- Love Languages May Improve Relationship Satisfaction | Time
- Breast cancer spreads at night, study shows: Surprising findings from cancer research — ScienceDaily
- Flu vaccination linked to 40% reduced risk of Alzheimer’s disease — ScienceDaily
Passenger Ship: RICH PASSAGE 1
- Finding the right memory strategy to slow cognitive decline: A new study compares two popular forms of cognitive training that people often use to improve learning and memory — ScienceDaily
- People with poor sleep behaviors may be at risk for fatty liver disease: Study shows people who stay up late, snore and nap are at highest risk — ScienceDaily
- Put down devices, let your mind wander, study suggests — ScienceDaily
Tug Boat: HUDSON
- Men over 40 who regularly eat sunomono more likely to be in lower blood pressure category, study finds: Vinegar-based Japanese side dish provided an opportunity for first observational study of dietary vinegar’s health benefits — ScienceDaily
- Tracking daily movement patterns may one day help predict dementia: Study explores possibility that changes in daily activity patterns may predict Alzheimer’s and other cognitive decline in older adults — ScienceDaily
- Why Bluetooth remains an ‘unusually painful’ technology after two decades – CNN
Bulk Carrier: GRAND RADIANT
- COVID-19 patients more likely to develop cardiovascular diseases and diabetes soon after infection: Disease risk returns to baseline after 23 weeks for diabetes, and 7 weeks for cardiovascular diseases — ScienceDaily
- Why women do or don’t change their name once married – CNN
- Heatstroke, heat rash and more: Recognize the signs and stop it – CNN
Vehicles Carrier: GREEN COVE
Bulk Carrier: GUO YUAN 8
- ‘You are what you eat,’ and now researchers know exactly what you’re eating: Matching blood or stool samples to a reference database of foods reveals how much of our body chemistry is traceable to what we consume — ScienceDaily
- Processed Meat and Health Risks: What to Know – The New York Times
- People who practice intermittent fasting experience less severe complications from COVID-19, study finds — ScienceDaily