Chestnut: Experts weigh in on health benefits, nutrition facts, and more
Chestnut: Experts weigh in on health benefits, nutrition facts, and more
Side effects by Luciana M. Cherubin
- Chestnuts could cause stomach irritation.
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Reference: Microsoft Start Health: Faith Seke, Carolina Castro
Barclay: Nurses’ demands are ‘out of step’ with economic situation
Barclay: Nurses’ demands are ‘out of step’ with economic situation
The Health Secretary said it was “disappointing” nurses had voted to strike, as he said their demands were “out of step” with the economic situation faced by the UK.
Steve Barclay warned that the industrial action would lead to delayed care for patients, after the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) announced on Wednesday that nurses had voted to strike in the majority of NHS employers in a row over pay.
Insisting that his “door is open” for talks, he said that it needed to be recognised that “these are economically challenging times”.
“We need a strong economy in order to pay for a strong healthcare system,” he told broadcasters.
The pay demand by the RCN he said is “is out of step with the economic circumstances that we face”, as he defended the Tories’ record on the NHS as he said his party was committed to the manifesto pledge of building 40 new hospitals.
Mr Barclay, who has been Health Secretary for a matter of weeks, earlier tweeted: “It is disappointing some RCN members voted for industrial action.
“We accepted the recommendations of the independent NHS Pay Review Body in full and have given over one million NHS workers a pay rise of at least £1,400 this year on top of a 3% rise last year.”
In a series of tweets, he said that trade union demands were not “reasonable or affordable”, as he warned that the action would mean delays to care.
“Regrettably, this action will mean some patients will have their treatment delayed,” he said.
“My priority is to keep patients safe during any strikes, minimise disruption and ensure emergency services continue to operate.”
In the lead up to ballot results, the Government said it had contingency plans for dealing with any industrial action by nurses.
Shadow health secretary Wes Streeting accused the Government of “unacceptable negligence” after nurses voted to strike.
The Labour MP said: “There were no strikes in the NHS during 13 years when Labour was last in Government. If we were in office today, we would be talking with the RCN and doing everything we can to prevent these strikes going ahead.
“Government ministers spent the summer dodging calls and requests for meetings from the Royal College of Nursing. It is unacceptable negligence.
“The Conservatives have stopped governing and it is nurses and patients who will be made to pay the price.”
Appearing on BBC Radio 4’s PM programme, Mr Streeting said he could not guarantee he would offer the pay hike sought by nurses because the Tories have “crashed the economy”.
He said: “I think given the constraints on the public finances after the Conservatives crashed the economy, I can’t say that I would be able to offer that pay settlement today.
“What I could say, in stark contrast to the Secretary of State for Health and his predecessors, is that I would not only get the unions around the table today to negotiate, I would have been doing it for months.”
Reference: Evening Standard: Dominic McGrath
Man arrested on UK COVID ward is US rape suspect Nicholas Rossi
Man arrested on UK COVID ward is US rape suspect Nicholas Rossi
A court has ruled for the first time that a man arrested on a COVID ward in Scotland is an American rape suspect who faked his own death.
The court sheriff decided that the man calling himself Arthur Knight is in fact Nicholas Rossi.
Sheriff Norman McFadyen said: "I am ultimately satisfied on the balance of probabilities, by the evidence of fingerprint, photographic and tattoo evidence, taken together, supported by the evidence of changes of name, that Mr Knight is indeed Nicholas Rossi, the person sought for extradition by the United States."
He rejected his claims of mistaken identity as "scandalous" and "implausible and fanciful".
Fugitive Rossi, 35, is wanted in connection with sex attacks on three different women in Utah and is also alleged to have committed a number of other crimes across the US.
The authorities say he fled the US to avoid prosecution and attempted to trick investigators into believing he was dead, even attempting to hold a fake memorial mass to commemorate his passing.
But he was tracked via an Interpol arrest warrant to a hospital in Glasgow where he was undergoing treatment for COVID-19 in December 2021.
Since his arrest, he has insisted he is a victim of mistaken identity - that his name is Arthur Knight, and that he is an Irish orphan who has never visited the US.
Fingerprints and tattoos
Since his arrest, he has insisted he is a victim of mistaken identity - that his name is Arthur Knight, and that he is an Irish orphan who has never visited the US.
Fingerprints and tattoos
That story was ruled to be false today by officials at Edinburgh Sheriff Court.
Three days of evidence were heard this week as lawyers tried to get to the truth of the man's identity.
Advocate Depute Paul Harvey called 10 witnesses including hospital staff, police officers and fingerprint experts who were all adamant the man they had encountered in Glasgow was the man identified by the Americans as Rossi.
Two fingerprint experts from Police Scotland identified unique characteristics of prints from "Arthur Knight" that they said were "identical" matches for prints taken from Rossi.
A nurse, from Glasgow's Queen Elizabeth University Hospital, described "distinctive" tattoos on her patient's biceps, which were the same as images released by Interpol as part of the manhunt.
Bizarre claims 'entirely fanciful'
During the course of his defence, the wanted man made a series of bizarre claims to explain away the biometric evidence put before the court.
He told the sheriff that he did not have any tattoos before his admission to hospital and that he "awoke" from a coma to find his body had been tattooed while he was unconscious.
In another strange twist, he alleged the fingerprints on the Interpol warrant only matched his own because they were taken by an NHS employee in Glasgow. He claimed a man known only as "Patrick" took the prints while he was sedated and then sent them to a corrupt official in Utah who in turn circulated them to Interpol.
Sheriff McFadyen said Rossi's claim that he had regained consciousness from a coma to find that he had been tattooed "was equally... if not more implausible and fanciful" than his assertion that his fingerprints were taken from him by an NHS worker on behalf of US prosecutors while he was in intensive care.
On Rossi's insistence that he was Arthur Knight and not the man wanted in the US, the sheriff added: "It seems to me highly suspicious that the change of names went through a number of permutations. That seems to me consistent with someone who was hiding from someone or something."
Rossi's series of bizarre stories, excuses and stalling tactics were branded "entirely fanciful" and "outlandish" by the prosecutor, who suggested there was no doubt the man in court was Rossi himself.
At one point in the proceedings, Rossi appeared to cry and wheeze, describing his experience of Scottish prison as "challenging and dystopian".
He mouthed "I love you" at his wife Miranda, who has stood by him and maintains that her husband is a victim of mistaken identity.
Rossi was denied bail by Sheriff McFadyen, who said he was "a flight risk", and remanded him in custody.
US extradition bid
This case, which has been plagued with delays, is one of the most bizarre to be heard in a Scottish court.
Today's ruling brings to an end the relentless fight over the identity, removes any suggestion of the existence of alias "Arthur Knight" and paves the way for full extradition proceedings which are likely to get under way next year.
American officials want him extradited to stand trial.
A full hearing on Rossi's extradition to the US will take place in March in Scotland.
Reference: Connor Gillies, Scotland correspondent, at Edinburgh Sheriff Court - Friday
From spillovers to Disease X, how AI will rank viruses with greatest pandemic threat
From spillovers to Disease X, how AI will rank viruses with greatest pandemic threat
A database that ranks viral threats could play a central role in the race to develop vaccines to combat the next ‘Disease X’, scientists say.
On Wednesday, the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (Cepi) announced plans to turbocharge the scope and technology of the SpillOver app with a £1.5 million cash injection.
The platform – created by researchers at the University of California, Davis in the US – aims to better answer a difficult question: which pathogens pose the greatest risk to humans?
Scientists have estimated that birds and mammals harbour roughly 1.7 million viruses, including some 700,000 with “zoonotic potential”, meaning they could spread to people.
SpillOver aims to categorise that threat and identify “Disease X” – an as yet unknown virus with pandemic potential – before it strikes, using data from more than half a million samples taken from some 74,000 animals in 28 countries.
‘Vaccine library’
The results will be used to prioritise investments in a library of prototype vaccines to protect against the most dangerous viral families.
“Cepi’s plan is to help the world construct a library of vaccines that are ready to be adapted against the next Disease X, within 100 days of its identification,” said Dr Melanie Saville, executive director of vaccine R&D at Cepi.
“The data we hope to gather from the SpillOver programme will allow us and our R&D partners to align and prioritise our investments, maximise the impact of our funding, and help the world stop the next pandemic before it starts.”
The new funding will be used to expand the existing SpillOver platform, which already ranks 887 viruses based on 31 indicators, to identify those most likely to make the jump from animals to humans.
Currently, the viruses with the highest ratings include Ebola and Lassa Fever, both hemorrhagic diseases, but the list also includes almost 850 previously unidentified pathogens.
The researchers are aiming to expand the spillover database to include new risks – such as viruses that infect pets, reptiles and amphibians – and introduce artificial intelligence, which will allow more data to be analysed and enable automatic updates.
“This is a critical step forward in streamlining vaccine pipelines with the power to revolutionise epidemic and pandemic preparedness,” said Prof Jonna Mazet, a professor of epidemiology and disease ecology at UC Davis working on SpillOver.
The new partnership comes amid mounting evidence that the threat of zoonosis jumping to humans is accelerating due to urbanisation, deforestation and climate change.
In Africa, the number of outbreaks caused by zoonotic diseases jumped by 63 per cent in the last decade, compared to the period between 2001 and 2011, while a record number of people in France have caught dengue in local transmission chains this year.
Meanwhile scientists in Canada last month found that melting glaciers may soon expose frozen viruses that pose a threat to humans, while research published in Nature in April suggested shifting temperatures will drive a “potentially devastating” surge in new pathogens jumping between species over the next 50 years.
“More than ever, our globally connected world has made us vulnerable to the rapid spread of new zoonoses and the emergence of another pandemic disease is just a matter of time,” said Dr Saville.
Reference: The Telegraph: Sarah Newey
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