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22 votes
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Gates Foundation commits $2.5 billion to ignored, underfunded women's health
27 votes -
Full-body scans of 100,000 people could change way diseases are detected and treated
26 votes -
Sight of someone potentially infectious causes immune response, research suggests
19 votes -
Swarms of tiny nose robots could clear infected sinuses, researchers say
14 votes -
Journavx was approved this year. Why did it take so long to develop?
15 votes -
Risk of death higher from emergency surgery at private equity owned hospitals in the US
36 votes -
Finland's obsession with saunas is going global – what does science say about the claimed health benefits?
28 votes -
Adolescents' screen time displaces multiple sleep pathways and elevates depressive symptoms over twelve months
30 votes -
Nearly a century of happiness research indicates that social interactions are most significant
13 votes -
Virologists are still bringing dangerous, novel pathogens in from the wild
11 votes -
US private equity tied to 21% of healthcare bankruptcies for second consecutive year
26 votes -
US-developed drug formulation could eliminate cold storage for vaccines
11 votes -
US CIA now favors lab leak theory to explain Covid’s origins
33 votes -
Why gen Z is drinking less
37 votes -
South Korean researchers convert cancer cells back into normal cells
27 votes -
Medicare for all would save 68,000 US lives per year and reduce costs by $450 billion
78 votes -
Declaration of Helsinki turns sixty – how this foundational document of medical ethics has stood the test of time
8 votes -
Using Dungeons and Dragons as a group therapy tool
12 votes -
r/science user about long-term unemployment
29 votes -
Microplastics are infiltrating brain tissue, studies show
51 votes -
Amid a growing awareness of youth mental health, twenty schools in Denmark have pushed back their start times following a two-year trial
23 votes -
Pig transplant research yields pork safe for some with red meat allergy caused by lone star tick
20 votes -
Gilead shot prevents all HIV cases in trial of African women
29 votes -
Recent French research indicates that certain food emulsifiers may increase the risk of type 2 diabetes
18 votes -
Burden of stroke attributable to nonoptimal temperature in 204 countries and territories
7 votes -
Root cause of Alzheimer's may be fat buildup in brain cells, research suggests
22 votes -
HIV in cell culture can be completely eliminated using CRISPR-Cas gene editing technology, increasing hopes of cure
18 votes -
Annoying hospital beeps are causing hundreds of deaths a year
27 votes -
How parents' trauma leaves biological traces in children
18 votes -
Research at the heart of a US lawsuit against the abortion pill has been retracted
28 votes -
Fundamental questions about ovaries may unlock longer human lifespan. Philanthropist Nicole Shanahan is spending to find answers.
15 votes -
Vibrating capsule developed as an obesity treatment
19 votes -
Psychoactive drug ibogaine effectively treats traumatic brain injury in special ops military vets
31 votes -
Alzheimers paper retracted after a decade of resistance
44 votes -
Melatonin use soars among US children, with unknown risks
29 votes -
New book by doctor licensed in the UK and Brazil: poorer countries have useful knowledge and methods they could teach about frugal health care
18 votes -
How to get the best sleep of your life: Six secrets from research
39 votes -
Menopause as a case in point; funding for research on women’s health is still a fraction of that available for men’s health
20 votes -
Effects of thermal environment on sleep and circadian rhythm (2012)
20 votes -
Medical researchers report that the workers who make quartz countertops are dying of lung disease at a young age
31 votes -
Cochrane UK closes because funding has ended
11 votes -
Why depression after traumatic brain injury is distinct — and less likely to respond to standard treatment
Traumatic brain injury multiplies the risk of major depression eightfold. While the emotional trauma of whatever caused such deep damage may be understandable, from a blast in a war zone to a blow...
Traumatic brain injury multiplies the risk of major depression eightfold. While the emotional trauma of whatever caused such deep damage may be understandable, from a blast in a war zone to a blow on the playing field, there’s a physiological component, too, that neuroscientists have long suspected but have been unable to identify.
“As clinicians, a lot of us had a gut feeling that [TBI-associated depression] is a different disease,” said Shan Siddiqi, a Harvard Medical School assistant professor of psychiatry and a clinical neuropsychiatrist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. “Why did nobody detect it before? I think the reason is because unlike other psychiatric disorders, TBI caused a sort of structural reorganization of the brain.”
https://www.statnews.com/2023/07/06/depression-after-traumatic-brain-injury/
16 votes -
There’s finally a psychedelic caucus in congress — here’s what they’re doing
21 votes -
Aspartame sweetener used in Diet Coke a possible carcinogen, World Health Organization's cancer research agency to say - sources
40 votes -
An inhaled Covid vaccine booster was more than five-fold effective for inducing neutralizing antibodies at 28-days, and more durable at one-year, than shots, vs Omicron BA.5 in a randomized trial
18 votes -
Study finds trash, household crowding increase risk for three dangerous, mosquito-borne illnesses in Kenya
3 votes -
Bioluminescence helps researchers develop cancer drugs for brain
3 votes -
Stanford Medicine scientists transform cancer cells into weapons against cancer
6 votes -
Solid proof that parachutes don’t work
17 votes