This page shows you the latest news items in this category. This is page number 5.

Total 342 results found since Jan 2013.

Glass eye drops could replace reading glasses - now FDA approved
THE EYES are a complex part of the body, providing the necessary service of allowing people to see. For those who cannot see as well, or would like to improve their eyesight, there are normally three options: spectacles, contact lenses, or laser eye surgery.
Source: Daily Express - Health - July 13, 2022 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

The continuing vitality of bias in research on guns and violence: a second "non-response response" to unfounded critiques - Fridel EE.
ABTRACTFollowing Kleck's critique on my recent article on guns, firearms homicide, and mass shootings, I wrote a detailed and thorough reply refuting his methodological concerns and discussing directions for future research. In response, Kleck published a ...
Source: SafetyLit - June 21, 2022 Category: International Medicine & Public Health Tags: Research Methods, Surveillance and Codes, Models Source Type: news

Everyday modalities of militarization: beyond unidirectional, state-centric, and simplistic accounts of state violence - Basham VM.
Critiques of militarization have deftly highlighted its limitations as a concept, not least because it too easily implies something done to otherwise benign and peaceful societies by militaries. The guest editors of this special issue however are inviting ...
Source: SafetyLit - May 10, 2022 Category: International Medicine & Public Health Tags: Jurisprudence, Laws, Legislation, Policies, Rules Source Type: news

Contrast-Reducing Spectacles Could Slow Myopia Contrast-Reducing Spectacles Could Slow Myopia
Spectacles that reduce retinal contrast could slow the progression of myopia.Medscape Medical News
Source: Medscape Allergy Headlines - May 4, 2022 Category: Allergy & Immunology Tags: Ophthalmology News Source Type: news

Snap Pixy: hands-on with Snapchat's selfie drone
More than five years after it released Spectacles, Snap is back with a second hardware product. And this time it flies. Yes, Snap made a drone. Called Pixy, the small yellow puck takes off... #hardwareproduct
Source: Reuters: Health - April 28, 2022 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

Apr 22 2022 This Week in Cardiology Apr 22 2022 This Week in Cardiology
Critiques of last week ’s comments on VT ablation and a review of EHRA presentations, including new ways to ablate atrial myocardium and pace the ventricle, are discussed by John Mandrola, MD, in this week’s podcast.theheart.org on Medscape
Source: Medscape Cardiology Headlines - April 22, 2022 Category: Cardiology Tags: Cardiology Commentary Source Type: news

Patients Should Know Who's Operating, Surgeons Say
(MedPage Today) -- When Chryssa McAlister, MD, was learning to remove cataracts, she trained under some cranky doctors who didn't hesitate to bark critiques. But a few of her supervisors maintained a purposeful silence, soundlessly mouthing their...
Source: MedPage Today Surgery - April 5, 2022 Category: Surgery Source Type: news

On the provision of health services and protection of health workers in war: a review of Leonard Rubenstein's Perilous Medicine - Boetig B.
This review critiques Johns Hopkins professor Leonard Rubenstein's Perilous Medicine: The Struggle to Protect Health Care from the Violence of War, and offers the reader a military medical officer's perspective on these important concepts. Rubenstein's tom...
Source: SafetyLit - April 4, 2022 Category: International Medicine & Public Health Tags: Commentary Source Type: news

The Fight to Save the Embattled Monarch Butterfly
In the depths of the Californian winter, an ember of hope has flickered for the monarch butterfly, the charismatic and beloved visitor that has seemingly been on a graceful descent into oblivion. The annual mass migration of the orange and black butterflies to the coast of California, as well as a separate odyssey the creatures take each year to the mountains of central Mexico, is among the grandest of spectacles in the natural world. Images of butterflies adorn t-shirts, pottery, and confectionery sold at tourist hotspots that have sprouted up in places where the butterflies gather in such numbers that they cause the boug...
Source: TIME: Science - March 21, 2022 Category: Science Authors: Oliver Milman Tags: Uncategorized Source Type: news

Michigan-Wisconsin, Duke-UNC and other men's basketball rematches we want to see on Champ Week
Rivalries, vengeance and spectacles -- these are the regular-season encores we want to see during the 2022 conference tournaments. #conferencetournaments #encores #vengeance #dukeunc #champweekrivalries #mensbasketballrematches #spectacles
Source: Reuters: Health - March 8, 2022 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

Specialized Spectacles Slow Myopia During Lockdown Specialized Spectacles Slow Myopia During Lockdown
Spectacles designed to slow the progression of myopia appear to work even during a COVID-19 lockdown.Medscape Medical News
Source: Medscape Medical News Headlines - January 18, 2022 Category: Consumer Health News Tags: Ophthalmology News Source Type: news

Ghana: 520 Medical Lenses Distributed to Persons With Sight Problems in Dormaa West
[Ghanaian Times] Five hundred and twenty medical lenses and spectacles were given free-of- charge to persons who had sight problems at a screening which took place between December 23-24, 2021 in the Dormaa West Constituency.
Source: AllAfrica News: Health and Medicine - January 14, 2022 Category: African Health Source Type: news

Spielberg ’s ‘West Side Story’ Opens to Tepid Box Office Receipts
Musicals often take time to build an audience, but can this remake, with little star power, compete with franchises and spectacles? #spielberg #remake #spectacles #westsidestory #musicals
Source: Reuters: Health - December 12, 2021 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

Snap AR Spectacles hands-on: an ambitious, impractical start
The maker of Snapchat proves that mainstream AR glasses are still years away from reality. #snapchat
Source: Reuters: Health - December 7, 2021 Category: Consumer Health News Source Type: news

Osama bin Laden: humble megalomaniac - Langman P.
This article first examines Osama bin Laden in the context of Islam, al-Qaeda, and other extremist ideologies. The analysis critiques his use of collective guilt to justify killing innocent people and his misuse of Islam as a rationale for terrorism, highl...
Source: SafetyLit - December 6, 2021 Category: International Medicine & Public Health Tags: Jurisprudence, Laws, Legislation, Policies, Rules Source Type: news