Articles from NaturalNews In-House Writers:

Wheatgrass: a chlorophyll-rich superfood bursting with nutrients

By Michael Ravensthorpe, March 3 2014
(NaturalNews) Wheatgrass is a gluten-free food prepared from the young shoots of the wheat plant, Triticum aestivum, which grows in temperate regions throughout Europe and the United States. Consumption of wheatgrass only became popular in the Western world in the 1930s, when an American chemist, Charles L. Schnabel (now known as the "father of wheatgrass"), began to popularize it. Schnabel became well-known in the 1940s for stating that "fifteen pounds of wheatgrass is equal in overall nutritional...

California residents and officials to monitor radiation amid growing fears about Fukushima

By Ethan A. Huff, March 3 2014
(NaturalNews) Concerned about the effects of radiation still being released from the stricken Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power facility in Japan, towns and cities all across California have begun enacting monitoring programs to deal with what many agree is an "international crisis of epic proportions" with no end in sight. Citing multiple reports from the Sunshine State, ENENews.com highlights efforts by officials in Marin County, near San Francisco, as well as Mendocino County, the cities of Berkeley...

Top ways to keep stress at bay

By Yanjun, March 3 2014
(NaturalNews) A high level of stress is not good for anyone. When a person is constantly exposed to stress, the individual can develop anxiety disorders. People suffering from high levels of stress can exhibit uncontrollable behaviors related to acute stress such as anger and frustration. This should be avoided as much as possible. Fortunately, coping with stress is not that difficult anymore. There are foolproof ideas to keeping high levels of stress at bay. Relax The main combatant against stress...

Electrocardiographs detect heart rhythm changes from lead exposure

By PF Louis, March 3 2014
(NaturalNews) It may seem odd to associate lead toxicity with cardiac health issues. But there has been considerable research put into that association. Health experts seem to agree that there is no safe level of lead in our bodies, and this heavy metal toxin isn't easily flushed out of our system. Those small amounts can collect and accrue in vital organs, especially the kidneys and liver. However, determining lead poisoning by symptoms is just like reaching into the symptom bucket for most general...

What's missing from the effort to stop the GMO threat to our food supply?

By Paul Fassa, March 3 2014
(NaturalNews) The effort to stop Monsanto and its league of corporate monsters from ruining our food supply should focus more on what gets planted than what gets labeled on retail shelves. "GMO seeds should not enter the soil" should be the mantra instead of "we have a right to know." Observe all the SUVs lined up at McDonald's and other fast-food joints as they return home from work. Watch what they put into their supermarket shopping carts. The majority of American consumers don't know and don't...

The Seven Countries Study hoax and how the politics of food policy keeps the USA in the dark

By S. D. Wells, March 3 2014
(NaturalNews) This is the true story of an American scientist named Ancel Keys who studied saturated fat long ago (in the 1950s) and made the cover of the illustrious Time magazine, although in that "infamous" way that we later learned of. The damage was done though, and what Keys did was set a precedent of falsified and skewed research to mislead a whole nation for decades to come. It was known as the "Lipid Hypothesis," and it was put in plain terms like simple math so that any average "Joe" could...

VEGA joins Natural News heavy metals limits for protein products; company's blends already test among cleanest in industry

By Mike Adams, March 2 2014
(NaturalNews) Over the last month, Natural News rocked the dietary supplements industry by publishing laboratory research results which found significant levels of the heavy metals lead, cadmium and tungsten in popular rice protein products. The industry immediately responded to consumer concerns, and within days, industry leading companies like Garden of Life and SunWarrior agreed to adhere to a voluntary phase-in of heavy metals limits for rice protein products. Why do these levels of heavy...

FDA deliberately allows animal drugs to stay legal even when they threaten humans with superbugs

By David Gutierrez, March 2 2014
(NaturalNews) The FDA allowed 18 separate animal antibiotics to remain on the market even after concluding that they posed a "high risk" of leading to antibiotic resistance in bacteria that cause disease in humans, according to a new study by the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC). Microbiologist and lead author Carmen Cordova called the FDA's inaction in the face of its own findings "a breach of their responsibility and the public trust." The study is the latest contribution to an ongoing...

