• https://www.goodnewsnetwork.org, By Andy Corbley
An advance in prosthetics 7 years in the making has jumped into life with a lower-leg device that feels more like a part of the body than any other commercially-available product.
A team of researchers have developed a 3D-printed, biodegradable heart patch that seals holes in heart tissue and supports tissue regeneration, showing promise as a safer alternative to current surgical materials.
The End of Germ Theory by Spacebusters is a thought-provoking documentary that delves into the world of medical conspiracy theories. The film challenges the foundation of modern medicine, germ theory, by presenting a myriad of arguments against it an
Participants were sleeping at their homes when their brain waves and other polysomnographic data were tracked remotely by a specially developed apparatus
Scientists in New Zealand have combined two wavelengths of light to deactivate a bacterium that is invulnerable to some of the most widely used antibiotics in the world – paving the way for a potential disinfectant treatment to address the urgent p
Have you been tested for COVID? If so, you are probably all too familiar with the invasive nasal swab protocols. Maybe it shocked you or felt uncomfortable, but did you really give it a second thought? Meanwhile, people like Ivet Flexson and her daug
Tim James from Chemical Free Body sent me his silver guy, Dr. Keith Moeller, to explain the amazing health benefits of nanosilver on the human body. There are now several hundred studies on the power of this product, but most people have never heard
What our ancestors knew was that sound is able to manifest light and the physical form which includes you. Even in the scriptures it says in the beginning there was a word.
Imagine the possibility of detecting Alzheimer's disease up to 15 years before the onset of symptoms. By using retinal imaging available through a telehealth model, University of Waterloo physics professor Dr. Melanie Campbell and her company LumeNe
Sepsis is a leading cause of death, accounting for one in five deaths worldwide in 2017. In a research paper published in JAMA, researchers found "sepsis contributed to one in every two to three deaths" in U.S. hospitals. Owing to an increased ri
• https://www.technocracy.news by MICHAEL NEVRADAKI
Colorado State University in Fort Collins is totally stonewalling public protest over its new NIH-funded biolab and bat research facility to be completed by the end of summer 2023. CSU's horrible track record of lab leaks in the past should be suff
Antiaging company, NewLimit, has raised $40 million in Series A funding from Dimension, Founders Fund, and Kleiner Perkins with participation from Eric Schmidt, Elad Gil, Garry Tan, and Fred Ehrsam.
Dr. Jane Ruby meets with board-certified Embalmer and funeral Director, Richard Hirschman who reveals, for the first time ever, arteries and veins filled with unnatural blood clot combinations with strange fibrous materials that are completely fillin
Sen. Ron Johnson moderates a panel discussion, COVID-19: A Second Opinion. A group of world-renowned doctors and medical experts provide a different perspective on the global pandemic response, the current state of knowledge of early and hospital tre
Science, since it was monopolized by institutions and especially over the past two years, has become something quite other than what it was found to be during the early Enlightenment. That is, what is called science by the mouthpieces of the status q
Natural immunity is much stronger than what you can achieve from the injection, which only provides antibodies against the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein and wanes within a few months. The shots may in fact permanently limit the kind of immune response you
In her forty-year quest to understand the causes, prevent and treat chronic diseases, Dr. Judy has co-authored seminal papers culminating at least a decade of research in each of four fields: immunology, natural products chemistry, epigenetics, and H
According to a fascinating study published in the journal Nature Communication, nanobodies or antibody fragments from an unlikely source can be used to produce a new treatment for coronavirus (COVID-19).
Bioengineers have repurposed a "non-working" CRISPR system to make a smaller version of the genome engineering tool. Its smaller size should make it easier to deliver into human cells, tissues and the body for gene therapy.