Groundbreaking medical treatments; mysteries of fundamental biology; the impacts of health policy upheavals. Live Science covered all these topics and more in 2025 — and you can catch up on some of our best Health channel long-reads from the year below. The following list includes interviews, book excerpts and news analyses, as well as entries from our Science Spotlight series, which highlights how science is transforming the world as we know it.

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Maria Branyas Morera, once the world’s oldest woman, died in 2024 at age 117. Live Science took a deep look at a study that examined Branyas’ biology and uncovered key traits that may have protected her from disease in old age. Could lessons from the study help others lead longer, healthier lives?

Jim Al-Khalili discussed what he learned from shooting the new BBC show “Horizon: Secrets of the Brain,” which tells the story of how the human brain evolved. And in a book excerpt and interview with Live Science, neuroscientist Nikolay Kukushkin described the evolutionary forces he believes were key to the formation of the human brain and consciousness as we know it.

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We investigated experts’ concerns and hopes for future regulation of the research.

described emerging mRNA technologies and their wobbly status under the second Trump administration.

We looked at what may be driving this pattern, from underlying cancer triggers to better techniques for early detection.

existing research on sex differences in the brain, finding the results murkier than one might expect. Headlines often proclaim that male and female brains are “wired differently,” and that may be true in some subtle ways. But the biological consequences of those differences remain unclear, even to experts in the field.

analysis probed this dual-use problem and what can be done to safeguard our biosecurity.

Dr. Seth Berkley explained how he and other health leaders orchestrated a massive vaccine rollout to poor countries during the COVID-19 pandemic, so that the shots wouldn’t exclusively be hoarded by wealthy nations. Live Science also spoke with Berkley about the lessons learned from the pandemic and the ongoing fight for vaccine equity.

predicted and devastating effects that the loss of USAID will likely have on HIV care worldwide. And in an interview with author John Green, who published a book on tuberculosis (TB) this year, we explored what the cuts could mean for TB patients.

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Our analysis broke down what we know and what we don’t about microplastics in the brain.

We explored the details of the man’s case, digging into his genetic profile and the broader lessons it could teach scientists about dementia.

We examined this finding and what it can tell us about the profound impact of weight stigma on people’s health and well-being.

how we got here and what’s at stake. And in an opinion piece, several experts called out the anti-vaccine movement that drove down measles vaccination rates — a movement that health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has been spearheading for years.

Nafis Hasan argued that the United States has been employing the wrong strategies to fight cancer for decades. While hyperfocusing on finding treatments for individuals with cancer, America has largely ignored population-level strategies that could help drive down cancer rates and cancer deaths across the board, he argued.

Lawrence Goldstein dispelled widespread myths and misinformation about this type of research.

Michael Osterholm predicts that the next pandemic could be even worse than COVID-19. In a book excerpt and interview with Live Science, Osterholm described the lessons we should have taken away from the coronavirus pandemic, and how recent changes in U.S. policy may have destroyed our capacity to handle serious outbreaks.

hyponatremia may be on the rise. The condition causes a dramatic decline in sodium in the body, which can potentially cause seizures, coma and death. A Live Science exclusive looked at the emerging trend.

China were working on a “pregnancy robot” that could gestate a human baby from conception to birth. It turns out that the story was complete fiction — but, in theory, could such a technology be realized? Experts weighed in on the sci-fi-sounding idea and discussed whether, eventually, it could be feasible to build a bona fide pregnancy robot.