Upgrade your mattress topper during Memorial Day mattress sales to get up to 30% off
Fox News and its syndication partners may earn a commission if you buy through our referral links. This content was created by a team that works independently from the Fox newsroom.
Don't overlook the magic a mattress topper can bring to your sleeping situation. A mattress topper can enhance sleep comfort and protect your mattress. If your mattress feels too firm, a topper can add cushioning and make it feel softer and more comfortable, according to MattressOnline. Firm mattress toppers can turn an old, sagging mattress into something that feels brand new and radically more supportive.
For those struggling with back pain, mattress toppers can be a game-changer. They excel at relieving pressure points and improving spinal alignment. By distributing weight more evenly, they reduce pressure points and alleviate areas like hips, shoulders and back. With their cushioning and body-conforming properties, toppers can help maintain the spine in a neutral position, offering significant relief for back pain and arthritis sufferers.
With the Memorial Day sales in full swing at several mattress stores, now is the perfect time to invest in a topper. Here are 12 top-notch toppers that you should definitely consider:
Original price: $498.66
If you like soft beds, but your partner likes to sleep firm, this Helix Dual Comfort Mattress Topper with GlacioTex is the perfect solution. The topper features a soft and firm side so it delivers the best of both worlds, creating bedroom harmony. The softer side features a soft, contouring Copper Gel Memory Foam for additional pressure relief and cloud-like comfort. The firmer side features a firm high-density quick response foam for added spinal alignment and less sink into the surface of your mattress.
Original price: $498.66
Read On The Fox News App
Birch's Plush Organic Mattress Topper adds an extra layer of plush comfort and pressure relief to the surface of any mattress. This topper is made with organic cotton and latex and is free from polyurethane-based foams. Use this topper to maximize airflow for a cool night's sleep.
Original price: $299
The Leesa mattress topper will add comfort and support to your existing mattress and can help with pressure relief, and can potentially improve spinal alignment, depending on your individual needs and sleep preferences. This topper features a removable and washable cover for easy cleaning. It is crafted from foam that's breathable and suitable for a variety of body types and sleeping positions.
Original price: $252.84
Brooklyn Beddings four pound Memory Foam Topper is made of high-density memory foam and offers multiple cover and profile options. It is a great topper for relieving pressure on key areas like the shoulders and hips, particularly for side sleepers.
Saatva's graphite memory foam mattress topper has a three-inch layer of memory foam infused with cooling graphite. The temperature-regulating graphite and organic cotton cover make it a great topper for hot sleepers seeking relief. The graphite helps dissipate body heat, while the organic cotton cover is breathable and moisture-wicking.
Saatva's micro-coil mattress topper is designed to relieve pressure points and offer the responsive feel of an innerspring. It is a hybrid topper of micro-coils and gel-infused comfort foam for a plush three-inch height. Use it with a new mattress to make it more comfortable or extend the life of an older mattress.
Amazon Just Slashed Prices On Apple Watches – Get One Now While The Deal Lasts
Original price: $349
Nolah Sleep's AirFoam Luxe Mattress Topper uses AirFoam technology to deliver a higher-density topper for enhanced support and durability. The five pounds of foam cradles your curves for ultimate comfort and pressure relief. You can choose between two height options and two premium covers.
Original price: $299
This Nolah Mattress Topper has a higher density than the AirFoam for advanced pressure point relief and unmatched motion isolation. Below the AirFoam, there is an additional support foam layer for extra structure and durability. The cover is made using organic cotton to keep this topper clean and cool.
Original price: $270
This latex mattress topper from Silk & Snow comes with an organic cotton cover for easy cleaning. It offers a firmer, more supportive feel than memory foam, is naturally breathable and is designed to distribute body weight evenly for lasting comfort. You can purchase this topper in two firmness levels: medium and firm.
Le Creuset Is Celebrating 100 Years With A New Color Drop And Deals
Original price: $149
Brooklinen's Down Alternative Mattress Topper will breathe new life into an aging mattress. The luxe soft microgel mattress topper's tufted construction helps evenly distribute the fill. The topper's cotton shell helps keep things cool, and it is designed to easily fit mattresses up to 18 inches thick.
The Casper Comfy Mattress Topper is a two-layer mattress topper designed to enhance comfort and coolness. It combines a responsive, soft top layer with a supportive memory foam layer. The topper also features AirScape perforated foam for improved airflow and heat dissipation.
