Blog

  • Sticking to an Early Breakfast Could Help You Live Longer, According to New Research

    Sticking to an Early Breakfast Could Help You Live Longer, According to New Research

    Early birds have long basked in the glory of health superiority, sometimes even tinged with a hit of moral righteousness. It’s easier for them to snooze at night and rise with the sun, allowing them to tick through their to-do list, maybe knock out a self-care routine or morning workout, before night owls even drag themselves out of bed. And a new study just granted them even more aura points: Researchers found that older adults who maintained an early breakfast time as they aged were at less risk of dying during a roughly 20-year period than those who pushed back that morning meal over time.

    The study followed nearly 3,000 older folks in the United Kingdom who filled out questionnaires at various points during the study period, recording lifestyle details like their typical meal and sleep timing, as well as any symptoms of physical and psychological illness they were experiencing. Some of them also did blood testing, allowing researchers to track who among them had certain genes linked with having an evening chronotype (a.k.a. night owl tendencies). To no surprise, the night-owl people tended to eat all their meals at later times. But more illuminating were the consistent associations the researchers found between mealtimes and health outcomes: Delaying breakfast was linked with depression, higher levels of fatigue, and greater frequency of illness and, yep, mortality risk.

    Further stacking the evidence in favor of an early breakfast, the researchers also pinpointed two general clusters of participants: an early-eating group that had breakfast around 7:50 a.m. and a later-eating group that had their morning meal at 8:50 a.m. And it turned out, the earlier-eaters had a higher survival rate than the later-eaters. In fact, when the researchers crunched the numbers, they found that with each hour later that participants ate breakfast, they had an 11% increased risk of dying during the study period.

    It’s worth noting, studies like this one can only prove correlation, not causation—so it might be that health issues pushed some participants to eat breakfast later, rather than a delayed breakfast causing them to be worse off, health-wise. That change in meal timing among older adults “could be an easy marker, something that a family member could even pick up on, of an underlying health condition,” lead author Hassan Dashti, PhD, RD, a nutrition scientist and circadian biologist at Massachusetts General Hospital, tells SELF.

    But at the same time, Dr. Dashti holds that a consistent, early breakfast may have a positive effect on health and longevity, particularly by sharpening the circadian rhythm. As we age, that rhythm gets blunted, which can have a negative ripple effect on various body systems. A routine morning meal “is a strong environmental cue that tells your body it’s daytime,” Dr. Dashti says, “which signals each of your organs to shift from evening functioning into daytime mode.” That helps keep everything chugging along in optimal form.

    This isn’t the first study to suggest the importance of breakfast for living a long life—research has shown that regularly eating a morning meal is linked with lower overall and heart-related mortality (and that bypassing it can up your heart-disease risk).

    Continue Reading

  • This Blood Thinner Is More Effective Than Aspirin at Preventing Heart Attacks

    This Blood Thinner Is More Effective Than Aspirin at Preventing Heart Attacks

    Aspirin is one of the most widely taken medicines in the world, having been recommended for decades as a way of protecting against heart attacks and strokes in at-risk patients. However, a new study has revealed that clopidogrel, another commonly used blood thinner, or anticoagulant, is more effective in preventing serious heart attacks and strokes and carries no additional risk.

    The finding is the result of research conducted by an international team of scientists from the US, UK, Switzerland, Australia, and Japan. Their work is a meta-analysis—a study that collects and analyzes the results of multiple smaller studies, with the aim of reaching a more reliable conclusion by looking at a larger amount of data. In total, this meta-analysis looked at clinical data from nearly 29,000 patients diagnosed with coronary artery disease (CAD), a condition where fat builds up in the arteries, which can lead to secondary effects such as heart attacks and heart failure.

    The specialists conducted a systematic search of medical databases such as PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, and Embase to find randomized trials of treatments for CAD published up to April 12, 2025. The aim was to identify papers comparing the efficacy of aspirin versus clopidogrel in the prevention of cardiovascular deaths, heart attacks, and strokes.

    The analysis focused on seven investigations that included clinical information from persons with confirmed cases of CAD treated with aspirin or clopidogrel for an average of 2.3 years. After a follow-up of 5.5 years, the researchers observed that those who received clopidogrel had a 14 percent lower risk of a major cardiovascular event compared with those treated with aspirin.

