The presence of CWD in the Jackson elk herd will impact hunting opportunities and reproduction – Wyoming Public Media

Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a deadly neurological disease found in elk, deer and moose. In late 2020, the first elk in the region with CWD was detected. It was shot by a hunter in Grand Teton National Parknot far from where the Jackson elk herd is fed in the winter on the National Elk Refuge.

The announcement worried biologists who were concerned that feedgrounds act as a superspreader of the deadly disease because of the density of animals.

Doug Brimeyer, the deputy chief of wildlife for Wyoming Game and Fish, said the presence of the feedground was one reason behind a recent study published in Ecosphere last month.

Once there is a seven percent prevalence of CWD, the study predicts a modest decline of elk. It also predicts a mean of 12 percent CWD prevalence in the herd but it could go as high as 20 percent. Brimeyer said a high prevalence of the disease could impact hunting tags.

"CWD and hunting are both additive to the mortality of the population. And so for the last 20 years, our goal has been to manage the Jackson elk herd to 11,000 animals and, to do that you have hunting seasons on cows and the antlerless segment of the population," he said.

Brimeyer said this study provides insight into important management tools for the future of this unique herd. Since the herd is in western Wyoming where the numbers of predators on the landscape are higher, the herd is not as successful in reproducing, so the prevalence that the population could sustain will be lower than other herds in the state.

"So if CWD influences population performance, it's going to be important for managers to know that," said Brimeyer. "We want to maintain that long-distance migration and reduce the amount of human-caused mortality on those reproducing animals."

Brimeyer added that there are a lot of unknowns regarding feedgrounds and CWD.

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The presence of CWD in the Jackson elk herd will impact hunting opportunities and reproduction - Wyoming Public Media

Dealing with the discarded: E-Waste management in India – Down To Earth Magazine

India is the third-largest producer of e-waste after China and the United States. More than 95% of this waste is handled by informal sector

An individual on an average checks his / her phone 58 times in 16 waking hours.

This simple statistic points to the fact that technology plays a dominant role in our lives. But the increase in its use, coupled with extremist consumerist patterns, has not come without shedding some ill-effects on the environment. Data suggests that two out of five Indians replace their smartphones every year.

This begs the question: Where does all the e-waste go?

The unprecedented generation of e-waste is a cause of concern. The International Telecommunication Union defines e-waste as all items of electrical and electronic equipment (EEE) and its parts that have been discarded by its owner as waste without the intent of re-use.

This waste is classified into six categories: Cooling and freezing equipment like refrigerators, freezer other equipment such as televisions, monitors, laptops, notebooks and tablets.

It also comprises fluorescent lamps and other large and small equipment like washing machines, clothes dryers, dish-washing machines, vacuum cleaners and microwaves.

Ventilation equipment, small IT and telecommunication equipment like positioning systems (GPS), pocket calculators, routers, personal computers, printers and telephones are also included in the broad definition of e-waste.

India has become the largest producer of e-waste after China and the United States. More than 95 per cent of this waste is handled by the informal sector, which only adds to the problem. According to a Central Pollution Control Board report, in financial year 2019-2020, India generated 1,014,961.2 tonnes of e-waste for 21 types of EEE.

Another problem lies with the nature of the material. The e-waste stream contains diverse materials most prominently hazardous substances such as lead, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), polybrominated biphenyls (PBBs), mercury, polybrominated biphenyl ethers (PBDEs), brominated flame retardants (BFRs), and valuable substances such as iron, steel, copper, aluminum and plastics.

These require special treatment and cannot be dumped in landfill sites.

E-waste releases harmful chemicals, such as lead, on burning, which adversely impacts human blood, kidney and the peripheral nervous system. When it is thrown in landfills, the chemicals seep in the ground water affecting both land and sea animals. Decomposing e-waste is an expensive process and only a few developed countries can afford to do so.

Enormous generation of e-waste is not a new issue, but it has resurfaced in the discourse of climate change. According to a survey, 78 per cent respondents agreed with the statement: COVID-19 caused unnecessary short-term investment in technology, which leave us at risk with data being stored on a wide range of devices.

As many as 92 per cent of enterprises agreed with the statement: We must take a serious view on ensuring all devices used to equip the workforce throughout the COVID-19 pandemic are appropriately stored and disposed of.

The way ahead

We need to efficiently use our electronic devices by regularly maintaining them. By getting devices serviced timely, we can extend the average life of these electronic devices.

There is a need to break consumerist patterns. We need to revaluate our choices and use one multi-purpose device. One can also extend the life of electronics by buying a case, keeping the device clean and avoiding overcharging.

Another unique solution to the problem can be offered by tech giants through conditional selling. All tech companies should mandate their customers to buy new technology only after exchanging old electronic products for the new ones.

Hardware stores and companies should offer incentives such as exchange offers and discounts to customers who give away their old electronic devices. Tech companies and sellers should collaborate with e-waste disposing companies for their proper disposal.

They should also adopt smart ways to recycle their old products to produce new ones by outsourcing contracts to e-waste disposal companies.

These activities can be sanctioned by government laws where in thy can provide companies tax benefits for recycling of e-waste.

There are various legislations to regulate the disposal and management of e-waste in India, but their implementation is lax. These legislations include Hazardous Wastes (Management and Handling) Amendment Rules, 2003, Guidelines for Environmentally Sound Management of E-waste, 2008 and E-waste (Management and Handling) Rules, 2011.

The states have notified a set of hazardous waste laws and built waste disposal facilities in the last 10 years. However, a Comptroller and Auditor General of India report found that over 75 per cent of state bodies were not implementing these laws.

Views expressed are the authors own and dont necessarily reflect those ofDown To Earth.

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Dealing with the discarded: E-Waste management in India - Down To Earth Magazine

Sorrento Therapeutics Announces Entry Into Option Agreement to Exclusively License MPRO Inhibitors Against SARS-CoV-2 and Variants of Concern,…

MPro is a SARS-CoV-2 enzyme that catalyzes the formation of a number of essential proteins for the viral reproduction.

MPro inhibitors block this catalytic process to potentially inhibit the viral replication in human cell hosts and prevent viral infection.

The lead compound, MPI8, exhibited potent in vitro antiviral activity against SARS-CoV-2 and all of the major Variants of Concern (VoCs) (alpha, beta, delta and gamma) tested.

Sorrento intends to develop the lead MPro inhibitor in oral administration form and as a component of an antiviral cocktail therapy to potentially eliminate current and emerging coronavirus infections.

SAN DIEGO, Aug. 24, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Sorrento Therapeutics, Inc. (Nasdaq: SRNE, "Sorrento") today announced that it has entered into an option agreement (Option) with The Texas A&M University System (TAMUS) for exclusive rights to the intellectual property covering highly potent main protease (MPro) inhibitors against SARS-CoV-2. This latest agreement bolsters Sorrentos wide-ranging portfolio of preclinical and clinical therapeutic candidates targeting COVID-19, including new and emerging variants of concern of the SARS-CoV-2 virus. Under the terms of the agreement, Sorrento has an exclusive option to exclusively license patents covering the MPro inhibitor drug candidates.

Discovered and developed by Dr. Wenshe Ray Liu and his research team at Texas A&M University, the MPro inhibitors have demonstrated strong cellular antiviral potency against SARS-CoV-2 in preclinical studies. Several MPro inhibitors were identified that exhibited antiviral effects against diverse SARS-CoV-2 variants, including Indian (Delta), UK (Alpha), Brazilian (Beta) and South Africa (Gamma) variants of concern. The potential advantage of using small molecules, in oral and/or intravenous administration, that target MPro is that they are not affected by mutations in the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein, which may enable MPro drugs to be effective against SARS-CoV-2 and its variants of concern (VOCs), as well as against other coronaviruses that currently exist or might emerge in the future.

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MPro is a SARS-CoV-2 enzyme that catalyzes the formation of a number of essential proteins for the viral reproduction. MPro inhibitors block this catalytic process to inhibit the viral replication in human cell hosts achieving the eradication of the virus, according to Dr. Liu.

We are excited to be collaborating with Dr. Liu and his team at Texas A&M and look forward to advancing the development of these novel drug candidates to address COVID-19, and a multitude of other respiratory viruses, stated Dr. Henry Ji, Chairman and CEO of Sorrento. This agreement further strengthens our dynamic COVID-19 product portfolio and is well aligned with our overall strategic plan to combat COVID-19 through a combination of potent small molecules and antibodies, cellular therapies and vaccines.

Sorrento may exercise its right to enter into a worldwide exclusive license agreement at any time during the option period.

About Sorrento Therapeutics, Inc.

Sorrento is a clinical stage, antibody-centric, biopharmaceutical company developing new therapies to treat cancers and COVID-19. Sorrento's multimodal, multipronged approach to fighting cancer is made possible by its extensive immuno-oncology platforms, including key assets such as fully human antibodies (G-MAB library), clinical stage immuno-cellular therapies (CAR-T, DAR-T), antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs), and clinical stage oncolytic virus (Seprehvir). Sorrento is also developing potential antiviral therapies and vaccines against coronaviruses, including COVIGUARD, COVI-AMG, COVISHIELD, Gene-MAb, COVI-MSC and COVIDROPS; and diagnostic test solutions, including COVITRACK, COVISTIX and COVITRACE.

Sorrento's commitment to life-enhancing therapies for patients is also demonstrated by our effort to advance a first-in-class (TRPV1 agonist) non-opioid pain management small molecule, resiniferatoxin (RTX), and SP-102 (10 mg, dexamethasone sodium phosphate viscous gel) (SEMDEXA), a novel, viscous gel formulation of a widely used corticosteroid for epidural injections to treat lumbosacral radicular pain, or sciatica, and to commercialize ZTlido (lidocaine topical system) 1.8% for the treatment of post-herpetic neuralgia. RTX has completed a Phase IB trial for intractable pain associated with cancer and a Phase 1B trial in osteoarthritis patients. SEMDEXA is in a pivotal Phase 3 trial for the treatment of lumbosacral radicular pain, or sciatica. ZTlido was approved by the FDA on February 28, 2018.

For more information visit http://www.sorrentotherapeutics.com.

Forward-Looking Statements

This press release and any statements made for and during any presentation or meeting contain forward-looking statements related to Sorrento Therapeutics, Inc., under the safe harbor provisions of Section 21E of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those projected. Forward-looking statements include statements regarding Sorrentos pipeline and plans with respect to its preclinical and clinical COVID-19 programs, including the MPro inhibitors to which Sorrento has certain exclusive license option rights; the antiviral properties of these MPro inhibitors, including MPI8, and the potential advantage the MPro inhibitors offer against SARS-CoV-2, its variants of concern and other coronaviruses; Sorrentos plans to develop the MPro inhibitors to address COVID-19 and other respiratory viruses; and Sorrentos strategic plan to address COVID-19 with a combination of treatments and therapies, including small molecules and antibodies, cellular therapies and vaccines. Risks and uncertainties that could cause our actual results to differ materially and adversely from those expressed in our forward-looking statements, include, but are not limited to: risks related to Sorrento's technologies and prospects, including, but not limited to risks related to seeking regulatory approval for MPro inhibitors against SARS-CoV-2, its variants of concern and other respiratory viruses; clinical development risks, including risks in the progress, timing, cost, and results of clinical trials and product development programs; risk of difficulties or delays in obtaining regulatory approvals; risks that clinical study results may not meet any or all endpoints of a clinical study and that any data generated from such studies may not support a regulatory submission or approval; risks that prior test, study and trial results may not be replicated in future studies and trials; risks of manufacturing and supplying drug product; risks related to leveraging the expertise of its employees, subsidiaries, affiliates and partners to assist Sorrento in the execution of its therapeutic antibody product candidate strategies; risks related to the global impact of COVID-19; and other risks that are described in Sorrento's most recent periodic reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including Sorrento's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2020, and subsequent Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including the risk factors set forth in those filings. Investors are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date of this release and we undertake no obligation to update any forward-looking statement in this press release except as required by law.

Media and Investor Relations ContactAlexis Nahama, DVM (SVP Corporate Development)Email: mediarelations@sorrentotherapeutics.com

Sorrento and the Sorrento logo are registered trademarks of Sorrento Therapeutics, Inc.

G-MAB, DAR-T, SOFUSA, COVIGUARD, COVI-AMG, COVISHIELD, Gene-MAb, COVIDROPS, COVI-MSC, COVITRACK, COVITRACE and COVISTIX are trademarks of Sorrento Therapeutics, Inc.

SEMDEXA is a trademark of Semnur Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

ZTlido is a registered trademark owned by Scilex Pharmaceuticals Inc.

All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners.

