🌊 Negócios em Emersão  ·  Vamos Emergir?  ·  Cadastre-se e ganhe 50 REC de bônus
Notícias

Acompanhe as Notícias da Recifes

Fique por dentro das últimas novidades sobre tecnologia, negócios e empreendedorismo.

320 notícias encontradas para "decade"
Foto: www.kaboompics.com / Pexels
The circuit that lets your brain think and see
Nuttida Rungratsameetaweemana is challenging a story neuroscience has told for decades. According to the conventional account, our eyes collect raw information and relay it through a series of nerves and waystations that lead deep into the brain, eventually reaching the cortex. T
Heart risk markers in adults over 40 with obesity increasingly converge with normal BMI le
Over the last three decades, differences in unhealthy cholesterol levels and blood pressure between older adults with obesity and those with a normal body mass index (BMI) have narrowed or disappeared in several high-income countries, suggests a study published in The Lancet. The
CDC urges people to prevent mosquito bites as West Nile virus season hits a strong, early
Health officials are encouraging people to use bug spray and mosquito-control efforts as West Nile virus season is off to its earliest and worst start in over two decades.
Foto: Erik Karits / Pexels
Would hunters take a Lyme disease vaccine?
It's tick season, possibly the worst in a decade. O recorte ajuda a contextualizar a pauta dentro de Fitness.
Cystic fibrosis doesn't just affect the lungs. It's a gut disease too
For decades, lung disease has been the most visible and life-threatening part of cystic fibrosis. People might picture chronic (long-term) cough, breathlessness, recurrent chest infections and oxygen therapy.
Foto: Google DeepMind / Pexels
Human red blood cells form without central 'hub' seen in mouse models, upending understand
Northwestern Medicine scientists have discovered that one of the body's most fundamental biological processes—how red blood cells are made—works differently in humans than previously thought, according to a new study published in Nature Genetics. The findings overturn decades of
Study: Mexico's infant mortality rates did not improve from 2014 to 2023
Study: Mexico's infant mortality rates did not improve from 2014 to 2023
Over the decade from 2014 to 2023, Mexico's infant death rate barely budged, suggesting the country hit a wall in saving babies' lives—even as official paperwork claimed that almost all babies had a medical professional present when they died.
Foto: Markus Winkler / Pexels
7 things to know about Medicare's new GLP-1 coverage
For decades, it's been against the law for Medicare to pay for weight-loss medication. But that changed on July 1, with the launch of a new program called Bridge. It gives some people over 65, or who have Medicare for other reasons, access to some weight management medications if
Decade-long national study finds antimicrobial use in Australian hospitals improves with r
A 10-year national study has found improved antimicrobial use in Australian hospitals that regularly monitored their prescribing, using a globally unique program developed by a Melbourne hospital. The study reinforces the importance of antimicrobial stewardship to improve patient
Pandemic onset stalled reduction of benzodiazepine use among older Americans, says study
Years of progress in reducing benzodiazepine prescribing among older Americans stalled after the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a decade-long national study from Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health and Columbia University Irving Medical Center. Altho
Parental Holocaust trauma linked to higher risk of schizophrenia in offspring, new study f
Can the trauma of a parent rewrite the mental health of a child born decades later? A new study reveals that children born decades after the Holocaust to parents who were older than 5 at the time of the initial Nazi persecutions faced an elevated schizophrenia risk. This preconce
Foto: Michelle Leman / Pexels
Largest study yet reveals which cancers have their own microbiomes
For decades, cancer has been thought of as a purely human disease—rogue cells multiplying out of control, with no room for anything else in the picture. But a growing body of research suggests that isn't quite right. Some tumors, it turns out, come with company: communities of ba