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CHEST launches critical care APP education and certification

2025-06-26
GLENVIEW, IL – First announced earlier this year, the American College of Chest Physicians (CHEST) educational program and formal certification exam for advanced practice providers (APPs), including nurse practitioners (NPs) and physician assistants/associates (PAs), in critical care is now available. The CHEST Critical Care APP (CCAPP) Certification Exam was created using a rigorous and data-driven approach aligning with professional certification standards to determine the 11 topic areas on the exam. Questions focus on foundational areas for practicing critical care that are meaningful across ...

Kelp-eating microalgae offer huge potential

2025-06-26
Diatoms are some of the most common algae found in the ocean. There are at least 100,000 species. Most of these tiny diatoms use photosynthesis. This means that they use sunlight, carbon dioxide and water to produce the sugar and energy they need to grow, live and reproduce. However, some diatoms are different, such as the one with the not very catchy name of Nitzschia sing1. “These algae have stopped photosynthesising and started living off kelp,” explained Finn L. Aachmann, Professor at the Department of Biotechnology and Food Science at the Norwegian University ...

Study challenges climate change's link to our wild winter jet stream

2025-06-26
A new study challenges the idea that climate change is behind the recent erratic behavior of the polar jet stream, the massive current of Arctic air that regulates weather for much of the Northern Hemisphere. Large waves in the jet stream observed since the 1990s have, in recent years, driven abnormally frigid temperatures and devastating winter storms deep into regions such as the southern United States. Scientists fear that a warming atmosphere brought on by climate change is fueling these wild undulations, causing long troughs of bitter-cold air to drop down from the Arctic. But Dartmouth researchers report in AGU Advances ...

Study shows controlled burns can reduce wildfire intensity and smoke pollution

2025-06-26
As wildfires increasingly threaten lives, landscapes, and air quality across the U.S., a Stanford-led study published in AGU Advances June 26 finds that prescribed burns can help reduce risks. The research reveals that prescribed burns can reduce the severity of subsequent wildfires by an average of 16% and net smoke pollution by an average of 14%. “Prescribed fire is often promoted as a promising tool in theory to dampen wildfire impacts, but we show clear empirical evidence that prescribed burning works in practice,” ...

FAU Harbor Branch receives grant from Chef José Andrés’ Longer Tables Fund for queen conch lab aquaculture expansion

2025-06-26
Florida Atlantic University’s Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute was awarded a grant by the Longer Tables Fund to develop a community-based aquaculture facility for conservation and restoration of the queen conch on the island of Eleuthera in The Bahamas. Through a strategic partnership with The Island School’s Cape Eleuthera Institute (CEI), the Queen Conch Conservancy: A Community-Based Aquaculture Restoration Project will address the needs to ensure longevity of the species. Launched by Chef José Andrés with support from the Bezos Courage and Civility Award, the Longer Tables Fund invests in innovative solutions that ...

AERA selects James A. Banks to deliver 2025 Brown Lecture in Education Research

2025-06-26
Washington, D.C., June 26, 2025—James A. Banks, the Kerry and Linda Killinger Endowed Chair in Diversity Studies Emeritus and founding director of the Center for Multicultural Education (now the Banks Center for Educational Justice) at the University of Washington, has been selected by the American Educational Research Association (AERA) to present the 2025 Brown Lecture in Education Research. The public lecture will take place on Thursday, October 23, at 6:00 p.m. ET. Complimentary registration for the livestream will open in July on the AERA website. Often called the “father of multicultural education,” ...

WSU-led study identifies associations between prenatal factors and childhood obesity

2025-06-26
PULLMAN, Wash.—When a team of scientists led by a Washington State University researcher examined the way that more than 9,400 children grew from toddlers to pre-adolescents, two distinct trajectories emerged. For most children, their body-mass index developed along a typical path: a drop in BMI following their first year, followed by a gradual increase after age 6. Eleven percent of the children, however, showed a very different pattern. These children—whose mothers were more likely ...

Researchers show AI art protection tools still leave creators at risk

2025-06-26
The use of AI image generation models has not only gained popularity but raised concerns surrounding potential misuse when it comes to training data, including copyright-protected material. Text-to-image models have gained significant popularity due to their ability to generate diverse, realistic-looking images from just a short prompt. As these models are trained on vast datasets from various sources, there is growing concern that artists’ works, including photographs, paintings and other creative pieces, may be used in training without their consent. To protect their work from being exploited by emerging technologies, artists have turned ...

