Our sister died because of our mum's cancer conspiracy theories, say brothers
Paloma Shemirani’s brothers say she refused chemotherapy because of their mother’s beliefs.
Horrific story of a young woman dying of cancer complications after refusing cancer care under the guidance of her influencer mother who charges £70/y for an annual membership to her site & £195 for a consultation & personalised 12-week programme. Thanks to @profstevegriffin.bsky.social for sharing
23.06.2025 07:17
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In 2015, researchers Limb, Limb, Limb and Limb found that British doctors have surnames related to their specialties more often than expected by chance. Reproductive medicine had the largest proportion, with 1 in 52 doctors having specialty-relevant surnames including Horn, Hussey, and Woodcock. Second was Urology, with 1 in 59 related names such as Burns, Waterfall, Ball, and Koch.[96] "Dr Pain" appeared most commonly in general surgery.[96]
Specialty Surname
frequency
Surname examples
Cardiology 8 (1 in 213) Hart, Pump, Payne
Dermatology 4 (1 in 243) Boyle or Hickey
General medicine 63 (1 in 101) Mysore, Safe, Warning
General surgery 56 (1 in 91) Gore, Butcher, Boyle, Blunt
Paediatric medicine 46 (1 in 119) Boys, Gal, Child, Kinder
Plastic surgery 7 (1 in 140) Carver, Mole, Price
it's the 10 year anniversary of a very important study
13.06.2025 12:10
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There is a false dichotomy drawn between "the ivory tower" and "the real world," and I'm here to report that in a post-industrial society, your real-world economy absolutely hinges on the university.
University towns are factory towns. Universities drive economic activity, not the other way around.
18.05.2025 09:20
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A screenshot of the termination notice showing "Outstanding Investigator Grants"
A screenshot of the termination notice with "This award is terminated effective the date of this award, due to unsafe antisemitic actions that suggest the institution lacks concern for the safety and wellbeing of Jewish students." highlighted
Yesterday, the NIH R35 “Outstanding Investigator” grant to fund scientists in my lab studying antibiotic resistance was terminated for reasons not related to the content of the science, or any actions taken by me or members of my lab
13.05.2025 23:37
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The Price of Remission
When I was diagnosed with cancer, I set out to understand why a single pill of Revlimid cost the same as a new iPhone. I’ve covered high drug prices as a reporter for years. What I discovered shocked ...
A depressing article about drug pricing for cancer patients, specifically for multiple myeloma. The good news in this case is that generic competition should be coming next year. The bad news is there will be another case jaut like this. www.propublica.org/article/revl...
15.05.2025 01:12
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Figure 4 from "How persistent infection overcomes peripheral tolerance
mechanisms to cause T cell-mediated autoimmune disease" by Arup Chakraborty
1/ A long standing paradox in my mind (from always seeing immune "strength" or reactivity drawn as a spectrum from immunodeficiency to autoimmunity) was resolved this year at #AAI #Immunology2025. WHY do SO many people have both simultaneously? Each infection brings risk of developing autoimmunity!!
11.05.2025 17:03
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Is the UK paying the price for world’s most expensive visas? | The Observer
Competing political and economic goals on immigration are resulting in the loss of valuable skills and talent in the UK
“The visa fees are so exceedingly high that it makes coming here very difficult for some people. We are fishing for the best scientists in the world. They want to come and work here because we are such an effective country at science, but if we have these high costs, they can and will go elsewhere.”
12.05.2025 10:03
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Great collection from one of the best paper hounds out there!
12.05.2025 18:05
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Now this is the future La Guin and Wells imagined
09.05.2025 23:30
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This is a breakthrough in multi-modal single-cell technology
09.05.2025 14:15
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*pronouncing leo XIV like arXIV*
09.05.2025 10:55
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Wow, just implemented the new Cellpose-SAM from @computingnature.bsky.social in NimbusImage and it's *awesome*! Give it a try!
nimbusimage.com
07.05.2025 18:18
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Progenitor exhausted T cells contribute to the formation of immunological memory
Nature Reviews Immunology - A preprint by Raposo et al. shows that immune checkpoint blockade drives the expansion of certain clones of exhausted T cells that can develop into functional memory...