    Ultimately, the team concluded that these findings “add to the evidence” that clopidogrel is superior to aspirin for preventing major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events. In the researchers’ view, these findings support using clopidogrel over aspirin in patients with established CAD to try to prevent them going on to have major complications as a result of their condition, such as a heart attack. The findings were published in the journal The Lancet.

    In terms of mortality and bleeding risk, the meta-analysis concluded that the rates were similar in both groups, confirming that clopidogrel is as safe as aspirin.

    “To the best of our knowledge, clopidogrel monotherapy is the only antiplatelet treatment that has consistently demonstrated greater efficacy than aspirin without compromising safety,” the researchers wrote in the paper.

    The discovery could transform medical guidelines internationally. Clopidogrel is a widely available, affordable drug with reliable generic versions, characteristics that would make it easy to incorporate into routine clinical practice. Nevertheless, specialists stress that more extensive research is needed to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of clopidogrel and its performance in diverse populations in order to support its inclusion in treatment standards.

    Cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of death in the world. According to the World Health Organization, an estimated 17.9 million people die each year from these conditions. More than four out of every five of these deaths are due to coronary heart disease or stroke. The new research suggests that clopidogrel could become a key alternative to combat this public health problem, the incidence of which continues to rise around the world.

    This story originally appeared on WIRED en Español and has been translated from Spanish.

    Continue Reading

  • Ministers urged to digitise adoption records to help reunite families | Local government

    Ministers urged to digitise adoption records to help reunite families | Local government

    Ministers have been urged to digitise records essential to reuniting families separated by the UK’s unmarried mothers’ home scandal by campaigners who fear they could be lost in Angela Rayner’s local government reorganisation project.

    Hundreds of thousands of British women were coerced to give up babies at church-linked homes, which worked alongside statutory agencies, between the 1940s and 1980s.

    This week, ITV’s Long Lost Family: The Mother and Baby Home Scandal will feature the searches of people – including mixed-race and disabled adoptees – affected by forced adoptions, which the UK government has refused to formally apologise for.

    Away from the cameras, campaigners say digitising records across the UK will help survivors struggling to trace relatives and reveal the risk of inherited health conditions or from anti-lactation drugs used in homes.

    The Movement for an Adoption Apology (MAA), which fears records could be destroyed in the plans to merge English local authorities , has written to the families minister, Janet Daby, calling for digitised archives.

    However in a letter seen by the Guardian, Daby said while “the feasibility of digitising records” had been considered, “the scale and cost … make it unachievable within current resources”.

    Nicky Campbell, a presenter of ITV’s Long Lost Family: The Mother and Baby Home Scandal, with Sian, whose sisters had been searching for her. Photograph: Multitude Media/ITV

    Westminster’s approach contrasts with that of the devolved administrations. Northern Ireland’s Truth Recovery Independent Panel this week revealed it had digitised more than 5,500 records from unmarried mothers’ institutions and planned a permanent archive. In Scotland, the first minister, John Swinney, has committed to working with MAA on an oral history project.

    Responding to MAA’s letter in June, Daby said she understood the “historical significance and emotional importance” of adoption records. The minister said officials had written “to all directors of children’s services across England” and regional and voluntary adoption agencies “who may hold similar records”, urging them “to retain all adoption records they hold from 1948 and earlier”, and was planning a consultation to extend the statutory retention period from 75 years to 100 years. The UK government’s stance is that legal responsibility for records remains with councils.

    MAA believes this does not go far enough. In July the Information Commissioner’s Office fined the adoption support charity Birthlink £18,000 for destroying 4,900 records linked to adoptions in Scotland to clear space. This prompted MAA to write to the education secretary, Bridget Phillipson, saying it was “gravely worried similar tragic losses are occurring”, and asking to meet and be included in shaping new legislation. MAA awaits a response from Phillipson.

    The writer and MAA campaigner Karen Constantine said: “We need a more supportive system for people to access their files and recognition from the government that this is important history we need to capture. The current approach of UK government is indirect sex discrimination – they aren’t taking women seriously. With funds under pressure local government reorganisation could lead to chaos for records.

    skip past newsletter promotion

    “In my research I’ve found younger generations are now seeking to unravel family history because the trauma has travelled down, and there are more people finding out they are the children of men who fathered siblings born in different homes. There were clear cases of rape and women and girls were punished for it in a system which involved the commodification of children and human trafficking in the UK.”

