Public Release: 2-Jun-2015 Majority of breast cancer patients did not know the aggressive procedure does not improve survival University of Michigan Health System ANN ARBOR, Mich. — A survey of women with breast cancer found that nearly half considered having… Read More ›
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Prescription drugs associated with an increased risk of committing a Homicide
Anti-depressants were associated with a slightly elevated risk (+31%), Benzodiazepines (drugs used to treat anxiety and insomnia) with a significantly elevated risk (+45%). Opiate painkillers (+92%) Anti-inflammatory painkillers (+206%). In persons under 26 years of age, the highest increase in… Read More ›
Organic agriculture more profitable to farmers
Public Release: 1-Jun-2015 Large profit margins show room for growth Washington State University PULLMAN, Wash.–A comprehensive study finds organic agriculture is more profitable for farmers than conventional agriculture. In spite of lower yields, the global study shows that the profit… Read More ›
Western diet may increase risk of death after prostate cancer diagnosis by 67%
Public Release: 1-Jun-2015 Harvard School of Public Health Boston, MA — After a prostate cancer diagnosis, eating a diet higher in red and processed meat, high-fat dairy foods, and refined grains–known as a Western diet–may lead to a significantly higher… Read More ›
Study links exposure to common pesticide with ADHD in boys
Public Release: 1-Jun-2015 Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center A new study links a commonly used household pesticide with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in children and young teens. The study found an association between pyrethroid pesticide exposure and ADHD, particularly… Read More ›
High Fructose decreases physical activity and increases body fat signifigantly over glucose
Public Release: 1-Jun-2015 “Fructose decreases physical activity and increases body fat without affecting hippocampal neurogenesis and learning relative to an isocaloric glucose diet,” Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology In the last 40 years, fructose, a simple carbohydrate derived… Read More ›
Which Cancer drugs cure and which don’t
Public Release: 30-May-2015 ESMO announces scale to stratify magnitude of clinical benefit of anticancer medicines This is the PDF to the full study. Drug Charts are towards the bottom of the study: Cancer Drug Field Study 2015 European Society for… Read More ›
Study shows hypothermia occurs during surgery in around half of patients
Public Release: 29-May-2015 ESA (European Society of Anaesthesiology) A study presented at this year’s Euroanaesthesia congress in Berlin (30 May-2 June) shows that hypothermia occurs in around half of patients undergoing surgery, despite national guidelines for its prevention. The study… Read More ›
US military accidentally shipped live Anthrax to nine labs
27 MAY 2015 US officials accidentally sent Anthrax to labs in nine states The US military accidentally sent live Anthrax samples to as many as nine labs across the country. There were no public threats from the mishap, a… Read More ›
False breast cancer alarm has negative impact on health long term
Public Release: 27-May-2015 “they are so affected by the first message that they still show signs of stress and depression several years after the false alarm” University of Copenhagen – The Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences The psychological strain… Read More ›
Why Americans can’t buy some of the best sunscreens
Public Release: 27-May-2015 American Chemical Society With summer nearly here, U.S. consumers might think they have an abundance of sunscreen products to choose from. But across the Atlantic, Europeans will be slathering on formulations that manufacturers say provide better protection… Read More ›
Dartmouth researchers create first smartphone app that predicts GPA
Dartmouth College HANOVER, N.H. – If you’re a college student wondering how your study and party habits will affect your GPA, wonder no longer. Dartmouth researchers and their colleagues have built the first app that automatically predicts college students’… Read More ›
Drug treatments to prevent hip fracture are neither viable, cost effective, yet dangerous
Public Release: 26-May-2015 “Pharmacotherapy can achieve at best a marginal reduction in hip fractures at the cost of unnecessary psychological harms, serious medical adverse events Current strategy is inefficient and associated with considerable harms, say experts Professor Teppo Järvinen and… Read More ›
No army in Mid East is challenging ISIS. Iran regroups to defend S. Iraqi Shiites, Assad to save Damascus
DEBKAfile Exclusive Analysis May 25, 2015, 5:20 PM (IDT) Hassan Nasrallah Saturday, May 23, called his Lebanese Shiite Hizballah movement to the flag, because “we are faced with an existential crisis” from the rising belligerence of the Islamist State… Read More ›
Vaccines that Contain Latex ;CDC PINKBOOK Feb 2015 ;Packaging Exposure
” should not be administered unless the benefit of vaccination outweighs the risk for a potential allergic reaction” Below this line is for search engine access. Latex in Vaccine Packaging “If a person reports a severe (anaphylactic) allergy to latex,… Read More ›
Chinese troops ask U.S.military jet to leave Nansha Islands: FM
English.news.cn | 2015-05-22 22:31:07 | Editor: huaxia BEIJING, May 22 (Xinhua) — Chinese troops asked a U.S. military jet approaching the Nansha Islands to change course by radio, a foreign ministry spokesperson confirmed on Friday. “Chinese troops acted upon… Read More ›
China Jams US Spy Drones Over Disputed South China Sea Islands
23:00 22.05.2015(updated 04:47 23.05.2015) China tried to electronically jam US drone flights over the disputed South China Sea in order to prevent surveillance on man-made islands Beijing is constructing as a part of an aggressive land reclamation initiative,… Read More ›
