TME

Apr 06 2026HEALTH

Better Care for Older Patients in the Emergency Room

Emergency rooms that specialize in older patients have become more common since 2018. These centers, called Geriatric Emergency Departments or GEDs, aim to give better treatment for seniors. The program that awards the GED label checks that each hospital follows strict guidelines. Recent studies sh

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Apr 06 2026FINANCE

Ping An Healthcare Gets a Steady Boost from Analysts

Analysts at one firm aren’t backing down from their strong opinion on Ping An Healthcare and Technology. The company just got a second vote of confidence with a buy rating and a price target set at HK$23. 88. That’s higher than what most analysts think, which sits around HK$17. 63 on average. Ping

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Apr 06 2026ENVIRONMENT

Turning wood scraps into a tool for cleaning dirty water

Recycling leftover eucalyptus wood into biochar turns a common trash problem into a water-cleaning hero. Scientists took ordinary wood chips from eucalyptus trees and heated them without oxygen, creating a material that grabs arsenic from polluted water. In lab tests, one gram of this biochar remove

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Apr 04 2026HEALTH

Biologics for Long‑Term Urticaria: When to Start and What It Means

Veterans who suffer from chronic spontaneous urticaria (CSU) often go through many doctor visits, hospital stays, and emergency rooms before a new type of medicine is tried. A study looked at records from 2011 to 2021 to see how long it takes from the first diagnosis until a biologic drug is started

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Apr 04 2026POLITICS

Better Schools Today, Stronger Community Tomorrow

Alaska’s schools serve over 45, 000 students daily, yet many buildings date back to the 1950s and 60s. These aging facilities face problems like leaky roofs, outdated electrical systems, and limited accessibility. Proposition 1 puts this reality on the ballot, asking voters to approve upgrades that

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Apr 03 2026POLITICS

Worcester’s Apartment Plan Gets a New Deadline

The city’s planning board decided to push back the review of a request for more time on a downtown apartment project. The developer, HHM Cube from Springfield, asked for extra days to lock in funding, finish the building drawings, and file a permit. Instead of hearing about it on April 1, the

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Apr 03 2026OPINION

Rent Control Slows Home Improvements, Not Housing

Paragraph 1 In Pennsylvania, many people think rent limits will keep homes affordable. The truth is different. When owners can’t raise rents, they often skip needed fixes. Paragraph 2 A man who runs a manufactured‑home park in Bedford County shows this. He bought the site when it was run down

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Apr 03 2026SCIENCE

CHD4: The Switch That Controls Cancer’s Moves

CHD4 is a protein that helps rearrange DNA inside cells, making it easier or harder for genes to speak. It works as part of a larger team called NuRD, which uses energy from ATP to shuffle chromatin. When the cell faces damage, CHD4 steps in at the break sites to help rebuild and decide which

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Apr 03 2026FINANCE

Micron’s Memory Stock Still Looks Good, Even With Supply Worries

The idea that memory chips are at their peak has faded, and one company that felt the hit after a sharp drop is Micron Technology. The firm’s earnings report recently showed strong growth, largely thanks to demand from artificial‑intelligence workloads and a healthy order backlog. Even though Google

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Apr 03 2026BUSINESS

Sustainable Shoes Big Name Struggles with Huge Loss in Value

A once-famous shoe brand from California just got sold at an incredibly low price. It was worth billions at its peak but now its entire company is changing hands for just $39 million. The brand made shoes from wool and eucalyptus, attracting eco-conscious buyers in tech hubs like Silicon Valley. Sta

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