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May 23 2026HEALTH

Could AI help decide who needs extra cancer treatment after surgery?

After surgery for throat cancer linked to HPV, doctors face a tough call: which patients actually need more treatment to stay cancer-free? Not everyone does, so figuring out who can skip extra therapy without risking their health is key. Right now, doctors rely on a mix of factors like tumor size an

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May 23 2026HEALTH

Healing Tendons and Ligaments: A Fresh Approach to Tissue Repair

Soft tissues like tendons and ligaments don’t heal like bones. When damaged, they often form weak scar tissue instead of regenerating properly. This happens because tendons and ligaments have limited blood flow and few natural repair cells. Scientists have long struggled to find a way to guide bette

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May 22 2026POLITICS

Challenges Facing U. S. Scientists Under New Policies

Scientists across the United States are feeling the strain of recent federal changes that have shaken up funding, hiring, and research freedom. A survey conducted by a university panel gathered 280 responses from fields such as biology, engineering, and public health. The results show that more than

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May 22 2026SCIENCE

Funding Cuts Leave Science Labs Empty and Researchers Stuck

Scientists across the United States are feeling the bite of delayed federal funding, especially after a series of cuts during the previous administration. One Harvard researcher, who works on the origins of life, once had a bustling lab filled with students and colleagues. Now, after his grant was a

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May 22 2026SCIENCE

Checking if Medical Data is Good Enough for Research

Medical records are being used more and more in research and AI. But before we can trust them, we need to ask: are these records actually useful? Most people think of data quality like a test score—90% is better than 70%. But in medicine, it’s not that simple. Records might look fine at first glanc

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May 22 2026HEALTH

Pain beyond the gut: How science is trying to crack the code of chronic belly pain

Every fifth adult carries a daily burden that stays hidden unless they decide to speak up. The ache isn’t in an arm or a leg; it’s deep inside the belly, turning everyday meals into possible threats and nights into endurance tests. For many, this pain is a guest that never leaves, yet doctors often

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May 22 2026POLITICS

How math tries to fix messy political maps

Gerrymandering—the practice of drawing voting districts to favor one group—has been around as long as democracy. But today’s maps are redrawn using powerful computers and advanced data, which makes cheating easier and harder to prove. Some states now rely on independent commissions to avoid politica

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May 20 2026TECHNOLOGY

AI’s Big Promise: Why Google Should Focus on Health

Google’s latest keynote felt like a mix of tech demos and big‑picture promises. After almost two hours of updates on models, the stage shifted to a different kind of AI: one that could help with climate change, deforestation and even medical research. That shift seemed abrupt, almost like a last‑min

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May 20 2026HEALTH

When Famous Faces Challenge ALS

In the past year, ALS has quietly gained attention after the passing of actor Eric Dane and the recent diagnosis of Russell Andrews. Both brought the disease into living rooms through their high-profile roles. But here’s the catch: ALS remains extremely rare, affecting fewer than 2 people per 100, 0

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May 20 2026SCIENCE

X-rays and nanotech team up against tough cancers

Doctors have long battled the side effects that come with typical cancer treatments. Strong drugs meant for tumors often harm healthy cells along the way, making recovery harder. A fresh approach uses X-rays, the same rays used in scans, to switch on a specialized treatment inside the body. Tiny del

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