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  • New European trial tests subcutaneous EEG technology for people with epilepsy

    New European trial tests subcutaneous EEG technology for people with epilepsy

    A new clinical trial co-led by researchers at FutureNeuro and RCSI University of Medicine and Health Sciences is investigating how advanced brain monitoring could improve the diagnosis and management of epilepsy. Led in Ireland by…

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  • Tiny brain nanotubes found by Johns Hopkins may spread Alzheimer’s

    Tiny brain nanotubes found by Johns Hopkins may spread Alzheimer’s

    Researchers at Johns Hopkins Medicine report that they have identified how mammalian brains build intricate networks of tiny tubes that move toxins in and out of brain cells, much like pneumatic tubes send items through systems in factories and…

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  • Ariarne Titmus, Olympic gold medallist, retires from swimming | Olympics News

    Ariarne Titmus, Olympic gold medallist, retires from swimming | Olympics News

    Titmus, famous for beating US swim star Katie Ledecky at the Paris Games, was expected to compete in the 2028 Olympics.

    Australian four-time Olympic gold medallist…

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  • Pocognoli looking to make Van Gaal-style ‘impact’

    Pocognoli looking to make Van Gaal-style ‘impact’

    Former Belgian international named new head coach after Adi Huetter’s dismissal following a poor run of results


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  • The South Asian women wanting more menopause chats

    The South Asian women wanting more menopause chats

    BBC Two women smile into the camera behind microphones. One on the left has long dark hair past her shoulders and a green jacket over a white top. The microphone in front of her is green.  The woman on the right has a blue head scarf tied around her head and a white and black vertically striped jacket. The microphone in front of her is yellow.BBC

    Veerpal Sandhu (left) and Inderpal Flora have teamed up to create safe spaces for women to talk about menopause

    The consequences of not talking about menopause in South Asian families can be far-reaching and lead to marriages breaking down,…

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  • Common Painkillers May Accelerate Antibiotic Resistance, Study Warns – Medscape

    1. Common Painkillers May Accelerate Antibiotic Resistance, Study Warns  Medscape
    2. “Cocktails” of common pharmaceuticals in our waterways may promote antibiotic resistance  University of Exeter
    3. Growing cocktail of medicines in world’s waterways…

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  • Lindsey Oil Refinery workers accuse ministers of sitting on hands

    Lindsey Oil Refinery workers accuse ministers of sitting on hands

    Workers at an under-threat oil refinery have accused ministers of “sitting on their hands”.

    At a rally on Wednesday, members of the Unite union called for urgent action to secure the future of Lindsey Oil Refinery, which was taken over by the Official Receiver in June when Prax Group went into administration.

    About 255 employees remain at the site in North Lincolnshire after 125 were told they would be made redundant this month. A jobs fair will be held in Immingham later to support them.

    Speaking in the Commons, Energy Minister Michael Shanks said the government wanted to “support as much investment in that site as possible”.

    Dave Smith, a Prax worker and union representative, said: “We’ve been asking the government for help and support – we know the country needs the fuel security, and yet they seem to be sitting on their hands.

    “Everyone has been left scratching their heads wondering why we are in this position.”

    Sub-contractor Anne Holmes, 63, said the site supported about 1,000 people, including those in the supply chain, and its closure would “a huge knock-on effect”.

    “It’s not just the Prax employees, it’s the rest of us who work here as well,” she said.

    “I’m an older person and I’m not going to get another job – this is it for me.”

    Last week, an investment group expressed interest in joining forces with the government to buy the refinery.

    In a debate in the House of Commons on Tuesday, Conservative MP Martin Vickers, who represents Brigg and Immingham, said the government “should be taking a more proactive role in determining the future of the refinery”.

    He said “at least two investors” were “looking to take over the whole site” and asked whether the government would back this.

    In response, Shanks said the Official Receiver was “considering a number of bids to make sure they are viable” and he would be happy to have conversations with Vickers on the subject.

    Speaking at the rally, Sharon Graham, general secretary of the Unite union, said workers had been badly let down and urged the government to invest in green fuel production at the site.

    “Ed Miliband again is missing in action, and we have a Labour government, and I’m sorry to say it, with absolutely no plans for the oil and gas industry,” she added.

    The Insolvency Service said there were “ongoing discussions with a number of parties to progress bids with the objective of achieving a sale of the business”.

    A jobs fair hosted by Grimsby Jobcentre was held at Immingham Civic Centre.

    Representatives from British Steel, Myenergi, Humberside Engineering Training Association, Navigo and Associated British Ports attended the event, according to the Local Democracy Reporting Service.

