Ice Spice to Make Acting Debut in Spike Lee Movie

Ice Spice Reveals Her Fashion Goal Was "Bronx Mommy”

Ice Spice is ready to spice up the big screen. 

The "Think U the S–t" rapper will make her acting debut in director Spike Lee's upcoming movie High and Low, a source close to production told E! News April 10.

Ice Spice—real name Isis Naija Gaston Read more

A Blind Patient Had Sight Restored in a Breakthrough Study

The darkness descends slowly for people with retinitis pigmentosa (RP), a degenerative eye disease that affects 2 million people worldwide. The condition is typically diagnosed in childhood or adolescence, but it can take until middle age before a person’s vision has deteriorated severely enough that they are fully or effectively blind. When the lights finally do go out, however, they sta…

Read more

I Tried to Cure My Burnout. Here’s What Happened

I’ve been in dance therapy for all of 90 seconds when I embarrass myself. The group is doing a follow-the-leader exercise, with one person picking a dance move that everyone else must mimic. When my name is called, I panic and launch into an extremely uncool move that could be generously described as disco-inspired, my cheeks flaming as a group of strangers mirror it back at me.

I&r…

Read more

New Advances in Managing COPD

The Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease, or GOLD, is the world’s preeminent COPD research and advocacy organization. Founded in 1997 in collaboration with the U.S. National Institutes of Health and the World Health Organization, one of GOLD’s stated aims is to “improve prevention and treatment of this lung disease.”

In its 2023 global strategy report, GOLD chan…

Read more

Most Nursing Home Workers in New Survey Say ‘Life Is at Risk’ Daily From Coronavirus

More than three months after a nursing home in Kirkland, Wash., became the center of the country’s first coronavirus outbreak, a majority of nursing home workers believe they’re risking their lives on the job and that their employers are not doing enough to protect them from the virus, according to a new union survey.

Most nursing home workers say their employers (76%) and the…

Read more

The 6 Key Factors That Will Determine the Severity of the COVID-19 Surge in the U.S. This Fall

Here we go again. The United States is now experiencing a fourth wave of COVID-19, with very rapidly rising infections. The surge in new daily cases is driven by the Delta variant, which makes up 83% of sequenced samples in the U.S. and which is estimated to be twice as transmissible as the original strain. One of the reasons that Delta spreads more easily is that a person infected with this va…

Read more

Teen Contraceptive Use Is Changing

The teen birth rate in the U.S. has been declining consistently for more than 30 years, despite the fact that the number of teenage girls having sex has not changed since at least 2002คำพูดจาก สล็อตเว็บตรง. A new report from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) sug…

Read more

What Does the Solar Eclipse Mean for You- Astrologers Can’t Seem to Agree

The upcoming total solar eclipse will either wreak havoc on your life or herald waves of positive change. That is, depending on who you are, which astrologer you ask — and, of course, whether you believe in astrology in the first place.

The moon will completely block the sun during an Aug. 21 eclipse that can only be seen in America. Among those who believe the positions of celestia…

Read more

Underwater Glacier Melt May Be Worse Than Thought

Underwater ice melt from glaciers could be happening much faster than previously thought, according to new research published in the journal Science. That’s a dangerous finding as melting glaciers linked to climate change threaten to raise sea levels dramatically by the end of the century.

The scientists who worked on the study developed new methods incorporating sonar, tim…

Read more

The New Technology Inspiring People to Care About the Ocean

Humankind’s curiosity about what lies up above in space has long outpaced its interest in what lurks beneath the surface of the Earth’s oceans. Such is the disparity that scientists today have more accurate maps of the surface of Mars than they do the bottom of the sea. Indeed, more humans have visited the moon than the bottom of the sea.

But humans would do well to learn more about w…

Read more