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World Stories – The Week in Reports The Chinese city of Maotai is famous for its liquor. Maotai is one of the most exclusive spirits in the world and is a popular bribe in business circles +++ The birth rate in Italy is falling all the time. Now, the pandemic is putting people off having babies Watch video 12:36 ....
A study published today in JAMA Internal Medicine shows that wearing two face coverings can nearly double the effectiveness of filtering out SARS-CoV-2-sized particles, preventing them from reaching the wearer's nose and mouth and causing COVID-19. ....
NUNN ON THE RUN Fri. April 16, 2021 12:00 AM by Jerry Nunn Vincent Willem van Gogh surely would have appreciated the benefits of yoga. The meditation and breathing exercises could have possibly helped the tortured artist that suffered from mental illness and depression. Fans of the Dutch post-impressionist painter in Chicago can now immerse themselves in his work while working on themselves. The already popular Immersive Van Gogh is now partnering with Lifeway Foods and CorePower Yoga to bring in yoga followers of all ages to explore fitness and art all at the same time. Animations are projected on the ceiling, walls and floors of the Lighthouse ArtSpace Chicago, at 108 W. Germania Place, in an exhibit that has just been extended until November 28, 2021 after selling out the current block of tickets. In our current world, people are looking for safe ways to leave the house and enjoy an excursion. Immersive ....
In a new study, appearing on the pre-print server medRxiv , researchers at the University of Trieste and Istituto Auxologico Italiano IRCCS in Italy report that more than half of patients with previous mild-to-moderate symptomatic COVID-19 complained of the persistence of at least one symptom 12-months after the onset of the illness. ....
Biology of single-celled organisms reveals potential treatment target for COPD In a series of experiments that began with amoebas single-celled organisms that extend podlike appendages to move around Johns Hopkins Medicine scientists say they have identified a genetic pathway that could be activated to help sweep out mucus from the lungs of people with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease a widespread lung ailment. Physician-scientists and fundamental biologists worked together to understand a problem at the root of a major human illness, and the problem, as often happens, relates to the core biology of cells. Doug Robinson, Ph.D., professor of cell biology, pharmacology and molecular sciences, medicine (pulmonary division), oncology, and chemical and biomedical engineering at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine ....