Science 2.0

Sending Health Care To Homes Is Better And Cheaper Than Hospital Stays

Science 2.0 - 11 hours 16 min ago
Due to the rising costs and inability of doctors to own hospitals since the Affordable Care Act (ACA), costs have ballooned. The ACA was passed because 750,000 people had pre-existing conditions that made private insurance unavailable, yet their incomes were too high for government assistance. The ACA bridged that gap, yet as government requirements increased the cost for everyone increased so much that 50,000,000 now need subsidies.

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Conferences Good And Bad, In A Profit-Driven Society

Science 2.0 - Dec 03 2025 - 12:12
Nowadays researchers and scholars of all ages and specialization find themselves struggling with mailboxes pestered with invitations to conferences, invitations to submit papers to journals, invitations to participate in the editorial board of journals, invitations to receive prizes for this or that reason; and of course, 99% of the origin of these invitations are individuals running fake conferences, scam, or predatory journals. Spam filters are not extremely good at distinguishing good and bad invitations, so if one wants to avoid discarding prestigious opportunities the only option is a painful manual screening.

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$0.50 Pantoprazole For Stomach Bleeding In ICU Patients Could Save Families Thousands Of Dollars

Science 2.0 - Dec 03 2025 - 10:12
The inexpensive medication pantoprazole prevents potentially serious stomach bleeding in critically ill patients and can save consumers and the government thousands of dollars.

The results of a new study show that when prescribed in hospital for mechanically ventilated patients in the intensive care unit, where patients are on life support and at high risk of upper gastrointestinal bleeding due to ulcers, the benefits are dramatic. So are the resulting savings, at a time when governments are struggling to contain costs during times of rising public criticism.


Image: Storyblocks

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If You Want To Golf Better, Don't Play With A Democrat

Science 2.0 - Dec 03 2025 - 09:12
Sports used to bridge a lot of cultural gaps. You could walk into any bar and ask what the score was and everyone was your friend, regardless of race, creed, or color.

Those days are gone, according to humanities scholars at coastal universities. Even elite athletes are shook by being around anything different from them, they write in a new paper. The authors even suggest their work means business teams may want to group employees by political beliefs. Perhaps restaurants should consider having sections just for Democrats or Republicans.

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If You Like MAHA, Thank Obama

Science 2.0 - Dec 02 2025 - 14:12
In 2008, Senator Obama won the election against Senator John McCain to become America's 44th President. It brought a lot of excitement to the science community. Before social media, opinion was easy to manipulate. Academics who, let's be honest, are almost 90% Democrats, were ready to believe the worst about Republicans. Bush banned stem cell research and it would cure Alzheimer's if a Democrat was in office(1), they repeated. Solar was ready but Republicans blocked it, while nuclear energy had to stay banned because it always led to nuclear weapons, they insisted.(2)

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USERN: 10 Years Of Non-Profit Action Supporting Science Education And Research

Science 2.0 - Nov 28 2025 - 09:11
The 10th congress of the USERN organization was held on November 8-10 in Campinas, Brazil. Some time has gone by, so it is due time for me to report on the event. I could not attend in person for a cause of force majeure, but I was connected via zoom, and I also delivered two recorded speeches plus one talk in one of the parallel "virtual session" that were run via zoom in the evenings (CET) after the in-person program of the day was over. 

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Quantum Leap Or Quantum Mirage? What Happens When Schrödinger Gets A Microchip

Science 2.0 - Nov 26 2025 - 11:11
The Nobel committee dropped a bombshell in 2025 by handing its annual physics prize—often reserved for theoretical wizards—to a scrappy team of chip engineers. For showing that quantum mechanics isn’t just for blackboards and headline-grabbing paradoxes, but the heartbeat of the chip in your own hand. That’s right: the same theory that has tormented generations of undergrads is now expected to run your phone.

Sounds wild. But before anyone starts imagining quantum teleportation apps, there are two (uncomfortable) facts to remember:

1. Quantum weirdness isn’t some bonus feature—it’s mostly a headache in modern electronics.

2. Most “quantum breakthroughs” in tech are more marketing than miracle.

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Life Sciences Can’t Afford Fragmented Data And Disconnected Teams

Science 2.0 - Nov 26 2025 - 10:11

Despite big ambitions, most life sciences organizations are stuck navigating outdated systems that make collaboration harder and breakthroughs slower.

The result? Slowdowns, missed insights, and costly rework. 

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Baby Steps In The Reinforcement Learning World

Science 2.0 - Nov 25 2025 - 09:11
I am moving some baby steps in the direction of Reinforcement Learning (RL) these days. In machine learning, RL is a well-established and very promising avenue for the development of artificial intelligence, and the field is in rapid development. Unfortunately I have been left behind, as I never really needed to fiddle with those techniques for my research. Until recently.

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Student Loans Were Touted As The Path To Higher Income - Most Made Young People Poorer

Science 2.0 - Nov 24 2025 - 11:11
In the 1980s, Democrats produced data showing that a college degree meant hundreds of thousands of dollars in lifetime earnings difference than a high school diploma. It should be a right, they said, and universities readily agreed. Student loans became unlimited and suddenly it wasn't just rich dumb kids or scholarship winners, everyone could go everywhere.

