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Teens Are Less Familiar with Marijuana, E-Cigarette Health Risks Researchers found that although teens are familiar with the negative effects of smoking cigarettes, they know little about the health risks of using marijuana and e-cigarettes, and even describe some benefits they think are related to these products. "The main implication of these findings is that teens are receiving the health messages about smoking cigarettes, but they are not hearing much information about the risks of these other products, so they may perceive them as being OK," said Bonnie Halpern-Felsher, co-author of the study and a professor of pediatrics and adolescent medicine at Stanford University School of Medicine in Stanford, California. During these discussions, the teens were asked to describe the risks and benefits of using conventional cigarettes, marijuana and e-cigarettes, as well as how, where and from whom they learned information about these products. Read More »Many Medical Marijuana Edibles May Have Inaccurate Labels The labels of many edible medical marijuana products may not accurately reflect the actual doses of the compounds within the marijuana, according to a new study. Researchers found that only 13 of the 75 edible marijuana products they tested in the study had labels that accurately listed the product's levels of tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, one the compounds that is thought to drive its health effects. "The majority of the products we tested were inaccurately labeled," said study author Ryan Vandrey, of The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore. Read More »Spot Elusive Planet Mercury in the Predawn Sky This Week Read More » Pluto Probe Spies Weird 'Dark Pole' on Big Moon Charon (Photos) Read More » Jersey Shore Situation: Man-of-War 'Jellyfish' Pays a Visit Read More » Watch Ring-Shaped Molecule Unravel in Record-Fast Movie Read More » Shark-Mounted Cameras Reveal Predators' Deep-Sea Secrets Read More » Rough-and-Tumble Roach Bots Barrel Over Obstacles Read More » Roughhousing and Climbing Trees: Some Risks May Be Good for Kids Kids who engage in thrilling, risky activities, such as roaming far from home, may be healthier, both psychologically and physically, according to a new analysis of existing research. The risky activities could include iconic childhood pursuits like climbing a tree, sledding down an icy hill, play-fighting and even venturing through a wooded area and getting a little lost. "Engaging in risky play increased physical activity, it decreased sedentary behavior, and it promoted social health and behavior," said study co-author Mariana Brussoni, a developmental psychologist and injury prevention researcher at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. Read More »Fitbit May Help Boost Activity in Older Women In the study, women who wore a Fitbit saw a boost in their physical activity over a four-month period. About half of these women were given a Fitbit One, a fitness tracker that clips to a person's waistband and tracks a number of metrics: how many steps they take, the total distance they move, the number of floors they climb, the calories they burn, and the total number of minutes during the day that they are active. Both groups were asked to try to do 150 minutes of moderate to vigorous physical activity per week. Read More »Rosetta to Spiral onto Comet's Surface After Extended Mission Read More » It's no hallucination, that creature is just really weird Hallucigenia is one of the species emblematic of the Cambrian Period, a pivotal juncture in the history of life on Earth when most major groups of animals first appeared and many unusual body designs came and went. "It is nice to finally know rather fundamental things such as how many legs it has, and to know its head from its tail," University of Cambridge paleontologist Martin Smith said. Hallucigenia, whose fossils have been unearthed in the Burgess Shale site in the Canadian Rocky Mountains, belongs to a primitive group of velvet worms, animals that still exist today. Read More »Shell shock: Triassic reptile was 'grandfather' of all turtles Read More » Bizarre Cometlike Alien Planet Is First of Its Kind Read More » Ancient Carbon Haze Offers Clues to Galaxy Evolution Read More » Zombie Burials? Ancient Greeks Restrained the Undead Read More » | ||||
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Wednesday, June 24, 2015
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Tuesday, June 23, 2015
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Cyberbullying on Social Media Linked to Teen Depression Cyberbullying on social media is linked to depression in teenagers, according to new research that analyzed multiple studies of the online phenomenon. Victimization of young people online has received an increasing level of scrutiny, particularly after a series of high-profile suicides of teenagers who were reportedly bullied on various social networks. Social media use is hugely common among teenagers, said Michele Hamm, a researcher in pediatrics at the University of Alberta, but the health effects of cyberbullying on social media sites is largely unknown. Read More »Unhealthy Teens Face College and Job Obstacles Researchers found that teens with either mental health or chronic physical health conditions were less likely to graduate high school or finish college, and were more likely to be unemployed or have lower-income jobs as adults compared with healthy teens. The analysis also showed that teens with mental health problems fared worse than those with physical health issues in terms of economic and academic outcomes as young adults. "Mental health conditions may be more detrimental than physical health conditions, because