ADHD: A false paradigm projected onto the minds of a generation

By Lance Johnson, March 2 2014
(NaturalNews) In today's healthcare climate, where prescription drug use has multiplied, it's becoming increasingly important to question medical professionals on the diagnoses they dish out. It's equally important to question one's own belief in pharmacology as the solution to the health problems we face today. We must question the labels that we place on ourselves and on our kids. One in nine children now labeled with ADHDA very misleading paradigm has been imposed on the minds of the public...

Federal government sues California companies for unsafe toxin levels in children's toys

By L.J. Devon, Staff Writer, March 2 2014
(NaturalNews) Leaded gasoline for vehicles and lead-based paint for homes used to be the norm, as the dangers of lead went unnoticed. While the public has become aware of lead's health dangers, there remains concern for high levels of lead persisting in children's toys. These toys, typically imported from China, can induce blood lead levels exceeding 5 micrograms per deciliter in children, which is unsafe, according to new EPA safety standards. Lead toys contribute to behavioral and learning problems...

Health Basics: Xanthan gum is mutated corn sugar fermented with bacteria

By S. D. Wells, March 2 2014
(NaturalNews) Xanthan gum was discovered in the 1960s and was approved in 1968 as a food additive in the USA and Europe. It is mostly used as an emulsifier. It is made from bacteria that create black spots on broccoli and cauliflower. Xanthan gum at first is a slimy, gooey, fermented substance, but during processing it's dried up and finally ground into a fine white powder. You can bet your first and last mutated gene that the corn sugar used to make xanthan gum is not certified organic, but rather...

Traditional Chinese Medicine herbal formula shown to help prevent diabetes

By Reuben Chow, January 28 2014
(NaturalNews) A recent study to be published in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism (JCEM) has revealed that a particular Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) herbal formula helped to slow the progression from pre-diabetes to a full-blown diagnosis of diabetes. Pre-diabetes is a condition whereby a person has elevated blood sugar levels but not yet to the point of developing type 2 diabetes. Individuals with pre-diabetes have a higher risk of not only type 2 diabetes, but also stroke...

Healthcare organizations under massive attacks from cyber thieves stealing your information

By J. D. Heyes, March 2 2014
(NaturalNews) If the failings of Obamacare haven't been bad enough, especially in terms of losing more of your privacy, now healthcare organizations are increasingly coming under hack attacks that phish for, and steal, personal information. A new study recently published found that networks and medical devices that are connected to the Internet in places like hospitals and doctor's offices, and in insurance and pharmaceutical companies, are under near-constant cyber assault. In many cases, the...

Scientists discover a new natural sleeping pill for children

By Sandeep Godiyal, March 2 2014
(NaturalNews) Having children who develop problems at night can wreck havoc on the sleeping patterns. According to the Canadian Sleep Society, a massive 25 percent of young children have difficulties settling and falling asleep. When they are asked to sleep, they cause a lot disturbance. Research has shown that many parents, especially mothers, are at risk of getting long term insomnia. The worst part is that some of the remedies these parents apply are not as effective as they should. For those...

EFSA pesticide panel infiltrated by industry insiders, according to new report

By David Gutierrez, March 2 2014
(NaturalNews) A report by Pesticide Action Network (PAN) Europe reveals how the pesticide industry has infiltrated global environmental regulatory bodies and sabotaged efforts to research the chemicals' toxic effects. The report focuses on the pesticide panel of the European Food Safety Agency (EFSA) and its failure to implement a 2005 order from the European Commission to start investigating the health effects of mixtures of different pesticides, a practice known as cumulative risk assessment...

Why are taxpayers subsidizing bad food choices?

By J. D. Heyes, March 2 2014
(NaturalNews) One quick perusal of the recently passed agricultural bill in Congress will show you what is inherently wrong with it: Taxpayers are being forced to heavily subsidize some of the worst crops in terms of our health. According to The Washington Post's Tamar Haspel, two of those crops -- corn and soy -- are in and of themselves bad enough (the vast majority of both of these crops, for example, are genetically modified strains). But worse, taxpayer subsidies of these crops "facilitate...

