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Updated: 09:19 EDT
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Steph Hammerman, 29, from Knightdale, North Carolina, was diagnosed with cerebral palsy at birth. Her parents were told that she would likely never walk, talk, read, or write. Hammerman currently gets around in a wheelchair and with crutches (left), and became certified in CrossFit in 2014. She was diagnosed with Hodgkin's lymphoma, a cancer of the lymphatic system in May 2016. After 29 weeks of chemotherapy, she was declared to be cancer-free. In September 2018, Hammerman opened her own gym, Hammer Driven Fitness (right and inset). Last year, she was also asked by Nike to become one of their sponsored athletes.

Health minister apologises after 27 baby deaths at two Welsh NHS maternity units

An investigation into maternity units at Cwm Taf University Health Board, which has two hospitals in South Wales, raised 'significant concerns'. Monique Aziz (see left), from Coed-Ely, Rhondda Cynon Taff, is demanding answers after her baby son died days after leaving hospital. Pictured right, Ms Aziz during pregnancy.

Two juries have sided against Monsanto, the maker of Roundup, after deciding there was enough evidence that glyphosate is carcinogenic. But on Tuesday, the EPA took the opposite view.

Max Johnson (pictured), 11, of Winsford, Cheshire, inspired the UK's law change after his life was saved when nine-year-old donor Keira Ball donated her heart following her death in 2017.

Student, 19, reveals how a SNEEZE caused her to snap a metal rod in her spine

Rosie Paltridge, 19, had sections of her vertebrae fused together on June 4 2015 after suffering from scoliosis that left her in a back brace since she was just 12 years old. Doctors inserted three rods to realign her backbone, which was curved in three different places by 17°, 63° and 42°. With the operation seemingly going to plan, Miss Paltridge's pain returned since six months later. In June 2016 she was diagnosed with a staphylococcus infection, which is thought to have come from the 'metal hardware'. Thinking the worst was over, Miss Paltridge (pictured top inset after the ordeal) was horrified when she heard a loud 'crack' while sneezing in March 2017, with one of her remaining rods snapping. Miss Paltridge, of Rocklin, California, is pictured right under anaesthesia for one of three PICC lines that administered antibiotics into her bloodstream and left showing off the scars of her operations. The bottom X-ray inset shows the extent of her curved spine on the left and how spinal fusion initially helped to realign her backbone on the right.

Anna Minty, 30, from Cardiff,  appeared on This Morning on Wednesday to conquer her unusual fear of statues, which she said started when she was just eight-years-old.

The little blue pill, used to treat erectile dysfunction, was found to slow and even reverse the progression of the condition in sheep in a study at the University of Manchester.

Toddler diagnosed with rare disorder after his mother noticed stroke symtpoms in a photo

Chloe Storer, 34, was shocked when she noticed that her face of her son Jake Meikle, now 16-months-old, was drooping on the right side (pictured right, the photo, and left, the two together recently). Jake had already been back and forth to hospital appointments having genetic testing since birth after he was born five weeks prematurely. Jake was diagnosed with micro duplication 1q21.1, which is so rare that only 200 people are diagnosed with worldwide, according to a charity database. Medics are still trying to understand how Jake will be affected, but it can cause facial paralysis, learning difficulties, heart conditions and hearing loss.

Researchers, who presented their findings at the European Congress on Obesity in Glasgow, found that obesity directly accounts for about four million deaths globally in a year.

People in Bangladesh eat the most rice, consuming 473g each day on average. In comparison, people in Tunisia eat the least, having a daily amount of just 2.59g.

Analysis of 2016 data, led by King's College London, found 46 per cent of adults were suffering food insecurity compared to 28 per cent in 2004. Researchers said it is likely to be many more.

Indiana parents receive $142,000 bill after their daughter was bitten on the toe by a

Oakley Yoder, 10 (with her parents, left and right), from Bloomington, Indiana, was bitten on the toe by a copperhead snake during summer camp in July 2018. She was airlifted to St Vincent Evansville, where she was given four vials of antivenom, and then transferred to Riley Children's Hospital for observation. Her parents received medical bills for Oakley's care that totaled $142,938. Bills included more than $55,500 charged for the air ambulance (inset) and $67,000 for the vials of antivenom. The family's insurance company negotiated the bills down and paid $107,800, and Oakley's parents didn't have to pay any out-of-pocket costs.

