Health Comparisons
Conditions that look alike, medications that get mixed up, and benefits programs that share a name. These pages explain in plain language what each one actually is and how to tell them apart. They're general educational information, not medical advice — see the disclaimer for the full note.
Last reviewed on 2026-04-27.
Common Conditions
Cold
vs
Flu
Both are respiratory viruses; the flu hits harder and faster, with fever and body aches more common.
Virus
vs
Infection
A virus is a type of pathogen; an infection is what happens when any pathogen establishes itself in the body.
UTI
vs
Yeast Infection
UTIs are bacterial infections of the urinary tract; yeast infections are fungal overgrowths, usually in the genitals.
Chronic & Long-Term
Type 1
vs
Type 2 Diabetes
Type 1 is an autoimmune loss of insulin production; Type 2 is mostly insulin resistance with later production decline.
Osteoarthritis
vs
Rheumatoid Arthritis
Osteoarthritis is wear-and-tear cartilage damage; rheumatoid arthritis is autoimmune attack on the joints.
HIV
vs
AIDS
HIV is the virus; AIDS is the late-stage syndrome that develops when untreated HIV severely damages the immune system.
Mind & Brain
Anxiety
vs
Depression
Anxiety is fear or worry about the future; depression is persistent low mood and loss of interest.
Dementia
vs
Alzheimer's
Dementia is the umbrella term for cognitive decline; Alzheimer's is its most common cause.
ADD
vs
ADHD
ADD is an older term; ADHD is the current diagnosis and includes presentations with or without hyperactivity.
Heart, Pain & Coverage
Heart Attack
vs
Cardiac Arrest
A heart attack is a plumbing problem (blocked blood flow); cardiac arrest is an electrical problem (the heart stops).
Ibuprofen
vs
Acetaminophen
Ibuprofen reduces inflammation; acetaminophen treats pain and fever without significant anti-inflammatory effect.
Medicare
vs
Medicaid
Medicare is age-based federal coverage (mostly 65+); Medicaid is income-based joint federal-state coverage.
HDL
vs
LDL Cholesterol
"Good" and "bad" cholesterol — two carrier particles with very different effects on the arteries.