Obesity-mortality paradox debunked: Overweight type 2 diabetes patients do NOT survive better

By Reuben Chow, January 21 2014
(NaturalNews) A recent study published in the New England Journal of Medicine has debunked the findings of some recent studies which suggested that diabetics who were overweight or obese could have lower mortality rates than their normal-weight counterparts. The study, led by researchers from the Harvard School of Public Health, looked at 2,457 men who took part in the Health Professionals Follow-up Study (HPFS) and 8,970 women who took part in the Brigham and Women's Hospital-based Nurses' Health...

Many hospitals ignore protocols that would prevent infections

By PF Louis, March 2 2014
(NaturalNews) With 100,000 Americans a year killed by healthcare-associated infections and adding approximately $33 billion in excess medical costs, you'd think something isn't being done the way it's supposed to be. And that's a fact, according to the most comprehensive study on hospital infection protection in three decades. A research group at Columbia School of Nursing surveyed compliance with evidence-based policies for infection prevention in 1,653 intensive care units (ICUs) at 975 hospitals...

Low iron in your blood may increase stroke risk

By J. D. Heyes, March 2 2014
(NaturalNews) New research by scientists in the United Kingdom has found that iron deficiency increases your chance of suffering a stroke by making the blood stickier. In a study published in the journal PLOS ONE, researchers from the Imperial College London acknowledged previous research which indicated that iron deficiency can be a risk factor for ischemic stroke -- which occurs when small blood clots interrupt blood flow to the brain -- in both adults and children. To find out why, the team...

Neanderthals gave humans the gene for disease

By Yanjun, March 2 2014
(NaturalNews) The results of a new study by German and United States researchers showed that there is a genetic connection between Neanderthals and modern humans. This connection could be responsible for something as benign as being able to tolerate cold weather better, or something as sinister as being predisposed to developing type 2 diabetes. In spite of the fact that Neanderthals died out more than 30,000 years ago, their genetic material still thrives in people who live today. Fascinating...

TSA agents strip-search and publicly humiliate cancer patient

By PF Louis, March 2 2014
(NaturalNews) A man's wife wrote up an account of what happened to her and her husband when they attempted to board a flight recently. Her husband is a prostate cancer victim undergoing conventional treatments that usually make things worse. One of his side issues includes incontinence, or the inability to control one's bladder, resulting in wearing incontinence undergarments that are similar to diapers, just in case. Not the type of thing a grown man looks forward to disclosing. The wife posted...

Why Bitcoin true believers are still delusional even after the collapse of MtGox

By Mike Adams, March 1 2014
(NaturalNews) To all those who are still swooned by Bitcoin's false hope, I offer you this letter of compassionate but stern wisdom. My aim is to help you learn from the harsh lessons that have now undeniably unfolded with the bankruptcy of MtGox and help save you from being harmed by similar mistakes in the years ahead. As we all know by now, nearly half a billion dollars worth of Bitcoins vanished last week as MtGox declared bankruptcy. Currency holdings simply vaporized for 750,000 customers...

Anti-fluoride activists pressure Austin City Council not to renew contract

By Julie Wilson , March 1 2014
(NaturalNews) On February 27, the Austin City Council addressed agenda item no. 19, an action to authorize and award an extending million-dollar contract with Mosaic Crop Nutrition, LLC, the city's hydrofluorosilicic acid supplier. The Fla.-based company commends itself for being the world's leading supplier of "potash," an alkaline potassium compound, and phosphate, which is mined from nearly 2,000 acres of Mosaic-owned land in central Fla. The silicofluorides used to fluoridate the water are...

'Techneck' wrinkles caused by constantly using smart devices

By L.J. Devon, Staff Writer, March 1 2014
(NaturalNews) In an age of constant mobile device usage, where tech obsessives constantly look down to their handheld screens, a new sign of aging is emerging. Tech obsessives are beginning to look older from the face down, as "techneck" wrinkles begin showing up as creases on their necks. View example here. Walk through a mall, go to a restaurant, look around and notice how some people are more in touch with their digital life than their waking life. Take inventory of your own personal...

Vitamin C could reduce risk of stroke

By Sandeep Godiyal, March 1 2014
(NaturalNews) The benefits of vitamin C on the immune system have been well documented for a number of years. Vitamin C is crucial to the overall health of the body in its efforts to fight off infections - both bacterial and viral. Recent research has discovered another advantage to ensuring that levels of vitamin C are at the optimum. Strokes and vitamin C Recently, at the American Academy of Neurology's annual meeting, a small French study presented evidence that those people who have normal...

