A Swansea University academic is part of a team investigating how green tea could give rise to a drug capable of tackling Covid-19.
Dr Suresh Mohankumar carried out the research with colleagues in India during his time at JSS College of Pharmacy, JSS Academy of Higher Education and Research
Their findings suggest that one of the compounds in green tea could combat the coronavirus behind Covid-19.
25 May 2021 | 09:44am
StockMarketWire.com - Mass spectrometry instrument developer Microsaic Systems said it had formed a collaboration with Swansea University Medical School to measure levels environmentally persistent pollutants.
The pair would utilising Microsaic s equipment, to develop a monitoring platform capable of measuring per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances at source and within a laboratory setting. This will be used to establish the health impacts of the broader range of PFAS pollutants, the company said. Through partnership with stakeholders in the environmental sector, this collaboration is designed to better inform pollution remediation, improve management processes for reduced emission and promote safer handling of PFAS chemicals.
Fact check: Has Wales really had the most deaths with Covid-19 in the UK?
We ve looked at the figures being cited suggesting Wales had a higher death rate with coronavirus than any other part of the UK
15:21, 5 MAY 2021
Updated
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Thank you for subscribingWe have more newslettersShow meSee ourprivacy notice Wales has the worst Covid death rate in the UK.
This accusation has been repeated time and again by opponents of Mark Drakeford and Welsh Labour.
Swansea by-election: the candidates for Castle ward
There is a vacant council seat which nine candidates are competing for on May 6
The different faces of Castle ward: flats on Griffith John Street (left), and flats and houses in Swansea Marina (Image: Wales Online / Google Maps)
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Apr 16, 2021
THURSDAY, April 15, 2021 (HealthDay News) The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and lockdowns on asthma is explored in three studies published online March 29 in
Thorax.
Syed A. Shah, D. Phil., from the University of Edinburgh in the United Kingdom, and colleagues derived asthma exacerbation rates for every week and compared rates for January to August 2020 to a pre-COVID-19 period and January to August 2016 to 2019. Data were included for 100,165 patients with asthma who experienced at least one exacerbation during 2016 to 2020. The researchers found a significant reduction in the level of exacerbation rates across all patients when comparing the prelockdown to postlockdown periods (−0.196 episodes per person-year).