The new frontier: Israeli hospitals contend with ‘long COVID’ in children – Israel News – Haaretz.com

At the “long COVID” clinic at Schneider Children’s Medical Center in Petah Tikva, about 150 children are being treated, but several hundred more are on a waiting list. “Demand is high and the wait is more than half a year, because we monitor and test everything for each patient,” says Dr. Liat Ashkenazi-Hoffnung, an infectious-disease specialist.

The clinic began operating in November, several months after similar clinics were opened for adults. The symptoms the doctors see are varied, from shortness of breath (the most common complaint), muscle pain, headaches, fatigue, disordered sleep, chest pain, hair loss, and digestive disorders, to the loss of taste and smell, weight loss, difficulty concentrating, memory loss and the exacerbation of tics in children who suffered from them previously. About 60 percent report reduced daily functioning because of the symptoms.

Source: The new frontier: Israeli hospitals contend with ‘long COVID’ in children – Israel News – Haaretz.com

Deaths involving COVID-19 by self-reported disability status during the first two waves of the COVID-19 pandemic in England: a retrospective, population-based cohort study – The Lancet Public Health (United Kingdom)

105 213 people died from causes involving COVID-19 in England, 61 416 (58%) of whom were disabled. Age-adjusted analyses showed higher mortality involving COVID-19 among disabled people who were limited a lot (HR 3·05 [95% CI 2·98–3·11] for men; 3·48 [3·41–3·56] for women) and disabled people who were limited a little (HR 1·88 [1·84–1·92] for men; 2·03 [1·98–2·08] for women) than among non-disabled people. Source: Deaths involving COVID-19 by self-reported disability status during the first two waves of the COVID-19 pandemic in England: a retrospective, population-based cohort study – The Lancet Public Health

The climate disaster is here – this is what the future looks like | Environment | The Guardian

Until now, human civilization has operated within a narrow, stable band of temperature. Through the burning of fossil fuels, we have now unmoored ourselves from our past, as if we have transplanted ourselves onto another planet. The last time it was hotter than now was at least 125,000 years ago, while the atmosphere has more heat-trapping carbon dioxide in it than any time in the past two million years, perhaps more.

Since 1970, the Earth’s temperature has raced upwards faster than in any comparable period. The oceans have heated up at a rate not seen in at least 11,000 years. “We are conducting an unprecedented experiment with our planet,” said Hayhoe. “The temperature has only moved a few tenths of a degree for us until now, just small wiggles in the road. But now we are hitting a curve we’ve never seen before.”

No one is entirely sure how this horrifying experiment will end but humans like defined goals and so, in the 2015 Paris climate agreement, nearly 200 countries agreed to limit the global temperature rise to “well below” 2C, with an aspirational goal to keep it to 1.5C. The latter target was fought for by smaller, poorer nations, aware that an existential threat of unlivable heatwaves, floods and drought hinged upon this ostensibly small increment. “The difference between 1.5C and 2C is a death sentence for the Maldives,” said Ibrahim Mohamed Solih, president of the country, to world leaders at the United Nations in September.

There is no huge chasm after a 1.49C rise, we are tumbling down a painful, worsening rocky slope rather than about to suddenly hit a sheer cliff edge – but by most standards the world’s governments are currently failing to avert a grim fate. “We are on a catastrophic path,” said António Guterres, secretary general of the UN. “We can either save our world or condemn humanity to a hellish future.”

Source: The climate disaster is here – this is what the future looks like | Environment | The Guardian

Biosurveillance of markets and legal wildlife trade needed to curb pandemic risk: Experts

  • Almost 90% of the 180 recognized RNA viruses that can harm humans are zoonotic in origin. But disease biosurveillance of the world’s wildlife markets and legal trade is largely absent, putting humanity at significant risk.
  • The world needs a decentralized disease biosurveillance system, experts say, that would allow public health professionals and wildlife scientists in remote areas to test for pathogens year-round, at source, with modern mobile technologies in order to help facilitate a rapid response to emerging zoonotic disease outbreaks.
  • Though conservation advocates have long argued for an end to the illegal wildlife trade (which does pose zoonotic disease risk), but the legal trade poses a much greater threat to human health, say experts.
  • Governments around the world are calling for the World Health Organization to create a pandemic treaty. Wildlife groups are pushing for such an agreement to include greater at-source protections to prevent zoonotic spillover.

Before the coronavirus pandemic shut down Wuhan’s wildlife markets in 2020, it was common to see dozens of species and hundreds of wild animals crammed into cages, stacked one on top of the other.

