EPIDEMIOLOGY

Jun 03 2026SCIENCE

Tracking Chemicals in Water: A Fresh Way to Understand Public Exposure

Scientists are finding new ways to detect hidden chemicals in wastewater by using advanced lab tools and clever data tricks. Instead of only looking for known pollutants, they created a smarter approach that spots hundreds of mystery chemicals at once. By analyzing water from nine major treatment pl

reading time less than a minute
May 27 2026HEALTH

Brain Blood Vessels: New Genes That May Warn of a Dangerous Bleed

Scientists searched the whole human genome to spot genetic clues that increase the risk of a dangerous brain aneurysm. They studied thousands of people, looking for patterns linked to the condition that can burst and cause fatal bleeding. The research revealed several new regions in DNA that are str

reading time less than a minute
May 25 2026SCIENCE

A Quiet Tumor That Spreads Slowly Around the World

AOT is a small, non‑cancerous growth that forms in the jaw. It looks like tiny tubes or circles under a microscope and usually stays inside its capsule, so it rarely invades nearby tissues. Because AOT grows very slowly, many people do not notice it until it becomes large enough to cause a visibl

reading time less than a minute
May 17 2026HEALTH

Risk of Ovarian Cancer in Women with Endometriosis

Women who have endometriosis, especially ovarian cysts called endometriomas, face about twice the chance of developing ovarian cancer compared to those without the condition. The overall risk over a lifetime is still small, roughly 2 percent. Studies show that the same gene changes—ARID1A, PIK

reading time less than a minute
May 06 2026SCIENCE

Understanding Hidden Factors in Disease Spread: A Fresh Look at Predicting Epidemics

During the early COVID-19 wave, experts tossed around different ways to model how diseases spread. One approach used SEIR—the Susceptible-Exposed-Infectious-Recovered—framework but added a twist: it considered that people might not all be equally likely to catch or spread the virus. The idea was tha

reading time less than a minute
May 02 2026HEALTH

How Cancer Research Stays Relevant and Trustworthy

Cancer studies rely on people joining big research groups called cohorts. These groups help scientists spot patterns between lifestyle choices, genes, and cancer risks. But it takes more than just collecting data. Real progress happens when researchers treat participants like partners, not just subj

reading time less than a minute
Apr 27 2026HEALTH

Hypertension in Mexico: How Numbers Changed Over 20 Years

In recent years, scientists have looked closely at high blood pressure across Mexico. They used data from national surveys that cover the whole country, not just a few cities. The goal was to see how common different types of high blood pressure are and what causes them. The surveys spanned twenty

reading time less than a minute
Apr 19 2026HEALTH

Healthy Weight and Heart Risk: What the 20‑Year Study Reveals

The ATTICA study followed more than a thousand adults from 2002 to 2022, tracking who developed heart problems over two decades. Researchers looked closely at people carrying extra weight but still showing no metabolic issues, a group called metabolically healthy obesity (MHO). They wanted to see if

reading time less than a minute
Apr 18 2026SCIENCE

Coatis Carry a Common Anaplasma Strain in Brazil’s Forest

In the Iguaçu National Park, researchers collected blood from 73 coatis across three locations. They used PCR tests to look for DNA from several tick‑borne bacteria and parasites: Anaplasma, Ehrlichia, Borrelia, and piroplasms. Almost half of the animals—about 48%—showed Anaplasma DNA, while n

reading time less than a minute
Mar 05 2026HEALTH

Worldwide Patterns of Fungal Sinus Infections

"The spread of fungal sinus infections varies across the globe, with each type showing distinct habits and results. Researchers have only a handful of side‑by-side data from different regions, leaving many questions unanswered. In some parts of the world, certain fungal strains thrive in warm, humi

reading time less than a minute