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The sorry story of cell phone radiation exposure — how did we get here? Part II
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DVIDS - News - Army medical logisticians modernize units in Japan to support multiple missions
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When Col. Matt Hoefer began his service as Army Materiel Commandâs command surgeon, he also took on the role as medical translator, a role that he would serve through a significant structure change and a global pandemic.
Hoefer became the commandâs surgeon in June 2019, after serving as the command surgeon of the 1st Theater Sustainment Command, which he said has different missions and structures. AMC is much larger, with roughly 175,000 service members, civilians and contractors, some working in depots and arsenals within the Organic Industrial Base.
âA lot of what we do here is assess and monitor the health of the OIB,â Hoefer said. âWe make sure everyone is receiving the care they need.â
Breast Cancer Patients Who Drink Non-Diet Soda Have Higher Death Risk
Breast cancer patients who drink sugar-sweetened soda regularly are at increased risk for death from any cause and from breast cancer in particular, a new study suggests.
By David Hill-Buffalo
Compared to women who never or rarely drank non-diet soda, those who reported drinking non-diet soda five or more times per week had a 62% higher likelihood of dying from any cause, and were 85% more likely to die from breast cancer specifically.
Research on soda and breast cancer is fairly new, says study first author Nadia Koyratty, a PhD candidate in the epidemiology and environmental health department in the School of Public Health and Health Professions at the University at Buffalo.
Army Begins Clinical Trials on Vaccine That May Be Effective Against All Coronaviruses
Officer receives the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine at the Conroy Bowl on Schofield Barracks, Hawaii on Jan. 14, 2021. (U.S. Army/1st Lt. Angelo Mejia)
6 Apr 2021
Fifteen months after launching an effort to develop a vaccine against COVID-19, the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research is preparing for a clinical trial, seeking volunteers for a small safety study.
The Army s vaccine candidate uses a new technology involving a Spike Ferritin Nanoparticle, or SpFN, that researchers hope can be adapted to protect against any coronavirus, including those that cause the common cold or deadly diseases such as COVID-19, Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome, or SARS, and Middle East Respiratory Syndrome, MERS.
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