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Rising Concern: Human Brain Tissues Hold High Microplastic Levels
Decrease in Heart Attack Deaths in US
Study Reveals Link Between Internal Clock Disruptions and Women's Hormonal Health
Ai-Controlled Robotic System Enhances Echocardiogram Delivery
Mobile App Med Safety Boosts Reporting of Adverse Drug Reactions
Federal Health Officials Push to Ban Orange B Food Dye
Tuberculosis Impact on HIV Mortality
Trump Officials to Link 25 Child Deaths to Covid-19 Vaccines
Rising Popularity of Glp-1 Agonists for Weight Loss
US Panel Sympathetic to Anti-Vaccine Movement Faces Backlash
Researchers Uncover Melanoma Cell Adaptation Mechanism
World Health Organization Warns: Slowdown in Fighting Major Diseases
Study Links Magnesium Depletion to Overactive Bladder
ASN Releases Kidney Health Guidance on Potassium & Phosphorus Additives
WHO Supports US Health Secretary's Focus on Prevention
Cervical Cancer Screening Nonadherence Surges Post-COVID
Africans' Influence Vital for Global Health Funding
Florida Governor Ron Desantis Unveils Plan to End Vaccine Mandates
The Protein Craze: From Yogurt to Chocolate Bars
WHO Reports 31 Deaths in Southern Congo Ebola Outbreak
Preventing Maternal Deaths: VET Technology for Postpartum Hemorrhage
University of Liverpool Scientists Unveil Novltex Antibiotics
How Physical Activities Influence Brain Signals
Nicotinamide Supplement Reduces Skin Cancer Risk
Autumn Brings Onset of Respiratory Illnesses for Older Adults
Unified Risk Assessments for Zoonotic Diseases and Vectors
Future Regret as a Tool to Boost Flu Vaccination: SMU Study
Study Reveals Overuse of Dementia Meds
Radiation from Medical Imaging Linked to Higher Child Cancer Risk
In-Utero Blood Transfusion Tech: Transforming Fatal Diagnoses
Life Technology™ Medical News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSLife Technology™ Science News
Global Markets Disrupted by Sharp Fluctuations: Study Findings
Research Reveals Challenges in Salmon Conservation and Aquaculture
Researchers from Kent Show Feasibility of Growing Tea in Lunar Soil
Role of Horses in Forest Management for Wildfire Prevention
Texas Hill Country Floods: UT Arlington Lab's Real-Time Flood Maps
Significant Soil Carbon Storage in Peatlands
Rising Frequency of 100-Year Floods and Megafires
Gender, Language, Income Impact on English Paper Publishing
University of Tokyo Researchers Achieve Quantum Squeezing
Key Genetic Adaptations Uncovered in Kenyan Pastoralists
Unsw Engineers Achieve Quantum Entangled States
Genetics Study: Anopheles Funestus Evolution Amid Malaria Control
Ecologists Uncover Key Factors in Ecosystem Diversity
Study Predicts Rise in Mosquito-Borne Illness Risk in Brazil
Cincinnati Brewing Company Reveals Stellar Fall Beer
The Social and Cultural Impact of Color Perception
Primordial Black Hole Theory: Source of High-Energy Ghost Particle
"Revolutionizing Science: New X-ray Technique Unveiled"
Study Reveals: Carbon Credit Use Doesn't Accelerate Decarbonization
Unveiling the Noise in Cellular Activity
Ice Age Legacy: Southern Scandinavia's Rocky Reefs
Courts Rule Against Overreach on Titanium Dioxide Classification
"Pablo Picasso Unveils New Portrait of Lover at Paris Auction"
Sharks in Mesopelagic Zone: Surprising Deep Ocean Behavior
Europe's Forests Face Economic Threats from Climate Change
Large Hadron Collider's Oxygen-Oxygen & Neon-Neon Collisions Unveiled
Scientists Develop Silicon-Based Quantum Device for Global Quantum Computing Race
Study Reveals Impact of Tree Species Diversity on Forest Resilience
Sanderlings Forage as Terns Rest on Bolivar Flats
Rapid Rise of Artificial Intelligence: Mental Health Concerns
Life Technology™ Science News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSLife Technology™ Technology News
Kids Playing at Connection Angle Lake Affordable Housing
Amazon pledged to support affordable housing. How has it fared so far?
