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Natural gas pipeline density higher overall in more vulnerable US counties

Eurekalert - May 28 2021 - 00:05
An analysis led by North Carolina State University researchers found counties with more socially vulnerable populations had a higher density of natural gas pipelines overall.
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Open, expressive family life may reduce social deprivation effects among adopted children

Eurekalert - May 28 2021 - 00:05
An environment in which family members support one another and express their feelings can reduce the effects of social deprivation on cognitive ability and development among adopted children, suggests a small study by researchers at the National Institutes of Health. In contrast, rule-driven households where family members are in conflict may increase an adopted child's chances for cognitive, behavioral and emotional difficulties.
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Providing more low-value care doesn't lead to higher patient experience ratings

Eurekalert - May 28 2021 - 00:05
Many healthcare providers and policy makers fear that increased pressure to please patients -- and ensure high satisfaction ratings as a result -- could lead to overuse of low-value care that doesn't provide any clinical benefit while unnecessarily ratcheting up medical bills. But new research from the University of Chicago and Harvard Medical School may alleviate some of those concerns.
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Social connectedness among medicare beneficiaries after onset of pandemic

Eurekalert - May 28 2021 - 00:05
What The Study Did: Researchers examined social connectedness among Medicare beneficiaries during the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Applying private insurer rules to Medicare Part B

Eurekalert - May 28 2021 - 00:05
What The Study Did: Researchers estimated the extent Medicare Part B medical services would have been subject to prior authorization under private insurance coverage policies and calculated the associated spending.
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Examining well-being, life expectancy with having family member incarcerated

Eurekalert - May 28 2021 - 00:05
What The Study Did: This survey study examined the associations of having an incarcerated immediate or extended family member with perceived well-being and change in projected life expectancy among adults in the United States.
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Assessment of SARS-CoV-2 reinfection 1 year after primary infection in Lombardy, Italy

Eurekalert - May 28 2021 - 00:05
What The Study Did: Study results suggest that reinfections are rare events and that patients who have recovered from COVID-19 have a lower risk of reinfection. However, the observation ended before SARS-CoV-2 variants began to spread, and it is unknown how well natural immunity to the wild-type virus will protect against variants.
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Socioeconomic disparities in respiratory health in US

Eurekalert - May 28 2021 - 00:05
What The Study Did: Socioeconomic disparities in respiratory health over the past six decades in the United States are described in this study.
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SARS-CoV-2 antibody status in patients with cancer, health care workers

Eurekalert - May 28 2021 - 00:05
What The Study Did: This study evaluates whether there are differences in SARS-CoV-2 seroprevalence and antibody levels in patients with cancer compared with health care workers in Japan.
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Seropositivity following mRNA vaccination for SARS-CoV-2 in patients undergoing cancer treatment

Eurekalert - May 28 2021 - 00:05
What The Study Did: Rates of antispike antibody response to a messenger RNA SARS-CoV-2 vaccine in Israeli patients with cancer who are undergoing systemic treatment compared with healthy controls were evaluated in this study.
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Electrons waiting for their turn: New model explains 3D quantum material

Eurekalert - May 28 2021 - 00:05
Scientists from the Cluster of Excellence ct.qmat - Complexity and Topology in Quantum Matter have developed a new understanding of how electrons behave in strong magnetic fields. Their results explain measurements of electric currents in three-dimensional materials that signal a quantum Hall effect - a phenomenon thus far only associated with two-dimensional metals.
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Ban on flavored vaping may have led teens to cigarettes, study finds

Eurekalert - May 28 2021 - 00:05
When San Francisco voters overwhelmingly approved a ballot measure banning the sale of flavored tobacco products in 2018, public health advocates celebrated. After all, tobacco use poses a significant threat to public health and health equity, and flavors are particularly attractive to youth.
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Revenge of the seabed burrowers

Eurekalert - May 28 2021 - 00:05
The ancient burrowers of the seafloor have been getting a bum rap for years.These prehistoric dirt churners -- a wide assortment of worms, trilobites, and other animals that lived in Earth's oceans hundreds of millions of years ago -- are thought to have played a key role in creating the conditions needed for marine life to flourish. Their activities altered the chemical makeup of the sea itself and the amount of oxygen in the oceans, in a process called bioturbation.
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Detecting skin disorders based on tissue stiffness with a soft sensing device

Eurekalert - May 28 2021 - 00:05
A research team co-led by a scientist from City University of Hong Kong (CityU) has designed a simple electromechanical device that can be used for deep tissue pathology diagnosis, such as psoriasis, in an automated and non-invasive fashion. The findings will lay a foundation for future applications in the clinical evaluation of skin cancers and other dermatology diseases.
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The dark matter particle explorer has measured high-precision cosmic ray helium energy spectrum

Eurekalert - May 28 2021 - 00:05
Dark Matter Particle Explorer (DAMPE) Collaboration directly observed a spectral softening of helium nuclei at about 34TeV for the first time.
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'Good' bacteria show promise for clinical treatment of Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis

Eurekalert - May 28 2021 - 00:05
Balfour Sartor, MD, Midget Distinguished Professor of Medicine, Microbiology and Immunology, is the senior author of a study that shows how a novel consortium of bacteria that live in the digestive tracts of healthy individuals can be used to prevent and treat aggressive colitis in humanized mouse models.
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The properties of non-racemic dihydrofurans have been studied at Samara Polytech

Eurekalert - May 28 2021 - 00:05
Research team of Samara Polytech in cooperation with the crystallographic research group of Lomonosov Moscow State University studied non-racemic 4,5-dihydrofurans.
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A new light-sheet microscopy unit enables an extended field of view and reduced photodamage

Eurekalert - May 28 2021 - 00:05
1. Development of a two-photon excitation light-sheet microscope which achieves low phototoxicity, an extended field of view, and high resolution for the observation of the growth of living organisms2. Applications of the microscope demonstrate long-term time-lapse observations for a three-day span of the embryonic development of medaka fish
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Peptide nanoparticles marked for in vitro visualization

Eurekalert - May 28 2021 - 00:05
The work was conducted under the auspices of the Russian Foundation for Basic Research and organizations-participants of the BRICS framework program in science, technology and innovation; the grant title is "Nanosized peptide-based biomaterials for photodynamic diagnostics of tumors".
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A non-invasive procedure allows obtaining archaeological information without excavating

Eurekalert - May 28 2021 - 00:05
An international archaeological study, led by researchers from the Culture and Socio-Ecological Dynamics (CaSEs) research group, has advanced in the understanding and preservation of archaeological sites and in improving their analysis, thanks to the application of pXRF (portable X-ray fluorescence analysis) to anthropogenic sediments in Africa. It is a rapid, inexpensive, non-invasive procedure, which enables generating an additional archaeological record from the anthropogenic deposit by analysing chemical elements, combined with geostatistics.
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