PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Caution advised with corporate virtual care partnerships

2025-11-03
(Press-News.org) Provincial governments that partner with for-profit virtual health care companies need to be cautious to protect public trust in the health care system, according to an analysis article in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal) https://www.cmaj.ca/lookup/doi/10.1503/cmaj.250639.

At least 4 provinces in Canada have partnered with corporate virtual care organizations as part of efforts to deal with challenges in primary care access, offering medical care via video, phone and text messaging.

“There are risks associated with direct-to-consumer virtual ‘walk in’ style care related to access, quality of care and data privacy,” writes Dr. Lauren Lapointe-Shaw, a clinician-scientist and associate professor, Temerty Faculty of Medicine and the Institute for Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, University of Toronto, and ICES Central, Toronto, Ontario, with coauthors. “These risks require careful consideration, particularly as formal partnerships could further entrench corporate virtual care within Canadian health care systems.”

The authors describe the variation in provincial partnerships with corporate-provided virtual care programs, as well as their benefits, risks, and the responsibilities of governments when adopting such partnerships. Of paramount concern is the need to ensure health care quality standards are met, to protect data privacy, and enable transparency around contracts, funding and profits.

“There is a need for caution before greenlighting corporations in the public health care sector, as once these programs are introduced, it may be difficult to modify what has been established. By leaving companies to self-regulate, change is unlikely to occur,” they conclude.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Keeping pediatrics afloat in a sea of funding cuts

2025-11-01
As Medicaid funding cuts enacted through the One Big Beautiful Bill Act are expected to reduce health coverage among adults, researchers and clinicians from Weill Cornell Medicine, NewYork-Presbyterian and Ariadne Labs argue in a New England Journal of Medicine perspective, published Nov. 1, that children are at increasing risk of unintended downstream effects. The bill, which became law on July 4, will cause 10 million people to lose their health insurance by 2034, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimates. Children aren’t mentioned explicitly in the bill, but the authors say that many parents who lose coverage ...

Giant resistivity reduction in thin film a key step towards next-gen electronics for AI

2025-11-01
Tokyo, Japan – Researchers from Tokyo Metropolitan University have developed a new atomically layered material which experiences a five order of magnitude resistivity reduction when oxidized, more than a hundred times the reduction seen in similar, non-layered materials. By analyzing the structure, the team discovered a synergy between oxidation and structural modification which drives dramatic changes in physical properties. The new material promises more power efficient next-generation devices, ...

First pregnancy with AI-guided sperm recovery method developed at Columbia

2025-11-01
Oct. 31, 2025--Researchers at the Columbia University Fertility Center reported the first successful pregnancy using an AI-guided method they developed to recover sperm in men with azoospermia, in which ejaculate contains little or no sperm.  The case is described in a research letter published in The Lancet.  Male factors account for approximately 40% of couples with infertility. Of those, about 10-15% of men with infertility have azoospermia.    “A semen sample can appear totally normal, but when you look under the microscope you discover just a sea of cellular ...

Global study reveals how bacteria shape the health of lakes and reservoirs

2025-10-31
A sweeping new study has uncovered global patterns in how bacteria thrive and interact within lakes and reservoirs, offering new insights into the invisible forces that sustain freshwater ecosystems. The research, led by scientists from Xi’an University of Architecture and Technology, analyzed hundreds of samples from around the world to understand how geography, temperature, and nutrients shape bacterial communities in water and sediments. Freshwater ecosystems are vital sources of drinking water, biodiversity, and economic activity, yet they are increasingly threatened by pollution, eutrophication, and climate change. Microorganisms, though microscopic, play a central role in ...

Biochar reimagined: Scientists unlock record-breaking strength in wood-derived carbon

2025-10-31
Researchers from the University of Toronto have uncovered how the hidden architecture of wood can give rise to biochar materials as strong as mild steel. Their new study reveals that the direction in which biochar is measured can make its hardness vary by more than twenty-eight times, opening the door to a new generation of sustainable carbon materials for use in energy devices, filters, and structural applications. Biochar, a carbon-rich material produced by heating biomass in the absence of oxygen, has long been valued for its environmental ...

Synthesis of seven quebracho indole alkaloids using "antenna ligands" in 7-10 steps, including three first-ever asymmetric syntheses

2025-10-31
Professor Lijia Wang's group at East China Normal University, in collaboration with Academician Yong Tang of the Shanghai Institute of Organic Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, developed a nickel (II)-catalyzed asymmetric [2+2] cyclobutanization reaction. By introducing a flexible "antenna" structure into the traditional chiral BOX ligand, they successfully achieved efficient asymmetric cyclobutanization of indole-derived heterocyclic enamines with methylene malonates. Based on this method, the team completed a concise asymmetric synthesis of seven ...

