Anonymous ID: 77415b Dec. 22, 2021, 11:57 a.m. No.15238606   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8614 >>8970 >>9308 >>9415

EAU CLAIRE (WQOW) - A Chippewa Falls man was sent to the hospital on Friday after his vehicle was struck by a train at the Indianhead Warehouse.

 

According to the report from the Eau Claire Police Department:

 

The incident happened on Friday, December 17 shortly after noon. The conductor of a train was moving in reverse, approaching where the train tracks cross the exit/entry way for Indianhead Warehouse. At the same time, the driver of a pickup truck was exiting the property, and was struck by a train cart.

 

Two witnesses told police they did not hear a horn from the train and there was no one standing at the warehouse apron to stop vehicles from entering or exiting.

 

The driver was transported to a local hospital. The Wisconsin Motor Vehicle Crash Report said the truck driver had suspected minor injuries.

 

https://www.wqow.com/news/local/man-sent-to-hospital-after-being-struck-by-train-in-eau-claire/article_4cceccac-6293-11ec-a900-274690f232e7.html

Anonymous ID: 77415b Dec. 22, 2021, 12:01 p.m. No.15238631   🗄️.is 🔗kun

The Department of Natural Resources (DNR) has been notified that a farm-raised deer in Eau Claire County has tested positive for Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD). The notification came from the Wisconsin Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection. As a result, a ban on feeding and baiting of deer has been placed over a 10 mile radius of the Town of Fairchild, where the deer was found on a deer farm.

 

The feeding and baiting ban is required under state law, and applies to farm-raised or free-roaming domestic or wild animals that test positive for CWD or tuberculosis. The DNR will renew the feeding and baiting ban in Eau Claire county for three years and has enacted a two-year ban in Jackson and Clark counties effective Dec. 13.

 

A DNR press release highlights that bait piles can encourage deer to congregate unnaturally around a shared food source near sick deer. This causes CWD to spread. Infection can be left behind in the saliva and urine of afflicted deer. The ban comes as the winter hunting season for deer continues across the state. In September, the DNR also confirmed that tissue samples from dead deer in La Crosse County tested positive for the virus which causes Epizootic Hemorrhagic Disease in deer. A landowner reported finding eight dead deer on a 200-acre property.

 

Neither CWD nor Epizootic Hemorrhagic Disease are known to infect humans. Nevertheless, the DNR recommends that any deer taken by hunters during the season be tested for diseases before consumption. The DNR has kiosk stations where hunters can test for CWD.

 

https://wisconsinexaminer.com/brief/feeding-and-baiting-ban-for-deer-enacted-in-eau-claire-jackson-clark-counties/

Anonymous ID: 77415b Dec. 22, 2021, 12:06 p.m. No.15238668   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8970 >>9308 >>9415

A pedestrian was struck and killed by a passing Norfolk Southern train Monday afternoon in Homestead.

 

The Allegheny County Medical Examiner’s Office identified the victim as Monterey Markee Woodson, 49, of McKees Rocks. The incident happened shortly before 1 p.m. along railroad tracks behind the 400 block of East Eighth Avenue.

 

Allegheny County police are investigating Woodson’s death.

 

“No matter the circumstances, any loss of life is a tragedy – our thoughts are with this person’s family during this difficult time,” a Norfolk Southern spokesperson said in a statement released to WPXI-TV.

 

“We would be remiss if we didn’t say that train tracks can be dangerous and they are not a place to walk along,” the statement continued. “This is a very unfortunate reminder of that.”

 

https://triblive.com/local/mckees-rocks-man-struck-and-killed-by-train-in-homestead/

Anonymous ID: 77415b Dec. 22, 2021, 12:30 p.m. No.15238794   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8828

HIV

 

The omicron variant of the virus that causes Covid-19 likely acquired at least one of its mutations by picking up a snippet of genetic material from another virus - possibly one that causes the common cold - present in the same infected cells, according to researchers.

 

This genetic sequence does not appear in any earlier versions of the coronavirus, called SARS-CoV-2, but is ubiquitous in many other viruses including those that cause the common cold, and also in the human genome, researchers said.

 

By inserting this particular snippet into itself, omicron might be making itself look “more human,” which would help it evade attack by the human immune system, said Venky Soundararajan of Cambridge, Massachusetts-based data analytics firm nference, who led the study posted on Thursday on the website OSF Preprints.

 

This could mean the virus transmits more easily, while only causing mild or asymptomatic disease. Scientists do not yet know whether omicron is more infectious than other variants, whether it causes more severe disease or whether it will overtake Delta as the most prevalent variant. It may take several weeks to get answers to these questions.

 

Cells in the lungs and in the gastrointestinal system can harbor SARS-CoV-2 and common-cold coronaviruses simultaneously, according to earlier studies. Such co-infection sets the scene for viral recombination, a process in which two different viruses in the same host cell interact while making copies of themselves, generating new copies that have some genetic material from both “parents.”

 

This new mutation could have first occurred in a person infected with both pathogens when a version of SARS-CoV-2 picked up the genetic sequence from the other virus, Soundararajan and colleagues said in the study, which has not yet been peer-reviewed.

 

The same genetic sequence appears many times in one of the coronaviruses that causes colds in people - known as HCoV-229E - and in the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) that causes AIDS, Soundararajan said.

 

South Africa, where omicron was first identified, has the world’s highest rate of HIV, which weakens the immune system and increases a person’s vulnerability to infections with common-cold viruses and other pathogens. In that part of the world, there are many people in whom the recombination that added this ubiquitous set of genes to omicron might have occurred, Soundararajan said.

 

“We probably missed many generations of recombinations” that occurred over time and that led to the emergence of omicron, Soundararajan added.

 

More research is needed to confirm the origins of omicron’s mutations and their effects on function and transmissibility. There are competing hypotheses that the latest variant might have spent some time evolving in an animal host.

 

In the meantime, Soundararajan said, the new findings underscore the importance of people getting the currently available Covid-19 vaccines.

 

“You have to vaccinate to reduce the odds that other people, who are immunocompromised, will encounter the SARS-CoV-2 virus,” Soundararajan said.

 

https://www.cnbc.com/2021/12/05/omicron-variant-may-have-picked-up-a-piece-of-common-cold-virus.html

Anonymous ID: 77415b Dec. 22, 2021, 2:03 p.m. No.15239222   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9308 >>9415

“The technologies at wastewater plants remove some pollutants, but not everything,” says Dr Mpingana Akawa. She lives near the Orange River in Namibia. Dr Akawa conducted the experimental work for the research as part of her PhD studies at the university of Johannesburg.

 

“Pharmaceuticals are regarded as emerging organic pollutants. We need to remember that most pharmaceuticals are not regulated.

 

“Hence there are no limits on how much should be in the effluent of a wastewater treatment plant before it is discharged into the environment.

 

“Because they are not regulated, people are not really monitoring these things before releasing the treated wastewater. I think that is where the whole problem is,” adds Akawa.

 

https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/935126