2021 Sorrento Therapeutics, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

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Sorrento Therapeutics Announces Entry Into Option Agreement to Exclusively License MPRO Inhibitors Against SARS-CoV-2 and Variants of Concern,...

Histone citrullination by PADI4 is required for HIF-dependent transcriptional responses to hypoxia and tumor vascularization – Science Advances

Hypoxia-inducible factors (HIFs) activate transcription of target genes by recruiting coactivators and chromatin-modifying enzymes. Peptidylarginine deiminase 4 (PADI4) catalyzes the deimination of histone arginine residues to citrulline. Here, we demonstrate that PADI4 expression is induced by hypoxia in a HIF-dependent manner in breast cancer and hepatocellular carcinoma cells. PADI4, in turn, is recruited by HIFs to hypoxia response elements (HREs) and is required for HIF target gene transcription. Hypoxia induces histone citrullination at HREs that is PADI4 and HIF dependent. RNA sequencing revealed that almost all HIF target genes in breast cancer cells are PADI4 dependent. PADI4 is required for breast and liver tumor growth and angiogenesis in mice. PADI4 expression is correlated with HIF-1 expression and vascularization in human breast cancer biopsies. Thus, HIF-dependent recruitment of PADI4 to target genes and local histone citrullination are required for transcriptional responses to hypoxia.

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Histone citrullination by PADI4 is required for HIF-dependent transcriptional responses to hypoxia and tumor vascularization - Science Advances

Male fertility is declining studies show that environmental toxins could be a reason – The Conversation US

In the U.S., nearly 1 in 8 couples struggles with infertility. Unfortunately, physicians like me who specialize in reproductive medicine are unable to determine the cause of male infertility around 30% to 50% of the time. There is almost nothing more disheartening than telling a couple I dont know or Theres nothing I can do to help.

Upon getting this news, couple after couple asks me questions that all follow a similar line of thinking. What about his work, his cellphone, our laptops, all these plastics? Do you think they could have contributed to this?

What my patients are really asking me is a big question in male reproductive health: Does environmental toxicity contribute to male infertility?

Infertility is defined as a couples inability to get pregnant for one year despite regular intercourse. When this is the case, doctors evaluate both partners to determine why.

For men, the cornerstone of the fertility evaluation is semen analysis, and there are a number of ways to assess sperm. Sperm count the total number of sperm a man produces and sperm concentration number of sperm per milliliter of semen are common measures, but they arent the best predictors of fertility. A more accurate measure looks at the total motile sperm count, which evaluates the fraction of sperm that are able to swim and move.

A wide range of factors from obesity to hormonal imbalances to genetic diseases can affect fertility. For many men, there are treatments that can help. But starting in the 1990s, researchers noticed a concerning trend. Even when controlling for many of the known risk factors, male fertility appeared to have been declining for decades.

In 1992, a study found a global 50% decline in sperm counts in men over the previous 60 years. Multiple studies over subsequent years confirmed that initial finding, including a 2017 paper showing a 50% to 60% decline in sperm concentration between 1973 and 2011 in men from around the world.

These studies, though important, focused on sperm concentration or total sperm count. So in 2019, a team of researchers decided to focus on the more powerful total motile sperm count. They found that the proportion of men with a normal total motile sperm count had declined by approximately 10% over the previous 16 years.

The science is consistent: Men today produce fewer sperm than in the past, and the sperm are less healthy. The question, then, is what could be causing this decline in fertility.

Scientists have known for years that, at least in animal models, environmental toxic exposure can alter hormonal balance and throw off reproduction. Researchers cant intentionally expose human patients to harmful compounds and measure outcomes, but we can try to assess associations.

As the downward trend in male fertility emerged, I and other researchers began looking more toward chemicals in the environment for answers. This approach doesnt allow us to definitively establish which chemicals are causing the male fertility decline, but the weight of the evidence is growing.

A lot of this research focuses on endocrine disrupters, molecules that mimic the bodys hormones and throw off the fragile hormonal balance of reproduction. These include substances like phthalates better known as plasticizers as well as pesticides, herbicides, heavy metals, toxic gases and other synthetic materials.

Plasticizers are found in most plastics like water bottles and food containers and exposure is associated with negative impacts on testosterone and semen health.Herbicides and pesticides abound in the food supply and some specifically those with synthetic organic compounds that include phosphorus are known to negatively affect fertility.

Air pollution surrounds cities, subjecting residents to particulate matter, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxide and other compounds that likely contribute to abnormal sperm quality. Radiation exposure from laptops, cellphones and modems has also been associated with declining sperm counts, impaired sperm motility and abnormal sperm shape. Heavy metals such as cadmium, lead and arsenic are also present in food, water and cosmetics and are also known to harm sperm health.

Endocrine-disrupting compounds and the infertility problems they cause are taking a significant toll on human physical and emotional health. And treating these harms is costly.

A lot of chemicals are in use today, and tracking them all is incredibly difficult. More than 80,000 chemicals are registered in the U.S. and nearly 2,000 new chemicals are introduced each year. Many scientists believe that the safety testing for health and environmental risks is not strong enough and that the rapid development and introduction of new chemicals challenges the ability of organizations to test long-term risks to human health.

Current U.S. regulations follow the principle of innocent until proved guilty and are less comprehensive and restrictive than similar regulations in Europe, for example. The World Health Organization recently identified 800 compounds capable of disrupting hormones, only a small fraction of which have been tested.

A trade group, the American Chemistry Council, says on its website that manufacturers have the regulatory certainty they need to innovate, grow, create jobs and win in the global marketplace at the same time that public health and the environment benefit from strong risk-based protections.

But the reality of the current regulatory system in the U.S. is that chemicals are introduced with minimal testing and taken off the market only when harm is proved. And that can take decades.

Dr. Niels Skakkebaek, the lead researcher on one of the first manuscripts on decreasing sperm counts, called the male fertility decline a wake-up call to all of us. My patients have provided a wakeup call for me that increased public awareness and advocacy are important to protect global reproductive health now and in the future. Im not a toxicologist and cant identify the cause of the infertility trends Im seeing, but as physician, I am concerned that too much of the burden of proof is falling on the human body and people who become my patients.

This article was updated to more accurately represent the chemical regulatory system in the U.S.

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Male fertility is declining studies show that environmental toxins could be a reason - The Conversation US

Study: Neanderthals Sexed Themselves to Death With Humans – InsideHook

Mythology is filled with notoriously sexy, not-quite-human figures who lure their victims to a gruesome if erotic death by sex. Sirens that drove sailors to shipwreck and succubus poltergeists that destroyed their sex partners mentally and physically are among various other (usually female) demons and temptresses whose creation is probably a reflection of centuries of misogyny and hatred for female sexuality, but oh well. Anyway, it turns out getting sexed to death by a species-adjacent creature isnt just the stuff of folklore, but something that actually happened to the Neanderthals who walked the earth before humans lured them to their demise.

Per the Daily Mail, new research from Aix-Marseille University claims sex with humans may have played a key role in the extinction of Neanderthals. It wasnt exactly a Black Widow spider situation, however; the sex itself wasnt killing Neanderthals, nor were their human partners slaying unwitting sub-humanoids after sex. Rather, according to the study, sex with humans gradually decimated the Neanderthal species because relations between the two could lead to a rare and fatal blood disorder in their offspring.

The condition, called haemolytic disease of the foetus and newborn, causes a fatal kind of anemia and is relatively rare today, affecting only three in 100,000 pregnancies, according to the Daily Mail. The condition would have been quite common amongst Neanderthals, Stephane Mazieres, one of the authors of the paper, told the outlet. The presence and prevalence of the disease in Neanderthal-human newborns wouldve made reproduction difficult, taking a toll on Neanderthal offspring and gradually depleting the species.

These elements could have contributed to weakening the descendants to the point of leading to their demise, especially combined with the competition with Homo sapiens for the same ecological niche, according to the researchers.

So, long before humans invented sexist tales of shipwrecking mermaids and horny, man-eating demons, it turns out we were the original succubi, slowly fucking the life out of another species, and probably giving them herpes in the process.

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Study: Neanderthals Sexed Themselves to Death With Humans - InsideHook

Houston, We Have a Baby – NEO.LIFE – NEO.LIFE

The year is 3000 and humans have conquered space travel. Weve colonized other planets and built self-sufficient societies on interplanetary spaceships. Most of humanity watches the new millennium dawn by the light of suns in other solar systems.

While many science fiction writers imagine a space-faring civilization as almost an inevitability and have envisioned mind-bending food-printing and advanced propulsion technologies to take us there, theres one major problem thats rarely considered: We dont know if humans can procreate in space or on any other planet. And without offspring, the survival of any space colony would be limited to a single generationfar short of the estimated 73,000 years it would take to reach even the closest star, Proxima Centauri, with currently available technology.

For some animals, making babies in space seems to be no problem. Former guests of past space missions like fruit flies, newts, and Japanese rice fish, have all produced offspring in space. Unfortunately, mammalsand especially humansare a lot more complicated, and studies involving astronauts, animals, and lonely cell cultures in Petri dishes floating in space suggest that reproduction outside of Earth could be very difficult for us.

Even if you were an adult in peak physical fitness living in the protective confines of a space station, your environment would be an almost unimaginably inhospitable one where you float in a tub, deprived of gravity, while bathing in a surplus of exotic cosmic radiation.

That punishing environment would not be a particularly safe place for the delicate tissues of your reproductive system. Studies have shown that even short stints in space shrivel testes, shrink ovaries, and plummet sperm counts. (The majority of these studies involve rodents, since astronauts arent particularly keen to have their testes or ovaries removed for dissection.)

There are some glimmers of hope. For trips where astronauts stay relatively close to Earth, say, to the International Space Station (ISS), spaceflight doesnt seem to induce permanent infertility. There are plenty of examples of both male and female astronauts having had kids after a stint in space. Anecdotally, some female astronauts do seem to have difficulty having children upon returning to Earth, but researchers generally attribute this to age rather than spaceflight.

For longer tripslike future missions to Mars, which if past missions are any indication, we should be able to reach within nine monthsthe radiation of deep space might have longer-term consequences, but with different risks for men and women. While sperm production can be impaired in space, it may recover afterward. The testes in rodents and in humans have so-called germline stem cells called spermatogonia, says Ulrike Luderer, a developmental biologist at the University of California, Irvine. Those spermatogonia are relatively resistant to radiation. So, after the radiation exposure has ceased, those spermatogonia can start repopulating the testes and making new sperm.

This isnt necessarily the case in the female reproductive system. In the ovary, we do not have any germline stem cells, says Luderer. Although the existence of stem cells in the ovaries has been the subject of recent controversy among developmental biologists, with some suggesting they do exist, others hold that women are born with all the eggs theyre ever going to have. If this is the case, then once theyre goneeither through the aging process or by exposure to radiation in spacetheyre not coming back.

Without improvements in protective technology, deep-space radiation could cause permanent infertility in female spacefarers.

Luderer wanted to know what effect the radiation exposure during a Mars mission would have on female astronauts ovaries. To find out, her team exposed female mice to different degrees of simulated deep space radiation and then assessed the effect on the ovarian folliclessmall bundles of tissue that contain the egg cells. Eight weeks after the high dose of radiation, there were essentially no follicles of any kind remaining in the ovaries, Luderer says. The high dose was 50 centigray. The total dose for a mission to Mars is estimated to be about 40 centigray. So, our high dose was about the total dose that an astronaut would receive during a Mars mission.

Though the experiment was limited by the fact that the radiation was administered over a relatively short time period rather than the multi-year timeframe of astronaut exposure, it nevertheless suggests that without improvements in protective technology, deep-space radiation could cause permanent infertility in female spacefarers.

The easiest way to solve the problems of fertility for deep space travel may be to harvest the sperm and fertilize the eggs in advance, nurture them, keep them safe from cosmic radiation, and implant the embryos in the womb. But this raises another question: Would the embryo (and later fetus) be able to develop normally? At present, we can only guess based on what we know about how spaceflight affects adult humans, animals, and cells in Petri dishes.

One of the biggest dangers of spaceflight for adult humans is bone loss. Any astronaut who serves a long tour in space will practice routine, rigorous exercises designed to prevent bone loss, and even then, astronauts can lose as much as 1 percent of their bone density every month they spend in space. Without the stress of gravity on the skeleton, the production of bone-building cells called osteoblasts slows down, which eventually leads to bone loss.

How would this affect a fetus, which needs to grow an entire skeleton from scratch and also, for obvious reasons, cannot practice astronaut bone-protecting exercise programs? Would a child whose skeleton developed in space be strong enough to ever live somewhere with Earth-like gravity?

