COVID Cases Plummet In NYC Just As Demand For Vaccines Does The Same
arrow People rest in the observation area, at right, after receiving COVID-19 vaccinations under the 94-foot-long, 21,000-pound model of a blue whale, in the Milstein Family Hall of Ocean Life, at the American Museum of Natural History, April 23rd, 2021 Richard Drew/AP/Shutterstock
North America beat smallpox nearly 20 years before Africa, Asia and South America. Europe did the same. India recorded a few million cases of the lethal pox well after cases disappeared from the United States.
The delays speak to the vast disparities that can emerge while controlling a pandemic through vaccination, and buried within this history are lessons for New York City. Whenever smallpox vaccines began to control an outbreak in a region, certain demographics or geographical areas got left behind leaving the door open for resurgences.
Scientists call for wise use of natural resources
Experts term protection of environment collective responsibility
APP
April 24, 2021
LAHORE:
Scientists at an international seminar have called upon the need to utilise natural resources in a wise manner for existence of all living beings on earth in a healthy environment. The experts were addressing an online international seminar organised by Punjab University College of Earth and Environmental Sciences (CEES) on the eve of World Earth Day with the title, “Restoration of Earth Resources for Sustainable Future”.
In this regard, four distinguished speakers shared the views for wise management of global resources. The first speaker, Dr M A K Lodhi from Texas Tech University, USA emphasised on the water conservation in Pakistan and its environmental awareness and education. The second speaker Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health former director Dr Muhammad Akram of New York, USA urged the country’s people to
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As politics grows increasingly polarized, a new global study finds people often exaggerate political differences and negative feelings of those on the opposite side of the political divide, and this misperception can be reduced by informing them of the other side s true feelings. The study replicates earlier research in the United States, finding the phenomenon to be generalizable across 25 countries.
The new study was led by Kai Ruggeri, PhD, assistant professor of health policy and management at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, and replicates a 2020 study by Jeffrey Lees and Mina Cikara at Harvard University, who were also co-authors of the new study. The new findings appear in the journal
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