-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.
Once reliant solely on buses and subway systems, our nation's seniors may soon have new choices on how to navigate their communities, including to their doctor's appointments. In March, the National Hispanic Council on Aging (NHCOA) released a poll indicating that Hispanic older adults felt that affordable and safe driverless cars could improve the lives of themselves and their family members. Although approximately 70% of senior surveyed live within an area with mass transit, they still felt that driverless cars could provide significant value, highlighting an opportunity for innovative transportation options to address the needs of a population that will reach 20 million by 2060.
This poll comes at a critical juncture as our transportation landscape continues to shift towards ride-sharing and health disparities persist among older Latinos and African Americans. Zhai Yun Tan reports in an August 2016 article in The Atlantic that hospitals nationwide are now starting to partner with ride-sharing services such as Lyft and Uber to help patients get to their appointments on time. In some cases, these rides are even being paid for by Medicaid and other insurance plans. According to a 2013 Journal of Community Health review by Samina Syed, Ben Gerber, and Lisa Sharp, patients with lower socioeconomic status, particularly those lacking a vehicle, report higher barriers to accessing health care and are more likely to miss their appointments. These ride partnerships could help fill in the gaps for patients who struggle to make it to appointments; although many hospitals provide transportation services, these typically need to be planned in advanced and may not offer a direct route to the hospital.
Patients with lower socioeconomic status, particularly those lacking a vehicle, report higher barriers to accessing health care and are more likely to miss their appointments.
In addition to providing quick and reliable rides for routine medical care, ride-sharing services may also help improve access to medical research opportunities for communities of color that often cite transportation as a barrier to participation. Despite a higher prevalence for diseases like Alzheimer's, Latinos and African Americans are chronically underrepresented in clinical research for life saving drugs. According to the FDA Office of Women's Health, Latinos make up less than one percent of clinical trial participants despite making up 17 percent of the U.S. population. However, polling data has demonstrated that Latinos and African Americans are willing to participate in these trials. A recent poll from the Global Alzheimer's Platform Foundation found that 39% of Americans said they would consider taking part in an Alzheimer's clinical trial, including 34% who are African American, 41% who are Hispanic. This diversity gap has real consequences for public health and both the FDA and NIH agree that minority inclusion in medical research is vital to ensuring drug safety and spurring medical innovation.
Yet transportation is a persistent issue. The Eliminating Disparities in Clinical Trials Project (EDICT) named unreliable transportation among the key socioeconomic obstacles working class individuals face when participating in medical research. Ride-sharing, and eventually driverless cars, could offer new avenues for addressing these transportation issues.
We need Uber for Clinical Trials -- why can clinical trials go to the patient. #bcsm
— Alicia C. Staley (@stales) June 14, 2016
Data released by Uber reveals that ride-sharing services are uniquely positioned to serve diverse communities. A March 2014 Uber study concluded that in Chicago, four in ten rides begins or ends in an underserved neighborhood, and the average wait time and likelihood that a ride will be completed has no relationship with the median neighborhood income. Further, ride-sharing company Lyft recently partnered with Axovant Sciences to provide transportation to seniors enrolled in an Alzheimer's clinical trial in California. If successful, this novel partnership model should be further explored with minority communities in mind.
Ride-sharing may not be a panacea for eliminating health disparities or for the exclusion of minorities in clinical research, but it is an example of a fresh approach that could help bridge the divide today.
While promising, these services have their own set of challenges that must be addressed. For example, advocates have noted that ride-hailing services have mixed success serving individuals with disabilities. Additionally, these services rely heavily on electronic payments and smart phones, which can be a barrier for individuals of lower socioeconomic status. Despite these challenges, innovative transportation options have the potential to improve mobility while increasing access to care and treatment for many communities.
Ride-sharing may not be a panacea for eliminating health disparities or for the exclusion of minorities in clinical research, but it is an example of a fresh approach that could help bridge the divide today while larger fixes are developed. As our population ages and diseases like Alzheimer's become more prevalent, demand for these types of innovative solutions will only grow.
Jason Resendez, executive director of the LatinosAgainstAlzheimer's Network and Coalition - a network of UsAgainstAlzheimer's - with contributions by Beth Moretzsky, The George Washington University.
-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.
The first day of school in France, the ‘taking of Caracas' in Venezuela, a murder re-enactment in Bali, the Notting Hill carnival in London, Mark Zuckerberg meets the Pope, a Bavarian ox race, an annular solar eclipse above La Reunion, and much more.
