• The most dangerous misconceptions about public health
    www.popsci.com
    In the year 2024, nobody in New York City died of cholera. But from the 1830s to 1850s, New York Citys mortality rate doubled amid a string of local cholera epidemics.Cholera can cause diarrhea so severe and dehydrating that it proves fatal within hours. An infected person might lose a quart of fluid and critical minerals from their body every 60 minutes, until the resulting electrolyte imbalance leads to shock, kidney failure, coma, and death. In the 19th century, back-to-back-to-back cholera pandemics wracked the globe. People became ill en masse, especially in cities, dying miserable deaths by the thousands.Yet in the present, there hasnt been an outbreak of the bacterial disease in the United States since 1911. Other diseases like typhus have also all but disappeared.Targeted infrastructure projects and policies explain why. Both cholera and typhus spread through water and food, which can be contaminated by feces particles from infected people and animals. By tackling the sanitation crisis that contributed to the disease, New York dramatically cut case numbers. The city constructed and then repeatedly expanded a reservoir and aqueduct system to store and transport fresh drinking water from upstate. Seventy miles of sewers were laid in New York between 1850 and 1855, keeping untreated waste out of the street. Lawmakers restricted livestock in tenements and ordered manure to be cleaned up from yards and vacant lots. In the years 1880 to 1920, we literally transformed the health environment, says David Rosner, a professor of history and public health at Columbia University, and author of the book, Building the Worlds That Kill Us. By the 1920s, we already began to notice that the infectious diseases of the 19th century were waningthat infections were suddenly fading away, he says, in a shining example of the value of public health interventions. We take it for granted today, he adds.Public health encompasses any and all actions at the societal and governmental level to ensure community health and safety. It is focused on preventing sickness and harm before it happens. Everything from seat belts, drivers licenses, laws against drunk driving, vehicle design, and urban planning to municipal water testing and treatment, hand washing, flush toilets, and food recalls fall under public healths vast umbrella, says Georges Benjamin, a physician, career public health official, and executive director of the American Public Health Association.But theres a difficulty inherent in public health: when its operating well, its invisible. What public health does is very silent. Were behind the scenes. When we do our best work, nothing happens, Benjamin tells Popular Science. Most interventions go unnoticed and unappreciated.In lieu of awareness, doubt and insidious propaganda can seep in. Opposition to public health interventions isnt new. For every policy and technologytheres always been a hypervocal contingent against the advance. But in recent yearsand especially in the aftermath of Covid-19 lockdowns and restrictionsmany long-standing efforts have come under strengthened political attack in the U.S.. Vaccination, dairy pasteurization, and water fluoridation are all facing renewed scrutiny, largely as the result of mis- and disinformation. Trust in science and health officials has declined. So have childhood vaccination ratesfalling from 95% among kindergarten children pre-pandemic, to 93% between 2023 and 2024, according to data from the CDC.Popular Science spoke with three public health experts to better understand why. They explained how they think about the work of public health, and debunked some of the most commonly held misconceptions they encounter about their field. As the start of the new presidential administration brings chaos and uncertainty to public programs and health institutions, heres what the experts want you to know.Public health doesnt eliminate risk. It reduces it.The flu vaccine does not guarantee that you wont get sick with the flu. Water treatment infrastructure does not eliminate all water borne illness. A buckled seat belt and airbags dont prevent all traffic collision deaths. Public health interventions cannot and do not eliminate all risk, says Rupali Limaye, an associate professor of global and community health at George Mason University.The goal of public health for most of these interventions is to reduce risk and severity, says Limaye. Ideally, people should not expect absolute protection, and should not interpret breakthrough infections or accidents as evidence of failure, but rather know that public health works to minimize the chances of the worst outcomes.The flu vaccine and most other vaccines lower your individual risk of infection, severe disease, hospitalization, and death. It also helps reduce risk for your close contacts and loved ones who may be vulnerable to disease complications. The more people get vaccinated, the more risk falls for the population as a whole, because diseases encounter more dead ends and infections spread less readily.Often, there is a small risk associated with an intervention itself. Seatbelts, for instance, can increase the risk of a clavicle fracture in the event of a collision. But at the same time, they prevent more serious injuries and save thousands of lives each year. The risk vs. reward is assessed through careful tests with crash test dummies, and long-term data collection and analysis.The same is true of vaccines, which carry the potential for side effects. Vaccines, as with all pharmaceuticals, go through years of safety and efficacy testing. This includes multiple animal and human research trials, each overseen by an independent Data and Safety Monitoring Board (DMSB) made up of scientists and health experts who arent affiliated with the trial or the company conducting it. Then, the Food and Drug Administration conducts a separate regulatory review before any vaccine can be approved. In all of this, the benefits have to far outweigh any risks before a vaccine moves on to the next step, says Limaye. Were usually talking decades