THEATER HE

Apr 25 2026ENVIRONMENT

A New Plant‑Based Show Gets Local Support

Healdsburg’s Little Saint, a 100% plant‑based eatery that opened on Earth Day 2022, is backing a fresh cooking series called “Climate Kitchen. ” The show will be hosted by Maggie Baird, who runs the nonprofit Support + Feed and is known for promoting vegan options worldwide. The restaurant’s owne

reading time less than a minute
Apr 24 2026HEALTH

New Mexico health officials sound alarm after rabid dog discovery

Health authorities in Curry County, New Mexico recently confirmed a troubling case of rabies in the area. A young dog, just under a year old, tested positive for the disease after coming into contact with wildlife. What makes this situation particularly serious is that the dog hadn't received its ma

reading time less than a minute
Apr 23 2026POLITICS

Vaccine Study Canceled: What It Means for Hospital Numbers

Health officials decided not to share a recent report that looked at how COVID‑19 shots might keep people from needing hospital care. The paper was meant for the CDC’s main bulletin, but a disagreement over how the data were handled stopped it from being published. Researchers usually check hospi

reading time less than a minute
Apr 23 2026POLITICS

Why COVID vaccine effectiveness research got blocked

Health experts recently stopped a study from being published that looked at whether COVID-19 vaccines were preventing serious illness in adults. The research was meant to show how well the shots worked by comparing hospital visits and ER trips between vaccinated and unvaccinated people. Scientists u

reading time less than a minute
Apr 22 2026HEALTH

Personalizing Health Apps with Personality Insight

Health apps are growing in popularity, helping people track fitness and receive reminders. These apps can become more useful if they speak to each user’s unique style. Researchers found that people with different personality traits prefer different app features. Using the Big Five personali

reading time less than a minute
Apr 22 2026SCIENCE

How a plant compound fights kidney damage in chickens

Heavy metals like cadmium sneak into the environment from mining, batteries, and factory waste. Even small amounts can build up in animal kidneys over time. Chickens, often raised near polluted sites, face particular risk since their kidneys filter blood continuously. Researchers recently tested if

reading time less than a minute
Apr 21 2026HEALTH

Bringing Backbone Care to Community Clinics

Health centers that serve low‑income neighborhoods are doing a great job with basic checkups, but they miss one big piece: help for back and joint problems. These issues are a top reason people end up on pain medicine, especially opioids. If clinics could add spinal specialists to their teams, pa

reading time less than a minute
Apr 19 2026HEALTH

Veterans’ Hidden Struggles: Spotting Unseen Self‑Harm in Health Records

Health records often miss signs of self‑harm, especially among veterans. Because doctors only flag clear cases, the data lacks true “negative” examples. This gap makes it hard to estimate how many people are at risk. Researchers used a special method called Positive and Unlabeled learning.

reading time less than a minute
Apr 19 2026FINANCE

The Money Game: Why Hedge Funds Are Fighting Over Top Traders

Hedge funds used to battle over trading strategies. Now, they fight over people. Once known for big bets and flashy returns, the $5 trillion industry has shifted its focus. Talent has become the new currency. Top traders now sign contracts worth hundreds of millions, similar to sports stars. Firms e

reading time less than a minute
Apr 19 2026WEATHER

Staying safe when coastal waters rise in Massachusetts

Heavy rains and high tides are putting six Massachusetts counties on alert through early Sunday. Areas near the shore could see water levels rise half a foot higher than usual, enough to flood roads and low-lying homes. Authorities warn against driving through flooded streets, where as little as a f

reading time less than a minute