Teen suicides spiked 30% after the first season of 13 Reasons Why

The third season of the show, executive-produced by Selena Gomez, is currently in production. The team defended the show but Netflix said they are looking into the new research.

Water safety is assessed by federal officials based on individual chemicals. The Environmental Working Group estimates water toxins in California account for 15,000 cases of caner in 70 years.

A new study found that after actor Robin Williams committed suicide in August 2014, there was a 225% spike in calls to the Suicide Prevention Lifeline, but a quarter fewer were answered.

Over-consumption of the kind of protein found in many shakes and supplements blocks tryptophan, leading to mood changes, weight gain and shorter lives, an Australian study suggests.

Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania discovered that disruptions to regular sleep patterns might turn off genes that fight tumor growth and turn on ones that fuel cancer cell multiplication.

The discovery of LATE disease by Kentucky researchers sheds light on why scientists have struggled to find a cure for the disease. LATE and Alzheimer's would need very different treatments.

Woman, 33, reveals how she lost 70 per cent of her hair after switching contraceptive pill

A 33-year-old woman from Brisbane has revealed how a simple switch of her contraceptive pill triggered the loss of 70 per cent of her hair. Kellie Scott lives with androgenic alopecia - an incurable form of female pattern hair loss that causes extreme thinning mainly around the hair's natural parting (left, now with clip-in extensions, centre, before hair loss, and right, after hair loss). Kellie revealed to FEMAIL how losing her hair felt as though she had 'lost part of my identity', before she 'took control' of her hair loss and started wearing hair pieces to help re-instill self-confidence. 'I found it really hard,' Kellie told Daily Mail Australia. 'As women, we're told men prefer long hair. I am not only battling with hair loss, but the stigma of being a woman and losing my hair.'

A study into the causes of polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), which affects one in 10 women of childbearing age, found DNA containing high levels of testosterone plays a key role in the condition.

Researchers from the University of Chicago worry parents' lack of knowledge around inhalers or their failure to supervise the medicine's use may be to blame for their children's poor technique.

New Mexico Health officials are urging anyone who had any kind of cosmetic injection at VIP Spa in Albuquerque to get tested for HIV after two clients developed the same strain of the virus.

A new study from the University of Iowa found that rates of e-cigarette use among pregnant women and non-pregnant women were the same at 3.6 percent and 3.3 percent, respectively.

Woman who called herself 'clumsy' discovers she has a genetic disorder that makes her trip

Kelly Barendt, 26 (left and right), from Strongsville, Ohio, referred to herself as clumsy for years. She struggled to walk while carrying a drink and held onto railings for fear of falling. At age 18, her primary care physician referred her to a neurologist, who diagnosed Barendt with Friedreich's Ataxia. FA is a rare genetic disease that affects the nervous system and causes a progressive loss of movement. Barendt uses a walker and a wheelchair to get around and has begun a blog to raise awareness of the disease.

'Our community failed us': Mother of infant boy who got measles slams anti-vaxxers

Sara Blum (pictured) blames low vaccination rates among her California community for allowing her son, Walter, to be exposed to and sickened by measles when he was just shy of five months old - too young for the measles shot. If enough members of a population are vaccinated - between 90 and 95 percent - those too sick or too young, like Walter, should be protected by 'herd immunity,' but that was not the case for Walter, who has since recovered.

The Democratic Republic of Congo saw 126 new cases of Ebola last week. This is the biggest jump in incidents since the outbreak was declared in August, beating the past record of 110 new cases.

US District Judge Robert Scola of Miami, Florida, recused himself from the lawsuit Richard Cole filed against UnitedHeatlhcare after they denied coverage for proton beam therapy to treat his prostate cancer.

Woman who can't close her eyes or mouth after doctors accidentally 'scooped out' her

Hannah Vaughn Setzer, 28, of Virginia (pictured, right, with her husband), can't close her eyes or shut her mouth - after doctors accidentally 'scooped out' her facial nerves as a baby - is the subject of stares, taunts and sneers. But she insists she is willing to take it all if her exposure means more people are aware of disabilities like hers. She was born with cystic hygroma, a condition where multiple cysts grow - which has left her with 'literally thousands' of them in her head and neck. During one of her many surgeries after birth, she claims doctors were scooping handfuls of cysts out of her head when they accidentally removed some of her facial nerves - leaving her unable to smile.

