ĢģĆĄ“«Ć½

Trusted by:

clients clients clients clients clients clients clients clients clients clients
Newswise: 040425-np-new-elements.jpg?itok=7unCRdQ1
Release date: 4-Apr-2025 2:35 PM EDT
New Progress Toward the Discovery of New Elements
Department of Energy, Office of Science

Researchers recently created two atoms of livermorium (element 116) using a new approach that offers a path to discovering even heavier elements. This brings scientists closer to creating a new element with 120 protons, which would push the boundaries of the periodic table to a new eighth row and move closer to the ā€œisland of stability.ā€

Newswise: Reporting ā€˜Rhode Kill:ā€™ new study calls on citizen scientists
Release date: 4-Apr-2025 1:35 PM EDT
Reporting ā€˜Rhode Kill:ā€™ new study calls on citizen scientists
University of Rhode Island

URIā€™s Natural Resources Science department recently launched an innovative solution to identify and address roadkill hotspots in the state using virtual data collection by Rhode Islanders.

Newswise: Chromatin remodeling captured in comprehensive structural study
Release date: 4-Apr-2025 12:15 PM EDT
Chromatin remodeling captured in comprehensive structural study
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

Scientists at St. Jude Childrenā€™s Research Hospital used a series of cryo-EM structures to visualize dynamics pivotal to chromatin remodeling, a process implicated in cancer and developmental disorders.

Newswise: Novel genomic screening tool enables precision reverse-engineering of genetic programming in cells
Release date: 4-Apr-2025 12:00 PM EDT
Novel genomic screening tool enables precision reverse-engineering of genetic programming in cells
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute

Collaborative research led by investigators at Dana-Farber/Boston Children's Cancer and Blood Disorders Center defines a novel approach to understanding how certain proteins called transcription factors determine which genetic programs will drive cell growth and maturation. The method, called ā€œPerturb-multiome,ā€ uses CRISPR to knock out the function of individual transcription factors across many blood cells at once.

Newswise: 1920_ai-virtual-primary-urgent-care-cedars-sinai.jpg?10000
Release date: 4-Apr-2025 11:35 AM EDT
Artificial Intelligence Has Potential to Aid Physician Decisions During Virtual Urgent Care
Cedars-Sinai

Do physicians or artificial intelligence (AI) offer better treatment recommendations for patients examined through a virtual urgent care setting? A new Cedars-Sinai study shows physicians and AI models have distinct strengths.

Newswise: Pancreatic Cells ā€˜Rememberā€™ Epigenetic Precancerous Marks Without Genetic Sequence Mutations
Released: 4-Apr-2025 11:00 AM EDT
Pancreatic Cells ā€˜Rememberā€™ Epigenetic Precancerous Marks Without Genetic Sequence Mutations
Johns Hopkins Medicine

Johns Hopkins Medicine scientists say they have found a pattern of so-called epigenetic ā€œmarksā€ in a transition state between normal and pancreatic cancer cells in mice, and that the normal cells may keep at least a temporary ā€œmemoryā€ of those cancer-linked marks.

3-Apr-2025 8:00 AM EDT
How A Small Number of Mutations Can Fuel Outbreaks of Western Equine Encephalitis Virus
Harvard Medical School

New research shows how small shifts in the molecular makeup of a virus can profoundly alter its fate. These shifts could turn a deadly pathogen into a harmless bug or supercharge a relatively benign virus, influencing its ability to infect humans and cause dangerous outbreaks.

   
2-Apr-2025 6:10 PM EDT
Many Older Adults Send Their Doctors Portal Messages, but Who Pays?
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

A new study suggests that people in their 50s and older have embraced the ability to send and receive secure medical messages with their doctors and other providers, through the digital patient portals that most health systems and medical offices now offer.

Newswise: Research Uncovers Hidden Spread of One of the Most Common Hospital-Associated Infections
2-Apr-2025 6:10 PM EDT
Research Uncovers Hidden Spread of One of the Most Common Hospital-Associated Infections
University of Utah Health

C. difficile is one of the most common and contagious hospital-acquired infections. Research has found that C. diff spreads more than three times more than previously thought and can remain undetected on surfaces for weeks until it infects a patient.

Newswise: Study Reveals Worse Patient Outcomes in Black-Serving Hospitals
Released: 4-Apr-2025 10:35 AM EDT
Study Reveals Worse Patient Outcomes in Black-Serving Hospitals
University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing

A new study ā€“ just published in Nursing Research ā€“ has uncovered concerning disparities in patient outcomes, specifically related to nursing care, within hospitals that predominantly serve Black communities.


close
0.84852