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  • Prevalence of Diabetes Mellitus Among People Living With HIV and Receiving Antiretroviral Therapy at Muhimbili National Hospital in Tanzania

    Prevalence of Diabetes Mellitus Among People Living With HIV and Receiving Antiretroviral Therapy at Muhimbili National Hospital in Tanzania

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  • Allianz achieves record results and expects a full-year operating profit of at least 17 billion euros – Allianz.com

    1. Allianz achieves record results and expects a full-year operating profit of at least 17 billion euros  Allianz.com
    2. Allianz increases full-year earnings guidance for 2025  The Insurer
    3. Allianz SE: Allianz reports strong 9M results and increases outlook for full year 2025  TradingView
    4. Allianz Sees 2025 Earnings at Top End of Target Range, Maybe Higher  The Wall Street Journal
    5. Allianz ups 2025 profit guidance after strong nine-month performance  Global Banking And Finance Awards®

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  • November 14, 2025 — StarDate Online

    Galaxies frequently collide with each other, and the results can be spectacular. The encounters can pull out giant ribbons of stars. They can trigger intense bouts of starbirth. And they can scramble a galaxy’s stars and gas clouds, creating…

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  • How to quickly revive tired, stressed skin this festive season – The Irish Times

    How to quickly revive tired, stressed skin this festive season – The Irish Times

    This time of year has a way of getting the better of us. Colder weather, longer days, shorter daylight, endless social commitments and the general rush of the festive season – unsurprisingly, the stress of it all often ends up on our faces.

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  • ‘Eat out to help out’ scheme added to air pollution in London, study finds | Eat out to help out

    ‘Eat out to help out’ scheme added to air pollution in London, study finds | Eat out to help out

    It is widely accepted that the UK government’s “eat out to help out” policy added to the spread of Covid-19 during the summer of 2020.

    New analysis reveals that it added to air pollution, too, at a time when the public was urged to minimise air pollution to protect vulnerable people shielding or isolating with Covid.

    “Eat out to help out” was designed to reboot the hospitality sector by subsidising restaurant and pub meals. It operated for three days a week in August 2020.

    Dr Ian Chen, from Imperial College London, was analysing data from the research monitoring site in London’s Marylebone Road when he first noticed unusual air pollution peaks: “I was trying to understand how the Covid lockdown affected pollution in central London. At first, I thought traffic was the obvious explanation.”

    Looking in more detail, Chen saw that soot from diesel exhaust was lower than the previous August, suggesting changes to traffic were not the cause.

    The chemical fingerprints of the particles provided the first explanation. They contained fatty acids from cooking, but their timings did not match the usual pattern of lunch, evenings and weekends.

    Instead, the pollution peaks happened each evening Monday to Wednesday, when the “eat out to help out” scheme operated. Bank holiday Monday, at the end of August, had the biggest peak of all.

    It did not stop there. The pattern continued through September and into October, suggesting that the policy had an influence on consumer behaviour and air pollution after it ended.

    There was another pollution source on those summer evenings. It contained chemicals that are normally seen from wood stoves in winter, but it was August and warm. Chen said: “We normally only detect the emissions from frying food, but here we were able to link these with cooking fuels, like wood and charcoal. This was the hardest part of the project and had never been observed before.”

    Commercial cooking is generally overlooked in actions to control air pollution despite it having been identified as a source of air pollution in London and Manchester about 15 years ago. About 8% of the particle pollution emitted in London is thought to come from commercial cooking, but this may be greater if the pollution from wood and charcoal fuels is included.

    Dr David Green, also from Imperial College London, said: “Our study marks an important step in understanding how commercial cooking affects particle pollution in our cities. While we don’t yet know which restaurants are the most polluting, we do know enough for regulators to begin to treat commercial kitchens as a significant, and solvable, source of urban air pollution.”

    In 2018, a study in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, found that particle pollution from restaurants can spread hundreds of metres into residential areas and can be greater than that from major roads. Air pollution from airline catering at Gatwick has also been detected in countryside about 500 metres away.

    Chen said: “As we reduce vehicle and other emissions in urban environments across Europe, commercial cooking is becoming the most important primary source of particle pollution and yet there is little regulation in place. Technologies which remove the particles and gases can effectively reduce these emissions – these are required by law in Hong Kong.”

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  • Cardiologists recommend reassessing need for additional stents later

    Cardiologists recommend reassessing need for additional stents later

    A blocked coronary artery causing an acute heart attack must be opened immediately with a stent procedure. However, if other coronary arteries also appear to be narrowed, it is safe to wait and treat those later. This approach cuts…

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  • Australian surgeon with 20 years of experience shares ‘top 2 foods that increase breast cancer risk’

    Australian surgeon with 20 years of experience shares ‘top 2 foods that increase breast cancer risk’

    According to World health Organisation, breast cancer – a disease in which abnormal breast cells grow out of control and form tumours – caused an estimated 6,70,000 deaths globally in 2022. If you want to lower your risk of breast cancer,…

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  • China’s Shenzhou-21 spaceship undocks from space station combination-Xinhua

    JIUQUAN, Nov. 14 (Xinhua) — China’s Shenzhou-21 crewed spaceship undocked from the space station combination on Friday and will commence the return mission of sending the Shenzhou-20 astronauts back to Earth, according to the China Manned…

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  • Study unites global neuroscientists to share brain data

    Study unites global neuroscientists to share brain data

    Imagine if every neuroscientist in the world could suddenly speak the same language and share their discoveries instantly. Allen Institute researchers and engineers have now unlocked that potential and the vast discoveries it could…

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  • Sam Ryder gig at Wembley Arena was dream come true, says teacher

    Sam Ryder gig at Wembley Arena was dream come true, says teacher

    BBC Sam Ryder sings into a microphone, with members of an orchestra out of focus behind him. He has long flowing blond hair and is wearing a black pinstripe jacket.BBC

    A guitar teacher who taught pop star Sam Ryder to play said it was a “dream come true” to perform at Wembley Arena with his former student.

    Ryder, originally from Maldon in Essex, invited Kelvin Pratt to join him on stage before thousands of…

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