Next-generation cooling garments aim to combat rising global heat and health risks
Global Warming Threatens Health and Work: PolyU Innovates Cooling Solutions
FAD-driven electrochemical system promises safer, cheaper green hydrogen storage
Novel System for Cost-Effective Green Hydrogen Production
Overcoming the barriers of hydrogen storage with a low-temperature hydrogen battery
Japanese Researchers Develop Low-Temperature Hydrogen Battery
OpenAI launches teen-safe ChatGPT with parental controls
Openai Unveils Safer Version of Chatgpt for Teen Chatting
Record Damages from Cyberattacks by Russia and China Hit German Firms
Costs of Russian, Chinese cyberattacks on German firms on rise: report
Uber Eats will soon launch US drone delivery in partnership with Flytrex
Uber Eats to Introduce Drone Meal Deliveries
Did you dawdle on that new heat pump or EV? Better move fast to get those tax credits
Tax Incentives for Home Efficiency, Clean Energy, and EVs Expiring
Berkeley Lab Unveils AutoBot for Advanced Material Fabrication
Autobot platform uses machine learning to rapidly find best ways to make advanced materials
Evolution of Fraud: Tools Change, Scams Persist
Scams and frauds: Here are tactics criminals use on you in the age of AI and cryptocurrencies
Analytical Tool Aiding UK Police in Human Trafficking Cases
Digital tool helps police forces identify potential victims of human trafficking
Study Reveals How to Thwart Cyberattacks on AI-Guided Spacecraft
Robustly detecting sneaky cyberattacks that might throw AI spacecraft off-course
Tiny manganese tweak results in material with record-high thermoelectric performance
Qut Researchers Develop Record-High Thermoelectric Material
Solar Power Emerges as Cheapest Electricity Option
Solar power cuts electricity bills and carbon emissions—NZ needs to scale up faster
Innovative Conductive Plastic: Versatile Material for Health Tech
Impact of Train Delays on Commutes and Economy
Life Technology™ Technology News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSSFriday, October 18, 2019
Transforming sulphur dioxide from harmful to useful
Scientists have created molecular cages within a polymer to trap harmful sulphur dioxide pollution in order to transform it into useful compounds and reduce waste and emissions.
Mars 2020 unwrapped and ready for testing
In this time-lapse video, taken on Oct. 4, 2019, at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, bunny-suited engineers remove the inner layer of protective antistatic foil on the Mars 2020 rover after the vehicle was relocated from JPL's Spacecraft Assembly Facility to the Simulator Building for testing.
NASA's planetary protection review addresses changing reality of space exploration
NASA released a report Friday with recommendations from the Planetary Protection Independent Review Board (PPIRB) the agency established in response to a recent National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine report and a recommendation from the NASA Advisory Council.
Young climate activists in Africa struggle to be heard
As Greta Thunberg and the Extinction Rebellion inspire climate protesters across the globe, young African activists say they still struggle to make themselves heard.
Thunberg brings her climate protest to Canada's oil patch
Teen activist Greta Thunberg rallied with climate change protesters in Canada's oil-rich province of Albert on Friday, as oil workers counter-protested by honking the horns of their big rigs.
Huawei exec: Chinese tech giant wants to be 'transparent'
A top executive of Chinese tech giant Huawei said Friday that the company is prepared to be "open and transparent" as it looks to persuade the U.S. government that it can be trusted and that national security concerns about its technology are unfounded.
Facebook says it will deliver News Corp stories
Facebook on Friday confirmed that some stories from News Corp, publisher of The Wall Street Journal, will be delivered at a new "tab" planned at the leading social network.
