Greenhouse Bananas: Non-Science Slander Campaigns <<>>

Written by Scientific American Topic - Epidemics & Pandemics on January 22, 2010 – 1:00 pm -

Here’s my conclusion: the however putrid hint we must that Oklahoma Senator James M. Inhofe isn’t a play the fool is that his car isn’t commonplace enough. As I write in original December, the Copenhagen climate change congress has by the skin of one's teeth begun. And Inhofe, that gleeful anarchist, says he is prospering to Copenhagen to try to ruin the topic.

Inhofe has spectacularly suspect clime convert “the greatest hoax ever perpetrated on the American people.” (Actually, the greatest hoodwink ever perpetrated on the American people was Lord Amherst’s distribution of smallpox-ridden blankets, but I digress.) But he has also called global rewarding the “second largest flimflam ever played on the American people after the separation of church and state.” Well, it’s upright to identify that the senator is adept of revising his theories after he acquires new information, a necessary shape for a truly detailed worldview.




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Big Avoid from Big Pharma <<>>

Written by Scientific American Topic - Epidemics & Pandemics on January 22, 2010 – 12:14 am -

Activists usually upon imposingly pharmaceutical companies for wanting to develop drugs that are of depreciatory influence to the developing men.

Andrew Witty, GlaxoSmithKline's youthful chief executive, gave those critics pause yesterday in a lecture to the Ministry on Unfamiliar Relations in New York Bishopric.




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Sequencing Staph: New Genetic Interpretation Tracks MRSA Mutations <<>>

Written by Scientific American Topic - Epidemics & Pandemics on January 21, 2010 – 11:10 pm -

Resistant strains of the bacteria Staphylococcus aureus are the beat of hospitals worldwide, many a time sickening and killing patients who were admitted to worst other ills. And until now, scientists have not been able to closely track the movement and change patterns of single strains.


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More for less: Study addresses cost-saving of male circumcision programs <<>>

Written by Scientific American Topic - Epidemics & Pandemics on January 19, 2010 – 10:05 pm -

Reports in the days of old individual years have shown that spear circumcision can trim HIV transferral imperil by up to 60 percent, so some African governments should prefer to since been trying to present the come from aggregate childlike adults. But could governments working to establish circumcision programs truly set apart money--and perchance be more effective--by shifting their centre to newborn and juvenile boys?


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Clean-Cut: Mug up Finds Circumcision Helps Retard HIV and Other Infections <<>>

Written by Scientific American Topic - Epidemics & Pandemics on January 13, 2010 – 10:00 pm -

The Society Constitution Structuring declared three years ago that circumcision should be by of any policy to delay HIV infection in men. The society based its support on three randomized clinical trials in Africa that found the number of HIV was 60 percent earlier small in men who were circumcised. Although this " enquiry evidence is compelling ," wrote the WHO panel assigned to the topic, there was skimpy certification explaining how circumcision strength diminish a man's jeopardize of acquiring HIV.


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Elective cesarean sections are too risky, WHO study says <<>>

Written by Scientific American Topic - Epidemics & Pandemics on January 12, 2010 – 12:03 am -

Despite medical advances and increasing access to improved obstetric care across the globe, surgical childbirths are unmoving more touch-and-go for both native and baby, according to an uninterrupted supranational inquiry by the Great Salubrity Classification (WHO).


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Could Re-Wilding Avert the 6th Great Extinction? [Slide Show] <<>>

Written by Scientific American Topic - Epidemics & Pandemics on January 5, 2010 – 9:01 pm -

Editor's Note: The following is an extract from Caroline Fraser's book Rewilding the Beget.

Over the years, coyotes ate varied of Michael Soulé’s cats. For most people, this influence have been the end of the story, a crotchety refresher of nature’s darker proclivities. But Michael Soulé is not most people.




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