A recent study by researchers at the University of Warwick and other institutions has uncovered a critical link between ...
to a meta-analysis of 99 studies of the imaging data from a total of 9,047 people with addiction. Subjects with SUDs, which included those affected by alcohol, cocaine, opioids, nicotine and cannabis, ...
Unhealthy drinking habits can lead to alcohol dependence. Recognize key signs like blackouts, emotional loss, and secretive drinking.
Jackson, 26, revealed she once battled a heroin addiction in a social media post celebrating five years of sobriety from drugs and alcohol on Tuesday. Jackson, who also candidly admitted to ...
Does Dry January make a difference for your health if you just quit alcohol for a month? Experts say there are benefits to quitting alcohol for a short period, even if you’re a social or moderate ...
His addiction worsened following the release of "The Marshall Mathers LP," as he was readying for his "Encore" album. "I was taking Vicodin, Valium, and alcohol," Eminem said. At one point ...
The U.S. surgeon general is kicking off this Dry January by warning about the link between alcohol and increased cancer risk. The announcement has left many people wondering about the healthiest ...
Dr. Vivek Murthy, the US surgeon general, said Americans need to know there's a link between alcohol and cancer, citing four recent studies. Murthy said all alcoholic beverages should have cancer ...
(AP Photo/Julio Cortez, File) Updated [hour]:[minute] [AMPM] [timezone], [monthFull] [day], [year] With the new year comes Dry January and a new surgeon general’s advisory on alcohol and cancer risk.
Dr. Spencer Hansen, a board-certified addiction psychiatrist at LDS Hospital in Salt Lake City, told the Deseret News several months ago that beneficial effects of moderate drinking might be ...
A quarter of nations worldwide have health risk labels on alcohol. But only South Korea has a warning about liver cancer. By Eve Sampson Should the United States follow the surgeon general’s ...
By Nina Agrawal and Katie Mogg The surgeon general of the U.S. Public Health Service warned on Friday that even light or moderate alcohol consumption can increase a person’s risk of cancer.