Vegan diet improves dietary acid load, a key risk factor for diabetes, new study finds

2025-06-26
WASHINGTON, D.C.— Compared with a Mediterranean diet, dietary acid load decreased significantly on a low-fat vegan diet and was associated with weight loss, according to a randomized cross-over trial conducted by the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine and published in Frontiers in Nutrition.   “Eating acid-producing foods like meat, eggs, and dairy can increase the dietary acid load, or the amount of acids consumed, causing inflammation linked to weight gain,” says Hana Kahleova, MD, PhD, director ...

Chicago’s rodents are evolving to handle city living

2025-06-26
In general, evolution is a long, slow process of tiny changes passed down over generations, resulting in new adaptations and even new species over thousands or millions of years. But when living things are faced with dramatic shifts in the world around them, they sometimes rapidly adapt to better survive. Scientists recently found an example of evolution in real time, tucked away in the collection drawers of the Field Museum in Chicago. By comparing the skulls of chipmunks and voles from the Chicagoland area collected ...

Uncovering the role of spacers in advancing portable, low-voltage OLEDs

2025-06-26
Organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) have transformed display and lighting technology with their vivid colors, deep contrast, and energy efficiency. As demand grows for lighter, thinner, and more energy-saving devices—especially in wearables, foldables, and portable electronics—there's increasing interest in OLEDs that can operate at lower voltages without compromising performance. A new type of OLEDs, known as exciplex upconversion OLEDs (ExUC-OLEDs), has opened newer avenues for making the display and lighting technology more ...

Unraveling protein–nanoparticle interactions using biophysics

2025-06-26
Nanoparticles (NPs) are materials whose dimensions range from 1 to 1,000 nanometers (nm). Due to their nano-scale dimensions and tunable material properties, NPs have gained interest in the global scientific community in recent years. Applications of NPs in the field of human health include NP-based drug delivery systems and radioactive probe-linked NPs for medical diagnosis. While significant advancements have been achieved in the design and synthesis of NPs, studies investigating the interactions of NPs with important biological macromolecules like proteins remain limited.   To reveal ...

SLAS Technology Vol. 32: AI, Robotics and Precision Diagnostics

2025-06-26
Oak Brook, IL – Volume 32 of SLAS Technology, includes one review, one tech brief, six original research articles, one protocol, one literature highlight and several Special Issue (SI) features. Review Review on biphasic blood drying method for rapid pathogen detection in bloodstream infections This review highlights the biphasic blood drying method—a novel approach combining blood drying with isothermal amplification to enable rapid, culture-free detection of bloodstream pathogens at ultra-low concentrations--offering a faster and ...

SLAS Discovery Volume 33 showcases new innovations in drug discovery

2025-06-26
Oak Brook, IL – Volume 33 of SLAS Discovery features one review, three original research articles and one entry in the upcoming Special Issue on Biomolecular Condensates as Targets for Drug Discovery. Reviews Antimicrobial resistance: Linking molecular mechanisms to public health impact This review highlights how β-lactamases and efflux pumps, combined with mobile genetic elements, drive the rapid spread of multidrug-resistant (MDR) and extremely drug-resistant (XDR) pathogens, posing a serious threat to global health and agriculture. Original Research Advancing the development of TRIP13 inhibitors: A high-throughput screening ...

Poll: Amid multi-state measles outbreak, 79% of Americans support routine childhood vaccine requirements

2025-06-26
Embargoed for release: Thursday, June 26, 2025, 6:00 AM ET Boston, MA—In the midst of a multi-state measles outbreak, a new poll by Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and the de Beaumont Foundation finds that most U.S. adults (79%) say parents should be required to have children vaccinated against preventable diseases like measles, mumps, and rubella to attend school. This includes a majority of adults across party lines—90% among Democrats and 68% among Republicans – as well as 66% of those who support the “Make America Great Again” (MAGA) movement. It also includes 72% of all parents. ...

Artificial intelligence in miniature format for small devices

2025-06-26
Artificial intelligence is considered to be computationally and energy-intensive – a challenge for the Internet of Things (IoT), where small, embedded sensors have to make do with limited computing power, little memory and small batteries. In the E-MINDS project, a research team from the COMET K1 centre Pro2Future, Graz University of Technology (TU Graz) and the University of St. Gallen has found ways to run AI locally and efficiently on the smallest devices – without having to rely on external computing power. For example, it has been possible to run specialised AI models on an ultra-wideband localisation device ...

Early blood-thinning treatment safe and effective for stroke patients

2025-06-26
Patients with atrial fibrillation who have experienced a stroke would benefit greatly from earlier treatment than is currently recommended in current UK guidelines, finds a new study led by UCL (University College London) researchers. The results of the CATALYST study, published in The Lancet, included data from four randomised trials with a total of 5,441 patients across the UK, Switzerland, Sweden and the United States, who had all experienced a recent stroke (between 2017-2024) due to a blocked artery and atrial ...