they are linked with social isolation and exclusion, which are both linked with poor employment and education outcomes," said Daniel Hale, co-author of the study and a research associate in children's health policy at University College London. Read More »More Than Two-Thirds of Americans Are Overweight or Obese Researchers analyzed data gathered from 2007 through 2012 in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES), which included more than 15,000 men and women age 25 and older. When compared with an analysis conducted nearly 20 years before this study, the results show that more people are now overweight and obese, said Lin Yang, an epidemiologist at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and a co-author of the study, published today (June 22) in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine. Yang said she sees the findings as a wake-up call to create policies designed to combat excessive weight gain and obesity, which burden the American health care system and society. Read More »Blue Origin Offers Tantalizing Preview of Private Space Trips (Video) Read More » Construction of Giant Telescope Pushes on Despite Protests Read More » European satellite blasts off to provide new color view of Earth By Irene Klotz CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla (Reuters) - An unmanned Vega rocket blasted off from French Guiana on Monday to put a sophisticated Earth-watching satellite into orbit, a European Space Agency webcast showed. Flying for the fifth time, the four-stage Vega rocket, lifted off at 9:52 p.m. EDT (0152 GMT) carrying Europe's Sentinel-2A satellite, the newest member of the multibillion-euro Copernicus Earth-observation project. From its orbital perch 488 miles (786 km) above Earth, Sentinel-2A is designed to take high-resolution, color and infrared images for a wide array of environmental initiatives, including crop forecasting and monitoring natural disasters. Read More »Kazakh cosmonaut to replace singer Sarah Brightman for space flight By Irene Klotz CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla (Reuters) - A rookie Kazakh cosmonaut will take over British singer Sarah Brightman's seat on a Russian Soyuz capsule heading to the International Space Station in September, officials said on Monday. In addition, a Japanese businessman training as Brightman's backup signed a contract to fly to the orbital outpost when another Soyuz seat opens up in the next two- to four years, said Space Adventures, a U.S.-based travel agency that has brokered eight privately paid flights to the station. Last month, Brightman, 54, pulled out of training for a 10-day taxi flight, citing personal family reasons. Read More »In twist, scientists join tobacco companies to fight cancer Read More » 'Iron Man' Laser: Beams Can Shape Electrical Discharges Read More » Cockroach robot uses shell to overcome obstacles US-based researchers have created a robot that can use its body shape to move through a densely cluttered environment. The team from the University of California, Berkeley based the robot on the humble cockroach and hope their design could be used to inspire future robot designs for use in monitoring the environment and search and rescue operations. The Berkeley team, led by postdoctoral researcher Chen Li, designed the shell so it could perform a roll maneuver to slip through gaps between grass-like vertical beam obstacles without the need for additional sensors or motors. Read More »Alien-Like Worm Invades US Read More » Ancient Greek 'Antikythera' Shipwreck Still Holds Secrets Read More » Art-ificial Intelligence? Algorithm Sorts Paintings Like a Person A team of researchers has developed an artificial intelligence (AI) program that can classify famous works of art based on their style, genre or artist — tasks that normally require a professional art historian. "We're definitely not replacing art historians, but with a growing number of paintings in online collections, we need an automatic tool" for organizing them, said study researcher Babak Saleh, a computer scientist at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, New Jersey. A human can look at a painting and easily draw inferences from it, such as whether it's a portrait or a landscape, whether the style is impressionist or abstract, or who the artist was. Read More »Teen Dies of Plague: What Are the Symptoms of the Deadly Disease? Read More » Curious Case of Muscle, Nerve Damage from Skinny Jeans A woman in Australia who spent long hours squatting while wearing skinny jeans experienced muscle damage in her legs that was so severe it impaired her ability to walk, according to the new report of her case. "We believe it was the combination of squatting and tight jeans that caused the problem," said Dr. Thomas Kimber, of the Royal Adelaide Hospital and Department of Medicine in Adelaide, South Australia, who treated the woman. The case happened about six months ago, Kimber told Live Science. Read More »Sun Storm Supercharges Northern Lights, Wowing Skywatchers (Photos) Read More » Medical Marijuana: Review Shows Pot Helps These Conditions Medical marijuana may provide some benefit for patients with chronic nerve pain or cancer pain, as well as people who have multiple sclerosis and experience muscle spasms, according to a new review study. However, there is not much evidence supporting the use of medical marijuana for other reasons, such as sleep disorders, Tourette syndrome and anxiety disorders. Still, many of the studies done to date that found that marijuana had little or no effect were small, or lacked a rigorous design, the researchers said. Read More »No difference in kids with same-sex, opposite-sex parents: study Read More » | ||||
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