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Spaniards now spend half their salary on rent, study finds

A property portal study finds the average share of salary spent on housing has risen 12 points since 2019, with Madrid and Catalonia leading on 70% of pay. The evidence of the housing crisis Spain is facing is plain for all to see. In the rental market, rents have risen by around 30% since 2022, according to the CIS, while new housing construction - PwC data - has been stuck at record lows since 2010, averaging 83,000 homes a year compared with 315,000 on average between 1970 and 2010.

Euronews 15h ago

Just 90 minutes of one regular exercise per week could lower early death risk, study finds

Just 90 minutes of one regular exercise per week could lower early death risk, study finds A major long-term study has found that one particular exercise is linked to lower mortality rates and could make a significant difference to your health New research reveals that just 90 minutes to two hours of weight training weekly could substantially cut the risk of premature death, a major long-term study has found. The findings, published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine, show that...

Daily Mirror 7d ago

Black suburbanization is reshaping American neighborhoods, study finds

Black suburbanization is reshaping American neighborhoods, study finds Lisa Lock Scientific Editor Andrew Zinin Lead Editor In 1970, nearly half of all Black individuals in the U.S. resided in a large city. Over the past 50 years, that number has fallen to merely 25%, while the share living in the suburbs of large cities rose from 16% to 36%.This demographic shift is as large as the post-World War II wave of the Great Migration, according to economists Evan Mast of the University of Notre...

Phys.org 5d ago

Wetlands loss has increased residential flood insurance claim payments by $10 billion across the US, study finds

Wetlands loss has increased residential flood insurance claim payments by $10 billion across the US, study finds Gaby Clark Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor A new study published in Nature Water finds that wetland loss across the United States has increased residential flood insurance claim payments by more than $10 billion since 1985, underscoring the critical role wetlands play in reducing riverine flood damage. Authored by Environmental Defense Fund (EDF) experts, Jesse...

Phys.org 7d ago

2025 costliest year on record for wildfires, study finds

2025 costliest year on record for wildfires, study finds Wildfires accounted for 38 per cent of all insured natural hazard losses globally - Bookmark - CommentsGo to comments Wildfires caused more financial damage in 2025 than in any other year, with catastrophic fires in the US, South Korea and Europe killing about 90 people and forcing roughly 300,000 to evacuate, a new study found. Wildfires accounted for 38 per cent of all insured natural hazard losses globally in 2025 – more than...

The Independent World 9d ago

Dementia risk linked to nitrate in drinking water, study finds

Dementia risk linked to nitrate in drinking water, study finds - Date: - June 8, 2026 - Source: - Edith Cowan University - Summary: - A major long-term study of more than 54,000 adults found that where nitrate comes from may matter far more than how much you consume. People who got more nitrate from vegetables—roughly the amount in a cup of baby spinach a day—had a lower risk of developing dementia, while higher nitrate and nitrite intake from red meat, processed meat, and even drinking...

Science Daily 2d ago

Thanks to natural selection, Indigenous Andeans may digest potatoes better than anyone else in the world, study finds

Thanks to natural selection, Indigenous Andeans may digest potatoes better than anyone else in the world, study finds After domesticating potatoes 10,000 years ago, the ancient people of the Andes evolved to have more copies of a key gene involved in digesting starch. Indigenous Andeans in Peru may be able to digest potatoes and other starches more easily than anyone in the world, a new study finds. Scientists discovered that Indigenous Andeans have more copies of the gene for saliva-based...

Live Science 1d ago

Young and unemployed? Remote work, not AI, may be the problem, study finds

Young and unemployed? Remote work, not AI, may be the problem, study finds Andrew Zinin Lead Editor The rise of remote work since the pandemic has made businesses more reluctant to hire young, inexperienced workers and is the key driver of higher unemployment rates for recent college graduates, a study released Monday has found. The study, by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, compared occupations that can be done remotely—such as software development—with those that are done in person,...

Phys.org 8d ago

Brits waste years of their lives mindlessly phone scrolling, study finds

Brits waste years of their lives mindlessly phone scrolling, study finds Some 69 per cent believed digital platforms were designed in ways that encouraged continued engagement - Bookmark - CommentsGo to comments Britons are set to spend an average of four years and eight months of their lives using mobile phones unintentionally. Virgin Media O2's year-long research, involving over 6,000 participants, found more than a third of phone use (36 per cent) occurs without clear purpose – equating...

The Independent UK 7d ago

Chimpanzees and bonobos have human-like friend circles, study finds

Chimpanzees and bonobos have human-like friend circles, study finds - Date: - May 31, 2026 - Source: - Utrecht University - Summary: - Great apes appear to build friendships much like humans do. By studying grooming behavior, researchers discovered that chimpanzees and bonobos form close inner circles along with wider networks of weaker social connections. Chimpanzees focus on a few trusted partners and become more selective with age, while bonobos maintain a more egalitarian social style.

Science Daily 9d ago