Health

Updated: 20:02 EST

6 ways virtual reality will soon change YOUR health

Virtual reality is now being used for health and wellbeing. Taking you to another world, it's shown potential as a mental health treatment, and even in simulating a full-body workout Fancy a serene stroll down a white beach?  You won't have to go much further than your bedroom, as virtual reality programs will soon be offering a calming environment with the choice of meditation. 

A chemical affecting activity in the nervous system could be what causes sleepiness when sick. Called FLP-13, the chemical turns down activity in the nervous system keeping us awake.

Federal data show HPV is least common among men aged 18 to 22 years old, affecting 29 percent of them. Once they hit 23, however, diagnoses rocket to 46.5 percent. But vaccine coverage is low.

Karen Glanz, a medical director at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, has published a report telling the CDC that financial incentives are the key to slimming down Americans.

Around 500 million people have genital herpes. But no experimental jab has ever achieved strong or consistent results in a clinical trial. Now, a jab at the University of Pennsylvania, has.

A study on monkeys by the University of Wisconsin and the National Institutes on Ageing found we would all lower our risk of age-related diseases if we cut calorie intake by 30 percent.

NHS mental health director left suicidal from depression

Mandy Stevens (right), who is also a registered nurse, began to show initial symptoms of the devastating mental illness in November. But within little more than a week, she was left suicidal and was admitted to a mental health unit. The condition has caused her to spend the past 12 weeks 'completely disabled' in an inpatient ward in the City & Hackney Centre for Mental Health, London. But after being discharged last Friday, she has now shared her story and a selfie of her during her suffering (left) to offer hope to millions of sufferers across the planet.

Too many fizzy drinks can age you as fast as smoking, making parts of the body almost five years older biologically, says Dr Elizabeth Blackburn, from the University of California, San Francisco.

An accumulation of tau protein in the brain are to blame for causing the spatial disorientation experienced by many patients, researchers from Columbia University Medical Center found.

A study by the National Institutes of Health found mice who had one big spurt of exercise during the day were lazier the rest of the time. It meant their overall physical activity leveled out.

Jaheim Whigham, 11, from Illinois, is the youngest person in the world to receive an artificial heart. He had a heart transplant when he was 7 but, last year, his body began rejecting it.

Gina Truman, from Yeovil, had her right breast removed in 2013 to get rid of the tumour. She was told her left breast would be made to look symmetrical, but funding cuts put an end to this.

The move has been heavily criticised by health campaigners in England who claim that people will die waiting for treatments that are not being provided for strictly economic reasons.

Wigan man turned stiff from ultra rare condition FOP dies

Adrian Berry (pictured left with his friends), 40, from Wigan, suffered from fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva - that causes bone to form inside muscle, ligaments and tendons. But the accountant managed to live for more than double his predicted life expectancy after he passed away with pneumonia on Boxing Day. However, his family say the disease, which is believed to affect just 3,500 people worldwide and he caught when he just 18-months-old (pictured right as a schoolboy), never stopped him from living life to the full. They even claim that he developed his own style of cross-legged walk to get around in his twilight years.

Tests carried out on an 18-year-old animal that died on a farm in County Galway, Ireland, found that it had bovine spongiform encephalopathy. But experts say there is no risk to meat lovers.

From gently stroking a drowsy tot's nose to help them sleep to persuading little ones that broccoli is a very fine thing, here we pick the best tips for ensuring a quiet (ish) life.

The soft silicone device, created by Harvard researchers, stiffens and relaxes when inflated with pressurised air. It fits outside the patient's own heart, squeezing it to make it beat.

Researchers at Binghamton University encrypted patient data using the person's own unique electrocardiograph as the key to lock and unlock their digital healthcare records.