New gene therapy delivery device could let hospitals create personalized nanomedicines on-demand

2025-06-26
A new gene therapy delivery device could let hospital pharmacies make personalized nanomedicines to order. This democratized approach to precision medicine, as published in Frontiers in Science, could revolutionize how hospitals treat rare diseases, even in low-resource settings.  Rare diseases affect millions worldwide, yet the one-size-fits-all model of drug development leaves patients with few treatment options. Now a European research project called NANOSPRESSO aims to tip the balance in patients’ favor by boosting access to low-cost bespoke gene and RNA therapies.  The prototype NANOSPRESSO device combines two proven technologies—nucleic acid ...

Membrane or metabolism, which came first?

2025-06-26
LMU researchers have demonstrated a possible mechanism for metabolic processes without cell membranes in water-filled pores. Looking at life today, it is difficult to imagine how complex biological processes and structures could have developed from simple building blocks. All cellular processes and reactions appear to be closely interdependent and necessarily occur within a cell membrane. There is no known organism that deviates from this pattern. But how did it come about? How does a cell membrane form without metabolism? Or conversely, how does metabolism arise without a cell ...

Jackpot! Gold from e-waste opens a rich vein for miners and the environment

2025-06-26
An interdisciplinary team of experts in green chemistry, engineering and physics at Flinders University in Australia has developed a safer and more sustainable approach to extract and recover gold from ore and electronic waste. Explained in the leading journal Nature Sustainability, the gold-extraction technique promises to reduce levels of toxic waste from mining and shows that high purity gold can be recovered from recycling valuable components in printed circuit boards in discarded computers. The project team, led by Matthew Flinders Professor Justin Chalker, applied this integrated method for high-yield gold extraction ...

EPFL scientists build first self-illuminating biosensor

2025-06-26
Optical biosensors use light waves as a probe to detect molecules, and are essential for precise medical diagnostics, personalized medicine, and environmental monitoring. Their performance is dramatically enhanced if they can focus light waves down to the nanometer scale – small enough to detect proteins or amino acids, for example – using nanophotonic structures that ‘squeeze’ light at the surface of a tiny chip. But the generation and detection of light for these nanophotonic biosensors requires ...

Oxford scientists develop new technique for capturing ultra-intense laser pulses in a single shot

2025-06-26
Scientists at the University of Oxford have unveiled a pioneering method for capturing the full structure of ultra-intense laser pulses in a single measurement. The breakthrough, published in close collaboration with Ludwig-Maximilian University of Munich and the Max Planck Institute for Quantum Optics, could revolutionise our ability to control light-matter interactions. This would have transformative applications in many areas, including research into new forms of physics and realising the extreme ...

Inflammatory cells remain in the blood after treatment of severe asthma

2025-06-26
Biological drugs have improved the lives of many people with severe asthma. However, a new study from Karolinska Institutet in Sweden shows that some immune cells with high inflammatory potential are not completely eradicated after treatment. Biological drugs (biologics) have become an important tool in the treatment of severe asthma. “They help most patients to keep their symptoms under control, but exactly how these drugs affect the immune system has so far remained unknown,” says Valentyna Yasinska, consultant ...

New insights into seasonal shifts in sleep

2025-06-26
A new international study drawing on 73 million nights of data reveals that our sleep patterns are seriously shaped by the day of the week, the season, and where we live. Working with sleep data from more than 116,000 adults across the globe, Flinders University sleep experts used insights from an FDA-cleared under-mattress device to track sleep duration and timing over 3.5 years. Lead author, Dr Hannah Scott from FHMRI Sleep Health says the findings give a detailed look at how geography, seasons, and our day-to-day schedules quietly disrupt the way we sleep. “Sleep patterns aren’t just about habits – they’re deeply connected to the environment around ...

Estimating microbial biomass from air-dried soils: A safer, scalable approach

2025-06-26
Niigata, Japan— In a remarkable advancement for soil science, researchers from Japan have developed a novel method for estimating microbial biomass using water-extractable organic matter (WEOM) from air-dried soils. This innovative approach not only simplifies the estimation process but also eliminates the need for toxic solvents typically used in traditional methods, such as chloroform fumigation extraction. A research was conducted by a dedicated team from Niigata University, Kyushu University, Japan Atomic Energy Agency, and Anhui Academy of Agricultural Sciences researchers. The study analyzed 50 soil samples from ten diverse profiles across various regions in Japan, including six ...
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