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Mother whose stomach leaked through her caesarean scar is having rare five-organ

Michelle Oddy, 43, of Derbyshire, gave birth to her daughter Kiera via C-section ten years before her health nightmare began in 2014. Mrs Oddy woke up one morning to find her insides 'bursting out' of her C-section scar in an ordeal caused by a complication of her Crohn's disease. Mrs Oddy now has multiple organ failure, which doctors believe was caused by various operations. She also has a colostomy bag (pictured left) and relies on feeding tubes. Surgeons hope Mrs Oddy (pictured right in hospital when her weight dropped to just 4st (56lbs)) will be able to have multiple organ transplants within the next two months to replace her liver, pancreas, small and large intestines, and half of her stomach, with all the organs coming from one donor. But the complex surgery comes with risks; namely, there is a 35 per cent change Mrs Oddy will not wake up from the 20-hour operation. The 'hole' in Mrs Oddy's abdomen following the ordeal is pictured centre and her extreme weight loss seen in her legs in the inset.

Mother reveals how her baby's eczema skin healed in just two weeks thanks to a 'miracle

Katie Rosendale, 21, took Evelyn to the doctors when she developed large dry patches over her chest and abdomen (seen right) at just three months old. Although her GP prescribed an ointment, the youngster's condition only got worse. Just as Miss Rosendale was starting to believe Evelyn's condition was 'incurable', she came across the skincare brand Baby Kingdom Collection on Instagram, which claims to ease eczema. Despite having 'no faith' it would work, she ordered a cream and shampoo, which soothed the youngster's skin (seen left after using the products) almost immediately. Evelyn is pictured recently in the inset with her mother, father Nathan Rosendale, 22, and three-year-old brother Ellis.

People who were slaves to sugar were told to cut it from their tea either gradually or drastically in a study by the University College London and the University of Leeds.

The scientists, from the University of Manchester, believe this 'really very exciting' research has the 'potential to significantly increase participation rates for cervical screening'.

WARNING: GRAPHIC CONTENT The unnamed woman went to a beautician in St Louis, Missouri, who used a hook to 'dig out' the hairs. The beauty therapist likened it to 'going fishing'.

Dr James Levenson, a psychiatrist at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, Virginia, said schizophrenic patients may be made 'afraid' of swallowing the online-tracked pill.

Breakthrough pill that expands in patients’ stomach DOUBLES the chance of losing weight

The capsule is taken 20 minutes before meals and enlarges to make the dieter feel too full to eat any more. It could be available over the counter in UK chemists by next year. It fills up a quarter of the stomach by absorbing water. Scientists asked 223 people to take three of the pills before lunch and dinner, while on a moderate diet – eating 300 fewer calories a day. Compared to more than 200 people taking useless sugar pills, those on the slimming pills were twice as likely to lose five per cent or more of their body weight.

High dose-rate brachytherapy – which delivers a surge of radiotherapy direct to the prostate in a single session – is safe and effective for men with low-risk cancer, researchers found.

Victims of the contaminated blood scandal were not initially told they had HIV, new evidence suggests. Doctors knew one patient had HIV but kept them in the dark for two years.

Madeline Roberts, 24, from Tennessee first developed cystic acne at the age of 14, and was left terrified of dating. Husband Trevor, 25, helped her embrace her skin and love herself.

A drug-free gel drink that helped remove radioactive toxins from Chernobyl victims could provide relief to millions of Britons enduring the misery of irritable bowel syndrome.

Victoria Beckham's ex-personal trainer Louisa Drake shows us six KEY bum toning barre

Louisa, who is based in London, is a former dancer and choreographer and Victoria Beckham's ex-personal trainer. Here you she reveals exclusively to FEMAIL a 15 minute workout which will  strengthen and tone the entire lower body with just 6 barre moves. Pictured (l-r clockwise) Louisa showing the wide second plie, arabesque leg lifts, curtsey lunge, vertical v, attitude leg lift and a standing pretzel

DR MIKE DILKES: Natasha Ednan-Laperouse, 15, from London, suffered a fatal allergic attack in 2016 after eating a sandwich bought from High Street chain, Pret a Manger.

DR MIKE DILKES: Eczema is painful, unsightly and, as the 1.5million British sufferers will no doubt know, confidence-sapping. As many as one-in-five children are born with it.

DR MIKE DILKES: People with allergies can still enjoy a meal out, providing appropriate precautions are taken. It goes without saying that food labels should be read carefully and questions asked.

