New Trauma Center Cut Gunshot Travel Time by 10 Minutes, Deaths Fell 3.9%
The University of Chicago Medicine opened a Level 1 trauma center in May 2018, cutting average transport time for gunshot victims by roughly ten minutes and distance by 3.4 miles. An analysis of more than 45,000 Chicago shootings from 2010‑2024 showed a 3.9% drop in firearm mortality within the center’s service area, equating to about 39 lives saved per 1,000 injuries. The study compared outcomes before and after the opening and against other city regions, highlighting the center’s unique impact. Researchers argue the findings provide a blueprint for locating trauma facilities in high‑violence neighborhoods.
Global Review Finds Wide Gaps in Rules for Polygenic Embryo Testing
A new global review highlights stark differences in how nations regulate polygenic embryo testing, a rapidly expanding extension of pre‑implantation genetic testing (PGT). While the United States has permitted commercial polygenic screening since 2019, many European countries limit testing to...
Listening to Music for 24 Minutes May Ease Anxiety, Study Finds
Researchers at Toronto Metropolitan University discovered that a 24‑minute session of music combined with auditory beat stimulation (ABS) significantly reduces anxiety symptoms in adults already taking medication. In a randomized trial of 144 participants, the 24‑minute condition outperformed a 12‑minute...
Spatial Mapping Technique Allows Researchers to Understand Tumor Architecture
University of Illinois Urbana‑Champaign researchers unveiled GIS‑ROTA, a Geographic Information System‑augmented spatial transcriptomics framework that visualizes biological pathway activity inside tumors. Applied to estrogen‑receptor‑positive breast cancer, the method exposed distinct spatial patterns differentiating primary from metastatic lesions and highlighted regions...
Second-Hand Smoke Exposure Down 96% Since Scotland's Smoking Ban, Study Shows
Scotland’s 2006 smoke‑free law has cut second‑hand smoke exposure by 96%, according to a University of Stirling and Public Health Scotland study analyzing salivary cotinine data from 1998‑2024. Average cotinine levels in non‑smokers dropped 95.7%, and the share of smoke‑free...
Night Shifts Worsen Type 2 Diabetes Management, Study Finds
A new study by King’s College London tracked healthcare workers with type 2 diabetes across night, day and rest shifts, revealing that night‑shift schedules impair diet quality and increase blood‑glucose variability. Participants relied on vending‑machine snacks and faced up to 22‑hour...
How to Contain Avian Flu H5N1 if Human-to-Human Spread Begins
Researchers at York University used agent‑based models to evaluate how best to contain avian influenza H5N1 if it begins spreading between humans. The study, published in Nature Health, compared self‑isolation, reactive vaccination after a case is detected, and pre‑emptive vaccination...
Falls Are Prevalent Concerns Among People Who Use Wheelchairs, Scooters
A University of Illinois study found that more than 98% of full‑time wheelchair and scooter users worry about falling, and 68% reported a fall‑related injury in the past year. Researchers created the Fall Concerns Scale, a device‑specific tool that captures...
Triple Pre-Surgery Therapy May Boost Immunity Against Soft Tissue Sarcoma
Researchers at UCLA Health and Stanford Medicine reported that a neoadjuvant regimen combining hypofractionated radiation, the experimental immunomodulator BO‑112, and anti‑PD‑1 therapy (nivolumab) can reshape the tumor microenvironment of soft‑tissue sarcoma. Preclinical mouse work and a Phase I trial in 14...
Hospital Delirium Linked to Later Dementia Risk in Healthy Adults
A new population study in The Lancet Healthy Longevity found that older adults who experience delirium during a hospital stay face a three‑fold higher risk of developing dementia later, even if they entered the hospital with few or no chronic...
New Tool Rates Diet Misinformation by Potential for Harm, Not Just True or False
UCL researchers have unveiled Diet‑MisRAT, a rule‑based tool that evaluates diet and nutrition misinformation by its potential to cause harm rather than simply labeling content true or false. The system adapts the World Health Organization’s exposure‑risk framework, assigning green, amber,...
Treating Disease at Birth: How a Brief Spike in Testosterone Sets the Trajectory for Disease that Appears Decades Later
Researchers at Nagoya University discovered that the neonatal testosterone surge triggers mutant androgen receptor accumulation in motor neurons of male SBMA mice, initiating a cascade that leads to neurodegeneration later in life. Administering gene‑silencing drugs at birth reduced mutant protein...
