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Jan 13 2025ENVIRONMENT

LA Wildfires: Burning Schools and Outdoor Classrooms

As wildfires rage around Los Angeles, families and educators are mourning the loss of beloved outdoor learning spaces and the impact on students. Irina Contreras, a program manager, saw her daughter's outdoor education sanctuary go up in flames. The fires have hit various educational settings hard,

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Jan 13 2025ENVIRONMENT

Greening Up: How Land Changes Impact Dust in Northern China

Dust aerosols are a big deal. They mess with our climate, our health, and how plants grow. But what happens when we change the land around? That's what scientists found out using a special computer model called WRF-Chem. They looked at how land changes in northern China from 2000 to 2020 affected du

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Jan 13 2025HEALTH

Taxing Fats: A Better Solution for Italy's Health?

You might think that taxing sugar is the way to go, but Italy has a bigger problem: excessive fat consumption. The government has been considering a sugar tax, but our research shows that it might not do much good. Instead, we suggest a fat tax. We used a special math model to see how taxes would ch

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Jan 13 2025HEALTH

How Housing Costs Affect Australian Well-being

Imagine you're Australian, and the cost of your housing keeps rising. What happens to your health and happiness? Researchers looked into this, using a special method to compare locals' health and life satisfaction when housing prices go up. They found that high housing costs can make your body feel

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Jan 13 2025ENVIRONMENT

Do Financial Policies Really Help Cut Emissions?

Do you know how countries are trying to reduce their carbon footprint? This study took a look at 87 countries from 2000 to 2023, focusing on how climate-related financial policies, or CRFPs, are helping them switch to renewable energy and cut down on CO2 emissions. Using some fancy methods like the

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Jan 13 2025HEALTH

Malaria and Pregnancy: What Puts Moms at Risk in Ghana?

Malaria is a nasty disease that often hits the poor the hardest. When pregnant women get malaria, it can lead to serious issues like low birth weight and even baby deaths. A recent study in Ghana's Ashanti Region looked into what makes pregnant women more likely to get malaria while they're visiting

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Jan 13 2025HEALTH

Adding a Side Ligament Fix to ACL Surgery: Benefits and Risks

In recent years, doctors have started doing something extra during anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstructions. They're adding a procedure called anterolateral ligament reconstruction (ALLR) or lateral extra-articular tenodesis (LET). This involves fixing a ligament on the outer side of the kne

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Jan 13 2025SCIENCE

Boosting Plant Genome Editing with a Tweaked CRISPR System

Scientists have been tinkering with a tiny, powerful tool called Cas12j-8. This tiny tool, half the size of the commonly used Cas9, can recognize specific DNA sequences, making it great for tweaking plant genomes to improve crops. The catch? It wasn't very efficient in plants. So, researchers decide

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Jan 13 2025HEALTH

Marmosets in Brazil: A Window into Human Health

In northeastern Brazil, scientists are looking at marmosets to understand how viruses spread. These small primates live close to humans, making them a good indicator of virus activity. In 2018, researchers studied 47 marmosets from urban and suburban areas in the semiarid region. They checked for si

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Jan 13 2025HEALTH

The Protector: How a Tiny Protein Guards Tiny Lungs

Have you ever thought about how newborns can handle so much oxygen? Turns out, they have a tiny protector called Cpt1a. This protein keeps their lungs safe from too much oxygen. When hospitals give babies too much oxygen, Cpt1a's levels drop, making the lungs more vulnerable. Scientists discovered t

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