A major vulnerability in WhatsApp left the personal details of nearly 3.5 billion users exposed, a research report from the University of Vienna has claimed.
Browsing: LIFE STYLE
India is undergoing the fastest ultra-processed food (UPF) sales growth, and the resulting dietary transition is surging obesity and diabetes cases, leading to poor health, according to a new three-paper Series published in The Lancet on Wednesday.
Ā One woman worldwide dies every two minutes due to cervical cancer — a treatable and preventable disease — said the UN on Monday on the first official World Cervical Cancer Elimination Day. The day — November 17 — was designated by the Seventy-eighth World Health Assembly (WHA78.8)
Post-partum depressionā has been discussed as an identifiable, measurable, treatable disorder for 50 years now. Thresholds, scales, prevalence rates: everything seems clear, even reassuring.
Researchers in Osaka have found that stem cells from fat tissue can repair spinal fractures similar to those caused by osteoporosis.
By turning these cells into bone-forming clusters and pairing them with a bone-rebuilding material, rats regained stronger, healthier spines.
A study presented at the American Heart Associationās scientific meetings has raised concerns about melatonin, one of Britainās most commonly prescribed sleep aids. The findings suggest that long-term users face a higher risk of heart failure.
Walking up to 5,000 steps everyday may help delay cognitive decline by three years on average while 7,500 steps daily may delay it by seven years, a study in around 300 individuals has found.
Antimicrobial peptides can control pathogens like Salmonella and E. coli- a major cause of foodborne diseases and can also act as an alternative to antibiotics to help combat increasing antimicrobial resistance (AMR).
Children born to mothers who had Covid-19 while pregnant may be at a high risk of suffering from developmental disorders, including speech delays, autism, and motor disorders, by the time they turn 3 years old, according to new research.
