Daily step counts of 4,000 or more tied to reduced risk of heart disease, mortality in older women
2025-10-21
Mass General Brigham researchers found that older women who took 4,000 steps on just one or two days a week had a 27% reduction in risk of cardiovascular disease and 26% reduction in risk of death compared to those who got less steps
The study found that the number of steps taken rather than any daily pattern of stepping was tied to these risk reductions
Tracking daily steps has become a staple exercise metric as smart devices keep count with ease. This physical activity stimulates bodily repair and maintenance, which is especially important as we age. But how many steps do you need to reap health benefits? A new study by investigators ...
Number of steps taken matters more for better health in older women than the frequency
2025-10-21
Clocking up at least 4000 daily steps on just 1 or 2 days per week is linked to a lower risk of death and cardiovascular disease among older women, finds research published online in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.
This large prospective study examined not only how many steps older women take but how often they reach their step targets across the week, addressing a key gap in current physical activity guidelines.
Researchers found that achieving at least 4000 steps per day on 1-2 days per week was associated with a significantly lower risk of death and lower risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD), compared with not reaching this ...
Less than half of schoolkids at risk of food anaphylaxis in England prescribed adrenaline ‘antidote’
2025-10-21
Less than half of schoolchildren in England who are at risk of a serious and potentially life-threatening allergic reaction (anaphylaxis) to food were prescribed the antidote—an adrenaline [epinephrine] autoinjector, or AAI for short—finds an analysis of national prescribing data, published online in the Archives of Disease in Childhood.
This is despite recommendations by the UK and European medicines regulators that those at risk should have access to 2 AAIs at all times, since some reactions need more than one dose or to allow for incorrect use.
And with 1 in 10 episodes of anaphylaxis occurring ...
The Lancet: Antidepressants vary widely in their physical side effects, highlighting the need for personalised prescribing, says major meta-analysis
2025-10-21
Antidepressants can differ widely in how they physically affect the body, including around a 4 kg difference in weight change between certain drugs (approximately 2.5 kg weight loss from agomelatine and 2kg weight gain from maprotiline), confirms a systematic review and meta-analysis published in The Lancet. The authors emphasise that these findings should not deter people from taking antidepressants, which remain vital and effective treatments for mental health conditions. Instead, they say the results ...
Scientists discover clean and green way to recycle Teflon®
2025-10-21
New research demonstrates a simple, eco-friendly method to break down Teflon® – one of the world’s most durable plastics – into useful chemical building blocks.
Scientists from Newcastle University and the University of Birmingham have developed a clean and energy-efficient way to recycle Teflon® (PTFE), a material best known for its use in non-stick coatings and other applications that demand high chemical and thermal stability.
The researchers discovered that waste Teflon® can be broken down and repurposed using only sodium metal and mechanical energy – movement by shaking - at room temperature and without toxic ...
‘Messy’ galaxies in the early universe struggled to settle
2025-10-21
Astronomers using the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) have captured the most detailed look yet at how galaxies formed just a few hundred million years after the Big Bang – and found they were far more chaotic and messy than those we see today.
The team, led by researchers at the University of Cambridge, analysed more than 250 young galaxies that existed when the universe was between 800 million and 1.5 billion years old. By studying the movement of gas within these galaxies, the researchers ...
Global supply chains benefit most from who you know
2025-10-21
In a time of tariffs and political trade disputes, new UBC Okanagan research shows that it’s not what you know but who you know.
And how well you treat them.
The research demonstrates that strong and strategic international alliances—not just diversification—are key to protecting supply chains from political trade disruptions.
Dr. Amin Ahmadi Digehsara, Assistant Professor in UBCO’s Faculty of Management, says creating strong global supply chain networks requires countries to make strategic decisions about facility locations, how to allocate capacity and how to manage operations across ...
While searching for the world’s oldest ice, scientists find sediment sneaking under the Antarctic ice sheet
2025-10-21
For decades, researchers seeking to understand global climate change have analyzed ice cores drilled deep within the Antarctic ice sheet. This ice traps chemicals and bubbles of ancient air that tell the story of how Earth’s climate has changed over time.
To develop a precise climate record, researchers seek to find continuous ice that’s uninterrupted, frozen in chronological order with newest ice at the top and the oldest ice at the bottom.
Until recently, the oldest continuous ice core samples went back as far as 800,000 years, just when Earth’s ...
Contrasting risk profiles for suicide attempt and suicide
2025-10-21
About The Study: In this case-control study, risk factors for suicide attempt and suicide incompletely overlapped and may present distinct opportunities for prevention, risk prediction, and suicide-risk screening.
Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Fenfen Ge, MD, PhD, email ffge.ncrr@au.dk.
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/
(10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2025.3444)
Editor’s Note: Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, conflict of interest and financial disclosures, and funding ...
Future-focused conservation index identifies reptiles as highest conservation priority
2025-10-21
Reptiles could overtake amphibians as the highest priority for conservation among vertebrates as threats like climate change and invasive species worsen in the future, according to a new conservation index tool developed by Gabriel Henrique de Oliveira Caetano at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel and Université Paris-Saclay, France, and colleagues, publishing October 21st in the open-access journal PLOS Biology.
Climate change, habitat loss, and the overexploitation of nature are driving wildlife population declines and extinctions ...
Ideological polarization and the spread of biased or fake news on Facebook are on the rise, according to a study by the UPF
2025-10-21
A study led by Pompeu Fabra University (UPF) confirms the rise in ideological polarization and biased or false news posted on Facebook. This groundbreaking research analyzed over 6 million news-related URLs – from 1,231 different domains in the United States – shared on Facebook between 2017 and 2020.
The news stories from these four years covered such significant events as the COVID pandemic, the 2020 US presidential elections (which culminated in the attack on Congress following Trump’s loss) and the 2018 midterm elections, in which all seats ...
New study reveals how tiny but powerful gatekeepers guard the nucleus
2025-10-21
Nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) are tiny but sophisticated gatekeepers that control the flow of materials between a cell’s nucleus and its cytoplasm by quickly selecting which molecules to transport across the nuclear membrane. Because NPCs are involved in most key cellular processes, when the transport system goes awry, numerous diseases can result, especially those of a neurodegenerative nature.
How each NPC makes a split-second decision about which molecules to allow to pass through its molecular gate is one of biology’s oldest mysteries. Now researchers from The Rockefeller University, working with ...
Discovery of a brown dwarf orbiting a red dwarf through the synergy of ground- and space-based observatories
2025-10-21
M dwarfs, or red dwarfs, are the most common type of star in our galaxy, accounting for more than half of all stars in the Milky Way. These small, cool stars are key targets for understanding the processes of stellar and planetary formation and evolution. However, because M dwarfs are intrinsically faint, detailed observations have historically been limited, and early surveys suggested that more than 70% of them were single stars. Recent advances in observational techniques, however, have revealed that this picture was incomplete: the frequency of low-mass ...
CPA journal wins prestigious award at high-quality development conference
2025-10-21
From October 19 to 21, 2025, the "Science Journal High-Quality Development Seminar and the 12th Anniversary of KeAi" was successfully held at the Portman Seven Stars Bay Hotel in Xiamen. Organized by Beijing KeAi Senlan Cultural Communication Co., Ltd., the conference gathered experts and scholars from the field of journal publishing both domestically and internationally to discuss strategies for high-quality development in scientific publishing.
The "Current Pharmaceutical Analysis" (CPA) journal was honored with the "Great Progress Award" for its significant advancements in journal development and ...
Disruptive investments can build a cleaner aviation industry
2025-10-21
Taking greater investment risks with technologies and new lines of business can help lower emissions from the aviation industry, one of the world’s fastest-growing sources of climate pollution, shows new research from UCD Michael Smurfit Graduate Business School.
The full article, “Mobilizing Capital and Technology for a Clean Aviation Industry,” was first published in Science, one of the world’s top academic journals.
Cutting planet-warming pollution to near-zero will take more than inventing new clean technologies; ...
Wearable optical device distinguishes blood flow signals from the brain and scalp
2025-10-21
WASHINGTON, Oct. 21, 2025 — Measuring how well blood flows to the brain is crucial for understanding a wide range of neurological issues, from strokes to migraines to traumatic brain injuries. Obtaining such measurements noninvasively, however, remains a challenge. The scalp and skull not only obstruct viewing the brain directly but also have their own blood supply, further complicating cerebral blood flow measurements.
In APL Bioengineering, by AIP Publishing, researchers from the California Institute of Technology, the University of Southern California, Rancho Research Institute, the University of Toledo, and the National Neuroscience Institute of Singapore ...
USC-Caltech study moves novel tool to measure brain blood flow closer to the clinic
2025-10-21
Measuring blood flow in the brain is critical for responding to a range of neurological problems, including stroke, traumatic brain injury (TBI) and vascular dementia. But existing techniques, including magnetic resonance imaging and computed tomography, are expensive and therefore not widely available.
