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Life Technology™ Medical News
U.S. Health Officials Update Measles Vaccination Guidance
Global Impact: Childhood Infections Linked to Hearing Loss
Scientists Uncover Insights on Early Brain Connections
New Study: Starting Healthy Eating for Brain Health
Novel ADC Pivekimab Sunirine Shows High Efficacy
Oral ER Degrader Vepdegestrant Boosts Survival
New Trial: CompassHER2 pCR Evaluates Reduced Chemo for HER2+ Breast Cancer
FDA Warns of Salmonella-Tainted Tomatoes in Southern States
Breastfeeding: Vital Child Health Investment
New Clinical Practice Guideline for Surgical Management of Chronic Rhinosinusitis
Physician Performance Ranking Impact on Motivation
Psoriasis Linked to Higher Sleep Disorder Risk
High-Fiber Plant-Based Diet Benefits Multiple Myeloma Risk
Clinicians Find HPV Vaccine Feasible at Age 9-10
Dental Patients Optimistic About AI in Health Care
Geographic Trends in Opioid Deaths: Study by Medical Experts
Plant-Based Portfolio Diet Reduces Cardiovascular Risk
Machine Learning Method for Prostate Cancer Survival
Study Reveals High Seizure Rates in Frontotemporal Dementia
Ochsner Health Study: Pharmacogenomics Implementation Guide
Salmonella Outbreak Linked to Cucumbers Sickens 45
Rising Trend: Older Americans Switching Medicare Plans
Challenges in Patient Empathy: Impact on Medical Education
Rutgers Study: Police Spending Linked to Black American Deaths
Medics Warn of Lifelong Consequences of Chronic Malnutrition
Decades of Neglect: Impact on Women's Health
AI Study Predicts Child Emotional Issues
Optimal Timing for Covid-19 Booster and Flu Shot
Benefits of eConsent in Stroke Studies: Higher Enrollment & Adherence
Key Driver of Breast Cancer: Inavolisib Combo Boosts Survival
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Global Seismic Signal Linked to Mega Tsunamis in East Greenland
Experience Dublin's Vibrant Pub Culture
Earthen Levees in US: Infrastructure Report Reveals D+ Grade
5.8 Magnitude Earthquake Strikes Turkish Coastal Town
Reddish Dawn Over Fournoi: Fisherman Returns Empty Nets
Unmasking Art Forgery and Notre-Dame Secrets
The Role of Tunneling in Quantum Phenomena
Natural History Museums: Key to Future Pandemic Preparedness
African Swine Fever Virus Presence in Europe Since 2007
Mystery of Extinct Megafauna: Clues for Future Extinctions
Rural Africa's Sanitation Crisis: Impact on Water Sources
Survey: UK Food Delivery & Ride-Hail Workers Fear Unfair Feedback
Zimbabwean Farmer Doubles Goat Prices with Crossbreeding
Oil and Gas Companies' Environmental Claims in 1962
How Anillin Controls Cell Asymmetry in Cancer
Subantarctic Mode Waters: Key Players in Ocean Climate
Key Immune Cell in Atherosclerosis: Promising Therapy Tested
Korean Researchers Develop Innovative Transparent Graphene Film
Ancient Stone Water Tanks Repurposed in Northern Portugal
Advanced Materials for Next-Gen Fusion Reactors: UHTCs Examined
Amphibians Face Extinction Threat Due to Climate Change
Fish at Marine Biological Lab Walk with Six Leg-Like Appendages
Navigating Authoritarianism: Jewish Professor's Identity in Tech Era
The Impact of Framing Social Issues as Civil Rights
Researchers Uncover PFAS Contamination at Holloman Lake
Soursop Ice Cream: A Taste of Grenada's Delight
How Workplace Tracking Apps Support Home Health Care Workers
Government Actions Against Free Speech: A Historical Overview
Virtual Reality Headsets Integration in Education: Costs and Benefits
Northern Lights Expected in Parts of U.S. After Solar Storms
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One Tech Tip: How to use your smartphone to photograph the Northern Lights
Northern Lights Phenomenon Visible in Some U.S. Areas
In Canada lake, robot learns to mine without disrupting marine life
Robotic Arms Collecting Pebbles in Canadian Lake
TSMC Anticipates Record Earnings with Increased Semiconductor Production
TSMC forecasts record profit in 2025 on soaring AI demand
Access to Information Online: Vital for Democracy
Circumventing internet censorship in countries like China or Iran
Australia's latest emissions data reveal we still have a giant fossil fuel problem
Australia's Emissions Data: On Track for 2030 Targets
How Data Powers AI for Better Services
AI strategies promise smarter systems without sacrificing personal privacy
Research Team Explores Cement Reduction in Concrete
AI stirs up the optimal recipe for sustainable concrete
New prospects for green ammonia: Study provides blueprint for load-flexible production plant
Ammonia Production Shift: Climate-Friendly Challenge
Fraunhofer Institute Unveils Advanced Robot Capabilities
Cognitive robotics and new safety technologies for human-robot collaboration
Beyond translation: Multilingual benchmark makes AI multicultural