of work, she adds.In extreme instances, vaccine approval can move more quickly, as in 2021 when the first Covid-19 vaccines received approval under emergency authorization. But still, Limaye says years and years of work had gone into studying mRNA vaccines preceding the pandemic, there were still independent review boards, and there was continual data evaluation throughout to track outcomes and update guidelines about who should be vaccinated. Public health is a balancing act between risk and benefit, Limaye says. An intervention isnt generally put into effect unless for the overwhelming majority of people, the benefits outweigh the risks.Science isnt static. Guidelines change with new knowledge.If a public health intervention shifts through time or a guideline changes, its not because the experts in charge are untrustworthy or trying to trick you. Facts are facts, but science is an evolving process of evaluating and re-evaluating what we know, says Benjamin.You probably remember that, during the Covid-19 pandemic, the guidelines around masks changed. Initially, masks werent recommended for most people and the CDC actually urged the public to forgo masks to conserve supplies for healthcare workers. In part, this was based on past knowledge of related viruses, says Benjamin. Covid-19 is caused by SARS-CoV-2, a virus in the SARS family. In prior SARS virus outbreaks, most people were not infectious until they were symptomatic. With SARS-CoV-2, that changed. As a growing body of research supported that asymptomatic people could spread Covid-19, and that the virus was airborne, the CDC began recommending masks. Get the Popular Science newsletter Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent every weekday. By signing up you agree to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.It turns out we were wrong, and that does happen. Benjamin says. We were trying to be judicious [and avoid pushback] in our initial recommendations, but I dont think we explained the change adequately.If a public health agency changes a guidance, it can be easy to assume ineptitudebut it would be more accurate to assume that updated advice means updated information. It almost certainly means someone has worked to understand the problem better.When things go right, they dont go viral.If youre on social media, chances are youve come across someone sharing a negative experience about a vaccine, medication, healthcare provider, or health agency. Dramaticstories of supposed vaccine injury or corrupt systems frequently go viral. But just because you see or hear about it doesnt mean its true and or representative. Sixty-five percent of anti-vaccine misinformation circulating online in 2021 could be traced back to just a dozen social media influencers, according to an analysis from the Center for Countering Digital Hate. Part of what makes their content so shareable is that its shocking and sensational.What you hear about far less often is the status quo. Its hard to sell a story where nothing happened, says Limaye. Its hard to say, I got a vaccine and because of that I didnt deal with an infectious disease, she explains. Yet thats the overwhelming majority of peoples experiences. Im not going to go viral for saying, I got the shot and Im fine, Limaye notes.Public health decisions are based on population-level data. Yet anecdotes and narrative can hold outsized sway over public opinion, particularly on emotionally charged issues. To stay in the game, Limaye believes public health experts will have to get creative, and embrace storytelling. We have a lot to learn. In the meantime, consider thinking about your health and safety the way an epidemiologist or city planner might. A story about an unexpected disease cure or an especially dangerous intersection could be a reason to investigate and collect data but its not a basis for ignoring current advice.Public health is not a power grab or a money maker.The vast majority of pharmaceutical companies are for-profit entities but, compared with other products, vaccines are not the money-making venture they might seem, says Limaye. Vaccines account for a relatively small share of pharma company profits, at less than 10 percent of all sales. Drugs that people have to take on a daily basis, like cholesterol medication, are much bigger sources of profit. The three doses of the vaccine for hepatitis B, which are recommended for children, cost under $100. In comparison, the lifelong treatment for Hepatitis B is thousands of dollars each year. Pharma companies can make a lot more money off of you if youre not vaccinated.Your doctors office might even be losing money through vaccines. A provider has to purchase the vaccine stock, properly store the doses, plus staff an office. The reimbursement insurers offer for administering a vaccine is usually not enough to offset those costs. Nearly a quarter of family medicine doctors reported no longer purchasing vaccines because of financial concerns, according to a 2017 study in the journal Academic Pediatrics.As a rule, public health measures are far cheaper for you than the alternative of getting sick or injured and having to pay for treatment after the fact. If we still routinely became sick from our water supply, wed be collectively spending much more on healthcare. If we didnt have traffic lights or drunk driving restrictions, you can bet that emergency services would be a far bigger business.In contrast, people who build careers out of railing against public health measures often do have a financial incentive. Robert F. Kennedy Jr., for instance, is poised to make money off of vaccine injury lawsuits that hes maintaining a financial stake ineven as he faces confirmation to lead Health and Human Services and regulate the makers of those vaccines.Aside from money, some can get caught up believing that public health is about control and power. And its true that abiding by public health guidelines and policies can involve sacrificing a degree of personal freedom for community safety and benefit. You can face criminal charges for driving while intoxicated or penalties for driving without a license, for instance. Theres