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People With Medical Debt Five Times More Likely to Not Receive Mental Health Care Treatment

People with medical debt in 2023 were about five times more likely to forgo mental health care treatment in the following year due to cost, compared to those without medical debt, according to a study led by researchers at the Johns Hopkins...
18-Apr-2025 11:00 AM EDT Add to Favorites

New CDC Report Shows Increase in Autism in 2022 with Notable Shifts in Race, Ethnicity, and Sex

Researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health contributed to a new Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report examining autism among children who turned 4 and 8 years old in 2022. The CDC report, which includes data from...
17-Apr-2025 8:25 PM EDT Add to Favorites

Weight-Loss Drug Use Has Risen Sharply Among Children and Adults With Type 1 Diabetes

Popular prescription weight-loss drugs called GLP-1 receptor agonists are now frequently used by type 1 diabetes patients, despite limited data on the drugs’ safety and effectiveness in this patient population, according to a study led by...
26-Mar-2025 9:40 AM EDT Add to Favorites

Discovery of Mosquito Molecular Mechanism Opens Door to New Antimalaria Strategies

A molecular quality-control system in Anopheles mosquitoes—the species responsible for most of the world’s malaria cases—is a promising target for future malaria-control strategies, according to a study led by researchers at the Johns Hopkins...
11-Mar-2025 8:15 PM EDT Add to Favorites

Patients With Depression From Wealthier Areas More Likely to Use Telehealth for Mental Health Care

A new study led by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health found that mental health visits for patients with depression from high-wealth neighborhoods in Maryland were significantly more likely to happen via telehealth...
27-Feb-2025 9:15 AM EST Add to Favorites

Small Amounts of Moderate to Vigorous Physical Activity Are Associated with Big Reductions in Dementia Risk

A little movement could help prevent dementia, even for frail older adults, suggests a new study led by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
20-Feb-2025 9:00 AM EST Add to Favorites

Report Recommends States Adopt Firearm Purchaser Licensing Laws That Include Five Core Components

A new report released by the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Violence Solutions recommends that more states adopt comprehensive firearm purchaser licensing laws based on years of evidence that these laws are effective in reducing gun violence.
18-Feb-2025 8:45 AM EST Add to Favorites

Two New Studies Provide Broadest Evidence to Date of Unequal Impacts of Abortion Bans

In two new papers, researchers from Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and colleagues estimate that abortion bans in 14 states resulted in 22,180 additional live births and 478 additional infant deaths above what would have been...
13-Feb-2025 9:00 PM EST Add to Favorites


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The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health is dedicated to the education of a diverse group of research scientists and public health professionals, a process inseparably linked to the discovery and application of new knowledge, and through these activities, to the improvement of health and prevention of disease and disability around the world.

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