When menopause strikes, workplace support is key to continued productivity, overcome brain fog and crankiness

When menopause strikes, workplace support is key to continued productivity, overcome brain fog and crankiness

“No one ever talks to you about menopause,” says Carlotta Berry, an electrical and computer engineer at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology in Terre Haute, Indiana. But a few years ago, it hit Berry “like a steam truck”. She got brain fog, she grew irritable and cranky, and her hair fell...

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Report calls for new diagnosis of Africa’s instability that’s not shaped by specific interests or ideology

Report calls for new diagnosis of Africa’s instability that’s not shaped by specific interests or ideology

Africa faces widespread instability. In the past year, there have been coups in Mali, Chad, Sudan, Burkina Faso and Guinea, and attempts to overthrow governments in the Central African Republic (CAR), Ethiopia and Guinea-Bissau. Violent extremism has also spread due to the political and economic marginalisation of some communities, the...

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Rebuttal: Forget the mantra that you ‘eat breakfast like a king, lunch like a prince and dinner like a pauper’

Rebuttal: Forget the mantra that you ‘eat breakfast like a king, lunch like a prince and dinner like a pauper’

Breakfast earned its title as the most important meal of the day back in the 1960s after American nutritionist Adelle Davis suggested that to keep fit and avoid obesity, one should “eat breakfast like a king, lunch like a prince, and dinner like a pauper.” Breakfast literally means “to break...

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Climate change: A growing number of Africa countries turn to mangrove restoration to tackle carbon emissions

Climate change: A growing number of Africa countries turn to mangrove restoration to tackle carbon emissions

In a bid to protect coastal communities from climate change and encourage investment, African nations are increasingly turning to mangrove restoration projects, with Mozambique becoming the latest addition to the growing list of countries with large-scale mangrove initiatives. Mozambique follows efforts across the continent – including in Kenya, Madagascar, Gambia...

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Men’s health: Sexologists say after Covid, the joystick stops firing due to low blood flow, reduced hormones

Men’s health: Sexologists say after Covid, the joystick stops firing due to low blood flow, reduced hormones

For a respiratory disease, Covid-19 causes some peculiar symptoms. It can diminish the senses of smell and taste, leave patients with discoloured “Covid toes” or even cause a swollen, bumpy “Covid tongue.” Now scientists are examining a possible link to an altogether unexpected consequence of Covid-19: erectile dysfunction. A connection...

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From surveillance to search-and-rescue, consumer drones have given Ukraine the edge in its defence against  Russia

From surveillance to search-and-rescue, consumer drones have given Ukraine the edge in its defence against  Russia

In the snowy streets of the north Ukrainian town of Trostyanets, the Russian missile system fires rockets every second. Tanks and military vehicles are parked on either side of the blasting artillery system, positioned among houses and near the town’s railway system. The weapon is not working alone, though. Hovering...

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Researchers in advanced stages of developing nose spray vaccines they hope can quash Covid variants

Researchers in advanced stages of developing nose spray vaccines they hope can quash Covid variants

The relentless evolution of the Covid-causing coronavirus has taken a bit of the shine off the vaccines developed during the first year of the pandemic. Versions of the virus that now dominate circulation – Omicron and its subvariants – are more transmissible and adept at evading the body’s immune defences...

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AI on the cusp of generating fluent language from data processed by emerging technologies, but for the better

AI on the cusp of generating fluent language from data processed by emerging technologies, but for the better

Machine-learning algorithms that generate fluent language from vast amounts of text could change how science is done – but not necessarily for the better, says Shobita Parthasarathy, a specialist in the governance of emerging technologies at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. In a report published on April 27,...

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Ethiopia launches national dialogue to stop people from going to the battlefront, heal wounds of war

Ethiopia launches national dialogue to stop people from going to the battlefront, heal wounds of war

As an 18-month civil war grinds on, Ethiopia is gearing up for a national dialogue aimed at bridging the country’s many fault lines. But key rebel groups have not been invited, and opposition figures are accusing the government of trying to orchestrate the process. The commission tasked with overseeing the...

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With robots outperforming astronauts in space travel , debate is shifting to ownership of ‘outer worlds’

With robots outperforming astronauts in space travel , debate is shifting to ownership of ‘outer worlds’

How much do we need humans in space?  How much do we want them there?  Astronauts embody the triumph of human imagination and engineering.  Their efforts shed light on the possibilities and problems posed by travel beyond our nurturing Earth.  Their presence on the moon or on other solar-system objects...

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