health
Keeping your mind and body in check - popular topics in health and medicine to maintain a long and healthy life.
Patients Could Face Disruption After Hospital Fire. AI-Generated.
A major fire at a regional hospital has raised concerns about patient safety and service disruption, as emergency crews worked through the night to contain the blaze and hospital administrators began assessing the damage. Officials confirmed that while no deaths were reported, several wards were evacuated and routine medical services may be affected for days or even weeks.
By Fiaz Ahmed 8 days ago in Longevity
United States Positron Emission Tomography Market Size and Forecast (2026–2034). AI-Generated.
Introduction The United States Positron Emission Tomography (PET) market is undergoing steady and transformative growth as healthcare providers increasingly prioritize early disease detection, precision diagnostics, and personalized treatment strategies. According to Renub Research, the U.S. PET market is expected to grow from US$ 330.83 million in 2025 to US$ 467.22 million by 2034, expanding at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 3.91% between 2026 and 2034.
By Sakshi Sharma8 days ago in Longevity
India’s Snakebite Crisis Is Killing Tens of Thousands Every Year. AI-Generated.
India is facing a silent but devastating public health emergency: snakebites kill tens of thousands of people every year, making the country home to the highest number of snakebite deaths in the world. Despite being largely preventable and treatable, snakebite envenoming continues to claim lives in rural and underserved communities, exposing deep gaps in healthcare access, awareness, and infrastructure. According to health experts and international organizations, India accounts for nearly half of all global snakebite deaths annually. Most victims are farmers, laborers, and children living in villages where encounters with venomous snakes are common and medical care is often hours away. A Rural Tragedy Snakebites occur most frequently in agricultural regions during the monsoon season, when snakes are displaced from flooded habitats and human activity in fields increases. Farmers working barefoot or sleeping on floors are especially vulnerable. In many cases, victims are bitten while harvesting crops, walking at night without lighting, or sleeping in homes without protective barriers. Children are also at risk when playing outdoors in tall grass or near water sources. “For rural families, a snakebite can mean sudden death or lifelong disability,” said a public health researcher based in New Delhi. “It is one of the most neglected health problems in the country.” Delayed Treatment Costs Lives Medical experts agree that snakebite deaths are largely preventable if victims receive timely anti-venom and proper care. However, delays remain common. Many people first turn to traditional healers instead of hospitals, losing critical hours. In remote areas, transportation to medical facilities can take several hours or even days. Some clinics lack trained staff or sufficient supplies of anti-venom. Others are unable to identify the type of snake involved, leading to inappropriate treatment. “Time is everything with snakebite,” said an emergency physician in Uttar Pradesh. “If anti-venom is given early, survival rates are high. But too often patients arrive too late.” Compounding the problem is the shortage of high-quality anti-venom. India produces most of its supply using venom from just four snake species, even though many more venomous snakes cause bites. This mismatch reduces treatment effectiveness in some regions. Economic and Social Impact Snakebite deaths are not just a health issue; they are an economic and social crisis. Most victims are working-age adults who support families through farming or manual labor. Their deaths push households deeper into poverty. Survivors often suffer permanent injuries such as paralysis, kidney damage, or amputations, leaving them unable to work. Medical bills further strain already vulnerable families. “Snakebite is both a cause and consequence of poverty,” said a development economist. “It hits the poorest communities hardest and keeps them trapped in cycles of hardship.” Lack of Awareness and Data One major challenge in tackling snakebite deaths is poor data collection. Many cases go unreported because deaths occur at home or in small clinics that do not maintain official records. This undercounting weakens policy responses and funding priorities. Public awareness about prevention remains limited. Simple measures such as wearing protective footwear, using torches at night, raising beds off the floor, and clearing vegetation around homes could significantly reduce risk. Yet these steps are not widely practiced due to lack of education and resources. Health campaigns about snakebite prevention are rare compared to those for diseases like malaria or tuberculosis. Government and Global Action The Indian government has begun acknowledging the severity of the crisis. Snakebite envenoming is now recognized as a notifiable disease in several states, meaning hospitals must report cases. Training programs for healthcare workers are being expanded, and efforts are underway to improve anti-venom distribution. At the international level, the World Health Organization has launched a global strategy to halve snakebite deaths and disabilities by 2030. India plays a central role in this effort due to its large burden of cases. However, experts