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For good growth, add soap and water
Children under the age of five who have access to clean water and soap are half a centimetre taller than those who lack such basics, a study shows. The Cochrane Review, authored by the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and WaterAid, examined data on nearly 10,000 children taken from 14 studies conducted in low- and middle-income countries, including Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Nigeria and Chile. Children who used clean water and soap were taller and less likely to have suffered from diseases caused by growth stunting or to die from diarrhoea 鈥 the third-biggest killer of under-fives worldwide. 鈥淯nsafe water, inadequate sanitation and poor hygiene can affect the body鈥檚 ability to absorb nutrients, impacting on child development and contributing to their stunting,鈥 said Barbara Frost, WaterAid chief executive.
Queen Mary, University of London
University of Warwick
Souped-up secret of the starfish
Scientists have unlocked the secret that enables starfish to carry out one of the most remarkable forms of feeding in the natural world. A聽starfish eats by extending its stomach out of its mouth and over its prey, such as mussels and clams, before dissolving it into a聽soup-like 鈥渃howder鈥 and drawing it back into its body. Academics at Queen Mary, University of London and the University of Warwick have identified a neuropeptide that triggers the unusual feeding process. The discovery may help in the development of chemical-based strategies to control the growing starfish populations that threaten the health of Pacific coral reefs.
University of Surrey
Queasy truth about tiny feet
Flies can contaminate clean surfaces within seconds because they have as many as 6聽million bacteria on their feet, research suggests. Scientists at the University of Surrey measured the trail left behind by three bluebottle flies that were trapped in a聽plastic Petri dish and allowed to walk around for 10 minutes. After the bacteria they deposited were left to grow for a day, the extent of the flies鈥 contamination was analysed. 鈥淚 must admit that even as a well-seasoned microbiologist, these images make me slightly queasy,鈥 said Simon Park, senior lecturer in molecular biology, who led the research. Dr Park said the study underlined the need to keep food covered or refrigerated in hot weather.
University of Leicester
Fans flock to royal dirt-digging
The further excavation of the site of Richard III鈥檚 grave has attracted sightseers from as far afield as Canada and New Zealand. The University of Leicester鈥檚 month-long second excavation of the site of the city鈥檚 medieval Grey Friars church, where the Plantagenet king鈥檚 remains were uncovered last year, made a series of further discoveries, including a medieval stone coffin containing an inner lead coffin. A public viewing platform has been erected and the university has employed a 鈥淩ichard III outreach officer鈥, Charlotte Barratt, to field questions. A聽visitor centre is being built on the site to showcase some of the finds.
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University of Nottingham
Warming up to energy鈥檚 hot potato
The prospect of fracking to extract shale gas may be spurring heated protests in the Home Counties, but public attitudes towards shale gas extraction appear to be warming in the UK as a whole. A series of surveys over 16 months, carried out by a聽University of Nottingham team, found significant rises in the proportion of respondents who saw shale gas as a cheap and clean energy source. Sarah O鈥橦ara, pro vice-chancellor at Nottingham and one of the project leaders, noted that the findings did not mean shale gas 鈥渋s a wildly popular alternative to other forms of energy 鈥 though that [may] change if the movement in the climate of opinion continues鈥.
Aston University
Rubbish idea seeks support
Researchers are calling on manufacturers in the West Midlands to send in their waste to help hone a聽new bioenergy technology. The European Bioenergy Research Institute, based at Aston University, has developed a device called a Pyroformer to generate cost-effective heat and power from waste sources. To take this further, the institute is asking companies to supply agricultural waste, sewage sludge, manure and biomass, as well as 鈥渢all oil鈥 from the pulp industry and waste in the form of pellets created by food processing and water-treatment plants. Tim Miller, director of operations at the institute, said: 鈥淭he city of Birmingham has the potential to power itself using the waste it produces.鈥
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University of Wolverhampton
Business plans await council OK
Plans for an 拢11 million, six-storey building to house a business school have been submitted by a聽university. Anthea Gregory, dean of the University of Wolverhampton鈥檚 Faculty of Social Sciences (which incorporates the business school), said the new development should 鈥減rovide an exciting learning environment supported by the latest technology and able to offer tailored facilities to meet the needs of learners from sub-degree level right the way through to executive education鈥. A planning application has been submitted to Wolverhampton City Council. If it is approved, construction will start in December, with completion projected in May 2015.
