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Reviving indigenous languages linked to improved public health outcomes, new research shows

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  • 2025-06-13 00:30 event
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Reviving indigenous languages linked to improved public health outcomes, new research shows
In British Columbia, First Nations youth who speak their ancestral language are less likely to die by suicide. In Australia's Northern Territory, community-led language initiatives are linked to better mental health outcomes.

2.675. New proposal aims to protect patients with high-risk brain implants

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As companies such as Elon Musk's Neuralink begin human trials of high-risk brain implants, a new proposal calls for a major change in how the U.S. handles injuries caused by the devices.

2.676. Federal R&D funding boosts productivity for the whole economy. Making big cuts to such government spending unwise

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Large cuts to government-funded research and development can endanger American innovation—and the vital productivity gains it supports.

2.677. Adolescents who smoke or vape may believe tobacco's perceived coping benefits outweigh accepted health risks

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Tobacco use in a variety of forms is common in adolescent life today, with over 2.25 million youth using.

2.678. Endometriosis: Difficult childhood linked with greater likelihood of being diagnosed

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About 1 in 10 women worldwide have endometriosis. This common condition causes tissue similar to the lining of the uterus to grow in other parts of the body. This can result in painful periods, chronic pain and even infertility.

2.679. Studies identify predictors and outcomes in systemic sclerosis

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The Very Early Diagnosis of Systemic Sclerosis (VEDOSS) criteria identify red flags as puffy fingers, abnormal nailfold capillaroscopy, and specific autoantibodies in patients with Raynaud's phenomenon as a very early disease stage where patients do fulfill the classification criteria.

2.680. Cancer cells exploit alternative pathway to gather antioxidant lipids and evade cell death

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Scientists have discovered tumors can tap a nontraditional pathway to acquire lipoproteins—molecules that transport fat in blood—which enriches cancer cells with an antioxidant shield to survive stress, according to new research from Children's Medical Center Research Institute at UT Southwestern (CRI) published in Nature.

2.681. Researchers uncover a potential new therapeutic target for a hard-to-treat form of leukemia

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A new target for potential treatments for blast phase myeloproliferative neoplasm (BP-MPN), one of the most aggressive forms of leukemia, has been identified by a research team at the University of Oxford.

2.682. Wearable fitness trackers can make you seven times more likely to stick to your workouts: New research

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The hardest part of any workout regime is sticking with it. Around half of those who start an exercise program stop within six months.

2.683. Novel assay promises more efficient screening for carriers of fragile X syndrome

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Researchers have developed an innovative new nanopore sequencing assay to identify carriers of fragile X syndrome (FXS), the leading cause of monogenic autism spectrum disorder and inherited intellectual disabilities. The study, published in The Journal of Molecular Diagnostics, addresses the urgent need for a screening tool to identify carriers of FXS in a more comprehensive, faster, efficient, and cost-effective way compared to current methods, for better informed genetic counseling.

2.684. Reviving indigenous languages linked to improved public health outcomes, new research shows

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In British Columbia, First Nations youth who speak their ancestral language are less likely to die by suicide. In Australia's Northern Territory, community-led language initiatives are linked to better mental health outcomes.

2.685. Study shows sharp contrasts in complementary and alternative medicine use across countries

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Contrary to expectations, the COVID pandemic did not cause a spike in the overall use of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) in Europe: the growth was modest, from 27% in 2014 to 28% in 2023. These University of Helsinki findings are reported in an article published in the Journal of Public Health.

2.686. Sleep apnea found to be more prevalent in young female athletes than expected

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According to a new study, presented at the American College of Cardiology (ACC) Care of the Athletic Heart 2025 conference, sleep apnea may be more prevalent in younger female athletes than previously believed, especially among female athletes with higher levels of training. While obstructive sleep apnea has been observed in younger male athletes, the prevalence in female athletes and the association with cardiovascular risk is largely unknown.

2.687. Study finds no behavioral impact on children with preterm-born siblings—children without siblings show more difficulties

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A study published in PLOS Mental Health has explored whether having a sibling born preterm (before 37 weeks of gestation) affects the behavior of children born at term.

2.688. Early detection of aging signals in liver tissue can predict diseases

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Aging and chronic diseases involve the gradual accumulation of subtle tissue changes over a long period. Therefore, there are still limitations in quantitatively understanding these changes within organs and linking them to early signs of disease onset.

2.689. Novel photoacoustic contrast agent offers safer, cost-effective imaging for tumors

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Tumor cells have higher metabolic activity compared to healthy tissue and consequently consume a lot of glucose. Positron Emission Tomography (PET)—the current gold standard diagnostic technique—exploits this property.

2.690. Lymph node on a chip: New immune system model may enhance precision medicine research

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Scientists with the Fralin Biomedical Research Institute at VTC have created an engineered model of the supportive tissue found within a lymph node to study human health.

2.691. Broad-spectrum coronavirus drug developed through AI-enabled dynamic modeling

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About 30% of all respiratory tract infections are caused by coronaviruses, leading to widespread illnesses and, in some cases, to epidemic and even pandemic outbreaks, as we experienced with the COVID-19 pandemic. Despite the development of groundbreaking technology that enables the design of prophylactic vaccines, access to those vaccines is not equal across the globe, especially in low-resource countries, and also other hesitations prevent their adoption.

2.692. August 2023 marked the turning point in US drug overdose crisis, study finds

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While the U.S. has recently seen a welcome downturn in drug overdose deaths, a new study from Northwestern Medicine is the first to pinpoint when the tide began to turn—identifying August 2023 as the national inflection point in the crisis.

2.693. How physical activity protects the brain—cell by cell—in Alzheimer's disease

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Using advanced single-nuclei RNA sequencing (snRNA-seq) and a widely used preclinical model for Alzheimer's disease, researchers from Mass General Brigham and collaborators at SUNY Upstate Medical University have identified specific brain cell types that responded most to exercise.

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