For more deals, visit www.foxnews.com/deals
Sleepyhead mattress toppers are perfect for college dorm room beds. They are thick, soft, and comfortable and will improve your student's sleep quality. This topper is copper and gel-infused for cooling and relieving pressure so you get a more restful sleep.Original article source: Upgrade your mattress topper during Memorial Day mattress sales to get up to 30% off

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

2 hours ago
RFK Jr. has promoted 'freedom of choice' while limiting vaccines, food
Prior to becoming Health and Human Services Secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. had espoused the idea of "medical freedom," the ability of people to make personal health decisions for themselves and their families without corporate or government coercion. It's an idea supported under Kennedy's Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) movement to reduce the prevalence of chronic disease in the U.S. by making healthier lifestyle choices. On topics, such as vaccines, Kennedy has said he wouldn't prevent children from being able to receive vaccines but would leave the choice up to parents. "I'm a freedom-of-choice person," Kennedy told Fox News host Sean Hannity during an interview in March. "We should have transparency. We should have informed choice, and if people don't want it, the government shouldn't force them to do it." Some public health experts told ABC News, however, that the HHS has been limiting choices on some products for many Americans despite Kennedy's talk about "freedom of choice." Just last week, Kennedy announced the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention would no longer recommend the COVID-19 vaccine for certain groups. Additionally, Kennedy has called on states to ban recipients of food stamps from being able to use them to purchase soda. He has also praised states for banning fluoride from public drinking water and indicated he will change federal guidance on recommending adding fluoride. The public health experts said Kennedy's actions are setting up a dichotomy on public health. "I think that RFK Jr. has done a really good job of identifying some of the problems [in public health], but it's the solutions that are problematic," Dr. Craig Spencer, an associate professor of the practice of health services, policy and practice at Brown University School of Public Health, told ABC News. "What you're seeing with RFK Jr. and his approach to health is an individualization of public health. It's this idea that you can make decisions for your health, and that's always been true." He went on, "We need to be able to follow their guidance, not just have them tell us, 'Follow your own science.' As the focus shifts from community to individuals, we're losing a lot of that underpinning, which has led to a lot of the gains in public health." Limiting access to COVID-19 vaccines Kennedy has repeatedly stated that he is not anti-vaccine and that he supports vaccination. Shortly after Trump's election, Kennedy said in an interview with NBC News that "if vaccines are working for somebody, I'm not going to take them away. People ought to have choice, and that choice ought to be informed by the best information." During his confirmation hearings, Kennedy said he supported the childhood vaccination schedule and that he would not do anything as head of HHS that "makes it difficult or discourages people from taking vaccines." Separately, in an opinion piece Kennedy wrote for Fox News in March on the nationwide measles outbreak, he said the measles vaccine helps protect individuals and provides "community immunity" but also called the decision to vaccinate a "personal one." However, last week, Kennedy announced the removal of the COVID-19 vaccine from the CDC's immunization schedule for "healthy children and healthy pregnant women." The CDC's immunization schedule is not just a guide for doctors but also determines insurance coverage for most major private plans and Medicaid expansion programs. Following Kennedy's announcement, the schedule was updated noting all children would be eligible for COVID vaccines, but now under a shared-clinical decision-making model -- allowing parents to choose whether their children are vaccinated alongside advice from a doctor. "Regarding the vaccines, HHS is restoring the doctor-patient relationship," HHS spokesperson Andrew Nixon told ABC News in a statement. "We are encouraging those groups to consult with their health care provider to help them make an informed decision. This is freedom of choice." "If you restrict access, you necessarily restrict choice," Dr. Matthew Ferrari, a professor of biology and director of the Center for Infectious Disease Dynamics at Pennsylvania State University, told ABC News. "Those two things are antithetical. You can't do both. You can't say you're allowing choice if you're restricting access." Ferrari said the idea of "medical freedom" is catchy, but public health recommendations are made based on how to protect the most vulnerable individuals. "If you look at the outcomes, if you look at the consequences of that movement, it has been to disproportionately restrict access to -- and restrict support and infrastructure to allow people to access -- preventive medicine," he said. "It's sort of easy to say, 'Well, take the vaccine away. But [vaccines] prevent a future outcome of illness for yourself and for others in the community." Traditionally, the CDC's Advisory Committee for Immunization Practices decides if there is a benefit to a yearly vaccine and who should get it. The independent advisory committee then makes recommendations to the CDC, which has the final say. The committee was set to meet