-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.
kàiaiguo posted a photo:
Often, going fishing consists of more talking than actually catching anything. In this short documentary A Fishing Trip on the Gunnison, three members of the conservation organization Trout Unlimited discuss the impacts of irrigation on the beautiful Gunnison River in Colorado. The organization that works with farmers, ranchers, and conservationists to find ways to preserve Colorado waterways.
This film comes to us from the world-traveling web series The Perennial Plate. To learn more about this series, visit its Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter pages.
kevingrieve610 posted a photo:
Ahuna Mons, the 13,000 foot high, 11 mile wide volcano on dwarf planet Ceres is made entirely out of ice and provides evidence that water may have once existed beneath the planet's surface.…
-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.
www.matthewcattellphotography.com posted a photo:
A Red Deer Stag with new antlers covered in a layer of velvet.
By using a low vantage point and by positioning the stag between the sun and the camera I was able to capture a halo of light around the edges of the antlers. This was enhanced by using the dark tree canopy in the distance as a backdrop.
www.matthewcattellphotography.com
www.facebook.com/matthewcattellphotography
Larterman posted a photo:
Hạ Long Bay, located in the Quảng Ninh Province of Vietnam, is a stunningly beautiful destination. Here, towering limestone pillars and tiny islands topped by a rich, green forest rise from the beautiful waters of the Gulf of Tonkin. Halong translates as ‘where the dragon descends into the sea' and local legend suggests that this seascape was created when a great mountain dragon charged towards the coast, its flailing tail gouging out the valleys and crevasses in its path.
20°54′N 107°12′E
Instagram: http://bit.ly/2cf4YEs
EZTD posted a photo:
Sunset at the South Bank, London, August 2016.
Frederick Soddy Scientist of the Day
Frederick Soddy, an English chemist, was born Sep. 2, 187…
The declaration of a geological era defined by mankind's destruction might be cause for despair, but this book inspires with tales of resourcefulness and survival
• Why we're writing about books to give you hope this summer
On Monday the International Geological Congress was advised to declare the start of a new geological era, the Anthropocene, which means that our tribe of “bloody ignorant apes” in Samuel Beckett's pithy appellation has officially taken control of the planet.
The very next day, the Guardian reported on the impending extinction of the Asiatic cheetah (farmers, cars and hunting are among the causes cited for their decline to just two females now known to be living in the wild). Time to despair? If you're an Asiatic cheetah or any number of other endangered species it doesn't look good. But can the humanity that drove, starved and hunted them to extinction also be their salvation?
Related: Adventures in the Anthropocene by Gaia Vince review
Related: How the domestic chicken rose to define the Anthropocene
Continue reading...Rober1000x posted a photo:
Kieran Williams Photography posted a photo:
Full Text:
Cassiopeia A is the remnant of a supernova explosion that occured over 300 years ago in our Galaxy, at a distance of about 11,000 light years from us. Its name is derived from the constellation in which it is seen: Cassiopeia, the Queen. A supernova is the explosion that occurs at the end of a massive star's life; and Cassiopeia A is the expanding shell of material that remains from such an explosion. This radio image of Cassiopeia A was created with the National Science Foundation's Very Large Array telescope in New Mexico. The image was made at three different frequencies: 1.4 GHz (L band), 5.0 GHz (C band) and 8.4 GHz (X band). Cassiopeia A is one of the brightest radio sources in the sky and has been a popular target of study for radio astronomers for decades. The material that was ejected from the supernova explosion can be seen in this image as bright filaments.
Image credit: L. Rudnick, T. Delaney, J. Keohane, B. Koralesky and T. Rector; NRAO/AUI/NSF
JH Images.co.uk posted a photo:
This is the wonderful view from Franks cafe which is a pop up bar on top of a car park in Peckham, London.
As you can see they have quite a view over the city.
You can see alot of the citys famous buildings see if you can find them all. Tower Bridge is a fun one to locate.
The first scientists are moving into the Francis Crick Institute, the biggest biomedical research institute under one roof, costing £650m.…
Full Text:
Betsy Levy Paluck has always been interested in how societies find ways to reject violence and prejudice. That curiosity led her to Princeton University, where she works as a researcher, and then to the halls of New Jersey's middle schools, to see whether social psychological theory could help students stamp out bullying and other forms of conflict. To make that happen, her research team relied on an unusual set of partners: students, including those identified by their classmates as trendsetters, team leaders and peer role models -- known in scientific terms as "social referents." Paluck said she started with a well-established concept in social psychology theory, which says people's perception of normative or accepted behavior can actually influence their decisions more than their own opinions. But, she said, experiments that field-test such theories are still fairly rare.