NEW Preprint Watch from Annette Wu & @wenjiang-nano.bsky.social @preprintclub.bsky.social reporting on @biorxiv-immuno.bsky.social preprint by @colinraposo.bsky.social et al. showing that checkpoint blockade drives expansion of exhausted T cell clones that develop functional memory
rdcu.be/ek1kY
07.05.2025 11:19
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On a Nature news article reporting that NIH planned to suspend subawards for foreign collaborations:
“No, that’s false. There’s going to be a policy on tracking subawards. The NIH and the government should be able to see where the money’s going.”
“I’m really uncomfortable with this conversation, because you’re like, actually spreading rumors that you don’t know anything about. … Nature also is spreading rumors. Halt foreign collaborations, that’s not true.”
“We’re working on the policy, Jocelyn. You shouldn’t be reporting rumors. I know there’s leaks all over here, but the leaks don’t actually reflect what’s happening. Don’t write about rumors. It actually makes the things that you and I care about worse. Like it spreads panic.”
Later that day, NIH released a policy that halted future subawards to foreign scientists and said they will need to apply directly for money under a system still in development.
With NIH director Jayanta Bhattacharya dismissing my reporting as "false" and "spreading rumors" hours before releasing a policy that confirmed said "rumors," I feel compelled to respond.
Here's an inside look into how this story was reported. It was a weird one. 🧵
www.nature.com/articles/d41...
06.05.2025 12:15
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UK wins £500m in science grants from EU Horizon scheme after Brexit lockout
Exclusive: British scientists ‘over the moon’ with re-entry to funding scheme after losing out for three years
British scientists are “over the moon” to be back in the EU’s Horizon funding programme after a 3-year Brexit lockout.
New data reveals they have been awarded about £500m in grants since re-entry.
International isolationism never works well.
🧪🔬⚛️🔭
www.theguardian.com/science/2025...
05.05.2025 07:00
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Hahaha
27.04.2025 00:58
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But their defense also hinges on the argument that the individual books themselves are, essentially, worthless—one expert witness for Meta describes that the influence of a single book in LLM pretraining “adjusted its performance by less than 0.06% on industry standard benchmarks, a meaningless change no different from noise.” Furthermore, Meta says, that while the company “has invested hundreds of millions of dollars in LLM development,” they see no market in paying authors to license their books because “for there to be a market, there must be something of value to exchange, but none of Plaintiffs works has economic value, individually, as training data.” (An argument essential to fair use, but that also sounds like a scaled up version of a scenario in which the New York Philharmonic board argues against paying individual members of the orchestra because the organization spent a lot of money on the upkeep of David Geffen Hall, and also, a solo bassoon cannot play every part in “The Rite of Spring.”)
Nasty work. www.vanityfair.com/news/story/m...
17.04.2025 01:35
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You call it an ifelse statement, I call it a lightweight, agentic decision module operating within a deterministic inference framework
16.04.2025 03:27
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Why ‘de-extinct’ dire wolves are a Trojan horse to hide humanity’s destruction of nature
Extinction is, for the time being, forever – and a symptom of our global economic system.
'What’s the problem? Well, pretty much everything. These aren’t species returned from extinction.'
@oxfordgeography.bsky.social's Dr Richard Grenyer argues that extinction is, for the time being, a symptom of our global economic system ⬇️
15.04.2025 09:22
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Dear US researchers: break the outrage addiction. I survived the besieging of science. So can you
As I watch US researchers respond to threats against science, I’m reminded of when scientists in Brazil navigated a similar storm.
"...remember: your work is an act of resistance. Every experiment, every line of code, every collaboration defies those who would silence science."
Dear US researchers: break the outrage addiction. I survived the besieging of science. So can you www.nature.com/articles/d41...
14.04.2025 17:16
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How Trump 2.0 is slashing NIH-backed research — in charts
Nature analyses which fields of science and US states are being hit hardest by grant terminations.
Sobering analysis by @nature.com on the Trump administration's NIH cuts. ~ 800 research projects have been terminated with research on HIV/AIDS, health disparities, transgender health, vaccines and COVID-19 being hit hardest, with some labs forced to close entirely. www.nature.com/articles/d41...
13.04.2025 22:12
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George R. R. Martin on @biorxiv-evobio.bsky.social!
11.04.2025 23:43
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What if TCRs didn’t need to see peptides to bind MHC?
A newly identified human TCR docks sideways onto HLA-DQ2.5—like an antibody.
This could reshape how we think about antigen recognition 🧐🧐 @niclag.bsky.social @naturecomms.bsky.social
08.04.2025 23:54
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