in late June to vote on potential changes to COVID vaccine recommendations. Spencer said Kennedy's bypassing of traditional avenues when it comes to changing vaccine recommendations is also taking away choice from people. "This did not go through the normal process that it should have, and he basically just made a decision for people while at the same time saying that he's going to let people make a decision," Spencer said. Restricting foods under SNAP Kennedy has also campaigned to prevent Americans from using food stamps -- provided under the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program -- to buy candy and soda. "It's nonsensical for U.S. taxpayers to spend tens of billions of dollars subsidizing junk that harms the health of low-income Americans," Kennedy wrote in an opinion piece for The Wall Street Journal last September. At a MAHA event in late May, Kennedy said the governors of 10 states have submitted waivers to the United States Department of Agriculture requesting permission to ban SNAP recipients from using benefits to buy candy and soft drinks. "The U.S. government spends over $4 trillion a year on health care," Nixon said in a statement. "That's not freedom -- it's failure. Secretary Kennedy is unapologetically taking action to reverse the chronic disease epidemic, not subsidize it with taxpayer dollars. Warning Americans about the dangers of ultra-processed food isn't an attack on choice -- it's the first step in restoring it." Nutrition experts agree that sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs) are unhealthy. Frequent consumption of SSBs is linked to health issues such as weight gain, obesity, type 2 diabetes, tooth decay, heart disease and kidney diseases, according to the CDC. Kristina Petersen, an associate professor in the department of nutritional sciences at Pennsylvania State University, told ABC News there is a crisis of diet-related diseases in the U.S., which increase the risk of disability and reduces lifespan. However, she said there needs to be strong evidence of the benefits of restrictive policies if they are to be put in place. "In terms of limiting people's choices, it is important to consider all the different roles that food plays in someone's life, and so obviously we want people eating nutritious foods, but also we need to acknowledge that food is a source of enjoyment," Petersen said. "A lot of social situations revolve around food. So, when we're thinking about reducing people's access to given foods, we need to think about the consequences of that." One unintended consequence could be an eligible family not signing up for SNAP benefits because of the restrictions, she said. Even if a ban on buying candy and soda with SNAP benefits does occur, Petersen said she is not aware of any evidence that shows banning certain foods leads to healthier diets. She added that the nation's dietary guidelines are written to emphasize healthy foods like fruits and vegetable rather than telling people to avoid or restrict less healthy foods. "All foods can be consumed as part of a healthy dietary pattern. It's really just the amount and the frequency that determines whether that pattern is helpful overall or less helpful," Petersen said. "People can have small indulgences, but really, we're interested in what is their pattern over a period of time." Providing incentives for purchasing healthier foods may be more effective and still allow people to have choice, Petersen said. A 2018 study used a model simulation to study the effects of food incentives, disincentives or restrictions in SNAP. One of the simulations involving incentives for foods such as fruits, vegetables, nuts, whole grains, fish and plant-based oils found to have the most substantial health benefits and be the most cost-effective. "Things like fruits and vegetables, they do tend to be more expensive, so if you incentivize them by providing more benefits … that's making the dollar go further, and it's kind of making the economic piece of this a bit stronger," Petersen said. "A lot of this is framed around personal choice. Rather than restricting access to, how can we give people more access to healthy foods? I think that's going to have the greatest benefit here."
Yahoo
12 hours ago
- Yahoo
Measles in Iowa: What parents, and the public, should know about the first case in nearly six years
DES MOINES, Iowa — The first confirmed case of measles in Iowa since 2019 was announced by the state's Department of Health and Human Services on May 23, 2025. However, specific details on the patient and potential exposure of additional residents have been limited. 'Through our thorough investigation, it was learned this individual had traveled outside of the state of Iowa,' said HHS's Director of Communications Alex Murphy via email to WHO 13's Katie Kaplan. 'A thorough investigation has been completed. Public health officials will be reaching out to identified contacts, and no widespread public exposure is anticipated.' While the initial release from HHS on the confirmed Iowa case stated the patient was an unvaccinated adult, Murphy added that any further information about the specifics of the case was 'protected from disclosure under Iowa Code 139A.3(3).' While it is unconfirmed which medical facility the patient was treated at, WHO 13 was able to view internal messages from Central Iowa medical networks that were sent to area medical professionals. One noted that the Central Iowa resident may have recently traveled to Mexico and Texas. HHS confirmed to WHO 13 that the patient traveled internationally, but did not specify where. The announcement about the highly contagious viral illness that is spread through the air when an infectious person coughs, sneezes, or breathes was made late in the workday on a Friday afternoon before the Memorial Day weekend. 