Dr. Lahouaria Hadri of Mount Sinai is a diligent medical researcher with many distinguished awards and publications highlighting her scientific progress. She is passionate about finding cures for diseases, specifically for the complex cardiopulmonary and vascular diseases plaguing many individuals. Throughout her career, Dr. Hadri has always been motivated by the ability to contribute to the body of knowledge in medical sciences, hoping to one day change patients’ lives. She contributes to the ongoing medical research field by training students at Mount Sinai and teaching them valuable research methods. Visit LahouariaHadriMountSinai.com to learn about her other contributions in her field!
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Welcoming BMC Agriculture: A Landmark Journal for Sustainable Agricultural Science
The BMC Series is delighted to announce the upcoming launch of BMC Agriculture – our new broad scope, inclusive, community led journal aiming to capture all aspects of research being done in this vital field. As we grapple with pressing challenges such as climate change, food security, and biodiversity loss, the importance of innovative agricultural… Read more »
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Introducing BMC Artificial Intelligence: Leading the way for AI in the Life and Medical Sciences
We are excited to announce the upcoming launch of BMC Artificial Intelligence, a new open-access, peer-reviewed journal, focused on the impact of artificial intelligence (AI) on the life, medical and environmental sciences. Launching in Summer 2024, the journal will provide a platform for sharing breakthroughs and innovations that harness the power of AI to solve… Read more »
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Introducing BMC Primary Care’s Collection: Diabetes in primary care
BMC Primary Care is pleased to announce a new Collection to highlight the role of primary care in the management of diabetes. We welcome submissions that explore early detection, interdisciplinary management, patient-centered interventions, technology, primary care strategies, and provider education.
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Bioarcheologists investigate the origin of the malaria parasite infecting the Romans
Studies of ancient human remains are beginning to reveal details of the origin, evolution, and virulence of parasitic diseases, including malaria. A recent study of mitochondrial DNA from an ancient skeleton is adding to our understanding.
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World Malaria Day: talking about malaria everyday
April 25th 2024 marks World Malaria Day, a time when the disease is highlighted in the media and brought to the general public’s attention for a time. However, malaria is important and talked about year-round by those who have a vested interest in the disease (researchers, students, healthcare workers, community workers etc). In this blog article, I explore some of the trends behind the discussions relating to malaria over the last 12 months.
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Forecasting zoonotic disease risks in a changing climate
Modelling predicts how the ecological impacts of climate change are expected to drive changes in the endemic ranges of zoonotic vector-borne diseases globally
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Introducing BMC Primary Care’s Collection: Trust and mistrust in primary care
BMC Primary Care is pleased to announce a new Collection to highlight the importance of trust in the primary care provider-patient relationship. We welcome research that explores communication dynamics, socioeconomic factors, cultural awareness, and new technologies that shape trust in primary care.
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Female genital schistosomiasis needs more attention
It is now recognised that health studies and interventions have historically been male-biased, and female-related health issues less explored. The potential consequence of infection with Schistosoma blood flukes is an example that two recent reviews have exposed.
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Highlights of the BMC Series – March 2024
Can the jewel wasp tell us anything about the process of aging? How does advertising contribute to social inequalities? Can a silver filter reduce metal artifacts in computed tomography? How far is prenatal care from equity? How to adapt risk communication to women’s preferences for a breast cancer screening campaign?
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Introducing BMC Bioinformatics’ Collection: Bioinformatics ethics and data privacy
BMC Bioinformatics warmly welcomes submissions to its Collection on new computational approaches, tools, and databases to address issues and open questions in bioinformatics ethics and data privacy, including anonymization, encryption and data deposition.
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