COVID - 19 Simulation Shows Importance of Continued Safety Efforts During Vaccine Distribution
Research out on the pre-publication website medRxiv shows how non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPIs) like mask wearing and physical distancing can help prevent... Read more.
TWAW: General safety advice
TWAW: General safety advice - Journal Advocate... Read more.
Watch The First Vehicle to Get a Zero - Star Safety Rating in Australasia
The Mitsubishi Express van became one of the first vehicles in Australasia to ever receive a zero-star safety rating. Watch it here.... Read more.
AAKP Unveils 2021 National Kidney Patient Safety Award Winner
/PRNewswire/ -- The American Association of Kidney Patients (AAKP), the oldest and largest fully independent kidney patient organization in the nation,...... Read more.
Two sloth bears run over by train, mother jumps to safety
Nagpur: Two sub-adult male sloth bears were run over by Mumbai-bound Gitanjali Express near Gangajhari railway station, 20km from Gondia, while the mo.... Read more.
Pharmacovigilance and Drug Safety Software Markets: Adverse Event Reporting Software, Drug Safety Audits Software, Issue Tracking Software, Fully Integrated Software - Global Forecast to 2026 - ResearchAndMarkets.com
Pharmacovigilance and Drug Safety Software Markets: Adverse Event Reporting Software, Drug Safety Audits Software, Issue Tracking Software, Fully Integrated Software - Global Forecast to 2026 - ResearchAndMarkets.com... Read more.
Seminar to be held on National Safety Day
Karnatala has 16,917 factories registered under the Factories Act, 5,724 registered boilers and around 16.56 lakh workers in these factories.�... Read more.
Pharmacovigilance and Drug Safety Software Markets: Adverse Event Reporting Software, Drug Safety Audits Software, Issue Tracking Software, Fully Integrated Software - Global Forecast to 2026 - ResearchAndMarkets.com
Pharmacovigilance and Drug Safety Software Markets: Adverse Event Reporting Software, Drug Safety Audits Software, Issue Tracking Software, Fully Integrated Software - Global Forecast to 2026 - ResearchAndMarkets.com... Read more.
Pharmacovigilance and Drug Safety Software Markets: Adverse Event Reporting Software, Drug Safety Audits Software, Issue Tracking Software, Fully Integrated Software - Global Forecast to 2026 - ResearchAndMarkets.com
Pharmacovigilance and Drug Safety Software Markets: Adverse Event Reporting Software, Drug Safety Audits Software, Issue Tracking Software, Fully Integrated Software - Global Forecast to 2026 - ResearchAndMarkets.com... Read more.
Deteriorating building could put officers, and community safety at risk
The facility may only last 2 to 3 more years before it needs replaced.... Read more.
Morristown group home ordered closed for safety violations, owner has a day to appeal
Whitley Gilbert, who operates the home on Reggie Drive, has previously faced criminal charges in connection with the home when it was on Buffalo Trail.... Read more.
Ice safety as lakes continue to thaw
It's been two days since the deadline to remove ice shanties in West Michigan. and that hasn't been the only sign ice fishing season is coming to a close.... Read more.
Covid - 19 safety measures have made an impact, Forum News & Top Stories
General practitioners have seen not only a marked decrease in the incidence of influenza over the last few months, but also a noticeable decrease in the incidence of hand, foot and mouth disease, and acute gastroenteritis (No flu cases at polyclinics in 8 months, March 1).. Read more at straitstimes.com.... Read more.
AAA's School Safety Patrol Program Celebrates Centennial - The Pulse ? Chattanooga's Weekly Alternative
AAA is proud to celebrate its School Safety Patrol program�s centennial anniversary. For 100 years, Patrollers around the world have provided school-aged children an extra sense of safety and security ...... Read more.
City councilors hold safety hearing after 2 construction workers die in Boston
City councilors hold safety hearing after 2 construction workers die in Boston - Boston News, Weather, Sports | WHDH 7News... Read more.
Severe Weather Awareness Week Day 3: Lightning Safety - KOLR
SPRINGFIELD, Mo. � It is Severe Weather Awareness Week here in Missouri. Each day will focus on a different topic to help you prepare for the upcoming season.... Read more.
Yours & Owls 2021?s COVID Safety Plan Has Been Approved
Yours & Owls organisers say they're locked in to go ahead next month, with the Wollongong festival's COVID safety plan receiving approval.... Read more.
Drug Safety: FDA's Future Inspection Plans Need to Address Issues Presented by COVID - 19 Backlog
We have long-standing concerns about the Food and Drug Administration's ability to oversee the increasingly global pharmaceutical supply chain, an issue on our High Risk List since 2009.... Read more.
Surrey Teachers' Association calls for district - specific COVID - 19 safety measures ? Surrey Now - Leader - Surrey Now
STA holds third and fourth walk-ins after multiple COVID-19 variant exposures... Read more.
