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Africville brings something significant to Halifax Convention Centre

Africville brings something significant to Halifax Convention Centre
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Trudeau calls NS child care funding key to a feminist recovery from COVID | City | Halifax, Nova Scotia

The massive funding announcement is welcome news to many given the rising costs of care and impact of COVID-19 on daycares, which caused some centres to shutter over the past year. But the provincial NDP’s education and early childhood development critic Claudia Chender said today’s announcement comes far too late to help those who most need support. “We’re in a pretty huge bind as far as childcare goes in Nova Scotia,” Chender said in an interview Tuesday afternoon. “We don’t have enough ECEs, we have a massive wage disparity between the public sector and the not-for-profits.”

Chronic pain is becoming more common in the United States

Chronic pain is becoming more common in the United States Americans are in chronic pain, and a comprehensive new study exploring trends in this major public health concern reveals that what has been a long-standing and under-acknowledged problem is getting substantially worse. The findings, published in the latest issue of the journal Demography, suggest blanket increases across multiple measures, with pain rising in every adult age group, in every demographic group, and at every site of pain for which data exists. People today are experiencing more pain than individuals of the same age in earlier decades. In fact, each subsequent birth group is in greater pain than the one that came before it.

Chronic pain in the US has gotten substantially worse

The findings, published in the journal Demography, suggest blanket increases across multiple measures, with pain rising in every adult age group, in every demographic group, and at every site of pain for which data exists. People today experience more pain than people of the same age in earlier decades. In fact, each subsequent birth group is in greater pain than the one that came before it. “We looked at the data from every available perspective including age, gender, race, ethnicity, education, and income, but the results were always the same: There was an increase in pain no matter how we classified the population,” says coauthor Hanna Grol-Prokopczyk, associate professor of sociology in the University at Buffalo.

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