
Toil and trouble in China over Nobel medicine prize
China's Tu Youyou collects her country's first Nobel Prize for medicine next week for extracting an anti-malarial drug from a herb mentioned in a traditional text, but her award has prompted debate over the role of science in the practice. ... more
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Russian TV host reveals HIV-positive status live on air
A well-known Russian television host announced live on air that he is HIV-positive, an unprecedented revelation in a country with rising infection rates but where HIV/AIDS remains a largely taboo subject. ... more
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More than 1,100 deaths linked to Spain's heatwave
Survivors claw through rubble after deadly Pakistan cloudburst
Spanish PM says 'difficult hours' left in wildfire fight
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China 'clone factory' scientist eyes human replication
The Chinese scientist behind the world's biggest cloning factory has technology advanced enough to replicate humans, he told AFP, and is only holding off for fear of the public reaction. ... more
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With climate change, malaria risk in Africa shifts, grows
A larger portion of Africa is currently at high risk for malaria transmission than previously predicted, according to a new University of Florida mapping study.
Under future climate regimes, t ... more
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Indonesia's Papua battles AIDS epidemic
Fifteen-year-old Adina curls up in bed under a sheet, her body ravaged by AIDS, one of many caught up in an epidemic sweeping Indonesia's eastern Papua region. ... more
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'Live positively': Togo's 'Tino' sets example for HIV/AIDS
Augustin Dokla is arguably Togo's most famous person with HIV, having lived with the virus - against the odds - since 1999. Sixteen years later, he's still fighting for the rights of those infected. ... more
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Fighting AIDS a top priority in western Kenya
Between plantations of bananas, mangoes and avocados, a small group of men trek along paths freshly carved out by the November rains on a mission to inform and educate in an area of western Kenya where AIDS remains rife. ... more
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