Image credit: Princeton University, Office of Communications, Denise Applewhite
Writing in the fourth century, the theologian Athanasius explained the incarnation thus: “He became human so that we might become divine.” In other words, God's purpose is to make us like him, to shape us into mini gods. Called divinisation, and still popular with the Orthodox church and also with Mormons, this theology was not the direction the mainstream western church would take. It offended too much against monotheism, the basic source code of the Abrahamic religions. But according to Israeli historian Yuval Noah Harari, divinisation is precisely the direction in which we are now heading not through the work of the divine, but because of technology. Thus the title of his new book, Homo Deus: A brief history of tomorrow. Technology, argues Harari, is going to transform some of us into gods: powerful, super-intelligent, ageless. The product of evolution, yes but not through natural selection but through our own super-fast intelligent design.
My own idea of human advancement hasn't changed much since 1973 when Colonel Steve Austin had a bit of trouble on a runway in The Six Million Dollar Man. “Man barely alive. We can rebuild him. We have the technology.” Over 40 years later, the projected technology has been transformed, and you wouldn't get a decent Premier League footballer for $6m, let alone a new sort of human being. Nonetheless, the basic idea is pretty much the same. Take human powers and enhance them. Take human intelligence and multiply it. These gods are like human beings, except more so.
Continue reading...Stand down, one and all: there's not even cool new science in this week's “alien signal”, let alone a SETI success: the signal seems to have come from a Russian military satellite.…
A "significant explosion" hit the SpaceX launch pad at Cape Canaveral early Thursday, destroying the unmanned rocket that was set to launch this weekend.
“Chemotherapy kills” was bound to pique our interest, especially since in the best traditions of modern research, its source was a badly-reported scientific study.…
Back in 1991, fresh from reading George Stewart's magnificent science fiction novel “Earth Abides”, I started an eighth-grade science assignment with the quote from Ecclesiastes Stewart begins the book with:
“One generation passeth away and another generation cometh but the earth it abideth forever”
To this I added:
“Not if the human race can help it, though.”
Inspired by a recent article in Time magazine about global warming, I had written a Ted Kaczynski-esque withering assault on modern civilization and advocated a reversal (yes, LOL indeed) of industrialization. It was a thoroughly godawful paper and I have little doubt that George Stewart was the only thing that got me a passing grade on it.
It was straight from the heart though, and not since then has my interest and passion in what we have done to this planet waned. As someone who tries to keep track of the impact of human-induced climate change, I have always found baffling the lack of importance the issue has received as an electoral issue. There is no greater threat to our safety and well being-no ifs, ands, or buts about it. We are a species that like any other, requires a habitat that can sustain our biological functions and allow the vegetation and animal life necessary to sustain our food supply. The manifest reality of today is that our habitat is under attack from our own creations. We have polluted our air and our oceans. We have doomed to extinction countless species of plants and animals many of whom we may have annihilated before they could be discovered. The earth is warming quicker and sea levels are rising faster than any prediction model foresaw. Literally hundreds of small island communities ― as well as major nations like Bangladesh and Indonesia ― are already losing shorelines and even arable land. In America, with our over 10,000 miles of shoreline, climate scientists predict a rise in sea levels and markedly increased flooding in coastal cities like New York within the next five decades.
This is not a problem of the future, it is a problem of the here and now and a catastrophe beyond biblical proportions in the making.
Jill Stein is the first presidential candidate in American history to make climate change the centerpiece of her campaign. Her plan to address climate change is the most comprehensive and consistent over the years of any Presidential candidate. Her plan aims to make clean energy a major focus of her economic plan and she states in her manifesto:
“The environment and the economy are interdependent―they are not at odds with each other. In order to have a prosperous economy, you need to have the healthy environment to support it: for energy, for food, and for other aspects. The idea that they're pitted against each other is a concoction of misinformation from those who exploit the environment. We allow them to exploit the environment at our own peril, as we see from everything from air pollution and its health impact, to water shortages, to flooding, to extreme storms. These are not just happening in the Third World: we are beginning to pay the price for this very misguided, short-term, short-sighted exploitation of the environment.”
With such beautiful simplicity, Dr. Stein makes a point no one else is making. A cleaner environment and actions to protect our country and planet from climate change are not, and must not, be construed as being anathema to our economy. They are a necessary challenge on which the future of everything, including the economy, rests.
