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Newswise: Nursing 2025: No Relief in Sight as Burnout, Stress and Short Staffing Persist
Released: 29-Apr-2025 8:30 AM EDT
Nursing 2025: No Relief in Sight as Burnout, Stress and Short Staffing Persist
Florida Atlantic University

A survey of 2,600 nurses and nursing students reveals a profession under severe strain, with widespread stress, burnout, and staffing shortages threatening both nurse well-being and patient care. Despite increased attention since the pandemic, little progress has been made, with 65% of nurses reporting high stress, 40% unsure they’d choose the profession again, and students already anxious about workload. Still, many students remain hopeful, and the profession is urgently calling for better staffing, leadership, flexibility and recognition.

Newswise: Exceptional Points Revolutionize Surface Acoustic Wave Sensors for Precision Gas Monitoring
Released: 29-Apr-2025 6:20 AM EDT
Exceptional Points Revolutionize Surface Acoustic Wave Sensors for Precision Gas Monitoring
Chinese Academy of Sciences

In a landmark advance in microsensor technology, researchers have unveiled an ultra-sensitive gas detection method using surface acoustic wave (SAW) sensors enhanced by the physics of exceptional points (EPs). These EPs, phenomena from non-Hermitian systems where eigenvalues and eigenvectors converge, allow for amplified signal response.

Newswise: Concerning Chemicals from the Wear of Climbing Shoes Cause Trouble in Indoor Halls
Released: 29-Apr-2025 5:10 AM EDT
Concerning Chemicals from the Wear of Climbing Shoes Cause Trouble in Indoor Halls
University of Vienna

Those who climb indoors are doing something for their health. But climbing shoes contain chemicals of concern that can enter the lungs of climbers through the abrasion of the soles. In a recent study, researchers from the University of Vienna and EPFL Lausanne have shown for the first time that high concentrations of potentially harmful chemicals from climbing shoe soles can be found in the air of bouldering gyms, in some cases higher than on a busy street. The results have been published in the journal Environmental Science and Technology Air.

Released: 29-Apr-2025 2:45 AM EDT
New Research Offers Hope for Safe Agricultural Revival in Chornobyl-Affected Lands
University of Portsmouth

Thousands of hectares of Chornobyl-affected farmland, long deemed too dangerous for cultivation in northern Ukraine can safely return to production, according to new research.

Released: 29-Apr-2025 12:10 AM EDT
باحثو مايو كلينك يكتشفون رابطًا بين طفرة وراثية ومرض الكبد الدهني
Mayo Clinic

روتشستر، ولاية مينيسوتا — اكتشف باحثون في مركز مايو كلينك للطب الفردي متغيرًا جينيًا نادرًا يمكنه أن يسبب بشكل مباشر مرض الكبد الدهني المرتبط بالخلل الأيضي، والذي عُرف سابقًا باسم مرض الكبد الدهني غير الكحولي.

Newswise: Simplifying Solid Biosample Processing for Field-Ready Diagnostics!
Released: 29-Apr-2025 12:00 AM EDT
Simplifying Solid Biosample Processing for Field-Ready Diagnostics!
National Research Council of Science and Technology

The Korea Institute of Machinery and Materials (President Seog-Hyeon Ryu, hereinafter referred to as KIMM) has developed a compact, rapid pretreatment system capable of liquefying and homogenizing solid biological samples in under one minute. This innovation simplifies the analysis of specimens that are traditionally difficult to process, offering a new diagnostic platform that complements the predominantly liquid-based landscape of in vitro diagnostics (IVD).

23-Apr-2025 7:00 PM EDT
Sexism Undermines Teams by Disrupting Emotional Synchrony’s Role in Performance
Bar-Ilan University

Researchers found that exposure to sexist comments significantly alters how women interact emotionally during teamwork, increasing a key ingredient of successful collaboration: emotional synchrony. Emotional synchrony—shared, temporally aligned facial expressions among team members—has long been known to enhance trust, coordination, and performance.

Released: 28-Apr-2025 6:45 PM EDT
Brain Decoder Controls Spinal Cord Stimulation
Washington University in St. Louis

Ismael Seáñez’s lab develops brain wave decoder that may help in spinal cord injury rehabilitation

Released: 28-Apr-2025 6:40 PM EDT
A Neuro-Quantum Leap in Finding Optimal Solutions
Washington University in St. Louis

A computer scientist from Washington University in St. Louis developed a problem-solving architecture modeled on neurobiology that leverages quantum mechanical behavior to guarantee optimal solutions to complex problems.

   
Newswise: 042825-ber-burning-bush.jpg?itok=ieOJ8vSe
Released: 28-Apr-2025 6:40 PM EDT
Borrowing a Gene from the Burning Bush Plant Improves Oil Qualities in Bioenergy Crops
Department of Energy, Office of Science

Some plants produce oils with properties that are particularly good for biofuels, but not all of these plants are suitable for being grown on a large scale. To solve this dilemma, scientists modified the seeds of camelina and pennycress to produce the same type of oil made by the burning bush plant. The result is plants that produce nearly pure, high-quality oil with improved biofuel properties.


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