Obamacare causing Target to drop coverage for part-time employees

By J. D. Heyes, March 1 2014
(NaturalNews) We have warned for more than a year that the Affordable Care Act will prove to be one of the most harmful, job-killing, economy-destroying pieces of legislation ever, and with each passing week we are consistently proven correct. One of the boldest - and easiest - predictions we made regarding the ill effects of Obamacare was that the law's employer mandate would cause a net reduction in employment. The employer mandate, you may recall, is a provision in the law that requires all...

Prickly pear: discover the healing power of an ancient Aztec superfood

By Carolanne Wright, March 1 2014
(NaturalNews) If you live in Latin America, or a semi-arid region of the United States, a wild superfood may be ripe for the picking in your own backyard. Known as prickly pear cactus (Opuntia spp), the leaves and fruit of this desert plant can be harvested and consumed to treat a variety of conditions -- including diabetes, obesity, cardiovascular disease and inflammation. Native to the mountainous areas of Mexico, prickly pear cactus has been used since ancient times as a potent medicine, as...

This is the weekend you quit smoking!

By S. D. Wells, March 1 2014
(NaturalNews) What if you could look back at a particular day, or say a weekend, and remember that it was the weekend you quit that awful habit of inhaling chemicals. What if you could name the day, the time, even the minute when you learned exactly how to quit and you did it? Would that not be a moment to remember forever, the weekend you extended your life by 10 to 20 years? Pesticide, insecticide, bleach, ammonia, plastic and glass wool are just a few of the chemicals used to make commercial...

Testing your levels of cardiovascular inflammation

By Dr. David Jockers, March 1 2014
(NaturalNews) Most doctors have been misled to focus on total cholesterol as a key figure in measuring heart disease. More recent research has shown that measuring inflammatory mediators and inflammatory levels in the body is a much better way of assessing cardiovascular risk. C-reactive protein (CRP) is one of the major inflammatory markers that should be measured when assessing inflammatory levels and risk of heart disease. CRP is released from the liver in response to acute tissue damage and...

Hundreds of confidential dental records dumped in vacant lot in California

By L.J. Devon, Staff Writer, March 1 2014
(NaturalNews) A pile of confidential dental records were found scattered in a random field in Apple Valley, California. The private patient information included names, addresses, phone numbers, social security numbers and birthdates. Found in a vacant lot next to the home of Carolyn Lindblade, the records were collected by the hundreds. A brick wall was keeping them from blowing into a busy street and into a mall parking lot. "We found the papers up against the block wall in the field over there...

Malibu Proclamation Says Dolphins Deserve Rights to Freedom and Life

By Laura Bridgeman, March 1 2014
(NaturalNews) February 24, 2014 was an historic day in the movement to gain basic rights for dolphins and whales. A proclamation requesting protection for cetaceans and including a bold statement that dolphins should have the right to their own lives was presented to the Malibu City Council and was signed by Mayor Joan House. The proclamation, initiated by councilmember Dr. Laura Rosenthal, supports the free and safe passage of all whales and dolphins in the city's coastal waters and "encourages...

Hey quinoa, teff may be the new gluten-free kid on the block

By Antonia, March 1 2014
(NaturalNews) Quinoa, long-praised for the fact that it's a gluten-free food rich in protein and manganese, may have to share some of the nutritional spotlight with teff. Of course quinoa still remains an outstanding health food. But teff, which has likely been available from your supermarket and health food store for quite a while now, is fast becoming another gluten-free favorite that can be used for meal preparation similarly to quinoa (baking, for example). Teff, a grain that comes from the...

Music is your best workout partner

By J. D. Heyes, March 1 2014
(NaturalNews) If you're looking to get the most out of your workouts, no matter what it is that you're getting set to do -- cardio, weightlifting or an intense crossfit session -- you might first think about getting your groove on. In fact, according to various studies, if the music that you listen to fits the rhythm and mood of the physical activity you're performing, you tend to work out a little harder. "The metronome aspect, the synchronization of movement to music, is the most important...

Myth exposed: Do eggs really cause high cholesterol?

