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Opinion: Family doctors shouldn t be in the dark about the vaccine rollout

The Globe and Mail Parminder Singh, Jason Flowerday and Sachin Aggarwal Contributed to The Globe and Mail Published March 10, 2021 Bookmark Please log in to listen to this story. Also available in French and Mandarin. Log In Create Free Account Getting audio file . This translation has been automatically generated and has not been verified for accuracy. Full Disclaimer Parminder Singh is the co-founder of HealthCare Plus, a network of digital-first clinics, and the managing director of clinical services at health tech company Think Research. Jason Flowerday is the managing director of Think Research and Sachin Aggarwal is the CEO. Vaccine hesitancy is a legitimate concern – one that’s being amplified by the COVID-19 pandemic. We know that government officials are worried about it, and Ottawa has set up a team of behavioural scientists to monitor how Canadians feel about vaccines and public-health messaging.

Trust your first impressions on a first date - they re usually right, researcher suggests

10:00 AM MYT Make sure you pay attention to every last detail before meeting a potential partner for the first time. Photo: AFP While real-world first dates have become increasingly rare since the pandemic hit, that doesn t necessarily mean people have given up on looking for love. So, to stack all the odds in your favor, make sure you pay attention to every last detail before meeting a potential partner for the first time. In fact, a new study from researchers in Canada suggests that, on a first date, our first impressions are usually right. Researchers at McGill University in Montreal set out to study whether the first impressions made, interpreted, and sometimes even dismissed, on first dates could accurately assess a prospective partner s personality.

LSD may one day be used to treat anxiety and other mental health issues

Researchers at McGill University have discovered one way the psychedelic LSD may increase social interaction for some people who consume it. The new study,

Researchers link cellular transport pathway to aggressive brain cancer

 E-Mail IMAGE: Compared with control mice (top two rows), brain tumors (green) grow faster in the absence of Rab35 (bottom two rows). view more  Credit: ©2021 Kulasekaran et al. Originally published in Journal of Cell Biology. https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.202004229 Researchers at McGill University have identified a new cellular pathway that limits the growth and spread of brain tumors by controlling the recycling of cell surface receptor proteins. The study, which will be published January 14 in the  ( JCB), suggests that the pathway, which involves a protein called Rab35, is defective in many patients with glioblastoma and that restoring Rab35 s activity could be a new therapeutic strategy for this deadly form of brain cancer.

Researchers identify the origin of a deadly brain cancer

Researchers identify the origin of a deadly brain cancer
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