The prevalence of obesity around the world has tripled over the past 40 years, and, along with that rise, dieting
Month: September 2021
New method used to study how cancer cells are organised
Changes in individual cancer cells over time may explain why brain tumors develop so differently, and why some cancer cells
Unique aspects of pancreatic cancer proteins could lead to early detection, new treatments
A large international collaboration led by researchers from the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center has identified promising new targets for
DNA modifications could be used to determine the progression of severe liver disease
Findings of a national study led by the Translational Genomics Research Institute (TGen), an affiliate of City of Hope, identify
A pair of proteins control the supply lines that feed cancer cells
In human cancer cell and mouse studies, researchers from Johns Hopkins Medicine have found that a set of proteins work
Little research available on the long-term effects of tear gas
University of Minnesota Medical School graduate students analyzed and summarized literature on the health effects of chemical demonstration control agents,
Virus lockdown end in sight for Australia’s second-largest city
Australia’s second-largest city will exit its coronavirus lockdown in late October if vaccine targets are met under an official roadmap
Living with Alzheimer’s: China’s health time bomb
The first time Chen Shaohua went missing and was picked up by police, the 68-year-old’s family put it down to
Same goal, different paths: US, EU seek max vaccine rates
The Belgian town of Aarschot has a vaccination rate of 94% of all adults, but Mayor Gwendolyn Rutten worries her
North Africa virus cases plummeting after summer spike
Weeks after a spike in coronavirus cases overwhelmed intensive care units across North Africa with severe oxygen shortages sparking public