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U.S. scientists develop mouse model to test Zika vaccines, drugs Read More » Arctic Sea Ice Is at Near Record Lows, NASA Says Read More » Sanofi poaches AstraZeneca scientist as new research head Read More » This Negative Facial Expression Is 'Universal' Read More » Women Could Lower Fracture Risk with Mediterranean Diet Older women who eat a diet full of produce, fish and nuts, may have a slightly lower risk of hip fractures, a new study finds. The researchers found that the risk of hip fracture among the women in the study who adhered most closely to this kind of diet, sometimes called the Mediterranean diet, was very slightly reduced. The finding is important mainly because it shows that following the Mediterranean diet and other related diets, which do not emphasize the intake of dairy foods,is not linked with a higher risk of hip fractures, said Dr. Bernhard Haring, who led the study and is a physician at the University of Wu?rzburg in Germany. Read More »Old Vaccine, New Tricks: Revive Early Pertussis Shot, Study Says Newer isn't always better — some researchers are proposing to bring back an older version of the whooping cough vaccine, because multiple studies show that today's version doesn't protect as well as the earlier kind. In a new study, researchers suggest vaccinating children with one dose of the older whooping cough vaccine — called the whole-cell pertussis vaccine — and then giving them four doses of the current whooping cough vaccine in early childhood. Using a mathematical model, the researchers found that this "combined" vaccination strategy could reduce the rate of whooping cough infections by up to 95 percent, and save millions of dollars in health care costs. Read More »Sanofi poaches AstraZeneca scientist as new research head Read More » 12 Supereruptions Pockmark Path of Yellowstone Hotspot
Colon Cancer Found in 18th-Century Hungarian Mummy Tissue samples from a Hungarian mummy have revealed that people in the early 17th and 18th centuries suffered from colon cancer, long before the modern plagues of obesity, physical inactivity and processed food were established as causes of the disease, according to new research. In a new study of 18th-century Hungarian mummies, scientists found that the genetic predisposition to colon cancer predates modern impacts on health. One of the mummies in the study carried a mutation in the adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) gene, which physicians now know raises the risk of colon cancer, said lead study author Michal Feldman, a research assistant formerly at Tel Aviv University in Israel. Read More »U.S. firms target investment in Israeli cannabis R&D Read More » Man-Made Earthquake Hotspot Revealed: Oklahoma Read More » | ||||
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Tuesday, March 29, 2016
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Monday, March 28, 2016
FeedaMail: Science News Headlines - Yahoo! News
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Can Apple's 'Night Shift' Really Help You Sleep Better? Read More » After Zika Infection, People Should Wait Months to Conceive Children, CDC Says People who have been infected with Zika virus should wait at least several months before they attempt to conceive a child, according to new recommendations from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Women who are diagnosed with Zika or who experience symptoms of the disease after possible exposure to Zika should wait at least eight weeks after their symptoms started before trying to become pregnant, the CDC said. For men, the recommended wait is much longer: Those who have been infected with Zika or who have symptoms of it should wait at least six months before attempting to conceive a child, the agency said. Read More »Ancient Mini Weapons Likely Made to Please Gods Read More » Amazing Blind Cavefish Walks Up Rocks and Waterfalls Read More » Eating More 'Healthy Fats' May Lower Diabetes Risk Replacing some of the meat and cheese in your diet with vegetable oils or nuts could help slow the progression of diabetes in some people, according to a small new study. People with "prediabetes" have levels of blood sugar, or glucose, that are higher than normal but not high enough to warrant being diagnosed with type 2 diabetes. In 2012, 86 million Americans age 20 and older had prediabetes, and 29.1 million had diabetes, with the vast majority of the cases being type 2, according to the American Diabetes Association. Read More »WWII-Era Bell from Sunken Japanese Submarine Recovered Read More » Affordable Hypersonic Jets Could Be High-Flying Reality by 2023 Read More » New Ultrathin Solar Cells Are Light Enough to Sit on a Soap Bubble Read More » Alaska Volcano Erupts, Spewing Ash 20,000 Feet into the Air Read More » Season of Birth Genetically Linked to Allergy Risk People born in the fall and winter seem to have an increased risk of certain allergic diseases such as asthma, studies have shown, and now scientists may have found one reason why. In a new study of people in England, researchers found that certain markers on the DNA are linked to the seasons in which people are born, and these markers also seem to mediate people's risk of allergic diseases. The results suggest that some environmental factor that varies from one season to another may also drive the changes in these markers, the researchers said. Read More »Aloha, You Old Bat: Extinct Critter Doubles Hawaii's Land Mammal Species Read More » | ||||
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Saturday, March 26, 2016
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Tiny Artificial Life: Lab-Made Bacterium Sports Smallest Genome Yet Read More » With the Right 'Words,' Science Can Pull Anyone In (Op-Ed) Read More » You're Surrounded: New Tech Unleashing 3D Audio Read More » 6 of the World's Best Cities to Be a Scientific Genius More than a backdrop to innovation, certain cities in the United States and around the world have emerged as active innovation centers, where forward-thinking public and private-sector investment is focused on attracting scientists and other innovators to live and work in the region. Do you live in a global innovation hub? Read More »Isaac Newton's Recipe for Magical 'Philosopher's Stone' Rediscovered One of Isaac Newton's 17th-century alchemy manuscripts, buried in a private collection for decades, reveals his recipe for a material thought to be a step toward concocting the magical philosopher's stone. The "philosopher's stone" was a mythical substance that alchemists believed had magical properties and could even help humans achieve immortality. The manuscript turned up at an auction at Bonhams in Pasadena, California, on Feb. 16, where the Chemical Heritage Foundation (CHF) in Philadelphia bought it. Read More » | ||||
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