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14 votes
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New pill can deliver insulin
7 votes -
How to rapidly image entire brains at nanoscale resolution
10 votes -
AIDS – An approach for targeting HIV reservoirs
5 votes -
How do you feel what you can't touch? Scientists crack the nerve code.
6 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 -
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 -
Electrical stimulation allows paralysed patients to walk short distances
7 votes -
The rise of cancer immunotherapy
7 votes -
Two unborn babies' spines repaired in womb in UK surgery first
6 votes -
Meet the carousing, harmonica-playing Texan who just won a Nobel for his cancer breakthrough
4 votes -
How venoms are shaping medical advances
4 votes -
A bone-marrow transplant treated a patient’s leukemia — and his schizophrenic delusions, too. Some doctors think they know why.
12 votes -
Psychogenic death: People can die from giving up the fight
10 votes -
Exterminate Mosquitoes for the Sake of Humanity
12 votes -
Early alterations of social brain networks in young children with autism
5 votes -
Top cancer researcher fails to disclose corporate financial ties in major research journals
9 votes -
The ethics of consciousness hunting: We are letting brain-damaged patients die on a false assumption
8 votes -
'A Nazi in all but name': Author argues Asperger's syndrome should be renamed
18 votes -
Too good to be true? A nonaddictive opioid without lethal side effects shows promise
10 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 -
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 -
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 -
Protecting Mothers and Babies — A Delicate Balancing Act
6 votes -
DMT Models the Near-Death Experience
4 votes -
An entirely new type of antidepressant targets postpartum depression
2 votes -
How the CIA’s fake vaccination campaign endangers us all
11 votes -
Psychological language on Twitter predicts county-level heart disease mortality
3 votes -
Bioengineered lungs grown in a lab successfully transplanted into living pigs
8 votes -
BCG vaccine leads to long-term improvement in blood sugar levels in type 1 diabetes patients
6 votes -
IVF at forty: Revisiting the revolution in assisted reproduction
3 votes -
Two fungal species—one pathogenic, one benign—are actually the same
10 votes -
Potential DNA damage from CRISPR has been ‘seriously underestimated,’ study finds
7 votes -
When you have a serious hereditary disease, who has a right to know?
4 votes -
First 3D colour X-ray of a human using CERN technology
8 votes -
Anti-vaxxers are targeting a vaccine for a virus deadlier than ebola
7 votes -
Scientists hopeful as HIV vaccine candidate passes key test
Here's a news article about an HIV vaccine being tested on humans "in the field": Scientists hopeful as HIV vaccine candidate passes key test Here's the scientific report: Evaluation of a mosaic...
Here's a news article about an HIV vaccine being tested on humans "in the field": Scientists hopeful as HIV vaccine candidate passes key test
Here's the scientific report: Evaluation of a mosaic HIV-1 vaccine in a multicentre, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 1/2a clinical trial (APPROACH) and in rhesus monkeys (NHP 13-19)
13 votes -
Pain control: “no evidence” cannabis improves outcomes
6 votes -
Newborn screening urged for fatal neurological disorder, spinal muscular atrophy (SMA)
6 votes -
HIV vaccine to begin human trials in 2019
16 votes -
Moderate exposure to sunlight improves motor learning and long-term memory in mice
5 votes -
A better way to trace neuronal pathways: Moving forward by moving backward more effectively
8 votes -
Researchers create first artificial human prion
11 votes -
Research shows consciousness may extend beyond clinical death
6 votes -
A genetically modified organism could end malaria and save millions of lives — if we decide to use it
8 votes -
How gut microbes are joining the fight against cancer
10 votes -
Successful treatment of a rare genetic disorder in the womb
5 votes