Infections can affect your IQ by over 9 points
Public Release: 21-May-2015 New research shows that infections can impair your cognitive ability measured on an IQ scale; the study is the largest of its kind to date, and it shows a clear correlation between infection levels and impaired cognition… Read More ›
Endocrine-disrupting chemicals in baby teethers
Public Release: 21-May-2015 Two out of 10 plastic rings release chemicals with hormone-like effect Goethe University Frankfurt FRANKFURT. In laboratory tests, two out of ten teethers, plastic toys used to sooth babies’ teething ache, release endocrine disrupting chemicals. One product… Read More ›
Field study shows how a GM crop can have diminishing success at fighting off insect pest
Public Release: 21-May-2015 North Carolina State University A new study from North Carolina State University and Clemson University finds the toxin in a widely used genetically modified (GM) crop is having little impact on the crop pest corn earworm… Read More ›
Obese teens’ brains unusually susceptible to food commercials, Dartmouth study finds
Public Release: 21-May-2015 – TV food commercials activated overweight adolescents’ brain region that controls their mouths Dartmouth College IMAGE: The most surprising finding of a new Dartmouth College study was that TV food commercials activated overweight adolescents’ brain region that… Read More ›
Why Saudi Arabia is poised to behead a dissident cleric and publicly display his corpse
Updated by Zack Beauchamp on May 14, 2015, 11:30 a.m. ET @zackbeauchamp zack@vox.com Yemeni Shias protest the Saudi death sentence for Nimr Baqir al-Nimr, a Shia cleric and protest movement leader.(Mohammed Hamoud/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images) DON’T MISS STORIES. FOLLOW VOX! Saudi… Read More ›
Beyond the poppy: A new method of opium production
Public Release: 18-May-2015 Discovery by researchers from Concordia and Berkeley could lead to the synthetic manufacturing of painkillers and other drugs Concordia University Moonshiners and home-brewers have long used yeast to convert sugar into alcohol. New research shows that those… Read More ›
Noted urologist calls attention to implications of flawed prostate specific antigen data in SEER
Public Release: 18-May-2015 Editorial in The Journal of Urology® warns of impact on previous research results Elsevier Health Sciences New York, NY, May 18, 2015 — The National Cancer Institute (NCI) recently announced that it had removed all prostate specific… Read More ›
Tetra-GX development
Editors Note; ( Ralph Turchiano) I apologize about posting this here; However, this is the best way to inform some of our older members that Tetra-GX has reached it’s preliminary stage of completion. This is a rare occurrence.. It took us… Read More ›
Can transgenic rice cause ecological risks through transgene escape?
“ transgene carrying progeny will lead to contamination of the original wild rice populations, and even to the extinction of endangered wild rice populations in local ecosystems “ LU Baorong**, SONG Zhiping and CHEN Jiakuan (Ministry of Education Key Laboratory… Read More ›
Congresswoman Loretta Sanchez Caught On Camera Making A Racist Gesture!
Published on May 17, 2015 Congresswoman Loretta Sanchez, D-Calif., having just entered the race for the U.S. Senate seat being vacated by Barbara Boxer, put her foot in her mouth on Saturday with a racist gesture. While talking to a… Read More ›
Croatians and Serbians Mock Soros Owned Media
Editors Note: (Ralph Turchiano) Macedonian Press Serbians and Croatians apparently have had it with Soros owned media in both countries. Used the social networks to attack the propaganda placed by Blic, RTB, Tanjug, B92… who became infamous for reporting on… Read More ›
Egypt court bans soccer fan groups as "terrorists"
English.news.cn 2015-05-16 22:34:06 CAIRO, May 16 (Xinhua) — An Egyptian court banned on Saturday soccer fan groups in the country and designated them as “terrorist groups,” the Egyptian state TV reported. The Court of Urgent Matters accepted the appeal… Read More ›
Which is most valuable: Gold, cocaine or rhino horn?
Public Release: 14-May-2015 For example, rhinoceros horn is more valuable by weight than gold, diamonds or cocaine According to study co-authored by UCLA ecologist, the answer is devastating news for Earth’s largest animals University of California – Los Angeles Many… Read More ›
US to Deploy Strategic Bombers to Australia, citing Chinese "threat"
Thursday, 14 May 2015 The United States announced that it will deploy nuclear-capable strategic bombers in Australia as China becomes increasingly concerned about US interference at its borders. The United States will station B-1 strategic bombers in Australia, US… Read More ›
Anemia can lead to a false diagnosis of diabetes
Public Release: 13-May-2015 Anemia distorts regular method of diabetes diagnosis and questions its reliability Diabetologia The use of glycated haemoglobin (sugar-bound haemoglobin, or HbA1c) is now in almost universal use to assist doctors in the diagnosis of type 2 diabetes…. Read More ›
Astrology and celebrity: Seasons really do influence personality
Public Release: 13-May-2015 A statistical analysis of birth month and celebrity finds that individuals born under certain astrological signs are more likely to become famous University of Connecticut People’s personalities tend to vary somewhat depending on the season in which… Read More ›
Infant antibiotic use linked to adult diseases
Public Release: 13-May-2015 New study may lead to recommendations for antibiotic usage and a clinical test for measuring gut microbe development in children University of Minnesota IMAGE: This framework shows different evidence-supported ways that antibiotics may disrupt the gut microbiota… Read More ›
Debate: Is the long term use of psychiatric drugs harmful?
