Mon.Nov 25, 2024

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Long COVID patients push to see federal research refocused on treatments

NPR Health

The federal government has allocated $1.15 billion so far on long COVID research, without bringing any new treatments to market. Patients and scientists say it's time to push harder for breakthroughs.

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USDA Funding Supports Northeast Native Americans

US Department of Agriculture

The Pocasset Pokanoket Land Trust (PPLT) is a Tribally led nonprofit organization committed to reconnecting and empowering various Indigenous peoples throughout the Northeast. The Land Trust acts as a catalyst for change, addressing critical issues related to land reclamation and food insecurity for the Pocasset Wampanoag tribe and other marginalized communities.

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You can reduce your risk of dementia. Here's how to get started

NPR Health

About 40% of dementia cases could be prevented or delayed by healthy lifestyle choices and preventive medicine. Here's a tool to gauge your brain care and track your progress.

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Tons of chicken, pork and beef recalled over listeria concerns

The Hill

Yu Shang Food, Inc. is recalling more than 70,000 pounds of its ready-to-eat meat and poultry products because of a listeria outbreak that has sickened at least 11 people, including one baby who subsequently died. The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) on Thursday announced an expanded recall from the distributor, which initially recalled the food products on Nov. 9, 2024.

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U.N. report: 85,000 cases of femicide in 2023. And that's likely an undercount

NPR Health

These are women murdered by an intimate partner, a family member, a rapist, a stranger randomly assaulting females. Laws do not always offer protection and justice. What needs to be done?

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Study finds bone density loss associated with levothyroxine

News Medical Health Sciences

Levothyroxine, the second most commonly prescribed medication among older adults in the U.S., may be associated with bone loss, according to a study being presented next week at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA).

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The silent struggles of men’s mental health and suicide prevention

News Medical Health Sciences

Globally, the month of November is associated with campaigns to raise awareness and encourage conversation around men's health, particularly on topics such as prostate cancer, testicular cancer, mental health and suicide prevention.

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'I think of my body as a teacher,' says Marine who struggled with disordered eating

NPR Health

During her years as a military linguist, Bailey Williams pushed her body to extremes. Her new book is Hollow: A Memoir of My Body in the Marines.

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Taking health into consideration, is garbage incineration the way forward to tackle waste?

The Hindu

Investigative report on Delhi's WTE incinerators and Chennai's Climate Action Plan highlights health and environmental risks.

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Plastic waste is everywhere. Countries have one more chance to agree on a solution

NPR Health

Negotiations over a U.N. treaty to cut plastics have been bogged down. Environmental groups blame the oil and gas industry.

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Boosters cut long COVID risk significantly

News Medical Health Sciences

Vaccination, especially booster doses, reduces the risk of long COVID by up to 29%, highlighting its critical role in preventing lingering Omicron-era complications.

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The holidays are stressful. Restore your calm with these 5 quick tricks

NPR Health

Keep these science-backed stress busters in your back pocket this holiday season. Whip 'em out the next time you're at a table full of bickering in-laws or your flight gets canceled!

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Physical activity essential at all stages of adult life

News Medical Health Sciences

The research reveals that physical activity is key to lowering mortality risk, with stronger effects in older adults compared to other health factors over time.

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The eradication of small pox may have the set stage for the mpox outbreak

NPR Health

After small pox was eradicated and vaccinations against the disease came to an end, people in parts of Africa started getting sick with something rarely seen before - mpox. Researchers eventually realized that with the end of smallpox vaccinations, any immunity to other pox viruses such as mpox went away. They say this helps to explain why there are historically high numbers of mpox cases in the world today.

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Uranus's swaying moons will help spacecraft seek out hidden oceans

Science Daily: Pharmacology News

A new computer model can be used to detect and measure interior oceans on the ice covered moons of Uranus. The model works by analyzing orbital wobbles that would be visible from a passing spacecraft. The research gives engineers and scientists a slide-rule to help them design NASA's upcoming Uranus Orbiter and Probe mission.

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A message of commitment to our communities from Public Health

Public Health Insider

Public Health - Seattle & King County stands ready to support the health, well-being, and rights of our communities no matter what changes happen in the coming months and years. The post A message of commitment to our communities from Public Health appeared first on PUBLIC HEALTH INSIDER.

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New study reveals the explosive secret of the squirting cucumber

Science Daily: Pharmacology News

A team has solved a mystery that has intrigued scientists for centuries: how does the squirting cucumber squirt? The findings were achieved through a combination of experiments, high-speed videography, image analysis, and advanced mathematical modelling.

