Science & Environment

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A rarely seen deep sea fish is found in California, and scientists want to know why
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Published Aug 15, 2024 • 1 minute read

081524-California-Rare-Fish
This image provided by The Scripps Institution of Oceanography shows a team of researchers and science-minded snorkelers working together to recover a dead oarfish from La Jolla Cove, Calif., Saturday, Aug. 10, 2024. Photo by Michael Wang /THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SAN DIEGO (AP) — A rarely seen deep sea fish resembling a serpent was found floating dead on the ocean surface off the San Diego coast and was brought ashore for study, marine experts said.


The silvery, 12-foot-long (3.6-meter) oarfish was found last weekend by a group of snorkelers and kayakers in La Jolla Cove, north of downtown San Diego, the Scripps Institution of Oceanography said in a statement.

It’s only the 20th time an oarfish is known to have washed up in California since 1901, according to institution fish expert Ben Frable.

Scripps noted that oarfish have a mythical reputation as predictors of natural disasters or earthquakes, although no correlation has been proven.

Oarfish can grow longer than 20 feet (6 meters) and normally live in a deep part of the ocean called the mesopelagic zone, where light cannot reach, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Swimmers brought the La Jolla Cove oarfish to shore atop a paddleboard. It was then transferred to the bed of a pickup truck.

Scientists from NOAA Southwest Fisheries Science Center and Scripps planned a necropsy on Friday to try to determine the cause of death.
california-rare-fish[1].jpg
 

spaminator

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Your molecules change rapidly around ages 44 and 60, study says
The study offers further evidence that the markers of age do not increase at a steady pace, but more sporadically

Author of the article:Washington Post
Washington Post
Leo Sands
Published Aug 15, 2024 • 5 minute read

For many, middle age is associated with midlife crises and internal tumult. According to new research, it is also when the human body undergoes two dramatic bouts of rapid physical transformation on a molecular level.


In a new study, scientists at Stanford University tracked age-related changes in over 135,000 types of molecules and microbes, sampled from over 100 adults. They discovered that shifts in their abundance – either increasing or decreasing in number – did not occur gradually over time, but clustered around two ages.

“Obviously you change throughout your entire life. But there are two major periods when there are lots of changes: One is when people hit their mid-40s, and one is they hit their 60s,” said Professor Michael Snyder, a geneticist at Stanford University who co-wrote the study, in a phone interview. On average, the changes clustered around the ages of 44 and 60.

The peer-reviewed study, which published Wednesday in the journal Nature Aging, offers further evidence that the markers of age do not increase at a steady pace, but more sporadically. The focus on molecular change could also offer future researchers a clue into the drivers of age-related diseases, although it is too early to say precisely how molecular change is related to aging.


“When people become old, the molecules in your body change,” said Xiaotao Shen, a computational biologist at Singapore’s Nanyang Technological University who co-wrote the study while at Stanford, in a phone interview Wednesday. “What we don’t know is what drives this change.”

The findings also underscore the importance of a person’s lifestyle once they enter their 40s, the scientists said – advising people to improve their diet and exercise at this age, when the body begins to change.

Every three to six months, the scientists took oral, skin and nasal swabs, as well as blood and stool samples, from 108 adults. On average, participations were observed for a relatively short period – with a median of less than two years. The participants were aged 25 to 75, healthy and from diverse ethnic backgrounds.


The scientists then analyzed some 135,239 different molecules and microbes – including RNA, proteins and metabolites – from the samples, forming 246 billion data points from across the time span. A statistical analysis revealed that the majority of observed molecules – 81 percent – did not fluctuate in number continuously, but changed around two ages significantly. “In the mid-40s and 60s, that seems to be where most changes were occurring,” said Snyder.

As part of the study, the scientists observed changes in molecules and microbes including proteins, metabolites and lipids, which are related to cardiovascular function, the immune system, metabolism, and skin and muscle.

Changes in molecules related to cardiovascular disease, the metabolism of caffeine, and skin and muscle were observed at both ages, the scientists found – but there were also some differences between the two ages. For participants in their mid-40s, for example, marked changes included those observed in molecules related to the metabolism of alcohol and lipids (or fats). For those in their 60s, notable fluctuations were observed in molecules related to immune regulation, kidney function and the metabolism of carbohydrates.


Snyder said the molecular changes observed in the 60s was not surprising. “A lot of age-related diseases kick in then: cardiovascular disease, cancer,” he pointed out.

But the changes observed in the 40s, Snyder said, were initially surprising. After breaking down the study’s results by sex, the authors found that the shift was also observed in men in their mid-40s – discounting the possibility that the dramatic changes could be accounted for solely by the onset of menopause or perimenopause in women.

“In hindsight, it makes intuitive sense,” Snyder said – referring to the molecular shifts observed in both sexes in the mid-40s. “People who do a lot of exercise realize when they hit their 40s that they’re not quite the same as they were in their 20s.”


The exact reason for why these molecular changes cluster at the mid-40s and 60s is unclear. But the study’s authors say their findings show that from your 40s, people stand to gain particular benefits from taking care of their health. This includes getting regular medical check ups – at least twice a year once you hit your 40s, suggests Shen – as well as making lifestyle adjustments.

“For example, if you know that your carbohydrate metabolism is going off – there’s something you can do about that: changing your diet,” said Snyder, who generally advises people in their midlife to exercise and eat a healthy diet.

