News

Bellin and two other graduates of the biotechnology master’s program, Joel Andrade MS ’21 and Hannah Hirou MS ’23, are ...
A tourist in Spain has been warned he's lucky to be alive after grabbing a snake to take a photo of it, because he'd ...
Discover how experts in India are revolutionizing snakebite treatment and research to save lives and protect communities.
“Our epitope-focusing technology has already shown promise across RSV, HIV, malaria, oncology, and even universal antivenom,” ...
WIRED attended a biohacking conference filled with unorthodox and often unproven anti-aging treatments. Adherents revealed ...
For nearly two decades, Tim Friede voluntarily injected himself with venom and endured over 200 snake bites in hopes of building immunity and helping create a universal antivenom. Now, scientists ...
Back to homepage / Live news Man who let snakes bite him 200 times spurs new antivenom hope Paris (AFP) – Tim Friede was feeling particularly down on the day after the September 11 attacks, so ...
Glanville said the ultimate goal of his US-based firm Centivax was to develop a universal antivenom administered by something like an EpiPen, potentially produced in India to keep the costs down.
Discover how 200+ self-inflicted snakebites led to a universal antivenom, why magnetars may forge cosmic metals like gold, and what Type 5 diabetes means for global health.