Overactive Bladder Independently Linked to Risk for Recent Fall
A cross‑sectional analysis of 4,118 U.S. adults aged 20‑69, published in *Neurourology and Urodynamics*, found that overactive bladder (OAB) is independently linked to a higher recent‑fall risk. OAB prevalence was 19.6% while 28.3% of participants reported a fall in the...
Study Builds a Seven-Factor Scale of Play, Based on Children's Own Words
Researchers at Aarhus University and VIA University College created a seven‑factor Play Qualities Inventory by interviewing 104 children and surveying 504 more about good and bad play experiences. The factors—social inclusion, imagination, transgression, accessibility, wild and exciting play, having something...
Home Testing Kits Could Bridge the Cervical Screening Gap for Disabled Women, New Study Finds
A new study published in the Journal of Medical Screening finds that more than half of physically disabled women in the UK would choose at‑home HPV self‑sampling kits over traditional clinic‑based cervical smears. The research, which surveyed 1,493 women with...
Anthrax‑causing Bacteria Have Dwelled in Soil for Centuries, Cycling Through People, Animals and Earth
Anthrax‑causing Bacillus anthracis spores linger in alkaline, calcium‑rich soils for decades, forming microbial communities around plant roots. Herbivores such as cattle ingest or wound‑expose themselves to these spores, die rapidly, and return the bacteria to the earth, completing a natural...
Struggling to Identify Emotions May Increase Vulnerability to TikTok Addiction
A Chinese study of 342 university students found that higher attachment anxiety significantly increases the risk of short‑video addiction, commonly known as TikTok addiction. The relationship is partially mediated by poorer attentional control and heightened alexithymia, a difficulty in identifying...
A Machine Learning Model May Enable Liver Cancer Risk Prediction with Routine Clinical Information
Researchers developed a random‑forest machine learning model that predicts hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) risk using only routine clinical data—demographics, electronic health records, and standard blood tests. In a UK Biobank cohort the model achieved an AUROC of 0.88, and external validation...
Replacing TV Time with Reading or Desk Work May Lower Dementia Risk
A 19‑year Swedish cohort study of 20,811 adults aged 35‑64 found that mentally passive sedentary activities, such as TV watching, increase dementia risk, while mentally active sitting—reading or desk work—significantly lowers it. Substituting equal amounts of passive with active sedentary...
Study Reveals Early Developmental Gaps in Twins Compared to Siblings
A new longitudinal study of 851 families shows twins fall behind their singleton siblings in language, cognition, and social‑emotional development from ages two to four. The early gaps largely persist through age seven, except that twins surpass singletons in verbal...
Cycling Desks Can Drive Students to the Vending Machine
Researchers at Université de Montréal examined how cycling‑desk intensity influences students' post‑lecture eating and drinking habits. In a three‑condition crossover study, participants either sat, pedaled lightly, or pedaled at moderate intensity while watching a documentary and then ate from an...
As Antibiotics Fail, a New Treatment Targets the Host, Not the Bacteria
Researchers at Trinity College Dublin have demonstrated that a single dose of interferon‑gamma can “train” human macrophages to more effectively kill drug‑resistant bacteria such as MRSA and Mycobacterium tuberculosis. The IFN‑γ‑trained cells undergo epigenetic reprogramming, rely on glutamine metabolism, and...
Cancer Drug Can Treat Drug-Resistant Herpes, Too
Researchers at the University of Illinois Chicago have repurposed the FDA‑approved cancer drug doxorubicin to combat drug‑resistant herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV‑1). Using their AI‑driven platform HerpDock, they identified doxorubicin’s ability to block the PI3K‑AKT‑mTOR pathway that the virus exploits,...
Short-Lived Fish Offer New Insights Into the Aging Immune System
Researchers used the short‑lived turquoise killifish to map immune aging, publishing a Nature Aging cover article. Multi‑omics analyses revealed systemic inflammaging, kidney‑marrow fibrosis, and accumulation of DNA‑damaged stem‑like immune cells, mirroring changes seen in mammals. Functional assays showed older fish...
Study Makes Promising Advances in Accurately Diagnosing Sepsis
Doctors at Liverpool and Cardiff University, together with 20 NHS hospitals, completed a large randomized trial of a rapid procalcitonin‑guided algorithm for suspected sepsis. The study of 7,667 emergency patients showed a 17% relative drop in mortality—from 16.6% to 13.6%—equating...
Why Long-Term Lung Risks Persist After Tuberculosis Treatment
Scientists at Singapore’s A*STAR Infectious Diseases Labs discovered that tuberculous granulomas persist after standard TB therapy and provide a protected niche for secondary pathogens such as Mycobacterium abscessus. The study, published in Nature Communications, shows that these granulomas shield bacteria...
Supporting Therapists' Well-Being May Help Clients Stay in Care Longer
A Boston University study linked therapist flourishing to lower early client dropout. Each one‑point rise in a therapist’s self‑reported flourishing reduced the odds of a client leaving before three sessions by roughly 10%. Burnout showed no significant effect, while therapist...
Bariatric Surgery in Adolescents 'Reprograms' Kidney Biology to Promote Recovery
A multi‑institutional study in the Journal of Clinical Investigation shows that vertical sleeve gastrectomy in adolescents with type 2 diabetes and obesity triggers profound molecular reprogramming of kidney cells, leading to functional recovery. Over a 12‑month follow‑up, participants lost weight, improved...
Improving Heart Health May Not Be Enough to Protect Against Alzheimer's Disease
A randomized trial involving 480 seniors at risk for Alzheimer’s tested whether exercise, intensive vascular risk reduction, or their combination could improve cognition over two years. While participants achieved significant cardiovascular gains—blood pressure fell 13 mm Hg and LDL dropped 24 points—the...
Higher Intake of Fruits, Veggies, Legumes, Potatoes May Cut Crohn Disease Risk
A large prospective study of 341,519 adults followed for 13.4 years found that high combined intake of fruits, vegetables, legumes and potatoes cut the risk of Crohn's disease by 56 percent (adjusted hazard ratio 0.44). The same dietary pattern showed...
Guidance Issued for Conservative Management of Patients with Kidney Failure
The Journal of the American Society of Nephrology released new evidence‑based guidance on conservative management for kidney failure, authored by Susan P.Y. Wong and colleagues. The document outlines three core components—customized CKD care, symptom management, and coordinated care transitions—across varying...
Why Scientists Are Exploring Brain Cooling as a Defense Against Altitude Sickness
Scientists are investigating selective brain cooling as a proactive defense against altitude sickness, especially high‑altitude cerebral edema. Current treatments—acetazolamide, dexamethasone, supplemental oxygen—have limited efficacy and notable side effects. Cooling helmets and cervical collars can lower brain temperature by up to...
Integrated Psychological Treatment Improves Outcomes in Dual Disorders
A new international consensus study published in the Journal of Clinical Medicine finds integrated psychological treatment for dual disorders outperforms separate treatment. Researchers from the University of Barcelona, CEU Cardenal Herrera, Bellvitge University Hospital and European University of Madrid reviewed...
Genetic Study Finds Links Between Height and Risk of Cardiovascular and Reproductive Conditions in East Asian People
A large‑scale GWAS of over 120,000 Han Taiwanese participants identified 293 genetic variants linked to height and five linked to familial short stature. The study found that greater genetically‑predicted height raises the risk of atrial fibrillation and endometriosis in East...
Health Insurance Jargon Can Be Frustrating and Confusing. Here's How to Navigate It
After the Affordable Care Act subsidies expired at the end of 2025, U.S. consumers face higher premiums and a maze of health‑insurance jargon. The article breaks down core terms—premium, deductible, coinsurance, copayment, and out‑of‑pocket maximum—explaining how each affects annual costs....
Could Ozempic Help People Whose Cancer Has Spread to the Brain?
A large retrospective analysis of over 19,000 patients with cancer, type 2 diabetes and brain metastases found that those prescribed GLP‑1 receptor agonists such as Ozempic or Wegovy experienced a 37% reduction in three‑year mortality compared with matched controls. The survival...
Psychedelic Drug MDMA Could Help Treat PTSD—But There's a Reason It's Not Widely Available
Australia became the first nation to reclassify MDMA from a prohibited to a controlled substance, permitting its use in PTSD treatment under strict conditions. The 2026 guidelines limit MDMA‑assisted psychotherapy to adults who have not responded to first‑line therapies, require...
