Recent comments in /f/science
[deleted] t1_jdork2o wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Research found after six years spent tracking health outcomes among nearly 925,000 Danish seniors, investigators determined that when a man between the ages of 65 and 69 loses his wife he is 70% more likely to die in the year that follows, when compared with his non-widowed peers by Wagamaga
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GetyPety t1_jdorc2r wrote
Reply to Heavy metal concentrations in rice that meet safety standards can still pose a risk to human health by aboynamedbluetoo
Great now we can't even eat rice, is there even a food that doesn't cause cancer?
[deleted] t1_jdor7xu wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Research found after six years spent tracking health outcomes among nearly 925,000 Danish seniors, investigators determined that when a man between the ages of 65 and 69 loses his wife he is 70% more likely to die in the year that follows, when compared with his non-widowed peers by Wagamaga
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Diseased-Prion t1_jdoqcnn wrote
Reply to comment by Danielsuperusa in Any type of hormonal contraceptive may increase risk of breast cancer: according to an analysis of data by researchers at Oxford, progestogen-only hormonal contraceptives may increase breast cancer risk by 20-30%; the use of combined contraceptives may also slightly increase breast cancer risk. by aiaaidan
You can’t “use the pill rarely”, this isn’t ‘Plan B’. It’s birth control pills you take daily, or injections you get monthly or other methods that involve routine upkeep. If you do not do it consistently it does not work.
[deleted] t1_jdopk1f wrote
Reply to Research found after six years spent tracking health outcomes among nearly 925,000 Danish seniors, investigators determined that when a man between the ages of 65 and 69 loses his wife he is 70% more likely to die in the year that follows, when compared with his non-widowed peers by Wagamaga
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[deleted] t1_jdopgnm wrote
Reply to comment by Twisted_Cabbage in Heavy metal concentrations in rice that meet safety standards can still pose a risk to human health by aboynamedbluetoo
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[deleted] t1_jdool1u wrote
Reply to Research found after six years spent tracking health outcomes among nearly 925,000 Danish seniors, investigators determined that when a man between the ages of 65 and 69 loses his wife he is 70% more likely to die in the year that follows, when compared with his non-widowed peers by Wagamaga
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[deleted] t1_jdonnk4 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Research found after six years spent tracking health outcomes among nearly 925,000 Danish seniors, investigators determined that when a man between the ages of 65 and 69 loses his wife he is 70% more likely to die in the year that follows, when compared with his non-widowed peers by Wagamaga
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[deleted] t1_jdon52j wrote
Reply to comment by stu54 in Any type of hormonal contraceptive may increase risk of breast cancer: according to an analysis of data by researchers at Oxford, progestogen-only hormonal contraceptives may increase breast cancer risk by 20-30%; the use of combined contraceptives may also slightly increase breast cancer risk. by aiaaidan
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[deleted] t1_jdon3bc wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Research found after six years spent tracking health outcomes among nearly 925,000 Danish seniors, investigators determined that when a man between the ages of 65 and 69 loses his wife he is 70% more likely to die in the year that follows, when compared with his non-widowed peers by Wagamaga
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Danielsuperusa t1_jdomx1m wrote
Reply to Any type of hormonal contraceptive may increase risk of breast cancer: according to an analysis of data by researchers at Oxford, progestogen-only hormonal contraceptives may increase breast cancer risk by 20-30%; the use of combined contraceptives may also slightly increase breast cancer risk. by aiaaidan
Edit: I misunderstood the type of contraceptive that the study is talking about, my b.