a trade-off there, says Benjamin. But those laws are established through a legal process, underpinned by elected legislators. Its a democratic process, he says. Were not evil authoritarians, says Benjamin. Plus most of what we do is by recommendation. Often, people can opt out.Public health workers go into the field, not because theyre going to get rich or get political power, theyre invisible. says Rosner. They went into it because they wanted to help. They want to make a better world.Threats dont disappear. Interventions shouldnt either.Once a public health measure is in place, it can be tempting to assume thatat some pointthe work will be done and the effort can end. But most public health endeavors require continual investment and upkeep.There is no point at which we can stop maintaining our waste water infrastructure and still expect it to protect us from getting sick. A motorcycle helmet can only prevent injury if you keep putting it on your head.Smallpox is the only human disease thats been globally eradicated through a vaccination campaign. It no longer occurs naturally. But every other illness that we have vaccines for is capable of making a resurgence in the U.S.. Just a 5% dip in vaccine uptick could lead to a major measles outbreak. Weve already seen that dynamic play out in pockets across the U.S. in recent years. As vaccine hesitancy has risen, so too have measles cases. A 2019-2020 measles outbreak in Samoa, following the suspension of vaccines, resulted in 83 deaths, mostly of young children. In 2022, the U.S. saw its first evidence of circulating polio in thirty years.If politicians continue to sow doubts about vaccination, or even take steps to restrict vaccine access, then the trend of re-emerging disease will continue. I think were going to see a lot more infectious disease thats going to affect everything from school attendance to sporting events, says Limaye.Ultimately, the outcome of increased disease is increased death. More than 40% of children died before their fifth birthday in the U.S. in 1800. We dont need any sort of natural experiment to demonstrate what happens when public health measures dissolve. Instead, we have centuries of human history to inform what life was like. It involved a lot more deadly diarrhea.
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  • Catch the spring migration in 2.5K HD with this smart bird feeder with AI recognition
    www.popsci.com
    Stack CommerceShareWe may earn revenue from the products available on this page and participate in affiliate programs. Learn more Who needs a window to the wild when you can have a front-row seat to birdwatching right from your phone? With this high-tech smart birdfeeder, you can enjoy crystal-clear 2.5K footage of your feathered visitors without ever stepping outside, and its 36% off this week.The future of backyard birdwatchingEquipped with a 3MP camera, this smart bird feeder delivers stunning high-definition video that lets you get up-close and personal with your avian guests, whether day or nightthanks to built-in night vision. The AI-powered bird recognition feature acts as your personal bird guide, identifying species effortlesslyno more awkward Google image searches. And if a squirrel dares to invade, the built-in siren sends them running, keeping your bird seed safe from their tiny hands.A dream of springAs spring approaches and your favorite feathered friends return from migration, this smart feeder will be ready to capture all the action. Solar-powered and eco-friendly, it can be mounted on a pole, hoop, or wall to fit your outdoor space. And if youve had a series of cloudy days and the solar power isnt enough, you can always charge it directlyno excuses to miss out on birdwatching! Store your videos either on an SD card (16GB-128GB) or opt for cloud storage to keep your birdwatching moments accessible.Pro tipDont overfill the feeder. While its tempting to load it up with seed, too much can spill out and create a mess, especially since the small mounting hole at the back cant handle an overflow. Plus, stale seeds can harm your birds and spread diseases, so its best to keep things fresh and controlled.Dont miss outget the solar-powered smart bird feeder now for $94.99 (Reg. $149) before the swallows return to Capistrano.StackSocial prices subject to change.BirdHi Mag Metal Solar Powered Smart Bird Feeder with Camera $94.99See Deal
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  • Better male birth control is on the horizon
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    Health & MedicineBetter male birth control is on the horizonMen could have more options within five to 10 years if regulatory hurdles are cleared Scientists are cautiously optimistic that men will soon have new forms of birth control.Arik RoperBy Fred Schwaller36 seconds agoIn 1960, a new drug revolutionized society from the bedroom to the streets. The introduction of a hormonal contraceptive, the birth control pill, gave women reproductive autonomy and a more effective way to plan a family. Since then, many more options have arrived: different pill formulations; hormonal implants, patches and vaginal rings; IUDs and barrier methods.But over the last 60 years, exactly zero new options have been developed for men. They are stuck with only two choices, condoms or vasectomies. Both have their issues: Condoms, their relatively high failure rate (as high as 12 percent); vasectomies, their permanency. Neither offer men the same level of fertility control as options for women, says Alexandra Joice Berger, a urologist at Brigham and Womens Hospital in Boston.
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  • Fine-tuning gibberellin improves rice alkalithermal tolerance and yield
    www.nature.com
    Nature, Published online: 29 January 2025; doi:10.1038/s41586-024-08486-7Precise regulation of the phytohormone gibberellin to optimal levels may not only confer alkalithermal tolerance to Green Revolution rice varieties but may also further enhance their yield, and ATT2, by enabling the fine-tuning of gibberellins, is expected to be a potential new post-Green Revolution gene.
