Rabies resurgence in Peru highlights global threats of health inequity

Insight into what Peru's second-largest city may be missing in its efforts to track rabies could provide insight to the rest of the world on a disease that still kills 70,000 people per year. A team led by researchers from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania found that efforts to track dog-related rabies in poorer areas were lacking even though more dogs were found to have the disease there than in wealthier neighborhoods.
đ Full Story

Paul Saladino Still Doesn't Understand Science | What the Fitness | Biolayne
- The Rising Popularity of Connections: A Deep Dive into the Trending Word Game - Bertha Stephens
- China Warns Journalists, Threatens Consequences For Reporting âDistorted Factsâ Of Deadly Disaster - Anthony Iafrate
- âAlice Through the Looking Glassâ: Dems in House Oversight Committee Divulge Ghislaine Maxwellâs Happy Emails Since Her Arrival at FPC Fort Bryan - Diana Zapata
- Sean Combsâ Mother Upbraids Netflix Over âFalseâ Claims Her Son Hit Her & More Alleged âFake Narrativesâ In âReckoningâ Docuseries - Dominic Patten
- UAV PANIC: A PSYOP? Unidentified Drones Over Belgium Lead to UK, France and Germany Sending Troops and Equipment to Counter the âThreatâ - Diana Zapata
- BAC Eyes Panamaâs Multibank Deal - Nic Wirtz

Ilhan Omar Says Americans Are To Blame For Somali SCAMS
- In 1995, a Netscape employee wrote a hack in 10 days that now runs the Internet - Benj Edwards
- Engadget Podcast: WTF is up with RAM? (With Will Smith from The Tech Pod) - Devindra Hardawar
- Google versus OpenAI: Unraveling the Intricacies of AI Giants - Michael Terry
- Several Dead After Mass Shooting In South Africa - Mark Tanos
- The Matrix Director Retcons Own Movie And Changes Its Meaning, Yet Again - Jennifer Asencio
- Netflix to buy Warner Bros. for $82.7 billion - Daniel Cooper

