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    A drug to treat a debilitating disease was approved using data collected about patients over decades, creating path for researchers of other rare conditions who often struggle to prove their treatments work.

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    • FDA Widens Path for Rare-Disease Treatments With New Approval Friedrichs ataxia drug approved on basis of natural history study comparison with open label extension plus a clinical trial #cardiotwitter https://t.co/fA88XYA81T

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    In Kota, students from across the country pay steep fees to be tutored for elite-college admissions exams — which most of them will fail.

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    • Eye opening “only a small percentage are accepted to elite colleges. Known as “toppers,” they are seen as symbols of how grit and dedication can pay off” https://t.co/labFAFbv6p

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    The Netherlands may be a small country, but the Dutch are known for many things: cycling, cheese, coffee shops, windmills and being the tallest people in the world, but there’s only one thing they rarely do. Dutch people don’t say sorry. Producer: Michelle Potters Follow BBC Reel on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook and YouTube

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    • Why the Dutch don't say sorry https://t.co/z8spihOVRG via @BBC_Reel