Language Model Misunderstanding: Legal Query on Greek Traffic Laws
Satellite Sensors for Early Missile Detection
Q&A: How electro-optical sensors can offer improved protection against missile attacks
PFAS-free seals work with water-based lubricants
Seals in Technical Systems: Impact of Plastic and Lubricants
Plastics: Versatile Materials Dominate Packaging in Germany
AI tools optimize plastic packaging design for recycling and sustainability goals
A novel, multimodal approach to automated speaking skill assessment
Mastering Spoken English: Key to Academic and Professional Success
Urban Fires Leave Unburned Green Amidst Devastation
California plan to ban plants within 5 feet of homes safety overlooks some important truths about flammability
Life Technology™ Technology News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSMonday, 16 September 2019
Scientists identify previously unknown 'hybrid zone' between hummingbird species
We usually think of a species as being reproductively isolated—that is, not mating with other species in the wild. Occasionally, however, closely related species do interbreed. New research just published in The Auk: Ornithological Advances documents the existence of a previously undiscovered hybrid zone along the coast of northern California and southern Oregon, where two closely related bird hummingbirds, Allen's Hummingbird and Rufous Hummingbird, are blurring species boundaries. Researchers hope that studying cases such as this one could improve their understanding of how biodiversity is created and maintained.
To address hunger, many countries may have to increase carbon footprint
Achieving an adequate, healthy diet in most low- and middle-income countries will require a substantial increase in greenhouse gas emissions and water use due to food production, according to new research from the Johns Hopkins Center for a Livable Future based at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
New species of giant salamander is world's biggest amphibian
Using DNA from museum specimens collected in the early 20th century, researchers from ZSL (Zoological Society of London) and London's Natural History Museum identified two new species of giant salamander—one of which they suspect is the world's biggest amphibian.
Scientists prove low cost arthritis drug can effectively treat blood cancer sufferers
A simple arthritis drug could be an effective, low cost solution to treat patients with blood cancers such as polycythemia vera (PV) and essential thrombocythemia (ET), a breakthrough study by the University of Sheffield has shown.
Only a third of women take up all offered cancer screenings, new research finds
In a paper published today in the Journal of Medical Screening, researchers from King's College London and Queen Mary University of London have found that despite free cancer screening programmes, only 35% take part in all offered programmes.
Teaching kids physical activities they'll go on to enjoy
Physical education is one of the most popular subjects for children in their early school years. Yet by secondary school less favorable attitudes towards what's known in the Australian school curriculum as Health and Physical Education (HPE) can start to creep in.
Subterranean blaze: Indonesia struggles to douse undergound fires
Thousands of Indonesian firefighters are locked in an around-the-clock game of Whack-a-Mole as they battle to extinguish an invisible enemy—underground fires that aggravate global warming.
Dozens of tigers dead after confiscation from Thai temple
More than half of the 147 tigers confiscated from a controversial Thai temple have died, park officials said Monday, blaming genetic problems linked to in-breeding at the once money-spinning tourist attraction.
Hope for coral recovery may depend on good parenting
The fate of the world's coral reefs could depend on how well the sea creatures equip their offspring to cope with global warming.
Researchers advance noise cancelling for quantum computers
A team from Dartmouth College and MIT has designed and conducted the first lab test to successfully detect and characterize a class of complex, "non-Gaussian" noise processes that are routinely encountered in superconducting quantum computing systems.
Amid settlement talks, opioids keep taking a grim toll
As the nation's attorneys general debate a legal settlement with Purdue Pharma, the opioid epidemic associated with its blockbuster painkiller OxyContin rages on in state after state, community after community, killing tens of thousands of people each year with no end in sight.
VW settles Australia emissions cheating scandal
Volkswagen has agreed to pay up to Aus$127 million ($87.3 million) to settle multiple class action suits brought by Australian motorists over a diesel emissions cheating scandal, the parties' lawyers said Monday.