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The Organic Foods You Need To Avoid This Thanksgiving To Stay Cancer-Free

Science 2.0 - Nov 23 2025 - 04:11
Though vegetable oil is all the rage this year, we need to remember that food scaremongering is designed to pile onto previous hysteria, not replace it. The Endocrine Disruptor/PM2.5/5G conspiracy community, dominated by the left for decades, finally got one of their into a position that was important, rather than Guardian journalists or Natural Resources Defense Council attorney, and that means a whole new tranche of Evil Science must be lamented.

If being worried that food coloring caused your autism and telling strangers that beef tallow would've prevented it is not enough to keep you in full militant mode this Thanksgiving, here is a list of other foods that the International Agency for Risk on Cancer (IARC) has linked to cancer.

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Mitochondria Replacement May Help Old Cells Feel Young Again

Science 2.0 - Nov 22 2025 - 04:11
People who 'age' better don't share much in common at all about lifestyles like diet. Surveys are too unreliable and too many centenarians were only such because of inaccurate records or even fraud for valid epidemiology.

But what they do share in common is superior energy production in cells. Their mitochondria, the energy factories that take all our food (ultra-processed and organic certified foods are biologically the same, sorry activists) and convert it into a common energy currency, fire better.

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The Global Space Awards - December 5, 2025

Science 2.0 - Nov 21 2025 - 13:11
The inaugural Global Space Awards, presented by theoretical physicist Professor Briane Greene and his World Science Festival, will be held Friday, December 5, 2025 at The Museum of Natural History in South Kensington, London.

The event is dedicated to the late Apollo XIII Captain Jim Lovell.



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Neanderthals Resorted To Cannibalism - Just Like European Settlers At Jamestown

Science 2.0 - Nov 21 2025 - 13:11
A recent analysis of Neanderthal bones from the Troisième caverne of Goyet in Belgium, which has a whopping 101 skeletal remains, notes cannibalism was happening 45,000 years ago - women and children impacted most.

The consumed Neanderthals were not from the local tribe and the presence of bones from numerous other animals means they were likely to have been brought into the community just for food, like any other animal, rather than as part of some elaborate ritual.

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Lancet Is Doing For MAHA On Food What They Did For Wakefield On Vaccines

Science 2.0 - Nov 18 2025 - 17:11
The Lancet, which championed both the 'vaccines cause autism' and the 'Frankenfood' movement, is now promoting the same bad epidemiology in their claims about ultra-processed food.

Scientists may be concerned that a prominent journal is giving credence to scaremongering but we are talking about The Lancet - no journalists except Guardian and New York Times consider them scientifically reliable. Yes, they will have producers at "60 Minutes" repeating it and then SEO bloggers at Gizmodo and Daily Beast too, but the public are so jaded by epidemiological misinformation and disinformation, they have learned not to trust anything.

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A 900-Meter Clue Beneath The Granite: China’s Jinlin Crater Reshapes Our Understanding Of Holocene Impacts

Science 2.0 - Nov 16 2025 - 09:11

For decades, scientists have assumed that the Holocene—the relatively quiet geological epoch spanning the last ~11,700 years—was marked by only a handful of small meteorite impacts, most of them modest in size. But a newly confirmed structure in southern China is now challenging that narrative.

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After Pre-Diabetes, Will CDC Call Pre-Hypertension A Pandemic Next?

Science 2.0 - Nov 15 2025 - 04:11
A new paper says that before your blood pressure rose, hypertension was already damaging blood vessels and brain matter.

How is that even possible? It won't matter, if history is any indication, career bureaucrats at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are already scheduling a briefing before Congress to ask for more money to prevent this new pandemic. 

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The Immortal Life Of Beef Cells

Science 2.0 - Nov 14 2025 - 11:11
Ranchers and vegans don't agree on much but they agree that lab-grown meat is a bad idea. Not for science ones, for economic and psychological ones.

Still, activists are in a war of extinction against the modern world, so they are confident they will eventually win, either with allied progressive politicians like Secretary Robert Kennedy, Jr. banning products, or by regulating them so they are unaffordable, like California Governor Gavin Newsom has done with energy, home insurance, and healthcare.

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And Since You Mention SNAP,

Science 2.0 - Nov 13 2025 - 17:11

Among others oozing angst about “democratic socialist” Zohran Mamdani’s election were two refugees from the USSR (one was Garry Kasparov) speaking on an anti-semitism panel Tuesday. Socialism, they declared, leads to communism! Even democratic socialism does! Just wait ‘til Mamdani shows his true colors!

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Metformin Diabetes Drug Used Off-Label Also Reduces Irregular Heartbeats

Science 2.0 - Nov 10 2025 - 15:11
Adults with atrial fibrillation (AFib) who are not diabetic but are overweight and took the diabetes medication metformin after a rhythm-correction procedure had decreased risk of AFib episodes for a year. Weight loss would usually be a confounder, since lifestyle changes such as that are often a big help, but in the data sample the weight changes were low.

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