Imagine you’re lounging comfortably at home, watching TV, when a car ad comes up showing a vehicle traveling at high speed on a windy road. Inside, an infant is shown in a baby seat that… isn’t secured. How would that commercial make you feel about the advertiser? Thankfully that never happens in real life, right?
Test with volunteers shows wasabi improves short- and long-term memory in older people
A team of cognitive health and aging research specialists affiliated with a large number of institutions in Japan has found that ingesting wasabi can help improve both long- and short-term memory retention in older adults. For their study, published in the journal Nutrients, the group gave one group of older adult volunteers daily wasabi tablets and another group a daily placebo for three months.
Farmers in Luanshay happy with ECL return
By ROGERS KALERO
PEASANT farmers in Maposa area of Roan constituency in Luanshya district of the Copperbelt Province are excited with the return of former republican President Edgar Lungu to active politics and have pledged their support as the former head of State embarks on the crusade to defend democracy.
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Survey of 34,000 health care professionals indicates higher bias against transgender people
By analyzing data from the Harvard Implicit Association Test—a widely accepted measure of a person’s attitudes toward people based on characteristics like race, gender, and sexuality—researchers find that health care professionals, and in particular nurses, are more biased against transgender people than are people who are not health care professionals.
Survey reveals higher parenting stress for dads working from home during pandemic
A survey from Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago found that 40% of parents who worked remotely during the pandemic reported higher parenting stress compared with only 27% of parents who worked onsite.
Study provides molecular blueprint of spinal circuits governing locomotor speed
Researchers at Karolinska Institutet, Sweden have uncovered the molecular logic underpinning the assembly of spinal circuits that control the speed of locomotion in adult zebrafish. The study has been published in Nature Neuroscience.
Researchers find evidence of mpox circulating in humans since 2016
A large international team of medical researchers and epidemiologists has found evidence that monkeypox (mpox) has been circulating in humans since 2016. In their study, reported in the journal Science, the group used Bayesian evolutionary analysis of the mpox virus to show that its genomic history includes years of change due to human infections.
Two-drug approach could overcome a common cancer mutation, make treatments more effective
Cancer cells are often a mess of mutations. About 20% to 25% of cancers involve mutations in a complex of molecules called SWI/SNF. Yet drugs designed to block SWI/SNF activity haven’t always worked as expected. Researchers at Harvard Medical School have now figured out why.
Beta-cells study sheds light on cause of type 2 diabetes
Scientists at Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital, along with an international team of researchers, are shedding new light on the causes of type 2 diabetes. The research, published in the journal Nature Communications, offers a potential strategy for developing new therapies that could restore dysfunctional pancreatic beta-cells or, perhaps, even prevent type 2 diabetes from developing.
Viewpoint: I was a geriatrician on Old People’s Home for Teenagers. Here’s why I joined this TV experiment
Many people will have heard about “intergenerational practice” via the TV.