Storm Humberto strengthens but moves away from Bahamas and US
Tropical storm Humberto gained strength Sunday and was expected to return to hurricane force by evening, but its track now puts it far from the Bahamas and the US coast, the US National Hurricane Center said.
Vapes spiked with illegal drugs show dark side of CBD craze
Jay Jenkins says he hesitated when a buddy suggested they vape CBD.
No Deal: Auto workers strike against GM in contract dispute
More than 49,000 members of the United Auto Workers walked off General Motors factory floors or set up picket lines early Monday as contract talks with the company deteriorated into a strike.
Purdue files for bankruptcy in bid to settle opioid crisis cases
Purdue Pharma has filed for bankruptcy in a settlement agreement that it hopes will provide more than $10 billion to address the opioid crisis, the company said in a statement on Sunday.
Reduce, reuse, recycle: The future of phosphorus
When Hennig Brandt discovered the element phosphorus in 1669, it was a mistake. He was really looking for gold. But his mistake was a very important scientific discovery. What Brandt couldn't have realized was the importance of phosphorus to the future of farming.
More predictive genetic risk score sought for type 1 diabetes
Paul Tran is working to develop a highly predictive genetic risk score that will tell parents whether their baby is at significant risk for type 1 diabetes.
Off-label medication orders on the rise for children, study finds
U.S. physicians are increasingly ordering medications for children for conditions that are not approved by the Food and Drug Administration, according to a Rutgers study.
Commonly used drug for Alzheimer's disease doubles risk of hospitalization
A drug commonly used to manage symptoms of Alzheimer disease and other dementias—donepezil—is associated with a two-fold higher risk of hospital admission for rhabdomyolysis, a painful condition of muscle breakdown, compared with several other cholinesterase inhibitors, found a study in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal).
Heart-healthy forager-farmers in lowland Bolivia are changing diets and gaining weight
A group of forager-farmers in Bolivia's tropical forests—known for having remarkable cardiovascular health and low blood pressure—experienced changes in body mass and diet over a nine-year period, with increased use of cooking oil the most notable dietary change.
Physicians report high refusal rates for the HPV vaccine and need for improvement
Despite its proven success at preventing cancer, many adolescents are still not getting the HPV vaccine. A new study from the University of Colorado School of Medicine at the Anschutz Medical Campus shows that physicians' delivery and communication practices must improve to boost vaccination completion rates.
Three in five parents say their teen has been in a car with a distracted teen driver
It's a highly anticipated rite of passage for many high schoolers—finally getting to drive your friends around.
Childhood behavior linked to taking paracetamol in pregnancy
The research published today in Paediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology examined whether there were any effects of taking paracetamol in mid-pregnancy and the behaviour of the offspring between the ages of 6 month and 11 years, with memory and IQ tested up until the age of 17. Paracetamol is commonly used to relieve pain during pregnancy and is recommended as the treatment of choice by the NHS.
Obesity linked to a nearly 6-fold increased risk of developing type 2 diabetes
Obesity is linked to a nearly 6-fold increased risk of developing type 2 diabetes (T2D), with high genetic risk and unfavorable lifestyle also increasing risk but to a much lesser extent. These are the conclusions of new research presented at this year's Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes in Barcelona, Spain (16-20 Sept), by Hermina Jakupovic, University of Copenhagen, Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Basic Metabolic Research, Copenhagen, Denmark, and colleagues.
Latest studies suggest a possible downturn in rate of new cases of diabetes
While overall, the numbers (prevalence) of people with type 2 diabetes continue to grow at an alarming rate, new research presented at this year's annual meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD) in Barcelona, Spain (16-20 September) shows that recent studies suggest the rate at which new cases develop (incidence) may be falling. The study is by Professor Dianna Magliano and Professor Jonathan Shaw, Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute, Melbourne, Australia, and colleagues.
Types and rates of co-existing conditions in diabetes are different for men and women
A new study presented at this year's Annual Meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD) in Barcelona, Spain (16-20 Sept) shows that men and women experience different comorbidities (other diseases at the same time) as having diabetes or prediabetes, as well as an unexpectedly high rate of prediabetes among children aged 6-10 years.
Scanning the lens of the eye could predict type 2 diabetes and prediabetes
New research presented at this year's annual meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD) in Barcelona, Spain (16-20 September) shows that specialist analysis of the lens in the eye can predict patients with type 2 diabetes and impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) (also known as prediabetes, a condition that often leads to full blown of type 2 diabetes).
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