DR MIKE DILKES: By far the most common allergies are those triggered by particles in the air that we breathe. From dog hair to pollen, these inhaled allergies affect up to a third of adults globally.

News reader KATE SILVERTON reveals shock allergic reaction to prawn salad 'nearly killed'

KATE SILVERTON: Almost 11 years have passed since I nearly died from anaphylaxis. While presenting for the BBC at Royal Ascot, I’d stopped for lunch, opting for a delicious prawn salad. But as I walked to the car to leave for home, a tickly cough began to irritate me. It became more intense until I was hunched over, battling a dramatic coughing fit. I stumbled around the street, red welts popping up across my chest and neck and my tongue doubled in size. Struggling for breath, I fell to the floor, certain I would die. Thankfully a passer-by recognised my symptoms instantly and injected her EpiPen into my thigh (Kate Silverton is pictured left, and a stock image of prawns is right).

After 23-year-old estate agent dies from meningitis, do you need second dose of childhood

Abigail Harris (pictured), 23, from Cheltenham, went to bed on March 27 suffering from ‘cold symptoms’ – and never regained consciousness. She had contracted deadly bacterial meningitis and hadn’t been vaccinated, as she didn’t know she was eligible. Experts say it is never too late to have a jab: even if you aren’t sure whether you’ve had a specific vaccination, there is no evidence that having another dose is harmful. In fact, the immunity provided by many vaccines actually wanes over time, so an extra dose may offer you an important boost.

CIARA ROBERTS: When recovering from an illness, or injury, our instinct is to rest. Simply going about our normal daily routine can seem overwhelming, let alone doing something more active.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock unveils plans to label highly addictive painkillers with warnings - to prevent a US-style epidemic of people hooked on ‘opioids’ – drugs derived from opium.

DR MICHAEL MOSLEY: It used to be thought that eggs, because they contain cholesterol, boost your blood levels of cholesterol. We now know that is not true.

DR ELLIE CANNON: Before starting any new medication, it is absolutely reasonable for a patient to ask their doctor the reasons behind taking it, the potential risks and alternative options.

LORRAINE KELLY reveals heartbreak of friend's sudden breast cancer diagnosis

LORRAINE KELLY: It would be fair to say I talk about breasts a lot. I’m not shy. Our boobs are part of us and it should be as easy to have conversations about how to keep them healthy as it is any other body part. But last April, the grave importance of having these discussions – which we do on my show regularly – really hit home when my friend and producer Helen Addis (left and centre during chemotherapy) was diagnosed with an aggressive form of breast cancer. A mother of three children, aged five, seven and nine, she never smoked, barely touched alcohol, and there was no history of cancer in her family. I hate to say it (Lorraine is pictured right), but I thought: why her? Helen simply says: ‘Why not me?’ Her campaign, Change And Check, will see stickers (inset) put on mirrors in women’s changing rooms, in shops and gyms across the country. The stickers show a range of images that highlight the red flags for breast cancer.

DR MAX THE MIND DOCTOR: Scott Mitchell, husband of Barbara Windsor, spoke movingly this week of the difficulties of living with someone in the throes of dementia.

Products made by Kiehl’s, Origins, e.l.f and Burt’s Bees all appear to still promise to deal with spots or acne. The Advertising Standards Authority banned product adverts claiming to target spots.

Is your fitness tracker LYING to you?

The research from the consumer watchdog Which? comes as the UK prepares for the London Marathon this weekend and found the Garmin's Vivosmart 4 (top right) was named the least reliable and clocked the marathon distance of 26.2 miles only when runners would have in fact run 37 miles. Meanwhile, the Garmin Vivoactive 3 (centre) was 100 per cent accurate at tracking running distance. Samsung's Gear S2 (bottom left) was also found to miscalculate the distance according to the research, saying the wearer had reached marathon distance only after they had run 36.2 miles. The Misfit Ray, Xiaomi Amazfit Bip, Fitbit Zip and Polar A370 were all also named as devices which carried runners past the 30-mile mark in testing. Huawei's Watch 2 Sport (top left) left runners short of a full marathon, the research claimed, telling the wearer they had reached the milestone after only 18.9 miles. The Apple Watch Series 3 (bottom right) also said the target had been hit at 22.8 miles.

Teenager who broke his neck in a charity polar plunge defies the odds to walk again

Michael Wright, now 18, was 17 when he took part in Staten Island's annual challenge to raise money for the Special Olympics: jumping into icy cold water from a height.

