
What are your questions about lowering blood pressure and the latest advice about how to do it?
Follow
Recently updated blood pressure guidelines from the American Heart Association and the American College of Cardiology make some new recommendations around prevention and treatment. What are the risks from high blood pressure? How do you know if you need to make changes and what can you do to get your numbers to a healthier level?
Share your questions with CNN below.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Associated Press
3 minutes ago
- Associated Press
Federal officials to take over inspections when troubled Boar's Head plant reopens
Federal inspectors will assume direct oversight of a troubled Boar's Head deli meat plant when it reopens after last year's deadly listeria outbreak, U.S. Agriculture Department officials said. The Jarratt, Virginia, factory is set to resume operations in the coming months. It will face at least 90 days of heightened monitoring and inspections by federal Food Safety and Inspection Service officials. Previously, inspections were conducted by state officials who operated on behalf of the agency. The change aims to 'ensure the establishment consistently and effectively implements its corrected food safety plans,' USDA officials said in a statement. It calls for stricter enforcement if lapses occur. The plant was shuttered nearly a year ago when listeria-tainted liverwurst caused the outbreak that killed 10 people, sickened dozens and forced a recall of more than 7 million pounds of deli products. USDA officials lifted the plant's suspension in July. In the years before the outbreak, state inspectors documented numerous problems at the plant, including mold, insects, liquid dripping from ceilings and meat and fat residue on walls, floors and equipment, records showed. They were operating under a cooperative agreement, the Talmadge-Aiken program, that allows state inspectors to conduct federal inspections. The shift to direct federal oversight underscores the severity of the problems at the Boar's Head plant, said Sandra Eskin, a former USDA official who now heads STOP Foodborne Illness, a consumer advocacy group. It raises concerns about communication between state and federal officials when problems occur, she added. 'Given its history, it's particularly important that there be robust oversight of that plant,' Eskin said. Boar's Head officials said in a statement that they have worked with state and federal regulators 'to ensure the successful and safe reopening of the Jarratt facility.' The company said it has boosted food safety practices in Jarratt and other sites aimed at reducing or eliminating listeria in finished products. The company has declined to comment on documents obtained by The Associated Press that showed that sanitation problems persist at other Boar's Head sites in three states. Between January and July, inspectors in Arkansas, Indiana and a second site in Virginia reported problems that include instances of meat and fat residue left on equipment and walls, drains blocked with meat products, beaded condensation on ceilings and floors, overflowing trash cans and staff who didn't wear protective hairnets and plastic aprons or wash their hands. Officials at the 120-year-old company based in Sarasota, Florida, hired a chief food safety officer in May. It also brought in a panel of experts, including Mindy Brashears, a food safety expert nominated by President Donald Trump for a second term as the USDA's undersecretary for food safety. Brashears, who now directs a food safety center at Texas Tech University, did not respond to requests for comment about Boar's Head. An automatic email reply said she was traveling out of the country until next week. ___ The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute's Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
Yahoo
30 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Acorn Health Names Mony Iyer CEO
CORAL GABLES, Fla., August 21, 2025--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Acorn Health, a leading national provider of applied behavior analysis (ABA) therapy for children diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), announces Mony Iyer as its new president and chief executive officer, effective Sept. 15, 2025. "We are delighted to welcome Mony to Acorn Health," said Imran Siddiqui, a member of Acorn Health's board of directors and managing director of Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan. "A nationally recognized business leader, he brings the unique combination of championing culture and inspiring teams while scaling organizations with purpose. We are excited to support him as he leads Acorn Health into its next stage of growth and impact." Iyer has more than 20 years of experience leading large, mission-driven organizations. Most recently, he served as president of Banfield Pet Hospital, one of the largest veterinary companies in the US. Prior to that he was vice president of specialty healthcare services for Walmart, president of OneSight and vice president for Luxottica Group. "What drew me to Acorn Health is its clear mission and strong culture of care," said Iyer. "Over the course of my career, I have experienced how empowering teams and clinicians leads to better outcomes for those we serve. I am eager to build on that foundation by investing in and strengthening our teams that provide such critical care to our clients, expanding access for families, and ensuring that Acorn continues to grow in a way that reflects its values." Iyer holds a bachelor's degree in electronics and communication engineering from The University of Madras, a master's degree in electrical engineering, and an MBA from Duke University. Rich Hallworth, who has led Acorn Health since 2023, will retire from the CEO role and continue to serve as an active member of Acorn Health's board of directors. "It has been a privilege to lead Acorn Health and to work alongside such a talented team," Hallworth said. "As I transition into retirement, I am pleased to remain an active member of the board and continue supporting the organization's mission. I have full confidence in Mony's leadership and in the team's ability to carry Acorn forward." About Acorn Health: Acorn Health is accredited by the Autism Commission on Quality and offers both center-based and in-home services nationwide in more than 70 centers located throughout Florida, Illinois, Maryland, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, and Virginia. Founded in 2018, Acorn is committed to providing industry-leading quality clinical care through applied behavioral analysis (ABA) therapy to give children diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) the opportunity to live more independent and meaningful lives. Cases of ASD are on the rise; according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, one in 31 children is living with ASD. ABA therapy, a program endorsed by the U.S. Surgeon General, provides individualized plans for each patient based on agreed upon clear, measurable goals with the child's family. Acorn Health uses its proprietary Behavioral Health Index to measure success in ways that are easily understood by families, clinicians and educators. To learn more about Acorn Health, visit and to learn about career opportunities, visit To inquire about ABA therapy at Acorn Health, please call 844.244.1818. Follow us at and View source version on Contacts Media contact: Lynne Blasi, 703.582.3973, lynne@ Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


