Every year, millions of newborns undergo routine screening as a preventive strategy to detect inherited disorders before symptoms emerge. Newborn screening (NBS) programs have traditionally relied on biochemical markers to identify…
Category: 6. Health
-

Bacteria at The Back of Your Eye May Be Linked With Alzheimer’s Progress : ScienceAlert
A common bacterium usually found in the respiratory system appears to be linked to cognitive decline and Alzheimer’s disease when it’s present in the retina.
Chlamydia pneumoniae – often responsible for pneumonia and sinus infections –…
Continue Reading
-

Why Nepal needs to talk about gut health
Many people in Nepal are suffering from conditions such as diabetes, heart disease, kidney problems and mental disorders. The focus for the prevention and treatment has always been on medications, changes in lifestyle and easy access to…
Continue Reading
-

Oral Semaglutide May Reduce Heart Failure Risk in Patients With T2D
Oral semaglutide may reduce
heart failure (HF) events in patients withtype 2 diabetes (T2D) and HF, according to a secondary analysis of the phase 3b SOUL trial.1HF is among the most prevalent cardiovascular complications in patients with T2D,…
Continue Reading
-

What the science says about plant proteins
The Soy Nutrition Institute Global is calling for people to consume more plant proteins at a time when the 2025–2030 Dietary Guidelines for Americans encourage reducing saturated fat intake while increasing protein intake. High-protein calls…
Continue Reading
-
Targeted Brain Stimulation Doubles Efficacy in Parkinson’s Disease – Inside Precision Medicine
- Targeted Brain Stimulation Doubles Efficacy in Parkinson’s Disease Inside Precision Medicine
- Parkinson’s disease as a somato-cognitive action network disorder Nature
- ‘Extraordinary’ brain network discovery changes our understanding of…
Continue Reading
-

MDT Boosts Survival Outcomes in Oligometastatic Prostate Cancer | Targeted Oncology
Adding metastatic-directed therapy (MDT) to standard of care (SOC) improved progression-free survival (PFS), radiological PFS, and castration resistance-free survival in patients with oligometastatic prostate cancer, according to a meta-analysis…
Continue Reading
-

Journal of Medical Internet Research
Introduction
Adolescents and young adults aged 15‐24 years, defined as “youth” by the United Nations [-], are disproportionately affected by HIV around the globe. This age range is widely used in international health research and reporting,…
Continue Reading
-

Intellectual Property Dispute Stalls WHO Decision On Global AMR Strategy
Nepal, alongside Ethiopia, successfully proposed reopening talks on technology transfer rights, addressed in the WHO’s Global Action Plan on AMR. A dispute over technology transfer rights pushed the World Health Organization (WHO) to delay…
Continue Reading

