• Peptides on interstellar ice: Study finds presence of water molecules not a major obstacle for formation

    A research team led by Dr. Serge Krasnokutski from the Astrophysics Laboratory at the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy at the University of Jena had already demonstrated that simple peptides can form on cosmic dust particles. However, it was previously assumed that this would not be possible if molecular ice, which covers the dust particle, contains water—which is usually the case.

  • Record 3.7m workers in England will have major illness by 2040, study finds

    Health Foundation report also predicts people in poorest areas will be three times more likely to die by the age of 70A record 3.7 million workers in England will have a major illness by 2040, according to research.On current trends, 700,000 more working-age adults will be living with high healthcare needs or substantial risk of mortality by 2040 – up nearly 25% from 2019 levels, according to a report by the Health Foundation charity. Continue reading

  • Weight loss jabs like Wegovy ‘DON’T increase cancer risk’, major study finds

    DIABETES jab Ozempic and the weight-loss drug Wegovy have soared in popularity in recent months. But there has been concern that the class of drugs – called glucagon-like peptide-1 recep

  • Majority of children who express unhappiness with gender will grow out of these feelings, major new study shows

    It found that one in ten 11-year-olds was not content with their birth sex, but for most this uncertainty had vanished by the time they reached their mid-20s.

  • Study finds evidence of microplastics in brains and other organs

    Two new studies have described the ways in which tiny microplastics can end up in humans' organs – and even in the brains of mice. One of the studies, published in Environmental Health Perspectives on Apr. 10., involved feeding healthy mice microplastics over a period of four to eight weeks. Scientists later found that various organs in the mice were contaminated. "In mice that ingested microspheres, we detected polystyrene microspheres in distant tissues including the brain, liver, and kidney,"...

  • Sugar cravings could be caused by loneliness, study finds

    Sugar cravings 'caused by loneliness' (Second column, 16th story, link) Related stories:Why OZEMPIC could change whole personality: 'May warp brain'

  • There IS a link between women's periods and the moon after all, study finds

    Researchers in France and the US discovered there is a link between menstrual cycles and the full moon. The moon affects the body's circadian rhythms, syncing the cycles.

  • Study finds deadly bacteria with ‘thirst for human blood’

    A research team led by Washington State University have discovered a phenomenon in which some of the world’s deadliest bacteria feed on human blood.

  • India ranks number 10 in cybercrime, study finds

    India ranked number 10 in cybercrime, with frauds involving people to make advance fee payment being the most common type, according to a new research that surveyed cybercrime experts around the world. An international team of researchers has compiled the 'World Cybercrime Index' that ranks roughly 100 countries and identifies key hotspots according to various categories of cybercrime, including ransomware, credit card theft and scams. Russia topped the list, and was followed by Ukraine, China,...

  • Study finds microbes hitchhike on microplastics to reach the sea

    The oceans contain large amounts of microplastics, particles that are less than 5 mm in size. In parts of the Baltic Sea, the concentration of microplastics can be as much as 3,300 particles per cubic meter. The microplastics end up in aquatic environments through industrial or domestic sewage and littering. Because they are difficult to degrade, they can be persistent in the ecosystem and affect many aquatic organisms.

  • Study finds Minnesota state bee in tough shape

    The rusty patched bumble bee was once common from Minnesota to the northeastern U.S. and in the Appalachian Mountains

  • Pregnancy may speed up biological ageing, study finds

    Each pregnancy is linked with an additional two to three months of biological ageing, researchers sayPregnancy may speed up biological ageing in women, a study has found.Scientists at the Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health in New York looked at the reproductive histories and DNA samples from 1,735 people in a long-term, continuing health survey in the Philippines to investigate the influence pregnancy has on the ageing process. Continue reading