Health
Featured
The Art of Medicine
Article
The Art of Medicine
A doctor combines the scientific and the human to improve outcomes—one childhood cancer patient at a time.
Sciences
Pollution Problem
A BYU professor and his team of students study how diesel exhaust affects fat cell growth and metabolic health.
Research
Through a Woman’s Eyes
Walking alone is different for women. A new BYU study has eye-catching proof.
Research
Life and Breath
This summer BYU students will collect data to help improve air conditions for Nepali bricklayers.
A study by a BYU psychology professor uncovered a connection between heart health and social support.
Insights from a BYU professor on having open conversations about caregiving for aging family members.
BYU researchers find another reason why it's a bad idea to exclude women from exercise research.
Violent sexual predators are using dating apps to target vulnerable victims.
A professor has inspired more than 5,000 BYU students to register as bone-marrow donors.
Most diets don't work for long-term weight loss and health. BYU experts offer up three different frameworks to consider.
Slam dunks during BYU Basketball conference games raised $886,475 to fund BYU student cancer research.
Researchers use scary movies to study fear and support in marriage relationships.
Raised in Samoa and Utah, biology PhD student connects science and family to help Pacific Islanders with Alzheimer's.
BYU life sciences researcher finds extra benefits of endurance running that might just motivate you to hit the pavement.
Does night mode really help you sleep better? BYU psychology researchers put it to the test.
Darren Campbell is BYU's head doctor: he leads the physicians supporting athletics, and he's an expert on concussions.
BYU student nurses stepped up to carry out voluntary COVID-19 testing on campus.
With so many unknowns, a BYU dean—and household finance expert—shares pointers to help gain stability.
Behind the headlines of COVID-19 is another far-reaching health crisis.
A winter semester like no other—with events canceled, classes online, grading adjusted, and social lives disrupted.
A BYU professor shares why relatives of cancer patients are missing crucial knowledge about their own cancer risk.
While the effects of COVID-19 on campus may feel unprecedented, canceling classes has happened before at BYU.