BBC NHS documentary crisis leaves viewers heartbroken

Peter Lai (main with doctors) was forced to wait in a corridor at St Mary's Hospital, London, for hours as doctors battled to find him a bed in the second installment of BBC2's Hospital. The patient had his surgery scheduled for two months, and had 14 hospital staff prepped and ready to go to treat his aortic aneurysm - which could rupture at any moment and kill him. But doctors were cruelly forced to cancel the procedure at the last moment due to there being no space in the post-surgery unit - leaving his life in danger. His operation was rescheduled for a month later, but he died following a six week battle with pneumonia, leaving viewers heartbroken (tweets inset). Many speculated that had he received better care and the operation wasn't cancelled initially that he would still be alive today.

Menopausal women are nearly four times more likely to have insomnia, and recent figures suggest that, in Britain, some 15m prescriptions for sleeping tablets are thrown at this problem every year.

Researchers, from the University of California San Diego, found a strong link between a sedentary lifestyle and the premature ageing of cells in the body in a study of 1,481 women over the age of 64.

Psychologists in Britain have found the two sexes cope very differently during hard times, with women most likely to raid the biscuit tin or fridge until they feel better.

What babies first see: Incredible gif reveals transformation from black-and-white vision at birth to full focus color within 12 months

Even before birth, fetuses can differentiate between light and dark. When they are born, they use this rudimentary understanding of tones to make out shapes.  However, for weeks everything is in black and white as their brain grapples to comprehend how to connect with their eyes.

Dorota Donigiewicz, 27, from Royston, Hertfordshire, suffered powerful delusions after the birth of her first child in August 2015 which led her to believe she was secret agent 007.

Haircare is a booming industry with the global market valued at £60 billion. Scientists and doctors have worked with a documentary team to find the answers to the most pressing questions.

Eating disorders could be more than just unhappiness with your body. Psychotherapist Abigail Natanshon says the onset of the disease can be nature as well as nurture.

The research by University College London and the University of Cambridge is the first to show that being confused or disorientated can accelerate cognitive decline in patients with dementia.

Indonesian woman's rigid spine from Ankylosing Spondylitis

Pictures show 35-year-old Sulami a woman from the Sragen area of Central Java, in the grip of a disease known as 'bamboo spine' that has turned her completely rigid. According to the Health Department of Sragen, Sulami's suffers from a rare genetic disorder, Ankylosing Spondylitis. Her condition is so bad that she has to rely on help from her 90-year-old grandmother, Suginem, to care for her. For the last 10 years, Sulami has not able to sit or even bend over her body, and has to use a stick in order to help her walk.

Beachgoers who sit under an umbrella are more likely to burn than those who wear sunscreen, a new Texas study funds. Parasols stop direct sunbeams but are no match for diffuse radiation.

Eloise Barnette, 75, from Ohio was unresponsive one morning in October. After no signs of improvement showed, her family decided to take her off her life support. Two days later, she woke up.

Gwyneth Paltrow last week told goop readers to use jade eggs. Dr Jen Gunter warns the idea is nonsense - and could increase the risk of bacterial vaginosis or toxic shock syndrome.

in a new review of 36 studies, by researchers at Bristol University and Leicester Diabetes Centre, involving more than 3.2 million people, statins were found to cut the risk of venous thrombosis.

Californian girl born without an ear needs surgery

Alana Zarate, was born without an ear but still loves to sing and dance to Disney classics. Her mother Sarah Perez has been desperately raising money to fund surgery that will give Alana a new ear. Her mother Sarah Perez, a 31-year-old deputy sheriff in Fresno, California, is desperate for her youngest child to have surgery before she starts school because 'kids can be brutal and it's hard enough as a kid to fit in'.

Bill Gates has joined the governments of Germany, Norway, and Japan in donating $460 million to make vaccines for Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV), Lassa and Nipah viruses.

The final FDA guidelines on the fish pregnant women should and should not eat were released. Fish low in mercury, like salmon and tilapia, were advised and high mercury fish, like shark, were not.

One unavailable bed puts a stop to a 60-year-old man in need of surgery in BBC2's Hospital. The team of experts at St Mary's Hospital, London, try their hardest to find a bed but the patient is sent home.

Scientists from Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore have zeroed in on a synthetic peptide that offers long-lasting protection from macular degeneration.

