Foot Book Still in Print and Selling After 12 Years From:
On April 1, 2009 Dr. Burton S. Schuler , Podiatrist of  Panama City, Fl. published his book titled  Why You Really Hurt: It All Starts In The Foot . The book is about  a  medical/foot  problem known as the Morton s Toe.  During the past 12 years 20,000 copies of Why You Really Hurt: It All Starts In The Foot . have been sold ( paper backs) Dozens and dozens have left unsolicited reviews and comments on the Amazon website  attesting to  how the book has changed their life;  by getting them out of foot pain when everything else has failed.
https://www.afinalwarning.com/508014.html (Natural News) Health officials in Canada are struggling to figure out the cause of a new, mysterious brain disease that has affected more than 40 people in the country’s southeast.
In early March, Canadian officials began alerting doctors and provincial health officials in New Brunswick to tell them that federal health authorities were monitoring a cluster of 43 cases of neurological disease with an unknown cause. The first case was identified in 2015, but the number of people with the condition has risen sharply since, with 24 cases reported in 2020 and six so far in 2021. Five people have died due to complications as a result of the disease.
New wireless system can restore communication and mobility in people with paralysis
Brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) are an emerging assistive technology, enabling people with paralysis to type on computer screens or manipulate robotic prostheses just by thinking about moving their own bodies. For years, investigational BCIs used in clinical trials have required cables to connect the sensing array in the brain to computers that decode the signals and use them to drive external devices.
Now, for the first time, BrainGate clinical trial participants with tetraplegia have demonstrated use of an intracortical wireless BCI with an external wireless transmitter. The system is capable of transmitting brain signals at single-neuron resolution and in full broadband fidelity without physically tethering the user to a decoding system.
Suppressing facial expressions may be useful in certain contexts, shows study
How do our facial expressions in response to seeing others in pain influence how we see and feel their pain? There are many situations where it may be helpful to suppress our emotional responses to the pain of others.
For example, doctors are trained to regulate their emotional responses to the pain of their patients, which may help them to avoid exhausting their own cognitive and emotional resources. Understanding whether suppressing our own facial expressions in response to other s pain reduces our ability to empathize with them has important implications for a variety of social relationships including those between doctors and patients, parents and children, and police officers and members of the community.
DIY: Proof That Your Brain Is Slower Than You Think forbes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from forbes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.