Nurses harness AI to help quantify their instincts about patient care

Hospital nurses are often so busy that they have trouble finding time for a bathroom break. Over an eight- to 12-hour shift, they're keeping tabs on multiple patients: checking their vital signs, administering medication, and chatting with family members who've come to visit. Occasionally, a patient seems off, looking tired or pale or drowsier than normal. But if objective measures such as blood pressure and heart rate are normal, it's hard for a nurse to justify pulling the physician out of rounds to check on the patient. Plus, there's not much time to interrogate a gut feeling before moving on to the next room.

Study urges alcohol drinkers to be aware of emotional state

While, historically, men in the United States have tended to drink more than women, that trend has reversed over the last decade, prompting a University of Rhode Island behavioral science psychology student to study the implications of the shift, and examine how emotion and craving are impacting alcohol use among women.

Family data reveal two genetic paths to childhood depression and anxiety

Many common mental health disorders, including depression and anxiety, are associated with a tendency to internalize problems or, in other words, to direct feelings inwards instead of expressing them and sharing them with others. Past studies suggest that this tendency to withdraw from others and suppress emotions often emerges early, during childhood and adolescence.

Screens can be part of a child’s healthy bedtime routine, study shows

Most parents are aware of the current advice to switch off all screens at least an hour before bed. However, a recent study reveals this may not be necessary for every child. The study, from Deakin's Institute for Physical Activity and Nutrition in partnership with The University of Queensland, revealed the interaction between screens and sleep may be more complex than first thought, with the impact of screens on children potentially being less pronounced.

Liquid biopsy predicts response to breast cancer immunotherapy

Immunotherapy has become a standard of care in treating high-risk, early-stage breast cancers, yet it has had limited success in shrinking tumors. New biomarkers that can improve outcomes for patients are urgently needed. Now, a study led by researchers at the Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center has found that repeated blood sampling—essentially, a liquid biopsy—can assess and predict the evolving antitumor immune response to therapy.

Blocking a cellular inflammation process could result in effective therapy for pancreatic cancer

Scientists at The Wistar Institute and clinical researchers from ChristianaCare's Helen F. Graham Cancer Center & Research Institute have discovered a vulnerability in pancreatic cancer that could be targeted as a potential therapy. In a new study, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, they show how defective mitochondria within cells spark a process that triggers inflammation. They also show how cancer cells become so dependent on this inflammation to grow that without it, they die.