Dee Hicks learns mouldy breast implants behind poor health

WARNING GRAPHIC IMAGES: Dee Hicks, from Satellite Beach in Florida, suffered hair loss, chest pain, rashes and depression, and was ultimately bed-ridden for six months before she realised her symptoms matched mould poisoning. Doctors had put the mother of five's (seen left when she was sick and right after having her implants removed) declining health down to the onset of menopause, but she is back to normal since having her mouldy breast implants (inset) removed.

Working in a stressful job, with high work load, time pressure and job insecurity, for 15 years increases the risk of five forms of the disease, scientists from Quebec University warn.

It is believed the extra amount of blood from the slight delay, around a decilitre, equates to an extra four months of nutrients for children, researchers from Uppsala University, Sweden, say.

Desperate to be part of the newborn's first few weeks, many fathers can feel sidelined due to the lack of time they spend with them, researchers from UT Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, found.

Experts, from the University of California San Francisco, found in 58 per cent of trials the lead investigator had at least some degree of financial tie to the firm that made the drug being tested.

Dementia sufferer Laura Borrell says doctors dismissed her

Laura Borrell was diagnosed with frontotemporal degenerative dementia in 2015 when she was just 39. The former Law student from Hertfordshire said that she had a 'real battle' to get her condition diagnosed after neurologists were baffled by her symptoms, which included slurred speech and confusion. She told Holly Willoughby and Philip Schofield that one neurologist was 'vile' to her (Pictured: Laura Borrell on This Morning, reaction to her appearance)

Professor Dame Sally Davies, the Government's chief medical officer, warned that the increasing prevalence of superbugs could soon make routine operations risky.

German sports scientist Frieder Beck analysed how movement affects the brain. He believes that because skiing needs planning and concentration skills, it sharpens a child's mind.

Scarlett Wright, from Talke, Staffordshire, is one of only 130 people in the world born with Adams-Oliver syndrome - a condition that means her hands and feet will never grow.

A mew video by Good Heath 24/7 reveals the bonus health benefits from drinking the tea can give you, from helping you to lose weight to fighter cancer and preventing gum disease.

Ohio twins born conjoined at the spine can now both walk

Born entangled at the hip and spine (left, shared skin circled) in a rural Ugandan village in September 2014, Acen and Apio Akello left local doctors stunned. With nothing more than rudimentary medicine for miles around, it looked like the girls - the first children of 19-year-old Ester - would face a life of disability and pain. However, surgeons managed to reach the expert separation team at Nationwide Children's Hospital in Columbus, Ohio. Their surgery (bottom right) was intensely complicated, involving an entire team of neurophysiological surgeons tasked with separating each nerve to ensure the girls would be able to be independent after. Now, just 16 months later, they are walking (top right) - and their surgeon Dr Gail Besner believes all of their medical woes are behind them.

Scientists used the method to help a Ukrainian woman who was unable to conceive, it has been announced. She gave birth to her son on January 5 after trying for a baby for more than a decade.

The intervention by the British Medical Association follows a warning by the Prime Minister that GPs were partly to blame for the pressure on A&E; by closing their surgeries early.

Researchers from the University of Pavia in Italy studied the effects of gossip in women and found it causes the release of oxytocin, a hormone that helps bring people closer together (stock image)

Desmond J Tobin, professor of cell biology and director for the Centre for Skin Sciences at the University of Bradford delves deep into the science behind your hair.

Sex expert Tracey Cox says it's essential to have chemistry for a happy long-term relationship. Here, she reveals the best ways to tell if you and your partner have enough of it.

Celebrity trainer and Flow Athletic founder Ben Lucas, from Sydney, said if you follow the right diet and exercise, it can take just four weeks to make a significant change to your body.

Colorado girl is diagnosed with Spinal Muscular Atrophy

At two years old, Lexi Pacini, (right with her mother Tammy) from Colorado, was diagnosed with Spinal Muscular Atrophy - a neuromuscular disease which weakens the physical muscles. Not long after, she was approved for a new clinical drug trial. Now at age 4, Lexi is learning to stand, walk (pictured left with walker), and even climb on her own. But with treatment costing $750,000 her family doesn't know if they can afford it.