Researchers at the University of North Georgia found 31 different types of bacteria and a yeast that can cause pneumonia, skin, heart, and blood infections and more in ball pits.

Washington University, St Louis, researchers found that a hormone 'fragment' can throw off nine of the top 11 urine pregnancy tests used by hospitals, causing them to return false negatives.

Researchers in Sweden tracked the lifestyle habits of more than 5,000 people from 1998 to 2010. They found the people with the best mental health drank up to 14 units a week - the equivalent of 10 pints.

Physiotherapist and a professor at McGill University, Claudia Brown, says she sees patients all the time with issues that seem mysterious but really they stem to the pelvic floor.

Oklahoma grandfather who claims a drug for DOGS cured him of cancer is tumor-free

Joe Tippens (pictured left and right) was diagnosed with lung cancer that had spread throughout his body in 2017 and given three months to live. Joe didn't think he'd live long enough to see the birth of his first grandson Luke (right). He happened to make contact with a veterinarian who told him a bout fenbendazole, a dog de-worming drug that scientists had accidentally discovered might kill cancer cells. In addition to the clinical trial he was in, Joe started taking the dog drug. In May he got to meet his grandson, and less than three weeks later, Joe's PET scans were completely clear of cancer, and he credits the dog medication for making him an 'outlier' in the clinical trial. There's no way to know yet which drug made Joe's many tumors vanish, but he's working with medical researchers on a case study. The dog de-worming medication is not recommended by any health officials or doctors, nor has it been tested in clinical trials.

Donald Trump's statement on Friday is the first time he has actively endorsed vaccines without implying risk. It comes days after US health officials said this year's rate of measles is the highest since 2000.

Whether 'God' spontaneously appeared or was conjured by a hallucinogenic drug people who had intense religious experiences report mood improvements, a Johns Hopkins study says.

Woman undergoes radical treatment that can regenerate skin to treat her burn wounds

WARNING: GRAPHIC CONTENT Natasha Williams, 46, had 75 percent of her body burned in a house fire in January 2018. Doctors at Tampa General Hospital, in Florida, performed skin grafts, but there was not enough healthy skin to cover her burn wounds. One of her physicians recommended a new product, SkinTE, which regrows functional, full-thickness skin. Cells at the bottom of shafts of hair have stem-cell like properties that, when proliferated, can form new layers of skin. The product was applied to Williams's legs in February 2018 and she was discharged from the hospital in April 2018. Areas of her legs treated with the product now have blood vessels, sweat glands, some nerves, just like healthy skin. Pictured: Williams before the accident in December 2017, left, and after the accident, right.

Melissa Carmicle, of Laurel County, near the Tennesee border, was hospitalized in early March with an E. coli infection after eating beef bought from K2D, which has recalled infected meat.

A study by the University of Helsinki that followed 755 children over 27 years found those with tooth decay or gum disease were more likely to have a build-up of plaque in their arteries as adults.

Interactive map shows north-south divide of cancer patients in England

Figures from the Office for National Statistics showed people in London have the lowest rates of cancer overall, and prostate, breast and pancreatic cancers are more common in the south.

Some 47,000 men are diagnosed with prostate cancer in the UK each year of which 11,800 die. Until now academics knew of six genes linked to the cancer, but research has found 23.

George Monckton, from West Midlands, could be saved from lung deterioration by Orkambi. It is unavailable on the NHS due to a deadlock on a price deal with US manufacturers Vertex.

Five-year-old boy suffers from a condition so rare it does not even have a name

Charlie Parkes' parents first knew something was wrong when his mother Laura had a routine scan while pregnant. The youngster (pictured left as a baby), of Corby, Northamptonshire, is one of the 6,000 children born every year in the UK with SWAN - Syndrome Without A Name - which is thought to occur due to genetic abnormalities. The mysterious condition forced the now-five-year-old to spend the first two years of his life in hospital, with him now battling bowel problems, anxiety, autism and allergies to name a few. After being told he would never walk or talk, Charlie now attends a mainstream school.

Ruby Smith's parents, from Bedford, are fundraising for a cot made of teething-safe plastic so she won’t be able to eat her way through it. Ruby has the eating disorder pica.

A group of eight young males had an extra 1,000 calories for either five or 28 days in a study by Deakin University in Australia. Researchers measured their weight before and after.

