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Who's feeding babies peanuts early? Too often, not low-income or minority parents

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  • 2025-07-10 00:40 event
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Who's feeding babies peanuts early? Too often, not low-income or minority parents
Introducing peanut-containing foods to infants can dramatically reduce the risk of peanut allergies later in childhood.

340. 'It just makes you feel less alone': Using the power of play to break menopause taboos in the workplace

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Health psychologists from the University of Staffordshire have adopted a novel approach to support women going through the menopause.

341. Substances isolated from marine sponges show potential for treating malaria

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Brazilian researchers have discovered chemical compounds in marine sponges that have the potential to eliminate the malaria parasite, including strains that are resistant to conventional antimalarial drugs. The research results were published in the journal ACS Infectious Diseases.

342. Novel AI method sheds light on how enzyme linked to Alzheimer's selects its targets

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Researchers from DZNE, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München (LMU), and Technical University of Munich (TUM) have found that the enzyme "gamma-secretase"—implicated in Alzheimer's disease and cancer—selects its reaction partners according to a complex scheme of molecular features.

343. Antidepressant withdrawal: New review downplays symptoms but misses the mark for long-term use

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A new review of antidepressant withdrawal effects—written by academics, many of whom have close ties to drug manufacturers—risks underestimating the potential harms to long-term antidepressant users by focusing on short-term, industry-funded studies.

344. Somali women's perspectives on female genital mutilation and its abandonment

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Somali women describe a complex and shifting tradition of female genital mutilation/cutting (FGM/C) in Somalia, according to a study published in PLOS Global Public Health by Zamzam I.A. Ali from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UK and the Mayo Clinic, US, and colleagues.

345. Stepping up the potential of wearables: Predicting pediatric surgery complications

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An estimated 4 million children undergo surgical procedures in hospitals across the United States each year. Although postoperative complications, such as infections, can pose significant health risks to kids, timely detection following hospital discharge can prove challenging.

346. Loneliness predicts poor mental and physical health outcomes, survey data indicate

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Loneliness is common and is a strong and independent predictor of depression and poor health outcomes, according to a new study published in PLOS One by Dr. Oluwasegun Akinyemi, a Senior Research Fellow at the Howard University College of Medicine, Washington DC, U.S.

347. Prenatal and childhood lead exposure linked to faster memory decay in children

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A study led by researchers at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai shows that exposure to lead during pregnancy and early childhood may accelerate the rate at which children forget information—a critical marker of memory impairment that may have implications for learning and development.

348. Oxytocin improves contact between mothers with postpartum depression and their child

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Researchers at Radboud University and the Radboudumc found that mothers with postpartum depression benefit from oxytocin nasal spray. The oxytocin causes mothers to respond more positively to their newborn child. "Although extra oxytocin does not affect mothers' caregiving behavior and stress levels, it does contribute to better contact between mother and child," according to psychologist Madelon Hendricx-Riem, one of the researchers.

349. Who's feeding babies peanuts early? Too often, not low-income or minority parents

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Introducing peanut-containing foods to infants can dramatically reduce the risk of peanut allergies later in childhood.

350. Pilot study demonstrates feasibility of digital tool for dietary goal setting in primary care diabetes management

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A recent study in the Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior evaluated the feasibility of Nutri, a user-centered digital platform designed to support personalized, evidence-based diet goal setting during routine primary care visits for patients with type 2 diabetes. Findings show that primary care providers (PCPs) who used the system consistently, found it usable and satisfactory, and that patients were able to engage with the intervention effectively.

351. Women more susceptible to certain subjective effects of alcohol during binge drinking episodes

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A clinical trial led by the Germans Trias i Pujol University Hospital and Research Institute has found that women experience some of the subjective effects of acute alcohol intake, such as drunkenness and sedation, more intensely than men, when consumed over a short period of time.

352. Gwada-negative: The rarest blood group on Earth

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In a routine blood test that turned extraordinary, French scientists have identified the world's newest and rarest blood group. The sole known carrier is a woman from Guadeloupe whose blood is so unique that doctors couldn't find a single compatible donor.

353. Researchers identify project manager of the immune defense in the brain

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Infections in the brain can have serious consequences and are often fatal. The immune defense system works differently here than in the rest of the body. A team of researchers at TWINCORE—Center for Experimental and Clinical Infection Research in Hanover—has now discovered, in collaboration with partners, which signaling pathways play a central role in communication between immune cells in the brain in their defense against viruses. The results have now been published in the Journal of Neuroinflammation.

354. A good shower is a simple shower, no matter what influencers recommend

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You may be seeing elaborate shower cleansing routines on social media: daily exfoliation, double cleansing, antibacterial soap, loads of scented body scrubs and shower oils.

355. Aggressive breast cancer triggered by obesity-related blood signals, study shows

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Breast cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer among women worldwide and represents a major public health concern due to its high incidence and significant mortality rates. In the U.S. alone, approximately 297,790 new cases of invasive breast cancer were reported in women in 2023, resulting in an estimated 43,700 deaths.

356. Drug candidate IHMT-15130 shows dual action against heart muscle thickening and inflammation

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A research team led by Prof. Liu Qingsong from the Hefei Institutes of Physical Science of the Chinese Academy of Science has developed IHMT-15130, a selective and irreversible inhibitor of Bone marrow kinase in chromosome X (BMX) kinase, which showed robust efficacy in preclinical models of cardiac hypertrophy.

357. The US is having its worst year for measles in more than three decades

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The U.S. is having its worst year for measles spread in more than three decades, with a total of 1,288 cases nationally and another six months to go in 2025.

358. COVID-19 vaccine technology adapted to develop first mRNA defense against antibiotic-resistant bacteria

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Researchers from Tel Aviv University and the Israel Institute for Biological Research in Ness Ziona have used the platform developed for COVID-19 vaccines to create the world's first mRNA-based vaccine against a deadly, antibiotic-resistant bacterium.

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