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Environmental News For The Week Ending 03 April 2019

Environmental News For The Week Ending 03 April 2019 This is a collection of interesting news articles about the environment and related topics published last week. This is usually a Tuesday evening regular post at GEI (but can be posted at other times). Please share this article - Go to very top of page, right hand side, for social media buttons. Note: Because of the high volume of news regarding the coronavirus outbreak, that news has been published separately: There hasn t been much change in the trajectory of either US Covid metric: new cases continue to increase at a modest pace, while US Covid deaths continue to fall. New cases of Covid confirmed over the week ending April 3rd were 5.9% higher that those confirmed over the week ending March 27th, and 15.9% higher than those of the week ending March 20th, while US Covid deaths during the week ending April 3rd were 12.2% lower than the prior week, and down 74.7% from the peak week in late January.

Study exposes conflicts of interest black lung treatment

By Curtis Tage West Virginia Public Broadcasting Apr 7, 2021 3 hrs ago Long exposure to coal dust can often bring on back lung disease, a life-altering and incurable affliction. In the past 10 years, more than 10,000 miners have died from the illness. TWV FILE PHOTO CHARLESTON — Doctors hired by coal companies in black lung cases are far less likely to diagnose the disease in X-rays than are independent doctors or those who are hired by coal miners, a new study has concluded, pointing to conflicts of interest in the system that sick miners use to receive assistance. The doctors who worked for coal companies to read the chest X-rays of miners found an absence of the disease nearly 85% of the time, according to the authors of the study, published Friday by the University of Illinois Chicago School of Public Health’s Division of Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences. In contrast, the doctors whose clients were coal m

Study exposes conflicts of interest in black lung treatment

By Curtis Tage West Virginia Public Broadcasting Apr 7, 2021 Apr 7, 2021 Long exposure to coal dust can often bring on back lung disease, a life-altering and incurable affliction. In the past 10 years, more than 10,000 miners have died from the illness. TWV FILE PHOTO CHARLESTON — Doctors hired by coal companies in black lung cases are far less likely to diagnose the disease in X-rays than are independent doctors or those who are hired by coal miners, a new study has concluded, pointing to conflicts of interest in the system that sick miners use to receive assistance. The doctors who worked for coal companies to read the chest X-rays of miners found an absence of the disease nearly 85% of the time, according to the authors of the study, published Friday by the University of Illinois Chicago School of Public Health’s Division of Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences. In contrast, the doctors whose clients were coal

HARRIS SWEETENS CHICAGO TRIP — ELECTION WINNERS, LOSERS — MORE CORRUPTION CHRONICLES

HARRIS SWEETENS CHICAGO TRIP — ELECTION WINNERS, LOSERS — MORE CORRUPTION CHRONICLES
politico.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from politico.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Research shows some genes come to life in the brain after death

Research shows some genes come to life in the brain after death ANI | Updated: Apr 05, 2021 23:06 IST Washington [US], April 5 (ANI): Researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago analyzed gene expression in fresh brain tissue and found that gene expression in some cells actually increased after death. In the hours after we die, certain cells in the human brain are still active. Some cells even increase their activity and grow to gargantuan proportions, according to new research from the University of Illinois Chicago. In a newly published study in the journal Scientific Reports, the UIC researchers analyzed gene expression in fresh brain tissue which was collected during routine brain surgery at multiple times after removal to simulate the post-mortem interval and death. They found that gene expression in some cells actually increased after death.

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