warn that progress will be slow without sustained investment. “This requires better roads, stronger rural health systems, and community education,” said a WHO adviser. “It cannot be solved by medicine alone.” Climate Change Worsens the Risk Climate change is expected to intensify the snakebite crisis. Rising temperatures and unpredictable rainfall are altering snake habitats and increasing human-snake encounters. Flooding forces snakes into homes, while drought pushes people into areas where snakes live. Urban expansion into rural land also raises the risk as people move closer to wildlife environments. Researchers warn that without adaptation measures, snakebite incidents could rise further in coming decades. Stories Behind the Statistics Behind the statistics are countless personal tragedies. In one village in Bihar, a young farmer died after being bitten while walking home at night. His family waited hours for transport to a hospital that had no anti-venom in stock. In another case in Maharashtra, a teenage girl survived a bite but lost the use of her hand due to delayed treatment. “These stories repeat every year, in every state,” said a rural doctor. “And most of them could be prevented.” Conclusion India’s snakebite crisis is one of the country’s most overlooked public health disasters. Tens of thousands of deaths each year reflect failures in access to healthcare, education, and infrastructure. While anti-venom and treatment exist, they remain out of reach for many who need them most. Reducing snakebite deaths will require coordinated action: stronger rural health systems, reliable supplies of anti-venom, public awareness campaigns, and improved reporting. Until then, snakebite will continue to quietly claim lives in villages across India — a tragedy that no longer needs to be inevitable.
By Fiaz Ahmed 8 days ago in Longevity
Ecclesiastes and the Weight of Meaninglessness
Have you ever noticed how unsettling Ecclesiastes feels compared to most of Scripture. It does not rush to reassure. It does not soften its conclusions. It returns again and again to the same observation: everything fades, everything repeats, and nothing under the sun seems capable of holding still long enough to become permanent. Wisdom fails to secure lasting satisfaction. Pleasure loses its edge. Work outlives the worker. Even moral effort appears unable to guarantee stability. For many readers, this tone feels almost dissonant, as if the book is saying out loud what faith is supposed to quiet.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast9 days ago in Longevity
Vietnam’s Aging Population: When Society Grows Old Faster Than Its Care System. AI-Generated.
Introduction Vietnam is changing very fast. Cities are growing, young people are moving for work, and life expectancy is rising. But there is one big change that many people are not talking about enough: Vietnam is getting old.
By Adil Ali Khan9 days ago in Longevity
After 20 Years in the Gym, I Quit for 3 Months. Here's What I Did Instead.
After 20 years of gym memberships, I needed a break. I usually take at least a month long sabbatical every year. But I didn't need that this year, I needed a break from the gym entirely. Yet I still wanted to get in my workouts. So I tested what would happen if I stripped fitness down to the bare minimum for a while.
By Destiny S. Harris9 days ago in Longevity
If You're Waiting for the Root Canal, You're Missing the Point of Skincare
At some point, our culture decided that care is only valuable if it’s extreme. If it doesn’t burn, blast, paralyze, or shock the system into instant compliance, it’s dismissed as “doing nothing.” Apparently, that now includes estheticians.
By Brooke Gallagher9 days ago in Longevity
When Parents Feel Alone and Adult Kids Feel Overwhelmed
Being an adult these days is really busy. Our jobs take up a lot of time we spend a lot of time traveling to and from work. We have other things we do on the side that take up our weekends. On top of all that we have a lot of family things to take care of. Aging parents are often very lonely even if we do not forget about them. The thing is, we just do not have a lot of time for aging parents anymore. Time is very scarce, for everyone, including our aging parents.
By Live Peace10 days ago in Longevity
Why Life Gets Better After 50
If you think about life as a picture of how happy people are we have always thought it looks like a hill that goes up and then comes down. You start out when you are young and things get better and better you reach the top when you are in the middle of your life. Then it starts to get worse and worse as you get older.. What if we have been looking at this picture the wrong way? Some new research about how people think and feel is showing us that it is actually shaped like a U. When people are in the middle of their life they are often very busy and stressed out and they are not as happy as they used to be. But then something unexpected happens people start to get happier after they turn 50 and they just keep getting happier and happier. Life is, like a U shape happiness goes down. Then it comes back up again and that is what the research is showing us about life and happiness. This isn’t about denying the very real challenges of aging, but about uncovering the profound psychological shifts that make this chapter uniquely satisfying. Here’s the science and soul behind why contentment so often blooms in later life.
By Live Peace10 days ago in Longevity











