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The landscape of our minds |
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Gather Images |
A peek at what’s going on inside our heads. |
- Dr. Judith Simmons, managing
director of healthcare at digital innovation network Gather, and founder
and principal of healthcare consultancy Lion Head Advisors, led a
virtual roundtable addressing the challenges of being an empathetic
communicator during the COVID-19 crisis. Larry Dobrow for Medical Marketing & Media reports.
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John Harrington for PRWeek U.K.
writes about a short film narrated by the Duke and Duchess of
Cambridge, encouraging people to take care of their mental wellbeing.
The film is part of Public Health England’s Every Mind Matters campaign,
and was made in response to data showing that coronavirus has affected
adults’ welfare.
- Despite South Korea recording a
spike of COVID-19 cases in February, the country of 50 million
dramatically reduced the number of new cases throughout March. Surekha Ragavan of PRWeek Asia
talks to Margaret Key, APAC CEO of PR firm MSL, about South Korea’s
secret sauce for handling an infectious disease — one part physical
preparedness, one part mental: “Communications during a crisis isn’t
just a matter of relaying health information; it’s also about managing
panic and fear.”
- Hera Khan, digital project manager at digital agency Dare, tells her digibride” story to Conference & Incentive Travel.
“We’re certainly all being pushed to the limits of what’s possible
today,” said Khan. “Most of all, I hope we all do something to reconnect
with our loved ones during this time — even if that does mean sitting
behind screens.”
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Medical rounds |
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Getty Images |
There’s
a reason coronavirus is called “novel” — it’s never been seen before.
Because of that, best practices for doctors, patients and unaffected
citizens are constantly changing. |
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Emily Pond of Infectious Disease Advisor
takes a look at a perspective article published in the New England
Journal of Medicine describing the challenge of emergency department
employees. As the core of outbreak response programs, healthcare workers
are at a substantially elevated risk of developing COVID-19. The
stressful situation is believed to weaken immune responses and increase
the risk of developing infection further, endangering not only the
workers but also the family members they return home to daily.
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Clinical Pain Advisor
excerpted a letter from the Annals of Internal Medicine that found, for
patients infected with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2
(SARS-CoV-2), neither surgical nor cotton masks effectively filter
during coughs, supporting the importance of hand hygiene after touching
the outer surface of masks.
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Lawmakers are pushing congressional leaders
to include cannabis businesses in the next coronavirus relief bill.
“Like other businesses with continued operations, cannabis businesses
have met the moment by preserving access to treatment for patients with
chronic conditions, donating protective clothing, and manufacturing
equipment for medical use,” the lawmakers wrote.
- Public-facing scientists such as
Sir Patrick Vallance, the U.K.’s chief scientific adviser, and his U.S.
counterpart, Dr. Anthony Fauci, say we won’t have a COVID-19 vaccine before 12 to 18 months.
But others, including some of those in the race to create a vaccine
themselves, have suggested it could be as early as June this year.
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The Takeaway: |
We’re basically living in an experiment. |
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Earth, wind and fire |
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Getty Images |
Around the globe,
air pollution has fallen as a result of reduced travel during the
pandemic. Here’s a look at some of the challenges we face keeping
emissions down as everyone starts “getting back to work.” |
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ENDS Report
has everything you need to know about how the U.K.’s environmental
regulators are handling their duties during the coronavirus outbreak.
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As countries look to give their economies a much-needed jolt
in the wake of COVID-19, governments and companies have two choices:
They can lock in decades of inefficient, high-carbon, unsustainable
development, or use this as an opportunity to accelerate a shift to
low-carbon and affordable energy and transport systems, which can help
combat the growing climate emergency.
- Barring members of Congress getting serious about climate change, maybe they can take a cue from Bogotá,
where, since 1996, every Sunday starting at 7am, vast stretches of the
city’s roadway are turned over to non-motorized activities. CiclovĂa, or
Bicycle Way, is a respite for the city’s inhabitants and the
environment, which is otherwise clogged with “1,600,000 suicidal private
cars, 50,000 homicidal taxis, 9,000 gasping buses, and some half a
million demented motorcycles that otherwise pack into the buzzing
capital of Colombia.”
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This mind-bending read
sounds like something out of a Phillip K. Dick novel, but is apparently
real. A Super-Kamiokande neutrino detector, aka, a golden chamber the
size of a 15-story building, is buried under a mountain in Japan that is
filled with 50,000 tons of ultra-pure water that may help us understand
how the universe evolved.
- In certain parts of the world, wild animals are taking over the streets.
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The Takeaway: |
It’d
be great if the few positive aspects of this pandemic could be
leveraged for a healthier, more environmentally friendly future. |
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Music and poetry |
And now, music videos that celebrate our real environments, our surreal environments, and the ennui of empty mansions. |
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Have a lovely Monday. Try to think of a good thing for every bad. |
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