Taking the “Ewww”… out of snail cream
June 17, 2014 – 11:07 pm | One Comment

Great news for all those women (and men) who have wanted to try the beautifying effects of snail slime but could never get past the “ick” factor. 20yrsyounger.com promises to get rid of the Ewww… while still letting women reap the anti-aging and rejuvenating benefits of snail slime cream. The process itself is called lyophilisation […]

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Articles tagged with: harvard school of public health (hsph)

Slowing neurodegeneration in Huntington’s
December 18, 2011 – 8:28 pm | No Comments
Slowing neurodegeneration in Huntington’s

Slowing neurodegeneration in Huntington’s Increase in regulatory enzyme may offer protection University of Tennessee “Diseases such as Huntington’s, Parkinson’s, and Alzheimer’s disease have different causative factors, but they share common themes — such as aggregation of misfolded proteins — and a unifying end point, the degenerative loss of neurons,” says Harvard Medical School Professor of […]

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Scientists Uncover Evidence on How Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis Cells Form
December 15, 2011 – 9:17 pm | No Comments
Scientists Uncover Evidence on How Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis Cells Form

Scientists Uncover Evidence on How Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis Cells Form Findings Could Lead to More Effective Treatment for Global Disease Boston, MA — A new study led by Harvard School of Public (HSPH) researchers provides a novel explanation as to why some tuberculosis cells are inherently more difficult to treat with antibiotics. The discovery, which showed that the […]

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Relief for the weary
December 15, 2011 – 8:29 pm | No Comments
Relief for the weary

Relief for the weary Shore Fellowships allow young researchers to focus on key needs For Sunil Chauhan, an eye researcher at Harvard-affiliated Schepens Eye Research Institute and an assistant professor at Harvard Medical School, the Shore Fellowship means being able to hire an additional postdoctoral fellow to help in the lab. “This is a fantastic […]

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Overall Hospital Admission Rates in U.S. Linked with High Rates of Readmission
December 14, 2011 – 8:49 pm | No Comments
Overall Hospital Admission Rates in U.S. Linked with High Rates of Readmission

Overall Hospital Admission Rates in U.S. Linked with High Rates of Readmission Boston, MA — High hospital readmission rates in different regions of the U.S. may have more to do with the overall high use of hospital services in those regions than with the severity of patients’ particular conditions or problems in the quality of […]

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Harvard professors partner in unique approach
December 12, 2011 – 9:00 pm | No Comments
Harvard professors partner in unique approach

Harvard professors partner in unique approach U.S.-based and Rwandan physicians work to treat cancer in children Sara Stulac (right), consults with colleagues at the Rwinkwavu Hospital in Eastern Rwanda. Stulac, who is a Harvard Medical School instructor in medicine and the director of pediatrics for Partners In Health, has designed a program that brings together […]

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Rotating Night Shift Work Linked to Increased Risk of Type 2 Diabetes in Women
December 6, 2011 – 8:25 pm | No Comments
Rotating Night Shift Work Linked to Increased Risk of Type 2 Diabetes in Women

Rotating Night Shift Work Linked to Increased Risk of Type 2 Diabetes in Women Boston, MA — Women who work a rotating (irregular) schedule that includes three or more night shifts per month, in addition to day and evening working hours in that month, may have an increased risk of developing type 2 diabetes when […]

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