“We found that the metabolism ability for alcohol and coffee decreases around 40 and 60 years old,” Shen said, suggesting that people at these ages would benefit from reducing their consumption of both. Some people who could once drink multiple cups of coffee a day and have no trouble sleeping may suddenly find in their 40s that a single cup of coffee is enough to inhibit a good night’s sleep that night, he pointed out.


David Clancy, a lecturer in biogerontology at England’s University of Lancaster who was not involved in the research, said that the study can help offer an insight into the causes of aging by identifying which molecules are directly linked to age-related diseases. “Ultimately, of course, this might help identify therapeutic targets,” Clancy said in an email Tuesday.

The molecules analyzed in this study, Clancy pointed out, are often linked to age-related diseases and characteristics like thrombosis and cardiovascular disease, skin and muscle stability, immune senescence, kidney function and carbohydrate metabolism.

The authors cautioned that it was possible some of the observed molecular changes – such as the ability to metabolize alcohol – could be related to behavioral changes that take place around the same age, as opposed to factors relating directly to age biology. “We don’t always know what’s cause and effect,” Snyder said, pointing out the possibility that people are simply consuming more alcohol at those ages.


The authors also cautioned that the length of the study was too short for tracking changes that unfold over decades. Longer-term research, they say, could offer better insight into how observed molecular changes align with longer-term changes in functional capacities, disease occurrences and mortality hazards. The number of participants was also relatively small.

Researchers hope to better understand the factors driving these molecular changes, Shen said. “If we can find the drivers of these change, we may even be able to find ways to slow or even reverse the drivers of the aging at these two time points.”
 

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Alcohol boosts cancer risk 'from the first drop,' study author says
Author of the article:postmedia News
Published Aug 18, 2024 • Last updated 1 hour ago • 2 minute read

A new study suggests hangovers may be worsened for patients with long-COVID.
A new study claims that alcohol, no matter the amount, offers no health benefits and no amount is safe to consume in a drinker's golden years.
Talk about a black fly in your chardonnay.


Yet another study has claimed that alcohol, no matter the amount, offers no health benefits and is not safe to consume in a drinker’s golden years, according to a U.K. study, cited by the New York Post.

The 12-year study looked at the drinking habits of 135,000 people over the age of 60 and said even light drinking was linked to an increase in cancer deaths. The increase was even worse among older adults living in lower-income communities and those with health problems, the Post reported.

Lead study author Rosario Ortola, an assistant professor of preventive medicine and public health at the Autonomous University of Madrid, told the New York Times that drinking alcohol raises someone’s cancer risk “from the first drop.


“We did not find evidence of a beneficial association between low drinking and (overall) mortality,” Ortola said, via the Times.


The study flies in the face of the previously held belief that a glass of red wine can provide health benefits, with the Post crediting research by the Canadian Institute for Substance Use Research at the University of Victoria for raising the red flag.

The new research published Monday in the JAMA Network Open journal supported those findings, according to the Post, regardless of health or socioeconomic status.

The study also linked heavy drinking — more than 40 grams a day for men and 20 grams for women, with the standard U.S. drink containing 14 grams of alcohol — to more deaths from all causes.


Distilled Spirits Council senior vice-president Amanda Berger took issue with the study, however, telling the Post that the new research “contradicts decades of robust scientific evidence consistently demonstrating that moderate drinkers live at least as long as non-drinkers.”

The news comes after the Canadian Centre on Substance Use and Addiction said in a 2023 update to its health guidelines that “no amount or kind of alcohol is good for your health” and one to two drinks per week was the maximum recommendation to avoid health issues like heart disease and cancer.

The World Health Organization has also said alcohol is a carcinogen and consumption boosts the risk of breast, liver, head and neck, esophageal and colorectal cancers, among others, according to the Post.
 

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Toronto reports first probable human case of West Nile virus this year
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Published Aug 16, 2024 • 1 minute read
Toronto's public health unit is reporting the city's first probable human case of the West Nile virus this year.
Toronto's public health unit is reporting the city's first probable human case of the West Nile virus this year.
Toronto’s public health unit is reporting the city’s first probable human case of the West Nile virus this year.


Toronto Public Health says in a news release on Friday that an adult resident contracted the virus.

This is the fourth human case of West Nile virus in Ontario this year.

The West Nile virus can be transmitted to people through the bite of an infected mosquito.

The infection symptoms usually start to show between two and 14 days after a person is bitten and may include fever, headache, nausea, vomiting, body aches, skin rash and swollen lymph glands.

Toronto Public Health says residents can protect themselves from the West Nile virus by wearing light-coloured, long-sleeved shirts and pants outdoors and by applying insect repellent.
 

spaminator

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Junk food, processed meat paving way for rise of cancer?
Author of the article:postmedia News
Published Aug 18, 2024 • Last updated 5 hours ago • 3 minute read

With cancer diagnoses apparently on the rise, some experts say there’s no better time to avoid junk food and processed meat.
With cancer diagnoses apparently on the rise, some experts say there’s no better time to avoid junk food and processed meat.
With cancer cases rising, some experts say there’s no better time to avoid junk food and processed meat.


“We advise that people eat less overly processed, high-in-saturated fat, sugar and salt food,” Matthew Lambert, a nutritionist and the health information and promotion manager at the World Cancer Research Fund, told the Daily Mail this week, according to the New York Post.