The cardiovascular system is also negatively impacted by space travel. The heart muscle atrophies, and anecdotal evidence suggests an increased risk of arrythmias. In nine-day-old rats, spaceflight altered the development of the aorta, thinning the wall of this major artery. So would a newborn baby whose cardiovascular system developed in space have a heart or blood vessels strong enough to survive to adulthood? We simply dont know.

Indeed, some scientists have hypothesized that normal fetal development would be impossible in space, predicting that alterations to normal muscle and bone development would cause space-born children to reach developmental milestones like sitting, standing, and walking much later than their Earth-bound counterparts.

Far more fickle may be the brains development. Although we know very little about how spaceflight might alter bone, muscle, and cardiovascular development, we understand even less about how it might affect brain development. Studies on Earth, however, give cause for concern: prenatal radiation exposure is associated with an increased risk of intellectual disability and seizure disorders.

More research needs to be done before we can ethically allow a human fetus to develop in space, but the most dangerous part of space reproduction may not come until the very end. The process of birthwhich can be dangerous enough on Earthis likely to be even more risky in space, an environment which weakens both bone and muscle. Pregnant rats that experienced spaceflight for just 11 days before returning to Earth and giving birth had twice as many labor contractions as rats that stayed on Earth, potentially due to weakening of the muscles needed for giving birth.

Scott Solomon, an evolutionary biologist at Rice University, says that the involuntary muscle contractions during labor are going to be the same whether a woman is giving birth on Earth or in space, but the effect of those forces on a womans body could be very different in space. Those forces could be really dangerous if the woman has a weakened skeleton, he says.

No mammals have ever given birth in space.

Although pregnant rats have been taken to space, none have actually given birth there. In fact, Luderer says, at this time, no mammals have ever given birth in space. Since humans are rarely the first to undergo unknown medical dangers (in the present century, at least), it is perhaps unsurprising that the Dutch startup SpaceLife Origin abruptly aborted its Mission Cradle plan to launch a pregnant woman into space and have her deliver her baby there, which was originally scheduled for 2024.

An earlier Mission Lotus, originally slated for sometime this year, would have sent human sperm and eggs into space to attempt in vitro fertilization, returning the resulting embryos to Earth for transfer into a mothers womb. But this mission was also cancelled. In a statement, SpaceLife Origin CEO Kees Mulder cited serious ethical, safety and medical concerns as the reason for these cancellations. A 2019 Atlantic report noted that the companys top three employees had no background in either medicine or space travel.

Medical experts say its a good thing this mission was cancelled. I couldnt wrap my head around it, says Virginia Wotring, a space medicine researcher at Baylor College of Medicine. Even if you were to just go to the ISS, youd be 250 miles away from medical help in the event of an emergency. And I dont know many pregnant women who would volunteer for that. She says it was too much, too soon to even think about sending women into space to give birth. Mission Lotus was also problematic: Id be really uncomfortable sending something as sensitive as an embryo into space, Wotring says.

Radiation is also a danger, especially in deep space. The type of radiation to which you would be exposed in deep space is unlike anything you will ever experience on Earthit includes high-energy atom fragments from solar flares and ions from beyond our solar system traveling at nearly the speed of light. Even in low-Earth orbit on the International Space Station, our planets magnetic field protects us from this dangerous deep-space radiation that can damage DNA.

But deep space radiation is just the beginning, Wotring says. Spaceflight stresses the human body in a myriad of ways. Your circadian rhythms are disrupted. You are exposed to higher levels of carbon dioxide, prolonged psychological stress, and social isolation. You lack fresh food, use only recycled air and water, and subject your microbiome to unknown stressall of which may affect your fertility and the development of a fetus.

This makes coming up with solutions tricky. For many of the physical effects of spaceflight, Wotring says, we dont know which one of the possible causes is really responsible. And without knowing the etiology of something, its really hard to figure out an appropriate countermeasure or treatment.

Nevertheless, scientists are trying to come up with new technologies to improve radiation shielding and alter the microgravity environment of space vessels, but these are thorny challenges. On Earth, we can use metals such as lead to protect ourselves from radiation in hospitals or industrial settings. But the types of radiation present in space are a completely different beast.

Metal solutions are not very useful when it comes to space radiation, Wotring says. Because with some of the space radiation types, if they encounter a metal ion, they break up and result in actually higher, more dangerous radiation. So, its exactly the wrong thing to do. And then theres the profound payload problem of lifting heavy lead shielding into space. Its just not feasible, Wotring says.

Polyethylene plastics are relatively light and effective for blocking space radiation. Unfortunately, they are not very strong. Astronautical engineers in Italy are experimenting with adding carbon or graphene nanomaterials to polyethylene to see if they can make it stronger while preserving its radiation-blocking properties. Research teams in Europe and Japan are investigating different types of lithium-containing materials, with promising early results. Scientists at NASA and space agencies around the globe are also investigating active shieldingusing magnetic or electric fields to protect spaceships from radiation in the same way that the Earths magnetic field protects terrestrial life. So far, however, these designs have been deemed too heavy to scale up for space travel.

Shielding on other planets, such as Mars, may be slightly easier. Materials that are less efficient at radiation shielding can still be usefulthey just need to be a lot thicker to achieve the proper protection. If we use materials that are already available on Mars, we could use as much as we wanted without worrying about how much fuel it would take to transport them from Earth. People living on Mars might use the Martian regolith (the Martian soil) to block the radiation, Solomon says. They might live underground in lava tubes. Waterwhich is found on Mars and which colonists will need to survive anywayis also effective at blocking radiation.

Scientists are also working on ways to provide artificial gravity using rotational forces. The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency has developed an artificial gravity system for mice, which seems to ameliorate at least some of the negative effects of spaceflight. But scaling this system up from a mouse-sized enclosure to an entire space station presents several engineering challenges, from the complicated problem of how to dock a ship with a rapidly rotating space station to the issue of motion sickness. However, recent research from scientists at the University of Colorado Boulder suggests that starting with slow rotations and letting people acclimate over several weeks can reduce motion sickness. But would this device be safe for a developing fetus? We have no idea: To date, there are no data regarding the effects of these artificial gravity generators for embryonic or fetal development.

Others are working on pharmacological options to help protect astronauts (and perhaps one day their developing offspring) from the dangers of space travel. Animal studies from Luderers lab found that an antioxidant called alpha lipoic acid provided at least partial protection for the ovaries of mice exposed to some (but not all) types of simulated space radiation. We know that a lot of the tissue damage from ionizing radiation is by the generation of reactive oxygen species when the radiation interacts with water in the cell, Luderer says. Reactive oxygen species are a type of unstable molecule that can damage our DNA. And so thats why we thought an antioxidant might be beneficial.

Could something as simple as an antioxidant be the key to preserving a womans fertility during space travel? That is something that I think is certainly worth researching further, Luderer says.

A recent study by researchers at the Jackson Laboratory for Genomic Medicine found that using pharmaceuticals to block certain signaling proteins in mice not only prevented the loss of bone and muscle mass that usually takes place in microgravity but actually increased their density. Perhaps some in-utero treatment based on a cocktail of such proteins could help a space fetus grow bones and muscles in microgravity, although much more research is needed before this could be determined.

But maybe the answer isnt taking drugs or changing the environmentmaybe we need to change ourselves. Scientists are studying durable organisms like tardigrades and certain forms of yeast, looking for genes that protect their cells from radiation or help repair damage to their DNA after its occurred. Scientists at the University of Wisconsin Madison are blasting bacteria with high doses of ionizing radiation to watch them evolve radiation resistance in real time and study which genes are involved. Geneticists like George Church, cofounder of Harvard Medical Schools Consortium for Space Genetics, have suggested dozens of genes that might benefit space-faring humans.

But Solomon says that knowing which genes confer protection is only the first step. We need to know that any changes we make arent going to have unintended consequences, he says, and to make sure that a gene that helps protect an adult from radiation doesnt have harmful effects on a fetus.

Maybe we need to get even more creative and think outside the womb, so to speak. Perhaps the future of human reproduction in space doesnt occur inside a human at all. Scientists are already working on creating bioengineered ovaries as well as artificial sperm and eggs from other cells in our bodies. Perhaps these artificial gametes could then be implanted in an artificial womb with an artificial placenta. It might be easier to protect this smaller structure from radiation, and an artificial womb isnt affected by stress or circadian rhythm disruption in the same way a womans womb is. This could also protect female astronauts from the dangers of pregnancymorning sickness, gestational diabetes, preeclampsia, and moreas well as reduce the risks associated with childbirth in space.

Long-term human habitation in space or on other planets might eventually turn us into multiple human species.

But none of this is possible quite yet. Wotring, Solomon, and Luderer agree that we have barely scratched the surface of understanding how living in space or on other planets would affect human reproduction and development. Its early days for these topics, says Wotring. Its far too early to really think about attempting reproduction in space.

However, if we do manage to figure out extraterrestrial reproduction, this will have major implications for the future of our species. Genetic and physiological changesprecipitated by genetic engineering, adaptation to the conditions of space, or to the measures that we took to survive off Earthwill likely occur.

For example, one way to address the difficulty of delivering a baby in space would be to deliver them via Cesarean section, but if all extraterrestrial births had to take place by Cesarean section for the safety of the mother, this changes the evolutionary pressures on human head size, says Solomon. For all of human history, the size of our heads (and therefore the size of our brains) at birth has been limited by the need for the head to be able to squeeze through the birth canal. But without this constraint, Solomon says, the human head would be freed to become larger without the consequence of it being dangerous to the birth of the child and to the mothers life. So, you could then imagine on Mars, if people chose [to have Cesarean sections], that heads could become larger and larger in future generations.

If we ever leave Earth and start to colonize other places in our solar system or beyond, that could trigger evolutionary changes that would be perhaps similar to the types of changes that happen to species here on Earth when they colonize new habitats like islands, says Solomon. Organisms living in drastically different environments dont necessarily stay the same species foreverlong-term human habitation in space or on other planets might eventually turn us into multiple human species. How long this speciation could take is anyones guess: In special circumstances, new species may arise in just a few generations, in other cases, scientists think lasting evolutionary change may occur over a million years.

But to get there, we have to figure out extraterrestrial reproduction first.

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Houston, We Have a Baby - NEO.LIFE - NEO.LIFE

Infertility treatment: When will free IVF be introduced in Ireland? – The Irish Times

In 2019, the government committed to publicly funding infertility services, including IVF. Lynn Enright asks if it will happen this year and speaks to some people about the costs financial, medical and emotional of funding the process privately

Amy Gallagher and James Rowan have always known they would need help to conceive. Rowan had cancer first at age 15, then at 20 and the high-dose chemotherapy used to treat it destroyed his fertility. Before the first course of chemotherapy began, he banked sperm which remained frozen for the best part of two decades. When he and Gallagher got together and decided they wanted to complete their family she has a son from a previous relationship to whom Rowan is a loving stepfather they faced a dearth of information and options.

I asked my GP about it and he just pointed me in the direction of a private clinic, Rowan says. Thats all he could do for me.

The World Health Organisation is clear: infertility is a disease. It affects the male or female reproductive system and is defined by the failure to achieve a pregnancy after 12 months or more of regular unprotected sexual intercourse. In those of reproductive age, it affects men and women equally, with male-factor infertility accounting for 50 per cent of cases, according to Prof Mary Wingfield, clinical director of the Merrion Fertility Clinic in Dublin.

Yet, in Ireland, people who cant conceive without turning to assisted reproductive technology (ART) receive little or no support within the public health system. Those who need in-vitro fertilisation (IVF) and other fertility treatments to start a family will find themselves immediately paying for treatment, a situation that compares unfavourably with most of our European neighbours. In Scotland, for example, eligible patients are offered up to three free cycles of IVF the number most experts agree gives a fair chance of conception. In Ireland, there is no comprehensive State-funded fertility treatment, even when patients are receiving care and treatment for a condition or disease that affects their fertility, such as cancer, colitis or endometriosis.

Forty-year-old Natalie Doyle needed to pursue IVF after her Fallopian tubes became encased in scar tissue following complications relating to colitis. She had been receiving expert care within the public health system but once it came to looking into ART options, a situation she found herself in as a direct result of the disease, she felt completely adrift.

Youre just left on your own to choose a clinic and theres no communication between your fertility clinic and your other doctors, she says. Theres not even a link between your GP and the clinic its just nuts, I cant get my head around it.

Doyle and her partner postponed moving in together, both staying with family while they funded cycle after cycle of failed IVF. Eventually, they conceived their daughter but Doyle is adamant that the Government needs to step in. The costs are too much for many couples to bear, she says.

