On witnessing another outbreak of salmonella from backyard chicken this week, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued a warning saying, "Always wash your hands after handling live poultry."
Healthcare professionals in northern New York need not wait anymore for the telemedicine program designed to screen patients for diabetic retinopathy.
Dermatology apps faced controversies when they were first launched but soon received respite when machine learning (ML) technologies were used for digital skin examinations.
Emergency situations can occur anywhere, airports and other public areas and obviously in hospitals. These places should be sufficiently equipped with emergency facilities, such as emergency stretchers.
New evidence has been unearthed by researchers at Columbia University Irving Medical Center (CUIMC) of how specific transport proteins function at the molecular level, creating a pathway for new, improved drugs to treat psychiatric disorders.
A study published online in The Lancet Oncology showed a score integrating clinical and biological markers which could help foresee the chance of mortality in patients with malignant pleural effusion and their probability of benefiting from pleurodesis.
Research shows that chief aspects of the aging of human cells can be inverted by new compounds developed at the University of Exeter.
Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) by U.S. residents against HIV infection has resulted in positive outcomes. Incidence of new HIV infections among those 13 years old and above fell during 2012 - 2016, and this plunge presented a statistically noteworthy association with an increase in drug prophylaxis among U.S. residents in the same duration.
Allotrope Data Format (ADF), a promising standard developed by a conglomerate of pharmaceutical companies is being implemented to export files from laboratories by the newly launched upgraded version of a chromatography data system owned by Agilent Technologies Inc. (NYSE: A).
Findings from a study conducted by Prof. Marco Falasca from Queen Mary University of London (QMUL) in the United Kingdom and team on a mouse model of pancreatic cancer, which they injected with cannabidiol (CBD), naturally occurring cannabis along with a classic chemotherapy drug, Gemcitabine, revealed that the rodents lived almost three times more than mice from a control group, which had been treated with Gemcitabine only.
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