Study dates arrival of humans in Asia
The first anatomically modern humans almost certainly arrived in southern Asia within the last 70,000 years, having dispersed as small groups of pioneer settlers along coastal regions from Africa, say...
View Article1 in 6 women at fracture clinics have been abused, study shows
One in six women who come into fracture clinics have been abused by their partners in the last year, and at least one in 50 are there as a direct result of a domestic abuse incident, according to a...
View ArticleNunavut study finds high rate of suicide attempts
Many people in Nunavut have taken their own lives, but even more have attempted suicide, according to the Nunavut Suicide Follow-Back Study.
View Article1 in 6 women at fracture clinics have been abused, study shows
One in six women who come into fracture clinics have been abused by their partners in the last year, and at least one in 50 are there as a direct result of a domestic abuse incident, according to a...
View ArticleBlame men for menopause, McMaster University study suggests
Researchers at McMaster University believe that over tens of thousands of years, a lack of reproduction among older women has given rise to menopause as an unintended result of evolutionary natural...
View ArticleBlame men for menopause, McMaster University study suggests
Researchers at McMaster University believe that over tens of thousands of years, a lack of reproduction among older women has given rise to menopause as an unintended result of evolutionary natural...
View ArticleParents in dark about teens tanning, study suggests
New research into the use of indoor tanning salons by Alberta teenagers suggests their parents are clueless about it.
View ArticleParents in dark about teens tanning, study suggests
New research into the use of indoor tanning salons by Alberta teenagers suggests their parents are clueless about it.
View ArticleParents in dark about teens tanning, study suggests
New research into the use of indoor tanning salons by Alberta teenagers suggests their parents are clueless about it.
View ArticleMental illness afflicts most of Calgary’s homeless, study finds
A study has found there is an “overwhelmingly high” rate of undiagnosed and untreated psychiatric illness among Calgary’s homeless population.
View ArticleWhite blood cells help spread cancer, mouse study shows
White blood cells, key defenders in the body’s immune system, can activate cancer cells and help them spread, a new study by Montreal and Calgary researchers suggests.
View ArticleRural and urban babies fare equally at birth, study suggests
Babies born to rural and urban mothers tend to fare equally well despite differences in birthing experiences such as travel times to hospital, a new Canadian report suggests.
View ArticleHealth costs to jump $1B by 2020, study predicts
New Brunswick’s annual health care costs are going to jump a billion dollars by the year 2020, according to a new study.
View ArticleChampix study wasn’t suppressed, health minister says
B.C.’s health minister says the NDP’s allegations that government suppressed an safety evaluationy of the smoking-cessation drug Champix ignores the fact that another evaluation of the drug has been...
View Article4 Atlantic universities get $2.5M to study mental services
Four universities in Atlantic Canada are getting $ 2.5 million from the federal government to study mental health services for youth, but a New Brunswick advocate is questioning how the money will be...
View ArticleDalhousie, P.E.I. team up on HPV vaccine study
Dalhousie University and the P.E.I. Department of Health are working together on a new study of the effectiveness of the human papillomavirus vaccine.
View ArticleDalhousie, P.E.I. team up on HPV vaccine study
Dalhousie University and the P.E.I. Department of Health are working together on a new study of the effectiveness of the human papillomavirus vaccine.
View ArticleDalhousie, P.E.I. team up on HPV vaccine study
Dalhousie University and the P.E.I. Department of Health are working together on a new study of the effectiveness of the human papillomavirus vaccine.
View ArticleB.C. study to consider liquor at parks, beach
The B.C. Liberals are considering allowing people to bring alcoholic beverages to beaches and parks, according to attorney general Suzanne Anton.
View Article4 Atlantic universities get $2.5M to study mental services
Four universities in Atlantic Canada are getting $ 2.5 million from the federal government to study mental health services for youth, but a New Brunswick advocate is questioning how the money will be...
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