Researchers from the University of Bristol have compared the rates at which different types of hip and knee replacements need repairing or replacing within the 10 years following their surgery.

Medical student looks at his own SPERM under a microscope and films fascinating close-ups on his iPhone

Martin Kristiansen shot the footage of his semen, magnified up to 1,000 times, to give an insight into the world of reproductive cells. His recording shows thousands of the tiny cells darting back and forth full of life. The biomedicine student at Aalborg University in Denmark is using the footage as part of a research project. Mr Kristiansen posted the video on his YouTube channel, My Microscopic World, alongside a series of similar videos showing wonders of micoorganisms in our every day life.

Childcare.co.uk, which has more than two million users across the UK, is offering the service. The brains behind the initiative worry mothers put off their smear test because they 'cannot find the time'.

Elaine Ruddick, from Milton Keynes, is in intensive care in a hospital in Santa Cruz on the holiday island battling pneumonia after she became ill while away with her husband.

Woman reveals she is considering a hysterectomy at just 22 to rid her of the extreme PMS

Charlotte Atkinson, of Greenwich, south east London, suffers with premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD) an ultra-severe form of premenstrual syndrome (PMS) which causes anxiety, depression and, at its worst, psychosis or suicidal thoughts. It's only become a recognised psychological condition within the past decade, and could be caused by genetics. Miss Atkinson has to put her life on hold every month after a diagnosis, and fears passing the condition on to her daughter. (See left, on a good day, and right, on a bad day).

Vaccination is the best protection against the measles, but some adults that got the shots decades ago may not actually be immune and need to get additional shots, experts warn amid outbreaks.

Measles cases have hit a new record with 704 cases in 22 states, the CDC revealed Monday. While the outbreak in Washington has been declared over, cases still surge in New York.

Toddler who swallowed a BATTERY meant for her father's watch spends a week in intensive

Abigayle Galle, now two, put the battery in her mouth on July 18. Her father Jeff Galle, 26, watched in horror as the then 15-month-old retched and screamed out in pain, with him being oblivious to what had just happened. The youngster (pictured left after the ordeal) was rushed to A&E;, where an X-ray revealed she had swallowed a circular object (seen bottom right), which doctors initially believed to be a coin. After it was discovered to be a battery, Abigayle spent two-and-a-half weeks on a feeding tube (seen top right). Now home, she still suffers from breathing and digestive difficulties.

The potential problems are being attributed to progestin — a synthetic form of progesterone — which is used in hormonal coils, including leading brands Mirena and Levosert.

Measles is NOT a minor childhood illness – it robbed Nicky of her hearing

Nicky Jones, 35, from Holyhead, Wales, has been deaf since she was a baby after contracting measles. Here, she tells her compelling story as it's revealed half a million UK children did not receive their measles jab between 2010- 2017.

Researchers led by the University of Leicester have found testing people's genes to see if they're early or late risers by nature could influence the best time to give them radiotherapy.

A study by the University of Nottingham found no direct link between the consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages and a higher BMI in youngsters aged between four and ten.

Army mother-of-two who battled cancer while pregnant rings the bell on her last day of chemotherapy

Jessica Purcell, 36, of St Petersburg, Florida, was diagnosed with breast cancer in August 2018 when she was nine weeks pregnant. She had a mastectomy in October, when doctors discovered the cancer had spread to her lymph nodes. Purcell had to undergo chemotherapy, and she gave birth to her son in March 2019 (right), during round 12. She asked for breast milk donations because chemotherapy drugs interfere with the normal division of cells, which can harm a growing infant. Last week, after 16 rounds of chemotherapy, Purcell rang the bell at Moffitt Cancer Center that signified the end of her treatment (left)

John Pibworth, 77, a retired flooring contractor from Shropshire, believes infected compost was responsible for infecting his late wife, Ann, with aspergillosis.

The study, led by the National Institute of Health in Portugal and promoted by the World Health Organisation, looked at breastfeeding rates for up to 22 countries. The UK was not included.