By Dr. Megan Heimer, NHE, J.D, N.D., March 1 2014
(NaturalNews) For years mainstream medicine and public health organizations have put eggs on the black list for those with high cholesterol. This view flooded the market with a series of "egg substitutes" and led to the birth of the "egg white only" movement. This movement was founded on the assumption that foods containing high cholesterol... cause high cholesterol. However, not only do eggs not increase cholesterol; they could help prevent cardiovascular disease. A substance in eggs counteracts...

Snorting cocaine increases risk of stroke by six to seven times

By L.J. Devon, Staff Writer, March 1 2014
(NaturalNews) When research scientist Yu-Ching Cheng, Ph.D., from the Baltimore Veterans Affairs Medical Center set out to study the factors contributing to stroke risk in young adults, he came across some very aggressive statistics. Cocaine is more aggressive than thought, increasing risk of stroke six to seven times in a 24-hour windowAfter researching typical stroke risk factors like personal behavior, diet, medical, and environmental factors, he found that the greatest risk of stroke for...

Snakes protect themselves from their own venom by producing natural chelating agent

By L.J. Devon, Staff Writer, March 1 2014
(NaturalNews) Snake venom can be toxic to many systems of the human body. Viperine snakes will strike, inject venom and withdraw, sending haemotoxins into the blood. These toxins can also be necrotizing or deadly to the tissues. They can be anticoagulant, keeping blood from clotting. Some venom can even be neurotoxic, as seen in the Mojave rattlesnake species. Metal ions play a powerful role in snake venom Snake venom is loaded with various protein enzymes that act as catalysts, which speed up...

New highly radioactive water leak detected at Fukushima nuclear power plant

By Ethan A. Huff, February 28 2014
(NaturalNews) More blunders at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power facility in Japan, now defunct, have led to yet another major environmental disaster, indicate new reports. Workers from the Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO), which owns the shuttered utility, apparently forgot to turn off an overflow valve at an onsite storage tank recently, causing the release of 100 metric tons of highly radioactive water into the ground. According to Reuters, this latest leak is the worst to occur at the...

Americans start drinking sewer water as droughts take toll nationwide

By J. D. Heyes, February 28 2014
(NaturalNews) There is a saying that goes, "Desperate times call for desperate measures," and clearly, city officials in one drought-stricken Texas town are getting desperate. According to the CBS News affiliate in Dallas-Fort Worth, one North Texas community may serve up recycled sewer water to residents because of prolonged dry conditions in the region: Wichita Falls is two hours outside of Dallas. Three years ago 88-percent of Texas was under exceptional drought conditions -- that's the...

Could polio or other vaccinations be behind the new "polio-like" Illness outbreak in California?

By Tony Isaacs, February 28 2014
(NaturalNews) According to reports, there are now about 25 or more cases, and counting, of a new "polio-like" outbreak in California children. Disease control officials have yet to determine the cause of the outbreak and they are looking for a new virus. Perhaps one direction they should take a look at is polio and other childhood vaccinations. Initial reports have indicated that the children being affected by the new disease have all been vaccinated against polio. The scenario of children vaccinated...

Russian citizens, scientists feel reject GMOs as lawmakers push for total ban

By Ethan A. Huff, February 28 2014
(NaturalNews) The general hostility of the American mainstream media, which is heavily influenced by the pharmaceutical and chemical cartels, toward Russia during the 2014 Winter Olympics could have some of its underpinnings in the Eurasian country's stance on genetically modified organisms (GMOs). According to Voice of Russia (VoR), Russia's Ministry of Agriculture wants to see the cultivation and sale of GMOs completely banned in Russia, and all of the country's agriculture converted to organic...

Orwellian nightmare becomes reality for Florida woman after judge declares living 'off the grid' illegal

By Ethan A. Huff, February 28 2014
(NaturalNews) A Florida woman who successfully converted the utilities in her house from city water and electricity from the local power company to rainwater and solar panels is being punished for her innovative efforts to live "off the grid," which a local magistrate recently declared to be illegal and in violation of local code ordinances. Though he admitted that the regulations are redundant and unreasonable, Special Magistrate Harold S. Eskin ruled that Robin Speronis, a 54-year-old former...

