Author: Andrew Rogers
Andrew Rogers is a freelance journalist based in Chicago, USA, with over 10 years of experience covering Politics, World Affairs, Business, Health, Technology, Finance, Lifestyle, and Culture. He graduated with a degree in Journalism from the University of Florida. Over the years, he has contributed to leading outlets such as The New York Times, CNN, and Reuters. Recognized for his sharp reporting and thoughtful analysis, Andrew delivers accurate and timely news that keeps readers updated on key national and global developments.
Most side-effects listed for statins are not caused by the drugs, a major review finds.Researchers published the analysis in The Lancet after reviewing 19 trials with 124,000 participants.The study found evidence for muscle pain, diabetes risk, and four minor effects only.These included liver test changes, mild liver abnormalities, urine changes, and tissue swelling.Researchers found no strong evidence linking statins to memory loss, depression, sleep problems, or nerve damage.The benefits of statins in preventing heart attacks and strokes far outweighed the small risks.Lead author Christina Reith said statins did not increase common complaints compared with no treatment.Experts called for updated drug…
Hidden sellers promote unlicensed weight-loss drugs through WhatsApp and Telegram giveaways.They offer injectable medicines as competition prizes. The Guardian found groups advertising retatrutide, an unapproved experimental drug.Posts pressure users with short entry deadlines. Experts warn these promotions pose serious health risks.They misuse aggressive marketing tactics for unlicensed medicines. Some sellers disguise drug sales as fitness coaching programmes.Authorities say platforms ban illegal drug sales.
Comedian and actor Dave Coulier has announced that he is now in remission from tongue cancer. The news comes after a period of early detection, treatment, and recovery that Coulier says offers hope to others facing the disease. Coulier, best known for his role on the popular television show Full House, shared his journey publicly to raise awareness about cancer prevention and the importance of regular health checkups. He emphasized that catching the cancer early played a major role in his successful treatment. The actor underwent medical treatments that included surgery and ongoing monitoring. Doctors confirmed that his cancer is…
Researchers say ultra-processed foods resemble cigarettes more than healthy food and need stricter regulation.A study from Harvard, Duke, and the University of Michigan said UPFs are engineered to drive addiction.They linked UPFs to widespread health harms similar to those caused by smoking.The findings appeared in Milbank Quarterly.UPFs include soft drinks, crisps, and packaged snacks made with industrial additives.Researchers criticised “health washing” claims like “low fat” or “sugar free”.They urged policies similar to tobacco control, including marketing limits and legal action.Experts warned action should shift responsibility from consumers to the food industry.
Toto Wolff dismissed rival claims that Mercedes is exploiting loopholes in the 2026 engine rules.He insisted the power unit is legal and approved by the FIA.The dispute centres on engine compression ratios and alleged gains from thermal expansion.Audi, Ferrari and Honda raised concerns, but Wolff said rivals should “focus on themselves”.He warned protests could still follow after the season opener in Melbourne.
Researchers recreated cosmic dust in a Sydney lab to study how life’s building blocks reached Earth.University of Sydney PhD candidate Linda Losurdo produced dust by mimicking dying stars.Cosmic dust carries organic CHON molecules, essential to life’s chemistry.Scientists debate whether these molecules formed on Earth or arrived via meteorites.Losurdo used plasma and star-like gases inside a vacuum chamber.The method reproduces dust with infrared signatures matching real space material.Experts say the work could advance research into early life formation.The study appeared in the Astrophysical Journal.
Consumer prices for goods such as computers, electrical machinery and transport equipment could rise sharply as shipping costs surge, Chartered Institute of Procurement and Supply warned.CIPS said rising transport, energy and raw material costs are exposing cracks in global supply chains.A late-2025 survey showed supply disruption concerns at a two-year high among procurement leaders.Shipping and logistics face the steepest increases, with 22% reporting costs rising over 10%.Computer, transport and electrical equipment prices have also climbed.CIPS said volatility now looks structural, driven by geopolitics, tariffs and trade tensions.
West Ham United banned season-ticket holder Joshua Wood for displaying an oversized protest banner.The banner called on owners David Sullivan and Karren Brady to sell the club.The club said Wood breached regulations by lifting a banner exceeding permitted dimensions at the London Stadium.Wood denied bringing it into the ground and said other fans asked him to help hold it.The five-match ban cites safety concerns, not protest content, and Wood plans to appeal.
Artificial intelligence use in breast cancer screening cut later cancer diagnoses by 12%, a Swedish study found.Researchers studied 100,000 women in mammography programmes between 2021 and 2022.AI helped prioritise scans and flagged suspicious findings for radiologists.The study, published in The Lancet, showed higher early detection rates.More aggressive cancers appeared 27% less often in the AI group.Lead author Kristina Lång from Lund University urged careful rollout with ongoing monitoring.Experts from Cancer Research UK and Breast Cancer Now called the results promising but said further trials are needed.
Google DeepMind launched AlphaGenome, an AI tool that helps identify genetic drivers of disease.The system predicts how DNA mutations disrupt gene regulation across different tissues.AlphaGenome can analyse up to one million DNA letters at once.Most inherited diseases link to regulatory mutations rather than protein-coding genes.Researchers trained the model using large human and mouse genetics databases.Scientists say it could accelerate cancer research and gene therapy development.Experts call the tool a major step toward understanding the non-coding genome.