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Thanks to the widespread use of the HPV vaccine, cervical cancer deaths among young women in the US have dropped by 62%. Researchers call for increased coverage to sustain and amplify these life-saving results.
(c) jpdvg/Pixabay CC0
(c) jpdvg/Pixabay CC0
  • December 31, 2024

HPV vaccination drives down cervical cancer mortality

NEWS MEDICAL

Thanks to the widespread use of the HPV vaccine, cervical cancer deaths among young women in the US have dropped by 62%. Researchers call for increased coverage to sustain and amplify these life-saving results.

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After securing over 57% of the votes in a landmark victory, former  freedom fighter and an advocate for women's rights, Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah, has made history as Namibia's first female president.
Previous Post Namibia elects first female president in a history victory
Next Post China's carbon emissions may have already peaked
Nearly half of the world's climate experts believe that China's carbon emissions have already peaked or will peak this year, thanks to rapid advancements and massive investments in renewable energy and clean technologies.

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Scientists monitoring the ozone layer report that the hole above Antarctica has reduced to its smallest measured size since 2019. Thanks to favourable weather and lower ozone-depleting emissions, the drop could mean a healthier atmosphere and milder ultraviolet exposure for southern latitudes — good news for people and ecosystems alike.
(c) Gatis Marcinkevics

Antarctic ozone hole shrinks to smallest size since 2019

  • December 2, 2025
Researchers at RMIT University created biochar from used coffee grounds, replacing part of the sand in concrete. The result: up to 30% more strength and a carbon footprint cut by up to 26%. Real-world footpath trials are already underway — waste coffee becoming sustainable infrastructure.
(c) Devin Avery

Spent coffee grounds turn concrete cleaner and stronger

  • December 2, 2025
After decades near collapse, humpback whales are resurging — from an estimated 10 000 at their lowest, to around 80 000 today. Conservation efforts and the whales’ flexible feeding behavior helped them recover. Researchers now spot them almost daily in former near-deserts of the sea.
(c) Marlin Clark

Humpback whales bounce back: global population rises from 10 000 to ~80 000

  • December 2, 2025

Most Read

Researchers studying a soil bacterium discovered a powerful antibiotic that can kill drug-resistant bacteria previously deemed untreatable. The compound emerged from re-examining a known drug’s production process and opens new directions in the fight against antimicrobial resistance.
Powerful new antibiotic from soil bacteria targets superbugs
The European Court of Justice ruled that Poland must recognise same-sex marriages legally performed in other EU countries, even if Polish law doesn’t allow them. Refusing violates EU citizens’ rights to free movement and family life.
EU court orders Poland to recognise same-sex marriages from other EU states
The Vatican has handed over 62 sacred Indigenous items — including an Inuit kayak, wampum belts, war clubs, and masks — to the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops. The gesture is described as a “concrete sign of dialogue, respect and fraternity” after decades of cultural suppression.
Pope returns Indigenous artifacts to Canada in powerful reconciliation move
From near-collapse to a stunning rebound — this season India welcomed an estimated one million nests of endangered Olive Ridley sea turtle along its coasts. Volunteers, hatcheries and coastal protections combined to give these turtles a fighting chance — and the babies are now crawling into the sea.
Endangered sea turtles return in force: India’s Olive Ridleys see mass nesting surge
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