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A mobile phone app designed to deliver suicide-specific therapy reduced suicidal behavior among high-risk psychiatric inpatients, according to a new study by scientists at The Ohio State University ...
Ohio State sport psychologists provide mental health counseling to athletes for anxiety, depression, eating disorders, trauma and more. Learn more.
Rolling out your muscles isn’t just for professional athletes. While it has the ability to increase performance, foam rolling can also be used to relieve and reduce tension caused by daily stresses.
Nose hair is the kind of thing you never think about until you catch a glance in the mirror of an unruly strand protruding from your nostril. You may be tempted to snip or pluck, but should you? Learn ...
Ventilators are life-saving tools in the fight against COVID-19, but they can cause serious complications.
With flu season just around the corner and COVID-19 cases on the rise, a new nationwide survey from The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center reveals hesitancy around vaccines this fall.
Did you know that leeches are still used today to promote healing after some surgeries? A pharmacist at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center explains how some "old-fashioned" medical ...
Improve your mood every day: just eat breakfastThere’s a reason the word “hangry” – a combination of “hungry” and “angry” – has entered our vocabulary. (You know, like “I am grumpy and starving. I ...
What is flesh-eating bacteria, really? Where do you find it? Can it be cured? Infectious disease expert Jose Bazan, DO, answers these and more questions about necrotizing fasciitis.
The appendix is an appendage that hangs off the beginning of the colon, or large intestine. It doesn’t have a function, and we all can live without it. But when it gets gets infected or bursts – ...
COLUMBUS, Ohio – When it comes to a hospital stay, new research shows patients and family members care deeply about privacy, accessibility and comfort in their rooms -- things that they say can help ...
Why are some people surviving COVID-19 and then developing diabetes? An expert at The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center explains why this may be happening.
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