TRI

May 07 2026HEALTH

How Brazil Spends on Mental Health Outside Hospitals

Between 2001 and 2022, the Brazilian government shifted how it paid for mental health care outside of hospitals. When a key mental health law passed in 2001, about 2% of all federal health spending went to mental health services outside hospitals. By 2017, that share had dropped to 1. 7%, even thoug

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May 07 2026POLITICS

Why race still shapes US voting maps—and when it shouldn’t

The Supreme Court recently said states can’t rely too much on race when drawing voting districts. This isn’t about removing fairness—it’s about asking if old rules still fit today. Back in 1965, laws like the Voting Rights Act were needed to stop racist tricks that kept Black Americans from voting.

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May 06 2026HEALTH

Fast‑Food Choices and Student Identity

Many college women pick fast food because it is quick and cheap. Their daily schedules are packed, so grabbing a meal on the go feels natural. However, eating too often from fast‑food outlets can harm health if it replaces balanced meals. Researchers looked at 385 female students in Egypt t

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May 06 2026SCIENCE

Research Ethics Forms Should Embrace Diversity and Patient Voice

In Canada, researchers often submit applications to ethics boards before starting a study. These forms normally ask for basic details about the trial, but they rarely prompt investigators to think about who will benefit from the research or how patients will be involved in decisions. The study lo

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May 06 2026CELEBRITIES

Stefon Diggs' Former Chef: Overpaid or Just Making Claims?

A legal dispute involving NFL player Stefon Diggs and his former chef, Jamila Adams, has taken a surprising turn. Adams claimed Diggs attacked her after she raised concerns about unpaid wages, but financial records tell a different story. According to a money manager who reviewed his accounts, Adams

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May 06 2026HEALTH

Yoga’s Quiet Role in Helping Kids Fight Cancer Side Effects

Doctors have been exploring gentle ways to ease tough side effects for young cancer patients. Yoga, often seen as a calm activity for healthy people, is now getting attention in hospitals. Between 2009 and 2024, researchers dug through hundreds of studies to see if yoga could help kids battling canc

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May 06 2026SCIENCE

Sneaky Science: How Tiny Tubes Help Make Super Small Stuff

Making super tiny particles is tricky. Scientists usually start with big chunks of stuff and break them down, like sculpting from a block of ice. But this time, they flipped the script and built particles from scratch using teeny reactors instead. These reactors are like microscopic pipes that twist

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May 04 2026SPORTS

College Sports Cash Flow: The Big Ten’s $1. 37 Billion Windfall

The Big Ten has just handed out a record‑setting $1. 37 billion to its 18 schools for the year ending June 30, 2025, a jump of $490 million from last year. The amount dwarfs the SEC’s $1. 03 billion payout announced earlier this month, showing that college athletics still churns out huge profits.

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May 04 2026POLITICS

The Redistricting Rift: How a Court Ruling Fuels Political Battles

A recent Supreme Court decision has removed a key safeguard that once helped keep minority voting power in check. The ruling effectively opened the door for partisan groups to redraw congressional districts with fewer constraints, sparking a fresh wave of political maneuvers across the country. I

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May 04 2026OPINION

Rethinking Healthy Eating: Do New Food Guidelines Actually Help Anyone?

In 2025, a fresh set of dietary rules for Americans arrived with a confusing twist—a food pyramid flipped upside down. The message seems simple at first: eat more whole fruits and vegetables, choose whole grains over refined carbs, and include healthy fats from foods like nuts and fish. But digging

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