Feature Channels: Environmental Health

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Released: 18-Sep-2024 2:05 PM EDT
Humboldt and California Insurance Commission to Create Nation’s First Public Wildfire Catastrophe Model
Cal Poly Humboldt

The strategy group will draw from California’s research and higher education communities to recommend a new, publicly accessible data source to predict future wildfire losses. This effort will support California’s goals of building safer communities and expanding access to insurance coverage.  “We can’t keep our Department and Californians in the dark ages when it comes to the use of technology and climate science.

Newswise: Polluted Air, Disturbed Hearts: Study Ties Air Quality to Cardiac Health
Released: 18-Sep-2024 8:05 AM EDT
Polluted Air, Disturbed Hearts: Study Ties Air Quality to Cardiac Health
Chinese Academy of Sciences

A recent study has uncovered a significant link between chronic exposure to air pollution and an increased risk of various arrhythmias, representing a pivotal advance in environmental health research.

   
Newswise: Harnessing Nature's Rhythm: Piezocatalysis for Organic Pollutant Degradation
Released: 18-Sep-2024 7:05 AM EDT
Harnessing Nature's Rhythm: Piezocatalysis for Organic Pollutant Degradation
Chinese Academy of Sciences

In a pivotal advancement for environmental conservation, researchers have pioneered piezoelectric techniques to efficiently degrade organic pollutants in water. This green approach converts mechanical stress into catalytic action, offering a sustainable and efficient method for water purification without relying on external energy sources.

Newswise: Groundwater Cleanup Boost: Tailoring 3D Media for DNAPL Contaminant Removal
Released: 18-Sep-2024 6:05 AM EDT
Groundwater Cleanup Boost: Tailoring 3D Media for DNAPL Contaminant Removal
Chinese Academy of Sciences

Groundwater serves as a vital resource, yet dense non-aqueous phase liquid (DNAPL) contaminants pose a significant threat to its quality. New research delves into how the 3D microstructures of porous media influence DNAPL migration and the efficacy of surfactant-enhanced aquifer remediation (SEAR), offering promising solutions for subsurface clean-up.

Newswise: Scientists Urge New Conservation Approach to Save Vulnerable Species From Climate Change Impacts
Released: 17-Sep-2024 9:05 PM EDT
Scientists Urge New Conservation Approach to Save Vulnerable Species From Climate Change Impacts
University of South Australia

A team of international scientists alarmed by the loss of biodiversity across the world due to climate change has proposed a new approach to managing vulnerable landscapes, focusing on sites that are least impacted by changing weather.

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Released: 17-Sep-2024 5:05 PM EDT
Dengue Fever Lands in LA: How Global Warming Is Affecting Health
Cedars-Sinai

Amid southern california’s recent record-breaking heat wave and fast-moving wildfires, public health officials reported the third locally acquired case of dengue fever in the los angeles area. Although the events seem unrelated, they actually are connected—and for troubling reasons.

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Released: 17-Sep-2024 4:05 PM EDT
It's Not Your Life Span You Need to Worry About. It's Your Health Span.
Hevolution Foundation

We’re living much longer than our ancestors, but is that always a good thing? With many people living well into our late 70s or beyond, more of us are also spending a greater portion of our lives—sometimes a decade or more—saddled with physical and mental health conditions that can make it challenging to accomplish the tasks of daily life.

   
Newswise: FSU Researchers Work to Protect Local Springs
Released: 17-Sep-2024 2:05 PM EDT
FSU Researchers Work to Protect Local Springs
Florida State University

Florida State University researchers at the Coastal and Marine Laboratory and the School of Communication are working to educate the public and help clean up Wakulla Springs, thanks to funding from the Florida Legislature.

Newswise: Just How Dangerous Is Great Salt Lake Dust? New Research Looks for Clues
Released: 16-Sep-2024 4:05 PM EDT
Just How Dangerous Is Great Salt Lake Dust? New Research Looks for Clues
University of Utah

As Utah’s Great Salt Lake shrinks, exposing more of its playa, concerns grow about the dust the dry lakebed emits. University of Utah scientists find sediments in the exposed lakebed show elevated 'oxidative potential,' indicating greater risk to human health.

Released: 16-Sep-2024 2:05 PM EDT
Study Finds Mine-Drainage Treatment Cost Effective, but Far More Costs Lay Ahead
University of Pittsburgh

Research by the University of Pittsburgh shows that state and federal appropriations allowing Pennsylvania to treat abandoned mine drainage works to both successfully and cost effectively clean up acidic water. But their research also shows funding is insufficient for long-term treatment for mine drainage and other abandoned mine hazards

Newswise: Wildland Firefighters Hit Their STRIDE
Released: 16-Sep-2024 1:05 PM EDT
Wildland Firefighters Hit Their STRIDE
University of Utah

In thousands of simulations, STRIDE produced much more accurate travel times than the standard slope-only models. STRIDE also chose to use established roads and trails to avoid patches of forest or dense vegetation. In contrast, the slope-only model sent rescuers through dense vegetation, dangerous scree fields and forested areas.