New research center aims to make electronics more secure
The University of Cincinnati will lead a new National Science Foundation research center to protect electronics and networked systems from sabotage, hacking or spying.
NASA-NOAA satellite finds overshooting tops, gravity waves in Tropical Storm Nestor
NASA-NOAA's Suomi NPP satellite provided night-time and infrared views of developing Tropical Storm Nestor in the Gulf of Mexico and found over-shooting cloud tops and gravity waves. When the satellite passed over the potential tropical depression early on Oct. 18, it was consolidating. Less than 12 hours later, it became a tropical storm.
Wind turbine design and placement can mitigate negative effect on birds
Wind energy is increasingly seen as a sustainable alternative to fossil fuels, as it contributes to a reduction in greenhouse gas emissions. It is estimated that by 2050, wind turbines will contribute more than 20% of the global electricity supply. However, the rapid expansion of wind farms has raised concerns about the impact of wind turbines on wildlife.
SNAP provides a model for ensuring a right to food
Alleviating food insecurity is often seen as one of the fundamental roles a country should fulfill. In some cases, this is encapsulated into a constitutionally formalized "right to food". In other cases, including the U.S., the right to food isn't formalized, but the U.S. government spends billions of dollars per year to help Americans obtain the food they need.
Land management practices to reduce nitrogen load may be affected by climate changes
Nitrogen from agricultural production is a major cause of pollution in the Mississippi River Basin and contributes to large dead zones in the Gulf of Mexico.
Why respiratory infections are more deadly in those with diabetes
Since the Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) first emerged in Saudi Arabia in 2012, there have been more than 2,400 confirmed cases of the infection, resulting in greater than 800 deaths—an alarming fatality rate of 35 percent. For this reason, researchers have been eager to identify any risk factors that contribute to the development of severe or lethal disease. Current clinical evidence points to diabetes as a major risk factor in addition to other comorbidities including kidney disease, heart disease, and lung disease.
UK veterinary profession simply not ready for 'no deal' Brexit
The UK veterinary profession is simply not prepared for a 'No Deal' Brexit, warns the editor of Vet Record.
How Purdue's aggressive sales of a painkiller blew up in its face
In 2002, Andrew Kolodny, a resident in psychiatry, attended a training session on pain treatment in Philadelphia.
America's endless battle against lethal drug fentanyl
In a windowless hangar at New York's John F. Kennedy airport, dozens of law enforcement officers sift through packages, looking for fentanyl—a drug that is killing Americans every day.
Lunch break lesson: how to reverse an opioid overdose
At a small shop selling handmade jewelry in South Philly, employees are skipping their lunch break for a good cause. They are getting training they all wanted—in how to save someone who has overdosed on opioids.
Confessions of a cannabis farmer: The Vietnamese getting Brits high
Holed up alone in a suburban British house thousands of miles from home, cannabis farmer Cuong Nguyen spent months carefully nurturing his plants, one of thousands of Vietnamese migrants working in the UK's multi-billion dollar weed industry.
Training social workers in fight against opioids
Nancy Ochoa was 15 years old the first time she used heroin with a group of friends. At 16, four months after the birth of her first child, her occasional drug use had turned into a "necessity."
Plant-based compound may enable faster, more effective gene therapy
Gene therapy has broadened the treatment possibilities for those with immune system deficiencies and blood-based conditions, such as sickle cell anemia and leukemia. These diseases, which once would require a bone marrow transplant, can now be successfully treated by modifying patients' own blood stem cells to correct the underlying genetic problem.
Health care intervention: Treating high-need, high-cost patients
In crisis and with nowhere else to turn, thousands of patients with complex needs—serious mental and physical health problems and substance use disorders—every year flock to emergency rooms in Harris County, Texas and across the country. Referred to as "high-need, high-cost," these patients have limited ability to take care of themselves, making it challenging for doctors to find effective treatments.
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