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COVID-19 kept our parks busy, but not everyone ventured outside


Credit: Violeta Berdejo-Espinola
Public use of parks and reserves increased only slightly during last year s COVID-19 national lockdown despite gyms and sports facilities shutting down, a University of Queensland study found.
UQ School of Biological Sciences PhD candidate Violeta Berdejo-Espinola surveyed 1000 people in Brisbane, measuring their use of urban green space and the benefits people associated with visiting the areas during lockdown.
People all around Brisbane, myself included, noticed a boom in park use in 2020, but while more people ventured into local parks, many folks were left indoors, Ms Berdejo-Espinola said.
Thirty-six per cent of people increased their use of city green spaces, yet at the same time, 26 per cent reduced it - there was a great deal of flux during this time. ....

Violeta Berdejo Espinola , Uq School Of Biological Sciences Ph , United Nations Sustainable Development Goal , University Of Queensland , Biological Sciences Phd , Professor Richard Fuller , Social Behavioral Science , Arts Culture , Sports Recreation , Mental Health , ஒன்றுபட்டது நாடுகள் நிலையான வளர்ச்சி இலக்கு , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் குயின்ஸ்லாந்து , உயிரியல் அறிவியல் ஃப்ட் , சமூக நடத்தை அறிவியல் ,

Pioneering single-dose radiotherapy for breast cancer treatment


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A breast cancer therapy that requires just one shot of radiotherapy is as effective as traditional radiotherapy, and avoids potential damage to nearby organs, according to a paper by UCL experts.
The results, published in the
British Journal of Cancer, mean that eight out of ten patients who receive the treatment, TARGIT-IORT, will not need a long course of post-operative external beam radiotherapy (EBRT). These results strengthen and expand previously published outcomes.
Patients who received the treatment are less likely to go on to experience fatal cardiovascular disease such as heart attacks, lung problems or other cancers. As well as avoiding scattered radiation from EBRT that can damage nearby vital organs, delivering TARGIT-IORT during the lumpectomy procedure seems to lower the likelihood of death if patients do go on to develop cardiovascular disease, protecting in a drug-like manner. This was the case even when EBRT was also given post-operati ....

United States , United Kingdom , University College , New South Wales , Frederik Wenz , Michael Alvarado , David Mcready , Jeffreys Tobias , Richard Hoefer , Wolfgang Eiermann , David Joseph , Lorenzo Vinante , Christobel Saunders , Tammy Corica , Elena Sperk , Samuele Massarut , Mary Falzon , Gloria Petralia , Michael Baum , Wojciech Polkowski , Jane Bolger , Dennis Holmes , Max Bulsara , Fernando Bozza , Douglas Brown , Jens Blohmer ,

Sometimes, even 3-year-olds just want to fit in with the group


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DURHAM, N.C. What makes preschoolers eat their veggies? Raise their hand? Wait their turn? Because I say so is a common refrain for many parents. But when it comes to getting kids to behave, recent research suggests that the voice of adult authority isn t the only thing that matters. Around age three, fitting in with the group starts to count big too.
That s the finding of a new study by Duke University researchers showing that, by their third birthday, children are more likely to go along with what others say or do for the sake of following the crowd, rather than acting out of a desire to kowtow to authority or heed that person s preferences per se. ....

Michael Tomasello , Bari Britvan , Duke University , Children Conform More , Norms Than , Social Behavioral Science , Parenting Child Care Family , மைக்கேல் டோமசெல்லோ , டியூக் பல்கலைக்கழகம் , சமூக நடத்தை அறிவியல் ,