By University of Colorado Denver
Current criteria used to match lung cancers with the drug crizotinib may miss some patients who could benefit from the drug.
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By American Medical Association (AMA)
Among patients with diabetes, use of an outpatient electronic health record (EHR) in an integrated healthcare delivery system was associated with modest reductions in emergency department visits and hospitalizations, but was not associated with a change i
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By Wellcome Trust
Young people have greater difficulty in learning from bad news to interpret their risk of future events, which might explain why they often do not respond to warnings.
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By Penn State
Bilingual speakers can switch languages seamlessly, likely developing a higher level of mental flexibility than monolinguals, according linguistic researchers.
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By Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR), Singapore
Scientists have discovered a new defense mechanism that the immune system utilizes to combat infections. The discovery of how a novel protein unexpectedly activates an immune response shows how this mechanism can also be used to get rid of tumor cells.
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By PeerJ
By combining the experience of self-reported positive and negative emotions among 1,400 US-residents, researchers created four affective profiles which they then used to discern differences in happiness, depression, life satisfaction and happiness-increas
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By University of California - Santa Barbara
If you've ever wondered how you learn to like a food you dislike, a new study may offer an answer. The work addresses a central question in neurobiology -- how experience can alter animal behavior.
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By BMJ-British Medical Journal
UK commercial baby foods don't meet infants' dietary weaning needs, because they are predominantly sweet foods that provide little extra nutritional goodness over breast milk, indicates new research.
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By Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., Publishers
Use of stimulant medications to treat Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) in children and adolescents has increased significantly over the past several years. This trend toward increased use of prescription stimulants extends beyond ADHD to ot
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By European Lung Foundation
Collecting samples of exhaled breath from people at a high risk of lung cancer could be a cheap and non-invasive method of diagnosing the disease, according to new research.
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By Rutgers Biomedical and Health Sciences
Researchers have described exciting progress in harnessing the human immune system's reaction to the presence of parasitic worms, as a way to lessen susceptibility to type 1 diabetes and other autoimmune and inflammatory diseases, as well as for use in pr
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By University of Michigan Health System
Americans who may benefit from Medicaid expansion look very different than current Medicaid population – and not who you might expect.
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By American Friends of Tel Aviv University
Because animals can't talk, researchers need to study their behavior patterns to make sense of their activities. Now researchers are using a common zoological method to study people with serious mental disorders such as schizophrenia and OCD.
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By Stanford University Medical Center
A defective trash-disposal system in the brain's resident immune cells may be a major contributor to neurodegenerative disease, scientists have found.
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By University of Pittsburgh
A wearable, picture-taking health monitor has received a recent facelift. Now, in addition to documenting what a person eats, the eButton prototype can accurately match those images against a geometric-shape library, providing a much easier method for cou
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By American Society for Microbiology
Scientists have developed an influenza vaccine delivered via microneedle patch that provided 100 percent protection against a lethal influenza virus in mice more than one year after vaccination.
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By St. Michael's Hospital
Problem gamblers are a hidden population among people with mental health or substance abuse issues. These people often don't get the treatment they need.
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By American Chemical Society
Scientists are reporting development of a new form of aspirin -- taken daily by about 60 million people in the United States alone to reduce the risk of heart attack and stroke -- that could extend aspirin's benefits to people who may not respond to the d
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By St. Michael's Hospital
Problem gamblers are a hidden population among people with mental health or substance abuse issues. These people often don't get the treatment they need.
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By EMBO - excellence in life sciences
A preclinical study has found that a new oral drug shows early promise for the treatment of muscular dystrophy. The results show that VBP15 decreases inflammation in mice with symptoms similar to those found in patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy.
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