Hair colorants and the cancer connection - Protect yourself with these natural alternatives

By Carolanne Wright, February 28 2014
(NaturalNews) As a culture obsessed with youth and beauty, it's easy to fall into the trap of using hair dyes to cover those telltale gray hairs. However, using these commercial products is risky since the chemical formulations are linked with a range of cancers. Even so-called 'natural' dyes can compromise health. Where do we turn? With a measure of creativity and knowledge, do-it-yourself hair color can give you glossy, rich locks without the drawbacks of pre-made colorants. Beware of youth...

Man dies after reentering burning home to rescue forgotten cell phone

By J. D. Heyes, February 28 2014
(NaturalNews) These days, Americans are increasingly reliant on personal electronics to help us get through our busy lives, but this story should remind us that, at some point, being temporarily inconvenienced by the loss of a device is not worth dying for. According to the CBS News affiliate in Dallas-Fort Worth, a Plano, Texas, man was killed in the early morning hours of Feb. 27, because apparently, he didn't think that he could go on without his cell phone. As reported by CBS DFW, the man...

Fake food being sold by criminal organizations across Europe

By L.J. Devon, Staff Writer, February 28 2014
(NaturalNews) In light of recent investigations exposing fake fruit in popular breakfast cereals, the Health Ranger has begun unmasking misleading packaging claims, revealing the truth about the ingredients listed on product labels. While cereal falsehoods are exposed at the Natural News forensic food lab, more investigations in Europe reveal that fake food is actually being pushed by criminal organizations who relabel and repackage foods with drugs, chemicals and fillers. This criminal fake food...

Microscopic particles in tattoos could be linked to cancer

By Yanjun, February 28 2014
(NaturalNews) Getting a tattoo has always carried at least a slight risk of side effects. While many of these side effects are directly related to the use of unsanitary equipment, such as the transmission of disease or an allergic reaction, there is also the chance of an infection at the site of the tattoo. This risk is magnified when the site is not taken care of properly. More tattoo side effects Historically, the stance on the inks that are used in tattoos is that they have not shown to pose...

Insane public health officials propose serving fluoridated milk to UK schoolchildren

By Ethan A. Huff, February 28 2014
(NaturalNews) Public health officials in the U.K. resort town of Blackpool, located west of Manchester, have apparently gone mad drinking the fluoridated Kool-Aid, as new reports indicate that town officials there are pushing to have all public schoolchildren forcibly medicated with milk that contains added fluoride chemicals. The Blackpool Gazette reports that the town's Health and Wellbeing board recently met to discuss the scheme, which was hatched in response to continued rejection by the...

Magnesium consumption linked to lower risk of hip fractures

By David Gutierrez, February 28 2014
(NaturalNews) A higher intake of magnesium may reduce the risk of hip fractures, according to a study conducted by researchers from the Norwegian Institute of Public Health and published in the journal Bone. Researchers from the Universities of Bergen, Tromso, Trondheim and Oslo also collaborated in the study, which was funded by the Norwegian Research Council. Norway has one of the highest rates of hip fractures in the world, with approximately 9,000 cases per year. This is considered a major...

How chronic stress rewires your brain and creates mood disorders

By Mike Bundrant, February 28 2014
(NaturalNews) The medical is big on theorizing about your chemicals and adding more into the mix. Traditionally trained doctors, however, give little thought into what causes deficiencies in the first place, especially when those causes are psychological. This is why research into the effects of chronic stress is so important. The effects of psychological stress move beyond the mental, right into your brain chemistry. The following study demonstrates specifically how this happens. Researchers...

New fuel cell technology produces electricity from biomass and sunlight

By Jonathan Benson, February 28 2014
(NaturalNews) The future of renewable energy is upon us, as a team of researchers from the Georgia Institute of Technology has reportedly come up with a new way to extract energy directly from crude biomass, at room temperature, that avoids the need for expensive and pollutive precious metals or other conventional catalysts, all of which are ineffective at breaking down biomass. As published in the peer-reviewed journal Nature Communications, the new study outlines a process by which biomass,...

For a killer bod, eat like a killer whale

By Raw Michelle, February 28 2014
(NaturalNews) Ever hear the one about what a whale or dolphin can teach us about a balanced diet? No, this isn't a question designed to lead into a silly joke, but rather information that can shed light on healthier eating habits for humans. A study conducted by scientists at the University of British Columbia and the University of La Rochelle, in France, found that whales and dolphins, despite their size, don't eat the gargantuan portions people assume they do. One of the study's co-authors,...



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