Culture

Comprehensive nutrition services vital to children's health

INDIANAPOLIS, IN, November 1, 2010 – School meal programs play a significant role in keeping children healthy and are "the anchor" of comprehensive school nutrition services that improve children's nutritional status, health and academic performance, according to an updated joint position paper from the Society for Nutrition Education (SNE), American Dietetic Association (ADA) and the School Nutrition Association (SNA).

Eliminating or reducing cost-sharing for high-value prescription drugs improves medication use

New York, NY, November 2, 2010—An initiative by the U. S. technology company Pitney Bowes to make medications of proven value less expensive for their employees succeeded in stabilizing employees' adherence to their treatment regimens, according to a Commonwealth Fund-supported study published in this month's Health Affairs.

Non-medical prescription drug use more common among rural teens than city dwellers

Rural teens appear more likely than their urban peers to use prescription drugs for non-medical purposes, according to a report posted online today that will appear in the March 2011 print issue of Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.

Home visit program for at-risk first-time mothers associated with delaying their next pregnancy

After a three-year implementation period, home visits by nurses to high-risk mothers appear to increase their likelihood of waiting at least two years to have a second child, according to a report posted online today that will appear in the March 2011 print issue of Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.

Having oral sex increases likelihood of intercourse among teens

Half of teens who have oral sex during the ninth grade will have intercourse by the end of the 11th grade, and most sexually active teenagers will begin engaging in oral sex and sexual intercourse within the same six-month period, according to findings from a new survey conducted by researchers at UCSF and UC Merced.

New American Chemical Society podcast: Stop wasting food and save energy

WASHINGTON, Nov. 1, 2010 — Generations of Moms and Grandmas have preached the virtues of not wasting food.

At great expense, railroad bypassed first black-founded town in the US

At great expense, railroad bypassed first black-founded town in the US

Voting-machine-allocation method could reduce voters' wait time by 36 percent

Voting-machine-allocation method could reduce voters' wait time by 36 percent

With a lifelong interest in politics, University of Cincinnati researcher Muer Yang spent the last two years developing a quantitative method for allocating voting machines that could significantly reduce the average wait time of voters.

Pivoting hooks of graphene's chemical cousin could revolutionize work of electron microscopes

Pivoting hooks of graphene's chemical cousin could revolutionize work of electron microscopes

Morrison Natural History Museum discovers baby sauropod tracks

Morrison Natural History Museum discovers baby sauropod tracks

Morrison, CO, USA–Staff at the Morrison Natural History Museum have again discovered infant dinosaur footprints in the foothills west of Denver, Colorado, near the town of Morrison. Dating from the Late Jurassic, some 148 million years ago, these tracks were made before the Rocky Mountains rose, when Morrison was a broad savanna full of dinosaurs.

Pregnant women who eat peanuts may put infants at increased risk for peanut allergy

Researchers have found that allergic infants may be at increased risk of peanut allergy if their mothers ingested peanuts during pregnancy. The data are reported in the November 1 issue of the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology.

They're all crooks? Charges of political corruption have little impact on voter opinion

Republican claims of political corruption in North Carolina's Democratic Party have made little impact on public opinion among potential voters in the state, according to new polling data analyzed by North Carolina State University researchers. The findings show that highlighting actual corruption is not necessarily an effective electoral strategy.

Origin of pressure flaking for tool-sharpening pushed back more than 50,000 years

Origin of pressure flaking for tool-sharpening pushed back more than 50,000 years

A highly skillful and delicate method of sharpening and retouching stone artifacts by prehistoric people appears to have been developed at least 75,000 years ago, more than 50,000 years earlier than previously thought, according to a new study led by the University of Colorado at Boulder.

Not setting the clocks back this weekend would improve health

Not setting the clocks back this weekend would increase the number of 'accessible' daylight hours and thus encourage more outdoor activity throughout the year, argues Mayer Hillman, Senior Fellow Emeritus at the Policy Studies Institute.

Low birth weight may lead to poor growth rate in children with kidney disease

Low birth weight may lead to poor growth rate in children with kidney disease

The lower the birth weight, the greater the chance of poor growth rate in children with chronic kidney disease (CKD), according to a new study appearing in an upcoming issue of the Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology (CJASN).