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Food allergies at summer camp: The cost-effective solution to keep kids safe

2025-06-24
Going off to summer camp can be a scary experience for children, but it can be even more nerve-wracking for parents of kids with food allergies. New UVA Health research reveals the most cost-effective way to keep those children safe. For most summer camps, stocking a supply of epinephrine – a common treatment for allergic reactions – rather than leaving it up to campers to bring their own is a safe strategy with the lowest overall cost for everyone involved, the UVA researchers found.  “Stock, unassigned ...

What can tiny molecules in ants and naked mole-rats tell us about societal roles?

2025-06-24
Key Takeaways Researchers led by Penn Integrates Knowledge Professor in the School of Arts & Sciences and the Perelman School of Medicine Shelley Berger explore the genetic basis of how communal-dwelling organisms like leafcutter ants and naked mole-rats divide labor among their societies They discovered that pathways dating back hundreds of millions of years are conserved across animal kingdoms Their findings offer fundamental insights into the origins of complex social behaviors and the neuroplasticity of assigned roles From the bright lights of cities that don’t ...

National data shows post-pandemic rise in head and shoulder injuries for youth hockey players

2025-06-24
Journal: Injury Title: Pediatric Ice Hockey Injury Trends Presenting to U.S. Emergency Departments: A 10-Year Review of National Injury Data Authors: Luca M. Valdivia, MS, MD Candidate at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai Sheena Ranade, MD, Associate Professor of Orthopedics, and Pediatrics, at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai Bottom line: This study analyzes pediatric ice hockey injuries in emergency departments throughout the United States, finding a post-pandemic rise in head and shoulder injuries as well as hospitalizations. Why this study is unique: This ...

The Vaccine Innovation Center of Korea University's College of Medicine successfully held a special seminar with Professor Pierre Van Damme

2025-06-24
On April 29th, the Vaccine Innovation Center (Director Chung Hee-Jin) of Korea University's College of Medicine successfully held a special seminar with Professor Pierre Van Damme, a world-renowned vaccine expert, at the Yoon Joo-Hong lecture room, 4th floor main building.   61 researchers joined this seminar to have in-depth discussions on the latest research trends and strategies in vaccine development and clinical trials.     Professor Pierre Van Damme is a world-renowned vaccine expert who has been selected as one of the 2025 recipient of the Park Man-Hoon Award for his contribution to lead the development of the first oral polio ...

Direct observation of the charge distribution at the ferroelectric interface was succeeded

2025-06-24
Multilayer ceramic capacitors (MLCCs) (1), which utilize ferroelectric ceramics, are widely used as electronic components in various devices such as smartphones, personal computers, televisions, and automotive systems. With the advancement of mobile devices, home appliances, and IoT technologies, there is an increasing demand for MLCCs to become more compact, offer higher capacitance, and exhibit greater reliability. MLCCs are structured with alternating layers of ferroelectric material and internal electrodes. Within the ferroelectric layers, there are domains with differing polarization directions, as well as domain interfaces on the nanometer (one-billionth of a ...

Sentinel-based index boosts tracking of Spartina alterniflora

2025-06-24
Researchers have unveiled a simple yet effective satellite-based tool to track Spartina alterniflora, one of the most aggressive invasive plant species threatening coastal wetlands. Using freely accessible Sentinel-2 imagery, the new Spartina alterniflora Index (SAI) enables precise, large-scale mapping of this fast-spreading species. Outperforming traditional vegetation indices and rivaling machine learning models in accuracy, SAI offers a scalable and practical solution for environmental monitoring and wetland protection. Originally introduced to China in the 1970s to control erosion and support land ...

New protein targets for cancer treatments

2025-06-24
Cells depend on the precise reading of DNA sequences to function correctly. This process, known as gene expression, determines which genetic instructions are activated. When this fails, the wrong parts of the genome can be activated, leading to cancers and neurodevelopmental disorders. Scientists at the University of Geneva (UNIGE) have identified two proteins that play a key role in regulating this essential mechanism, paving the way for promising new treatments that could be more effective and less toxic than those currently available. Their findings are published in Nature Communications. Human DNA contains over 20,000 genes and would stretch nearly two metres ...

New strategy for lead-free antiferroelectric design: Sn and Ce Co-doping regulates NaNbO₃ phase structure

2025-06-24
For decades, researchers have pursued lead-free alternatives to replace toxic yet high-performance lead-based antiferroelectrics (AFEs). Sodium niobate (NaNbO3, NN) emerged as a prime candidate due to its low cost and environmentally benign nature. However, its irreversible phase transition at room temperature, resulting in energy-wasting ferroelectric-like hysteresis, has hindered practical applications. The team published their work in Journal of Advanced Ceramics on June 18, 2025. Now, a materials scientists team has cracked this challenge through ions co-doping strategic. As published in Journal of Advanced Ceramics, co-doping NN with variable-valence elements Sn and Ce ...

