1 February 2021
Pandemics present a unique civic challenge for public health officials. How do you monitor infection levels in large groups of people who are very close together in a repeatable way, using limited labor and reagents? The answer lies beneath our feet. Sewers carry the viral components shed by infected individuals to wastewater treatment plants, where those components settle with solid waste into an unsavory but informative component: sludge. Download 10,000+
EPA issued a FIFRA Section 18 emergency exemption to Georgia and Tennessee permitting the use of Grignard Pure in health care facilities, intrastate transportation, food processing facilities, and other spaces. Grignard Pure forms a mist with activity against the virus that causes COVID-19.
Glyphosate and Roundup disturb gut microbiome and blood biochemistry at doses that regulators claim to be safe Details
New study reveals evidence for potential cancer-causing damage. Report: Claire Robinson
Glyphosate and the glyphosate-based herbicide Roundup disrupt the gut microbiome by the same mechanism by which the chemical acts as a weedkiller, and these effects happen even at low doses that regulators claim to be safe, a newly published study has found.[1]
The new study was conducted by an international team of scientists based in London, France, Italy, and the Netherlands, led by Dr Michael Antoniou of King’s College London. It is published today in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives.