TIZER'S SCIENCE NEWS

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Stanley
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Re: TIZER'S SCIENCE NEWS

Post by Stanley »

See THIS BBC report on deaths from antibiotic resistant disease....
4 hours ago
More than three million children around the world are thought to have died in 2022 as a result of infections that are resistant to antibiotics, according to a study by two leading experts in child health. Children in Africa and South East Asia were found to be most at risk. Antimicrobial resistance - known as AMR - develops when the microbes that cause infections evolve in such a way that antibiotic drugs no longer work. It has been identified as one of the biggest public health threats facing the world's population. A new study now reveals the toll that AMR is taking on children. Using data from multiple sources, including the World Health Organization (WHO) and the World Bank, the report's authors have calculated there were more than three million child deaths in 2022 linked to drug-resistant infections.

We have been talking about the possibility of this for years. Like climate change, it is now a reality.....
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Re: TIZER'S SCIENCE NEWS

Post by Whyperion »

I think I would like to know specifically what diseases for now are being questioned
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Re: TIZER'S SCIENCE NEWS

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See THIS for what could be good news....
Scientists believe they have found a new effective antibiotic for gonorrhoea, which could be one of the most promising in decades. Gepotidacin can treat and clear the sexually transmitted infection just as well as existing antibiotics and appears to be able to tackle some emerging drug-resistant 'superbug' strains too, say researchers in The Lancet journal. The work was funded by pharmaceutical company GSK which makes the new tablets. Gonorrhoea is one of the most common STIs in the UK and cases have been rising. In 2023, over 85,000 gonorrhoea diagnoses were reported in England alone - the highest number since records began in 1918. Most of the cases were treatable, but there is growing concern, external that some strains can't be dealt with so easily. Over time, the bacterium has developed resistance to most classes of available antibiotics and experts fear it may become untreatable in the future, unless new drugs are found.
Stanley Challenger Graham
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Re: TIZER'S SCIENCE NEWS

Post by Tripps »

"Universe expected to decay in 10⁷⁸ years, much sooner than previously thought.
by Netherlands Research School for Astronomy"

I don't think that, as usual in such cases I should be too concerned. Universe decay time It's such a gem that I've copied it, of course, to trippssnipps.

That's a really long time. Do you recall when the million pouind question on Millionaire was What is a googol ?This is the sort of territiry we are in. I actually knew the answer (thanks Leigh Tech College) which was a first - so did the contestant. I had also read -

How big is a googol? Really, really big! Mathematicians believe a googol is bigger than the number of subatomic particles in the universe. Despite its size, a googol is still smaller than the total number of possible different games of chess (approximately 10e120).

Fascinating that people are spendig any time researching such stuff.Good topic though - most unlikely to be true, of no value whatever, and no one will ever know if they were right or not. :smile:
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Re: TIZER'S SCIENCE NEWS

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Couldn't agree more David. One year is a very long time for me!
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Re: TIZER'S SCIENCE NEWS

Post by Stanley »

See THIS BBC report.
4 hours ago
An artificial intelligence (AI) tool has been used to sort through comments about botox and lip fillers, that were submitted as part of a public consultation, in what officials said was the first use of this kind in the UK. Officials set the tool to work sifting responses to a Scottish government consultation on regulating non-surgical cosmetic procedures. They found it came up with "nearly identical" results, when compared to humans set the same task. It is hoped the tool, dubbed "Consult", will spare civil servants from similar time-consuming tasks in future, and save taxpayers an estimated £20m. Consult is one of a planned set of government AI-powered tools that have collectively been dubbed "Humphrey" after the wily senior civil servant, Sir Humphrey Appleby, from the classic 1980s sitcom Yes, Minister. The series often took aim at excessive bureaucracy in government.
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