AI tool set to transform characterisation and treatment of cancers

2025-06-24
A multinational team of researchers, co-led by the Garvan Institute of Medical Research, has developed and tested a new AI tool to better characterise the diversity of individual cells within tumours, opening doors for more targeted therapies for patients. Findings on the development and use of the AI tool, called AAnet, have today been published in Cancer Discovery, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research. Not all tumour cells the same Tumours aren't made up of just one cell type – they're a mix of different cells that grow and ...

COPD prevalence, disease burden varies significantly by state

2025-06-24
Miami (June 24, 2025) – Prevalence of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and the disease’s burden varies significantly by state. Understanding this variation could help address public health gaps to ease the burden on people with COPD and the health care system, according to a new study. The study is published in the March 2025 issue of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Diseases: Journal of the COPD Foundation, a peer-reviewed, open-access journal. COPD is an inflammatory lung disease, comprising several conditions, including chronic bronchitis and emphysema, and can ...

This blood protein could be spreading aging throughout your body

2025-06-24
For the first time in the world, a Korean research team discovered how cellular aging can spread systemically through the bloodstream—offering new insights and a potential therapeutic strategy to combat aging-related decline.   Professor Ok Hee Jeon's research group at the Department of Convergence Medicine, Korea University's College of Medicine, discovered that High Mobility Group Box 1 (HMGB1),a key extracellular senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP) factor, plays a ...

Official BRACELET-1 trial results indicate that adding the oncolytic virus immunotherapy pelareorep to paclitaxel chemotherapy warrants further investigation in HR+ HER2- metastatic breast cancer

2025-06-24
The official results of the BRACELET-01 (PrECOG 0113) trial have been published in Clinical Cancer Research, detailing the safety and efficacy of pelareorep, an investigational oncolytic virus immunotherapy, when added to paclitaxel chemotherapy, both with and without the checkpoint inhibitor avelumab. The trial included 48 patients with unresectable metastatic hormone receptor-positive (HR+), human epidermal growth factor receptor 2-negative (HER2-) tumors. All had experienced disease progression after receiving at least ...

Trusted oncology guidelines get a digital makeover: National Comprehensive Cancer Network launches NCCN Guidelines Navigator

2025-06-24
PLYMOUTH MEETING, PA [June 24, 2024] — The National Comprehensive Cancer Network® (NCCN®)—an alliance of leading cancer centers—announces a new, interactive digital delivery format for the NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology (NCCN Guidelines®).  The NCCN Guidelines® are the recognized standard for clinical decision making and policy in cancer care and are the most thorough and frequently updated clinical practice guidelines available in any area of medicine. They assist in the decision-making process of individuals involved in cancer care and prevention—including ...

 Tomatoes in the Galápagos are quietly de-evolving

2025-06-24
On the younger, black-rock islands of the Galápagos archipelago, wild-growing tomatoes are doing something peculiar. They’re shedding millions of years of evolution, reverting to a more primitive genetic state that resurrects ancient chemical defenses. These tomatoes, which descended from South American ancestors likely brought over by birds, have quietly started making a toxic molecular cocktail that hasn’t been seen in millions of years, one that resembles compounds found in eggplant, not the modern tomato. In a study published recently in Nature Communications, scientists at the University ...

Mapping barriers to natural climate solutions

2025-06-24
Conservation, restoration, and ecosystem management can reduce greenhouse gas emissions or increase carbon dioxide sequestration, in what frequently are referred to as “natural climate solutions.” Such natural climate solutions have  gained global attention in recent years as they could provide over one-third of the climate mitigation required to keep global warming under 2°C (3.6°F) by 2030. The authors mapped social, political, informational, and economic roadblocks that prevent implementation of natural climate solutions around the world, drawing ...

Is it immoral to be too rich?

2025-06-24
Is excessive wealth immoral? Most people do not think so, but members of societies that are more equal and wealthy than average are more likely to believe it is wrong to have too much money.  Currently, the world’s eight richest individuals have as much wealth as the bottom 50% of people worldwide. There are two distinct moral objections to such extreme wealth. One is that economic inequality is wrong, an opinion shared by a majority of people worldwide. The other is that extreme wealth itself is wrong. Jackson Trager and Mohammad Atari recruited survey samples mirroring demographics in terms of gender, education, and age for 20 nations, totaling 4,351 participants overall. Participants ...

Predicting cognitive abilities from brain scans

2025-06-24
Predicting cognitive abilities from brain imaging has long been a central goal in cognitive neuroscience. While machine learning has modestly improved predictions using brain MRI data, most studies rely on a single MRI modality. Narun Pat and colleagues integrated multiple MRI modalities through a technique called stacking. The method combines structural MRI (e.g., cortical thickness), resting-state and task-based functional connectivity, and task-evoked blood-oxygen-level-dependent (BOLD) contrasts to build a more robust neural marker of cognitive function. The authors analyzed data from 2,131 participants aged 22 to 100 from three ...

Poll shows wide variation in older adults’ preparations to age in place

2025-06-24
Overall, 46% of adults age 65 and older have taken steps to “age in place,” according to a new poll. This includes 31% who have made modifications to make their home more age-friendly and 26% who have already moved to a place that can meet their needs as they age. Some older adults have done both.  That’s even though most older adults polled – 84% – said it’s very or somewhat likely that they’ll live in their current home for the rest of their life. This includes 80% of those who have not yet taken any steps to age in place.  The new findings from the National Poll on ...

Colorful, “healthy” branding makes cannabis edibles appealing to teens, study finds

2025-06-24
Bright colors, fruit imagery, and labels like “locally made” or “vegan” might seem harmless—but when used on cannabis edibles, they can send misleading messages to teens. That’s according to a new Washington State University-led study examining how adolescents perceive the packaging of cannabis-infused products such as gummies, chocolates and sodas. Despite regulations barring packaging that targets youth, many teens in the study found these products appealing— often likening them to everyday ...

The urge to delay a return to pleasure

2025-06-24
People often delay returning to lost pleasures, according to a study. When people are unable to engage in enjoyable activities, from catching up with friends to going to the movies, one might think that they would jump at the chance to return. However, Linda Hagen and Ed O’Brien show in a series of surveys and experiments that people often delay returning to previously rewarding behaviors. After the end of COVID-19 shutdowns, surveyed Americans reported waiting additional time to return to restaurants, movie theaters, parties, vacations, and family visits so that their return would be especially ...

Popular diabetes and weight-loss drug may reduce risk of dementia

2025-06-24
CLEVELAND—Researchers at the Case Western Reserve School of Medicine have found that semaglutide, a popular diabetes and weight-loss drug, may lower the risk of dementia in people with type 2 diabetes (T2D). Dementia, a condition that slowly makes it harder for people to remember things and think clearly, occurs when brain cells are damaged and their connections stop working properly. This damage, which worsens over time, can be caused by various modifiable factors, including obesity, T2D, cardiovascular diseases, traumatic brain injury and stroke.   According to the National Institutes of Health, more than 6 million people in the United ...

Model tackles key obstacle to efficient plastic recycling

2025-06-24
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Most people who separate their plastic waste for recycling assume the bulk of it will in fact be recycled. But current recycling methods, which “require sorting, grinding, cleaning, remelting and extrusion to obtain plastic pellets, usually lead to lower value materials because of contamination and mechanochemical degradation,” the authors of a new study write. As a result, only about 10% of the plastic that makes it to recycling facilities is recycled. The rest is incinerated, sent to landfills or ends up in ...

Cell therapy improves overall survival of patients with colorectal cancer

2025-06-24
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the second most common cause of death from cancer in the United States (US) and the most prevalent malignant tumor worldwide. CRC refers to cancer in the colon or rectum, the two parts that make up the large intestine. In the US, deaths from CRC in people under 55 have been increasing since the mid-2000s, highlighting the need for effective treatments.  New data published in The Journal of Immunology, reveal that cytokine-induced killer (CIK) cell therapy improved overall survival and progression-free survival of patients ...

Food packaging is a source of micro- and nanoplastics in food

2025-06-24
About this study: New research analyzes 103 scientific studies related to micro- and nanoplastics (MNPs) from food packaging and other food contact articles (FCAs). The normal and intended use of FCAs is a source of MNPs in foodstuffs. The full dataset is freely available through an interactive dashboard.   Zurich, Switzerland – [June 17, 2025] – In a new research article being published in npj Science of Food, scientists led by the Food Packaging Forum show that the normal and intended use of plastic food packaging and other food contact articles (FCAs), such as opening a plastic bottle or chopping on a plastic cutting board, ...

New study sheds light on the effectiveness of measures to solve the 'migration crisis'

2025-06-24
Migration agreements between “transit countries”, such as Turkey or Libya, and Europe have in recent years become the norm as emergency measures to try to stop irregular migration. In 2024, for example, Egypt received over 5 billion euros to improve its border security measures. This kind of initiatives follow as a model the agreement signed in 2016 between the European Union and Turkey to prevent refugees and migrants from entering the EU: the main narrative is that such deals help to reduce overall irregular migration to Europe. A new study by researchers ...
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