Health
Junk food linked to age-marker in chromosomes: study – RFI

Paris (AFP)
People who eat a lot of industrially processed junk food are more likely to exhibit a change in their chromosomes linked to ageing, according to research presented Tuesday at an online medical conference.
Three or more servings of so-called “ultra-processed food” per day doubled the odds that strands of DNA and proteins called telomeres, found on the end of chromosomes, would be shorter compared to people who rarely consumed such foods, scientists reported at the European and Inter…
-
Noosa News21 hours ago
Woman was watching keepers work when lion attacked, Darling Downs Zoo says
-
Noosa News19 hours ago
Working for someone else made it hard to care for my daughter. So I quit
-
General24 hours ago
Developer warns wind energy capacity may not be ready by WA coal deadline
-
Noosa News22 hours ago
Star Entertainment faces $36.5m blow if Queen’s Wharf deal flops