logo
‘I depend on Depends': Deion Sanders gets candid about his bladder cancer battle

‘I depend on Depends': Deion Sanders gets candid about his bladder cancer battle

CNN6 days ago
Deion Sanders revealed he had his bladder removed amid his fight against bladder cancer. CNN Medical Analyst Dr. Jonathan Reiner explains the Hall of Fame athlete's diagnosis.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Medical Professionals, What's The Most Shocking Thing A Woman Didn't Know About Their Own Body?
Medical Professionals, What's The Most Shocking Thing A Woman Didn't Know About Their Own Body?

Yahoo

time2 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Medical Professionals, What's The Most Shocking Thing A Woman Didn't Know About Their Own Body?

Calling all doctors, nurses, and healthcare professionals — what were you shocked to realize female patients didn't know about their own bodies? Maybe they genuinely thought they peed out of the same hole they got their period out of. Maybe they believed sexist misconceptions like the vagina stretching if you have multiple sexual partners, or becoming "ruined" by childbirth. Or maybe you're the patient who didn't know something about your own body — maybe you thought that peeing after sex could prevent pregnancy. Whatever the misconception, confusion, or lack of knowledge was, we want to know. Tell us in the comments below or via this anonymous form, and you could be featured in an upcoming BuzzFeed Community post. Also in Community: Also in Community: Also in Community:

The Push to Make Montana a Hub for Experimental Medical Treatments
The Push to Make Montana a Hub for Experimental Medical Treatments

Wall Street Journal

time5 minutes ago

  • Wall Street Journal

The Push to Make Montana a Hub for Experimental Medical Treatments

Montana is well known for luring visitors with outdoor activities such as fly fishing and hiking. Now, longevity companies are exploring investments in the state in a moonshot bid to make it a medical tourism hub. State legislators have backed measures designed to ease patients' access to therapies not approved by the Food and Drug Administration. The measures, known as 'Right to Try' laws, exist in more than 40 states.

Ryan McMahon's walk-off hit in 11th inning gives Yankees crazy win over Rays
Ryan McMahon's walk-off hit in 11th inning gives Yankees crazy win over Rays

Yahoo

time10 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Ryan McMahon's walk-off hit in 11th inning gives Yankees crazy win over Rays

Access the Yankees beat like never before Join Post Sports+ for exciting subscriber-only features, including real-time texting with Greg Joyce about the inside buzz on the Yankees. Try it free On Tuesday night, Cody Bellinger gave the Yankees life. A day later, he repeated the feat. With Aaron Judge sidelined, there's no debate over the most valuable Yankees position player. Bellinger already was enjoying a strong first season in The Bronx. Lately, he's taken it up a notch. His RBI triple pulled them even with one out in the 10th, and Ryan McMahon's fly ball single an inning later sent the Yankees to a dramatic 5-4 win over the Rays in a wild, back-and-fourth game in The Bronx. 'We talk about, obviously, Judgey being MVP, and rightfully so, but we're going to get to the end of the year, and Cody Bellinger is going to be on that list,' manager Aaron Boone said after the Yankees rallied from deficits in the eighth, ninth and 10th innings. 'I don't know where he's going to fall, but he's played that well.' These past two wins over the floundering Rays have not come easily. The Yankees had to rally from three runs down Tuesday, and they managed just two hits over the first seven innings Wednesday. But clutch hits by Bellinger and Anthony Volpe — his ninth-inning homer forced extra innings — along with a strong start by Will Warren were enough Wednesday. Tim Hill, pressed into duty despite it being an expected day off for the heavily used reliever, worked a scoreless 11th for the victory. The Rays intentionally walked Jasson Domínguez to set up a potential double play. McMahon was called on to bunt, but Rays reliever Kevin Kelly balked the potential winning run to third, and McMahon ended it there. 'I felt good about doing it,' McMahon said of the bunt. 'Like I've said when I first got here, I'll do whatever they ask me to do.' The Yankees improved to 6-6 since the All-Star break, as they try to snap out of their extended malaise. This was a feel-good day for them. Pregame, Judge fielded balls in the outfield as he works his way back from a right elbow flexor strain, and Boone said Luis Gil came through his final rehab start without a hitch. The day, however, was not without negatives. Volpe committed his third error in two games and leads all of baseball with 16. Devin Williams blew his first save since April 25, serving up a two-run Josh Lowe homer in the ninth. Austin Wells lost track of how many outs there were in the bottom of the frame, costing the Yankees a chance at avoiding extra innings. With Wells on first, Trent Grisham nearly beat out a bunt. Wells didn't realize Grisham was just the second out and was tagged out coming off the field in a stunning moment. 'Obviously, [it] can't happen,' Boone said. Said Wells: 'Very embarrassed and disappointed for sure. You let the guys down when you do that. You give away an out like that in a big spot.' In the 10th, Luke Weaver allowed the automatic runner to score on a Jonathan Aranda sacrifice fly. The damage could've been much worse. The bases were loaded, and Domínguez made the catch up against the left-field fence. Bellinger answered with his run-scoring triple, but he was left stranded by Giancarlo Stanton and Jazz Chisholm Jr. Over the first seven innings, the Yankees managed just two hits, both off Rays starter Zack Littell, who pitched five scoreless innings, then found out he was being traded. The three-team deal was not official at press time, but an agreement to send the righty starter to the Reds was being finalized as Cincinnati appears to be going all in at the trade deadline. The Yankees bats got going in the eighth, when Grisham homered to lead off the frame and Stanton plated Ben Rice with the go-ahead run in a rally off Rays reliever Bryan Baker. Warren received a hard-luck no decision after delivering six innings of one-run ball. The Rays struck first in the third, when Lowe plated Taylor Walls with a two-out, run-scoring double. That was all Warren allowed. The young right-hander, who had struggled of late with a 6.29 ERA in five July starts, made it through six innings for the first time since June 22. He allowed six hits, struck out four and walked only one while tying a season high with 102 pitches. Finally, in the eighth, the bats woke up. Even when the pitching let them down, the Yankees kept on coming. 'It's a huge win,' Bellinger said. 'So many people to give credit to in this game. Wins come in a bunch of different ways, and this was a good one.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store