Sunday, October 15, 2017

Researchers question whether you should really finish your antibiotics and other top stories.

  • Researchers question whether you should really finish your antibiotics

    Researchers question whether you should really finish your antibiotics
    The "complete the course" advice given to patients taking antibiotics is "fallacious" and backed by little evidence, they state in their article, and could lead to antibiotic overuse -- and further resistance. But other doctors urge caution, and say they aren't ready to change standard advice around taking antibiotics.The opinion piece suggests that an alternative message, such as "stop when you feel better" could be developed. But the authors accept that more research is needed before this is i..
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  • Slimy slugs inspire 'potentially lifesaving' medical glue

    Slimy slugs inspire 'potentially lifesaving' medical glue
    Image copyright SPL Image caption Slugs were the inspiration for a new kind of super-sticky bio glue A defensive mucus secreted by slugs has inspired a new kind of adhesive that could transform medicine, say scientists. The "bio-glue" is incredibly strong, moves with the body and crucially, sticks to wet surfaces. The team at Harvard University have even used it to seal a hole in a pig's heart. Experts have described the glue as "really cool" and said..
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  • Charlie Gard's parents say hospital denied their 'final wish' for dying son

    Charlie Gard's parents say hospital denied their 'final wish' for dying son
    LONDON (Reuters) - The parents of Charlie Gard, a terminally ill baby who a judge ordered should be sent to a hospice to die, said Britain's top pediatric hospital had denied them their final wish to decide the arrangements for their son's death. After a harrowing legal battle that prompted a global debate over who has the moral right to decide the fate of a sick child, a judge on Thursday ordered that Charlie be moved to a hospice where the ventilator that keeps him alive will be turned off. ..
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  • How California Can Utilize Surplus Marijuana Other Than Smoking Weed

    How California Can Utilize Surplus Marijuana Other Than Smoking Weed
    The executive director of the California Growers’ Association, Hezekiah Allen, said Wednesday the state would have to scale down the production of marijuana as it is currently producing eight times the amount than is normally consumed.This hadn't been a problem till now as the surplus was exported to other states; but a new law set to go in effect in January will ban growers from selling their products outside the state, leaving them with fewer outlets to sell their surplus weed to.Joseph Devlin..
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  • Can frequent, moderate drinking ward off diabetes?

    Can frequent, moderate drinking ward off diabetes?
    Men and women who hoist a few glasses three to four days a week have the lowest risks of developing diabetes, Danish researchers found. Compared to people drinking less than one day each week, men who drink frequently had a 27% lower risk while women had a 32% lower risk, the researchers said.Diabetes is a disease in which blood glucose -- sugar -- levels are high. When we eat, most of our food is turned into glucose to be burned as energy, with a hormone called insulin helping our cells absorb ..
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  • Falling sperm counts threaten the human race? Don't get your shorts in a twist over it just yet

    Falling sperm counts threaten the human race? Don't get your shorts in a twist over it just yet
    Plummeting sperm counts could spell the extinction of the human species? Um, not quite. Stories this week about a study reporting sperm counts among Western men have fallen by more than half in less than 40 years had researchers warning of a fertility “crisis” and others offering tips on how men could counteract the “shocking” and “all-time low” sperm slump by, among other things, eating tomatoes and pomegranates. However, a Canadian expert in human sperm pathophysiology says semen analysis tes..
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  • In US first, scientists edit genes of human embryos

    In US first, scientists edit genes of human embryos
    Last Updated Jul 27, 2017 1:50 PM EDT For the first time in the United States, scientists have edited the genes of human embryos, a controversial step toward someday helping babies avoid inherited diseases.    According to MIT Technology Review, which first reported the news on Wednesday, the experiment was just an exercise in science — the embryos were not allowed to develop for more than a few days and were never intended to be implanted into a womb.     Officials at Oregon Health & Science..
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  • Third-person self-talk helps control emotion, says study - News

    Third-person self-talk helps control emotion, says study - News
    July 28, 2017 A study published online in a nature journal Scientific Reports suggests that talking in the third person to oneself in stressful times might help controlling emotions and it needs no additional mental effort than first person self-talk, which is normally used by people to talk to themselves. The study which was done by the psychology researchers from Michigan State University and the University of Michigan is the first of its kind indicating comparatively effortless self-control ..
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  • More E-Cigarettes, Fewer Tobacco Smokers?

    More E-Cigarettes, Fewer Tobacco Smokers?
    WEDNESDAY, July 26, 2017 (HealthDay News) -- More Americans are giving up cigarettes, and a new study suggests electronic cigarettes may be the reason why.After stalling for 15 years, the U.S. quit-smoking rate rose to nearly 6 percent in 2014-2015, up from less than 5 percent in prior years, according to national survey data.Researchers at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine believe e-cigarettes have helped fuel the increase. "From 2014 to 2015, more e-cigarette users tr..
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  • Prosecutor: Man killed doctor after pain medicine disagreement - WNDU

    Prosecutor: Man killed doctor after pain medicine disagreement - WNDU
    To some extent, Dr. Todd Graham was killed for refusing to write a pain pill prescription to the wife of the man who shot him. On Thursday afternoon, the gunman was identified as 48-year-old Michael Jarvis. “Doctors should never get shot. Doctors are trying to do what they can to help people and I think that’s what’s so tragic about this. Every homicide is tragic, but this one in particular hits home. Hits home to our medical professionals, their job is to try to help people and that’s certai..
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From Our Files: Moments from Hawai'i's Past–June Edition .Chris Christie catches foul ball at Mets-Cardinals game .
Overwatch Developers: We Would Rather Not Have Leavers Playing The Game .All new Volvo models to be electric from 2019 onwards .

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