2015年5月12日 星期二

2015-05-13 Pakistan Health


Voice of America
   
WHO to Accelerate R&D for Ebola, Other Diseases   
Voice of America
GENEVA—. Experts at a high-level World Health Organization meeting have agreed on a roadmap for accelerating research and development into new medical products to fight Ebola and other epidemic-prone diseases. More than 11,000 people in West ...

As Ebola disappears, no useful data seen from vaccine trials, says WHO   Fox News
As Ebola disappears, no useful data seen from vaccine trials – WHO   News24
WHO works on plan to tackle disease outbreaks after Ebola fiasco   Business Insider

all 40 news articles »   


1st stable relationship makes happy, but hardly changes personality: study   
Daily Times
The first relationship that a young person enters into increases his satisfaction with life, but changes his personality only slightly, said a study on Tuesday. Researchers at German universities of Kiel and Tuebingen compared changes in personality and life ...

First stable relationship makes happy, but hardly changes personality: study   GlobalPost

all 3 news articles »   


The Hindu
   
“Nurses play a huge role in helping patients recover”   
The Hindu
Nursing staff, students, and paramedical personnel of Mahatma Gandhi Memorial Government Hospital celebrated the International Nurses Day on the occasion of the birth anniversary of Florence Nightingale here on Tuesday. They lined up in large numbers ...

'Society should be grateful to nurses'   Times of India
Nurses: A force for change   Jakarta Post
Florence Nightingale, Highlight of International Nurses' Day in Tonga   Tonga Daily News

all 103 news articles »   


Times of India
   
Study Shows Mouth Exercises Could Decrease Snoring   
CBS Local
In a Brazilian study, 39 adults ages 20 to 65 did nasal lavage — a flushing out of the nasal cavity — then they either did breathing exercises, or a series of mouth exercises for about eight minutes. In the three month study, the breathing group had no change in ...

Brazilian researchers may have cure for snoring   abc7news.com
Simple Exercises May Help You Stop Snoring, Study Finds   ABC News
The key to a good night's sleep: Easy exercises to stop snoring   Hindustan Times
International News Network   
all 26 news articles »   


Daily Mail
   
Phil Lyndon's frog in his throat turned out to be a 5mm mangled bug   
Daily Mail
A graphic designer who had been suffering from a bad cough discovered a 5 millimetre-long mangled insect had been living in his lungs. Phil Lyndon, from Ealing, west London, had been to the doctors after suffering with a bad cough and was given a course ...

Persistent Cough Turns Out to be Caused by 'Mangled Insect' Living in Man's ...   Headlines & Global News
What This Man Found When He Thought He Was Just Coughing up a 'Large ...   TheBlaze.com
Pictured: Man with bad cough spewed out this 'wriggling critter'   Scottish Daily Record
Aaj News   
all 5 news articles »   


Popular Science
   
Meet The Machine That Could Replace Anesthesiologists   
Popular Science
The machine sedated this patient before her colonoscopy at the ProMedica Toledo Hospital in Toledo. Say hello to the hunk of plastic that could replace your anesthesiologist. Right now, only four U.S. hospitals are using the Sedasys anesthesiology machine ...

New Machine Could Replace Anesthesiologists   Newsmax
Would you put your life in the 'hands' of this machine?   Komando
New machine could one day replace anesthesiologists   Washington Post

all 7 news articles »   


Toronto Star
   
Drug-resistant typhoid fever bacterium spreading, becoming deadlier, study says   
Toronto Star
A “superbug” strain of the bacterium that causes typhoid fever has spread globally in just three decades and is currently seeding a silent epidemic in Africa, according to a study in the journal Nature Genetics. An international team of researchers on Monday ...

Drug-resistant 'superbug' strain of typhoid spreads worldwide   Reuters
Antibiotic-resistant typhoid spreading in silent epidemic, says study   The Guardian

all 174 news articles »   


Sky News Australia
   
Genes explain why we are sick in winter   
Sky News Australia
Nearly a quarter of our genes change how active they are according to the season, which may explain why people are more prone to illness in winter rather than summer, scientists say. In a study published on Tuesday in the journal Nature Communications, ...

Seasons May Influence Genes That Trigger Chronic Disease   Science Times
More die in winter because genes change with seasons   The Times (subscription)
Immune System Genes May Change With the Seasons: Study   Philly.com
Tech Times   
Business Insider   
Wired   
all 62 news articles »   


Los Angeles Times
   
In rich nations, risky drinking rises even as total drinking declines   
Los Angeles Times
In most of the world's richest nations, 20% of the people are doing 50% to 75% of the drinking, according to a new report on alcohol consumption in 34 countries. Overall, residents of these countries are drinking slightly less now than they were 20 years ago, ...

Our teens drink less but parents fourth heaviest drinkers in OECD   Irish Independent
Binge drinking spirals among youth and women: OECD   Irish Examiner
The middle-class women drinking themselves to death   Daily Mail

all 238 news articles »   


Los Angeles Times
   
Paging 'CSI': Microbiome analysis may be the new fingerprint   
Salina.com
In forensic science, fingerprints and DNA are beginning to look old-school. To catch perpetrators (or exonerate the innocent), future sleuths may find themselves collecting and comparing entire colonies of microorganisms and the people and places they ...

Body microbes can identify you   Financial Express
In forensics, 'microbiome' may be the new 'fingerprint'   Economic Times
Your Poop Is the Latest Privacy Threat   Discover Magazine (blog)

all 41 news articles »   

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