    A government spokesperson said: “This abhorrent practice should never have taken place, and our deepest sympathies are with all those affected. We take this issue extremely seriously and continue to engage with those affected to provide support.”

    Long Lost Family’s two-part special, airing at 9pm on 3 and 4 September, says: “For too long the story of unmarried mothers was seen as something that was happening only in Ireland. But now we’re beginning to wake up to the enormity of what happened right here in England.”

    Continue Reading

  • North Korean leader Kim Jong Un will meet with Chinese leader Xi Jinping

    North Korean leader Kim Jong Un will meet with Chinese leader Xi Jinping

    In this photo provided by the North Korean government, from second left in front, Russian President Vladimir Putin, Chinese President Xi Jinping and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un arrive for a reception marking the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II, at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing Wednesday, Sept. 3, 2025. Independent journalists were not given access to cover the event depicted in this image distributed by the North Korean government. The content of this image is as provided and cannot be independently verified. Korean language watermark on image as provided by source reads: “KCNA” which is the abbreviation for Korean Central News Agency. (Korean Central News Agency/Korea News Service via AP)

    The Associated Press

    Continue Reading

  • Bubonic plague case confirmed in Mongolia’s northernmost province of Khuvsgul-Xinhua

    ULAN BATOR, Sept. 4 (Xinhua) — One case of bubonic plague was confirmed in Mongolia’s northernmost province of Khuvsgul, the country’s National Center for Zoonotic Diseases (NCZD) said Thursday.

    “One person has been diagnosed with bubonic plague on Wednesday in Tsagaan-Uul soum (administrative subdivision) in the province and is receiving treatment at Khuvsgul province general hospital. Currently, the soum has been placed under quarantine,” the NCZD said in a statement.

    A total of 137 soums of 17 provinces in Mongolia are now risk areas of bubonic plague, according to the NCZD.

    The bubonic plague is a bacterial disease spread by fleas living on wild rodents such as marmots, which can kill an adult in less than 24 hours if not treated in time, according to the World Health Organization.

    Continue Reading

  • Radiohead to tour for first time in seven years

    Radiohead to tour for first time in seven years

    Britain’s Radiohead announced a 20-date European tour in November and December on Wednesday, the first tour by the band in seven years.

    “Last year, we got together to rehearse, just for the hell of it,” drummer Philip Selway said on Instagram.

    “After a seven-year pause, it felt really good to play the songs again and reconnect with a musical identity that has become lodged deep inside all five of us.”

    Radiohead, which also comprises singer and main songwriter Thom Yorke, guitarists Jonny Greenwood and Ed O’Brien, and bass player Colin Greenwood, will play four dates each in Madrid, Bologna, London, Copenhagen and Berlin. There are no Irish dates.

    The group’s landmark third album, 1997’s OK Computer, explored themes like anxiety and alienation, marking a departure from the optimism of the Britpop era.

    Radiohead’s return follows the reunion of Oasis, Britain’s biggest band of the 1990s, in a critically acclaimed tour this summer.

    Organisers said that to help ensure only fans are able to buy tickets, and to minimise them being accessed by touts and bots, they will only be available by registering at radiohead.com.

    Registration opens at 10am on Friday and closes at 10am on Sunday.

    The ticket sale itself begins on September 12th.

    A Portrait of Radiohead: Colin Greenwood’s photographs of Thom Yorke and the bandOpens in new window ]

    Last month, Radiohead digitally released the live album, Hail To The Thief – Live Recordings 2003-2009.

    The tracks were originally gathered as research for Yorke’s arrangements for the stage production, Hamlet Hail To The Thief. The live record will be physically released on October 31st. – Reuters/PA

    Continue Reading

  • IFSC CLIMBING WORLD CUP KOPER 2025: FACTS AND STATS

    IFSC CLIMBING WORLD CUP KOPER 2025: FACTS AND STATS

    The IFSC Climbing World Cup Koper 2025 is the 417th Climbing World Cup event in history, featuring the 236th Lead World Cup competition. Also, it is the 32nd Climbing World Cup held in Slovenia, the fourth in Koper.

