Tag Archives: your-feed-science

Sacklers Up Their Offer to Settle Purdue Opioids Cases, With a New Condition

Sacklers Up Their Offer to Settle Purdue Opioids Cases, With a New Condition

Seven months after the Supreme Court struck down a deal that would have resolved thousands of opioid cases against Purdue Pharma, the company’s owners, members of the Sackler family, have increased their cash offer to settle the litigation — but with a novel catch. Under the framework for a new deal, the Sacklers would not receive immunity from future opioid …

Read More »

Cats May Have Gotten Bird Flu From Raw Pet Food. Here’s What to Know.

Cats May Have Gotten Bird Flu From Raw Pet Food. Here’s What to Know.

Federal officials who spent the last year grappling with a surge of bird flu infections in cows and people are now confronting a spate of new cases in cats, some of which have died after eating contaminated, uncooked pet food. Since early December, more than two dozen cases have been confirmed in domestic cats in the United States. Officials have …

Read More »

People With A.D.H.D. Are Likely to Die Significantly Earlier Than Their Peers, Study Finds

People With A.D.H.D. Are Likely to Die Significantly Earlier Than Their Peers, Study Finds

A study of more than 30,000 British adults diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, or A.D.H.D., found that, on average, they were dying earlier than their counterparts in the general population — around seven years earlier for men, and around nine for women. The study, which was published Thursday in The British Journal of Psychiatry, is believed to be the …

Read More »

Trump Administration Temporarily Mutes Federal Health Officials-007

Trump Administration Temporarily Mutes Federal Health Officials-007

The Trump administration The Trump administration, moving quickly to clamp down on health and science agencies, has canceled a string of scientific meetings and instructed federal health officials to refrain from all public communications, including upcoming reports focused on the nation’s escalating bird flu crisis. Experts who serve on outside advisory panels on a range of topics, from antibiotic resistance …

Read More »

These Corals Are Made for Walking

These Corals Are Made for Walking

Corals come in a wide array of shapes, sizes and colors, and they build sprawling reefs that serve as refuges for vast amounts of biodiversity in the ocean. But they are not known for being fleet of foot. This is because out of the more than 6,000 species of coral known to science, most are colonial organisms — individual animals …

Read More »

Scientists Finally Make Heads of Giant Stingray Tails

Scientists Finally Make Heads of Giant Stingray Tails

With hornlike facial fins and diamond-shape bodies that can stretch nearly 30 feet across, manta rays are among the strangest fish in the sea. Yet these behemoths’ most puzzling feature is a whip-like tail that can measure as long as the rest of the fish’s body. Why mantas and related rays have such long tails has long been a mystery. …

Read More »

Mother Chimp and Daughter Share a Special Sign

Mother Chimp and Daughter Share a Special Sign

Parents and their children, or people who know each other well, often share some expression that is unique to them — a phrase or gesture that began by happenstance but gradually acquired a meaning that only they know. The same is true of Beryl, a chimpanzee living in Kibale National Park, in Uganda, and her young daughter, Lindsay. When Lindsay …

Read More »

Do Chimps Who Pee Together Stay Together?

Do Chimps Who Pee Together Stay Together?

Ena Onishi, a doctoral student at Kyoto University, has spent over 600 hours watching chimpanzees urinating. She has a good reason for all that peeping, though. She is part of a team of researchers that recently discovered that the primates tend to tinkle when they see nearby chimps do the same. In a study published Monday in the journal Current …

Read More »

Kennedy’s Plan for the Drug Crisis: A Network of ‘Healing Farms’

Kennedy’s Plan for the Drug Crisis: A Network of ‘Healing Farms’

Though Mr. Kennedy’s embrace of recovery farms may be novel, the concept stretches back almost a century. In 1935, the government opened the United States Narcotic Farm in Lexington, Ky., to research and treat addiction. Over the years, residents included Chet Baker and William S. Burroughs (who portrayed the institution in his novel, “Junkie: Confessions of an Unredeemed Drug Addict”). …

Read More »

Trump Picks Ex-Congressman to Manage U.S. Nuclear Arsenal

Trump Picks Ex-Congressman to Manage U.S. Nuclear Arsenal

President-elect Donald J. Trump has picked Brandon Williams, a former Navy officer and one-term congressman, to become the keeper of the nation’s arsenal of thousands of nuclear bombs and warheads. Mr. Trump’s selection is a shift from a tradition in which the people who served as administrator of the National Nuclear Security Administration typically had deep technical roots or experience …

Read More »