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They have up to 24 arms and grow to the size of a bicycle tire. Starting in 2013, these creatures and other sea star species along the west coast of North America died in epidemic proportions. The ...
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Newspoint on MSNCommon Diseases After Floods: Symptoms, Treatment, and Preventive MeasuresFloods impact many Indian states every year, causing not just destruction of life and property but also triggering a surge in ...
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Africanews on MSNSudan reports over 21 cholera deaths in just one weekSudanese displaced families take shelter in a school after being evacuated by the Sudanese army from areas once controlled by ...
Members of the Sudanese Red Crescent and forensic experts exhume the bodies from makeshift graves for reburial in the local ...
Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) have raised the alarm that about 1.5 million children still die yearly from diseases that ...
Sudan (MNN) — Sudan’s crisis is deepening day by day. More than 640,000 children under the age of five are now at risk of ...
Researchers said Monday that a bacteria related to cholera was responsible for the deaths of more than 5 billion sea stars ...
"The symptoms from skin infections can progress very quickly," Dr. Andrew Handel, a pediatric infectious diseases specialist ...
Researchers have unmasked the deadly bacteria responsible for causing sea stars to melt away, killing billions over the past decade population and upending ecological habitats.
A new study points a finger at a strain of the bacterium Vibrio pectenicida, which belongs to the same genus as Vibrio ...
Shutterstock Cholera Destroys Bent’s Fort Trading Empire The reconstructed Bent’s Old Fort in southeastern Colorado stands as ...
Aid groups are warning more than 600,000 children under the age of five are now at risk of violence, disease, and hunger as ...
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