BioOne and Max Planck Society sign 3-year agreement to include subscribe to open pilot

2025-10-31
Max Planck Digital Library and BioOne announced the signing of a three-year agreement to bring the flagship BioOne Complete aggregation to 84 Max Planck Society Institutes. Notably, this agreement includes the full term of BioOne’s Subscribe to Open (S2O) pilot from 2026 through 2028, supporting shared goals of sustainable open access and equitable scholarly communications. BioOne’s Subscribe to Open pilot brings together 71 journals from 54 societies, museums, and research organizations worldwide into a conditional open access framework —representing ...

How the arts and science can jointly protect nature

2025-10-31
A new study by a large international team of conservation scientists and artists explores how growing synergies between conservation and the arts can unveil many mutual benefits and fresh approaches to intractable conservation problems. “These collaborations can generate new knowledge, attract funding, boost visibility, and even catalyze behavioural change”, says Ivan Jarić, researcher from the University of Paris-Saclay in France and the Czech Academy of Sciences, and lead author of the study. “By working ...

Student's unexpected rise as a researcher leads to critical new insights into HPV

2025-10-31
When Sean Fletcher walked into Sam Biswas’ Medical and Molecular Sciences (MMSC) lab at the University of Delaware College of Health Sciences during the summer of his first year, he had no research or laboratory experience.  Two years later, the senior honors medical diagnostics major has published a paper as a first author after uncovering new insights into how human papillomavirus (HPV) functions on a molecular level.  In a study recently published in Virology Journal, Fletcher and co-authors Biswas, professor of MMSC, and Esther Biswas-Fiss, professor and chair of MMSC, used bioinformatics to pinpoint conserved ...

Ominous false alarm in the kidney

2025-10-31
Researchers at the University Hospital Bonn (UKB) and the University of Bonn have discovered how a small, naturally occurring RNA molecule in the kidney activates a mutated immune receptor, triggering a chain reaction. In cooperation with Nanyang Technological University Singapore and the University Hospital Würzburg, among others, the study provides an explanation for how a point mutation in the immune receptor RIG-I transforms the body's defense system into a self-destructive force and causes severe organ-specific autoimmune diseases. The results have now been published in the journal Science Immunology. RIG-I is an important ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Structural findings reveal how distinct GPCR ligands create different levels of activation

Anything-goes “anyons” may be at the root of surprising quantum experiments

UC review: Maximizing workplace opportunity for veterans

From generation to complex control: Metasurfaces make perfect vortex beams "within reach"

Thin-film lithium niobate-based detector: recent advances and perspectives

Exploring why some people may tend to persistently make bad choices

How cells balance their protein levels

Nirsevimab vs RSVpreF vaccine for RSV–related hospitalization in newborns

Effectiveness and impact of maternal RSV immunization and nirsevimab on medically attended RSV in US children

AI gives scientists a boost, but at the cost of too many mediocre papers

Next-generation vision model maps tree growth at sub-meter precision

Genes aren’t destiny for inherited blindness, study shows

MIT study: High-fat diets make liver cells more likely to become cancerous

Exposure to multiple fine particulate matter components and incident depression in the US Medicare population

Risk of burdensome health care spending over time in the US

Nirsevimab against hospitalizations and emergency department visits for lower respiratory tract infection in infants

New microfluidics technology enables highly uniform DNA condensate formation

A new strategy for immune tolerance

Super Mario Bros. help fight burnout: New study links classic games to boosted happiness

Deepest gas hydrate cold seep ever discovered in the arctic: International research team unveils Freya Hydrate Mounds at 3,640 m depth.

Integrating light and structure: Smarter mapping for fragile wetland ecosystems

ACA-SIM: A robust way to decode satellite signals over complex waters

Probiotics can restore gut microbiome in breastfed infants

AI could help predict nutrition risks in ICU patients, study finds

Federal EITC has unexpected result, researchers say – it decreases domestic violence

Researchers identify gene that calms the mind and improves attention in mice

Artificial metabolism turns waste CO2 into useful chemicals

Ancient sea anemone sheds light on animal cell type evolution

Begging gene leads to drone food

How climate policies that incentivize and penalize can drive the clean energy transition

[Press-News.org] Caution advised with corporate virtual care partnerships