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New Study Shows Mathematical Models Helped Reduce Spread of COVID-19 in Colorado
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New study shows mathematical models helped reduce the spread of COVID-19
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Environmental News Network - New Study Shows Mathematical Models Helped Reduce the Spread of COVID-19 in Colorado
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Is dabbing causing mental health problems for Colorado kids?Lindsey B. King •
Editor’s note: After 5280′
s July issue went to press, Governor Jared Polis signed into law HB 21-1317, which requires further study of the possible health effects of high-THC cannabis and aims to reduce access to cannabis among teenagers. This article has been updated to reflect the new law.
There’s no shortage of sensational, hide-the-children, marijuana-is-the-devil’s-lettuce stories on the internet. This is not one of those stories. Colorado is, after all, the cradle of recreational cannabis in this country, and by most accounts, the destruction of civilized society wreaked by commercialized medical and recreational pot was greatly exaggerated. Given the opportunity to comment, most Coloradans roughly 71 percent, according to a 2020 survey say legalization has been mostly or completely successful. However, that number leaves plenty of room for dissent, and in that remaining 29 percent
Two CU Cancer Center studies provide insights into the link between inflammation and leukemia
Two recent collaborative publications by CU Cancer Center members provide insights into how chronic inflammation can serve as a key factor in the development of leukemia and other blood cancers.
Eric Pietras, Ph.D., CU Cancer Center member and assistant professor in the CU School of Medicine Division of Hematology, and James DeGregori, Ph.D., deputy director of the CU Cancer Center and professor in the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics, were corresponding authors on both papers.
Both papers provide support for the theory of adaptive oncogenesis, which was developed by DeGregori. The theory stipulates that chronic inflammation (such as the inflammation associated with aging or with chronic disease) reduces the fitness of normal cells, hindering their ability to reproduce and creating space for cells with cancer-causing mutations to proliferate.