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Study Finds New Evidence of Health Threat from Chemicals in Marijuana and Tobacco Smoke
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Study Finds New Evidence of Health Threat from Chemicals in Marijuana and Tobacco Smoke

Scientists at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have uncovered new evidence of the potential health risks of chemicals in tobacco and marijuana smoke. In a study published online today by EClinicalMedicine, the researchers report that people who smoked only marijuana had several smoke-related toxic chemicals in their blood and urine,...

A Third of U.S. Families Face a Different Kind of Poverty
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A Third of U.S. Families Face a Different Kind of Poverty

Before the pandemic, one-third of U.S. households with children were already “net worth poor,” lacking enough financial resources to sustain their families for three months at a poverty level, finds new research from Duke University. In 2019, 57 percent of Black families and 50 percent of Latino families with children were poor in terms of...

Noncognitive Skills — Distinct from Cognitive Abilities — Are Important to Success Across the Life
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Noncognitive Skills — Distinct from Cognitive Abilities — Are Important to Success Across the Life

Noncognitive skills and cognitive abilities are both important contributors to educational attainment — the number of years of formal schooling that a person completes — and lead to success across the life course, according to a new study from an international team led by researchers at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, the University...

How to Mitigate the Impact of a Lockdown on Mental Health
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How to Mitigate the Impact of a Lockdown on Mental Health

The Covid-19 pandemic is impacting people’s mental health. But what helps and hinders people in getting through a lockdown? A new study led by researchers at the University of Basel addressed this question using data from 78 countries across the world. The results hint at the pivots and hinges on which the individual’s psyche rests...

How Medical Schools Can Transform Curriculums to Undo Racial Biases
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How Medical Schools Can Transform Curriculums to Undo Racial Biases

Medical school curriculums may misuse race and play a role in perpetuating physician bias, a team led by Penn Medicine researchers found in an analysis of curriculum from the preclinical phase of medical education. In a perspective article published Tuesday in the New England Journal of Medicine, the researchers identified five key categories in which...

Heading Outdoors Keeps Lockdown Blues at Bay
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Heading Outdoors Keeps Lockdown Blues at Bay

A new study has found that spending time outdoors and switching off our devices is associated with higher levels of happiness during a period of COVID-19 restrictions. Previous academic studies have indicated how being outdoors, particularly in green spaces, can improve mental health by promoting more positive body image, and lowering levels of depression and...

How the American Child Welfare System Lost Its Way
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How the American Child Welfare System Lost Its Way

Black children are removed from their families at much greater rates than any other race or ethnicity in this country. At the same time the sheer number of all child abuse investigations in the US is staggering: experts estimate that by age 18 one out of three children has been the subject of a child protective services...

One in Four Doctors Attacked, Harassed on Social Media
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One in Four Doctors Attacked, Harassed on Social Media

While many physicians benefit from social media by networking with potential collaborators or interfacing with patients, a new study from Northwestern University and the University of Chicago found many physicians also report being sexually harassed and personally attacked on these platforms on the basis of their religion, race or medical recommendations. Although the data were...

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Frequent Travel Could Make You 7% Happier

People dreaming of travel post-COVID-19 now have some scientific data to support their wanderlust. A new study in the journal of Tourism Analysis shows frequent travelers are happier with their lives than people who don’t travel at all. Chun-Chu (Bamboo) Chen, an assistant professor in the School of Hospitality Business Management at Washington State University, conducted a...