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A Week of Science

(23/12/2005 to 29/12/2005)

IOL Health & Science Staff

Dec. 29, 2005

A Year on From The Asian Tsunami, Satellites Are Aiding Regional Rebuilding

December 23, 2005

The deadly Indian Ocean tsunami that swept across coastlines on 26 December 2004 took the lives of more than 200,000 people. The sheer scale of the catastrophe meant that Earth Observation was vital both for damage assessment and for co-coordinating emergency activities. Through the year that followed, satellite-based maps from ESA's Respond consortium continued to support rebuilding efforts.

Source: European space Agency

Cloning Pioneer Did Fake Results, Probe Finds

December 23, 2005

Most of the key results in a landmark stem cell paper by South Korea’s cloning pioneer Woo Suk Hwang were faked, an investigation panel convened by Seoul National University revealed on Friday. The study had offered great hope to patients as it meant that embryonic stem cell lines – which could be used to repair or replace damaged cells – might be tailored to specific individuals.

Source: New Scientist.com

How Technology Is Aiding Medicine

December 24, 2005

Computers and mobiles phones are playing an increasingly valuable role in helping doctors and patients monitor conditions such as diabetes on a daily basis, new technology can also be harnessed to help elderly people live independently for longer.

Source: BBC News

Grapefruit 'May Cut Gum Disease'

December 25, 2005

Eating grapefruit could help fight gum disease, a study suggests, Researchers found people with gum disease who ate two grapefruits a day for a fortnight showed significantly less bleeding from the gums. They believe this is due to an increase in blood levels of vitamin C, known to promote wound healing.

Source: BBC News

Death Sentences Against Nurses Are Lifted

December 26, 2005

Bulgaria welcomed the decision by Libya's Supreme Court to scrap death sentences against five Bulgarian nurses and order a retrial of the cases, the nurses and a Palestinian doctor were sentenced to death by firing squad in May 2004 after a court found them guilty of knowingly injecting 426 children with HIV.

Source: Independent.co.uk

China Dumps Chemicals to Try to Clean Toxic River

December 26, 2005

China is dumping chemicals into a southern river to try to neutralize a toxic spill and contain the second environmental disaster to hit the country in as many months, The cadmium-containing slick, which has cut tap water for tens of thousands of people downstream for five days, was flushed into the North River running across Guangdong province north to south from a Shaoguan zinc smelter last week.

Source: Environmental News Network

Europeans Missing Their Kyoto Targets

December 27, 2005

Britain and Sweden are the only European countries honoring their Kyoto commitments to cut greenhouse gasses, Although the US is portrayed as the ecological villain for refusing to sign up to the agreement, 10 out of the 15 European Union signatories - including Ireland, Italy and Spain - will miss their targets without urgent action.

Source: Independent.co.uk

 First Galileo Satellite on Orbit to Demonstrate Key Technologies

December 28, 2005

ESA PR 61-2005. The first Galileo demonstrator is in orbit, marking the very first step to full operability of Europe’s new global navigation satellite system, under a partnership between ESA and the European Commission (EC).

Source: European space Agency

How Fatty Diet May Cause Diabetes

December 29, 2005

Researchers say they have discovered how a high-fat Western-style diet may increase the risk of type 2 diabetes.

Source: BBC News

 

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