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  • Signatures of longitudinal spin pumping in a magnetic phase transition
    www.nature.com
    Nature, Published online: 29 January 2025; doi:10.1038/s41586-024-08367-zLongitudinal spin pumping is experimentally demonstrated using the magnetic phase transition of ironrhodium, and the observed inverse spin Hall signal indicates that longitudinal spin pumping is driven by quantum fluctuations.
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  • What is alkaptonuria? The rare disease that turns your pee black
    www.livescience.com
    Alkaptonuria is an unusual disorder caused by a defect in protein metabolism.
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  • A lot of people were complaining about the topology so I reduced a little
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    Could you consider it game ready now? submitted by /u/random_cgi [link] [comments]
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  • Pressing on soft golden cube
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    submitted by /u/mrhitmen90 [link] [comments]
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  • Devs Will Support Helldivers 2 As Long as People Play, Arrowhead CEO Says
    cgshares.com
    Arrowhead Game StudiosWith the news that Creative Director of Helldivers 2Johan Pilestedt going on sabbatical, players are concerned if the acclaimed third-person shooter will continue receiving support from the developers. The studios CEO Shams Jorjani reassured fans that the game will continue exist until people stop playing it.On the official Helldivers 2 Discord, a fan asked if there was a date for the end of the games support. Shams Jorjani wrote an encouraging response: As long as people play, pay and we can build a business case around it well support it to hell and back. He then added:If we can keep it going for 10 years we will.The CEO also touched upon Johan Pilestedts sabbatical, saying that he will still be involved as a senior creative developer: The lead for the game is Mikael Eriksson and has been for the last few years Johans role as a senior creative is to support all our projects. So hell absolutely still be involved in the same way hes been the past year gives input on high level plans, collaborates with designers on some stuff. Jorjani also pointed out that the creation of the game is a team effort, and Johans superpower is developing concepts and games from the ground up, directing the creative process.Helldivers 2 was acknowledged as Best Ongoing Game and Best Multiplayer Game at The Game Awards 2024. Currently, Arrowhead Game Studios is working on the high concept for their next game, and Johan Pilestedt will contribute to it after his time off.Dont forget to join our 80 Level Talent platform and our new Discord server, follow us on Instagram, Twitter, LinkedIn, Telegram, TikTok, and Threads, where we share breakdowns, the latest news, awesome artworks, and more.Source link The post Devs Will Support Helldivers 2 As Long as People Play, Arrowhead CEO Says appeared first on CG SHARES.
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  • Confirmed: Dragon Age: The Veilguards Writers & Producers Laid Off as Part of BioWares Restructuring
    cgshares.com
    Earlier today, BioWares General Manager Gary McKay issued a public statement announcing that the studio is undergoing restructuring to focus on the development of Mass Effect 5, led by veterans from the original trilogy such as Mike Gamble, Preston Watamaniuk, Derek Watts, and Parrish Ley.BioWareBuried beneath corporate jargon was a line stating that BioWare no longer requires support from the full studio, with many employees being reassigned to other teams within Electronic Arts that had open roles, which, when translated to plain English, suggests that some team members were, in fact, laid off as part of the restructuring, even though McKay avoided confirming that explicitly.Over the past few hours, however, a number of social media posts have surfaced online, revealing the names of at least some of the employees who got fired from BioWare today.According to posts shared on LinkedIn and Bluesky, BioWares restructuring has led to the termination of Dragon Age: The Veilguards Lead Writer Trick Weekes, Lead Editor Karin West-Weekes, and Narrative Editor Ryan Cormier. Additionally, BioWare Producer Jennifer Cheverie Cott, Associate Game Producer Daniel Steed, Senior Product Manager Lina Anderson, and Senior Systems Designer Michelle Flamm were also let go, while Senior Writer Sheryl Chee, who wrote Dragon Ages Leliana, Isabela, Blackwall, and Harding, was moved to EA Motive.The restructuring comes a week after Electronic Arts revealed that Dragon Age: The Veilguard has engaged only about 1.5 million players indicating that the number of copies sold might be even lower and fell 50% short of the publishers expectations. Shortly thereafter, the developers shipped The Veilguards Patch 5 Release Notes, which featured the words dareth shiral safe journey, or more commonly, farewell in the in-game Elven language suggesting that the game wont receive any more quality-of-life updates going forward.Dont forget to join our80 Level Talent platformand ournew Discord server, follow us onInstagram,Twitter,LinkedIn,Telegram,TikTok, andThreads,where we share breakdowns, the latest news, awesome artworks, and more.Source link The post Confirmed: Dragon Age: The Veilguards Writers & Producers Laid Off as Part of BioWares Restructuring appeared first on CG SHARES.
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