Engaging in family meals may be a matter of improving communication and support at home. A new study in the Journal
Month: June 2020
Impressive result for mental health therapy
The researchers evaluated the NewAccess program, which is an Australian adaptation of the United Kingdom’s IAPT (Improving Access to Psychological
Repetitive negative thinking linked to dementia risk
Persistently engaging in negative thinking patterns may raise the risk of Alzheimer’s disease, finds a new UCL-led study. In the
Childhood trauma affects the timing of motherhood
Women who have experienced childhood trauma become mothers earlier than those with a more stable childhood environment, according to a
Researchers find TEG test can identify undetected blood clots in COVID-19 ICU patients
Researchers at Baylor College of Medicine are recommending that all COVID-19 patients admitted to the ICU undergo a thromboelastography (TEG)
The original SARS virus disappeared – here’s why coronavirus won’t do the same
British cancer doctor Prof Karol Sikora recently claimed that the current COVID-19 pandemic would “burn itself out”. His thinking is that
Teens can donate blood, but may need iron supplements after
Teens who donate blood are at significant risk for long-term iron deficiency, a new study warns. The concern comes as
Wearable brain scanner technology expanded for whole head imaging
Scientists from the University of Nottingham developed an initial prototype of a new generation of brain scanner in 2018 which
Gut research delves deeper into obesity problems
By delving deeper into metabolism problems, the research team has found that the nutrient sensing capacity of Enterochromaffin (EC) cells—which
Programming ‘language’: Brain scans reveal coding uses same regions as speech
What goes on in the minds of programmers when they write software? This was the question posed by Prof. Dr.