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To make crypto-artwork, British street artist Nathan Murdoch defaces his own mural - New Delhi Times

May 7, 2021 Share Nathan Murdoch, a British street artist, looks at the mural he just spray-painted, a giant picture of two hands joined in prayer and wearing rainbow-colored gloves, before hurling a huge dollop of white paint straight at it from an open tin. The desecration of a recently completed mural is part of a larger creative project that spans both the physical and virtual realms. The original image will be lost, but two copies will be kept: one as a print and the other as a digital file known as an NFT. Non-fungible token (NFT) is a form of digital asset that is validated using blockchain technology. NFTs are becoming increasingly common in the art world because they enable a file to be permanently authenticated, regardless of copies, making it exclusive.

SA far from ready for universal healthcare coverage

SA far from ready for universal healthcare coverage READER LETTER > By READER LETTER - 19 April 2021 - 10:01 Picture: 123RF/HXDBZXY The drive for all countries in the world to implement universal health care coverage by 2030 is good in principle but is it achievable? Even before Covid-19, the ideal of equal access to health care for all, noble as it is, was not always going to be easy to achieve for many countries. The few developed countries that offer universal health care coverage succeeded at the expense of poor countries, using their ability to pay better salaries and offer better working conditions to lure health professionals away from their original countries.

Seven ways to cope during hot weather - Punch Newspapers

Punch Newspapers Sections Jesusegun Alagbe Published 12:43 am It’s been hot for some time in several parts of the country, and even when it rains occasionally, they hardly suppress the heat. In recent times, daytime temperatures have been hovering over 30 degrees for consecutive days, a condition experts describe as a heatwave. Besides the irritability that heat causes the body, experts say it also has some health implications. Heat can result in dehydration (loss of water from the body), heat exhaustion, and illnesses ranging from mild ones such as heat cramps to severe or life-threatening conditions such as heat stroke. When the heat becomes intense, it can make symptoms worse for people who already have heart-related or breathing problems.

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