Health & Medicine
Many U.S. teens underestimate fentanyl’s deadly risk
A majority of 8th-graders and roughly a third of 10th- and 12th-graders do not see great risk in using fentanyl once or twice, a study reports.
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A majority of 8th-graders and roughly a third of 10th- and 12th-graders do not see great risk in using fentanyl once or twice, a study reports.
We summarize the week's scientific breakthroughs every Thursday.
Archaeologists have unearthed new evidence that indicates hominids used fire up to 1.79 million years ago.
An imaging study found early signs of coronary artery disease in people in Canada breathing air that regulators consider clean.
At least a dozen animals have been found with the flesh-eating maggots. It could take more than a year to eradicate the parasite again, experts warn.
It’s just a matter of time before Sporothrix brasiliensis reaches the U.S. a CDC expert says.
Plague DNA in ancient graves near Siberia's Lake Baikal suggests the disease threatened people long before farming and crowded settlements.
AI helped researchers develop an experimental blood test that might let doctors diagnose overlapping dementias.
Vitamin K lowers the risk of bleeding, including in a circumcision. That procedure may explain a disparity in which infants are more likely to get the shot.
The FDA will allow bemotrizinol in sunscreen. The chemical is long-lasting and defends against solar radiation that ages skin.
Researchers used machine learning to help predict chemical signatures for over 1 billion possible fentanyls, including variants never seen before.
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