Professions at the greatest risk include farmers, construction workers, police and the armed forces, according to researchers at Imperial College London.

Dr Clare Llewellyn, from University College London, ran the new obesity study. She found that overweight children pile on pounds because of big portions and said there is 'no need' for extras.

Scientists in London have developed artificial intelligence using a 'virtual 3D heart' that can predict when patients with a serious heart disorder will die with 80 percent accuracy.

Thorsten Rudroff, from Colorado State University, says his studies show benefits of weed as therapy for MS patients. But FDA regulations mean they can't test which strain did the trick.

Eating food triggers a response in humans by producing a type of immune cell. These then create IL-1beta in varying amounts, dependent on blood glucose levels, Swiss experts found.

A survey of 2,000 parents found that moms will get sick an average of 324 times during their kids' childhood due to sickness being passed to them as they nurse their offspring back to health.

Watching James Bond could encourage you to SMOKE

Cigarettes feature in all but one of the 24 James Bond movies filmed to date (top right, Timothy Dalton in 1987's The Living Daylights, and bottom right, Sean Connery smoking in 1962's Dr No), new research from the University of Otago, New Zealand, has discovered. Despite 2002's Die Another Day (left, actor Pierce Brosnan pictured with Halle Berry) being the last time he smoked, he is still exposed to second-hand smoke from sexual partners.

A University of Oxford study of half a million people found those diagnosed with diabetes before 50 lived 10 years less than those without the condition, and were half as likely to reach 75.

Preventable mistakes in treating children led to 12 deaths, 41 cases of severe harm and 658 cases of minor harm in England and Wales, a new report by Cardiff University found.

Not eating after 5pm and before 8am really does play a role in allowing people to lose weight, researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the National Institute of Ageing found.

A new study has found that roughly one in five people experience auditory sensations when viewing silent stimuli, suggesting it’s far more common than previously thought.

Davina's Sugar-Free in a Hurry is full of healthy, delicious and quick recipes for everything from lunch on the go and quick suppers to guilt-free snacks.

Demanding exercise regimes provide no extra health benefits for people trying to lose weight, a study by researchers at the University of Bath has found.

London schoolgirl discovers GROWING PAINS were cancer

Ashleigh Massey (left), from Chessington, struggled with the discomfort in her right leg when it first began in September. But when the pain reduced her to tears just a month later, her parents rushed her to Kingston Hospital in London. Her father, Chris, 40, claims she was initially assessed and told she could return home - but doctors then immediately rang back speaking of their concern. When they returned, she underwent various tests (inset) and scans that confirmed the doctor's suspicions, diagnosing her with osteosarcoma. She has since had two rounds of chemotherapy to fight the disease, and is set to undergo an operation at the end of the month to remove part of the tumour.

Cellulite affects anywhere between 80 and 98 per cent of women, it's said, but what you eat and drink can help get rid of those pesky dimples if you have the right foods, says nutritionist Lily Soutter.

Cosmetic doctor Dr Nestor Demosthenous highlights the pitfalls of going vegan, including a lack of calcium and being exposed to added sugar - which can wreak havoc with your skin and bone structure.

More than 90 per cent of those diagnosed with asthma were able to stop their medications and remained safely without drugs for a year, researchers from the University of Ottawa found.

Woman diagnosed with the cancer that killed Steve Jobs

Similarly to Apple founder Steve Jobs, Sarah Smith from Kent was diagnosed with Neuroendocrine tumours (NETs) in 2011, growths which were, quite unusually, located in her liver. The tumours secrete large amounts of hormones which cause symptoms such as flushing, cramps, diarrhoea, wheezing, skin problems and abdominal pain depending on where they are, and are commonly confused with menopausal symptoms.

The report, which counted 926,200 abortions in 2014, was released on Tuesday by the Guttmacher Institute. It concluded the drop is largely due to wider availability of effective contraception.