Ruby Shallom 'paralysed from HPV vaccine' needs £10k mental health therapy

Ruby Shallom, from Bracknell, had the HPV vaccine five years ago (pictured left, before aged 12) and later developed the functional neurological disorder. She gradually lost feeling in her whole body and had become paralysed by 2016 - where she was wheelchair-bound and couldn't move anything but her left arm (pictured inset in hospital, and right, recently). She received NHS treatment as her depression spiralled this year. Miss Shallom has been receiving private therapy costing £790 a night which parents Aron and Nicola Shallom fear is her last hope, but their funds have run out.

A report from the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, headquartered in Sweden, revealed the UK's rate of gonorrhoea per person is three times the European average.

Woman, 21, is branded contagious for her skin condition that causes hives all over her

Shauna Campbell (pictured right), 21, from Dublin, Ireland, has chronic idiopathic urticaria, a skin condition which often has no known cause. For the past five months, Miss Campbell has been constantly suffering with hives, and on her worst days, her face and lips swell up, too. She first saw symptoms two years ago, but over time, the patches worsened and became more recurrent, developing into large ring-shaped welts that are burning and itchy (see right, her legs, and inset, her arm). She claims strangers, who regularly comment on how 'horrible' it looks, have wrongly assumed she has 'ring worm' and a 'contagious disease'.

Jair Bolsonaro, a former army captain, called the figure 'ridiculous and sad' in a press conference in Brasilia after visiting the Education Ministry.

A study by McMaster University in Canada shows that compared with avoiding peanuts, attempts to desensitize children in the 'real world' promote allergic reactions.

From completely clear to white and sticky or even PINK: What your vaginal discharge means

Dr Kathryn Basford, a GP in London from online pharmacy Zava, told MailOnline: 'Every woman and their body is different.' She explained what the different colours of discharge may mean. While a white discharge is healthy in most cases, if it is cloudy and thick it could be a yeast infection, usually paired with swelling, itching, and painful sex if it is thrush. Yeast infections, which also include bacterial vaginosis, characterised by a grey, fishy smelling discharge, are very common in women. A green or yellow discharge with either a fishy or bad odour are the first signs of an STI. Red discharge, although predominately blood from menstruation, can be a sign of infections or even cancer when other symptoms are present, too.

A study by Johns Hopkins University found that of 54 patients who were diagnosed with schizophrenia, just 26 were still found to have it when checked over by a specialist.

Researchers quizzed women in the UK who said they found men to be 'perverse'. Their findings echo comments from pop star and gym-goer Ellie Goulding in 2015.

Mother, 19, who was diagnosed with untreatable brain cancer months before giving birth

A 19-year-old who was diagnosed with an incurable brain tumor months before giving birth has died after more than a year of battling to find a cure.   Dana Scatton, of Pennsylvania, was seven months pregnant in December 2017 when a brain scan revealed she had diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG). It is one of the most devastating cancers, which affects 300 children a year, most of whom are under 10 years old. No one has survived with DIPG for longer than 18 months, and it does not respond to any treatment. 

Mike Walton pricked himself with a hook while fishing off the coast of Florida. The minor injury soon turned into a swollen, black hand that Mike almost lost to a flesh-eating bacteria infection.

Girl, six, had toes and fingers amputated after a candle fire burned 70% of her body

A candle in a downstairs neighbor's apartment set fire to their couch - and then the Musgroves' Indiana apartment. Six-year-old Kenzie (pictured) was trapped and sustained burns to most of her body in December. Her injuries were so extensive that the little girl spent four months in the hospital (right), underwent six surgeries and lost all of her hair and half of her fingers and toes. At last, Kenzie is on the mend, but her mother says the little girl's life is 'altered forever' by a careless mistake and burning candle.

The nonprofit drug rehab, Cenikor sends clients to do 'work therapy' unpaid at more than 300 companies. Patients have been injured and killed on 'jobs' but never paid, a Reveal investigation found.

One in nine pregnant women drink, and four percent binge-drink. It is a slight increase from 2013, when one in 10 women had alcohol while pregnant and three percent admitted to binge-drinking.

Woman with excruciating swelling condition becomes a marathon runner and competitive

Alison Mahoney, now 32, was diagnosed with lymphedema praecox at 17. The condition caused her left leg to swell up so much that she was unable to get her foot into a shoe and made her feel uncomfortable to walk. For years she would try to hide her leg and compression wraps, which made her feel miserable and self-conscious. But one day she began wearing shorts with pride and took first place in a bikini bodybuilding competition (right).