Released: 16-Sep-2024 8:55 AM EDT
Arsenic exposure linked to faster onset of diabetes in south Texas population
University of Illinois Chicago

Multiyear study finds that high levels of toxic metals in urine lead to high blood sugar

Newswise: Iowa State Leads a 'Dream' Project to Catalog Livestock DNA Regulatory Regions
Released: 12-Sep-2024 5:05 PM EDT
Iowa State Leads a 'Dream' Project to Catalog Livestock DNA Regulatory Regions
Iowa State University

A new USDA-supported project based at Iowa State University will create an encyclopedia of livestock species' genetic regulatory regions, a DNA netherworld that could be useful in breeding for improved animal efficiency and health.

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Released: 12-Sep-2024 4:05 PM EDT
Has Quebec Entered a New Era of Drug-Related Deaths?
Universite de Montreal

For the last decade, people who use drugs in Quebec have been partially sheltered from Canada’s drug overdose epidemics. But since 2020, the picture has changed.

Newswise: New Research Reveals How El NiñO Caused the Greatest Ever Mass Extinction
9-Sep-2024 9:05 AM EDT
New Research Reveals How El NiñO Caused the Greatest Ever Mass Extinction
University of Bristol

Mega ocean warming El Niño events were key in driving the largest extinction of life on planet Earth some 252 million years ago, according to new research.

Newswise: Avian flu found in wastewater of 10 Texas cities through virome sequencing by researchers at UTHealth Houston and Baylor College of Medicine
Released: 11-Sep-2024 5:05 PM EDT
Avian flu found in wastewater of 10 Texas cities through virome sequencing by researchers at UTHealth Houston and Baylor College of Medicine
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

Avian influenza A(H5N1) virus, which spread to cattle and infected 14 people this year, was detected using virome sequencing in the wastewater of 10 Texas cities by researchers at UTHealth Houston and Baylor College of Medicine.

Newswise: Five Questions: FAMU-FSU Professor Uncovers the Impacts of Hurricane Flooding on Mold Growth
Released: 11-Sep-2024 3:05 PM EDT
Five Questions: FAMU-FSU Professor Uncovers the Impacts of Hurricane Flooding on Mold Growth
Florida State University

By: Kayla Cardenas | Published: September 11, 2024 | 12:09 pm | SHARE: Atlantic hurricane season is nearing its peak, raising alarms for mold outbreaks triggered by flooding and the respiratory health issues to follow.Ebrahim Ahmadisharaf, an assistant professor and researcher at the FAMU-FSU College of Engineering’s Resilient Infrastructure and Disaster Response Center, or RIDER, is shedding new light on the indirect effects of flood damage on residential buildings and human health.

Newswise: Planning for Impacts of Floods and Clouds on Power
Released: 11-Sep-2024 3:05 PM EDT
Planning for Impacts of Floods and Clouds on Power
Brookhaven National Laboratory

On the heels of a Northeastern rainstorm that flooded towns on Long Island and claimed at least two lives in Connecticut, teams of scientists, engineers, and representatives of local power and transportation utilities met to discuss the increasing frequency of severe weather and its impacts on crucial infrastructure. The timing for the meeting at New York’s Kennedy International Airport August 21-22, 2024, was a coincidence.

Newswise: Laser-Focused on Rainforest Carbon Loss
Released: 11-Sep-2024 2:05 PM EDT
Laser-Focused on Rainforest Carbon Loss
Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Scientists using high-resolution aerial scans and computational modeling concluded that wildfires, storms and selective logging have become key drivers behind rainforest carbon emissions, outpacing clear-cutting practices.The team used drones equipped with light detection and ranging sensors, or LiDAR, to measure tree biomass and carbon emissions in Brazilian forests.

Newswise: Hot Streets, Historic Bias: Effects on Neighborhood Walking in Older Adults
Released: 11-Sep-2024 8:30 AM EDT
Hot Streets, Historic Bias: Effects on Neighborhood Walking in Older Adults
Florida Atlantic University

Redlining from the 1930s, marked minority and low-income neighborhoods as “hazardous,” which influenced mortgage and insurance decisions. Results show that redlined areas have less greenspace and more pavement, intensifying urban heat. While higher temperatures generally decreased walking in “still desirable” or “best” neighborhoods, this effect was not significant in “definitely declining” or “hazardous” areas, possibly due to greater reliance on walking for essential activities. Findings underscore the lasting impact of discriminatory policies on environmental vulnerability and physical activity.



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