“This includes food like cakes, biscuits, pastries, (chips), sugar-sweetened drinks and fast food like pizza and burgers,” Lambert said.

Cancer has reportedly been hitting young people hard, especially adults in their 30s.

“It’s been pretty alarming to all of us,” Dr. Coral Olazagasti, assistant professor of clinical medical oncology at the University of Miami Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center, told the Post in April.

“In the past, you would think cancer was a disease of the elderly population,” she added. “But now we’ve been seeing trends in recent years of people getting diagnosed with cancer earlier and earlier.”


While there are many factors, ultra-processed food and processed meat have drawn significant scrutiny.

Speaking to the American Society of Clinical Oncology last year, professor Charles Swanton said research has shown that sometimes early-onset bowel cancer can be “initiated” by gut bacteria that’s more prevalent in those whose diets are low in fibre and high in sugar.

“What we are seeing in some studies is some tumors from patients with early-onset colorectal cancer harbour mutations that might be initiated by these microbial species,” said Swanton, oncologist and chief clinician at Cancer Research UK.

It’s thought that these mutations diminish the body’s ability to fight pre-cancerous cells.

Ultra-processed foods include packaged goods, drinks, cereals and ready-to-eat products that contain colours, emulsifiers, flavours and other additives. These foods are typically high in sugar, saturated fat, salt and devoid of vitamins and fibre.


A recent study suggested that these foods make up an estimated 73% of the U.S. food supply, and that the average American adult gets more than 60% of their daily calories from them.

“These types of food have no fibre and contain virtually no essential nutrients. They should only be eaten occasionally and in small amounts,” Lambert said.

Recent research reported that people who eat 10% more UPFs (ultra-processed foods) than others have a 23% higher risk of head and neck cancer.

A junk food diet was also linked to a 24% higher risk of cancer of the esophagus, the tube connecting your throat to your stomach, which is the sixth most common cause of cancer-related death worldwide, according to the Cleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine.


The UN’s International Agency for Research on Cancer has classified processed meat as “carcinogenic to humans” and notes that there is “sufficient evidence from epidemiological studies that eating processed meat causes colorectal cancer.”

The increased cancer risk may be caused by nitrates within the meat that combine with compounds in the body to damage cells, experts believe.

Research in 2015 suggested that people who eat red and processed meat daily are 40% more likely to get bowel cancer compared to those who eat it once a week or less.



“Consumption of foods containing nitrate or nitrite preservatives, smoked or charred foods, and red meat have clear associations with cancer risk,” Dr. Nicholas DeVito, an assistant professor of medical oncology at Duke University Medical Center, wrote in a “letter to the editor” submission to STAT News published recently.

DeVito shared that most of his new patients have been under 45.

He blames poor dietary choices, like “fried foods, red meat and sugary drinks” for this troubling trend.
 

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Perdue recalls 167,000 pounds of chicken nuggets after consumers find metal wire in some packages
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Published Aug 18, 2024 • 2 minute read

NEW YORK (AP) — Check your freezer. Perdue Foods is recalling more than 167,000 pounds of frozen chicken nuggets and tenders after some customers reported finding metal wire embedded in the products.


According to Perdue and the U.S. Agriculture Department’s Food Safety and Inspection Service, the recall covers select lots of three products: Perdue Breaded Chicken Tenders, Butcher Box Organic Chicken Breast Nuggets and Perdue Simply Smart Organics Breaded Chicken Breast Nuggets.

FSIS and Perdue determined that some 167,171 pounds (75,827 kilograms) of these products may be contaminated with a foreign material after receiving an unspecified number of customer complaints. In a Friday announcement, Maryland-based Perdue said that the material was “identified in a limited number of consumer packages.”

The company later “determined the material to be a very thin strand of metal wire that was inadvertently introduced into the manufacturing process,” Jeff Shaw, Perdue’s senior vice president of food safety and quality, said in a prepared statement. Shaw added that Perdue decided to recall all impacted packages “out of an abundance of caution.”


There are no confirmed injuries or adverse reactions tied to eating these products to date, according to FSIS and Perdue. Still, FSIS is concerned that the products may be in consumers’ freezers.

The now-recalled tenders and nuggets can be identified by product codes listed on both Perdue and FSIS’s online notices. All three impacted products have a best if used by date of March 23, 2025, and establishment number “P-33944” on the back of the package. They were sold at retailers nationwide.

Consumers who have the recalled chicken are urged to throw it away or return the product to its place of purchase. Perdue is offering full refunds to impacted consumers who can call the company at 866-866-3703.

Foreign object contamination is one of the the top reasons for food recalls in the U.S. today. Just last November, Tyson Foods recalled nearly 30,000 pounds (13,600 kilograms) of chicken nuggets after consumers also found metal pieces in the dinosaur-shaped products. Beyond metal, plastic fragments, rocks, bits of insects and more “extraneous” materials have prompted recalls by making their way into packaged goods.
 

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Watching five hours of TV a day increases risk of dementia, Parkinson’s: Study
Author of the article:Denette Wilford
Published Aug 19, 2024 • 3 minute read

If you watch five hours of television a day, you could be at risk for a number of serious, debilitating disorders and conditions.


A study of more than 400,000 people in the U.K. with an average age of 55.8 years were at greater risk of developing dementia, Parkinson’s disease and suffering a stroke.

