KFF/The Washington Post Survey of Parents: Exposure to and Trust in Children’s Health-Related Information Online

As debates over the safety of childhood vaccines and trust in public health guidance play out in the U.S., findings from the latest KFF/Washington Post Survey of Parents reveal how parents encounter health information on social media and how it may shape their decisions. One-third (34%) of parents say they have seen social media content related…

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Is there a price tag for the Louvre’s stolen jewels?

By Bloomberg Published October 22, 2025 French authorities have described it as priceless. But the last time the diamond-encrusted bow, which once belonged to Empress Eugenie, was sold, it reached a reported €6.72 million ($7.8 million). What it’s worth now, three days after it was stolen as part of a raid on the Louvre Museum in Paris is…

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Piquadro: first-half revenue rises 0.7% to €88 million

By Ansa Published October 22, 2025 Piquadro Group’s revenue for the first six months of the financial year, ended September 30, 2025, totalled €88.4 million, a slight increase of 0.7% compared to the same period last year, including the impact of exchange-rate movements. For the Piquadro brand alone, revenue came to €36.6 million, down 8.1%….

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Naturalist Chris Packham speaks at New Scientist Live about the six species that changed his life

Chris Packham is a conservationist and broadcaster known for his environmental and animal-welfare activism. Alongside his ambassadorial roles for various non-governmental organisations, he runs independent campaigns aimed at nature recovery and ending animal cruelty. He is also a vocal advocate for neurodiversity, with a particular focus on autism. At this year’s New Scientist Live festival,…

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AI turns x-rays into time machines for arthritis care

A new artificial intelligence system developed by researchers at the University of Surrey can forecast what a patient’s knee X-ray might look like one year in the future. This breakthrough could reshape how millions of people living with osteoarthritis understand and manage their condition. The research, presented at the International Conference on Medical Image Computing…

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Stanford’s tiny eye chip helps the blind see again

A tiny wireless chip placed at the back of the eye, combined with a pair of advanced smart glasses, has partially restored vision to people suffering from an advanced form of age-related macular degeneration. In a clinical study led by Stanford Medicine and international collaborators, 27 of the 32 participants regained the ability to read…

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