Dr. Stein wants to empower the EPA and cleanse it of all political and corporate influence. She wants to invest money not into bailing out our predatory banks and perpetually failing automobile industry but into clean energy and green technology. She envisions a major creation of green jobs including constructing green infrastructure, retrofitting homes, sustainable food and agricultural practices and increasing recycling.
I find Jill Stein to be the only Presidential candidate with the passion and sense of urgency necessary to combat human-induced climate change and other ongoing environmental damage. I cannot imagine voting for a man who has called global warming a Chinese conspiracy and climate change a hoax. I cannot vote for a woman who has corporate ties so prolonged and so deep that she cannot be trusted to operate independent of lobbyist influence on any issue including climate change.
A vote for Jill Stein is a vote for the future of this country and this planet. Let us no longer lead the world in war and corporate greed. Let us no longer pretend to the throne of the world and wax eloquent about our golden principles while violating them in every corner of the globe. Let us instead lead the world by example. And in this, let us start with the most crucial issue of all-protecting and preserving our habitat.
-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.
Different researches and real time experiences confirm that climate change has direct impact on access to and management of water for drinking and agriculture purpose in Pakistan. The country is hit hard due to recurring climate catastrophes. Women are at the center of these impacts due to their inequitable access to water and land rights and decision making.
Climate Scientists recommend the world take serious actions to limit emission of greenhouse gases and keep the average global temperature below 1.5°C. This is vital to prevent humanity from climate crisis. In case of Pakistan, even before reaching this threshold, water crisis in the region is already at alarming level. Pakistan by no means can afford the world cross the safe limit of 1.5°C and increase its vulnerabilities manifold.
Declining water as a serious threat to human life in Pakistan: In December 2013, the World Resources Institute ranked Pakistan among the 36 most water-stressed countries in the world. Data from the Water and Power Development Authority of Pakistan indicates in 1951 per capita water availability was 5,650 cubic meters. By 2010, that figure shrank to 1,000 cubic meters and it is set to fall to 800 cubic meters by 2025, when Pakistan's population rises to 221 million. Alarmingly, groundwater levels in the country are dropping by a meter a year. With this rate, Pakistan is heading towards widespread water poverty in next few years.
According to Water Aid, 16 million people in Pakistan have no choice but to collect unsafe water from unsafe sources. 68 million people don't have access to adequate sanitation in Pakistan. Around 39,000 children under five die every year from diarrhoea caused by unsafe water and poor sanitation in Pakistan.
Water-stressed agriculture: Nearly 70% of Pakistan's 291 millimeters of annual rainwater gets wasted because of poor storage facilities. Agriculture accounts for 24% of the total GDP of Pakistan. 68% of its geographical area has annual rainfall of 250mm whereas only 8% of the areas have annual rainfall of 500mm. To meet the food production need, the country thus requires supplemental water for better crops production. The contribution of Agriculture in GDP growth rate has significantly declines from 50% in 1929-50 to about 24% in 196-97. By the year 2050, the urban population of Pakistan is expected to reach 63.7% as compared to only 36 percent in 2010. Rapid increase in population will lead to overwhelming pressure on water supply both for households and agriculture needs.
Women, the most vulnerable: Women face the brunt of climate crisis more than anyone else in the society. Inequitable power relationship, lack of access to different resources like water and land rights, information and training keep women more vulnerable in the face of growing impacts of climate change. Women are often at receiving end by the policy makers and strategists rather than being empowered to find their own solutions and actions to find sustainable water solutions.
Women faces numerous challenges, however natural disasters and conflicts in Pakistan doubles the risks that women face. They have limited access to assets, income and information and their limited mobility restrict them respond to disasters, unlike men. In the agriculture sector, women are disproportionately employed. When disasters hit like flooding, large number of population gets displaced which triggers case of gender based violence and other abuses. In addition, living in displaced settings, women have to travel more to fetch water and collect food and woods as distance between their settlements and source of water increased. Studies from the Asian Development Bank shows that targeted interventions in rural development projects have significantly contributed in women's empowerment. Another study found that if water is available at household level in some rural communities, families can save as much as 1,200 hours per year.
This analysis simply tells a straightforward story - keep the world under 1.5 Degree threshold as this is the utmost need of countries like Pakistan and its citizens who would otherwise fight for their dignity and search of water to drink and survive.
-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.