People who watched more than five hours of TV a day had a 44 per cent greater risk of developing the debilitating condition, says a study of 400,000 people in the UK.

Published in the Journal of the America Medical Directors Association, the study’s title explained their mission: “Associations between recreational screen time and brain health in middle-aged and older adults,” though it excluded time spent on computers for work purposes.

The researchers’ findings “suggest high TV viewing time is associated with increased risk of various brain-related disorders.”


The scientists from Tianjin Medical University in China analyzed data on 407,792 people between the ages of 37 to 73, 40,000 of whom had a brain scan.

During the 13-year follow-up period, 5,227 developed dementia, 6,822 had a stroke and 2,308 were diagnosed with Parkinson’s.

The participants watched TV for 2.7 hours a day on average.


More than half of the participants (61%) spent between one to four hours a day in screen time, averaging 2.7 hours of TV-watching, and recreational computer screen time was 1.1 hours.

Those in the study who watched TV for one to three hours daily had a 1.02 times greater risk of developing dementia; television viewers at three to five hours a day had a slightly risk at 1.16 times greater chance of developing dementia; and those who spent more than five hours a day watching TV had a 1.41 increased risk of developing dementia.


Watching television for one to three hours per day led to a .98 increased risk of stroke, three to five hours a day of TV viewing resulted in a 1.01 risk of stroke, while those who watched more than five hours of TV jumped to a 1.12 increased risk of stroke.

The numbers were similar for TV-watching and its connection to Parkinson’s disease, with those who viewed one to three hours had a .98 increased risk and viewers of three to five hours saw a bit of a higher risk with 1.02.

However, those who watched more than five hours of TV had a 1.28 increased risk of developing Parkinson’s.


The researchers also found more than five hours of TV was associated with less grey matter and smaller memory centres, which are both tied to brain diseases.

It is unclear how watching television has these effects on the brain, though one theory is that sedentary behaviour, with low levels of muscle activity and energy expenditure, leads to chronic inflammation and reduced blood flow to the brain.

That said, it’s more about being a couch potato than regularly taking in your favourite shows.

“Restricting daily TV viewing time to three hours was shown to be the most beneficial to brain-related disorders,” the scientists noted in their conclusion.

“This has potentially important implications for public health to reduce recreational screen time, particularly for TV viewing to exert positive effects on brain health.”
 

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Prof treads unusual academic ground – after-death contact
Text messages from a dead loved one. The sensation of being hugged. A familiar whiff of perfume while walking in a forest.

Author of the article:Heather Rivers
Published Aug 19, 2024 • Last updated 14 hours ago • 3 minute read

Text messages from a dead loved one.


The sensation of being hugged.

A familiar whiff of perfume while walking in a forest.

These are common ways people say they experience so-called after-death communication (ADC) from a loved one, a phenomenon that one London professor is bringing into a place it’s rarely found – the world of peer-reviewed, academic study.

“I’ve had an interest in the survival hypothesis – the hypothesis that consciousness can continue to exist, at least for a time, after the death of the physical body – since I was a child,” said Imants Baruss, a psychology professor at Western University’s King’s University College and author of Death as an Altered State of Consciousness: A Scientific Approach.

The text book is published by the American Psychological Society, and used by his students.


For the last two years, he and his students has been researching after-death communication as experienced through cellphones, funded by a $44,500 BIAL Foundation grant.

“Rarely is this a phone call from the dead, although those do sometimes occur,” Baruss said. “Usually it’s something more elaborate like a text message that a person never wrote themselves and was never sent. The phone starts playing a song that is important to the deceased person or a voicemail message.”

Baruss also studies the hundreds of phone apps on the market “intended for use of talking to the dead,” he said.

“We’re trying to see if any of these apps work,” he said. “Do they allow you to actually have communication with a deceased person or not?”



So far there “has been nothing convincing,” Baruss said.

But what Baruss sees as the most important aspect of his research is the awareness it raises.

“A lot of people are having (these) experiences of all kinds and we’re not acknowledging that,” he said. “People are acknowledging that among themselves but they’re not being acknowledged by academics or mental health professionals.”

When they do discuss them with mental health workers, often the workers believe “there is something wrong with the person,” Baruss said.

“The problem is people having these experiences don’t know where to go, don’t know how to interpret them or what to do with them and that needs to change,” he said.


He said mental health professionals and other providers of services in the community need to be educated about these types of experiences “so they can provide something helpful or useful for these people instead of something that is disparaging, or gaslighting them.”

Mark Shelvock is a London-area grief and trauma therapist who authored a Psychology Today article about contact with dead loved ones. He says accounts of such experiences are more common than one might think.

“It’s incredibly common for people who have experienced a death-related loss to have an experience that the dead are around,” Shelvock said, noting studies on various populations have found between 31 to 82 per cent of people report experiencing one.


“(Research shows) more people than not end up having these experiences,” he said. “I help normalize people’s experiences.”

Other common forms of after-death communication include dreams, or being struck while seeing animals such as a cardinal or dragonfly.

“They get this felt sense experience or a sense of connection to their deceased person and it’s a really special experience,” Shelvock said. “People are not having hallucinations – that term is not appropriate.”

For Shelvock, experiencing after-death communication has been helpful to many of his clients.

“From a therapist perspective, many of these experiences are in fact therapeutic,” he said. “People feel more connected to their deceased loved one.”

