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‘Record of deaths during extreme heat events needs to be integrated in public health system’

‘Record of deaths during extreme heat events needs to be integrated in public health system’

Even as the National Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) has developed a surveillance system to record each death during extreme heat events, it also needs to be integrated in the public health system, experts have said.

Prof Mahaveer Golechha, Nodal officer of Centre for Excellence on Heat Health under the National Programme on Climate Change and Public Health, Union Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, Government of India, told The Indian Express that surveillance systems have been developed to record deaths during extreme heat events but are yet to be integrated in the public health system.

Prof Dileep Mavalankar, who heads the Indian Institute of Public Health at Gandhinagar, has said that hospital admissions and mortality need to be reported every day so that they can be correlated with heat. “What we have shown in Ahmedabad is that if you correlate mortality with temperature, then one can arrive at a local threshold. Each city has to have a local threshold of morbidity and mortality determination. Training and awareness programmes are being conducted but there is a need to record the death and correlate it with temperature across each city,” he said.

A National Action Plan on Heat-Related Illness (HRI) has been developed that outlines the basics of heat wave, HRIs and their management from primary to tertiary level, preparedness plan before, during and after summer season, and the standard operating procedures for surveillance of heat stroke cases and deaths. The plan has been prepared under the National Programme on Climate Change and Human Health.
According to Dr Archana Patil, Maharashtra director of health, advisories along with weekly IMD weather bulletins on heat wave conditions have been issued to each district in the state as hot days become the norm across Maharashtra. “So far, no case of heat stroke has been reported this year,” state health authorities have said.

Dr Pradeep Awate, State surveillance officer, told The Indian Express that since the beginning of March there has been a rise in the maximum and minimum temperatures. Each district has been told to step up measures to come out with their heat action plans so that facilities like cooling rooms, emergency medical kits and others are in place. “With the help of IMD, we are also planning to step up awareness about the heat condition during a particular day with colour-based codes. White colours would be associated with normal, pleasant temperature. Yellow, orange and red colours would be associated with related alerts on mild and severe heat conditions,” Dr Awate added.

Dr Sanjay Deshmukh, Assistant Director (health) Pune circle, which includes Pune, Satara and Solapur, said weather bulletins were being shared with health authorities so that they were aware of the heat wave warning for the next five days.

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Hoffman Shatters Facility Record, Blue Devils Win Six Events on Day Two – Duke University

Hoffman Shatters Facility Record, Blue Devils Win Six Events on Day Two - Duke University

HIGH POINT, N.C. – Graduate student Lauren Hoffman delivered a stellar performance en route to establishing a new facility record in the 400m hurdles, while the Blue Devils produced strong performances across the board and secured first-place finishes in six other events Saturday afternoon on the final day of the Bob Davidson Invitational.

In arguably her strongest individual event, Hoffman commanded the 14-member field as she clocked 56.53 seconds to claim the top spot and shatter the seven-year-old Vert Stadium record set by Joanna Currie. Hoffman finished three seconds faster than the event’s runner-up, while registering a new personal best and lowering her school-record time in the process. 

Halle Bieber got her spring campaign off to a strong start behind a strong display of running as she won both the 100- and 200-meter dashes. The junior registered personal best times in both events – 11.47 seconds (100m) and 23.58 seconds (200m) – slotting herself fifth all-time at Duke in the 200m in the process.

Graduate student Zoe Hughes took the track for the first time this season and tallied a pair of top-five finishes in the women’s long jump and 100m hurdles. Hughes finished first in the long jump – flying out to a wind-assisted leap of 6.04m (19-9.75 feet) on her final jump to edge High Point’s Alicia Dawson by a centimeter and claim the win. She also performed well in the took fourth in the hurdles with a wind assisted 13.93 second finish.

The women’s 4x100m relay of juniors Maya Provencal, Carly King and Jenna Crean and senior Nikki Merritt set the tone for the day in the first event of the morning, racing to a first-place finish behind a run of 46.60 seconds. Freshman Megan McGinnis opened her outdoor season with a bang and collected her first event win of the spring after clocking 2:14.64 in the 800m run, while junior Beau Allen cleared a height of 2.00m (6-6.75 feet) to place first in the men’s high jump.

Sophomore Job Trahan was the first Blue Devil to take on the windy conditions in the track events. Trahan delivered a strong performance to open the outdoor season as he ran 48.61 seconds to place third overall, just 0.2 seconds off his personal best.

Duke performed well as a whole in the sprints – first in the 100m dash, then in the 200m. On the women’s side, strong, slightly wind-aided sprints from Provencal and freshman Abby Geiser led to top-three finishes. Provencal registered a personal-best time of 11.68 seconds to place second, while Geiser took third (11.76) in her outdoor debut. Sophomore Hailey Williams (11.85) also had a solid run as she just missed out on the top-five by a thousandth of a second and Crean ran 11.90 seconds in her collegiate 100m debut. 