Over the next several days, delegates from over 170 countries will gather in Hawaii for the IUCN World Conservation Congress. The theme of this year's Congress is “a planet at risk.” Exaggerated droughts and floods, reduced regional water supplies, and ever-longer wildfire seasons, make it clear we are overdue for major conservation organizations to apply strong focus to combatting global warming and its dangerous climate change symptoms. Yet, just as in other recent conservation conferences I have attended, agenda topics at this Conservation Congress seem focused on traditional “on the ground” conservation tools like anti-poaching efforts and setting aside protected areas of habitat.
Climate change is the single biggest issue the world faces, with ramifications for generations to come. While traditional conservation efforts remain important, no conservation plan is complete without simultaneous efforts to stop this overarching threat.
Some conservationists seem to think this is an “either/or” situation, or that there is a competition between addressing global warming and implementing on the ground strategies. Nothing could be farther from the truth. If we don't stop elephant poaching soon, there will be no elephants left for global warming to kill. Conversely, if we don't act soon to address climate change, the boundaries of new elephant reserves will no longer enclose the ecosystems they were designed to protect. Clearly, we need traditional on the ground efforts and rapid efforts to reduce our use of fossil fuels. And, because we cannot fight global warming in the field, efforts to combat it must take place independently of ongoing efforts applied on the ground.
Combatting climate change requires a united front of conservationists and humanitarians to inform, enlighten, and inspire our policy leaders to take necessary action. This “enlightenment” can be done at the same time funds are focused on battling poachers.
For many concerned conservationists, climate change seems an uncertain and distant challenge. But there is no uncertainty in the ultimate threat. The laws of physics require the world to continue to warm as long as atmospheric greenhouse gas (GHG) concentrations rise. If we don't stop GHG rise soon, all of our on the ground conservation efforts will have been for naught.
By the latter part of this century, for example, mean annual temperatures across most of Africa and the Middle East will be nearly 5°C warmer than now, and summer temperatures in most latter years of this century will be hotter than any summer ever recorded. We don't need computer models to appreciate that those conditions will result in human malnutrition on an unprecedented scale, and we know from experience that hungry people cannot do conservation. At the end of this century, between widespread famine and refugee problems that dwarf anything yet seen, governments will be too busy dealing with humanitarian issues to care about conserving polar bears or rhinos.
Yet, I continue to be dismayed by statements like “we don't have the mandate to address greenhouse gas emissions” or “we are a research organization, and pushing for climate action is beyond our purview.” Such statements are like turning up the volume on your car's radio so you cannot hear a bad noise coming from the engine.
At the December 2015 Climate Talks in Paris nearly all nations of the world agreed that failure to stop GHG rise soon would assure numerous global extirpations and other future problems for all species, including humans. One unrecorded outcome from Paris was that avoiding the most dangerous of climate change effects is only likely if we adopt an international price for carbon emissions. Voluntary efforts simply will not get us to the Paris goals.
This week, the World Conservation Congress has an opportunity to carry the Paris momentum forward with a full force push for a fair carbon price. Such a call from the World Conservation Congress could help unite the voices of people concerned about conserving everything from coral reefs to polar bears. That united voice could become an important tool needed to stop the ever-louder noise coming from Earth's engine compartment. I hope the World Conservation Congress will build that tool instead of cranking up the volume on the radio.
-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.
Listen online here, or Download MP3 (6 mins)...
Link:Embed:
-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.
Read more: Barack Obama, Carbon Emissions, Climate Change, Climate Change Denial, Conservation, Energy, Environment, Fossil Fuels, Global Warming, Global Warming Deniers, Green, Green News, Green News Report, Hawaii, Marine Life, Oceans, Public Lands, Renewable Energy, Video, g20, China, Paris Agreement, Lake Tahoe, Jerry Brown, Extreme Weather, Hurricanes, Insurance, Green News
primulmeusarut posted a photo:
What an amazing way to start September!...
See how initiatives like Cumari: From Rainforest to Table are trying to drum up extra recognition - and income - for Latin America's forest stewards:
-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.
Greg Gard posted a photo:
Adult Peregrine Falcon in flight as seen from above
Please help to continue the preservation of New Jersey's threatened and endangered wildlife by supporting work of Conserve Wildlife Foundation: www.conservewildlifenj.org/getinvolved/donate/
Photograph captured with a Canon EOS 1DXII and 600mm lens
If you are interested in seeing more of my Peregrine Falcon photographs, please visit my gallery: www.greggard.com/falcons
-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.
-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.
andy.gittos posted a photo:
The view from Greenwich Park at Sunset
-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.