Daily Science Brief

Vaccine Dental Floss


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Maggot meat may have helped Neanderthals thrive, mice get flu shots by flossing, grief might be deadly, and your frenemies could be aging you—literally.


SOURCES

  • Neanderthals likely ate fermented meat with a side of maggots | The Conversation
  • Neanderthals, hypercarnivores, and maggots: Insights from stable nitrogen isotopes | Science Advances
  • Scientists gave mice flu vaccines by flossing their tiny teeth — and it worked | Live Science
  • Intensely grieving a loved one could shorten a mourner's life | New Scientist
  • Grief trajectories and long-term health effects in bereaved relatives: a prospective, population-based cohort study with ten-year follow-up | Frontiers in Public Health
  • Negative social ties, like frenemies, could be ageing you | New Scientist
  • Negative Social Ties as Emerging Risk Factors for Accelerated Aging, Inflammation, and Multimorbidity | medRxiv


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Host, Research, and Writing: Bobby Frankenberger

Cover Art: Scott Johnson

Outro Music: Stravyn

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Daily Science BriefBy Robert Frankenberger

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