A walk through the Huanan Wholesale Seafood Market revealed king rat snakes (Elaphe carinata), bamboo rats (Rhizomys sinensis), Amur hedgehogs (Erinaceus amurensis), raccoon dogs (Nyctereutes procyonoides) and hog badgers (Arctonyx albogularis) peering out from wire and glass cages. Marmots (Marmota himalayana), sold for food, commanded more than $25 per kilogram ($11 per pound). Hedgehogs cost just $2 per kilo (90 cents a pound). All held the possibility of being a vector for zoonotic disease.

Source: Biosurveillance of markets and legal wildlife trade needed to curb pandemic risk: Experts

El Día de los Pueblos Indígenas es una festividad que se celebra en los países colonizados para honrar a los pueblos indígenas y celebrar sus historias y culturas, ¡mientras los gobiernos y las empresas continúan saqueando y robando territorios indígenas!

Barbara Crane Navarro

En los Estados Unidos, el Día de los Pueblos Indígenas evolucionó como una alternativa al «día de la invasión», que celebró la llegada de Cristóbal Colón al Nuevo Mundo el 12 de octubre de 1492 y el inicio de la colonización de América del Norte.

Los nativos americanos protestaron por la idea de honrar a un hombre que permitió su genocidio y asimilación forzada.

Hoy en día, en toda América del Norte, las luchas indígenas contra las minas y oleoductos que deberían pasar por lugares sagrados o fuentes de agua en sus comunidades aún continúan. ¡Piden al gobierno que «respete los tratados! » y reconocer que « ¡El agua es vida! »

Entre ellos, el Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL) pone en peligro el suministro de agua de la reserva Standing Rock Sioux en el río Missouri.

La Línea 3 es un proyecto de expansión de oleoductos para transportar un millón…

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DIA DE LA RESISTENCIA INDIGENA, NEGRA Y POPULAR — BARRICADA

Barbara Crane Navarro

El 12 de octubre de 1492, el desdichado Almirante Cristóbal Colón, en busca de nuevas rutas para llegar a la India, se encontró con un continente desconocido, el Nuevo Mundo le llamó. Un mundo en plenitud, donde florecían esplendidas civilizaciones en Mesoamérica, Región Andina y Cono Sur. Cultivadores del maíz, frijol, calabaza, papa, tomate,tabaco,…

DIA DE LA RESISTENCIA INDIGENA, NEGRA Y POPULAR — BARRICADA

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AMÉRICA LATINA: CONQUISTA y COLONIZACIÓN — Revista Umbrales Uruguay — mimismo

Barbara Crane Navarro

Una ocupación que mató a 60 millones de americanos en poco más de un siglo. El sacerdote español Fernando Bermudez Lopez ha estado 30 años misionero en Guatemala y México y es profesor universitario de Historia de la Iglesia en América Latina. Recientemente hubo un rechazo del rey de España para pedir perdón por los[…][…]

AMÉRICA LATINA: CONQUISTA y COLONIZACIÓN — Revista Umbrales Uruguay — mimismo

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Projekt Wöchentliche Fotochallenge #33 “Landschaft”

Vivaldi translation of first two paragraphs: This week Roland from “Royusch-Unterwegs” invited to show a photo on the topic of “landscape”. I chose the image of one of the unique natural wonders of the earth, which shows the landscape of the subtropical rainforest with the waterfalls of Iguazú. The falls lie in the middle of the twin national parks of Argentina and Brazil in a magnificent landscape that is nowhere else in this way. That is why the two national parks, the Argentine “Parque Nacional Iguazú” and the Brazilian “Parque Nacional do Iguaçu”, also belong together to the UNESCO World Heritage Site.

The waterfalls are located on the border between the Brazilian state of Paraná and the Argentine province of Misiones. They arise from the fact that the Rio Iguazú in southern Brazil flows over a basalt plateau, which ends abruptly before the confluence with the Rio Paraná. In the language of the Tupi Guarani Indians, the name means “large water”, which is quite justified given the more than 250 individual waterfalls, which plunge down into two steps over a length of 2700 m and a height of sometimes over 80 meters is.

Senioren um die Welt

In dieser Woche hat Roland von „Royusch-Unterwegs“ dazu eingeladen, ein Foto zum Thema “Landschaft” zu zeigen. Ich habe dafür das Bild eines der einzigartigen Naturwunder der Erde gewählt, das die Landschaft des subtropischen Regenwalds mit den Wasserfällen von Iguazú zeigt. Die Fälle liegen inmitten der Zwillings-Nationalparks von Argentinien und Brasilien in einer grandiosen Landschaft, die es in dieser Art sonst nirgendwo gibt. Deshalb gehören die beiden Nationalparks, der argentinische “Parque Nacional Iguazú” und der brasiliansiche ,”Parque Nacional do Iguaçu”, auch gemeinsam zum UNESCO-Weltnaturerbe.


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