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Source: TIME: Health

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Total 207 results found since Jan 2013.

What Comes Next for the Dakota Access Pipeline
Supporters of the protests against the Dakota Access Pipeline celebrated the Obama administration’s decision Sunday not to approve a key permit allowing the pipeline’s builder to complete the project. The decision undoubtedly represents a significant victory for those gathered in North Dakota by the Standing Rock Indian Reservation, but the long struggle to block the pipeline remains far from over. The federal government did not definitively reject the path crossing the Missouri and instead chose to spend time—perhaps months or years—on further review, which will ultimately leave the final decision ...
Source: TIME.com: Top Science and Health Stories - December 5, 2016 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Justin Worland Tags: Uncategorized Environment Source Type: news

The Oldest Fossils Ever Found Were Discovered in Greenland
Scientists have found the oldest physical evidence for life on earth in the fossils of Greenland rocks that are 3.7 billion years old. The newly discovered fossils are 220 million years older than any previously unearthed fossil evidence, researchers wrote in the journal Nature. The fossils in the rocks are stromatolites, layered formations produced by microbial communities, the researchers wrote. The discovery indicates that life on other planets was possible at the time. “If we have got life at 3,700 million years on Earth, did it exist on other planets—because Mars, for example, 3,700 million years ago was w...
Source: TIME.com: Top Science and Health Stories - August 31, 2016 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Mahita Gajanan Tags: Uncategorized fossils Source Type: news

How a Paralyzed Man Walked Again
Adam Fritz was just another 21-year-old kid back in 2008—about to enter his senior year of college, cruising home from work on his motorcycle near Diamond Bar, California—when his life changed forever: A table from a truck in front of him slipped off and struck him, flinging him off his motorcycle onto the freeway. “It’s what I called my ‘oh shit’ moment,” he told TIME. “I tried to sit up and get up on my feet. I remember the firefighters telling me not to move. Everything just hurt.” Two days later, Fritz was told he had a spinal cord injury—and that he’d n...
Source: TIME.com: Top Science and Health Stories - September 24, 2015 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: tanyabasutime Tags: Uncategorized brain-computer interface neuroscience Paralysis public health Research spinal cord injuries Virtual Reality walking Source Type: news

How Air Pollution Contributes to Millions of Early Deaths
Outdoor air pollution leads to more than 3 million premature deaths each year, and more than two thirds of them occur in China and India, according to new research. The authors estimate that without government intervention, the total number of deaths could double by 2050. The study, published in the journal Nature, identifies particulate matter as the prime pollutant leading to premature mortality. Particulate matter, a substance formed as a combination of different materials released into the air, is thought to be harmful to human health once it exceeds 2.5 micrometers in diameter. Researchers also identified ozone as a c...
Source: TIME.com: Top Science and Health Stories - September 16, 2015 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Justin Worland Tags: Uncategorized Air Pollution climate change early death Environment fertilizer particulate matter premature death public health Research Source Type: news

Working Long Hours Could Increase Your Risk of Stroke and Heart Disease
Burning the candle at both ends might impress your boss, but you could be sacrificing your health in the process. A study published in The Lancet on Wednesday finds a strong connection between people who work 55 or more hours per week and cardiovascular disease. Those who work such long hours were found to have a 33% increased risk of stroke and 13% greater chance of developing coronary heart disease compared to people who work the standard 35- to 40-hour work week. Researchers from University College London reviewed 42 studies of hundreds of thousands of men and women from Europe, the U.S., and Australia for several years...
Source: TIME.com: Top Science and Health Stories - August 19, 2015 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: tanyabasutime Tags: Uncategorized Heart Disease public health Stress Work/Life Balance Source Type: news

Leading Health Experts Call For Fossil Fuel Divestment to Avert Climate Change
More than 50 of the world’s leading doctors and health researchers called on charities to divest from fossil fuel companies in an open letter Thursday. The letter, published in the Guardian, argues that climate change poses a dire risk to public health and that fossil fuel companies are unlikely to take action to reduce carbon emissions without prodding. “Divestment rests on the premise that it is wrong to profit from an industry whose core business threatens human and planetary health,” the health experts wrote. The case for divestment brings “to mind one of the foundations of medical ethics—...
Source: TIME.com: Top Science and Health Stories - June 25, 2015 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Justin Worland Tags: Uncategorized public health Source Type: news

