DELIVERY

Jun 20 2026HEALTH

New hope for heart repair: a simpler way to deliver stem cells

Heart disease stays the top killer worldwide, and even after surviving a heart attack many patients face a slow slide into heart failure. Stem cells could fix damaged heart muscle, but most trials show only small improvements and no clear regrowth of healthy tissue. The biggest problem isn’t the cel

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Jun 13 2026SCIENCE

Tiny Boosts for Tough Medicines

Some medicines are super useful. They might be natural compounds, like an isoflavone called puerarin. But here's a big problem: the body struggles to absorb them when you take them by mouth. These molecules often don't dissolve well or they can't pass through your gut lining easily. Scientists need

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Jun 11 2026HEALTH

When to Call a Doctor: Why Some Moms Delay Going to the Hospital

Many women in Tanzania wait too long before heading to a hospital when they start labor. This delay is the main reason why so many mothers die in developing countries. Even though the government has made hospital births free, it is still hard for many women to reach care quickly. Researcher

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May 27 2026LIFESTYLE

Food kits: a smart shortcut or an unnecessary expense?

The question of whether ready-to-cook food boxes are worth the money pops up often. For many, the biggest draw is the time saved. No more staring into the fridge at 6 p. m. wondering what to whip up. No more last-minute grocery runs after a long day. The boxes arrive with just the right amounts of i

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May 25 2026OPINION

Why Manhattan buses crawl to a halt

In Manhattan, buses crawl at snail speed despite wide roads and dedicated bus lanes. The reason doesn’t lie with regular drivers but with delivery trucks clogging the way. Each day, UPS trucks get caught in bus lanes over 25, 000 times—more than any other vehicle. Amazon delivery vans aren’t far beh

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May 21 2026CRIME

Delivery Bags Turned Doorways: How Gangs Hijacked LA Homes

South American gang members have been caught after a series of home break‑ins in Los Angeles that used delivery packages as disguises. Seven suspects, four of them from Colombia, were arrested for targeting houses by posing as workers from services like Amazon, DoorDash and UberEats. Police no

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May 19 2026POLITICS

How Gauteng's government services really measure up

Gauteng stands out as South Africa’s busiest and wealthiest province, but behind its economic growth lies a bigger question: how well do its public services actually meet the needs of everyday people? While some residents get reliable water and electricity, others face frustrating delays, potholed r

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May 13 2026TECHNOLOGY

Smart Drug Delivery: A New Focus on Light-Based Cancer Treatment

Light-activated cancer treatments sound high-tech—and they are. Doctors use a special light-sensitive drug called a photosensitizer (PS) to destroy unhealthy cells. The trick isn’t just dumping in more light-sensitive molecules. Studies show where those molecules go inside the cell matters more than

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May 05 2026SCIENCE

New Scientist Joins Nano‑Medicine Company to Tackle Tough Joint Diseases

Eascra Biotech, a startup that builds tiny delivery machines for medicines, has hired Dr. Anne Yau as a Life Science Research Scientist. She will work in the company’s preclinical laboratory at the Massachusetts Biomedical Initiatives facility in Worcester, where researchers test new tools before

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May 05 2026HEALTH

Needles on wheels: Bangor steps up clean needle game

Bangor is quietly gearing up to let health workers drop off clean syringes at home for people in its HIV case management program. This follows a city council committee vote to allow the public health department to seek certification for syringe delivery services. The move comes as HIV cases rise in

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