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NYT Health
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NYT Health
@NYTHealth
Health and medical news from The NYT's Health & Science desk. Sign up for the Science Times email, in your inbox every Tuesday: nyti.ms/2EKZcNt
New York, NY
nytimes.com/health
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    NYT Health
    @NYTHealth
    Jul 16, 2020
    Replying to @NYTHealth @apoorva_nyc and 2 others
    Are you interested in the race to develop a coronavirus vaccine? An easy way to keep up with it is by bookmarking our vaccine tracker: nytimes.com/interactive/20…
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    NYT Health
    @NYTHealth
    Apr 8, 2021
    Meet the woman who labored for years on the technology underpinning Pfizer and Moderna's mRNA coronavirus vaccines. Many scientists thought her ideas were unworkable. But a few saw real possibilities. 
    Katalin Kariko at her home in Jenkintown, Pa., in February. Dr. Kariko’s early research into mRNA eventually led to development of the Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines.
    Long Overlooked, Kati Kariko Helped Shield the World From the Coronavirus (Published 2021)
    From nytimes.com
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    NYT Health
    @NYTHealth
    Jul 18, 2020
    A molecular biologist, Flossie Wong-Staal helped establish H.I.V. as the cause of AIDS, then cloned it and took it apart to understand how it evades the immune system. She has died at 73.
    Dr. Flossie Wong-Staal was the first scientist to clone H.I.V. and determine the function of its genes. Her work is now being deployed in the fight against the Covid-19.
    Flossie Wong-Staal, Who Unlocked Mystery of H.I.V., Dies at 73 (Published 2020)
    From nytimes.com
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    NYT Health
    @NYTHealth
    Oct 1, 2018
    Two scientists won the Nobel Prize in medicine for their work on cancer immunotherapy. Here's a visual explanation for how immunotherapy works: nyti.ms/2Ne7wEe
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    NYT Health
    @NYTHealth
    Mar 26, 2020
    Breaking News: The U.S. now has more coronavirus cases than any other nation in the world, according to data gathered by @nytimes 
    A line for coronavirus testing outside of Elmhurst Hospital Center in Queens on Wednesday.
    The U.S. Now Leads the World in Confirmed Coronavirus Cases (Published 2020)
    From nytimes.com
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    NYT Health
    @NYTHealth
    Jul 12, 2020
    The W.H.O. agrees the coronavirus is airborne indoors, and people should avoid crowded and confined spaces with poor ventilation.
    A restaurant in São Paulo, Brazil, on July 6. The coronavirus may linger in the air indoors and infect people, the W.H.O. acknowledged.
    The Coronavirus Can Be Airborne Indoors, W.H.O. Says (Published 2020)
    From nytimes.com
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    NYT Health
    @NYTHealth
    May 8, 2021
    Roughly a third of the unvaccinated population said a cash payment would make them more likely to get a shot.
    nytimes.com
    $100 as Incentive to Get a Shot? Experiment Suggests It Can Pay Off. (Published 2021)
    A cash reward works best with Democrats, and relaxing safety guidelines seems to motivate Republicans, a survey study shows.
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    NYT Health
    @NYTHealth
    Jul 10, 2018
    Racing against time, the surgeon injected a billion mitochondria into the baby's damaged heart muscle. Within two days, the baby had a normal heart, strong and beating quickly. “It was amazing,”
    Kate Bowen with her infant, Georgia, in the intensive care unit at Boston Children's Hospital. Doctors tried to revive the baby's heart with an infusion of one billion mitochondria.
    Dying Organs Restored to Life in Novel Experiments (Published 2018)
    From nytimes.com
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    NYT Health
    @NYTHealth
    Jun 30, 2019
    HPV vaccines are so effective that cervical cancer could ultimately be eliminated, a new study finds.
    A woman receives the HPV vaccine in Shanghai. In countries where it has long been available, the vaccine has greatly reduced the incidence of precancerous lesions and genital warts.
    HPV Vaccines Are Reducing Infections, Warts — and Probably Cancer (Published 2019)
    From nytimes.com
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    NYT Health
    @NYTHealth
    Jun 27, 2019
    HPV vaccines are so effective that cervical cancer could ultimately be eliminated, a new study finds.
    A woman receives the HPV vaccine in Shanghai. In countries where it has long been available, the vaccine has greatly reduced the incidence of precancerous lesions and genital warts.
    HPV Vaccines Are Reducing Infections, Warts — and Probably Cancer (Published 2019)
    From nytimes.com
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    NYT Health
    @NYTHealth
    Dec 22, 2022
    Parents’ resistance to Covid shots has splashed onto longstanding school immunizations, with almost a third saying they should have the right to decide for their children, a new survey shows.
    A survey found that 28 percent of U.S. adults now say that parents should have the authority to make school vaccine decisions for their children. In a 2019 poll, that view was held by 16 percent of adults.
    Opposition to School Vaccine Mandates Has Grown Significantly, Study Finds (Published 2022)
    From nytimes.com
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    NYT Health
    @NYTHealth
    Apr 13, 2017
    An hour of running may add seven hours to your life
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    An Hour of Running May Add 7 Hours to Your Life (Published 2017)
    From nytimes.com
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    NYT Health
    @NYTHealth
    Dec 22, 2019
    Want to live longer? Try going to the opera. Researchers in Britain have found that people who reported going to a museum or concert even once a year lived longer than those who didn’t. 
    Leonardo da Vinci’s “The Virgin and Child” at the Louvre in Paris. A British study found that people who engaged with the arts had a lower likelihood of dying during the study period than those who did not.
    Another Benefit to Going to Museums? You May Live Longer (Published 2019)
    From nytimes.com
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    NYT Health
    @NYTHealth
    Feb 26, 2019
    Bill Jenkins was a government epidemiologist who tried to expose the unethical Tuskegee syphilis study in the 1960s and devoted the rest of his career to fighting racism and unfairness in health outcomes. He has died at 73.
    Bill Jenkins in 1997. He denounced the government’s unethical Tuskegee syphilis experiment aimed at black men, and spent his career working against injustice in health care.
    Bill Jenkins, Who Tried to Halt Tuskegee Syphilis Study, Dies at 73 (Published 2019)
    From nytimes.com

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