A New York Times health reporter explains what makes a good study, and how she knows which papers merit an article.
VANCOUVER, BC / ACCESS Newswire / October 16, 2025 / CoTec Holdings Corp. (TSXV:CTH)(OTCQB:CTHCF) (“CoTec” or the “Company”) is pleased to announce Québec-based BBA Inc. (“BBA”) has been engaged to ...
Older players of pickleball, the fastest-growing sport in the United States, are more vulnerable to eye injuries, some of ...
Intact forests struggle to escape climate degradation, exposing new impacts coming from increasingly warming temperatures.
Equip your marketing strategies with data from this list of financial and audience reports that reveal where digital growth ...
New research finds a correlation between truck drivers who violate English-language proficiency rules and bad carrier safety ...
Sealed Apollo 17 samples analyzed with new techniques reveal that the Moon's interior contains sulfur isotopes unlike those ...
But a new published case suggests that death may be averted if infected cats are treated early with antiviral medications, ...
The use of chromosomes is fundamental to numerous fields, including clinical diagnostics, genetics, and molecular biology ...
A new study by Consumer Reports, published on Oct. 14, 2025, claims that some such protein products contain dangerously high levels of lead, as well as other heavy metals such as cadmium and arsenic.
SAN ANTONIO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--#BIAF--bioAffinity Technologies, Inc. (Nasdaq: BIAF; BIAFW), a biotechnology company advancing noninvasive diagnostics for lung cancer and other lung diseases, today ...
The UKG study, which was done in partnership with Workplace Intelligence, shows frontline workers in India use AI at work far more than in other countries (84%), followed by Mexico (52%) and Australia ...