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    • Mashup Score: 1
      New Report Highlights U.S. 2021 Gun-Related Deaths: For Second Straight Year, U.S. Firearm Fatalities Reached Record Highs | Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health - 2 year(s) ago

      CDC data for 2021 firearm fatalities show Black people at greatest risk for gun homicide; guns remain leading cause of death for children and teens ages 1–19 and young adults under 25

      Source: Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
      Categories: General Medicine News, Latest Headlines
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      • Profile photo of 	LizSzabo
        LizSzabo

        New Report Highlights U.S. 2021 Gun-Related Deaths: For Second Straight Year, U.S. Firearm Fatalities Reached Record… https://t.co/3DBl23EQWG

    • Mashup Score: 5
      New Report Highlights U.S. 2021 Gun-Related Deaths: For Second Straight Year, U.S. Firearm Fatalities Reached Record Highs | Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health - 2 year(s) ago

      CDC data for 2021 firearm fatalities show Black people at greatest risk for gun homicide; guns remain leading cause of death for children and teens ages 1–19 and young adults under 25

      Source: Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
      Categories: General Medicine News, Latest Headlines
      Tweet Tweets with this article
      • Profile photo of 	JohnsHopkinsSPH
        JohnsHopkinsSPH

        An estimated 9,500 fewer people would have been killed with guns in the U.S. in 2021 if the firearm homicide rate had remained where it was in 2014, when it reached a 40-year low, according to authors of a new @JHU_CGVS report. https://t.co/bPTOmJa4Mp

    • Mashup Score: 5
      The Chemistry of Mosquito Attraction | Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health - 2 year(s) ago

      Using an outdoor testing arena in Zambia, researchers are hoping to use new discoveries about mosquitoes’ attraction to human scent to develop malaria interventions.

      Source: Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
      Categories: General Medicine News, Latest Headlines
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      • Profile photo of 	JohnsHopkinsSPH
        JohnsHopkinsSPH

        "By identifying microbes living on our skin that make us less attractive to mosquitoes, we could create new repellents that might ward mosquitoes away." https://t.co/uwff8NzydV

    • Mashup Score: 15
      Why (and How) You Should Ask Other Parents if They Own Guns | Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health - 2 year(s) ago

      1 in 3 children in the U.S. live in a home with at least one firearm. We can save lives by normalizing conversations about guns in the home and how they’re stored.

      Source: Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
      Categories: General Medicine News, Latest Headlines
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      • Profile photo of 	JohnsHopkinsSPH
        JohnsHopkinsSPH

        "Parents who have guns in the home will often say, 'No, my kids don't know where I keep it.' But if you ask those same kids, 73% of them know exactly where it is and could get it within a matter of minutes." https://t.co/SKxIPmuODk

    • Mashup Score: 10
      The Chemistry of Mosquito Attraction | Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health - 2 year(s) ago

      Using an outdoor testing arena in Zambia, researchers are hoping to use new discoveries about mosquitoes’ attraction to human scent to develop malaria interventions.

      Source: Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
      Categories: General Medicine News, Latest Headlines
      Tweet Tweets with this article
      • Profile photo of 	JohnsHopkinsSPH
        JohnsHopkinsSPH

        "The most interesting part of this study was that mosquitoes consistently, night after night, would choose the same human scent and not prefer some humans." @McMenimanLab explains why 🧀 https://t.co/uwff8NzydV

    • Mashup Score: 1
      Americans Agree on Effective Gun Policy More Than We're Led to Believe | Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health - 2 year(s) ago

      Americans broadly agree on numerous gun violence prevention policies—regardless of their political affiliation or whether or not they own guns—according to a new national public opinion survey from researchers at the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Violence Solutions.

      Source: Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
      Categories: General Medicine News, Latest Headlines
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      • Profile photo of 	JohnsHopkinsSPH
        JohnsHopkinsSPH

        The Johns Hopkins National Survey of Gun Policy has been fielded every two years since 2013 to track Americans’ support of gun policies. Learn more about what @JHU_CGVS’s latest data show and what these policies entail: https://t.co/h767F5jeD5

    • Mashup Score: 3
      Why (and How) You Should Ask Other Parents if They Own Guns | Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health - 2 year(s) ago

      1 in 3 children in the U.S. live in a home with at least one firearm. We can save lives by normalizing conversations about guns in the home and how they’re stored.

      Source: Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
      Categories: General Medicine News, Latest Headlines
      Tweet Tweets with this article
      • Profile photo of 	JohnsHopkinsSPH
        JohnsHopkinsSPH

        "Parents who have guns in the home will often say, 'No, my kids don't know where I keep it.' But if you ask those same kids, 73% of them know exactly where it is and could get it within a matter of minutes" https://t.co/SKxIPmuODk

    • Mashup Score: 4
      The Chemistry of Mosquito Attraction | Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health - 2 year(s) ago

      Using an outdoor testing arena in Zambia, researchers are hoping to use new discoveries about mosquitoes’ attraction to human scent to develop malaria interventions.

      Source: Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
      Categories: General Medicine News, Latest Headlines
      Tweet Tweets with this article
      • Profile photo of 	JohnsHopkinsSPH
        JohnsHopkinsSPH

        "Using an ice-rink-sized outdoor testing arena in Zambia called a flight cage, researchers tested mosquito behavior under naturalistic conditions and gleaned critical insights into the chemistry of mosquito attraction to humans." https://t.co/uwff8NzydV

    • Mashup Score: 2
      RAP Club: Promoting Adolescent Mental Health in Schools | Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health - 2 year(s) ago

      To help address the teen mental health crisis, some researchers are teaching mindfulness and coping strategies in schools—and delivering resilience that extends beyond the classroom.

      Source: Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
      Categories: General Medicine News, Latest Headlines
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      • Profile photo of 	JohnsHopkinsSPH
        JohnsHopkinsSPH

        A program developed by Bloomberg School researchers teaches teens mindfulness and coping strategies. https://t.co/Ffi3HGozJP

    • Mashup Score: 4
      Why (and How) You Should Ask Other Parents if They Own Guns | Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health - 2 year(s) ago

      1 in 3 children in the U.S. live in a home with at least one firearm. We can save lives by normalizing conversations about guns in the home and how they’re stored.

      Source: Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
      Categories: General Medicine News, Latest Headlines
      Tweet Tweets with this article
      • Profile photo of 	JohnsHopkinsSPH
        JohnsHopkinsSPH

        1 in 3 children in the U.S. lives in a home with a gun, but 55% of gun owners with children in the home do not practice safe storage. Click here to learn more from @JHU_CGVS about how normalizing conversations about guns can keep our loved ones safe: https://t.co/SKxIPmuODk

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