HRivers@postmedia.com

@HeatheratLFP
 

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People with disabilities twice as likely to have food insecurity: StatCan report
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Nicole Ireland
Published Aug 21, 2024 • Last updated 15 hours ago • 3 minute read

The odds of food insecurity were higher for people with a disability even after accounting for income and employment, among other factors.
The odds of food insecurity were higher for people with a disability even after accounting for income and employment, among other factors.
People with disabilities are twice as likely to live in food insecure households than those without disabilities, a new Statistics Canada report says.


The report, published on Wednesday, used data from the 2021 Canadian Income Survey and found 26.4 per cent of respondents with a disability experienced some level of food insecurity, compared to 12.5 per cent of people without disabilities.

The study “validates what we’ve been saying,” Rabia Khedr, national director of Disability Without Poverty, said in an interview Wednesday.

Khedr said that with the rising cost of living, she expects the situation has become even more dire in the years since the 2021 data was collected.

StatCan said food insecurity can range from marginal — filled with worries about food supply — to severe, forcing people to miss meals and, in extreme cases, go a day or more without food.

People with disabilities affecting their sight, learning, memory or cognition were most likely to have some level of food insecurity overall, while those with developmental disabilities had the highest level of severe food insecurity, according to the study.


Although lower income is tied to household food insecurity, the study found that people with disabilities were still at higher risk even when researchers accounted for income, employment status, education and other demographic factors.

“This finding suggests that there could be other pathways through which disability affects food insecurity, independent of income,” the report said. “For example, persons with disabilities often incur higher health care costs, which can strain their budgets and leave insufficient funds for food expenses.”


In addition, “mobility challenges can hinder their ability to access grocery stores and community resources,” it said.

The Canadian Income Survey used in the StatCan report included Canadians aged 16 and older living in the provinces. Data from the territories was not yet available.


Khedr said she often speaks to people with disabilities who are struggling with food insecurity.

”They’re making difficult choices on a daily basis. You know, it’s either food or shoes for my child,“ she said.

Governments have not made adequate efforts to address the problem, Khedr said, noting that the proposed Canada Disability Benefit announced in the federal budget last April falls far short of what’s needed.

The benefit was a $6.1-billion item in the budget that would be rolled out over six years, with $1.4 billion allocated per year after that — including administrative costs.

The disability benefit promised to provide a maximum of $2,400 a year — or $200 a month — for low-income people with disabilities starting in July 2025.


”The folks in deepest poverty in this country facing the most food insecurity are going to be the ones that will benefit the least, so really it’s not getting the support to the people who need it most,“ Khedr said.

“We’re not working toward helping disabled people achieve financial security — and achieving financial security means paying their rent, buying food. It doesn’t mean much more than that.”

A spokesperson for the minister of diversity, inclusion and persons with disabilities said the federal government is “seeking input from Canadians” on the Canada Disability Benefit and that it is “in discussions with all provinces and territories to ensure that this support is not clawed back.”

“The fact Canadians with disabilities face greater barriers to social and economic participation is unacceptable,” Alisson Levesque, director of communications for minister Kamal Khera, said in an email to The Canadian Press.
 

Tecumsehsbones

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Ya mean. . . cripples and retards have a harder time finding good-paying jobs than most?

Yay, another stunning revelation from the Department of the Bloody Obvious, AKA No Shit Canada.
 
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petros

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People with disabilities twice as likely to have food insecurity: StatCan report
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Nicole Ireland
Published Aug 21, 2024 • Last updated 15 hours ago • 3 minute read

The odds of food insecurity were higher for people with a disability even after accounting for income and employment, among other factors.
The odds of food insecurity were higher for people with a disability even after accounting for income and employment, among other factors.
People with disabilities are twice as likely to live in food insecure households than those without disabilities, a new Statistics Canada report says.


The report, published on Wednesday, used data from the 2021 Canadian Income Survey and found 26.4 per cent of respondents with a disability experienced some level of food insecurity, compared to 12.5 per cent of people without disabilities.

The study “validates what we’ve been saying,” Rabia Khedr, national director of Disability Without Poverty, said in an interview Wednesday.

Khedr said that with the rising cost of living, she expects the situation has become even more dire in the years since the 2021 data was collected.

StatCan said food insecurity can range from marginal — filled with worries about food supply — to severe, forcing people to miss meals and, in extreme cases, go a day or more without food.

People with disabilities affecting their sight, learning, memory or cognition were most likely to have some level of food insecurity overall, while those with developmental disabilities had the highest level of severe food insecurity, according to the study.


Although lower income is tied to household food insecurity, the study found that people with disabilities were still at higher risk even when researchers accounted for income, employment status, education and other demographic factors.

“This finding suggests that there could be other pathways through which disability affects food insecurity, independent of income,” the report said. “For example, persons with disabilities often incur higher health care costs, which can strain their budgets and leave insufficient funds for food expenses.”


In addition, “mobility challenges can hinder their ability to access grocery stores and community resources,” it said.

The Canadian Income Survey used in the StatCan report included Canadians aged 16 and older living in the provinces. Data from the territories was not yet available.


Khedr said she often speaks to people with disabilities who are struggling with food insecurity.

”They’re making difficult choices on a daily basis. You know, it’s either food or shoes for my child,“ she said.

Governments have not made adequate efforts to address the problem, Khedr said, noting that the proposed Canada Disability Benefit announced in the federal budget last April falls far short of what’s needed.