    ATHLETES’ HIGHLIGHTS

    Alberto Ginés López of Spain has been on the podium at every Lead World Cup in 2025, winning two silvers and three bronzes; similarly, Erin McNeice of Great Britain have podiumed at four out of five Lead competitions – only missing out in Alcobendas, Spain: she won two golds and two bronzes.

    South Korea’s Jain Kim will compete in her 104th Lead World Cup, she is second in the all-time list behind Italy’s Jenny Lavarda. Also in the top 10 of the all-time list is France’s Hélène Janicot, who is registered to compete in her 76th.

    Paris 2024 bronze medallist Jessica Pilz of Austria is nearing a big milestone in her career, as she is about to start in her 97th Climbing World Cup competition across all disciplines.

    Jakob Schubert of Austria tops the men’s all-time ranking for Lead World Cup appearances. The two-time Olympic medallist returns to competition in Koper for his 87th Lead start and 156th overall across all disciplines, placing him second only to Canada’s Sean McColl in the overall standings.

    Italy’s Stefano Ghisolfi is starting in his 85th Lead World Cup, placing third in the all-time ranking behind Schubert and fellow Italian climber Luca Zardini.

    Finally, Germany’s Sebastian Halenke is competing in his 65th Lead World Cup.

    The female athletes making their overall debut in Koper are:

    • Amanda CRISCUOLI TAVARES (BRA)
    • Cedar HENDRY (CAN)
    • Brooke WHITE (CAN)
    • Ronja Marlene WITT (GER)

    The male athletes making their overall debut in Koper are:

    • Juan Ramon PENDONES (CRC)
    • Luca NÜNDEL (GER)
    • Rolando José LOPEZ RAMOS (HON)
    • Alon PELEG LIEBLICH (ISR)
    • Inbar Doron SELA (ISR)
    • Eojin LEE (KOR)

    Continue Reading

  • Prime Members, Don’t Miss the Chance to Grab These Nothing Ear Buds at a Record Low Price

    Prime Members, Don’t Miss the Chance to Grab These Nothing Ear Buds at a Record Low Price

    If you have sensitive ears or feel that a lot of earbuds are jamming into your ears, open-ear buds are a great alternative. These lightweight earbuds prioritize your comfort. Most of them sit gently on your ear canal instead of in your ears like traditional ones. They also let external sound in so you can be aware of your surroundings. Right now, Prime members can treat themselves to one of our favorite open earbuds for less.

    Amazon is currently offering Nothing Ear (Open) buds for just $99 to Prime members — that’s an impressive 38% discount on the retail price of $159, and the lowest we’ve seen them go for. This matches their Prime Day pricing, but we don’t expect Amazon to be this generous for long, so you might want to hurry. Non-Prime members can snag these at a $10 discount for $149.

    In his review, CNET’s audio expert David Carnoy called these the best lightweight earbuds with earhooks among all the open-ear models he’s tested. Featuring the brand’s signature translucent plastic, they are super lightweight, fit comfortably and actually feel like nothing when on.

    Stepped drivers move sound closer to your ear without blasting it in, and the automatic algorithm detects music signals, adjusting sound settings on its own for a more personalized experience.

    Hey, did you know? CNET Deals texts are free, easy and save you money.

    You’re also getting a sound seal system that keeps the audio from leaking, so while you’ll stay aware of your surroundings, your listening stays private. One full charge gets you 30 hours of playback, and for when you’re running low on power, a quick 10-minute charge gives you an extra two hours of use. Plus, with ChatGPT integration, you can access AI anytime across the Nothing ecosystem.

    There’s also IP54 rated for dust and water resistance — perfect for sweaty workouts, long commutes and the occasional adventure.

    HEADPHONE DEALS OF THE WEEK

    Deals are selected by the CNET Group commerce team, and may be unrelated to this article.

    Why this deal matters

    Good quality earbuds that offer a secure yet comfortable fit, decent battery life and impressive performance cost well over $150. This deal gets you one of our favorite lightweight earbuds for under $100, which is a solid deal for a model this packed. Just be sure to get your orders in before Amazon pushes the price back up.



    Get hand-picked deals from CNET shopping experts straight to your phone.

