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Financial distress similar, or greater, for patients with heart disease compared to cancer

Eurekalert - Jun 15 2021 - 00:06
Financial toxicity, the financial strain experienced by patients accessing health care, impacts a large population of cancer patients according to prior research. A new study, published in JACC: CardioOncology, finds financial toxicity is often greater among heart disease patients compared to cancer patients, and those with both conditions suffer the highest burden.
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A push for a shift in the value system that defines "impact" and "success"

Eurekalert - Jun 15 2021 - 00:06
Discussions of a broken value system are ubiquitous in science, especially after the COVID-19 pandemic served to expose inequality globally. However, according to the authors of an article publishing 15th June 2021 in the open access journal PLOS Biology, science itself is not "broken," but it was built on deeply-entrenched, systemic sexist and racist values, which perpetuate biases through the continued focus on citation rates and impact factors.
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Alzheimer disease research results over-hyped if science papers omit mice from the title

Eurekalert - Jun 15 2021 - 00:06
Study published in PLoS Biology shows that Alzheimer disease experimental papers that omit mice from their titles are linked to more science news stories and gain greater visibility. The finding points to yet another type of spin in the reporting of biomedical research.
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Researchers 3D print rotating microfilter for lab-on-a-chip applications

Eurekalert - Jun 15 2021 - 00:06
Researchers have fabricated a magnetically driven rotary microfilter that can be used to filter particles inside a microfluidic device. They made the tiny turning filter by creating a magnetic material that could be used with a very precise 3D printing technique known as two-photon polymerization.
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Soaking up the sun: Artificial photosynthesis promises clean, sustainable source of energy

Eurekalert - Jun 15 2021 - 00:06
Humans can do lots of things that plants can't do. But plants have one major advantage over humans: They can make energy directly from the sun. That process of turning sunlight directly into usable energy - called photosynthesis - may soon be a feat humans are able to mimic to harness the sun's energy for clean, storable, efficient fuel. If so, it could open a whole new frontier of clean energy.
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Teens experienced helplessness when exposed to secondhand racism

Eurekalert - Jun 15 2021 - 00:06
According to a qualitative study published in JAMA Network Open adolescents expressed feelings of helplessness when exposed to secondhand racism online. Specifically, adolescents described helplessness stemming from the pervasiveness of racism in our society.
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New studies identify how tuberculosis destroy the lungs and how to protect them

Eurekalert - Jun 15 2021 - 00:06
A "3D Culture System" developed by University of Southampton has closely replicated how cells infected with TB change in the human lung. Analytical evidence of these changes identified 7 key gene changes that cause damage in the lungs, from hundreds of thousands. A second trial showed that a common antibiotic, doxycycline, could help reverse these changes and speed up recovery.
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Sequencing of wastewater can help monitor SARS-COV-2 variants

Eurekalert - Jun 15 2021 - 00:06
Viral genome sequencing of wastewater can provide an early warning system of emerging SARS-CoV-2 variants that is independent of investigations of identified clinical cases, according to a new study published in mSystems, an open-access journal of the American Society for Microbiology. In the study, researchers describe the detection and quantification of variant B.1.1.7, first identified in southeast England, in sewage samples from London, United Kingdom before widespread transmission of this variant was obvious from clinical cases.
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Researchers develop more reliable rapid tests for COVID-19

Eurekalert - Jun 15 2021 - 00:06
Researchers at the University of Maryland School of Medicine (UMSOM) have developed two rapid diagnostic tests for COVID-19 that are nearly as accurate as the gold-standard test currently used in laboratories. Unlike the gold standard test, which extracts RNA and uses it to amplify the DNA of the virus, these new tests can detect the presence of the virus in as little as five minutes using different methods.
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New AI model helps understand virus spread from animals to humans

Eurekalert - Jun 15 2021 - 00:06
A new model that applies artificial intelligence to carbohydrates improves the understanding of the infection process and could help predict which viruses are likely to spread from animals to humans. This is reported in a recent study led by researchers at the University of Gothenburg.
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Healthy fat impacted by change in diet and circadian clock, study finds

Eurekalert - Jun 15 2021 - 00:06
Changing your eating habits or altering your circadian clock can impact healthy fat tissue throughout your lifespan, according to a preclinical study published today in Nature by researchers with The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth).
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Keeping the peace

Eurekalert - Jun 15 2021 - 00:06
New research sheds light on how - and in what context - peacekeepers can contain the spread of violence in fragile post-conflict areas.
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Hippos and anthrax

Eurekalert - Jun 15 2021 - 00:06
Hippopotamus aren't the first thing that come to mind when considering epidemiology and disease ecology. And yet these amphibious megafauna offered UC Santa Barbara ecologist Keenan Stears a window into the progression of an anthrax outbreak that struck Ruaha National Park, Tanzania, in the dry season of 2017.
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Yale Cancer Center study reveals new pathway for brain tumor therapy

Eurekalert - Jun 15 2021 - 00:06
In a new study led by Yale Cancer Center, researchers show the nucleoside transporter ENT2 may offer an unexpected path to circumventing the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and enabling targeted treatment of brain tumors with a cell-penetrating anti-DNA autoantibody. The study was published today online in the Journal of Clinical Investigation Insight.
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Antidepressant pollution alters crayfish behavior, with impacts to stream ecosystems

Eurekalert - Jun 15 2021 - 00:06
Just two weeks of citalopram exposure caused changes in crayfish behavior, with the potential to disrupt stream ecosystem processes like nutrient cycling, oxygen levels, and algal growth.
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Not acting like themselves: Antidepressants in environment alter crayfish behavior

Eurekalert - Jun 15 2021 - 00:06
Expose crayfish to antidepressants, and they become more outgoing -- but that might not be such a positive thing for these freshwater crustaceans, according to a new study.
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Medication may help heavy-drinking smokers improve their health

Eurekalert - Jun 15 2021 - 00:06
A UCLA clinical trial has shown encouraging results in helping daily smokers who are also heavy drinkers quit smoking and reduce their alcohol intake.
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Scientists explain the crucial role of motor proteins in cell division

Eurekalert - Jun 15 2021 - 00:06
Proper chromosome segregation into two future daughter cells requires the mitotic spindle to elongate in anaphase. However, although some candidate proteins are implicated in this process, the molecular mechanism that drives spindle elongation in human cells has been unknown, until now! Researchers at the Croatian Ru?er Boškovi? Institute (RBI) have discovered the exact molecular mechanism of bridging microtubules sliding and its role in proper distribution of genetic material during cell division.
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Rarest bee genus in North America is not so rare after all

Eurekalert - Jun 15 2021 - 00:06
Canadian researchers have discovered that a bee thought to be rarest in North America, as the only representative of its genus, is no more than an unusual specimen of a widespread species. They have reclassified the mystery bee, collected in Nevada in the 1870s, as an aberrant specimen of the California digger-cuckoo bee, a cleptoparasitic bee, with females that lay eggs in the nests of digger bees.
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Plants use a blend of external influences to evolve defense mechanisms

Eurekalert - Jun 15 2021 - 00:06
Plants evolve specialized defense chemicals through the combined effects of genes, geography, demography and environmental conditions.
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