    Nick Gregory, the a manager at the job centre, said: “This is a very difficult time for those supply chain employees and their families and our hearts go out to them.”

    The government has also offered a training guarantee designed to help workers find new employment.

    Additional reporting by Ivan Morris-Poxton, Local Democracy Reporting Service.

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  • Little Boots aims to ’empower’ aspiring musicians at Bath Spa Uni

    Little Boots aims to ’empower’ aspiring musicians at Bath Spa Uni

    Bath Spa University Victoria Mason wearing a black dress with puffy sleeves that go down to her elbows, and gold stars on the collar. She is sitting in an orange leather chair with her elbow resting on a producer's desk. She appears to be in a recording studio, with lots of large technical equipment on wooden shelves filling the whole wall behind her, with buttons and dials and light-up switches. Victoria has light blonde hair which goes just down to her shoulders, with slightly darker routes and a short block fringe. She is wearing dark eyeliner and red nail varnish, and is smiling at the camera.Bath Spa University

    Victoria Mason joins the faculty alongside Emmy-award winning lecturers and songwriters for famous artists

    A professional singer and DJ has joined a university faculty to “empower” the next generation of musicians with her 20…

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  • Exciting new Sanzaar 5-year-calendar announced » allblacks.com

    All Blacks fans can look forward to an exciting new international schedule following the announcement of a new-look five-year calendar for the southern hemisphere’s SANZAAR partners.

    From 2026 to 2030 the All Blacks…

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  • Farmers near Newbury blame extreme weather for poor harvest

    Farmers near Newbury blame extreme weather for poor harvest

    BBC Dan stands in front of a pile of grain, he is wearing a grey zip hoodie with a grey polo shirt with yellow trim. He is wearing a light grey baseball cap. BBC

    Dan Willis says the impact of the weather on his crop has been “horrific”

    Farmers have blamed extreme wet weather followed by prolonged dry spells for a very poor harvest.

    Dan Willis, who runs a farm near Newbury, said the weather had been “horrific”.

    While George Brown, who also farms in West Berkshire, said he thought the conditions could lead to some farmers selling up.

    Provisional government figures for the 2025 English barley harvest showed a 14% decrease compared to last year, while spring barley had fallen 23%.

    Dan Willis runs the 1,500-acre Rookery Farm near Newbury. He said it had been a terrible harvest.

    “Probably the worst I’ve recorded in my career, over 40 years.

    “The weather has played its part horrifically. We had an extremely wet autumn, an extremely wet winter, followed by an extremely dry spring and summer.

    “It really did impact the yields. Something in the order of between 50 and 70% in places.

    But he believed farmers were very ingenious.

    “They will find ways around things. They’ve got great resolve, that’s why we still produce food,” he said.

    “If we didn’t have that resolve farming would be long gone in this country.

    “You draw deep that you have friends which are in a similar position that you can talk it through with and you’ve got your family, and you’ve got to lean upon them.”

    Government figures also revealed the majority of the main cereal crops saw lower yields this year compared to last year, with winter barley a notable exception.

    Despite there being a nearly 10% increase in land dedicated to growing oats, that crop also showed a decrease in yield this year.

    George Brown George stands with a lush green field behind him. He has a brown overcoat and a navy jumper. His hair is fair, as is his beardGeorge Brown

    George Brown thinks that some farmers will decide to sell their land

    George Brown runs Priors Farm near also Newbury. He said it stayed dry for so long “I guess you can be grateful that you got any sort of crop”.

    “Coming through June I think we were all very worried that we weren’t getting to a harvest at all at that point,” he said.

    George thinks some farmers are selling up because of the financial pressures they are facing.

    “If you look, there’s a huge amount of farm auctions, farm dispersal sales going on constantly at the moment,” he said.

    “There’s a lot of land for sale. People don’t have the confidence to carry on.

    “I absolutely want to keep farming, it gets to the point where if there’s no money in it then you’ve got to take a change of tack,” he said.

    Dr Paola Tosi, an associate professor in Crop Science at the University of Reading, thinks farmers may have to get used to these conditions.

    She said: “They’ve been extreme in the sense that they’re some of the worst we’ve seen on record, but I’m not sure we should use the term ‘unusual’.

    “Last season was also not good.

    “This could be the new usual. We need to come to terms with and tackle and make sure we prepared to fight it. To control it, to mitigate it.

    “At the University of Reading there is research going back to 1990 saying that this was going to happen and that crops were going to suffer,” she said.

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