By Dennis Thompson HealthDay ReporterTUESDAY, Jan. 27, 2026 (HealthDay News) — Heavy drinking increases a person’s risk of ...
It's the top cause of cancer death for men and women combined, a new study says.
Fewer people under age 50 are dying from cancer in the U.S., but colorectal cancer mortality rates continue to surge ...
(This is an excerpt of the Health Rounds newsletter, where we present latest medical studies on Tuesdays and Thursdays.) Jan ...
Meanwhile, mortality from other leading cancers is declining ...
A major US study has found that people who drink the equivalent of two nightly drinks face higher risk of developing ...
The adjustment is projected to identify an additional 600 bowel cancer cases early each year, marking an 11 per cent increase ...
“She never, never stopped fighting,” Chris Wilson said of his wife, Andrea Andrade ...
Mohammad Samad's stage 3 colon cancer was misdiagnosed as stress, IBS, and Crohn's disease.
A newly uncovered immune chain reaction in the gut may explain why people with inflammatory bowel disease face a much higher ...
Drinking alcohol is linked to higher chances of colorectal cancer − but just how many drinks increase your risk? Here's what new research says.