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science

imagine if a colonoscopy had nothing to do with your butt

purdue university has developed an alternative to invasive tests with a bacteria-finding capsule that can be swallowed.
erica ngao
aug 18, 2020

if you're a man, you don't think about quitting residency: study

just three per cent of men worry about about training opportunities, compared to almost 50 per cent of women.
diana duong
aug 17, 2020

cancer drugs offer new hope for malaria and covid-19

the study looks at inactivating enzymes that infections rely on to survive.
emma jones
aug 17, 2020

montreal's wastewater could track the next covid-19 wave

scientists are about to test local sewage samples they say could potentially detect community spread even before people are symptomatic.
healthing.ca
aug 12, 2020

the right chemistry: seems like a good time to brush up on hair dyes

when the pandemic closed salons, some critics of the cosmetics industry welcomed a decline in exposure to the chemical ppd.
joe schwarcz, special to the montreal gazette
aug 12, 2020

cord blood offers hope for rare diseases and ethnic minorities

new way of transplanting stem cells reduces chemotherapy while increasing safety and donor matches.
emma jones
aug 06, 2020

award-winning canadian tackles bowel disease and diversity

diversity is critical for our gut, but also in science, says dr. carolina tropini.
diana duong
jul 30, 2020

neurostimulation may herald a new treatment for depression

medical treatments involving neurostimulation, or cerebral electromagnetic stimulation, are resurfacing and appear to be more effective than drugs for treating depression.
the conversation
jul 23, 2020
powered by
canadian coalition for seniors’ mental health (ccsmh)
powered by
diabetes canada
powered by
obesity canada

imagine if a colonoscopy had nothing to do with your butt

purdue university has developed an alternative to invasive tests with a bacteria-finding capsule that can be swallowed.
erica ngao
aug 18, 2020

if you're a man, you don't think about quitting residency: study

just three per cent of men worry about about training opportunities, compared to almost 50 per cent of women.
diana duong
aug 17, 2020

cancer drugs offer new hope for malaria and covid-19

the study looks at inactivating enzymes that infections rely on to survive.
emma jones
aug 17, 2020

montreal's wastewater could track the next covid-19 wave

scientists are about to test local sewage samples they say could potentially detect community spread even before people are symptomatic.
healthing.ca
aug 12, 2020
powered by
canadian coalition for seniors’ mental health (ccsmh)

the right chemistry: seems like a good time to brush up on hair dyes

when the pandemic closed salons, some critics of the cosmetics industry welcomed a decline in exposure to the chemical ppd.
joe schwarcz, special to the montreal gazette
aug 12, 2020

cord blood offers hope for rare diseases and ethnic minorities

new way of transplanting stem cells reduces chemotherapy while increasing safety and donor matches.
emma jones
aug 06, 2020

award-winning canadian tackles bowel disease and diversity

diversity is critical for our gut, but also in science, says dr. carolina tropini.
diana duong
jul 30, 2020

neurostimulation may herald a new treatment for depression

medical treatments involving neurostimulation, or cerebral electromagnetic stimulation, are resurfacing and appear to be more effective than drugs for treating depression.
the conversation
jul 23, 2020
powered by
diabetes canada
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