Saturday, November 12, 2016

Surgeon behind world's first 'three-parent baby' defends controversial IVF procedure as 'revolutionary' and other top stories.

  • Surgeon behind world's first 'three-parent baby' defends controversial IVF procedure as 'revolutionary'

    Surgeon behind world's first 'three-parent baby' defends controversial IVF procedure as 'revolutionary'
    The surgeon behind the world's first 'three-parent baby' has defended his controversial work after scientists said it could be unsafe. But Dr John Zhang said the ground-breaking IVF procedure – which created a baby boy from the DNA of his mother, father and a donor to avoid a life-threatening disease – is "revolutionary" and a "wonderful thing". The baby, born in Mexico in April, could have inherited Leigh syndrome from its mother, a fatal disorder that affects the central nervous system. Sym..
    >> view original

  • This mouse was grown from its mother's skin cells

    This mouse was grown from its mother's skin cells
    K. Hayashi/Kyushu University For the first time, researchers have grown eggs entirely in a lab dish. Skin-producing cells called fibroblasts from the tip of an adult mouse’s tail have been reprogrammed to make eggs, Japanese researchers report online October 17 in Nature. Those eggs were fertilized and grew into six healthy mice. The accomplishment could make it possible to study the formation of gametes — eggs and sperm — a mysterious process that takes place inside fetus..
    >> view original

  • National Prescription Drug Take-Back Day Set For Oct. 22

    National Prescription Drug Take-Back Day Set For Oct. 22
    Community and the law enforcement representatives will host the 12th edition of the National Prescription Drug Take-Back Day on Oct. 22. The event, which will run from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. local time, aims to gather unwanted medicine, and not the additional accessories, including needles, sharps, asthma inhalers or illicit drugs. The event's first edition was held in 2010, and since then, 6.3 million pounds of expired or unused medications have been collected for proper disposal. The previous even..
    >> view original

  • Toxic chemicals tied to $340B in US health costs and lost wages

    Toxic chemicals tied to $340B in US health costs and lost wages
    Chemicals found in plastic bottles, flame retardants, metal food cans, detergents, cosmetics and pesticides cost the U.S. more than $340 billion a year in health costs and lost earnings, a new study estimates. That's more than twice the annual estimated cost of $163 billion in the European Union, where regulations may limit exposure to some of these chemicals, researchers note in The Lancet Diabetes and Endocrinology. The chemicals in question are known as endocrine disruptors because they can ..
    >> view original

  • Here Are the Most Popular Foods on Twitter

    Here Are the Most Popular Foods on Twitter
    If you are what you tweet, a lot of Americans are very, very jittery. A new study looked at nearly 80 million tweets and found that coffee was the most tweeted-about consumable in the U.S. and Starbucks was by far the most tweeted fast-food restaurant. The study, published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research Public Health and Surveillance, used Twitter as a way to gain insight into the health of people in neighborhoods across the U.S. “Increasingly we’re seeing more and more studies l..
    >> view original

  • Vice President Biden: 'Trump Is Out There Doing Something Very Dangerous'

    Vice President Biden: 'Trump Is Out There Doing Something Very Dangerous'
    Enlarge this image "I think when we appeal to the better angels of Americans, we've always succeeded," Vice President Biden told NPR. Ariel Zambelich/NPR hide caption toggle caption Ariel Zambelich/NPR "I think when we appeal to the better angels of Americans, we've always succeeded," Vice President Biden told NPR. ..
    >> view original

  • Left at the 1st Neuron: Project Will Map Every Human Cell

    Left at the 1st Neuron: Project Will Map Every Human Cell
    Imagine having the level of detail in Google Maps but for the inner workings of the human body. A new international initiative is creating an atlas that will chart every single cell in the human body, encompassing all of the tissues within Homo sapiens, scientists announced last week at a meeting in London. The revolutionary project, called the Human Cell Atlas, will help biologists and doctors understand, diagnose and treat diseases with the help of high-resolution images of healthy and ..
    >> view original

  • Are Fewer Cervical Cancer Screenings Needed After HPV Vaccine?

    Are Fewer Cervical Cancer Screenings Needed After HPV Vaccine?
    By Dennis ThompsonHealthDay Reporter (HealthDay) MONDAY, Oct. 17, 2016 (HealthDay News) -- Women who've been vaccinated against human papillomavirus (HPV) likely need fewer cervical cancer screenings, a new study argues. Just how often a woman needs a cervical cancer screening depends on the type of vaccine she had, the researchers said. Women vaccinated with earlier versions of the HPV vaccine -- which protect against the two worst cancer-causing strains of the sexually transmit..
    >> view original

  • Canadian hospitals struggle to cut wait times for breast reconstruction surgery

    Canadian hospitals struggle to cut wait times for breast reconstruction surgery
    For Sarah Michaelis, waiting two years for a new breast was almost as agonizing as cancer itself.The Toronto television producer was 36, and had only recently weaned her youngest daughter, when doctors told her in June of 2011 that the 10-centimetre lump in her chest was cancerous. Her left breast had to go. “I didn’t feel like a woman any more,” she recalled, her voice wavering. “I’m going to cry, but it’s true. You’re bald and when you get out of surgery you don’t realize how flat it is, but ..
    >> view original

  • Bill McKendree: Lead local counselor on Medicare issues advises what to weigh during open enrollment season - Pittsburgh Post

    Bill McKendree: Lead local counselor on Medicare issues advises what to weigh during open enrollment season - Pittsburgh Post
    Bill McKendree, coordinator for eight years of the Allegheny County Apprise program, leads a staff of counselors who advise the public on the many complicated details of Medicare and their options and decisions relating to it. The Apprise program is funded by the federal government and operated by Family Services of Western Pennsylvania in partnership with the county Area Agency on Aging. Aging Edge sought information from Mr. McKendree, 62, who was previously a practicing attorney, on the sign..
    >> view original

Did your zodiac sign change? Don't worry, NASA says astrology is still fake .Movie pirate? Don't trust Plex Cloud .
Elon Musk just unveiled a critical piece of his plan to save humanity by colonizing Mars .How immigration helps the US economy: Report .

No comments:

Post a Comment