The Open University
The prime of youth
A 16-year-old from Wales has become The Open University鈥檚 youngest graduate after gaining a聽BSc honours degree in mathematics. Cameron Thompson, who has Asperger鈥檚 syndrome, began studying with the institution aged聽11. 鈥淚鈥檓 very happy about my degree. I鈥檝e always enjoyed maths,鈥 he said after receiving news of his achievement. Rob Humphreys, director of The Open University in Wales, said: 鈥淭he flexible mode of study offered by The Open University means that students of all ages and circumstances can study with us to achieve their potential.鈥
University Campus Suffolk
Teacher training is top class
An East Anglia higher education institution has been recognised by Ofsted for its 鈥渙utstanding鈥 primary teacher training courses. University Campus Suffolk, which runs training courses at six locations in Norfolk and Suffolk, was given the top mark, 鈥渙utstanding鈥, for its programme of primary teacher training, while its secondary and post-16 teaching courses were rated 鈥済ood鈥. Only providers classed as outstanding are guaranteed to keep their core allocation of student numbers for 2013鈥14 and 2014-15. Simon Hallsworth, professor of sociology and head of the School of Applied Social Sciences, said: 鈥淭his is an amazing result for UCS, especially as in the country overall, universities are losing places over reported falls in teacher training standards.鈥
University of Bedfordshire
Call to tighten net on cybercrime
The co-director of the National Centre for Cyberstalking Research at the University of Bedfordshire has backed the findings of a parliamentary report highlighting the dangers of e-crime. Carsten Maple said that the Home Affairs Committee鈥檚 report, which was published last month and identified a sharp rise in online criminal behaviour, showed that the government鈥檚 current policy on combating such threats 鈥 particularly those aimed at children 鈥 are 鈥渙ut of touch鈥. 鈥淭here has been an increase in funding generally to combat e-crime, but some areas are facing significant cuts, such as the Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre,鈥 said Professor Maple, who is also Bedfordshire鈥檚 pro vice-chancellor for research and enterprise.
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Newcastle/Sunderland
One more might well hurt
Researchers have called for the government to consider lowering the safe drinking limit for people over 65. Experts from the universities of Newcastle and Sunderland have warned that messages about safe drinking levels are not getting through to older people, after interviewing 53 men and women aged between 65 and 90. Some respondents drank a bottle of wine a day or five or six pints of beer in one sitting but did not see this behaviour as a health risk. But the researchers warned that heavy drinking is linked to depression and anxiety and could interfere with prescribed medicines.
University of Dundee
A lecturer walks into a bar鈥
Academics will turn their hand to comedy at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe. Five University of Dundee scholars will perform at events organised by the Bright Club, which encourages academics to present their research to the public at comedy club-style events. This is the first time that Dundee staff have taken part in the Fringe. The gigs aim to 鈥渄ispel the stereotype of the stuffy academic with fresh and inventive stand-up that both entertains and enlightens鈥.
Bangor University
Doping in mind
A neuroscientist has warned that athletes could use 鈥渘eurodoping鈥 鈥 stimulating parts of the brain during practice 鈥 to improve their performance in a similar way to taking banned drugs. Nick Davis of Bangor University鈥檚 School of Psychology warned that if tennis players, for example, wore electrodes to stimulate parts of the brain during training they might improve their motor skills more rapidly. Each sport must decide whether 鈥渘eurodoping鈥 is cheating or a legitimate aid, he argues in the August edition of the peer-reviewed journal Sports Medicine.
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