Domination carried over to the 200m event as the Duke women registered six of the top seven times in the field. Senior Kelcie Simmons (23.97 seconds) and Crean (23.98 seconds) finished in second and third, with Crean’s time representing a PR. King, Geiser and Williams also finished back-to-back-to-back as the trio checked in at fourth (24.40 seconds), fifth (24.40 seconds) and sixth (24.41 seconds), respectively. 

On the men’s side of the 200m dash, three of the four individuals recorded personal bests. Graduate student Miles Mingo led the way with a 21.22 second finish,  junior Ezra Mellinger improved his No. 3 all-time program mark via his run of 21.25 seconds, while classmate Joseph Laster (21.70 seconds) and Trahan (21.83 seconds) also posted their fastest event times. In another windy race, this time the 100m, the Blue Devils took advantage and ran well, led by Mellinger who placed third on a 10.35 run. 

Up Next:

The Blue Devils will split up the team as they get set to compete in the Raleigh (March 25-26) and Texas (March 24) Relays. Duke will send a group of student-athletes up the road to Raleigh, N.C., while other members of the team will head to Austin, Texas.     

         

To stay up to date with Blue Devils cross country and track & field, follow the team on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook by searching “DukeTFXC.”

 

#GoDuke

 

 

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Comox Valley students excel in region’s Skills Canada events – Comox Valley Record

Comox Valley students excel in region’s Skills Canada events - Comox Valley Record

Students from Comox Valley and surrounding districts showcased their talents in the skilled trades and technologies at the Skills Canada Competition held at G.P. Vanier Secondary School on March 2.

The event featured students from several School District 71 schools ranging from grades 6 to 12, and there was a buzz in the air as the competitions returned to being held in person after the past two years of virtual activities.

There were 250 competitors in 16 different events, from 19 schools in four school districts (SD 71 – Comox Valley, SD47 – Powell River, SD72 – Campbell River, SD69 – Parksville-Qualicum).

This event provides an opportunity for competitors to show off their skills and encourages participants to pursue careers in good-paying, in-demand fields.

The Skills Canada Competition lets young people from across our schools shine,” said Steve Claassen, trades & ADST coordinator for School District 71. “From welding, carpentry – to website design, computer animation, and electronics and robotics – this event showcases talent, connects youth with employers, and promotes careers in the skilled trades and technologies.”

The competitions celebrate and reward students for excellence in their mastery of skilled trade and technology skills, and create an interactive and engaging environment for the young people who attend the competitions as spectators.

Skills Canada offers experiential learning opportunities including skilled trade and technology competitions for hundreds of thousands of young Canadians through regional, provincial/territorial, national and international events, as well as skilled trade awareness programs.

Winners in each competition area were awarded gold, silver or bronze medals.

Senior event gold medal winners from SD 71 this year were Caleb Elsasser (Vanier) in the automotive event and Austin Harris (Highland) in the electronics event. Both senior event winners are going to the Skills Canada provincials.

Other gold medalists from SD 71 were Timothy Sterk, Olie Phillips, Griffin Moquin and Ewen Chowdury of Highland Secondary in the Jr. Skills – VEX IQ Robotics competition. As well, Blaze Trickett and Quinn Sanderson-Stickley from Ecole Puntledge Park took home gold in Lego Mindstorm Gearbots competition.

Silver medals included Vanier’s Kali Brown in cabinetmaking, Isfeld’s Dalton Weaver in carpenty, Vanier’s Katie Brown in electronics, Highland’s Nate Weaver and Mikayla Roddam in Jr. Skills – Spaghetti, Highland’s Matous Karas, Logan Hildebrandt, Benoit Vaillant and Callum Whyte in Jr. Skills – VEX IQ Robotics, Cumberland’s Blake Peterson, Jonah Lywak and Jasper Sykes in Lego Mindstorm – Gearbots, Huband’s Callum Oxford and Max Bouchard in Lego Mindstorm – Gearbots and Vanier’s Kyle Noll in welding.

Several students also picked up bronze medals: Highland’s Hope Savard for digital art, Aspen Park’s Josh Read in Jr. Skills – Gravity Car, Highland’s Daniel Shea, Cal Kemya and Coltin Young in Jr. Skills – VEX IQ Robotics, Isfeld’s Shane Meyers in Jr. Skills – VEX IQ Robotics and Highland’s Morgan Gadd in welding.

The Skills Canada British Columbia Provincials 2022 will be held in various host sites around the province. The Skills Canada national competition will be held in Vancouver, May 25 to 28 at the Vancouver Convention Centre. WorldSkills 2022 take place in Shanghai between Oct. 12 and 17.

School District 71