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Apr 27 2026HEALTH

Doula Help Shown to Boost Mom‑Baby Health

A recent review of dozens of studies finds that having a doula—someone who supports expectant parents before, during, and after birth—can lower stress for mothers and increase the chances that babies are breastfed early. The research pulled data from 22 earlier investigations, most of which used

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Apr 27 2026POLITICS

Court Battle Over Roundup Could Change Thousands of Lawsuits

A man from St. Louis once sprayed a herbicide called Roundup on sidewalks to tidy up his neighborhood. Years later he was diagnosed with blood cancer and a Missouri jury said the weed‑killer caused his illness. They awarded him $1. 25 million, a decision that now faces the U. S. Supreme Court. The

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Apr 27 2026SCIENCE

Heart, Kidney and Sugar: A Hidden Link to Cancer

Recent research looks at how heart, kidney and metabolic problems can quietly raise the chance of getting cancer. The study followed a huge group of people across the country for many years to see if worse health in these areas meant more cancer. The new idea, called CKM syndrome, shows that the hea

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Apr 27 2026POLITICS

Australia’s Energy Trip to East Asia

The Australian foreign minister plans a short tour of three key Asian partners to tackle the fuel crisis sparked by Middle East fighting. In Tokyo, she will sit down with Japan’s foreign minister to hash out ways to keep supplies steady and discuss the wider regional fallout. A week later, she

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Apr 27 2026POLITICS

Bayer Faces Supreme Court on Big Roundup Lawsuit Fight

The U. S. Supreme Court will hear Bayer AG’s attempt to stop thousands of lawsuits that say the company did not warn people about Roundup’s cancer risk. Bayer wants federal pesticide rules to block state‑law claims like the one that earned a Missouri jury $1. 25 million for John Durnell, who says gl

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Apr 27 2026HEALTH

Eating Late Can Make Stress‑Related Stomach Issues Worse

People who keep snacking after nine o’clock are more likely to have tummy troubles, a new study claims. The research will be shared at the Digestive Disease Week conference in Chicago. The lead scientist, Dr. Harika Dadigiri, explained that the problem isn’t only about what you eat but also when

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Apr 27 2026SPORTS

Penguins Face Playoff Hurdles: Two Players Must Step Up

The Penguins are four games into the Eastern Conference quarterfinals and still lag behind. Two key wingers, Anthony Mantha and Egor Chinakhov, have not yet called the team. During the regular season they combined for 100 points and 51 goals in 124 games, but in this series they have not scored or a

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Apr 27 2026SCIENCE

Bridging the Gap: How Brazil Turns Research into Real Health Wins

Brazil’s health system faces a common problem: turning scientific studies into everyday care. A new effort called Grand Challenges Brazil tries to fix this by taking ideas that work elsewhere and fitting them into the country’s own context. The project studies what helps or hinders this “knowl

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Apr 27 2026OPINION

Surveillance Lessons from the Civil Rights Era

A group of Black leaders started a movement in 1957 that used peaceful protest to fight unfair laws. Their work soon caught the eye of federal agents, who began listening in on their meetings and homes by 1963. The FBI even put spies inside the organization to try to weaken it, a plan that was later

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Apr 27 2026TECHNOLOGY

Tesla’s Stock Holds Steady Despite Self‑Driving Doubts

Tesla’s shares remain firm even after the company admitted its full‑self driving system is not ready. A critic on X accused Tesla’s leadership of revealing the truth about the technology in a public forum, suggesting that this could wipe out most of the company’s market value. The commentator claime

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