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Jun 06 2026HEALTH

Healthy Eyes Start with Simple Habits and Ancient Wisdom

Staring at screens all day makes eyes feel tired and dry almost instantly. But according to traditional herbal practices, the real problem begins long before those symptoms show up. Many people assume eye strain comes from overuse, yet traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) suggests deeper imbalances in

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Jun 06 2026HEALTH

New ways to encourage exercise in low-income communities

Health tech isn’t just for wealthy neighborhoods anymore. A small study looked at how giving fitness trackers and automated reminders to low-income families might help them move more. Instead of relying on expensive gym memberships or pricey personal trainers, this approach uses gadgets and texts to

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Jun 06 2026HEALTH

Juggling tasks: why nurses need better tech help

Nurses often work in fast-moving environments where many demands collide at once. They must quickly decide which patient needs attention first, which medicine to give next, or which chart to update. For new nurses, this constant juggling can feel overwhelming because every second counts. While some

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Jun 06 2026HEALTH

Healthy habits start young: what works for kids in tough spots?

Kids pick up habits fast—and not always the good ones. When families struggle with money or resources, healthy eating and exercise often take a backseat. That’s a big problem because small kids face lifelong risks when bad habits form early. Some programs try to fix this with screens and in-person h

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Jun 06 2026SCIENCE

A smart way to detect tiny amounts of medicine in milk

Scientists have created a clever system to spot very small doses of kanamycin, an antibiotic, in milk. Instead of relying just on enzymes stuck to DNA, they attached the walker to tiny magnetic beads. This trick helps separate the useful parts from the junk faster and more cleanly. Once kanamycin s

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Jun 05 2026CRYPTO

Crypto Prices Drop: What the Charts Tell Us

Bitcoin may still be falling. A seasoned trader thinks the coin could hit $60, 000 again before it starts to rise. He said Bitcoin looks like a bear flag after a sharp drop, and the market is nervous about liquidations. The price slipped into the $60, 000 area and traders fear more selling. The nex

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Jun 05 2026SCIENCE

Earth’s Buzzing Pulse: Do Lightning‑Generated Waves Juggle Our Minds?

The planet’s natural radio chatter, known as the Schumann Resonance, rings at about 7. 83 cycles per second. This beat comes from lightning storms that flash between the ground and a high‑altitude layer of air called the ionosphere. Some researchers say that this planetary hum matches the rhythm of

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Jun 05 2026HEALTH

Movie Moments for a Better Life

The University of Montreal began a new study in 2025 to see if watching movies together can help older people feel less lonely and more confident. The team of researchers gathered stories from seniors who watched a series of films in small groups. They chose movies that could spark memories and disc

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Jun 05 2026HEALTH

Ticks on the Island: A New Allergy Threat

The summer playground of Martha’s Vineyard is now a hotspot for tiny creatures that can change how people eat. The problem isn’t ordinary ticks; it’s a species called the lone star tick that can trigger alpha‑gal syndrome, an allergy to red meat and dairy. The island’s residents now have to think tw

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Jun 05 2026CELEBRITIES

Prada’s Pop‑Up Party at the Chelsea Hotel

A new fashion club called Prada Mode set up shop in New York’s iconic Chelsea Hotel on Wednesday. The event was a mix of music, food and exclusive merchandise. Guests could pick up Prada stickers, pins and even coloring books from branded vending machines. Inside the hotel, well‑known figures mingl

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