Researchers from the USC Neurorestoration Center and the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) have built a simple, noninvasive alternative. The device takes a technique currently used in animal studies known as speckle contrast optical ...
Changes in colorectal cancer screening modalities among insured individuals
2025-10-21
About The Study: Among privately insured individuals, the use of colonoscopy and fecal immunochemical tests decreased after the COVID-19 pandemic while stool DNA test use increased, with differences by sex, area-level socioeconomic status, and metropolitan area residence.
Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Sunny Siddique, MD, PhD, email sunny.siddique@yale.edu.
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/
(doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.38578)
Editor’s Note: Please see the article for additional information, including ...
Seaweed makes for eco-friendly tissue scaffolds and reduces animal testing
2025-10-21
WASHINGTON, Oct. 21, 2025 — Seaweed is found around the world. In fact, the name “seaweed” comprises a diverse range of species, from microscopic phytoplankton to the giant forests found in various bodies of water.
Seaweed species aren’t just crucial parts of marine ecosystems, though; they also provide numerous health benefits for humans and have been dubbed a superfood by marketing companies, a term used to encompass healthy, nutrient-rich foods.
In Biointerphases, an AVS journal published by AIP Publishing, researchers from Oregon State University found yet another ...
New study: AI chatbots systematically violate mental health ethics standards
2025-10-21
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — As more people turn to ChatGPT and other large language models (LLMs) for mental health advice, a new study details how these chatbots — even when prompted to use evidence-based psychotherapy techniques — systematically violate ethical standards of practice established by organizations like the American Psychological Association.
The research, led by Brown University computer scientists working side-by-side with mental health practitioners, showed that chatbots are prone to a variety of ethical violations. Those include inappropriately navigating crisis situations, ...
Smoking both cannabis and tobacco may alter brain’s ‘bliss molecule,’ study finds
2025-10-21
People who use both cannabis and tobacco show distinct brain changes compared to those who use cannabis alone, according to a new study led by McGill University researchers at the Douglas Research Centre.
The finding may help explain why people who use both cannabis and tobacco often report increased depression and anxiety, and why quitting cannabis is harder for them than for people only using cannabis
“This is the first evidence in humans of a molecular mechanism that may underlie why people who use both cannabis and tobacco experience worse outcomes,” said lead author Rachel Rabin, Associate Professor in McGill’s Department of Psychiatry ...
The rise of longevity clinics: Promise, risk, and the future of aging
2025-10-21
“The major issue is that longevity clinics not yet embedded within mainstream medical practice.”
BUFFALO, NY — October 21, 2025 — A new editorial was published in Aging-US on October 13, 2025, titled “Longevity clinics: between promise and peril.”
In this editorial, Marco Demaria, Editor-in-Chief of Aging-US, from the European Research Institute for the Biology of Ageing (ERIBA), University Medical Center Groningen (UMCG), University ...
Decoding the T-cell burst: Signature genes that predict T-cell expansion in cancer immunotherapy
2025-10-21
The ability of immune cells—particularly CD8+ T cells—to launch a rapid burst of proliferation inside tumors is key to the success of modern day cancer immunotherapies. However, the factors and mechanisms that drive this burst in proliferation remain poorly understood, making it difficult to predict which patients will benefit from treatment. A deeper understanding of this T cell burst could also guide the development of new therapies that enhance T cell proliferation and improve treatment outcomes.
To tackle this challenge, an international team of researchers led by Associate Professor Satoshi Ueha and Professor Kouji Matsushima from the Research ...
Biomarker can help predict preeclampsia risk in women with sickle cell disease
2025-10-21
(WASHINGTON — October 21, 2025) – In pregnant women with sickle cell disease, the risk of developing early-onset preeclampsia can be determined by measuring levels of a protein associated with placental function and development. These findings provide insight that may help clinicians to anticipate and mitigate adverse pregnancy outcomes and were published in the journal Blood Advances.
“Patients with sickle cell disease are at high risk for developing preeclampsia, but the challenge is that these patients ...
AI models can now be customized with far less data and computing power
2025-10-21
Engineers at the University of California San Diego have created a new method to make large language models (LLMs) — such as the ones that power chatbots and protein sequencing tools — learn new tasks using significantly less data and computing power.
LLMs are made up of billions of parameters that determine how they process information. Traditional fine-tuning methods adjust all of these parameters, which can be costly and prone to overfitting — when a model memorizes patterns instead of truly understanding them, causing it to perform poorly on new examples.
The new method developed by UC San Diego engineers takes a smarter approach. ...
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