Meanwhile, regions such as Latin America and the Middle East and Africa are gradually expanding digital insurance distribution as financial inclusion initiatives and new collaborations help extend ...
LOS ANGELES - For older adults, keeping a daily routine may prevent insomnia and improve sleep quality, according to a new study. The researchers, from the University of Haifa in Israel, said it's ...
Until recently, if you wanted your AI agent to check flight prices or look up a database, you had to write a custom tool. When Anthropic released the Model Context Protocol (MCP), it created a ...
Avery Mason saved the Beverly co-op girls hockey team’s season — in more ways than one. Back in late October, just a few weeks before their first practice, the Panthers found out they’d have a new ...
Andrew Joseph covers health, medicine, and the biopharma industry in Europe. You can reach Andrew on Signal at drewqjoseph.71. Plans for a controversial U.S.-funded hepatitis B vaccine study in Guinea ...
O. Rose Broderick reports on the health policies and technologies that govern people with disabilities’ lives. Before coming to STAT, she worked at WNYC’s Radiolab and Scientific American, and her ...
Thanks for all the congratulations on reaching Vol. 300. I begin the next 300 with your support and ask that you share these studies with those who need to know The Word. Happy New Year! I have been ...
Blurting out some curse words could give you a quick performance boost. It might provide a surge in physical strength and endurance by reducing your inhibitions, according to a study published ...
CLEVELAND, Ohio — Scientists know that people who suffer brain injuries are more likely to develop Alzheimer’s disease later in life because of prolonged brain inflammation that damages brain cells.
Dominant baboons rule the troop by day, but at night, they may pay a hidden cost. A new study led by Swansea University has found that higher-ranking baboons get less and more fragmented rest at night ...
It shouldn’t be much of a surprise Spencer Jones is a fast learner. The Nuggets’ two-way forward spent five seasons at Stanford after all. Now, he’s using his brain to make the most of an extended ...