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6 votes
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Faulty medical implants harm patients around world
4 votes -
New research suggests optimism for HIV/AIDS
6 votes -
Healing the body electric: In the next five to ten years, a new generation of small networked sensors will provide doctors with up-to-the-moment insight into patients’ health
5 votes -
The million-dollar drug: How a Canadian medical breakthrough that was thirty years in the making became the world’s most expensive drug — and then quickly disappeared
19 votes -
Sackler family members face mass litigation and criminal investigations over opioids crisis
4 votes -
Sackler family members face mass litigation, criminal investigations over opioids crisis
7 votes -
A startup company says it will give people free genome reports if they’re willing to answer detailed questions about their health, drinking habits, and more
5 votes -
What if the placebo effect isn’t a trick?
9 votes -
A marathon procedure to seperate conjoined 14-month-old twins Nima and Dawa is underway at Melbourne's Royal Children's Hospital, with doctors saying the operation is "all about the connections".
3 votes -
Identify pills based on shape, color, and stamping
7 votes -
Despite warnings, US FDA approves potent new opioid painkiller
7 votes -
Electrical stimulation allows paralysed patients to walk short distances
7 votes -
Young adults are the new vaccine skeptics
4 votes -
Two unborn babies' spines repaired in womb in UK surgery first
6 votes -
Using technology to fight counterfeit medicines in Africa and South Asia
5 votes -
Meet the carousing, harmonica-playing Texan who just won a Nobel for his cancer breakthrough
4 votes -
UK Biobank data on 500,000 people paves way to precision medicine
8 votes -
No wonder it works so well: There may be Viagra in that herbal supplement
6 votes -
How venoms are shaping medical advances
4 votes -
MDMA-assisted psychotherapy shows promise for reducing social anxiety in autistic adults
11 votes -
Recovering emotions after twenty-four years on antidepressants
13 votes -
Everything you know about obesity is wrong
15 votes -
Psychogenic death: People can die from giving up the fight
10 votes -
'This substance will cause death’: New euthanasia rules announced
6 votes -
Is Cannabidol an effective antipsychotic?
4 votes -
NHS beats drug companies in £100m Avastin battle
5 votes -
Exterminate Mosquitoes for the Sake of Humanity
12 votes -
Early alterations of social brain networks in young children with autism
5 votes -
Pharma chief defends 400% drug price rise as a ‘moral requirement’
8 votes -
The secret drug pricing system middlemen use to rake in millions
5 votes -
The future abortionists of America
15 votes -
Top cancer researcher fails to disclose corporate financial ties in major research journals
9 votes -
'A Nazi in all but name': Author argues Asperger's syndrome should be renamed
18 votes -
Jehovah’s Witness girl could receive blood against her will during childbirth
8 votes -
For poorer people in India and many other countries, a computer engineer has found a way to detect breast cancer without radiation
10 votes -
The spectre of smallpox lingers
9 votes -
Gwyneth Paltrow’s Goop expanding to Canada — and some medical experts aren’t happy
11 votes -
Shinrin-Yoku (Forest Bathing) and Nature Therapy: A State-of-the-Art Review
Summary A study of the effect of Shinrin-Yoku or "forest bathing" (immersing oneself in nature by mindfully using all five senses) on human physiological and psychological systems. Extract In...
Summary
A study of the effect of Shinrin-Yoku or "forest bathing" (immersing oneself in nature by mindfully using all five senses) on human physiological and psychological systems.
Extract
In general, from a physiological perspective, significant empirical research findings point to a reduction in human heart rate and blood pressure and an increase in relaxation for participants exposed to natural GS. Even research involving the use of nature videos of the forest or the ocean have the same physiological effects. From a qualitative and psychological perspective, Danish participants reported a sense of safety, calm and overall general wellbeing following exposure or engagement with nature. South Korean participants with a known alcohol addiction and high pre-test scores of depression benefited more from the Forest Therapy Camp than participants with lower pre-test scores of depression and alcohol abuse. Differences in culture, gender, education, marital or economic status were not associated confounding factors in many of the empirical studies. Overall, our review of the literature, as illustrated in Table 1, points to positive health benefits associated with SY and NT while confounding factors were clearly identified by the researchers.
Link
4 votes -
The imminent departure of Saudi medical residents
6 votes -
Newly Found Enzymes Can Help Turn Type A and B Blood into Universal Type O
13 votes -
Researcher at the center of an epic fraud remains an enigma to those who exposed him
11 votes -
US DEA wants more marijuana grown and fewer opioids produced in 2019. Really.
8 votes -
US Food and Drug Administration approves first generic version of EpiPen
18 votes -
Protecting Mothers and Babies — A Delicate Balancing Act
6 votes -
DMT models the near-death experience
4 votes -
Health effects of overweight and obesity in 195 countries over twenty-five years
4 votes -
How a transplanted face transformed a young woman’s life
6 votes -
The burnout crisis in American medicine
8 votes -
DIYers hack insulin pump - create artificial pancreas
13 votes