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Apr 18 2026HEALTH

How Machine Learning is Helping Fight Drug-Resistant TB in Egypt

For over ten years, doctors in Egypt have been tracking how patients respond to tuberculosis treatment. Tuberculosis, a lung infection spread through the air, has always been hard to treat. But a bigger problem is growing: some TB strains no longer respond to standard medicines. These drug-resistant

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Apr 18 2026BUSINESS

The Hidden Side of Masters Week

The Masters isn’t just about golf—it’s a carefully crafted experience, and some brands know exactly how to play along. Take Mercedes, for example. While fans focus on the tournament itself, the company has quietly built its own world around it. From sleek rides to private dinners, Mercedes doesn’t j

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Apr 18 2026CRIME

When family turns against you on your wedding day

A bride nearly walked down the aisle in black paint after her sister-in-law ambushed her just steps before saying "I do. " The attack wasn’t random—it came from a years-long feud that started when the bride tried to help calm tensions during her sister-in-law’s own wedding. That day, the bride had l

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Apr 18 2026CRYPTO

XRP's Recent Surge: What Traders Really Think About Its Future

XRP has jumped about 10% in just seven days, catching the attention of crypto watchers. This sudden rise has people wondering if it’s just a small bump or the start of something bigger. Some traders point to a pattern called price compression, where an asset’s price gets squeezed into a tight range

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Apr 18 2026HEALTH

Peptides on the Table: FDA Steps In on Custom Drug Mixes

The U. S. health watchdog is about to check if some lab-made peptides can be mixed freely in pharmacies. Peptides—tiny protein pieces—are popping up in treatments for everything from sleep troubles to weight loss. Yet most of these mixes skip the usual safety checks. A panel will meet in late July

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Apr 18 2026RELIGION

Young men’s growing religious focus raises questions

For the first time in 25 years, U. S. men aged 18 to 29 now say religion matters more to them than women their age do. In 2022, only 28% of young men called religion “very important, ” but by 2024 that number jumped to 42%. Young women stayed flat around 30%. A 14-point rise in just two years looks

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Apr 18 2026POLITICS

The Vaccine Debate Gets Personal in Capitol Hill

A top health official found himself in the hot seat during a House hearing last week, facing tough questions about vaccines and public health policies. Robert F. Kennedy Jr. , now leading a major health agency, defended his cautious approach to vaccination, pushing back against claims that his views

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Apr 18 2026ENTERTAINMENT

Games teach us how memories shape our lives

The latest sequel in a quirky series takes a surprising turn when its hero meets an old man who never moved on. Raz, a young psychic recruit, discovers that facing bad thoughts and old regrets doesn’t always look like a scary monster. Sometimes it looks like a 1960s rock festival glitching inside s

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Apr 18 2026HEALTH

Peptides for wellness: Good idea or risky shortcut?

Peptides are getting fresh attention—but not just in labs anymore. A push to make certain peptides easier to get has sparked debate, with wellness fans seeing quick benefits while medical experts urge caution. These tiny chains of amino acids are already used in some medical treatments, but their ro

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Apr 18 2026ENVIRONMENT

Saltwater Creeping Into Drinking Water – Could It Affect Your Heart?

Rising sea levels aren’t just flooding beaches—they’re quietly changing what comes out of your faucet. In coastal towns worldwide, fresh water supplies are getting saltier as ocean water mixes with underground reservoirs. Scientists found that people drinking this slightly saltier water tend to have

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