    CNET is always covering a wide array of deals on tech products and much more. Start with the hottest sales and discounts on the CNET Deals page, and sign up for the CNET Deals Text to get daily deals sent straight to your phone. Add the free CNET Shopping extension to your browser for real-time price comparisons and cash-back offers. And peruse our gift guide, which includes a full range of ideas for birthdays, anniversaries and more.


    Continue Reading

  • Bomb blast kills 15 near political rally in Quetta

    Bomb blast kills 15 near political rally in Quetta

    Fifteen people were killed and more than 30 others were wounded in a suicide bombing near a political rally in Pakistan, authorities said.

    Hundreds of members of the Balochistan National Party (BNP) had gathered for a rally at a stadium in Quetta, the capital of restive Balochistan province, when a bomb exploded in the parking area on Tuesday night.

    Provincial authorities said on Wednesday that the death toll had risen to 15. The Islamic State militant group said it carried out the attack.

    Balochistan, which borders Afghanistan and Iran, is the country’s largest and poorest region. Its residents also face regular and often deadly attacks from the Islamic State and separatist groups.

    The suicide bomber could not reach the rally venue due to tight security, Balochistan health minister Bakht Muhammad Kakar said, according to Pakistani network Geo News.

    The damage would have been much greater if the blast had happened at the venue, government official Hamza Shafqaat told reporters. He also said that the government had deployed 120 police personnel to the rally for security, Geo News reported.

    The rally on Tuesday night was held in commemoration of Ataullah Mengal, the former chief minister of Balochistan who died in 2021.

    Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif condemned the attack targeting the BNP rally, which he said was “damning evidence of the nefarious conspiracy by terrorists to spread chaos in Balochistan”, local media reported.

    A survivor of the blast, Zaman Baloch, said he was standing at some distance from the rally venue when he heard a loud explosion. He suffered shrapnel wounds to his leg.

    “After the explosion, I saw a lot of people lying on the ground and there was screaming everywhere,” Baloch said.

    Another survivor, Noor Ahmad, also recalled hearing a loud blast.

    Injured BNP leader Ahmed Nawaz told BBC Urdu that the explosion took place approximately 200 feet from the rally venue.

    Various militant groups operate in Balochistan, posing a constant threat to the security of its residents.

    In February 2024, Islamic State claimed it had carried out the bombing of election offices in Balochistan, one day before parliamentary elections were set to be held. The attacks killed more than 20 people and wounded dozens.

    Last November, more than 20 people were killed and dozens more injured in a suicide bombing at a railway station in Quetta. The Baloch Liberation Army, a militant group, claimed responsibility for the attack.

    And in March this year, armed militants from the separatist Balochistan Liberation Army hijacked a train carrying more than 400 passengers and threatened to kill hostages if authorities did not release Baloch political prisoners.

    Additional reporting by BBC Urdu

    Continue Reading

  • Researchers use AI to identify “hidden fat” on routine bone scans-Xinhua

    SYDNEY, Sept. 4 (Xinhua) — Researchers in Australia are developing an artificial intelligence (AI) algorithm that estimates dangerous hidden fat, or visceral fat, from bone density scans used to detect spine fractures.

    Visceral fat, the harmful deep belly fat that surrounds organs, is a “troublemaker” strongly linked to serious health problems like heart disease, diabetes and cancer, according to a statement released Thursday by Australia’s Edith Cowan University (ECU).

    The ECU team is training its machine learning algorithm to analyze lateral spine Dual-energy X-ray Absorptiometry (DXA) scans, used to assess bone density, to accurately predict visceral fat levels from these images, offering valuable new health insights without requiring additional tests.

    Current methods to estimate visceral fat, like body mass index, waist circumference, and waist-to-hip ratio, have limitations as they cannot distinguish between different types of body fat, leading to inconsistent obesity assessments, researchers said.

    Imaging techniques such as MRI and CT provide accurate visceral fat measurement but are costly and, in the case of CT, expose patients to higher radiation, they said.

    “The machine-learning model has been trained on thousands of images; the next step is to incorporate further datasets from around the world, so it learns from the largest, most diverse cohort possible and becomes as effective as possible,” said Syed Zulqarnain Gilani, a senior lecturer and lead AI scientist at ECU.

    Continue Reading