United Kingdom | Friday, 25 July 2008

Study Articles

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1. Study says multiple jabs have not made troops sick
A study has found no link between illness among troops sent to Iraq and multiple vaccinations. Instead, it says the troops tend to blame poor health on multiple jabs even when they did not have them.
01 Jul 2008
2. Nintendo DS teaches English in school
The Nintendo DS isn't just fun and games anymore for English students at Tokyo's Joshi Gakuen all-girls junior high school...
26 Jun 2008
3. Video games don't create killers, new book says
video games does not turn children into deranged, blood-thirsty super-killers, according to a new book by a pair of Harvard researchers.
09 May 2008
4. Study suggests cool kids can help others avoid smoking
Getting the cool kids to talk to their peers about the dangers of smoking cut the number of young people who started using cigarettes in one study by nearly 25 percent, researchers said on Friday.
09 May 2008
5. Study: Employers see drink as No. 1 threat to employee wellbeing
A new study by Norwich Union Healthcare has found that 77 per cent of employers consider alcohol to be the number one threat to employee wellbeing and encouraged absence due to sickness.
07 May 2008
6. Melanoma on scalp, neck most deadly, study finds
Melanoma, the most dangerous form of skin cancer, is much deadlier when it appears on the scalp or neck than somewhere else on the body, according to a study published on Monday.
22 Apr 2008
7. Study says immigrant crime same as wider population
A police study has found that the influx of immigrants from eastern Europe has not fuelled a rise in crime, the Guardian reported on Wednesday.
14 Apr 2008
8. Fraud in UK at highest levels for 12 years says study
According to a study by the accountancy group KPMG, the level of fraud in the UK has reached its highest point in 12 years, costing the country over £1 billion every year.
04 Feb 2008
9. Infant study casts doubt on vaccine-autism link
The mercury in a vaccine preservative is pumped out of a baby's body too quickly for it to do any damage, researchers reported on Wednesday in a study they say should further absolve shots of causing autism.
31 Jan 2008
10. Glaxo drug cuts bleeding in study
GlaxoSmithKline's experimental platelet boosting drug eltrombopag has produced further positive results in patients with idiopathic thrombocytopenia purpura (ITP), researchers said on Saturday.
09 Jun 2007
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