How Neighborhood Groups Are Trying to Provide a Pandemic Safety Net
NEW YORK — Ariadna Phillips was close to panicking. It was nearing midnight in the Bronx, and she was scrambling to find food for an older woman in the neighborhood who was going hungry after deliveries of federal food aid had run out. For the past few weeks, Phillips, 40, who organizes a mutual aid group in the South Bronx, had been working frantically to gather enough food donations for those left in the lurch after a federal program stopped temporarily at the start of the year, and then again, a few weeks later, when it ran into logistical problems. A year ago, as the pandemic engulfed New York, mutual aid groups like hers quickly formed as stopgaps meant to help tide people over during the worst of the crisis. Sign up for The Morning newsletter from the New York Times But even as the pandemic begins to subside, the economic and public health damage it has inflicted persists, especially in less well-off corners of New York City that have been particularly hard hit by an outbreak that has disproportionately hurt poor people and communities of color. Mutual aid groups that were formed largely ad hoc to address temporary needs are now facing challenges they are not well-equipped to take on: recruiting and retaining a sufficient number of volunteers, securing enough donations of money and goods to keep going, and finding space to serve people. A group that came together in the spring to offer free mental health care to front-line workers is trying to enlist more established community-based groups to bear part of the burden by organizing group therapy sessions and providing them in Spanish and Mandarin. “There are hurdles that come with reaching out for mental health services that are far beyond just the pandemic,” said Dr. Nicole Andreoli, a psychologist in Manhattan and one of the group’s organizers. “People really were in kind of like a fight-or-flight mode, kind of frozen. When this ends, we’re expecting to see the trauma response increase.” Phillips is struggling to find donors to fund a consistent supply of food and volunteers to go on late-night food runs to fill community refrigerators and to map distribution routes and manage logistics so food will be fresh when it reaches people. The group is also trying to develop an app to track all the roughly 100 community refrigerators in the city and notify users when they are filled with food. “A lot of the time the fridges are empty, and I can’t imagine how that feels for somebody to be trekking God knows how far,’’ said David Arvelo, a member of South Bronx Mutual Aid who is working on the app. “It’d be a huge boon for people just needing to know when the fridge is filled.’’ But trying to come up with a way to monitor the refrigerators, he added, was akin to “Amazon’s fulfillment of the last mile” of a delivery. The volunteer effort can sometimes feel like a full-time job even though Phillips is already a high school teacher and Arvelo is a software engineer. “There are many moments where we’re like, ‘You know we’re just regular people, right?’ ” Phillips said. Mutual aid — a collective, coordinated effort to help those in need — is not new. But the pandemic, the biggest public health disaster in a century, set off a major wave of mutual aid campaigns with at least 100 groups forming across the state, half of them in the city, according to Mutual Aid Hub, which tracks such organizations. Nationwide, there are over 800 such groups, though the number is likely to be higher given that many are small and informal. The groups are in larger cities, like Miami, Chicago, San Antonio and San Diego, but also in smaller towns like Columbia, South Carolina, and Butte, Montana. At the beginning of the pandemic, mutual aid groups helped people with basic necessities like food, clothing, even hand sanitizer. But as the crisis drags on, the groups have broadened their mission, providing Wi-Fi routers so students can access school, mental health counseling and even veterinary care to pets belonging to low-income people. Groups have also played a role in various volunteer efforts to help people sign up for COVID-19 vaccines. “We’re not looking to necessarily put a Band-Aid on these major crises that are in front of us,” said Yves Voltaire, who lives in Harlem and runs a community refrigerator that offers free food and produce in uptown Manhattan. “It’s about building the world we want to see.’’ Two stimulus bills passed by Congress have not prevented people from losing their jobs, being unable to buy enough food and lacking access to social support, said Eric Klinenberg, a sociology professor at New York University and the author of a forthcoming book about mutual aid and the pandemic titled “2020: A Social Autopsy.” The emergency federal aid was not available to immigrants in the country illegally, and the grinding nature of financial challenges has stretched the limits of how far official assistance can go. It is not clear if help for those immigrants will be part of the coronavirus aid package that is now winding its way through the Senate. “Government aid has reached just a fraction of the people who need it,’’ Klinenberg said. “Millions of Americans are in dire straits today, and mutual aid networks are delivering the goods.” The groups have proliferated thanks in part to technology. Volunteers have organized over WhatsApp and Slack. Apps have connected donors directly to financially strapped artists, laid-off bar workers and other gig employees. Some groups have developed software similar to that used by food delivery companies to make distributions more efficient. But the work has become more difficult to sustain as the pandemic persists, especially because New York has suffered a heavier financial blow than most other major U.S. cities. One group, NYC Mesh, has been trying to install rooftop routers in some so-called Wi-Fi deserts in Queens and the Bronx, where children have a hard time accessing remote schooling. It is also trying to bring broadband into buildings and homes, but that requires digging up part of the street to lay cables, “which is an expensive thing to do,” said Brian Hall, a member of the group. Connecting broadband to a single building can cost $10,000, Hall said, which exceeds the group’s financial resources. Volunteers are doing all they can, he added, “putting antennas on roofs and internal wiring in the buildings.” At NYC COVID Care Network, Andreoli said that the pandemic had exposed gaps in care, and her group is having to help people, from delivery workers to grocery store employees, find mental health providers who are taking on new patients or identify affordable options or in-network providers. Because of the scale of the problem, the group is applying to become a nonprofit, which would make it eligible to receive public funds and private grants. Mental health hotlines created by the city at the start of the pandemic are not really a long-term solution, Andreoli said. “If you need something more than just this one-time thing, something that’s a little bit more sustainable, there really is nowhere to go,” she said. In the Bronx, where many essential workers live and where the unemployment rate is the highest in the city, Phillips has been applying the survival skills she learned growing up in the borough to help lead her group. As a child, Phillips relied on food and clothes given to her family by friends and neighbors after her father died, reinforcing her belief that mutual is what “so many of us Latinas, so many of us women of color, know exists for us to survive.” She was accepted at Princeton University but couldn’t afford to pay for student dining, so she lived off free food offered by the university’s associations and clubs, she said. She shared the food with two friends who came from similar backgrounds.... Read more.
As virus restrictions bite, EU extends safety net till 2023
The European Union is set to extend for around two more years the economic safety net it put in place to help save businesses and jobs from the impact of restrictions imposed to halt the spread of the coronavirus.... Read more.