Christina Burton, of Greater Manchester, paid £75 for a procedure at home but ended up in hospital. She believes the numbing cream started the swelling.

Ashley Schlick, 34, of Orlando, went for a regular top-up filler procedure last year. But over the next two days her lips became bruised and weeped pus. She had to pay $1,500 to have the fillers removed.

Australian scientists fed mice the same diet but stressed ones put weight on. A vicious cycle is created by high insulin levels which produce a molecule that drives cravings.

Scientists at the University of Manchester studied cultured cells and mice to analyze how the internal body clock (or, circadian rhythm) affects metabolism and digestion. They found it did have an impact.

Skater reveals she had a double hip replacement at 29 after people dismissed her limp as

Kaitlyn Sharpe (pictured left with her husband), now 32, had severe hip dysplasia, which occurs when the socket does not fully cover the ball portion of the upper thighbone. Mrs Sharpe, who represented Canada in a synchronised skating competition at 17, battled daily pain ever since her teens. It was not until an athletic therapist recommended she have an X-ray in 2015 that Mrs Sharpe, of Ontario, was finally diagnosed, with surgeons then breaking the devastating news that her only option was to have both hips replaced. The then 29-year-old had her right hip replaced in October 2016, with the left going under the knife the following May (implants pictured in the X-ray inset). She even required two bone grafts due to the extent of the damage. Despite the ordeal, Mrs Sharpe claims her energy levels have 'jumped up'. She is pictured right proudly showing off her scar.

Obese man, 35, who weighed 729lbs sheds HALF of his body weight

Cillas Givens, 35, lost a whopping 416lbs (188.7kg) when he realised he was at risk of losing his life and enjoying his step-daughters childhood. He traveled to meet Dr Younan Nowzaradan in Houston, Texas, with the help of firefighters lifting him. After losing weight he had surgery and was able to walk for the first time in years (pictured left, before, and right, after). He is set to marry Jessica (pictured together, inset).

The US's Food and Drug Administration will now allow doctors to prescribe an electrical nerve stimulating device for seven to 12-year-olds. It has also been tested for PTSD sufferers (pictured).

HerpAlert, a site that can offer a diagnosis from a photo and, if it's positive, send a prescription to the person's pharmacy, saw a spike in diagnoses in Indio, California, in the last month.

Doctors fighting to save the lives of Ebola sufferers are threatening to STRIKE

This comes after a senior epidemiologist was killed last week while working to fight Ebola for the World Health Organization in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). Health workers are pictured left marching in the city of Butembo yesterday in protest of the fatality. Armed militiamen reportedly believe Ebola is a conspiracy against them and have repeatedly attacked health workers who are trying to fight the DRC's second deadliest outbreak ever. Doctors in the midst of the outbreak, which has left 885 feared dead (seen right) and 1,367 infected since it was declared in August, are calling for authorities to do more to protect them.

Matt Hancock will speak today at the Royal College of Physicians' annual conference in Manchester and say the NHS should have more flexible working and more women in senior roles.

Simon Neale, who worked for what is now British American Tobacco, said he became a heavy smoker after being given freebies at work and at times had 30,000 cigarettes in his car.

Boy who went into sudden cardiac arrest clings to life after 4 open heart surgeries in 4

Jace Curd, eight (left and right, with his mom in the hospital), from Pell City, Alabama, was born with several heart defects including a hole in his heart and a defective valve that lets blood flow. He had four open heart surgeries before age four and has had a pacemaker replaced four times. Jace's condition was stable for several years until March 15, when he collapsed while playing video games. He was rushed to the hospital, where doctors determined he'd gone into sudden cardiac arrest, an electrical problem that causes the heart to stop beating. Because he was without oxygenated blood for up to 20 minutes, he's suffered brain damage that surgeons believe is permanent.

More than half a million fragility fractures - where a fracture occurs from a fall at standing height or less - happen each year in the UK. The new study comes from the universities of Durham and Newcastle.

Experts at Tulane University believe long-term use of the drugs wipes out healthy gut bacteria - creating an imbalance that increases inflammation and narrows blood vessels.

Do not put garlic in your vagina for yeast infections, gynaecologist urges women

Dr Jen Gunter, based in California, went on a twitter rant about the old wives tale that recommends putting a clove inside the vagina to treat yeast infections. There are no studies to support it’s antifungal properties – apart from in a lab – and could be a serious risk for further infections, Dr Gunter said.