It feels like youre spending money, just sitting in the waiting room. It bleeds you dry. The Government needs to help with the costs, she says. But they also need to help medically, so that patients like me have a continuity of care. There have to be more regulations, there has to be more support, the mind boggles that nothing has been done yet.

In Ireland, fertility clinics are regulated by the Health Products Regulatory Authority (HPRA) but there is no regulatory body that specifically oversees the fertility industry. In the UK, the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) performs that role, ensuring fertility clinics and research centres comply with the law, as well as providing free, clear and unbiased information on all fertility clinics operating within the jurisdiction. Without such a body here, patients can find themselves feeling bewildered.

Amy Gallagher says she got most of her information from Google, Facebook and Instagram.

I just think there should be some form of support for people, not only financially but emotionally, she says. For people who experience infertility as a result of childhood cancer, theres nothing out there. Theres one Facebook group, thats all Ive found. There needs to be something like the citizens information service, somewhere you can get information. People have no one to turn to. Your GP doesnt know and a fertility doctor will charge at least 250 for a consultation, just to ask them questions. The situation is, she says, deeply frustrating and upsetting.

Prof Wingfield says Ireland desperately needs an equivalent of the HFEA. The industry is regulated by the HPRA but its more from the point of view of the quality procedures surrounding the management of human tissues and cells. Its not about the social, medical, ethical and legal realities. There are plans afoot to introduce such a body as part of an overhaul of the provision of fertility treatment but it is not clear when that will happen.

In October 2017, the cabinet approved the Assisted Human Reproduction (AHR) Bill, a piece of draft legislation that laid out regulations for AHR and the need for the establishment of a regulatory body.

Two years on, in late 2019, details of a model of care for infertility developed by the Department of Health in conjunction with the HSEs National Women & Infants Health Programme were announced, with the then minister for health Simon Harris receiving Government approval to publicly fund infertility services. The announcement a clear commitment from the then Government was hugely significant and it looked as though Ireland was finally set to join most other wealthy and developed nations in providing care and treatment for infertile people. Harris told reporters at the time that he expected publicly funded IVF to be available in 2021.

The planned scheme would comprise three stages: the first stage would involve patients seeing their GP and if it was deemed necessary, they would proceed to the second stage and be referred to a newly established regional fertility hub (there are plans for six hubs, one in each of Irelands six maternity networks), where tests, diagnostic surgery and some non-invasive forms of ART would take place. The third stage would involve the provision of free IVF.

Now, another year has passed and there has been little progress with this ambitious undertaking.

The commitment is ongoing and the current Minister for Health, Stephen Donnelly, confirmed in public statements on the most recent Budget that additional funding is being made available in 2021.

Womens health and our maternity services must get more attention, Donnelly said in the Dil last October, noting that, We will . . .open two new regional fertility hubs in Galway and Cork.

In response to questions from The Irish Times, a Department of Health spokesperson said that 2 million has been made available to allow for the establishment of the first four hubs and a further 1 million has been allocated for the final two hubs.

However, while Covid-19 has not impacted the funding available for the project, the establishment of the hubs has been slowed by the pandemic and its impact on the HSE and the provision of elective health services. None of the six regional hubs are operational at present. Meanwhile, the AHR Bill has still not been signed into law - and without that, publicly funded IVF will not take place.

The Department of Health spokesperson says that it is intended that, in line with available resources, [the] model of care for infertility will be rolled out on a phased basis over the course of the coming years. When pushed for a more specific timeframe, the spokesperson said it is not possible at this juncture to give a definitive timeline.

Rowan and Gallagher arent holding their breath. Weve been promised this Government money for years but its just not coming, Rowan says. Every time you hear about it, you think: Oh maybe that will be through soon. But it seems to be taking years. You cant rely on it, you cant put your hope in it. Gallagher fears that any change will come too late for her: It sounds mad because Im only 32, but every year that Im older, our chances are lower.

Prof Wingfield says Ireland absolutely lags behind other developed countries when it comes to the provision of fertility treatment. The cost of fertility drugs prescribed by a consultant are covered by the Drugs Payment Scheme or a Medical Card and private patients can claim tax relief on the costs of fertility treatment but even so, Irish patients receive significantly less support than those in the UK, Germany, Turkey and most European nations. When asked why that is, she says the answer is complicated. In the past, it would have been because it was a difficult subject to discuss from a religious and moral point of view, but thats no longer the case.

However, when you remove any religious concerns from the discussion of fertility treatment, there remains two very powerful taboos: money and womens reproductive systems.

Because, over the years, its only been available privately not just in Ireland but in most parts of the world and the treatment is expensive. There was a perception that it was a luxury, something that only rich people can afford, Prof Wingfield says.

Rowan says that he and Gallagher have encountered an attitude that suggests fertility treatment is somehow extravagant: We have no choice but to do IVF if we want to have a child but sometimes it feels like people dont understand that. Its nearly treated as though Amy is going in for a boob job. People think its a luxury as opposed to a necessity.

A cycle of IVF usually costs between 6,000 and 10,000 depending on which treatment is required and which clinic you are using. There is not always evidence to support expensive add-ons, such as endometrial scratching and assisted hatching, but if you are already spending huge sums of money, it can seem churlish not to attempt to boost your chances by opting in. Treatment can be accessed at a cheaper cost abroad (most Irish patients go to the Czech Republic or Spain) but flights and accommodation will add up and being hundreds of miles from your doctor if something goes wrong is stressful and potentially dangerous.

Generally, only the most expensive private health insurance packages cover infertility treatment and even then, they do not cover the entire cost. The most comprehensive packages at Irish Life and VHI cover up to 2,000 towards a cycle of IVF, which can be accessed only twice per lifetime.

The vast expense can make patients feel that their clinics are rapacious. You have to pay 160 for a blood test to tell you that youre not pregnant. Its horrendous. It can feel like its just about money to them. says Gallagher. Prof Wingfield, however, makes the point that it is a very expensive treatment because its very labour intensive.

For one couple to do IVF, she says, youll have several nurses involved, one or two doctors and several scientists. Then youll have all the administrative staff because record-keeping is so critical. It is a very expensive treatment to provide. The Merrion Clinic is run as a not-for-profit organisation and has charitable status but costs there are not significantly lower than at the private clinics, which are run for profit.

Infertility often has an impact on mental health a study in the United States found that women with infertility felt as anxious or depressed as those diagnosed with cancer, hypertension, or who were recovering from a heart attack and stress about money adds to feelings of anxiety and helplessness.

Louise Hazlett (37) has private health insurance that has covered the surgeries and treatments she needed to treat her endometriosis, but it does not extend to fertility treatment, which she needs as a direct result of the disorder. Over the last four years, she and her husband, Kevin, have had five cycles of IVF. In 2017, she discovered she was pregnant with twins but she went into labour at 22 weeks and her sons died shortly after birth. Since then, she has had three more cycles of IVF.

She explains that they got a loan from the credit union for 20,000 and that went fairly rapidly.

We had to get another loan last year, she says. And we just save. Any spare money goes to fertility. We both work but its not easy. But I feel lucky that we are in a position to save and to pay back loans. Not all couples have that.

People assume that once you get married or reach a certain age that youre going to have kids. They assume its going to be easy. And people say things like, Oh still no sign? And at this stage, I just say, Well, Ive done five cycles of IVF. We hope the sixth one is going to be our lucky one. That shuts people up.

Prof Wingfield says: Most people grow up thinking that they will be able to have children and unless they run into problems, they dont realise that it is such a big issue. People who have not experienced infertility according to the HSE, 85 per cent of people conceive within one year will perhaps struggle to realise just how distressing and expensive the process can be.

Its like an obsession, Doyle says. You see all the people around you getting pregnant and having kids. I had to become distant for the sake of my own mental health I couldnt go to baby showers. People can say that they understand but unless you go through it yourself, you dont, you cant really.

This isolation can be compounded by silence around the subject. People who cant get pregnant sometimes feel that there is something wrong with them and it affects peoples self-esteem, says Prof Wingfield. So its hard to be vocal about it and people can be very private about it. Often peoples friends or family dont even know about it. That is changing and people are becoming more open about it and with that will come the realisation that it is a medical issue.

The people interviewed for this piece said they were keen to speak openly because they believe that raising awareness is vital. Gallagher says she didnt tell her employer during her first cycle because she felt there was a stigma and a lack of compassion: People ask Is it you or him? and How much is it? Those are the two questions I get asked all the time. When going through her second cycle, she was open about it in her workplace but felt like they didnt understand.

It was like: Youre not sick, why do you need time off?

Hazlett hopes publicly-funded infertility treatment will help to improve awareness of infertility and its causes and treatments.

There will be huge challenges to creating a functional and fair State-sponsored system of providing fertility treatment. It will be necessary to decide who is eligible for free fertility treatment and to establish criteria and cut-offs. In the UK, for example, gay women who are in a relationship can access free IVF with a sperm donor but single women are ineligible. The financial, legal and logistical concerns relating to the implementation of the Governments planned three stages will be complex, but if it is achieved it will be a huge step forward for our health system. Prof Wingfield laments the existing system: As a doctor, it is unacceptable to me that medical healthcare should be preferentially available to those in our society who can find the money to pay for it and not available to all.

Doyles daughter Sadie is just about to turn three. When she was 10 months old, Doyle and her partner David Smith could finally move into their own home after years of spending almost everything they earned on fertility treatment. They consider themselves the lucky ones and wish more people could get to experience their joy.

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Infertility treatment: When will free IVF be introduced in Ireland? - The Irish Times

The Crane Consulting Firm LLC, Partners with Advanced Technologies to Provide a Biosecurity Solution that Significantly Reduces Up to 99.99% of the…

ATLANTA--(BUSINESS WIRE)--In a strategic partnership, The Crane Consulting Firm LLC and Advanced Technologies are pleased to announce the public availability of a scientifically validated antiviral, antimicrobial, and sanitization preventative control technology. The EPA registered Biosecurity technology provides a residue-free application that continuously sanitizes the air and common surface areas from viruses, pathogenic bacteria, molds, and mildew with no harmful impact on humans or pets in the treatment area. Furthermore, the technology is substantiated by its approval with USDA National Organic Standards in the sanitizer/disinfectant category as a chemical-free process in the US and Europe.

With COVID-19 cases rising, organizations are evaluating technologies to minimize public concerns for safe group gatherings. Technologies that are scalable and proven effective play an essential role in how organizations and the public can safely return to daily engagements. Together the strategic partners are prioritizing the technology for healthcare, cruise lines, public transportation, airports, and other commercial business industries. The Crane Consulting Firm President & CEO D. Williams stated, "Our goal is to improve overall air quality by reducing the rapid spread of COVID-19 and other pathogens causing sickness or death. We hope that raising awareness of our proven technology, will allow everyone to reengage in public spaces safely and with confidence."

Third-Party ISO certified labs have scientifically validated the Biosecurity technology. In a recent trial by a private manufacturing processing facility, initial air quality samples showed significant concerns and the need for corrective action. The implementation of the Biosecurity technology resulted in a post-treatment sample reduction of 83.7% in all bioburden from the pre-treatment samples. Test results also demonstrated stellar air quality improvements with no disruption to daily business operation nor any negative impact on onsite employees.

Based on the Biosecurity system's proven performance, the Joint Partnership has secured installations in Idaho and Kentucky's jails in concert with a key distribution initiative. With successfully improving air quality for clients in 13 countries, the Biosecurity platform powered by Oxyion continues to prove itself effective and safe.

The Biosecurity Technology is suitable for all operations with a central HVAC controlled environment, including standing office structure facilities and mobile public/passenger vehicles. To learn more about this solution, visit https://www.craneconsultingfirm.com/cranes-oxyion-technology/

The Crane Consulting Firm is an international consulting firm and technology business development group based in Atlanta, GA. Visit http://www.craneconsultingfirm.com to uncover how you can partner with this dynamic organization.

Since the early 2000s, Advanced Technologies operates offices in the USA, Canada, and Latin America with a focus on security solutions for government and commercial applications. Visit http://www.advancedtechnologiesus.com for more information!

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The Crane Consulting Firm LLC, Partners with Advanced Technologies to Provide a Biosecurity Solution that Significantly Reduces Up to 99.99% of the...

Ginkgo Trees Were Going Extinct on Their Own; Then Humans Saved These ‘Living Fossils’ So Now They’re Everywhere – Good News Network

Lining the streets of many American city suburbs are living fossils, which unlike many stories of mans interaction with nature, involves nature as the destroyer, and mankind, the savior.

While some people take ginkgoleaf as a nootropic supplement, few people would imagine its the equivalent of eating a horseshoe crab, that is to say its an organism that, unlike every other member of its family, made it out of the time before mammals.

