ACC Study Links Ultra-Processed Foods to 67% Higher Heart Disease Risk
AI SummaryWTOP30d agoUnited States
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β’A new American College of Cardiology study of over 6,800 U.S. adults shows consuming more than nine daily servings of ultra-processed foods raises heart attack, stroke, or death risk by 67% compared to one serving.
β’Each additional serving increases risk by over 5% overall and more than 6% among Black Americans, with findings presented at the ACC Annual Scientific Session in New Orleans on March 28-30.
β’Dr. Michele Arthurs of Kaiser Permanente advises checking labels and strategies like pre-eating healthy meals or pairing chips with oranges to cut intake.
β’Results published in JACC Advances highlight the need for dietary shifts to curb cardiovascular events.
β’ Florida's KidCare expansion remains stalled in legal limbo since February 2024, preventing coverage for more children.
β’ Uninsured children in the state have risen to 400,000, one of the highest tallies nationwide.
β’ Delay exacerbates access issues as federal funds await resolution, impacting low-income families significantly.
β’ East Bay man in Contra Costa County died after consuming toxic wild mushrooms amid statewide spike.
β’ California recorded 35 mushroom poisoning cases from Nov. 18 to Jan. 4, far above average of under five yearly.
β’ Surge prompts health warnings on foraging risks during wet weather conditions.
β’ Environmental Working Group study finds 20% of Americans used systems with elevated nitrate levels from 2021-2023 data.
β’ Nitrate poses health risks including cancer and developmental issues in contaminated supplies.
β’ Affects millions nationwide, urging stricter regulations and testing.
β’ Months after restoring federal family planning funding, Missouri's only Title X grantee program now confronts fresh challenges from U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley.
β’ The program provides essential reproductive health services amid ongoing political debates over federal support for family planning initiatives.
β’ This development underscores persistent tensions in U.S. public health policy regarding access to contraception and reproductive care funding.
β’ Nearly 1,300 people in Pittsburgh learned Hands-Only CPR during day two of the NFL Draft on April 24, 2026, at Acrisure Stadium, setting a Guinness World Record for the largest such training session in one hour.
β’ The event, organized by the American Heart Association, NFL, Damar Hamlin, and Doctor Mike, supports the Nation of Lifesavers movement aiming to double sudden cardiac arrest survival rates by 2030.
β’ More than half of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest victims do not receive CPR before emergency responders arrive, highlighting the critical need for widespread bystander training to improve survival odds.
β’ The Alabama Department of Corrections terminated its $1 billion health care contract with Tennessee-based YesCare for failure to adequately fulfill contractual duties.
β’ The contract, awarded in 2023 as a 5-year agreement, was dissolved due to the company's inability to meet performance standards for prison health services.
β’ The termination raises questions about oversight of private contractors providing essential health care services within the correctional system.
β’ The Snohomish County Board of Health approved new protections mandating septic system inspections prior to any home sale.
β’ Ordinance aims to prevent buyer exposure to faulty systems, promoting public health and property safety.
β’ Impacts thousands of rural Washington homes reliant on septic over municipal sewer.
β’ As of April 25, 2026, Medicaid/CHIP enrollment exceeds pre-pandemic levels in 32 states, totaling 68 million Medicaid and 7.2 million CHIP enrollees nationwide.
β’ The unwinding process disenrolled 25.2 million since September 2024, yet 69% of renewalsβ56.4 millionβwere approved in reporting states.
β’ Elevated enrollment supports ongoing public health efforts but strains budgets amid procedural disenrollments in states like Florida and Texas.
β’ A new clinical trial launched April 24, 2026 (NCT07549529), examines postural motor activation deficits following mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) in US patients.
β’ The study translates lab findings into physical therapy protocols for concussion rehabilitation, focusing on vestibular and balance impairments.
β’ Affecting millions annually, mTBI recovery gaps could improve with targeted interventions, potentially reducing long-term disability rates by 30%.
β’ American Medical Association warns that $100,000 H-1B visa application fees jeopardize physician recruitment for rural and underserved U.S. areas.
β’ Costs deter international doctors, who fill 25% of rural positions, exacerbating provider shortages affecting 60 million Americans.
β’ AMA urges policy reform to maintain care access amid growing demand.
β’ Health officials confirmed the first case of mpox clade I in New York City on Friday, a strain known to cause more severe disease and higher mortality than clade II.
β’ Clade I mpox leads to greater illness severity, prompting heightened vigilance in the densely populated urban area amid the ongoing national mpox situation.
β’ Detection underscores risks in international travel hubs, as clade I has driven recent African outbreaks with fatality rates exceeding 3% in some regions.
β’ The CDC reported six more US children died from influenza last week, bringing the season's pediatric flu deaths to 149 as respiratory virus activity slows nationwide.
β’ About 85% of deceased children with known vaccination status were unvaccinated, with flu positivity in labs dropping to 4.7% and hospitalizations falling to 1.3 per 100,000 people.
β’ Influenza B now predominates after surpassing A viruses, with high wastewater levels of RSV, influenza B, rotavirus, and norovirus signaling ongoing risks.