A new invention from Boston Children's Hospital successfully drove itself to the heart valves of pigs that needed to be fixed, moving just as quickly and accurately as human surgeons, study reveals.

A new study from the University of South Florida has found that losing 16 minutes of sleep was associated with poor judgement, getting easily distracted and a less productive work day.

A California-based startup is gearing up to launch the world's first-ever breathalyzer capable of detecting both marijuana and alcohol in the field, but skeptics say the tool has some serious flaws.

Researchers from the University of California tested on five volunteers who have electrodes already in their brain as a treatment for epilepsy and found the technology worked.

Epileptic mother passes on top of her curling tongs during seizure

Brittney Sullivan (pictured left, before her accident), from Cleburne, Texas, was found by her eight-year-old daughter after she collapsed in the bathroom in January last year. She spent 12 weeks in hospital recovering (pictured inset, most of the left side of her face was badly burned and needed to be replaced with skin grafts). Although her eyelids were destroyed by the burns Mrs Sullivan, 32, can still see out of her left eye. Pictured right, the mother-of-three now runs a support group encouraging others to focus on inner beauty.

Following massive recalls of valsartan blood pressure drugs, thousands of lawsuits claiming it gave patients cancer have been filed against the Chinese manufacturer at fault, Bloomberg reported.

While US health officials have not identified one sole source, K2D Foods has issued a voluntary recall of their products, which were shipped to Georgia and Florida.

Amiyah Evans, from Clinton, Mississippi, had eaten a burger on Friday night. The next morning, she woke up with a slightly swollen lip - which soon swelled.

Eating high-calorie foods brings us pleasure, and the brain's emotional center tells us to load up on these fatty snacks, leading to overeating, according to a University of North Caroloina study.

Meghan Markle's facialist and make-up artist reveals the secrets on how to tackle a spot

Meghan Markle's facialist Sarah Chapman, from London (pictured right) and US-based makeup artist Daniel Martin have combined their expert knowledge to reveal how to tackle a surprise spot. Their top tips include massaging the area to help reduce inflammation and to add an eyeshadow primer before attempting to conceal the blemish with makeup. Sarah was responsible for the Duchess' pre-wedding skin while Daniel helped to create her flawless natural glow. Pictured left, Meghan on her wedding day to Price Harry.

Harley Street hypnotherapist reveals her step-by-step guide to THINKING yourself slim

Neesha Sonii (right), a Harley Street hypnotherapist, explains why people get emotional cravings and gives her how-to guide on how to get to the root of the problem in order to lose weight. She recommends her patients to take deep breaths and visualise how they would look at their ideal weight. She says emotional cravings are hard to shake, but with the right treatment, they can be left behind (left).

New CDC figures reveal 681 people in 22 states have been diagnosed this year, outpacing the 667 people diagnosed in the whole of 2014.

Now 390 people in New York City have contracted measles, all but one of them live in four Brooklyn ZIP codes. Officials have issued court summonses to 12 people who have refused to vaccinate.

The number of Americans living in counties with highly polluted air has increased by seven million between 2016 and 2017, a new American Lung Association report revealed.

The investigation was prompted by a nationwide listeria outbreak linked to ice cream in 2015 killed three people and hospitalized 10.

The 74-year-old said his symptoms began in his late 60s, when he started struggling to focus, forgetting things, suffering from writers block, and lashing out at the smallest things.

When the app Sea Hero Quest was put to the test, a study by University College London and the University of East Anglia found it picks out players who are genetically at risk of Alzheimer's.

Bride-to-be, 29, was told she had cancer just three months before her dream wedding

When Louise Smith was told she had cancer, she feared her dream wedding would have to be postponed. But the 29-year-old still went ahead with her big day - despite only being halfway through her chemotherapy. And she even travelled to Asia five days after being told she was cancer-free for her honeymoon with husband Oli, 31. Mrs Smith, a personal assistant, had been planning her wedding to her boyfriend of seven years for many months. When she started to get a sore throat and swollen tonsils in July 2018, she assumed it was just a cough and sought advice from her GP. She was diagnosed with Non-Hodgkin lymphoma in August.

Global health chiefs said spending too much time looking at screens could lead to obesity or slower development. But one in five UK toddlers have their own tablet, according to Ofcom research.

A study by Tilburg University in the Netherlands found participants who were happy in their marriage were less likely to die within an eight-year period.

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