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Reducing risk of eating disorders by controlling peer and family pressures

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  • 2025-09-25 22:20 event
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Reducing risk of eating disorders by controlling peer and family pressures
Weight-related peer teasing is a strong predictor of disordered eating behaviors in adolescents, particularly those at higher genetic risk, new research shows.

15. Childbirth linked to increased depression and psychosis but lower suicide risk in mothers

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Depression and psychosis are more common in women after childbirth than before, but the risk of suicide attempts decreases. This is shown by two new studies from Karolinska Institutet. The results suggest that national guidelines for screening can help women get help earlier.

16. The robotic breakthrough that could help stroke survivors reclaim their stride

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Crossing a room shouldn't feel like a marathon. But for many stroke survivors, even the smallest number of steps carries enormous weight. Each movement becomes a reminder of lost coordination, muscle weakness, and physical vulnerability.

17. Robotic exoskeleton uses AI to ease walking for stroke survivors

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Crossing a room shouldn't feel like a marathon. But for many stroke survivors, even the smallest number of steps carries enormous weight. Each movement becomes a reminder of lost coordination, muscle weakness, and physical vulnerability.

18. Babies can get hepatitis B at birth. Here's why Trump is wrong about delaying the vaccine

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United States President Donald Trump this week claimed children should not be vaccinated against hepatitis B until they are 12 years old, rather than at birth. He also said the viral liver infection was a sexually transmitted disease.

19. Paracetamol use during pregnancy not linked to autism, our study of 2.5 million children shows

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United States President Donald Trump recently claimed that using the common painkiller acetaminophen (also known as paracetamol and by the brand name Tylenol in the US) during pregnancy is fueling the rise in autism diagnoses. He then went on to suggest pregnant women should "tough it out" rather than use the common painkiller if they experience fever or pain.

20. Study links early life epigenetic memory to adult brain inflammation

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Why do some people remain healthy through childhood yet become more vulnerable to brain disorders such as dementia later in life? A KAIST-led team has uncovered a key part of the answer: a developmental "switch" in astrocytes—the brain's most abundant support cells that shapes how strongly the brain's immune system reacts in adulthood.

21. How lymphatic endothelial cells help the body remember infections

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A study published in Nature Communications describes how lymphatic endothelial cells assist in generating robust immune memory, offering new insights into how the immune system functions.

22. Exclusive colostrum intake linked with reduced peanut allergy risk

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New research has found that newborns exclusively fed colostrum, the breastmilk produced in the first 72 hours following birth, were five times less likely to develop a peanut allergy by 12–18 months, and 11 times less likely to develop multiple food allergies, such as egg or cow's milk, compared with infants who also received formula during that period.

23. Parents eager to protect newborns against RSV, despite hesitancy toward COVID-19 and flu immunizations

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When a new immunization to protect newborns from respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) became available in late 2023, pediatricians at Temple University Hospital noted an unusually strong early interest from parents.

24. Reducing risk of eating disorders by controlling peer and family pressures

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Weight-related peer teasing is a strong predictor of disordered eating behaviors in adolescents, particularly those at higher genetic risk, new research shows.

25. Meningococcal B vaccine program holds strong five years on

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Meningococcal B cases have dropped by more than 70% in the five years since the South Australian Government introduced a publicly funded vaccination program, new data from the University of Adelaide has found.

26. Amid confusion over US vaccine recommendations, states try to 'restore trust'

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When the CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices met, confusion filled the room.

27. Diet and medication combo interrupts growth of aggressive childhood neuroblastoma tumors, study finds

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Researchers at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) found that combining a specialized diet with an approved medication interrupts the growth of high-risk neuroblastoma, a deadly pediatric cancer, by reprogramming tumor behavior. The findings were published in the journal Nature.

28. Brain activity grows increasingly variable during development before stabilizing in adolescence, study shows

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Fluctuations in brain activity, also known as neural variability, enable us to be flexible in adjusting our behavior to the current situation. A new study shows that neural variability increases throughout development before stabilizing in adolescence. And deviating from this trajectory is associated with worse executive functioning. The study was published Sept. 17 in Neuron.

29. While it may go unnoticed, loss of smell may linger for years after COVID-19

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People who suspect that their sense of smell has been dulled after a bout of COVID-19 are likely correct, a new study using an objective, 40-odor test shows. Even those who do not notice any olfactory issues may be impaired.

30. New protein interaction map sheds light on how brain cell communication breaks down in Alzheimer's disease

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A new study led by the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai offers one of the most comprehensive views yet of how brain cells interact in Alzheimer's disease, mapping protein networks that reveal communication failures and point to new therapeutic opportunities.

31. Childhood concussions may trigger long-term brain changes

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A new study in mice reports that concussions sustained early in life can cause subtle brain changes that re-emerge later in life. The findings, published in Experimental Neurology, may have significant implications for understanding the long-term impact of head injuries in children.

32. Active music therapy interventions may be more beneficial for pain than listening alone

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A new study from University Hospitals Connor Whole Health found that music therapy interventions involving singing, active instrument play, and relaxation/imagery may be more effective for reducing pain intensity than receptive interventions only involving live or recorded music listening among hospitalized patients with moderate-to-severe pain. The findings from this study were recently published in The Journal of Pain.

33. Bringing eye images into focus with AI

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Researchers at the University of Waterloo have developed a better way to enhance the clarity and detail of eye images used to diagnose disease by teaching artificial intelligence (AI) software the science behind the imaging process.

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