The benefit was a $6.1-billion item in the budget that would be rolled out over six years, with $1.4 billion allocated per year after that — including administrative costs.

The disability benefit promised to provide a maximum of $2,400 a year — or $200 a month — for low-income people with disabilities starting in July 2025.


”The folks in deepest poverty in this country facing the most food insecurity are going to be the ones that will benefit the least, so really it’s not getting the support to the people who need it most,“ Khedr said.

“We’re not working toward helping disabled people achieve financial security — and achieving financial security means paying their rent, buying food. It doesn’t mean much more than that.”

A spokesperson for the minister of diversity, inclusion and persons with disabilities said the federal government is “seeking input from Canadians” on the Canada Disability Benefit and that it is “in discussions with all provinces and territories to ensure that this support is not clawed back.”

“The fact Canadians with disabilities face greater barriers to social and economic participation is unacceptable,” Alisson Levesque, director of communications for minister Kamal Khera, said in an email to The Canadian Press.
Ya mean. . . cripples and retards have a harder time finding good-paying jobs than most?

Yay, another stunning revelation from the Department of the Bloody Obvious, AKA No Shit Canada.
So why are they waiting to start paying the disability benefit which is in place as of June but doesn't pay until next spring as a lump then monthly after?
 
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spaminator

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'Arms races' to attract doctors are straining Ontario municipalities
'It is a nightmare for smaller communities because we are bound to lose'

Author of the article:Elizabeth Payne
Published Aug 22, 2024 • Last updated 13 hours ago • 4 minute read

As the number of Ontario residents without family physicians grows, municipalities are playing an increasing role in attracting new doctors and some of them are offering cash incentives.
As the number of Ontario residents without family physicians grows, municipalities are playing an increasing role in attracting new doctors and some of them are offering cash incentives.
Some compare it to an arms race pitting Ontario municipalities against each other and undermining health equity. At least one municipal leader is asking the provincial government to put a stop to the growing practice of municipalities offering cash incentives in a bid to attract physicians to their communities.


“It is an unsustainable model,” said Mayor Matthew Shoemaker of Sault Ste. Marie. “It is not helping the system.”

As the number of Ontario residents without family physicians grows — now topping 2.5 million — municipalities are playing an increasing role in attracting new doctors. Some municipalities are offering cash incentives to attract them. This year Huntsville began offering bonuses of up to $80,000 for doctors to relocate there and to commit to staying for five years. Kingston offers bonuses of up to $100,000. Other communities are following suit.

Matthew Shoemaker
Matthew Shoemaker is mayor of Sault Ste. Marie. He wants the province to ban municipalities from offering cash incentives to attract doctors.
This week, at the Association of Municipalities of Ontario conference in Ottawa, Shoemaker met with Minister of Health Sylvia Jones and asked her government to ban the practice in order to level the playing field for municipalities in recruiting physicians and health workers.


He is far from the only municipal leader concerned about the trend which they say is making a bad situation worse.

“It is a nightmare for smaller communities because we are bound to lose,” said Todd Kasenberg, the mayor of North Perth. “An arms race is how I have been describing it, with no winner.”

The Association of Municipalities of Ontario says the municipal competition to attract doctors, nurses and other health care providers is diverting municipal dollars and undermining equal access to health care around the province at a critical time. It wants the province to take a bigger, more comprehensive approach to the health human resources crisis.

Sault Ste. Marie’s Shoemaker found himself at the centre of the primary-care crisis in Ontario this year when a clinic there was forced to drop 10,000 patients from its roster because of the acute doctor shortage. A nurse practitioner-led walk-in clinic has helped “plug the hole” in the short term, but Shoemaker said as many as 6,000 more residents risked losing access to care by the end of the year because of physician retirements.


Anxiety over the situation has gripped the community of almost 80,000, he said.

Shoemaker, like other municipal leaders, has been increasingly focused on ways to improve access to healthcare in his community.

He warns that Sault Ste. Marie is not alone. “What is happening in Sault Ste. Marie today is going to happen in every community in Ontario.”

The issue was top of mind at the annual meeting of Ontario’s municipalities.

Like other municipal leaders across the province, Shoemaker wants more co-ordinated help from the province in addition to a ban on the practice of offering cash incentives to attract doctors.

He would like to see a campus of the Northern Ontario School of Medicine University in Sault Ste. Marie to encourage more physicians to stay there. The university already had campuses in Thunder Bay and Sudbury.


Todd Kasenberg North Perth Mayor
North Perth Mayor Todd Kasenberg.
Kasenberg, of North Perth, has other ideas to help recruit doctors to his community. He would like to see the province improve financial support for virtual medicine, something that would help smaller rural communities get residents the care they need. He is also looking to communities such as Renfrew County, whose virtual triage and assessment program is increasing access to primary care and reducing the burden on hospitals there.

Kasenberg thinks the province should set up a health-care innovation fund to encourage similar innovative proposals from hospitals, health teams and municipalities to improve access to care.

Dr. Sarah Newbery, a rural family physician, associate professor and associate dean of physician workforce strategy at the Northern Ontario School of Medicine University, says Ontario is falling behind other provinces when it comes to promoting the province to graduating physicians, something that leaves municipalities trying to market to new doctors on their own.