Ginkgo Biloba stands alone in its family Ginkgoaceae;the last of its relatives dying out likely during the last ages of the dinosaurs. Understanding of the trees heritage suggests it would have gone the way of T-rex without a brush withhomo sapien.

The evidence for this comes down to the slow arms race observed in evolution. There are five types of plants which produce seeds on the Earth today. Flowering plants, conifers, cycads, and gnetales are joined by the lonely ginkgo family, which scientists suggest may have contained many different species based on the fossil record, specifically in China.

About 130 million years ago, flowering plants really started stealing the show, developing sweet nectar in their flowers to attract pollinators, and sweet fruit to attract animals for dispersing seeds. Ginkgo on the other hand relied on the wind to blow pollen from male to female trees.

This was hypothesized as being an inconsistent strategy, as ginkgo are sometimes observed to change sex, perhaps a failsafe mechanism to increase the chances of reproduction.

These respective evolutions likely pushed the ginkgo family to the back of the evolutionary bus. By 66 million years ago, according to National Geographic, ginkgo was gone from most of North America and Europe, and by the end of the last Ice Age, clung on only in China.

MORE:For First Time Ever, Scientists Identify How Many Trees to Plant and Where to Plant Them to Stop Climate Crisis

Its theorized that it was the Paleolithic residents of China who, removing the reeking outer layer of the ginkgo nut in search of a food source resembling a pistachio, began eating and replanting them to harvest the nuts.

Ginkgo is now one of the most common trees in cities along the U.S. East Coast after botanists brought the tree back from China in the 17th century. Good for almost nothing, besides offering a bounty of beautiful yellow leaves in fall when they all change in a very short time, it nevertheless is resistant to pollution and can thrive under concrete.

Peter Crane, author of the bookGinkgo and one of the worlds foremost Ginkgo experts, described the human intervention as a rescue from natural oblivion and a great evolutionary [and cultural] story.

RELATED: Rooftop Panels of Tiny Plants Can Cleanse Polluted Air at 100 Times the Rate of a Single Tree

The IUCN still recognizes the tree as Endangered in the Red Listthe worlds largest threatened species catalogue, largely due to a lack of ginkgo trees surviving in the wild in undomesticated forms.

However a 2012 study confirmed there are trees surviving in southeast China that may represent the only truly wild population left.

CHECK OUT: Tree-Planting Drones Have Successfully Planted Thousands of Saplings and Theyre About to Plant More

The story shows that while humans often receive blame for sending plants and animals into oblivion, we also have a reputation for saving them too.

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Ginkgo Trees Were Going Extinct on Their Own; Then Humans Saved These 'Living Fossils' So Now They're Everywhere - Good News Network

Speaking of invasive plants, it’s not easy to uproot them along a river – Concord Monitor

A stretch of tangled, mostly invasive plants that has taken over the Merrimack River riverbank by Fort Eddy Plaza in Concord will be mowed down this winter as the first step of possible eradication, and with any luck, the owners of nearby land will join in.

Im hoping everyone from Einsteins up to NHTI can sign on, said Tom Schurman, project manager with Outside Unlimited, the landscape management firm that has been hired to do the work by the owners of the plaza offExit 14 in Concord. He was referring to a stretch of riverbank owned by the franchised bagel restaurant to the south and the community college to the north.

Schurman said they will be working on about two acres of land on the western bank of the Merrimack River when conditions are right meaning the ground is frozen so that it isnt too muddy for equipment and the river level is lower than right now. The goal, he says, is to control a vast tangle of invasive plants such as barberry, bittersweet, Japanese knotweed and Asian silk grass.

It has just completely taken over. It makes a thick canopy, really restricts native species from taking root underneath, he said. These invasive climates are like jungles. They trap an enormous amount of garbage; native forests are a little more open.

Theres even a human health aspect to fighting these invasives.

Barberry creates a level of humidity underneath them, its so dense and thick they actually increase tick reproduction. The ticks love it, the perfect climate for them to over-winter, he said.

Under the proposal the invasive plants will be cut down this winter, and then will be sprayed with herbicide in the fall, when such spraying is most effective because plants are taking the maximum amount of material down into their roots as preparation for winter. Most invasive plants cannot be controlled by merely cutting them back repeatedly; their ability to quickly regrow is one of the reasons that they can overwhelm native species. The project could cost up to $50,000.

The work could affect some homeless people, who often set up along this stretch of the Merrimack River.

Invasive plants, insects, birds and animals are a problem all over the world. They are non-native species that for various reasons, especially a lack of predators in their new home, spread so quickly that they drive out native species and upset established ecosystems.

Schurman said getting permits to spray along the riverbank took months of meeting with state environmental and wildlife officials, who he said were very helpful.

The permitting process to do any kind of work on the water is an absolute headache, he said. Getting the permit is hard, and then being watched like a hawk after that not a lot of loggers and landscapers will even try.

Schurman said he has found in New Hampshire, at least, its harder to tackle invasive plants on land than invasive in water, such as Eurasian milfoil or water chestnut.

Not a lot of people will pay attention to these land-based invasives, he said. Almost all grants deal with aquatic invasives.

The affected stretch of riverbank includes parcels owned by a number of organizations, including the city, the state and private companies. Increasing the area covered by the project would not only help control the plants, which easily spread, but can also spread out the cost.

Schurman said that he wants to make sure that Concord doesnt end up like parts of Massachusetts where Outside Unlimited often works.

Its overrun down there. It almost looks like theres no native forest left, he said.

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Speaking of invasive plants, it's not easy to uproot them along a river - Concord Monitor

Here are just some of the government’s priorities for the months ahead – TheJournal.ie

WHILE COVID-19 AND the roll out of the vaccine are likely to dominate much of Dil time this year, the government also has other priorities -32 pieces of legislation, in fact.

Key legislation will be progressed in this term across a broad range of sectors including climate action, housing, health and transport, said Government Chief Whip Jack Chambers this week, adding that Brexit will also be key.

So, what stands out on that priority list, published at the start of term?

A new Affordable Housing Bill, as promised in the Programme for Government, is a little delayed, but is being prioritised this Spring.

The Parents Leave and Benefit (Amendment) Bill will also be prioritised this session. This will extend leave entitlements and also provide adoptive leave and benefits for same sex couples.

The Human Tissue Bill, which has been debated for some time now, will introduce an opt-out system of consent for organ donation. The Nursing Home Support Bill will also be put on the important list, and will place acap on how much farmers and business owners have to contribute towards nursing-home costs.

The much talked about Assisted Human Reproduction Bill which has been put on the long finger in recent years is also on the list.

There has long been criticism that there is no legislative framework for the regulation of assisted human reproduction such as IVF, fertility practices and associated research, and this Bill aims to remedy that.

The Animal Health & Welfare (Prohibition on Fur Farming) Bill is also on the priority list, as is the the Road Traffic (Miscellaneous Provisions) Bill which government say will deliver a raft of reforms in the sector including a new motor insurance database.

There has been much debate about legalising e-scooters over the years, with this government now planning on regulating their use.

New laws will also be introduced to deal with the issue of scrambler bikes being operated in a dangerous manner in communities across the country.

The Competition (Amendment) Bill aims to reform competition enforcement by giving powers to the competition authorities so they can impose civil sanctions. The topic was recently raised at an Oireachtas committee when the issue of Eir and its treatment of customers was being discussed.

Everyone is hopeful for a return of concerts and entertainment event this year, so the Sale of Tickets (Cultural, Entertainment, Recreational and Sporting Events) Bill and its prioritisation will be welcomed.

This proposed legislation aims to stop ticket touting by prohibiting the resale of tickets for events in designated venues for a price exceeding their original sale price.

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Limerick could be in line for a directly elected mayor if the government gets to the Local Government (Directly Elected Mayor Limerick) Billover the line, which will give this person executive functions.

There are a number of justice bills on the list, such as the Criminal Procedure Bill. Ireland has been criticised by Europe for our long delays in either charging people or bringing them to trial, leaving many people and their families in limbo for many years.

The Department of Justice promised to expedite this Bill last year, which provides for measures to reduce delay and improve efficiency in procedural aspects of criminal trials, including by introducing preliminary trial hearings.

Theres also former Transport Minister Shane Ross Bill, which has been modified, but has been much talked about in recent months due to the controversy surrounding the appointment of Supreme Court judge, and former Attorney General, Seamus Woulfe: the Judicial Appointments Commission Bill.

This will amend the law in relation to judicial appointments and establish a JudicialAppointments Commission to make recommendations with regard to such appointments.

Since the government came to office in June, it has published 29 Bills and enacted 30 Bills.

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Here are just some of the government's priorities for the months ahead - TheJournal.ie

We Need to Change the Terms of the Debate on Trans Kids – The New Yorker

Every night, when I walk my dog, several strangers, similarly tethered, will ask me the same two questions: Boy or girl? and How old? The pragmatic meaning of these questions escapes me. The answers do not inform the interactions between our dogs, nor do they tell a story. Wouldnt it be more interesting to learn whether the dog was a longtime family member or a pandemic puppy, whether it lived with other pets, how much exercise it got or desired, how it tolerated last summers orgy of fireworks, or to learn at least the dogs name? These are the questions I usually ask other dog owners as our pets sniff each other, but in response I am still askedhundreds of times a yearabout my dogs age and gender. These categories, it seems, are so central to the way we organize the world around us that we apply them to everything, including random dogs in the night.

No wonder, then, that attempts to subvert these two categories make people uncomfortable and, often, scared and angry. This happens when children act with particular independence; when people challenge the norms of gender; and, especially, when both of these things happen at once, as in the case of trans children. In December, the British High Court of Justice ruled on the question of whether young people under the age of eighteen are capable of giving informed consent to treatments that forestall puberty. Such treatments can be prescribed to children given a diagnosis of gender dysphoria, both to alleviate discomfort that can stem from the physical changes brought on by puberty and to pave the way for later medical gender transition. The court ruled that children under sixteen cannot consent to such treatment because they are unable to grasp its long-term consequences, and cast doubt on the ability of young people between the ages of sixteen and eighteen to give informed consent. The decision effectively bars British children and adolescents from transitioning medically.

British media coverage of the High Courts decision was generally positive. Other countries should learn from a transgender verdict in England the Economist wrote. The court was correct to curb a disturbing trend, the Observer wrote. Later in the month, the BBCs media editor, Amol Rajan, published his list of the five best essays of the year, among them J. K. Rowlings piece explaining her position on sex and gender issues. Rowling, who presents herself as a defender of bathrooms, dressing rooms, and other single-sex spaces against trans women, wrote that she was concerned about the huge explosion in young women wishing to transition and also about the increasing numbers who seem to be detransitioning. She cited the controversial hypothesis that some adolescent transitions may stem from a kind of social contagion. Had transition been an option during her own adolescence, Rowling wrote, she might have chosen it as a way to deal with her own mental-health challenges: The allure of escaping womanhood would have been huge.

In the United States, this line of argument has been advanced by Abigail Shrier, a writer for the Wall Street Journal who published a book last year titled Irreversible Damage: The Transgender Craze Seducing Our Daughters. The cover art is a drawing of a prepubescent girl with a giant round cutout where her abdomen should be. The book is currently ranked #1 Bestseller in Transgender Studies on Amazon. Bills that would ban trans care for young people have already been prefiled for this years legislative sessions in Alabama, Texas, and Missouri; last year, a similar bill was defeated in South Dakota, thanks to opposition from the pharmaceutical industry. When such bills contain language explaining their rationale, they make similar arguments to those of Rowling, Shrier, and the British High Court: that the effects of trans care are irreversible and that many people who want to transition when they are adolescents will ultimately choose to identify with the gender they were assigned at birth.

The state bills tend to lump all kinds of trans carepuberty blockers, cross-sex hormones, and surgeriestogether. As a narrative, this is not unreasonable: the vast majority of people who receive puberty blockers do go on to take cross-sex hormones, and many choose surgery. But the short- and long-term effects of the medical interventions are markedly different. Agonists of gonadotropin-releasing hormone, originally developed to treat prostate cancer and endometriosis in adults, can have the effect of preventing puberty-related changes: genital growth, breasts, body and facial hair, and voice changes. Estrogen promotes breast growth, and testosterone will likely lead to a lower voice and more body and facial hair; both kinds of hormones affect fat and muscle distribution. The effects of hormones are not as predictableand the line between reversible and irreversible effects of hormone treatments isnt as clearas their opponents seem to think, but a person whose puberty is effectively prevented and who later receives cross-sex hormones is unlikely to preserve their fertility. Some European researchers are experimenting with reserving gonad tissue that may be used to create biological progeny later (similar efforts are made with children undergoing cancer treatment that is likely to render them infertile). Natal males and females who transition during adolescence forfeit their fertility equally, but Rowling, Shirer, and other opponents of pediatric trans care seem particularly concerned with people they see as girls clamoring to escape womanhood. (The lead plaintiff in the British case, Keira Bell, who was assigned female at birth, began taking puberty blockers at sixteen and testosterone at seventeen and had a double mastectomy at twenty. Bell later transitioned back to being female.)

