Mortality Risk News
Latest articles and news about Mortality Risk on AXL Media.
Latest Articles
- Zurich Study Reveals Early Childhood Care Deprivation Slashing Life Expectancy by Twelve Years
Published: May 1, 2026
Section: Research
Research from the University of Zurich indicates that infants raised in care institutions during the 1950s face a 48 percent higher mortality risk compared to those raised in famil...
- Large-Scale Multinational Study Identifies U-Shaped Mortality Risk Linked to Low Cholesterol Levels in Chinese Adults
Published: Apr 29, 2026
Section: Medical News
A comprehensive longitudinal study of nearly 500,000 participants, published in the journal Engineering on April 28, 2026, challenges the "lower is better" paradigm of cholesterol...
- Long-Term Framingham Study Reveals 73% Lower Heart Disease Risk for Adults with Sustained High Health Scores
Published: Apr 28, 2026
Section: Medical News
A 25-year longitudinal analysis of Framingham Heart Study data indicates that maintaining high cardiovascular health scores during young and mid-adulthood significantly reduces the...
- Chinese Study Challenges Global Cholesterol Guidelines as Low Levels Link to Higher Mortality Risks
Published: Apr 28, 2026
Section: Medical News
A multinational cohort study of nearly 500,000 adults suggests that the traditional medical goal of driving cholesterol as low as possible may increase mortality risks for certain...
- Thirty Year Study Reveals Exercise Variety Reduces Mortality Risk More Effectively Than Volume Alone
Published: Apr 27, 2026
Section: Healthy Lifestyle
A longitudinal analysis of over 100,000 participants suggests that diversifying physical activity types is a key determinant in extending human lifespan. Researchers found that whi...
- Morning Naps in Seniors Linked to 30% Higher Mortality Risk; Wearable Data Identifies Sleep Timing as New Health Marker
Published: Apr 22, 2026
Section: Healthy Lifestyle
A new study published in JAMA Network Open suggests that not all naps are created equal for older adults. Using objective actigraphy data from 1,338 participants, researchers disco...
- Childhood Flu Exposure Leaves Lifelong Immune Imprint on Mortality Risk for Aging Populations
Published: Apr 18, 2026
Section: Medical News
A comprehensive analysis of 54 years of mortality data reveals that a person's first childhood influenza infection creates a "permanent" immunological bias that dictates their surv...
- Long Term Study of 650,000 Adults Links Common Irritable Bowel Syndrome Medications to Increased Mortality Risk
Published: Apr 16, 2026
Section: Medical News
A massive investigation by Cedars-Sinai researchers has identified a statistical link between certain IBS treatments and a higher risk of death over a 20 year period. The findings...
- Long-Term Study Links Antidepressants and Opioid-Based IBS Drugs to Increased Mortality Risk
Published: Apr 8, 2026
Section: Health
A massive study of 650,000 U.S. adults led by Cedars-Sinai investigators has revealed that certain medications commonly used to manage Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) are associated...
- Longitudinal Australian Study Finds Consistent Midlife Exercise Cuts Premature Death Risk for Women by Half
Published: Mar 27, 2026
Section: Environment
A 20-year study of over 11,000 women reveals that maintaining 150 minutes of weekly moderate-to-vigorous physical activity throughout middle age reduces all-cause mortality by 50%....
- New Research Links Spirits and Beer to Higher Mortality Risk While Wine Shows Potential Cardiovascular Benefits
Published: Mar 19, 2026
Section: Science & Tech
A comprehensive study of over 340,000 adults presented at the American College of Cardiology's Annual Scientific Session reveals that health risks associated with alcohol depend he...
- Study Finds Poverty and Slow Renewable Energy Adoption Double Air Pollution Mortality Risks in Europe
Published: Mar 19, 2026
Section: Science & Tech
A comprehensive study by ISGlobal and the Barcelona Supercomputing Center reveals that Europe’s most economically disadvantaged regions are significantly more vulnerable to the hea...