Sport England quizzed almost 2,000 adults on whether they found it simple enough to complete certain actions, such as booking a taxi, holiday or fitness class, on the internet.

Scientists from the University of Glasgow warn this is 'potentially harmful' because 'social-media blogs can shape the thoughts and behaviours of "followers".'

SECRETS OF AN A-LIST BODY: How to get shoulders like Hollywood actress Brooke Shields

Brooke Shields works hard to maintain her physique and showed off her impressive shoulders recently. The 53-year-old actress works out with a personal trainer and practises inversion training — hanging upside down while exercising — which is said to strengthen muscles in the back and abdomen. ‘I’ll just hang there and then start doing a series of crunches and things like that,’ she has said.

Could you save a life in an emergency? Ex-Olympian Mick Carter was saved by a stranger who

The Mail has teamed up with experts at St John Ambulance to produce a series of guides on first aid, launching this Saturday with a handy 24-page booklet, and continuing next week with advice for babies and children, older people, holiday emergencies and when playing sport.

A blood test developed at Stanford University by a scientist whose son suffers chronic fatigue syndrome accurately separates out those who do and do not have the often dismissed disease.

In a world-first, University of Maryland doctors transplanted a kidney into a patient after the organ was flown by drone over two miles in 10 minutes. The team hopes all organs will soon travel this way.

The Royal College of GPs in the UK also wants the NHS to introduce technology that streamlines a patient's care by allowing medics to communicate within the health service.

Studying 30,000 people over five years, researchers at Michigan State University found everyone had gained weight but marijuana users piled on fewer pounds.

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

Michelle Oddy, 43, from Derbyshire, gave birth to her daughter, Kiera, via C-section ten years prior to when her health nightmare started in 2014. Mrs Oddy woke up one morning to find her insides bursting out of her scar which had been caused by a complication of her Crohn's disease. With multiple organ failure due to so many operations, a colostomy bag and feeding tubes constantly becoming infected, doctors are running out of options. The complex surgery comes with risks - there is a 35 per cent change Mrs Oddy will not wake up from the 20-hour operation (pictured left at her home with her colostomy bag, right in hospital when her weight dropped to four stone and inset, the hole in her stomach)

A new generation of teas brings extra health benefits, from boosting gut health to regulating blood sugar levels and even aiding weight loss. But do they live up to their claims?

Dakota Johnson, 19, had attended school from home since seventh grade because he had a severe form of muscular dystrophy, Duchenne.

North Carolina teen who hit her head in 2017 now wakes up every day with no memory of the

Caitlin Little, 16 (left and right), from Greensboro, North Carolina, was hit on the head during cross-country practice in October 2017. She was diagnosed with anterograde amnesia, which is the inability to create new memories after the event that caused amnesia. Her brain resets as she sleeps at night, causing her to forget her memories from the previous day. Doctors have been unable to find a cure, and Cailtin is now in Texas undergoing new treatment to help her regain her memory.

About three-quarters of Americans say being in shape is important - but only a third exercise regularly. An expert explains how finding the right motive and starting slow can help you start.

Even healthy people at the beginning of the study had a higher death risk if their sense of smell was impaired - suggesting the problem may flag up deteriorating health years before other problems.

Nick Ferrari reveals the procedure that resolved his lifelong battle with gynaecomastia

The journalist, from Sidcup, suffered poor body confidence issues since adolescence, but now he's a new man after a treatment froze fat to the point of cell death. After just two sessions, the problem he endured for decades was radically altered — and he's lost two to three inches around his chest.

50,000 men in the UK are diagnosed with prostate cancer annually, with more men now dying from it than women from breast cancer. Yet, we still mainly rely on a PSA blood test from 30 years ago.

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'.

Woman with cystic acne feared she was 'unlovable' due to scarred skin

Madeline Roberts, 24, from Tennessee, first developed cystic acne at the age of 14. The condition left her terrified of dating and feeling unworthy of love. It was only meeting now-husband Trevor that helped her learn to love herself (inset). Now, she posts barefaced selfies online to help encourage other women to embrace their skin

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'.

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.

Researchers led by Xi'an Jiaotong University in China scanned the brains of 40 teenagers and found there were more signs of brain damage in those whose mothers had drank while pregnant.

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.

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.

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