'Measles is as scary as it sounds because it's so contagious,' said Dr. Daniel Pelzer, a Pediatrician with the Iowa Clinic. 'It is 10 to 12 times more contagious than a normal flu virus that spreads around every year. And for that reason, it's important for us to get ahead of that so that the unvaccinated or under-vaccinated in our community aren't at risk.' Pelzer said local physicians have been following the growing number of cases across the U.S. and have been preparing for a local case for months. He added that the case, which HHS said tested positive at the State Hygienic Laboratory, activated the plans that include vetting patients through their symptoms, limiting exposure to the public, and the potential use of hazmat, or PPE (Personal Protective Equipment) gear, for health providers. He said the first step the public should take if they believe they have the measles, or have been exposed to the illness, is to pick up the phone. Des Moines police release name of motorcyclist killed in crash 'For parents, if you think you have a case of measles in your house, or a known exposure, call us. Again, measles is so contagious that if it would arrive in our office, it would grind the entire clinic to a halt because of the density of airborne virus transmission,' he said. According to the HHS, about 1 in 10 people in the U. S. who get measles will be hospitalized, and 1 to 3 out of 1,000 children with measles will die even with good medical care. Measles was declared 'eliminated' from the United States in 2000, according to the CDC. This meant the absence of the continuous spread of disease was greater than 12 months. Most people who have been fully vaccinated against the illness do not need booster shots and are 'less susceptible' to contracting it, Pelzer said. However, he said he has watched as immunizations in local children have fallen in recent years, specifically since the Pandemic. 'Herd immunity, about 95%, is what we need to effectively, in communities, limit the spread of measles,' he said. 'In the last decade that I've been a pediatrician in this town, I've seen that rate decrease from 95%, which is our safe rate, down to closer to 90% by our best guesses.' Measles symptoms include a high fever, cough, and runny nose, followed by a red rash most often found on the face and arms. Tiny white bumps may also develop inside the mouth. The illness can lead to swelling of the brain and other complications. 'The best time to prevent measles is before an exposure occurs, and the best tool we have is getting the measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccine,' said Dr. Robert Kruse, State Medical Director, via a written statement provided by the HHS. 'Getting vaccinated not only protects you but also protects people in your community who can't get vaccinated, like infants too young to begin the series and those who are immunosuppressed.' If you think you have been exposed to a measles case and have symptoms, call your medical provider or nearest emergency room ahead of time and tell them that you have been exposed to measles and have symptoms before arriving. Measles symptoms begin to appear 7-to-21 days after exposure. As of June 5, nearly two weeks after the announcement of the case, the HHS told WHO 13 that there have been no other confirmed cases of measles in the state of Iowa. Iowa News: Measles in Iowa: What parents, and the public, should know about the first case in nearly six years WHO 13 Farm Report: Thursday, June 5 Motorcyclist killed after being hit by semi in Floyd County identified Forecast: Mild temps and tiny rain chances WHO 13 Farm Report: Wednesday, June 4 Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
13 hours ago
- Yahoo
Douglas County parents accused of keeping 3-year-old in shed with no electricity, running water
A pair of Douglas County parents are accused of leaving their toddler in a backyard shed with no supervision. The child wasn't wearing clothing, and police say he didn't have running water for days. A neighbor told Channel 2's Tyisha Fernandes that he believes he knows what sparked the investigation about two weeks ago. When Fernandes got to the neighborhood on Thursday, she couldn't find the shed. 'The structure is gone. It's not there anymore,' neighbor Matthew Govoni said. 'I know there was a huge fire with explosions.' Fernandes confirmed that the fire department investigated a fire on Memorial Day weekend. Govoni believes that's what sparked the investigation into the parents leaving a 3-year-old boy in the shed. TRENDING STORIES: Man tries to carjack 2 victims, police say. Then a good Samaritan jumped in to help GA ringleader of fraud scheme sentenced for creating fake recruiting websites to steal identities Police investigate double shooting that left men injured in Greenbrian Mall parking lot Police say the child's father, Joseph Turner, and the mother, Sarah Pobert, caused 'cruel/excessive mental and physical pain to the toddler' by keeping him in a dirty shed behind the house. They said the shed had no running water, no electricity, no adults around, and they said the 3-year-old was dirty with no clothes on. 'With the lifestyle they live, I'm not surprised by any of that, really,' Govoni said. Despite the living conditions, police are calling it criminally negligent. Govoni said the child looked happy on the few occasions he saw him outside. 'I'm saddened for them and the child, but I mean, for the child, I hope they can get to a place where they can be helped,' Govoni said. Both suspects are in their mid-30s, and the neighbor said they've lived in the home for more than a decade.