Women and children are always mentioned in the same breath, the visionary feminist activist Shulamith Firestone observed in the book The Dialectic of Sex: The Case for Feminist Revolution, from 1970. I submit . . . that the nature of this bond is no more than shared oppression. And that moreover this oppression is intertwined and mutually reinforcing in such complex ways that we will be unable to speak of the liberation of women without also discussing the liberation of children, and vice versa. Firestone noted that women and children were inextricably linked not only by the womens duty of childbearing and child rearing but by the obligation, for both groups, to maintain innocence, fragility, immaturity, and dependence on others. She saw the path to liberation in divorcing the reproductive function from womens biology, and in abolishing childhood. One might argue that young people who seek trans care are pursuing both of these projects, and that is why they inspire such panicked opposition.

Yet the arguments in favor of trans care for young people are usually not so much liberationist as they are determinist. Advocates generally claim that trans children are innately, immutably different from cis children and that access to medical transition is essential for staving off depression and even suicide. The fear that puberty per se can be a threat to life for transgender children permeates pediatric trans care, Sahar Sadjadi wrote in an essay in Transgender Studies Quarterly last year. (Sadjadi is a medical anthropologist who has studied clinical practices for transitioning and other non-gender-conforming children for a decade.) This type of advocacy, she argues, builds on two long-standing tendencies: the habit of thinking of gender transition as primarily a medical process, and the habit of grounding L.G.B.T. civil-rights claims in born this way rhetoric. These habits make for a compelling, easily digestible argument: transness is an immutable characteristic, and denying young people access to medical transition can be tantamount to killing them. This argument is grounded in the lived experience of some advocates, whose own medical transition relieved extreme anguish. But an argument rooted in despair cannot and should not represent all young trans people.

When we are not talking about children and adolescents, trans people talk about a much broader range of options than medical transitiona spectrum of gender expression more varied than the linear path of puberty blockers followed by cross-sex hormones. Some adult trans people consider themselves binary, and some dont; some use hormones and have surgeries, some choose one or the other, some try different approaches, and some eschew medical interventions altogether. Medical intervention requires a diagnosis of gender dysphoria, even if the person is paying for surgery and hormones out of pocket. In general, though, adults are not required to prove that they have always felt like they were in the wrong body (although some have).

If we hold to the premise that transness is an immutable, inborn trait, it follows that every young person who chooses to detransition will undermine the case any other young person may have for seeking trans care. The main debate has become whether these young people will persevere, Sadjadi told me by Zoom from Montreal, where she is on the faculty at McGill Universitys Department of Social Studies of Medicine. I think this is the wrong question. Gender changes with age. The gender of a fifty-year-old woman is not the same as of a five-year-old girl. Nothing terrible happens if a person transitions again, which is how I think we should think about it.

The British High Courts decision makes a point that appears compelling and compassionate. A child, the panel decided, cannot fully comprehend the meaning of infertility and possible loss of sexual function that come with transitioning at a young age. (One concern is that puberty blockers prevent genital growth, making gender-affirming bottom surgery more complicated.) But this argument rests not only on a narrow definition of sexual pleasure but on an impossible ideal of comprehension: we can never fully imagine loss, especially the loss of something weve never had. Keira Bell testified, It is only until recently that I have started to think about having children and if that is ever a possibility, I have to live with the fact that I will not be able to breastfeed my children. I still do not believe that I have fully processed the surgical procedure that I had to remove my breasts and how major it really was. As heartbreaking as that admission is, all available data indicate that such regrets are exceedingly rare. That one persons testimony convinced the court to make a decision that will affect untold thousands tells us more about the pull that human reproduction has on the imagination than it does about gender transition.

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We Need to Change the Terms of the Debate on Trans Kids - The New Yorker

Spell check for research? Confronting the reproducibility crisis with explainable AI | NIU – NIU Newsroom

You might have heard of the famous marshmallow test. The study, and follow-ups that extended over decades, found that children who could delay gratificationand consequently get two marshmallows instead of onetended to have better life outcomes.

But a 2018 study challenged those results. And many other widely accepted findings from high-profile studies of the past have faced new scrutiny over the last decade. Since the nature of science is one study building upon another, what has come to be known as the reproducibility crisis (or replication crisis) has cast a shadow on some important discoveries of the past, particularly in the fields of psychology, economics and medicine.

Now two NIU computer scientists, working with a colleague at Northwestern University, are hoping to make headway in addressing the reproducibility crisis by taking the first steps toward developing software akin to a spell checker for researcha program that would help scholars gauge the likelihood of their study results being successfully reproduced or replicated.

The National Science Foundation (NSF) has awarded $300,000 in grant funding for the project to NIU Computer Science Professors Hamed Alhoori and David Koop, along with colleague Brian Uzzi of Northwesterns Kellogg School of Management. Their project will make use of explainable AI, or artificial intelligence technology that finds solutions that can be understood by people.

Across the globe, millions of research papers are published by scholars annually.

NIU Computer Science Professor Hamed Alhoori

Each year, more than $2 trillion is spent on research and development worldwide, so findings that dont hold up represent an enormous waste of time and money, said Alhoori, the lead researcher on the project. He also points to a 2016 survey by the prestigious journal Nature finding that more than 70% of researchers have tried and failed to reproduce another scientists experiments, and more than half have failed to reproduce their own experiments.

If we cant validate published findings, its clearly a problem, Alhoori said. When scientists see research published in a reputable journal, we think we can build on the work.

Theres also public trust to consider, Koop added.

NIU Computer Science Professor David Koop

People hear about retractions (of scientific studies) and assume they cant trust science, he says. Its important to minimize those events as much as possible.

Over the next two years, the researchers plan to begin developing metrics and tools to help make reproduction of existing work more efficient. They also want to help scientists, scholars and technologists self-evaluate their work before publishing it.

One of our major goals is to quantify the level of confidence that a work is likely to be reproducible by leveraging both human and machine intelligence, Alhoori said. Ideally, researchers would have something like spell check.

The terms reproducibility and replicability are often used interchangeably. However, the former more specifically refers to computational reproducibility, or repeating an experiment using the same data and methods to obtain consistent results. Replicability aims to answer the same scientific question with new data. The thrust of the new research could aid either process but is focused on reproducibilityanalyzing the data originally captured and the computer code used to produce models and/or results.

The scientists plan to assemble new datasets covering the success and failure of hundreds of scientific papers and identifying the common threads among research that holds up to scrutiny versus studies that unravel when being reproduced. A range of metrics will be analyzed from the scholarly text, images, tables, methods, computer code, computational notebooks and results.

There are signals that could provide clues as to whether a work is reproducible, Koop said.

The research team is aiming to develop interpretable machine learning and deep learning models that will estimate a confidence level in a works reproducibility. However, Koop notes that tools that work in one type of discipline might not be appropriate for another. The tools we develop will probably need to be different depending on the type of publication, he said.

So, is a spell checker for research imminent? Not yet, Alhoori said, but he and his colleagues hope to make strides in that direction.

Media Contact:Tom Parisi

About NIU

Northern Illinois University is a student-centered, nationally recognized public research university, with expertise that benefits its region and spans the globe in a wide variety of fields, including the sciences, humanities, arts, business, engineering, education, health and law. Through its main campus in DeKalb, Illinois, and education centers for students and working professionals in Chicago, Hoffman Estates, Naperville, Oregon and Rockford, NIU offers more than 100 areas of study while serving a diverse andinternational student body.

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Spell check for research? Confronting the reproducibility crisis with explainable AI | NIU - NIU Newsroom

Francis Galton pioneered scientific advances in many fields but also founded the racist pseudoscience of eugenics – The Conversation US

A popular pseudoscience was leaving its mark on American culture a century ago in everything from massive reductions in quotas for immigration to the U.S., to thousands of fitter family contests at county fairs, to a growing acceptance of birth control by those who thought it could curtail the fertility of undesirables.

These are just a few examples of the influence of eugenics in the early 20th century. The idea of scientist Francis Galton, eugenics suggested that negative traits could be bred out of the human species by discouraging reproduction by those considered inferior. It laid the groundwork for forced sterilization laws in the U.S. and Nazi racial hygiene programs and the Holocaust.

While Galton is primarily remembered today, 110 years after his death, as the father of the shameful pseudoscience of eugenics, during his life he was considered one of the most influential thinkers of his day. He made seminal contributions in fields as diverse as statistics, geology, meteorology, anthropology, psychology, biology and psychometrics. My interest in Galton was renewed through my universitys decision to remove from buildings the name of one of its past presidents David Starr Jordan who also happened to be a eugenicist.

Galton was a pioneer in meteorology, the study of weather. His 1863 book Meteorographica was the first to describe weather on a continental scale. He developed instruments for measuring different weather parameters, described the use of barometric pressure in weather prediction, and devised systems for recording weather information. He published the worlds first weather map in a newspaper, showing the reported weather in England on March 31, 1875.

Galton was an innovator in the field of statistics, the first to recognize the wisdom of the crowd. He once attended a livestock fair where villagers were asked to guess the weight of an ox. Nearly 800 people participated. When Galton looked at their estimates, he found that while almost all the guesses were wrong, both the middle guess and the average of the guesses were almost exactly correct. From such observations he helped to develop the concepts of mean and variation, leading him to formulate the essential statistical concept of standard deviation.

Galton helped forge a new science of forensics. Fortune tellers and others had long scrutinized the lines and creases on the palms and fingers, which had been described in general terms by scientists and physicians. But Galton was the first to suggest that they could be the basis for a new science that he called dermatoglyphics or skin carvings. Galton demonstrated that fingerprints are unique, stable over a lifetime, and could be classified and used to identify individuals who had left prints at the scene of a crime. Scotland Yard adopted his system.

Galton used scientific inquiry to investigate what proponents of religion had long preached was the power of prayer. Reasoning that if prayer works, it should be possible to measure its effects, Galton set out to discover whether those who pray attain their objects more frequently than those who do not. In 1872, he published Statistical Inquiries into the Efficacy of Prayer, in which he found that prayer produces no measurable difference in outcomes. This conclusion is supported, he argued, by the fact that insurance companies take no interest when setting their rates in whether their clients pray or not.

Galton founded the field that became known as psychometrics, the measurement of psychological faculties such as intelligence. One of Galtons most famous works is Hereditary Genius (1870), in which he argues each generation has enormous power over the natural gifts of those that follow. If people would only direct a fraction of the time they spend on improving on cattle to the human race, he lamented, what a galaxy of genius might we not create!

Galton credited reading his cousin Charles Darwins On the Origin of Species (1859) about the theory of natural selection with initiating him into an entirely new province of knowledge, paving the way for his studies of inheritance.

In 1884, Galton set up an Anthropometric Laboratory at the International Health Exhibition in London. There he collected data on the physical characteristics and abilities of visiting members of the public. They paid to be measured, and he provided them with a copy of their data. He believed that such data could be used to compare individuals across different places of origin, residences, occupations, races and so on.

It was Galton who coined the term eugenics, from the Greek for good stock. He argued that the tendency of successful families to have few children relatively late in life was dysgenic, or bad for the stock, while capable people should be given incentive to marry early and have many children.

Galton thought he had discovered principles that would enhance human life, and he also spoke against what he regarded as unreasonable opposition to the extinction of an inferior race.

He himself had been born in 1822 into a prominent British family. He was a grandson of Erasmus Darwin, a physician, scientist and prominent abolitionist, and his family included multiple fellows of the Royal Society. His position of privilege likely influenced both his willingness to classify humankind into groups and his sense of what counted as good stock versus what sort of person belonged to an inferior race.

Sir Francis Galton died in the U.K. on Jan. 17, 1911, but his work shaped government policies on both sides of the Atlantic for decades. Eugenics policies encouraged the most valued people to procreate in large numbers, while also aiming to prevent reproduction by those considered to be less fit.

Politicians including Theodore Roosevelt expressed the concern that failure of Anglo-Saxons to produce large families would result in race suicide. Many states enacted forced sterilization laws, later backed by a Supreme Court ruling declaring that Three generations of imbeciles are enough.

As ethically faulty as eugenics was, Galton made errors in the science as well. Traits such as intelligence are not the expression of single genes, and the intelligence of children can differ markedly from that of their parents. Time after time, eugenicists promoted traits such as blond hair and blue eyes that reflected not objectively superior attributes but their own mirror images. The Nazi genocide programs, aimed at promulgating a master race, opened many eyes to eugenics sinister implications.