High Ambient Temperatures Linked to CKD Prevalence, ESKD Incidence
A new study links higher ambient temperatures to greater chronic kidney disease (CKD) prevalence and end‑stage kidney disease (ESKD) incidence across U.S. counties. Researchers found that each 1 °C increase in annual average temperature raises diagnosed CKD prevalence by 0.23 percentage...
Babies Learn a Lot in Their First Year. But Their Behavior Doesn't Always Tell the Full Story
Researchers observed that infants as young as four months can learn abstract speech sound patterns, linking them to visual cues. When tested again at seven and ten months, the infants’ overt responses changed: a clear familiarity preference at four months...
Coping with Chronic Disease when Food Is Scarce Takes Its Toll on Mental Health, Researchers Find
Researchers led by epidemiology professor Angela Liese published a longitudinal study in BMJ Open Diabetes & Research Care showing that youth and young adults with diabetes who experience food insecurity exhibit markedly higher rates of mental health symptoms and disordered...
Study Finds FGFR1 Boosts Cholesterol Uptake in Prostate Cancer Cells
Researchers at Texas A&M Health discovered that the fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 (FGFR1) drives cholesterol accumulation in prostate cancer cells by activating the sterol regulatory element‑binding protein 2 (SREBP2). This signaling cascade up‑regulates LDL‑receptor (LDLR) and cholesterol‑synthesis enzymes, boosting intracellular cholesterol...
Queensland GPs Face Barriers in Supporting Voluntary Assisted Dying, Study Finds
New research led by Queensland University of Technology examined 12 Queensland general practitioners during the first year of the state’s voluntary assisted dying (VAD) legislation. The study found GP involvement varied widely, from none to more than 50 cases, and...
What Is Flumist, the New Flu Vaccine for Kids That's Sprayed in Their Noses?
Australia will introduce FluMist, a needle‑free nasal flu vaccine for children aged 2‑17, this winter. The live‑attenuated spray targets the upper respiratory tract and offers protection comparable to injectable shots, reducing flu cases by 40‑60%. It will be free for...
I'm a Kidney Surgeon: Here's Why I Hope I Never See You
Australia faces a silent chronic kidney disease (CKD) epidemic, with one in seven adults showing early markers yet remaining undiagnosed. Rising rates of diabetes, hypertension and obesity are driving an 86 % projected surge in dialysis demand by 2032, straining already...
Digital Decision Support Tool Proven to Reduce Risks in Bowel Surgery
A new meta‑analysis of nine randomized trials involving 4,754 patients demonstrates that intra‑operative indocyanine green fluorescence angiography (ICGFA) cuts anastomotic leak risk by roughly 40% in colorectal surgery, especially for rectal and left‑sided resections. The study, published in The Lancet...
AI-Assisted Tool Linked to Improved Stroke Care and Outcomes
A Chinese trial of an AI‑driven clinical decision support system (CDSS) involving 21,603 acute ischemic stroke patients across 77 hospitals showed significant improvements in care quality and long‑term vascular outcomes. Patients whose physicians used the CDSS experienced a 26% reduction...
Innovative Research Captures Emotional and Social Realities of Denture Wearers
Researchers at the University of Sheffield introduced the Partial Denture Experience Questionnaire (P‑DEQ), a patient‑focused tool that records both clinical performance and the emotional and social impacts of removable partial dentures. Published in Gerodontology and developed with partners from Queen’s...
Direct Nervous System Link Promises More Natural Leg Prostheses
Researchers at Chalmers University decoded leg movement intentions directly from peripheral nerves of above‑knee amputees using ultrathin neural implants and a spiking neural network AI. The system accurately identified knee, ankle and toe motions and provided bidirectional sensory feedback through...
A Neuroadaptive VR System for the Treatment of Arachnophobia
Researchers at Graz University of Technology unveiled VRSpi, a neuroadaptive virtual‑reality system that reads EEG and heart‑rate signals to automatically adjust spider exposure intensity. The prototype uses frontal alpha asymmetry to gauge real‑time anxiety, ensuring stimuli are neither too weak...
Blood Banks Face O-Neg Shortages; Call for Donations, Changes in Emergency Infusion Practices to Protect Supply
U.S. blood banks are reporting critically low inventories of O‑negative red cells, prompting a coordinated call for donations and revised emergency transfusion protocols. Anesthesiologists, who deliver roughly 60% of the nation’s blood transfusions, are urging hospitals to start with O‑positive...