News



Life Technology™ Medical News

Myth of Tongue-Swallowing Prevention in CPR

UK Teens Vaping Linked to Smoking Uptake

Link Between Ultra-Processed Food and Lung Cancer

Exercise-Based Cardiac Rehab Reduces Atrial Fibrillation Severity

Diabetes Epidemic: Over 38 Million Americans Affected

Community Involvement in Dementia Care: Beyond Spouses & Children

High-Intensity Training Aids Cancer Battle: ECU Study

Tragic Death: Boy Succumbs to Brain-Eating Amoeba

Surgical Treatment for Neurological Disorders: Deep Brain Stimulation

Herpes Infections and Alzheimer's: Potential Link Explored

Cannabis Use Disorder Linked to Higher Oral Cancer Risk

Study Finds Low Risk of Locoregional Recurrence in Young Breast Cancer Patients

Childhood Immunization Progress in Africa: Global Targets at Risk

Low Blood Sugar Linked to Adverse Pregnancy Outcomes

Prediabetes Twice as Common in Asian Adolescents

Study: Avian Influenza Virus in Dairy Cattle Maintains Bird-Infecting Traits

Breakthrough Discovery by ANU Researchers Enhances Hodgkin Lymphoma Treatments

Planned Parenthood Clinics Maintain Medicaid Funding

Virtual Nature Exposure Boosts Well-Being in Dementia Patients

Ultrasound-Guided Nerve Blocks Ease Pain in Kids with Broken Thigh Bones

Unlocking the Power of Contextual Memory Recall

Local Homicide Rates Linked to Higher Suicide Rates

New Clinical Guideline for Early-Stage Lung Cancer Management

U.S. Health Spending vs. Community Health: New Research Insights

UK Residents Consume Eight Plant Varieties Daily

President Lyndon Johnson Signs Medicare into Law

First Malaria Treatment for Babies and Young Children Approved

Climate Change Worsens Diarrhea Risk for Children

Efficient Capture of Circulating Tumor Cells for Cancer Diagnosis

Study Reveals $192 Billion Health Care Costs Due to Inadequate Physical Activity

Life Technology™ Medical News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSS

Life Technology™ Science News

Study: Women Politicians in Europe Face More Uncivil Tweets and Identity Attacks

Human Presence in US National Parks Affects Animal Behavior

Wild Great Tits Show Early Divorce Signals

Unusually Hot Rock Beneath Appalachians Linked to Ancient Split

Variation in Blood Glycoproteins: Top 10 Dominance

Rising Threat: Multidrug-Resistant Bacteria Claim 5 Million Lives

Global Research Dominance: Factors Influencing Study Origins

Global Framework Proposed to Regulate Tire Additives

Southeast U.S. Residents Urged to Stay Hydrated Amid Record Heat

Rice University Engineers E. coli as Multiplexed Sensors

Plastic Waste Breakdown Threatens Global Ecosystems

Smartphone-Controlled Capsule Communicates with Gut Bacteria

Amyloids: Key Driver of Alzheimer's Disease

Is There a Massive Undiscovered Planet in the Solar System?

Harness AI for Quick Essay Writing & Reading Skips

Land Dispossession Struggle in Post-Apartheid South Africa

French Health Experts Warn Against Bee-Killing Pesticide

Reddit Hate Speech Posts Show Similarities to Psychiatric Disorder Communities

Trump Administration to Reverse Key Climate Change Determination

Rising Online Child Abuse: STOP-CSAM's Therapeutic Chat Intervention

Qut Researchers Innovate Remote Sensing for Antarctica's Moss & Lichen

Ancient Hominins: Study Reveals Size Disparity in Ancestors

Study Suggests Tech Boost for Coral Restoration

Lab-Grown Beef: Taste and Consistency Similar to Real Meat

Study by National Physical Laboratory Reveals Noise Impact on Orbitrap Mass Spectrometers

Researchers Use Artificial Intelligence to Manage $35 Million Plant Cost

Breakthrough Study: Advancing Affordable X-ray Free-Electron Lasers

"York University Study Reveals Evolution of Lava Planets"

Ancient Micrometeorites: Earth's Hidden History

College Athletes Embrace Influencer Roles: Study

Life Technology™ Science News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSS

Life Technology™ Technology News

Microsoft Authenticator Users Alerted: Password Management Update

Microsoft Authenticator is ending password autofill soon. How to set up a passkey before Aug. 1

Dating App Tea Reports Cybersecurity Breach

Tea app takes messaging system offline after second security issue reported

Most U.S. Adults Use AI for Information Search

How US adults are using AI, according to AP-NORC polling

Spotify Reports 12% Surge in Paying Subscribers

Spain's Competition Watchdog Expands Apple App Store Probe

Spain competition watchdog expands probe into Apple

Spotify sees 12% rise in paid subscribers

Scientists Disrupt Atomic Order for High-Performance Battery Anodes

Targeted atomic disorder boosts battery charging speed and long-term stability

Overcoming Faulty Ranking Mechanisms in AI Leaderboards

Why AI leaderboards are inaccurate and how to fix them

Artificial Intelligence Agents Show Strong Software Development Skills

AI agent autonomously solves complex cybersecurity challenges using text-based tools

Robotic Arm with Assistive Grippers Aids Pizza Making

Robotic arm with soft grippers helps people with disabilities make pizza and more

Technology Adoption Life Cycle: Innovators Embrace, Laggards Follow

'AI veganism': Some people's issues with AI parallel vegans' concerns about diet

Offshore Wind Power Potential Exceeds U.S. Electricity Demand

Great Lakes offshore wind could power the region and beyond

New Study: Flying Small Quadrotors in Air Ducts

Designing drones that can fly in air ducts

Moon Landings Unveil Lunar Dust Mystery

Solving a moon mystery helps game out future landings

Sustainable Energy Piles for Urban Buildings

New Method for Manufacturing Computer Chips

Optimizing geothermal foundations in soft clay for urban buildings

UV-light method cuts computer chip manufacturing steps in half

Life Technology™ Technology News Subscribe Via Feedburner Subscribe Via Google Subscribe Via RSS

Monday, 5 October 2020

Indirect effects of the COVID-19 pandemic coincide with a heavy mental health burden

The COVID-19 pandemic is taking a heavy mental health toll even on people who are not directly impacted by the disease, shows a new study in Frontiers in Psychiatry.