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Today Galtons star has fallen. This past summer, University College London announced that it was removing his name from a building, for instance, with his role as the father of eugenics far outweighing his other scientific contributions.

Yet Galtons legacy has not entirely vanished. It was recently announced that in Europe, the number of babies being born with Down syndrome has fallen by half, the result of prenatal testing and selective pregnancy termination. People are still choosing who can and cannot be born based on genes.

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Francis Galton pioneered scientific advances in many fields but also founded the racist pseudoscience of eugenics - The Conversation US

UCLA Fielding School of Public Health Researchers Say Mask Mandates Could add $1 Trillion to the U.S. GDP – YubaNet

Research published this month in theProceedings of the National Academy of Sciencesfound that near-universal adoption of nonmedical masks in public, combined with complementary public health measures, could reduce spread to essentially zero.

This research makes clear that even as vaccines are developed and new variants, like B.1.7.7, are being discovered, the power to protect ourselves remains in our hands, as individuals, said co-authorAnne Rimoin, UCLA Fielding School professor of epidemiology. Wearing a mask is one of the simplest, most effective, and cheapest ways to do exactly that and its been proven by the history of epidemiology over the past century, going back to the 1918-19 influenza pandemic and even before.

R0, pronounced R naught, is a mathematical term that indicates how contagious an infectious disease is. Its also referred to as the reproduction number. As an infection is transmitted to new people, it reproduces itself. Reducing reproduction to zero, in turn, could add $1 trillion to the U.S. GDP, the authors said.

Reducing disease spread requires two things: limiting contacts of infected individuals via physical distancing and other measures and reducing the transmission probability per contact, said co-authorChristina Ramirez, Fielding School professor of biostatistics. The preponderance of evidence indicates that mask wearing reduces transmissibility per contact by reducing transmission of infected respiratory particles in both laboratory and clinical contexts.

The research, published in the January edition of the National Academies peer-reviewed journal as An evidence review of face masks against COVID-19, was conducted by an international team of 19 specialists from UCLA and more than a dozen other universities and research centers. These include Oxford University, the University of Cape Town, Peking University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and the University of San Francisco.

When used in conjunction with widespread testing, contact tracing, quarantining of anyone that may be infected, hand washing, and physical distancing, face masks are an invaluable tool to reduce community transmission, Rimoin said. All of these measures, through their effect on Ro, have the potential to reduce the number of infections. As governments exit lockdowns, keeping transmissions low enough to preserve health care capacity will be critical until vaccines can be developed and widely provided.

To come to their conclusions, the team including Greg Watson, a UCLA FSPH scholar examined a wide range of new and existing studies and research, including work going back to a 1910 outbreak of plague in northeastern China. Even then, the researchers write, scientists fighting the plague recognized that the cloth mask was the principal means of personal protection. In total, the team examined a wide variety of work, focused in 11 areas:

The findings of this work had a variety of conclusions, including the following:

There is also ample evidence from the current pandemic, said study co-authorJeremy Howard, a distinguished research scientist at the University of San Francisco.

By the end of June 2020, nearly 90% of the global population lived in regions that had nearly universal mask use, or had laws requiring mask use in some public locations, and community mask use was recommended by nearly all major public health bodies, Howard said. This is a radical change from the early days of the pandemic, when masks were infrequently recommended or used.

TheUCLA Fielding School of Public Health, founded in 1961, is dedicated to enhancing the publics health by conducting innovative research, training future leaders and health professionals from diverse backgrounds, translating research into policy and practice, and serving our local communities and the communities of the nation and the world. The school has 631 students from 26 nations engaged in carrying out the vision of building healthy futures in greater Los Angeles, California, the nation and the world.

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UCLA Fielding School of Public Health Researchers Say Mask Mandates Could add $1 Trillion to the U.S. GDP - YubaNet

Asthma, allergy risk may be higher for children conceived with infertility treatment – National Institutes of Health (.gov)

News Release

Thursday, April 21, 2022

Children conceived with infertility treatment may have a higher risk for asthma and allergies, suggests a study by researchers at the National Institutes of Health. The study was conducted by scientists at the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development and National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, part of the National Institutes of Health. It appears in Human Reproduction.

The study enrolled approximately 5,000 mothers and 6,000 children born between 2008 and 2010. Mothers responded periodically to questionnaires on their health and their childrens health and medical histories. Infertility treatments included in vitro fertilization (sperm and egg are combined in a laboratory dish and inserted in the uterus), drugs that stimulate ovulation, and a procedure in which sperm are inserted into the uterus.

Compared to children conceived without infertility treatment, children conceived after treatment were more likely to have persistent wheeze by age 3, a potential indication of asthma. At 7 to 9 years old, children conceived with treatment were 30% more likely to have asthma, 77% more likely to have eczema (an allergic condition resulting in rashes and itchy skin) and 45% more likely to have a prescription for an allergy medication.

The authors called for additional research to determine how infertility treatment or lower parental fertility might influence the development of asthma and allergy in children.

Edwina Yeung, Ph.D., of the NICHD Epidemiology Branch and senior author of the study, is available for comment.

Polinski KJ et al. Infertility treatment associated with childhood asthma and atopy. Human Reproduction. 2022.https://doi.org/10.1093/humrep/deac070

About the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD): NICHD leads research and training to understand human development, improve reproductive health, enhance the lives of children and adolescents, and optimize abilities for all. For more information, visit https://www.nichd.nih.gov.

About the National Institutes of Health (NIH):NIH, the nation's medical research agency, includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. NIH is the primary federal agency conducting and supporting basic, clinical, and translational medical research, and is investigating the causes, treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and its programs, visit http://www.nih.gov.

NIHTurning Discovery Into Health

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Asthma, allergy risk may be higher for children conceived with infertility treatment - National Institutes of Health (.gov)

Publicly-funded IVF to begin in 2023 with ‘regional fertility hubs’ before that – TheJournal.ie

THE DEPARTMENT OF Health is planning to fund IVF services from 2023, with Taoiseach Michel Martin saying today that regional fertility hubs will be established before that.

A public fund which promised financial support for people undergoing fertility treatmentwas first announced in 2017, with commitments to fund IVF also contained in the Programme for Government.

Earlier this year, the government published the Health (Assisted Human Reproduction) Bill which will provide a basis for infertility services but no strict timeline for public IVF was provided.

It has now been confirmed by the Department of Health that it is hoped this would come on stream in 2023.

Speaking in the Dil today, Martin said Minister for Health Stephen Donnelly increased funding for womens health in this years Budget.

The minister intends to have a model of care for infertility, which will see the introduction of advanced assisted human reproduction treatments, including IVF, in the public health system. Mr Donnelly plans to commence this in 2023.

Currently, Ireland is the only country in the European Union where fertility treatments such IVF are not publicly funded.

Martin was speaking in the Dil today in response to questions from People Before Profit TD Paul Murphy, who has spoken publicly about the cost of IVF treatments for himself and his partner.

Murphy noted that there have been promises from previous governments about IVF funding and that he was doubtful whether it would happen next year.

I dont want to hold my breath about it, because we have heard this before, from the then minister for health Leo Varadkar in 2016, its in Slintecare, its in the Programme for Government and there has been precious little progress, he said.

So Im asking Taoiseach for a guarantee that this is actually going to happen in 2023 and a timeframe for when that will be within that year. Im also asking for a commitment that sufficient funding will be provided for the public system to ensure it can be done publicly, as opposed to outsourced private, mostly for-profit providers.

The question of the private companies profiting from infertility treatments is one that has been investigated by Noteworthy, with some private facility clinics reporting profits of well over 1 million in financial statements.

Speaking today, Fine Gael TD Neale Richmond also told the Dil that publicly available IVF must be matched but statutory employee leave to attend appointments.

What preparatory work has begun in relation to ensure that both parents will be eligible for leave dates and sick leave dates during this period, that eligibility will be inclusive of all of society?, he said.

Can we ensure that this process will be open and accessible to all very quickly because the uncertainty is already playing on so many hearts and minds of people around the country.

Taoiseach Michel Martin noted that theAssisted Human Reproduction Bill passed its second stage in March and continues to work its way through the Oireachtas.

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Phase One of the rollout of the model of care has involved the establishment at secondary care level of regional fertility hubs within maternity networks in order to facilitate the management of a significant proportion of people presenting infertility issues at this level of intervention, he said.

Phase Two of the rollout will see the introduction of tertiary infertility services, including IVF, in the public health system planned for 2023 at such time as infertility serves a secondary level services have been developed across the country.

The key legislation, the Assisted Human Reproduction Bill, passed second stage on 23 March, has been referred to the Select Committee on Health for third stage. Its important to get that through to create the legislative base.

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Publicly-funded IVF to begin in 2023 with 'regional fertility hubs' before that - TheJournal.ie

Nature Timespiral: The Evolution of Earth from the Big Bang – Visual Capitalist

Nature Timespiral: The Evolution of Earth from the Big Bang

Since the dawn of humanity, we have looked questioningly to the heavens with great interest and awe. Weve called on the stars to guide us, and have made some of humanitys most interesting discoveries based on those observations. This also led us to question our existence and how we came to be in this moment in time.

That journey began some 14 billion years ago, when the Big Bang led to the universe emerging from a hot, dense sea of matter and energy. As the cosmos expanded and cooled, they spawned galaxies, stars, planets, and eventually, life.

In the above visualization, Pablo Carlos Buddassi illustrates this journey of epic proportions in the intricately designed Nature Timespiral, depicting the various eras that the Earth has gone through since the inception of the universe itself.

Not much is known about what came before the Big Bang, but we do know that it launched a sequence of events that gave rise to the universal laws of physics and the chemical elements that make up matter. How the Earth came about, and life subsequently followed, is a wondrous story of time and change.

Lets look at what transpired after the Big Bang to trace our journey through the cosmos.

The Big Bang formed the entire universe that we know, including the elements, forces, stars, and planets. Hydrogen and massive dissipation of heat dominated the initial stages of the universe.

During a time span known as the Hadean eon, our Solar System formed within a large cloud of gas and dust. The Suns gravitational pull brought together spatial particles to create the Earth and other planets, but they would take a long time to reach their modern forms.

After its initial formation, the surface of the Earth was extremely hot and entirely liquid. This subsequent eon saw the planet cool down massively, solidifying some of the liquid surface and giving rise to oceans and continents, as well as the first recorded history of rocks.

Early in this time frame, known as the Archean eon, life appeared on Earth. The oldest discovered fossils, consisting of tiny, preserved microorganisms, date to this eon roughly 3.5 billion years ago.

The first era of the Proterozoic Eon, the Paleoproterozoic, was the longest in Earths geological history. Tectonic plates arose and landmasses shifted across the globeit was the beginning of the formation of the Earth we know today.

Cyanobacteria, the first organisms using photosynthesis, also appeared during this period. Their photosynthetic activity brought about a rapid upsurge in atmospheric oxygen, resulting in the Great Oxidation Event. This killed off many primordial anaerobic bacterial groups but paved the way for multicellular life to grow and flourish.

The Mesoproterozoic occurred during what is known as the boring billion stage of Earths history. That is due to a lack of widespread geochemical activity and the relative stability of the ocean carbon reservoirs.

But this era did see the break-up of the supercontinents and the formation of new continents. This period also saw the first noted case of sexual reproduction among organisms and the probable appearance of multicellular organisms and green plants.

In some respects, the Neoproterozoic era is one of the most profound time periods in Earths history. It bookends two major moments in the planets evolutionary timeline, with predominantly microbial life on one side, and the introduction of diverse, multicellular organisms on the other.

At the same time, Earth also experienced severe glaciations known as the Cryogenian Period and its first ice age, also known as Snowball Earth.

The era saw the formation of the ozone layer and the earliest evidence of multicellular life, including the emergence of the first hard-shelled animals, such as trilobites and archaeocyathids.

The Paleozoic is best known for ushering in an explosion of life on Earth, with two of the most critical events in the history of animal life. At its beginning, multicellular animals underwent a dramatic Cambrian explosion in aquatic diversity, and almost all living animals appeared within a few millions of years.

At the other end of the Paleozoic, the largest mass extinction in history resulted in 96% of marine life and 70% of terrestrial life dying out. Halfway between these events, animals, fungi, and plants colonized the land, and the insects took to the air.

The Mesozoic was the Age of Reptiles. Dinosaurs, crocodiles, and pterosaurs ruled the land and air. This era can be subdivided into three periods of time:

The rise of the dinosaurs began at the end of the Triassic Period. A fossil of one of the earliest-known dinosaurs, a two-legged omnivore roughly three feet long-named Eoraptor, is dated all the way back to this time.