Dr. Sarah Newbery
Dr. Sarah Newbery is a rural family physician, associate professor and associate dean of physician workforce strategy at the Northern Ontario School of Medicine University.
“It feels a bit jarring to have Wawa, Timmins and Chapleau at these conferences without a provincial presence,” Newbery said.

The Association of Municipalities of Ontario wants the provincial government to play a more comprehensive role in solving the health human resources crisis, taking some of the burden off individual municipalities, according to Lindsay Jones, AMO’s director of policy and government relations . It is calling for a provincial, sector-wide health human resources strategy to improve access to health care across the province.

Among other things, Jones says such a strategy should address issues such as burnout, fair compensation, adequate staffing and the unique needs of communities in rural and Northern Ontario.


Alexandra Adamo, spokesperson for the health minister, said Jones and ministry staff met with more than 100 delegations at the AMO conference “and look forward to continuing to work with municipal leaders to help recruit and attract physicians to come work here in Ontario.”

Adamo noted that the government had added 12,500 physicians to the workforce since 2018, increased the health-care budget by 31 per cent and launched the largest expansion in medical school education in more than 15 years. It has also expanded primary care and reduced barriers for internationally educated physicians.
 

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The biggest diamond in over a century is found in Botswana -- a whopping 2,492 carats
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Sello Motseta
Published Aug 22, 2024 • 2 minute read

A person holds a 2,492-carat diamond which was found in the country and on show, in Gaborone, Botswana, Thursday, Aug. 22, 2024. (AP Photo)
A person holds a 2,492-carat diamond which was found in the country and on show, in Gaborone, Botswana, Thursday, Aug. 22, 2024. (AP Photo) THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
GABORONE, Botswana (AP) — The largest diamond found in more than a century has been unearthed at a mine in Botswana, and the country’s president showed off the fist-sized stone to the world at a viewing ceremony Thursday.


The Botswana government says the huge 2,492-carat diamond is the second-biggest ever discovered in a mine. It’s the biggest diamond found since 1905.

The as-yet-unnamed diamond was presented to the world at the office of Botswana President Mokgweetsi Masisi. It weighs approximately half a kilogram and Masisi was one of the first to get to hold it.

“It is overwhelming,” Masisi said. “I am lucky to have seen it in my time.” He gasped and said “wow” before calling senior government officials over to take a closer look.

Officials said it was too early to value the stone or decide how it would be sold. Another smaller diamond from the same mine in Botswana was sold for $63 million in 2016, a record for a rough gem.

“This is history in the making,” said Naseem Lahri, Botswana managing director for Lucara Diamond Corp., the Canadian mining company that found the diamond. “I am very proud. It is a product of Botswana.”


Lucara said in a statement Wednesday that it recovered the “exceptional” rough diamond from its Karowe Mine in central Botswana. Lucara said it was a “high-quality” stone and was found intact. It was located using X-ray technology designed to find large, high-value diamonds.

“We are ecstatic about the recovery of this extraordinary 2,492-carat diamond,” Lucara President and CEO William Lamb said in a statement.

The weight would make it the largest diamond found in 119 years and the second-largest ever dug out of a mine after the Cullinan Diamond that was discovered in South Africa in 1905. The famous Cullinan was 3,106 carats and was cut into gems, some of which form part of the British Crown Jewels.

A bigger, less pure black diamond was discovered in Brazil in the late 1800s, but it was found above ground and was believed to have been part of a meteorite.


Botswana, a country of 2.6 million people in southern Africa, is the second-biggest producer of natural diamonds behind Russia and has unearthed all of the world’s biggest stones in recent years. The Karowe Mine has produced four other diamonds over 1,000 carats in the last decade.

Before this discovery, the Sewelo diamond, which was found at the Karowe Mine in 2019, was recognized as the second-biggest mined diamond in the world at 1,758 carats. It was bought by French fashion house Louis Vuitton for an undisclosed amount.

The 1,111-carat Lesedi La Rona diamond, also from Botswana’s Karowe Mine, was bought by a British jeweller for $53 million in 2017. Another diamond from Karowe, The Constellation, was sold for the record $63 million.

Diamonds are formed when carbon atoms are squeezed together under high pressure deep underground. Scientists say most diamonds are at least a billion years old and some of them more than 3 billion years old.
1724410475640.png
 
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petros

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The biggest diamond in over a century is found in Botswana -- a whopping 2,492 carats
Author of the article:Associated Press
Associated Press
Sello Motseta
Published Aug 22, 2024 • 2 minute read

A person holds a 2,492-carat diamond which was found in the country and on show, in Gaborone, Botswana, Thursday, Aug. 22, 2024. (AP Photo)
A person holds a 2,492-carat diamond which was found in the country and on show, in Gaborone, Botswana, Thursday, Aug. 22, 2024. (AP Photo) THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
GABORONE, Botswana (AP) — The largest diamond found in more than a century has been unearthed at a mine in Botswana, and the country’s president showed off the fist-sized stone to the world at a viewing ceremony Thursday.


The Botswana government says the huge 2,492-carat diamond is the second-biggest ever discovered in a mine. It’s the biggest diamond found since 1905.

The as-yet-unnamed diamond was presented to the world at the office of Botswana President Mokgweetsi Masisi. It weighs approximately half a kilogram and Masisi was one of the first to get to hold it.

“It is overwhelming,” Masisi said. “I am lucky to have seen it in my time.” He gasped and said “wow” before calling senior government officials over to take a closer look.