Good Housekeeping has revealed how long you should keep foods in the fridge - and some of the times are surprisingly short. It's just one day for shellfish and fish but two weeks for smoked salmon.

Max Kirsten, based in Chelsea, uses a range of different techniques in his app - Quit Smoking Now - to encourage smokers to give up their bad habits by changing the way they think about tobacco.

Children born to mothers who had taken the multiple micro-nutrient supplements had 'greater' cognitive ability, the researchers from Harvard, California and Lancaster universities found.

Research led by experts at Lund University in Sweden, suggests the ancient Chinese practice could help reduce the distress of babies with the condition.

Women have long been warned not to put on too much weight while pregnant, but a study led by Aberdeen University suggests it may not affect their children’s health over the long term.

Why DO so many middle-aged women long for one last baby

Shona Sibary was in a GP surgery with waiting for her 18-year-old daughter's contraceptive prescription when she found herself wondering, 'Another baby. I could still, couldn’t I?' But she is not alone. This month, mother-of-four Nicole Kidman — who turns 50 in June — bravely admitted she would ‘never say never’ to having another baby. Meanwhile Halle Berry was almost 47 when she had her second child, Susan Sarandon gave birth to her second child at the age of 47, and David Bowie’s wife, Iman, gave birth to her daughter with the rock star when she was 45. Shona, pictured with her brood, asks, ‘Is this some form of middle-aged, pre-menopausal madness? It certainly feels like the cruellest joke in the world.’

A British study found that 15 per cent of middle-aged women have battled an eating disorder, and almost a quarter of these have done so in the past year.

A report by the National Childbirth Trust warns that a desperate lack of midwives and cash has left Britain's labour wards in ‘crisis', with mothers being treated like ‘products on a conveyor belt' at hospitals.

Patients will be told to show a utility bill and passport before routine operations as part of a new crackdown on health tourism, with 20 British hospital trusts carrying out the ID checks.

The black market in prescription drugs is costing the NHS thousands of pounds - and one man was caught trying to flog an arthritis medication he no longer needed for £250 a box.

Boy born with a giant tongue can finally smile

Aparajit Lodhi, (left, right) from Jabalpur in the north Indian state of Madhya Pradesh, suffers from a rare congenital anomaly called Macroglossia, a medical term for an unusually large tongue. The congenital overgrowth disorder was discovered when he was born, meaning doctors had to tell Aparajit's parents that he was not going to live very long.

New data from a 10-year study by the Technical University of Munich show depression is almost as deadly as obesity, causing 15 percent of cardiac arrests (just shy of obesity's 21 percent).

The 22-year-old reveals his daily exercise routine and his experience with dry needling as an alternative therapy. He says he wants to stop himself growing older at the age of 27.

New research by Harvard University warns CRE (carbapenem resistant Enterobacteriaceae) could be much more dangerous, dynamic and widespread than previously thought.

Sushi's oh-so-healthy reputation as low-calorie and vitamin-rich has fuelled a UK market for the Japanese delicacy worth £69 million a year.

As an acute cough is a viral infection, antibiotics will not work, says Alyn Morice, who teaches respiratory medicine at the University of Hull. So which remedies will make a difference?

We reveal how YOU can get Naomie Harris's toned shoulders

The first black actress to play Miss Moneypenny in the James Bond franchise, the 40-year-old from Islington worked with a personal trainer two hours a day, five days a week for two months. When not filming, she says: ‘My go-to things are yoga, running and circuit training. I do Gyrotonic, a dance-based form of yoga, Pilates and chi gung."

NHS patients harmed as doctors prescribe WRONG meds

Philippa Gillespie from Haverfordwest (left) and Robert Welch from Grimsby (right) are just two of the victims of medication errors in NHS hospitals whose stories have emerged in the past 18 months alone. Inquests into each of their deaths concluded that drug errors had either caused or played a significant part. And shockingly, their needless suffering is far from unusual.

