Latest Breaking News On - Eliza hall - Page 6 : comparemela.com
Malaria is not only a blood disease, it also hides in the spleen, scientists have discovered - 27-May-2021
nzcity.co.nz - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from nzcity.co.nz Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Published:
5:00 PM May 14, 2021
Care co-ordinators Jason Simmons and Monique Aston are part of a new mental health team serving Ottery, Sidmouth and Honiton
- Credit: HOSMPCN
A new team of mental health experts has been created to serve communities in Ottery, Sidmouth and Honiton.
It aims “to promote positive mental health and emotional wellbeing in order to support patients to move from surviving to thriving”.
The service is offering a new approach for supporting mental health and wellbeing. It uses a holistic approach to look at all aspects of an individual’s life and how these aspects may be impacting that individual. This approach uses goal setting, coaching and care co-ordination to help individuals feel in control of their own health and wellbeing. The service will explore individuals’ mental health, general health, wellbeing, lifestyle factors and any barriers that may be preventing them from moving forward in their health and wellbeing journey.
Study reveals new genes that program stem cells to make dendritic cells
Using a new single-cell technique, WEHI researchers have uncovered a way to understand the programming behind how stem cells make particular cell types.
The research uncovered 30 new genes that program stem cells to make the dendritic cells that kick-start the immune response.
By uncovering this process, the researchers hope they will be able to find new immunotherapy treatments for cancer, and plan to expand this technique in other areas such as discovering new drug targets in tumour initiation.
At a glance
WEHI researchers have developed a new single cell method to understand the programming behind what causes stem cells to make particular cell types.
Allergic reactions to COVID-19 vaccines can happen but they re rare, data shows
Posted
SatSaturday 16
updated
SatSaturday 16
There s no evidence that people with mild allergies need to avoid COVID-19 vaccines.
(
Share
Print text only
Cancel
Severe allergic reactions to COVID-19 vaccines are exceedingly rare according to health authorities in the US, where more than 11 million people have now received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine.
At that point, 1.9 million people had been vaccinated, putting the rate of severe allergic reactions at 11.1 cases per 1 million doses of vaccine used.
Since the report was finalised, at least eight more cases of vaccine-related anaphylaxis have been confirmed in the US, as millions more Americans receive their first COVID-19 jab.
Why vaccines are injected in your upper arm muscle, and not in your veins
Posted
ThuThursday 7
updated
ThuThursday 7
JanJanuary 2021 at 10:01pm
Millions of deltoids belonging to high-risk people are being injected with a COVID vaccine. But why that part of the body?
(
Share
Print text only
Cancel
Like most adult jabs, this slew of vaccines including those developed by Oxford University and AstraZeneca and Pfizer and BioNTech are injected into the deltoid: the thick, fleshy muscle of your upper arm.
Despite using a raft of different technologies, COVID-19 vaccines all aim to do the same thing: introduce our immune system to antigens specific parts of a disease-causing organism which the body uses to identify the invader to shore up defences against the disease down the track.
vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.