Health & Medicine
-

Smog Levels Drop on a Major Copenhagen Street After Traffic Ban
A large amount of the heavy automobile pollution from Copenhagen's Bispeengbuen thoroughfare goes straight into people's homes, according to a study by researchers at the University of Copenhagen. A sensor developed by one of the researchers can help fill in the blanks of our understanding about local air pollution.
Latest Research Articles
-

Europe Air Pollution: Toxic Air Killed Over 500,000, European Environment Agency Says
-

Looking Back at Seema Verma’s Value-Based Approach: A Model for the Future of HealthCare
-

Pneumonia Cases Spike In China As Winter Sets In, WHO Asks For Records
-

Mysterious Dog Illness in New Hampshire: Researchers Find Clues to the Cause and Treatment
-

Lead Water Contamination Prompts President Biden to Declare Emergency in US Virgin Islands Over Environmental, Public Health Threat
-

Chlorine Disinfectants Not More Effective In Destroying Hospital Superbug, Study
-

Hot Weather: How Much Hot Temperature Can Humans Tolerate?
-

Heat Stress Threatens Farm Workers and Crop Production in Major Regions
-

How Outdoor Time Improves Your Mental Health
Nuclear War Can Wipe Out 300 Million in the US Due to Radioactive Fallout, New Models Reveal
-

Understanding and Overcoming Erectile Dysfunction: Strategies for Restoring Sexual Health and Intimacy
-

Zombie Deer Disease: Chronic Wasting Disease Identified for the First Time in Yellowstone National Park [NPS]