This Is How Extreme Heat Can Kill
Extreme heat has engulfed India in recent weeks with temperatures exceeding 120°F (49°C) in many areas. Thousands have died so far. Doctors and public health experts say the devastation comes as no surprise: when body temperature exceeds 104°F (40°C), heat stroke can cause a number of ailments and often death. Heat exhaustion requires immediate attention when it hits and should be treated as a medical emergency. If not, it will almost certainly result in death, said Claude Piantadosi a medicine professor at Duke University. But while death comes relatively quickly, sometimes in a matter of hours, the body g...
Source: TIME.com: Top Science and Health Stories - June 2, 2015 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Justin Worland Tags: Uncategorized climate change India public health Source Type: news

The Great Pot Experiment
Barcott is a journalist who has contributed to the New York Times, National Geographic and other publications. Scherer is TIME’s Washington bureau chief. Portions of this article were adapted from Barcott’s new book “Weed the People, the Future of Legal Marijuana in America,” from TIME Books, is now available wherever books are sold, including Amazon.com, Barnes & Noble and Indiebound. Yasmin Hurd raises rats on the Upper East Side of Manhattan that will blow your mind. Though they look normal, their lives are anything but, and not just because of the pricey real estate they call home on the 10t...
Source: TIME.com: Top Science and Health Stories - May 14, 2015 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Megan Gibson Tags: Uncategorized Drugs Source Type: news

Science Scandal Triggers Suicide, Soul-Searching in Japan
It was a success story that Japan sorely needed: a young, talented and beautiful researcher developed a cheap and simple way to grow versatile stem cells. MoreTokyo: What to See and What to SkipThis Is How TIME Explained the Atomic Bomb in 1945Iselle Weakens to Tropical Storm as Julio Barrels On NBC NewsIsrael Vows to 'Forcefully React' as Cease-Fire Ends NBC NewsCops Tampered With Pistorius Evidence, Lawyer Alleges NBC NewsThe discovery promised to usher in a new age of regenerative medicine, validated Japan as a leader in scientific research and demonstrated that even in a male-dominated society, women could excel when g...
Source: TIME.com: Top Science and Health Stories - August 8, 2014 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Charlie Campbell Tags: Uncategorized haruko obokata Japan Research Science Stem Cells Suicide Yoshiki Sasai Source Type: news

I Don’t Love Lucy: The Bad Science in the Sci-Fi Thriller
Now there are three Lucys I have to keep straight: The 3.2 million year old Australopithecus unearthed in Ethiopia in 1974; the eponymous star of the inexplicably celebrated 1950s sitcom I Love Lucy; and, most recently, the lead character—played by Scarlett Johansson—of the new sci-fi thriller straightforwardly titled Lucy. Going by intellectual heft alone, I’ll pick the millions-year-old bones. MoreThe NFL Needs to Take Domestic Violence SeriouslyThe Beta Marriage: How Millennials Approach ‘I Do’Sterling Lawyer: Wife's 'Hands Are Filthy, Filthy!' NBC NewsMore Carnage: Strikes Hit Refugee Camp and Nea...
Source: TIME.com: Top Science and Health Stories - July 28, 2014 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Jeffrey Kluger Tags: Uncategorized 10 percent Brain calories cinema energy fallacy Lucy movies Opinion Source Type: news

This Microwave Helmet Can Sense Strokes
Scientists in Sweden have invented a helmet that can identify whether a person has experienced a stroke, the BBC reports. The headwear can further determine what kind of a stroke has occurred, allowing doctors to quickly diagnose and treat patients. The helmet works by bouncing microwaves off a person’s brain and identifying whether there’s a bleed or a clot within it. Initial tests, involving 45 patients, proved successful. The helmet’s inventors now plan to roll the device out to ambulance teams and eventually put the technology in pillows as well. At present, doctors treating stroke victims need to det...
Source: TIME.com: Top Science and Health Stories - June 17, 2014 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Claire McCormack Tags: Uncategorized Brain microwave microwave helmet Stroke stroke diagnosis stroke prevention stroke treatment Source Type: news

New Obama Climate Regulations Could Help U.S. Pressure China
MoreWhy ‘Global Warming’ Is Scarier Than ‘Climate Change’The Bible Calls for Moral Action on Climate ChangeClimate Change Could Sink Statue of Liberty, Report WarnsAs my colleague Michael Grunwald points out, the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) proposed new rules on carbon emissions from the power sector are a big deal. (Vice President Joe Biden might use slightly different language.) The rules—which still have to go through a year of public comment and which will almost certainly face legal and Congressional challenges—would cut carbon emissions from the power sector by 30% below ...
Source: TIME.com: Top Science and Health Stories - June 2, 2014 Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Bryan Walsh Tags: Uncategorized Barack Obama carbon China climate change Environment EPA global warming greenhouse gas India Science Source Type: news