Ujjain (Madhya Pradesh) [India], October 9: "Neev-Nirupan"- The Integrating Spirituality and Innovation symposium, organized by SAVISHKAR Malwa at Ujjain Incubation Centre, in association with Ujjain Smart City Ltd. is set to be a groundbreaking event that explores the convergence of spiritu
After giving birth, up to one-third of mothers fail to form strong attachments with their children, leaving both mother and child in severe emotional distress1. Researchers have now discovered that they may teach expectant moms who are at risk for postpartum depression to notice and control
New Delhi [India], October 9: Dr. Santosh G. Honavar, the Honorary Secretary of the All India Ophthalmological Society (AIOS), Director of Ophthalmic Plastic Surgery and Ocular Oncology at the Centre for Sight Eye Hospital, Hyderabad, former Associate Director of LV Prasad Eye Institute, Hyd
Israel saw unprecedented bloodshed beginning in the morning of a Jewish holiday, as a barrage of rockets slammed into southern and central Israel on Saturday morning after Hamas launched an attack, the Times of Israel reported.
With an overall survival rate of more than 85% five years after diagnosis, the number of children cancer survivors in the United States is rising. However, survivors may still be more susceptible to a number of illnesses, such as second cancers.
By genetically analysing almost a thousand embryos, researchers have provided the most in-depth understanding of what occurs to embryos after human in vitro fertilisation.
Our five senses provide us with ongoing environmental information. One way our brain makes sense of this deluge of information is by combining information from two or more senses, such as scents with texture smoothness, pitch, colour, and musical dimensions.
Researchers have made significant progress in the treatment of gestational diabetes mellitus after a clinical trial involving pregnant women gave new hope to expectant mothers suffering from the condition.
Following acute respiratory infections that test negative for COVID-19, people may endure long-term symptoms, also known as 'long colds,' according to a recent study.
A new study from Queen Mary University of London, published in The Lancet's EClinicalMedicine, discovered that people may endure long-term symptoms -- or 'long colds' -- after acute respiratory infections that tested negative for COVID-19.