Paris shuts bars to brake COVID-19 spread

Bars and cafes in Paris, placed on maximum coronavirus alert Monday, will be shuttered for two weeks under new measures to fight the rapid spread of the epidemic, but restaurants will remain open, officials said.

Indian capital launches campaign to curb toxic air pollution

Authorities in New Delhi launched an anti-pollution campaign on Monday in an attempt to curb air pollution levels ahead of winter, when the capital is regularly covered in toxic haze, and warned that filthy air could make the coronavirus pandemic more dangerous.

3 win Nobel medicine award for Hepatitis C virus discovery

Americans Harvey J. Alter and Charles M. Rice, and British scientist Michael Houghton were awarded the Nobel Price for Medicine or Physiology on Monday for the discovery of the Hepatitis C virus.

Russia virus cases approach May high in 'serious' upturn

Russia on Monday recorded a rise in coronavirus cases close to the maximum level in May but it has stopped short of reimposing strict lockdown measures.

Microsoft plans $1 billion data center venture in Greece

Microsoft has announced plans to build three data centers in greater Athens, providing a badly needed investment of up to $1 billion to the Greek economy which has been hammered by the pandemic.

Spouses of ICU patients may be at increased risk for cardiac events or hospitalization

Having a spouse in a hospital's intensive care unit (ICU) may make a person more likely to have a heart attack or cardiac-related hospitalization themselves within a few weeks of the ICU admission, according to new research published today in the American Heart Association's flagship journal Circulation.

Dozens of mammals could be susceptible to SARS-CoV-2

Numerous animals may be vulnerable to SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, according to a large study modelling how the virus might infect different animals' cells, led by UCL researchers.

Britain passes 500,000 coronavirus cases

The United Kingdom passed 500,000 confirmed coronavirus infections on Sunday, official figures showed, in the latest grim milestone for the European country worst-hit by the pandemic.

New Zealand PM says 'we beat the virus again'

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern declared on Monday New Zealand "beat the virus again" and announced restrictions in the country's largest city would be eased, after a second COVID-19 wave was contained.

In an era of team science, are Nobels out of step?

With the 2020 Nobel prizes this week comes a recurrent question: has the world's most prestigious awards for physics, chemistry and medicine—first conferred in 1901—lost touch with the way modern science is conducted?

'Like wolves to Yellowstone': Tasmanian devils released on Australian mainland

Tasmanian devils have been released into the wild on Australia's mainland 3,000 years after the feisty marsupials went extinct there, in what conservationists described Monday as a "historic" step.

Wildfires raze dozens of homes in New Zealand

Wildfires have destroyed up to 50 homes in New Zealand, authorities announced Monday, saying it was a miracle no one was hurt as "a wall of orange" razed most of a remote South Island village.

Conservation success or pests? Seals spark passionate debate

Nick Muto has fished up and down the New England coast and there is nothing that gets his blood boiling more than the sight of a seal.

NYC seeks to reinstate virus restrictions in some spots

New York City's mayor said Sunday that he has asked the state for permission to close schools and reinstate restrictions on nonessential businesses in several neighborhoods because of a resurgence of the coronavirus.

2020 Nobel season opens with medicine prize

Breakthroughs in the field of health will be honoured Monday when the 2020 Nobel season kicks off with the medicine prize, as the world battles the worst pandemic in a century.

Anglo-Saxon warlord found by detectorists could redraw map of post-Roman Britain

Archaeologists have uncovered a warrior burial in Berkshire that could change historians' understanding of southern Britain in the early Anglo-Saxon era.

Some planets may be better for life than Earth

Earth is not necessarily the best planet in the universe. Researchers have identified two dozen planets outside our solar system that may have conditions more suitable for life than our own. Some of these orbit stars that may be better than even our sun.

How the brain helps us navigate social differences

Our brain responds differently if we talk to a person of a different socioeconomic background from our own compared to when we speak to someone whose background is similar, according to a new imaging study by UCL and Yale researchers.

Parents less aware when their kids vape than when they smoke

Most parents know or suspect when their child smokes, but they are much more likely to be in the dark if the child vapes or uses other tobacco products, according to a large national study by researchers at UC San Francisco.

Method used to track Ebola's trajectory being applied to COVID-19

What exactly happened in Asia that caused SARS-CoV-2 to rapidly spread across the region and then essentially came to a halt there? That's what researchers from the University of South Florida are trying to determine in a new study funded by an NSF Rapid Response grant.

A tale of two cesspits: DNA reveals intestinal health in Medieval Europe and Middle East

A new study published this week in the journal Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B demonstrates a first attempt at using the methods of ancient bacterial detection, pioneered in studies of past epidemics, to characterize the microbial diversity of ancient gut contents from two medieval latrines. The findings provide insights into the microbiomes of pre-industrial agricultural populations, which may provide much-needed context for interpreting the health of modern microbiomes.