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Transwomen in India face discrimination, stigma, contributing to their mental health struggles: study

The Hindu

A new study has found that entrenched inter-personal and structural stigma, including amongst law enforcement and healthcare professionals, deeply impacts the mental health of transwomen

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Prehistoric hunter-gatherers heard the elks painted on rocks 'talking'

Science Daily: Pharmacology News

Researchers performed acoustic impulse response measurements in front of 37 rock painting site and found that the same vertical rock surfaces that have the painted elks, humans and boats, are also effective sound reflectors.

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How neural and hormonal gut-brain communication shapes metabolism and health

News Medical Health Sciences

Interoception research reveals how gut-brain communication via neural, hormonal, and microbial pathways regulates metabolism, hunger, and overall health, offering insights for therapeutic innovations.

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Novel supernova observations grant astronomers a peek into the cosmic past

Science Daily: Pharmacology News

An international team of researchers has made new observations of an unusual supernova, finding the most metal-poor stellar explosion ever observed.

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Atlas maps plasma proteins to transform disease diagnosis and treatment

News Medical Health Sciences

Researchers have developed the most comprehensive atlas linking plasma proteins to diseases and traits in over 53,000 individuals, offering groundbreaking insights for precision medicine. This resource uncovers 168,100 protein-disease associations and identifies new therapeutic targets.

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Most energetic cosmic-ray electrons and positrons ever observed

Science Daily: Pharmacology News

Scientists have recently identified electrons and positrons with the highest energies ever recorded on Earth. They provide evidence of cosmic processes emitting colossal amounts of energy, the origins of which are as yet unknown.

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Bird flu has been detected in raw milk in California

The Hill

State health officials are warning Californians not to drink a single batch of milk from a Fresno-based dairy farm after bird flu was found in a sample. The virus was found in a batch of cream top, whole raw milk produced and packaged at Raw Farm LLC after a public health laboratory purchased it at a retail outlet for testing. The company issued a voluntary recall stating that the batch consisted of quart and half-gallon fluid milk sizes produced on Nov. 9 with an expiration date of Nov. 27.

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Women who suffer pregnancy complications have fewer children

Science Daily - Public Health

Women who suffer severe complications during their first pregnancy or delivery are less inclined to have more babies, a study reports. Given the recent steady decline in birth rate in Sweden, the researchers propose monitoring in antenatal care to address the problem.

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Bats' amazing plan B for when they can't hear

Science Daily: Pharmacology News

When bats can't hear, new research finds that these hearing-dependent animals employ a remarkable compensation strategy.

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Online health care reviews turned negative following COVID pandemic

Science Daily - Public Health

Researchers showed online reviews of health facilities took a negative turn after COVID and remain that way.

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Focaccia: A Neolithic culinary tradition dating back 9,000 years ago

Science Daily: Pharmacology News

A new study indicates that during the Late Neolithic, between 7000 and 5000 BCE, the fully agricultural communities in the Fertile Crescent region of the Near East, developed a complex culinary tradition that included the baking of large loaves of bread and 'focaccias' with different flavors on special trays known to archaeologists as husking trays.

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Researchers develop tools to examine neighborhood economic effects on spinal cord injury outcomes

Science Daily - Public Health

A new study emphasizes that neighborhood conditions significantly shape recovery opportunities for individuals with SCI and advocates for environmental interventions to reduce health inequities.

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Black students are punished more often

Berkeley Public Health

A paper lays out the case that Black students across the country in K-12 education are experiencing scholastic punishment far more often than their peers.

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Coffee reshapes Brazilian diets: sugar up, milk down, and health risks highlighted

News Medical Health Sciences

Coffee consumption in Brazil influences dietary choices, increasing sugar and sweetener intake while reducing milk and sugar-sweetened beverage consumption, with notable gender differences and public health implications.

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Sub-Saharan Africa leads global HIV decline

Science Daily - Public Health

A new study reveals significant progress in the global fight against HIV/AIDS, alongside a stark warning that current trends indicate the world is not on track to meet the ambitious UNAIDS 2030 targets.

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Study points to a strategy for inhibiting hyper-progression of melanoma

News Medical Health Sciences

Duke Cancer Institute researchers have identified potential biomarkers that predict the likelihood for checkpoint inhibitor drugs to backfire, driving hyper-progression of melanoma cells instead of unleashing the immune system to fight them.

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Supreme Court won't hear case on graphic cigarette package warnings

The Hill

The Supreme Court will not hear a challenge to a federal requirement that cigarette packages include graphic warnings showing the impacts of smoking. The court declined to hear the case, the case order from Monday said. Tobacco company R.J. Reynolds brought the case to the Supreme Court after the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled the Food and Drug Administration's (FDA) requirement for the packaging was consistent with the First Amendment.

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