Surprising

Mechanism underlying bacterial resistance to the antibiotic albicidin revealed

Mechanism underlying bacterial resistance to the antibiotic albicidin revealed

New study underscores the growing threat of antibiotic resistance in healthcare A new analysis shows that infectious bacteria exposed to the antibiotic albicidin rapidly develop up to a 1,000-fold increase in resistance via a gene amplification mechanism. Mareike Saathoff of Freie Universität Berlin, Germany, and colleagues present these findings August 10th in the open access journal PLOS Biology. Bacterial resistance … Read more

UK Biobank Study Reveals Modest Links Between Systemic Inflammation and Future Dementia Risk

dementia

A study of data from about 500,000 people in the UK Biobank has uncovered small but statistically significant associations between signs of systemic inflammation and later risk of dementia. Dr. Krisztina Mekli of The University of Manchester, UK, and colleagues present these findings in the open-access journal PLOS ONE on July 19, 2023. Millions of people around … Read more

Non-native English speaker in science has hard time to thrive, study finds

Estimated disadvantages for non-native English speakers when conducting different scientific activities. Credit: Amano T et al., 2023, PLOS Biology, CC-BY 4.0

English serves as a convenient, common language for science. However, this practice poses insurmountable barriers to those whose first language is not English — the majority of people around the world. According to research published on July 18th in the open access journal PLOS Biology, led by Dr. Tatsuya Amano at the University of Queensland, Australia, the … Read more

US has an increasingly proportion of excess deaths compared to five European countries

death road

Excess death gap widens between US and Europe – A new analysis shows that, compared to similarly high-income European countries, the US continues to have substantially higher death rates at all but the oldest ages, resulting in more “excess deaths,” and this gap widened during the Covid-19 pandemic. Patrick Heuveline, of the University of California, … Read more

EXPOSED: The Shocking Truth Behind Havana Syndrome – Are Government Cover-ups Putting Us All at Risk?

havana, cuba

Have you heard of Havana Syndrome? It’s a mysterious illness that has affected countless U.S. diplomats and intelligence officers working in Cuba, as well as other parts of the world. And while some experts believe it may be caused by sonic attacks or exposure to electromagnetic radiation, there is growing concern that government cover-ups are … Read more

Interfering in big decisions friends and family take could violate a crucial moral right, philosopher says

Image by Mircea - See my collections from Pixabay

We have a moral duty to allow others to make ‘transformative choices’ such as changing careers, migrating and having children, a new study argues. This duty can be outweighed by competing moral considerations such as preventing murder but in many cases we should interfere with far greater caution. If you’ve told an adult friend or … Read more