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Jan 22 2025POLITICS

Gaza: Rebuilding After Devastation

Imagine waking up to a world that's no longer yours. That's what happened to Hussein Barakat and thousands of other Palestinians in Gaza. After more than a year of fighting between Israel and Hamas, the tiny coastal enclave looks like a war zone. Buildings are reduced to rubble, and homes are flatte

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Jan 22 2025BUSINESS

AI Boom: Trump's $500 Billion Bet on Future Tech

President Donald Trump is set to announce a massive investment in artificial intelligence (AI), worth up to $500 billion. This project, called Stargate, is a partnership between tech giants OpenAI, Oracle, and SoftBank. The goal? To build the infrastructure needed for AI development, starting in Tex

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Jan 22 2025HEALTH

What Do Users Want from Disease Surveillance?

Imagine you're a doctor or a health official, and you need vital information to make important decisions about diseases like diabetes. What kind of data do you want? What format makes it easiest for you to use? The National Diabetes Surveillance team at the Robert Koch Institute (RKI) decided to fin

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Jan 22 2025HEALTH

The Mystery of Protein Piles in Lungs: Understanding Amyloidosis

Ever heard of amyloidosis? It's a sneaky condition where proteins go rogue and bunch up, causing chaos in different body parts, including the lungs. These protein clumps can be tiny and innocent, like nodules or cysts, or they can grow large and troublesome, making it hard to breathe. When amyloidos

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Jan 22 2025HEALTH

Discovering New Ways to Fight Biliary Tract Cancer

Ever wondered why finding new medicines for biliary tract cancer is so hard? It's not just one disease, but a group of different tumors affecting the inside and outside of the liver's bile ducts, and even the gallbladder. Each type has its own genetic make-up, making it a real puzzle for scientists.

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Jan 22 2025SCIENCE

Fast and Eco-Friendly: Triazoles Made Easy with Ionic Liquids

Triazoles are vital in creating medicines and pesticides. A clever team found a new way to make these molecules using something called ionic liquids. They started with ingredients like benzonitrile derivatives and primary amines, heating them up to create triazoles quickly. What's neat is they could

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Jan 22 2025HEALTH

Why Black Women in Wisconsin Are Missing in Pelvic Floor Disorder Studies

Ever thought about why some groups are left out of health research? Let's talk about Black women in Wisconsin and urinary incontinence. You might be wondering, what's that got to do with anything? Well, it turns out, Black women are often missing from studies about pelvic floor disorders. Why is tha

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Jan 22 2025HEALTH

AI in Public Health: The Power of Community Involvement

Artificial Intelligence (AI) has the potential to transform public health. But to make the most of it, everyone should be part of the conversation. Think about it like this: public health experts have given us life-changing innovations, like vaccines and clean water. Now, they're facing a big challe

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Jan 22 2025HEALTH

Are Dissociative Psychosis and Schizophrenia Two Sides of the Same Coin?

Have you ever wondered how much our past traumas can affect our mental health? Researchers have been digging deep into the connections between upsets we face as kids and the mental health issues we encounter later in life. Two of these confusing conditions are dissociative psychosis and dissociative

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Jan 22 2025HEALTH

Combining Light Therapy and Stem Cells to Fight Brain Inflammation

Brain inflammation, a significant factor in neurodegenerative diseases, is managed by tiny immune cells called microglia. These cells can be pro-inflammatory (M1) or anti-inflammatory (M2). We know that human stem cells from umbilical cords (hUCMSCs) can release substances that reduce inflammation.

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