots led to deterioration in asylum seekers’ mental health, says report

  • Doctor concept

    NHS training and staffing are in need of urgent care

  • An old woman using a smartphone

    Older people who use smartphones ‘have lower rates of cognitive decline’

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