Officials said it was too early to value the stone or decide how it would be sold. Another smaller diamond from the same mine in Botswana was sold for $63 million in 2016, a record for a rough gem.

“This is history in the making,” said Naseem Lahri, Botswana managing director for Lucara Diamond Corp., the Canadian mining company that found the diamond. “I am very proud. It is a product of Botswana.”


Lucara said in a statement Wednesday that it recovered the “exceptional” rough diamond from its Karowe Mine in central Botswana. Lucara said it was a “high-quality” stone and was found intact. It was located using X-ray technology designed to find large, high-value diamonds.

“We are ecstatic about the recovery of this extraordinary 2,492-carat diamond,” Lucara President and CEO William Lamb said in a statement.

The weight would make it the largest diamond found in 119 years and the second-largest ever dug out of a mine after the Cullinan Diamond that was discovered in South Africa in 1905. The famous Cullinan was 3,106 carats and was cut into gems, some of which form part of the British Crown Jewels.

A bigger, less pure black diamond was discovered in Brazil in the late 1800s, but it was found above ground and was believed to have been part of a meteorite.


Botswana, a country of 2.6 million people in southern Africa, is the second-biggest producer of natural diamonds behind Russia and has unearthed all of the world’s biggest stones in recent years. The Karowe Mine has produced four other diamonds over 1,000 carats in the last decade.

Before this discovery, the Sewelo diamond, which was found at the Karowe Mine in 2019, was recognized as the second-biggest mined diamond in the world at 1,758 carats. It was bought by French fashion house Louis Vuitton for an undisclosed amount.

The 1,111-carat Lesedi La Rona diamond, also from Botswana’s Karowe Mine, was bought by a British jeweller for $53 million in 2017. Another diamond from Karowe, The Constellation, was sold for the record $63 million.

Diamonds are formed when carbon atoms are squeezed together under high pressure deep underground. Scientists say most diamonds are at least a billion years old and some of them more than 3 billion years old.
View attachment 24266
Holy shit.
 

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Alcohol boosts cancer risk 'from the first drop,' study author says
Author of the article:postmedia News
Published Aug 18, 2024 • Last updated 1 hour ago • 2 minute read

A new study suggests hangovers may be worsened for patients with long-COVID.
A new study claims that alcohol, no matter the amount, offers no health benefits and no amount is safe to consume in a drinker's golden years.
Talk about a black fly in your chardonnay.


Yet another study has claimed that alcohol, no matter the amount, offers no health benefits and is not safe to consume in a drinker’s golden years, according to a U.K. study, cited by the New York Post.

The 12-year study looked at the drinking habits of 135,000 people over the age of 60 and said even light drinking was linked to an increase in cancer deaths. The increase was even worse among older adults living in lower-income communities and those with health problems, the Post reported.

Lead study author Rosario Ortola, an assistant professor of preventive medicine and public health at the Autonomous University of Madrid, told the New York Times that drinking alcohol raises someone’s cancer risk “from the first drop.


“We did not find evidence of a beneficial association between low drinking and (overall) mortality,” Ortola said, via the Times.


The study flies in the face of the previously held belief that a glass of red wine can provide health benefits, with the Post crediting research by the Canadian Institute for Substance Use Research at the University of Victoria for raising the red flag.

The new research published Monday in the JAMA Network Open journal supported those findings, according to the Post, regardless of health or socioeconomic status.

The study also linked heavy drinking — more than 40 grams a day for men and 20 grams for women, with the standard U.S. drink containing 14 grams of alcohol — to more deaths from all causes.


Distilled Spirits Council senior vice-president Amanda Berger took issue with the study, however, telling the Post that the new research “contradicts decades of robust scientific evidence consistently demonstrating that moderate drinkers live at least as long as non-drinkers.”

The news comes after the Canadian Centre on Substance Use and Addiction said in a 2023 update to its health guidelines that “no amount or kind of alcohol is good for your health” and one to two drinks per week was the maximum recommendation to avoid health issues like heart disease and cancer.

The World Health Organization has also said alcohol is a carcinogen and consumption boosts the risk of breast, liver, head and neck, esophageal and colorectal cancers, among others, according to the Post.
Gesh, my grandparents died at 87 & 95 respectively & enjoyed having a few drinks each & every day. My dad died at 95 - he had rum & coke or red wine every day. When the doctor asked him what he was doing to remain so healthy, dad told him he enjoyed his rum & coke. The doctor then said, keep doing what you're doing because it seems to be working. That was when he was 90!! He passed in 2021.
 
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petros

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Gesh, my grandparents died at 87 & 95 respectively & enjoyed having a few drinks each & every day. My dad died at 95 - he had rum & coke or red wine every day. When the doctor asked him what he was doing to remain so healthy, dad told him he enjoyed his rum & coke. The doctor then said, keep doing what you're doing because it seems to be working. That was when he was 90!! He passed in 2021.
My aunt had 3 fingers of rye every night. Made 98. Sisters that tea toddled died far younger.
 
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Dixie Cup

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My aunt had 3 fingers of rye every night. Made 98. Sisters that tea toddled died far younger.
Exactly!! I remember growing up, all the older folks usually had a "finger" or two of whiskey, rye or rum. They lived to be quite old. So there must be something to it. Obviously, overindulgence was never an issue. It's all in moderation.
 
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