Scientists believe the Eoraptor (and a few other early dinosaurs still being discovered today) evolved into the many species of well-known dinosaurs that would dominate the planet during the Jurassic period. They would continue to flourish well into the Cretaceous period, when it is widely accepted that the Chicxulub impactor, the plummeting asteroid that crashed into Earth off the coast of Mexico, brought about the end of the Age of Reptiles.

After the end of the Age of Dinosaurs, this era saw massive adaptations by natural flora and fauna to survive. The plants and animals that formed during this era look most like those on Earth today.

The earliest forms of modern mammals, amphibians, birds, and reptiles can be traced back to the Cenozoic. Human history is entirely contained within this period, as apes developed through evolutionary pressure and gave rise to the present-day human being or Homo sapiens.

Compared to the evolutionary timeline of the world, human history has risen quite rapidly and dramatically. Going from our first stone tools and the Age of the Kings to concrete jungles with modern technology may seem like a long journey, but compared to everything that came before it, is but a brief blink of an eye.

*Editors note: An earlier version of this article contained errors in the header graphic and an incorrect citation, and has since been updated.

This article was published as a part of Visual Capitalist's Creator Program, which features data-driven visuals from some of our favorite Creators around the world.

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Nature Timespiral: The Evolution of Earth from the Big Bang - Visual Capitalist

Is it ethical to have kids in the climate crisis? – Maclean’s

The planet is, quite literally, on fire: a third of humanity is now exposed to deadly heat stress. Nearly a million species are facing extinction, and a global pandemic still lingers. Extreme weather is increasing in frequency and intensity, and the future is looking even more dire: UN Secretary-General Antnio Guterres calls the latest Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report a damning indictment of failed climate leadership.

Small wonder, then, that eco-anxiety is on the rise, particularly among those young enough to know that theyand their childrenare heirs to a damaged and diminished world. Last year, Caroline Hickman, a specialist in the burgeoning field of climate psychology at the University of Bath in the U.K., reported on a study she co-authored that surveyed 10,000 youths aged 16 to 25 across 10 countries. Half reported feelings of anger, helplessness and shameemotions exacerbated by the belief that their governments were lying to them about delivering on green and humane policies. Some are outright refusing to plan for a future preordained to be nasty, brutish and short. As for their so-called eco-reproductive concerns, the results were jarring: 40 per cent of respondents expressed a reluctance to have children.

At 35, Britt Wray, author of the new book Generation Dread: Finding Purpose in an Age of Climate Crisis, falls outside of Hickmans respondent pool, but she, too, has heard the warnings and witnessed inaction her whole life. Wrays book is an extraordinary exploration of the emotional and psychological toll environmental chaos is already exacting. Its also a road map out from under that burden, made all the more compelling by the way it tracks her own journey. Born and raised in Toronto, Wray earned a Ph.D. in science communication at the University of Copenhagen. She is now a cross-appointed postdoctoral fellow at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine and Stanford University in California, studying the implications of the climate crisis on mental health. She knows the existential angstand its corrosive effectsintimately.

These fears once buffeted Wray badly, leaving her feeling isolated, despairing and uncertain of the wisdom and morality of bringing children into the world. Now, shes realized that there is still an opportunity to mitigate the worst outcomes. Shes able to visualize a better future for herself and, above all, for her seven-month-old son, Atlasa child of our times in every conceivable way. Researching and writing this book brought me to a position where I could have him, says Wray. There is a direct line from the radical hope my findings gave me to Atlas. If I were left up to my own ruminations, I dont know if I wouldve been able to dig myself out of that hole and see having him.

***

Growing up, Wray was as attuned to climate crisis projections as any millennial, but far from obsessed. That changed rapidly after she enrolled at Queens University in Kingston, Ontario, in 2004, majoring in biology. The sixth mass extinction, the ongoing annihilation of habitats and wildlifewhose populations have dropped by more than two-thirds since 1970is inextricably linked to human resource extraction. It was a crisis impossible for a biology student to ignore. A lot of my courses were focused on conservation biology and ecology, she recalls. Through it all, I was constantly bearing witness to more data about population decline, species decline, anthropogenic effects on wildlandsthese were my first environmental stressors. Wray was soon fixated on climate change, immersing herself in the literature and becoming less interested in doing science than developing innovative ways of spreading news of its discoveries. I wanted to bring a creative storytelling angle to what I was learning, she says.

MORE:Emily St. John Mandel cant stop writing about pandemics

In 2015, during her doctoral studies in Copenhagen, she met her future husband, Sebastian Damm Wraynot through her climate activism but in an equally modern way: on Tinder. Denmark, of course, was particularly attuned to the failure of the 2009 Copenhagen climate summit to effect meaningful reductions in carbon emissions. As a result, Wray moved ever deeper into climate worry. She read one IPCC report after another: most were concerned with the planet reaching tipping points that would destroy food and water supplies. All of them insisted that humanity was running out of time to avoid the worst outcomes.

In 2017, when she and Sebastian first started talking about having a child, Wrays response was a visceral one. A deep sense of grief and despair came crashing over me when I considered what it would mean to deliver a child into this world, she writes in Generation Dread. Desperate to see what her peers felt, Wray started reaching out to experts and, via social media, to ordinary people, parents and non-parents alike. There, she found a well-establishedif largely undergroundriver of thought on human conception, one that was rapidly devolving under the pressure of eco-anxiety.

This kind of anti-natalist thinking isnt new: there is a long-running tradition of it, found as far back as Ancient Greek philosophy and early Christianity. It argues that life always ends badly and should be stopped from even beginning. (Babies, as the second-century Christian Encratites put it, were merely fresh fodder for death.) Since the 1990s, proponents of voluntary human extinction have proclaimed that the only way humanity can save life on this planet is by a slow-motion mass suicide, protecting the biosphere by ceasing to procreate. Academics have pointed to the effects environmental degradation is already having on involuntary human infertility: sperm counts in Western countries have dropped by half since 1973, which correlates with rising pollution and heat levels.

More pertinent to Wray were the women of childbearing age who delayed having children due to contemporary socioeconomic factors: the end of job security, high housing costs and lengthy educations. All of these markers of adulthood were being affected by climate change. Wray took note of how the label selfishonce levelled at adults who didnt have childrenwas beginning to apply to those who did. There was one main consideration upholding child hesitation among the climate-aware: the pressure every new child puts on the environment. In the emissions-pumping Americas, the answer is, a lotthe average American child adds more than 9,000 cubic metric tonnes of carbon to their parents carbon footprint, while a Bangladeshi child adds only 56 tonnes to theirs.

Wray, meanwhile, was considering a different question: what havoc would a deteriorating world wreak on the health, happiness and security of a child? During her research, she found many who shared that fear. She spoke with a young mother who had waking nightmares the whole time she was pregnant with her son. I had all these catastrophic images in my head, she said. Of me running with my child and having nowhere to sleep, or of us starving, or him experiencing his parents dying. Wray also spoke with teenagers who were angry that their parents had brought them into a world spiralling downward. What haunted me was the possibility that if we had a kid, theyd grow up and become aware of whats happening. That theyd turn to us one day, understanding that we knew all of this was coming, and yet still chose to put them here . . . says Wray, trailing off. Would the situation ever become so oppressive that they would really rather not have been born?

The contemporary, climate-driven movement broke into popular consciousness when BirthStrike was founded in Britain in 2018. Its founders were a group of millennials who, as much as they wanted children of their own, believed reproduction was both dangerous for children and immoral given our collective environmental situation. A year later, BirthStrike changed its name to Grieving Parenthood in the Climate Crisis, or GPCC, in order to distance itself from populationism, the belief that too many people were the root cause of climate deterioration. The GPCC wanted to be clear that its members child-bearing hesitation is linked not to the size of the worlds population, but to individual carbon footprints. In that way of thinking, they were not alone: a more amorphous school of thought known as GINK (Green Inclination, No Kids) is now flourishing. Even prominent politicians like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez have gone on record asking, Is it okay still to have children?

Britt Wray.

Wray says she was particularly affected by perspectives of people from historically marginalized groupspopulations who are already on the front lines, whose lives and culture are intimately linked to land and water. Indigenous peoples around the world are disproportionately threatened by climate change. Yet Anishinaabe author Waubgeshig Rice, author of the climate-crisis thriller Moon of the Crusted Snow, told Wray he didnt know of anyone from his Wasauksing First Nation, 250 kilometres north of Toronto, whod decided against having kids for environmental reasons. In his community, Rice explained, children are essential, both as a means and living symbol of cultural continuity. Its being able to say, We are still herethe future includes us. It was a message echoed by Black women Wray interviewed, including her friend, the anti-racism activist Rachel Ricketts. While expressing compassion for Wrays personal dilemma, Ricketts pointed out that anxiety was nothing new for her people. Welcome to having to worry about the livelihood of your children, she said. My mother had to do it, my mothers mother had to do it. My ancestors had their children stolen from them and sold.

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Hearing that message of certainty from communities whose children have been taken from themin living memory, no lessand who are still seeking their unmarked and lost graves, had a powerful effect on Wray. She realized how much of her fear arose from a place of privilege. Those who have had secure, comfortable lives, it forms their benchmark for existence. That can be very fundamentally shaken by climate awareness, Wray says. So, okay, middle-class white girl is afraid because the world doesnt feel safe anymore. It is good to realize that many peoplepeople who have not had the luxury of feeling secure, who know the world is full of tearsthey find ways of cultivating joy amidst the tragedy.

***

Wray still wasnt sure. At first, her conversations with other climate-aware peopleand the hope they providedbarely balanced out the emotional toll of her everyday communications work: It was eight-plus hours a day of paying attention to new reports on the climate crisis and to the lack of effective action. Her eco-anxiety remained high and, at times, crippling. She was beginning to realize she couldnt even talk about a shared future with Sebastian, the person she loved most, without applying what she calls a filter of apocalyptic possibility.

In one intense 24-hour period in Denmark, Wray engaged in an emotional late-night talk with friends about the magnitude of the climate crisis, burst into tears with another friend at breakfast the next morning, and dined with her father-in-law as he made polite but insistent inquiries about grandchildren. She followed that with even more tears on the train ride home. When Wray read Caroline Hickmans four-stage eco-anxiety conceptual frameworka list of increasingly intense symptoms that allows therapists to place patients along a spectrumshe easily saw herself in the Significant group, the last stage before Severe, and the first where people choose to forgo having children.

And yet Wrays longing for a child grew over the years, even as her existential dread remained immovable. Almost all the pressure she felt was on the pro-child side: her own desire; Sebastians desire; the expectations of both families; helplessly watching two clocks simultaneously tick toward midnight (the entire planetary ecosystem and her own fertility). She came to believe that a child represented skin in the game, providing an ever-urgent incentive to fight for a better world.

READ:Zarqa Nawaz had a hit show, then a decade-long dry spell. Shes ready for her second act.

In 2018, the Wrays moved to the U.S., first to New York and then later to California, when Sebastian, a diplomat, took a role as the chief strategic advisor to Denmarks tech ambassador to Silicon Valley. Wray took up the Stanford portion of her fellowship. The biggest shift, though, was in her consciousness, prompted by the research she gathered and internalized while writing Generation Dread between 2017 and 2020. Gone are the breakdown crying fits she once had. I found not only the coping tools, she says, but just as importantly, others who mirror my feelings and validate them, when once I thought I was really alone. Thats what makes you feel like youre crazy.

In the end, there was no eureka moment that pushed her toward motherhood. Wrays mindset changed as she researched, gleaning insights and advice from climate therapists, and full of admiration for the hard-won resilience of the historically marginalized. Eco-anxiety is more than understandable: it is justified, she writes. We ought to mourn the coming losses to the natural orderand to human civilization. At the same time, we should do what we can to save whats left: by 2020, she and Sebastian simply decided to have a child, and in January 2021, they laughed and cried over a positive pregnancy test.

If Generation Dread has one overriding theme, its that community saves, and that trust and mutual care are its foundations. I learned to get a grip on my own emotions and develop much more flexible thinking around my child-bearing dilemma, says Wray. The basic question changed from, Is it okay to have a child? to Whats required when one decides to have a child today? How do we parent in the climate crisis? Now that her book is done, there is time for Wray to probe that question in day-to-day life. Were sleep training, she says. Atlas is smiling and laughing and bringing a lot of joy. Good news for our turbulent world.

This article appears in print in the May 2022 issue of Macleans magazine with the headline, Earth mother. Subscribe to the monthly print magazine here.

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Is it ethical to have kids in the climate crisis? - Maclean's