A reader consults Dr Martin Scurr on how to make his grandson a less fussy eater. The 25-year-old has avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder, which will have been developing since he was a child.

Karen Raphael, a professor of oral and maxillofacial pathology and medicine at New York University College of Dentistry, believes teeth grinding is unconnected with jaw pain.

The implant is being tested in the first human patients across six hospitals in Australia, and has the anti-inflammatory drug dexamethasone inside the silicone lining of its electrodes.

Persistent illnesses are essentially training the body, ultimately building up long-term immunity, according to a study by Washington University School of Medicine.

CPR saved this women's husband's life

Carolyn Bjelan from Harrogate was drying her hair one morning last May when she heard a sudden thud downstairs. Hurrying downstairs, she found him unconscious: he had suffered a heart attack.'His chest wasn't moving and no air was coming from his mouth or nose. I called out his name. No answer,' she said. Carolyn checked his pulse and, finding nothing, rang 999 and started CPR. She had first learned the technique 25 years ago when she became a Brownie Guide leader, and over the years she'd been on refresher courses.

From the age of eight, Gemma Element from Hertfordshire had to pass urine up to ten times a day and twice at night. Now, a new implant in her ankle has banished her problems for good.

For years after the birth of her daughter, Debra Shaw from Somerset was left with a legacy of pain and disability. She is one of around 7 per cent of women experience coccyx pain after childbirth.

HAART - a drug treatment used for HIV infection - might be the reason behind rising rates of syphilis, a new study warns. Rates are 107 times higher in gay/bisexual men.

University of Sheffield researchers found that mealworm beetles live for longer if they avoid mating. And they believe it could explain why nuns tend to live longer.

Annie Deadman reveals how YOU can shift your midlife middle!

Annie Deadman (inset left), a 56-year-old mother-of-two based in South-West London, has devised the Blast! programme, which promises results in just seven days or really quite radical transformations after 21 days. If Annie’s taught me anything it’s that doing something — anything — is better than doing nothing. Both my waistline and my heart are very grateful, says Kathyrn Flett (pictured before and after the programme).

Having a cuppa reduces chemicals in the blood that can trigger heart disease and are linked to early mortality, a study by scientists from Stanford University discovered.

Scientists at Altravita IVF clinic in Moscow played A State of Trance by DJ Armin van Buuren on a loop for 24 hours a day next to 758 eggs in a petri dish.

So-called 'fat shaming' may lead to feelings of stigma that result in comfort eating, researchers from Liverpool University and Florida State University say.

More than 1,300 service members in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars received genital organ injuries, a new report found. The 'unprecedented' number showed 94 percent were age 35 or younger.

However, just 12 per cent believe flu-like symptoms - which can often be passed on - are enough to warrant an absence, a survey conducted by researchers at the University of Michigan has found.

Blogger told by doctors she will no longer receive chemo in heartbreaking post

In a short message on her Facebook page (pictured inset) Hannah Lyson, from Lancashire, revealed that she had received the 'worst news imaginable' when she told followers her disease was not responding to treatment. Miss Lyson (pictured left and right) was diagnosed with bowel cancer in May last year when she was just 19 years old. Doctors initially believed the teenager was suffering from irritable bowel syndrome when she complained of back ache and constipation. But tests revealed she had five tumours growing on her bowel and liver. After her devastating diagnoses Miss Lyson set up the blog Hannah's Bowel Cancer Journey chronicling her 'unwavering determination' to beat the disease.

Published in the Journal of Pain and Symptom Management, it explains how he visited a palliative-care clinic in Toronto in 2016. Using it directly on his wound, it reduced the size of it by 5 per cent.

Globally, nearly 10 per cent of expectant mothers drink alcohol - but this figure varies widely, a study found. Ireland have the highest rates, with 60.4 per cent found to booze while pregnant.

Psychologists have revealed the three personality qualities that not only make someone more attractive to the opposite sex but also prove they can get on with anyone.

A study by Vermont University in the US, found that consumption of hot red chili peppers was associated with reduced mortality, with the chillies warding of heart conditions and strokes.

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