One of the key changes to our daily lives brought about by the COVID pandemic was, for those able to
Month: May 2023
Brain-altering fungi could lead the next frontier in mental health care
If you were one of the millions of people who watched HBO’s TV series “The Last of Us,” you probably
Fearful memories of pain stored in the prefrontal cortex could shape the experience of pain later in life
While pain and fear are very different experiences, past studies showed that they can sometimes be closely related to one
Risk of long COVID higher for people living in most deprived areas, finds new research
New research has found that the risk of long COVID is strongly associated with area-level deprivation, with the odds of
You are what you eat: Healthier diet may improve fitness
A healthy diet is associated with greater physical fitness in middle-aged adults, according to research published today in the European Journal
Skin patch could help ease peanut allergy in toddlers
A “peanut patch” worn on the skin may help protect toddlers who have potentially life-threatening peanut allergies, a new clinical
Old motor neurons don’t die, scientists discover—they just slow down
A new study led by researchers at Brown University’s Carney Institute for Brain Science offers a blueprint to help scientists
Skin cancer survivors: How to stay safe in the sunshine
For many people, playing and relaxing in the sun is fun. But for skin cancer survivors, the sun can be
Search for origin of rare tumor points to possible hot topic in cancer research: Succinylation
Researchers at the CNIO (Spanish National Cancer Research Center) have discovered that one of the causes for the rare tumor
Lack of belief in body’s ability to function through pain linked to daily pre-spine-surgery prescribed opioids
According to a new Johns Hopkins Medicine study, low pain self-efficacy can predict daily pre-surgery prescribed opioid use among patients