Public Release: 12-May-2015 -half a million people aged above 65 years die from the use of psychiatric drugs every year in the Western world The controversial topic will be discussed by leading experts at the Maudsley Debate, King’s College London… Read More ›
Campaign to reduce the harms of too much medicine comes to the UK
Public Release: 12-May-2015 BMJ Patients should be encouraged to ask if tests are really needed Doctors should discuss potential harms of treatment with patients Experts will develop lists of common practices that should be stopped A US initiative to get… Read More ›
College readiness declines when school’s focus is improving test scores, study finds
Public Release: 12-May-2015 Accountability sanctions have detrimental impact on learning, student morale University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Education reform policies that penalize struggling schools for poor standardized test scores may hinder — not improve — students’ college… Read More ›
Turkish Cargo Ship Attacked by Libya Monday,
11 May 2015 A Turkish dry cargo ship has been attacked near the Libyan port city of Tobruk, the Foreign Ministry in Ankara says. A ship officer was killed and several crew members injured. The incident took place Sunday night…. Read More ›
Environmental exposure to hormones used in animal agriculture greater than expected – 50 percent more biological exposure than anticipated.
Indiana University BLOOMINGTON, Ind. — Research by an Indiana University environmental scientist and colleagues at universities in Iowa and Washington finds that potentially harmful growth-promoting hormones used in beef production are expected to persist in the environment at higher… Read More ›
Bacterial forensics — tracing a suspect from the microbes on their shoes
Public Release: 11-May-2015 The microbial ‘signatures’ found on an individual’s personal items, such as their shoes and cell phone, could be used to trace their movements, according to a small pilot study published in the open-access journal Microbiome BioMed Central… Read More ›
Robot pets to rise in an overpopulated world
blic Release: 11-May-2015 Future of pet ownership examined University of Melbourne University of Melbourne animal welfare researcher Dr Jean-Loup Rault says the prospect of robopets and virtual pets is not as far-fetched as we may think. His paper in the… Read More ›
External noise produces volcanic seismicity, akin to a drumbeat
Public Release: 11-May-2015 Relatively small external disturbances play a crucial role in chaotic phenomena like the recent Calbuco volcanic eruption in Chile, leading to drum-beat-like seismicity Springer Volcanoes are considered chaotic systems. They are difficult to model because the geophysical… Read More ›
The Ultimate Ad for Amphetamine
Editors Note: ( Ralph Turchiano ) The American Chemical Society has always produced some of the best educational videos. This one even though technically well put together, may have some unintended interpretations.
Fake Diploma Prices and Information
Editors Note ( Ralph Turchiano ) – Below is a decent reference list researched by Havocscope. The research is based on public newspaper publications and the like. From personal experience I am often contacted to submit research documents in fields… Read More ›
N. Korea Test-fires Submarine-launched Ballistic Missile
Agence France-Presse 12:45 p.m. EDT May 10, 2015 SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea said Saturday it successfully test-fired a submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) — a technology that could eventually offer the nuclear-armed state a survivable second-strike capability. North Korean… Read More ›
Three universities using $1.55M NIH grant to track vaccine attitudes via Twitter
UGA using NIH grant to track vaccine attitudes with Twitter May 1, 2015 developed to study vaccination attitudes and behaviors through social media could change the way researchers conduct public health surveillance. Researchers from the University of Georgia, George Washington… Read More ›
US Has Highest Maternal Death Rate Of Developed Countries
The U.S. ranks last amongst developed countries when it comes to mothers’ health according to the State of the World’s Mothers 2015 report by the Save The Children organization released Monday. The U.S. comes in the 33rd out of 179… Read More ›
Statins may increase diabetes risk in healthy people by 87%
Public Release: 7-May-2015 Strong statin-diabetes link seen in large study of Tricare patients Increased diabetes risk for those on cholesterol-lowering drugs Veterans Affairs Research Communications In a database study of nearly 26,000 beneficiaries of Tricare, the military health system,… Read More ›
Cherry blossoms also bring out the Yakuza
KUCHIKOMI MAY. 06, 2015 – 06:40AM JST TOKYO — Yakuza are people too, and being Japanese, they have the same affinity for seasonal revelry as do any other citizen. But when they converge on public places for drinking and carousing,… Read More ›
A neural network model predicts whether a bank can go bust ( 96% accurate )
Public Release: 5-May-2015 A FECYT – Spanish Foundation for Science and Technology Share Print E-Mail IMAGE: Financial ratios provide the model with information to make predictions. view more Credit: reynermedia The learning mechanism of neurones has inspired researchers at the… Read More ›