Natural News

We Tend to ‘Copy’ Our Friends’ Eating Habits

Razi Berry The research, by Aston University’s School of Life and Health Sciences, found that study participants ate an extra fifth of a portion of fruit and vegetables themselves for every portion they thought their social media peers ate. So, if they believed their friends got their ‘five a day’ of fruit and veg, they […]

Natural News

How is Breathing Related to ‘Free Will?’

Razi Berry Do you inadvertently make decisions because you are hungry or cold? In other words, does the brain’s processing of internal bodily signals interfere with your ability to act freely? This line of thinking is at the heart of research that questions our ability to act on thoughts of free will. We already know

Natural News

UMass Developed Design to Produce Low Cost Face Shields for PPE

Razi Berry In just under two weeks, researchers at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, with engineers, nurses and other health care professionals, have developed a design informed by clinical feedback for protective plastic face shields as the nation combats the spread of the coronavirus. It will be made available to manufacturers to mass-produce personal protective

Natural News

Vaccine for COVID-19 Being Tested in Australia

Razi Berry South Australian researchers working with Oracle Cloud technology and vaccine technology, developed by local company Vaxine Pty Ltd, are testing a vaccine candidate against the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus responsible for the COVID-19 pandemic. The team is headed by Nikolai Petrovsky, Flinders University Professor and Research Director at Vaxine. Oracle tapped for technical collaboration, an

Love is Medicine Podcast 097: You Are Energy w/ Amy Stark
Love is Medicine Podcast

097: You Are Energy w/ Amy Stark

Many of you are curious about the ways that energy healing can help you not only create more energy for yourself but heal your body through the process as well. This is why I have brought Amy Stark from Stark Transformation onto the show today, to walk us through the tools necessary to have more energy and revitalize your health through energy medicine.

Natural News

A Model on Effects of School Closures on Potential Health-Care Worker Absenteeism

Razi Berry US policymakers considering physical distancing measures to slow the spread of COVID-19 face a difficult trade-off between closing schools to reduce transmission and new cases, and potential health-care worker absenteeism due to additional childcare needs that could ultimately increase mortality from COVID-19, according to new modelling research published in The Lancet Public Health

Natural News

COVID-19 May Lead to Cardiac Injury

Razi Berry COVID-19 can have fatal consequences for people with underlying cardiovascular disease and cause cardiac injury even in patients without underlying heart conditions, according to a review published today in JAMA Cardiology by experts at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth). COVID-19 can have fatal consequences for people with underlying

Natural News

Microbiome’s Connection to HPV-related Cervical Cancer

Razi Berry Gardnerella bacteria in the cervicovaginal microbiome may serve as a biomarker to identify women infected with human papillomavirus (HPV) who are at risk for progression to precancer, according to a study published March 26 in the open-access journal PLOS Pathogens by Robert Burk and Mykhaylo Usyk of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine,

Natural News

Pufferfish Toxin to Replace Opioids?

Razi Berry In Japan, pufferfish is considered a delicacy, but the tickle to the taste buds comes with a tickle to the nerves. Fugu contains tetrodotoxin, a strong nerve toxin. In low doses, tetrodotoxin is shown in clinical trials to be a replacement for opioids in relieving cancer related pain. In the journal Angewandte Chemie,

Natural News

Breathing is Less Rhythmical in the Brain Than You May Think

Razi Berry Breathing propels everything we do — so its rhythm must be carefully organized by our brain cells, right? Wrong. Every breath we take arises from a disorderly group of neurons — each like a soloist belting out its song before uniting as a chorus to harmonize on a brand-new melody. Or, in this

Scroll to Top