CBS News
31 minutes ago
- CBS News
Woman charged with murder after using abortion pill details claims against D.A., sheriff
A South Texas woman who was arrested on murder charges in 2022 after using medication to terminate her pregnancy has alleged new details about her case against a local sheriff and prosecutors, claiming they violated her constitutional rights. Her Aug. 12 court filing comes as the debate over medicated abortion is heating up in Texas, with Attorney General Ken Paxton announcing a new effort to prevent the abortion pill from being mailed into Texas. "These abortion drug organizations and radical activists are not above the law, and I have ordered the immediate end of this unlawful conduct," Paxton said Wednesday. The case of Lizelle Gonzalez was among the first to expose the complexities of criminalizing the use of medication to end a pregnancy. Starr County, located on the southern Texas border, launched an investigation into Gonzalez after hospital staff reported to law enforcement that she had taken medication to induce an abortion when she was 19 weeks pregnant. Three months later, she was indicted and arrested. Gonzalez spent three days in jail before her $500,000 bond was posted, and the charges were ultimately dropped. While Texas has one of the strictest abortion bans in the country, it's not a crime for a woman to obtain or seek abortion care for herself. The state's restrictions on abortion target physicians and those who aid a woman in obtaining or seeking an abortion, whether it's surgical or induced by use of abortion drugs like mifepristone and misoprostol. According to new filings in the lawsuit made last week, District Attorney Gocha Ramirez dropped the charges against Gonzalez after public outcry over Gonzalez's arrest. Included in an exhibit in the lawsuit was a text Ramirez wrote to his son, in which he admitted he'd made a mistake and even called Gonzalez to apologize, stating he "didn't know what happened." In the most detailed account to date of the events surrounding Gonzalez's arrest, her attorneys laid out in the 70-page lawsuit the events that they say led the Starr County district attorney, the assistant D.A. and the sheriff to pursue a case against her, even though records suggest prosecutors knew her actions did not violate state law. "They should have known from the very beginning that the conduct that they were investigating was not going to ever equal probable cause for homicide," said Lauren Johnson, director of the Abortion Criminal Defense Initiative at the American Civil Liberties Union. "The penal code is very clear that a pregnant person cannot be charged with — cannot be guilty of a crime, of a homicide, for ending a pregnancy themselves." According to the original complaint filed in March 2024, Gonzalez says she went to an emergency room in January 2022 after taking misoprostol, an abortion-inducing medication. Less than an hour after she was discharged, she returned to the hospital with complaints of abdominal pain and vaginal bleeding. After an exam detected no fetal cardiac activity, doctors performed a cesarean section to deliver a stillborn fetus. After the procedure, a nurse at the hospital called 911 and reported the procedure to local police, who then contacted the Starr County Sheriff's Office. The nurse later said the hospital's administrators directed her to report the incident "because, she said, abortions could now be considered murder due to a 'change in the law,'" according to the complaint. "It is not an overstatement to say that Lizelle's life was entirely upended by what happened to her," said Johnson, who is representing Gonzalez in the lawsuit. "She wanted to live her life and didn't want to be criminalized and have her mugshot in her local community. And have something that should have been a very personal decision be something that was made public." In July, the Southern District Court of Texas denied Starr County officials' attempts to have the lawsuit dismissed after the prosecutors and sheriff raised claims of absolute and qualified immunity, respectively. The immunity doctrine has been developed by the courts to restrict legal liability of government officials, such as law enforcement, judges and prosecutors. Absolute immunity applies a complete shield from legal action regardless of the legality or constitutionality of the official's actions. Qualified immunity however can not shield a government actor, like law enforcement, if they violate "clearly established" statutory or constitutional rights. However, the court filings allege that all three county officials named in the suit — Ramirez, first assistant prosecutor Alexandria Barrera and Sheriff Rene Fuentes — violated "clearly established" constitutional rights when they pursued a murder charge and arrest for an action the law clearly states is not a crime. And they allege that the prosecutors acted outside of their prosecutorial capacity by directing the investigation and providing legal advice to drive the indictment — which Gonzalez argues would exempt them from any immunity. The A.C.L.U. says the hundreds of pages of evidence it has gathered contradict the claim by county officials that they didn't know that it was not lawful to pursue a murder charge against Gonzalez. In a sworn deposition, an investigator with the sheriff's office testified that she wasn't ready to charge Gonzalez with murder but was instructed to do so by Barrera. "No practices have been put in place or conduct changed to prevent something like this from happening or being done differently in the future," says Johnson. "I think that part has been especially alarming and really does highlight the need for ways to shine a light on this conduct and also really force elected officials to follow the law when they're using the immense power that they have." The Starr County District Attorney's office has not yet responded to a request for comment. This story was reported by CBS News and the Center for Investigative Reporting.