Eén op de zeven mensen raadpleegt liever AI-chatbots dan een arts, uit Brits onderzoek blijkt
Exclusief: Artsen zeggen dat 'zeer zorgwekkende' peiling risico's voor patiënten benadrukt die AI raadplegen voor medisch advies
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Comprehensive coverage and timeline for Study Shows. Aggregated from 2 sources with 8 articles.
8 artikelen · 2 bronnen · Dekking sinds 3/16/2026
Hoe de dekking van Study Shows zich in de loop van de tijd heeft ontwikkeld.
Onderwerpen die vaak samen met Study Shows worden behandeld.
Exclusief: Artsen zeggen dat 'zeer zorgwekkende' peiling risico's voor patiënten benadrukt die AI raadplegen voor medisch advies
theguardian.comOnderzoekers stellen dat 50+ uur zorg per week schadelijk kan zijn voor de gezondheid, terwijl lichtere verantwoordelijkheden juist een positief effect hebben.
theguardian.comOnderzoek naar gewichtslimieten van liften vervaardigd in het VK en Europa tussen 1972 en 2004 roept zorgen op over veiligheid en gelijkwaardigheid • Liften zijn niet langer groot genoeg om de grotere burgers van het VK te accommoderen, aldus onderzoekers. • Een studie naar de maximale capaciteit van liften in het VK en vastland-Europa wees uit dat liften niet zijn meegegroeid met de stijgende obesitasniveaus, wat zorgen baart over de veiligheid en gelijkwaardigheid. Lees verder...
theguardian.comRevelation comes after report commissioned by department released in response to charity’s FoI requestThe Ministry of Defence has no system for examining whether UK military action has killed or injured civilians in war, a study commissioned by the department has revealed.The MoD also “does not maintain a central register of civilian harm incidents or allegations” and, despite mass casualties caused by other countries, has concluded there is no need to do so because its existing mitigation is considered effective. Continue reading...
theguardian.comReform UK is ‘doing something right when it comes to visibility’ on multiple AI systems, say researchersAI platforms are more likely to reference Nigel Farage than any other UK leader when prompted about British politics, according to an AI search analytics firm.“We are confident in saying that Reform are showing up significantly more than you would expect,” said Malte Landwehr, an expert at Peec AI, the firm that did the research. “So they’re doing something right when it comes to LLM [large language model] visibility.” Continue reading...
theguardian.com• A comprehensive analysis from the National Center for Atmospheric Research shows US carbon dioxide emissions fell 8.2% year-over-year in Q1 2026, driven primarily by renewable energy sources now supplying 34% of national electricity generation. • Solar and wind capacity additions reached record levels with 42 gigawatts of new renewable infrastructure installed in 2025, according to data released by the Department of Energy and independent research institutions. • Climate scientists attribute the acceleration partly to state-level climate policies and federal incentives from the 2024 Clean Energy Investment Act, though transportation and industrial sectors still require significant emission reductions.
nature.comCuts to family planning aid are linked to an 11% increase in deaths during pregnancy and childbirth in some countriesWhen Republican presidents win power in the US there is a stark consequence for many pregnant woman around the world – a significant rise in maternal mortality as aid is withdrawn, a new study has found.Global family planning aid typically drops under Republican presidents and then rises again by 48% once Democratic presidents are elected, the research, published in BMJ Global Health, finds. Continue reading...
theguardian.comBorrowers coming off fixed deals hit hard as Savills says big spike in interest payments made up half the overall rise UK households spent a record £226bn to keep a roof over their heads last year, figures showed on Monday, with mortgage borrowers finishing fixed-rate deals particularly hard hit by rising payments.Overall housing costs have gone up by £66bn over the past five years, a rise of 41%, the property group Savills said. Continue reading...
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