[deleted] t1_jdomlcj wrote
Reply to comment by stu54 in Any type of hormonal contraceptive may increase risk of breast cancer: according to an analysis of data by researchers at Oxford, progestogen-only hormonal contraceptives may increase breast cancer risk by 20-30%; the use of combined contraceptives may also slightly increase breast cancer risk. by aiaaidan
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allstevenz t1_jdomjbn wrote
Reply to Research found after six years spent tracking health outcomes among nearly 925,000 Danish seniors, investigators determined that when a man between the ages of 65 and 69 loses his wife he is 70% more likely to die in the year that follows, when compared with his non-widowed peers by Wagamaga
Sounds a bit like Takotsubo cardiomyopathy (broken-heart syndrome)
stu54 t1_jdom7x8 wrote
Reply to Any type of hormonal contraceptive may increase risk of breast cancer: according to an analysis of data by researchers at Oxford, progestogen-only hormonal contraceptives may increase breast cancer risk by 20-30%; the use of combined contraceptives may also slightly increase breast cancer risk. by aiaaidan
We should ban birth control, right after we ban cigarettes, asbestos, leaded aviation fuel, chlorinated hydrocarbons, liquor, cured meat products, most pesticides, and tanning salons.
[deleted] t1_jdoli52 wrote
Reply to Any type of hormonal contraceptive may increase risk of breast cancer: according to an analysis of data by researchers at Oxford, progestogen-only hormonal contraceptives may increase breast cancer risk by 20-30%; the use of combined contraceptives may also slightly increase breast cancer risk. by aiaaidan
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[deleted] t1_jdoknxt wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Research found after six years spent tracking health outcomes among nearly 925,000 Danish seniors, investigators determined that when a man between the ages of 65 and 69 loses his wife he is 70% more likely to die in the year that follows, when compared with his non-widowed peers by Wagamaga
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[deleted] t1_jdojf4j wrote
Reply to Research found after six years spent tracking health outcomes among nearly 925,000 Danish seniors, investigators determined that when a man between the ages of 65 and 69 loses his wife he is 70% more likely to die in the year that follows, when compared with his non-widowed peers by Wagamaga
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[deleted] t1_jdohtui wrote
Reply to comment by Sir_Vexer in Opposing retrograde and astrocyte-dependent endocannabinoid signaling mechanisms regulate lateral habenula synaptic transmission by dragononawagon
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dragononawagon OP t1_jdohrrf wrote
Reply to comment by SLKNLA in Opposing retrograde and astrocyte-dependent endocannabinoid signaling mechanisms regulate lateral habenula synaptic transmission by dragononawagon
Not quite! Cannabinoids generally suppress neurotransmitter release, but they found some unexpected opposite effects in this brain area, which has been implicated in depression. Happy to discuss specific questions!
CaptainBathrobe t1_jdohar0 wrote
Reply to Assessing (US) COVID pandemic policies and behaviors and their economic and educational trade-offs. by Troutkid
One overall point is that measures taken generally helped reduce infection and mortality, and that if the states that took fewer measures had done more, fewer people would have been infected and fewer would have died, by as much as 30% in some cases.
[deleted] t1_jdoh7fb wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Research found after six years spent tracking health outcomes among nearly 925,000 Danish seniors, investigators determined that when a man between the ages of 65 and 69 loses his wife he is 70% more likely to die in the year that follows, when compared with his non-widowed peers by Wagamaga
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[deleted] t1_jdog8da wrote
Reply to comment by derphurr in Assessing (US) COVID pandemic policies and behaviors and their economic and educational trade-offs. by Troutkid
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[deleted] t1_jdofxt9 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Research found after six years spent tracking health outcomes among nearly 925,000 Danish seniors, investigators determined that when a man between the ages of 65 and 69 loses his wife he is 70% more likely to die in the year that follows, when compared with his non-widowed peers by Wagamaga
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hikehikebaby t1_jdofseh wrote
Reply to comment by ItsJustATux in Any type of hormonal contraceptive may increase risk of breast cancer: according to an analysis of data by researchers at Oxford, progestogen-only hormonal contraceptives may increase breast cancer risk by 20-30%; the use of combined contraceptives may also slightly increase breast cancer risk. by aiaaidan
"causes hormonal issues" is made up nonsense that doesn't refer to any specific problem or reference any evidence. I'm not "tone policing." This is just nonsense.
[deleted] t1_jdorn3v wrote
Reply to Any type of hormonal contraceptive may increase risk of breast cancer: according to an analysis of data by researchers at Oxford, progestogen-only hormonal contraceptives may increase breast cancer risk by 20-30%; the use of combined contraceptives may also slightly increase breast cancer risk. by aiaaidan
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