Thursday, March 31, 2022

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Friday, March 25, 2022

Ask for the Best Package amidst nature at Rishikesh !






Ask for the Best Package amidst nature at Rishikesh !
Email us the dates of your planned trip & number of people.
Our Email ID: vohraindia@yahoo.com

インドのリシケシで自然に囲まれたベストパッケージをお求めください!
인도 리시케시에서 자연 속 베스트 패키지를 요청하세요! 在印度瑞诗凯诗寻求大自然中的最佳套餐!Спросите о лучшем пакете среди природы в Ришикеше, Индия!

Saturday, March 19, 2022

NASA Astronaut Reaches Historic Milestone

NASA astronaut Mark Vande Hei reached a historic milestone this week, claiming the record for the longest single spaceflight of a U.S. astronaut.

Vande Hei arrived at the International Space Station on April 9, 2021, and is expected to return home on March 30, 2022, after spending 355 days in low-Earth orbit. This duration breaks the previous record for the most consecutive days in space by an American explorer, held by retired NASA astronaut Scott Kelly, by 15 days.


During his mission, Vande Hei has worked on hundreds of experiments and investigations to benefit life on Earth and expand NASA’s knowledge of how the human body adapts to long-term spaceflight. His contributions will help pave the way for more people to travel to space on longer-duration missions as NASA pushes the boundaries of exploration to the Moon and Mars.

Live coverage of the activities surrounding Vande Hei’s departure from the space station will air on NASA Television, the NASA app, and our official social media channels starting at 11:30 p.m. EDT on Tues., March 29. Coverage of the deorbit burn and landing of the Soyuz MS-19 spacecraft in Kazakhstan is expected to begin at 6:15 a.m. EDT on Wed., March 30.

CALLING RWAs THE INDIAN POLICE FOUNDATION (IPF) IS LOOKING FOR VOLUNTEERS

CALLING RWAs

THE INDIAN POLICE FOUNDATION (IPF) IS LOOKING FOR VOLUNTEERS TO HELP US CARRY OUT A CITIZEN SATISFACTION SURVEY ON THE QUALITY OF POLICING IN YOUR LOCALITY.




Do you have the passion and dedication to play a positive role in improving crime control and security in your area?


Greetings from the Indian Police Foundation (IPF)!


The IPF Online Volunteer Scheme is a platform to build partnerships between citizens and the police.  IPF Volunteers will help in promoting community engagement, trust, and harmony among citizens, spreading awareness about how policing touches the lives of every citizen and why good policing is essential for India’s internal security and economic development. 
  
Our Police Forces perform a crucial role in protecting the lives and property of citizens, controlling crime, and maintaining societal peace which is considered essential for India’s internal security and democracy. IPF believes that a peaceful and crime-free society is essential to focus on India’s fight against poverty, unemployment, and disease and a pre-condition to India’s growth as a strong political and economic power.
 

This is an opportunity for students, youth, RWAs, and citizens in general, to participate in voluntary work for a public cause: to be an IPF Online Volunteer to conduct the annual Citizen Satisfaction Survey on the quality of policing in your area. Citizens of a democratic country have an important responsibility of providing feedback on the quality of governance. Our Citizen Satisfaction Survey is intended to understand public perceptions about the quality of police service and thereby help the police to continuously improve their services. RWAs have an important role to play in improving the quality of policing, public security, regulation of traffic, etc. 

 

TEN VOLUNTEERS EACH, FROM EVERY DISTRICT IN INDIA 
 

    IPF invites the partnership of RWAs from every District of India, to be our Online Volunteers to support us in this mission.  The IPF Online Volunteers will be required to assist us in conducting the annual citizen satisfaction survey so that we can capture feedback and diverse voices, from every district in the country.  

    Please note that this call is for persons wanting to volunteer. There is no financial or any other remuneration for this voluntary work.  However, in the future, IPF plans to hold seminars, discussions, webinars, etc to help RWAs to improve crime control and community policing.  We shall continue to remain in touch with you for this purpose.  Online Volunteers from RWAs will be given e-Certificates of Volunteering, in recognition of their contribution, at the end of the year.

    If you are willing to provide voluntary and impartial service to the above cause, please register online before 15th April 2022, using the link provided below.  Your personal particulars will be kept strictly confidential.

     

    https://forms.gle/MXw7wJYbyPkbjHan9 
     

     

    Saturday, March 12, 2022

    中国的冠状病毒封锁, 중국의 코로나 봉쇄, 中國的冠狀病毒封鎖, 中国でのコロナ封鎖,

    请在下面的评论部分分享中国和其他国家/地区的第 4 波新冠疫情的状况。


    아래 댓글 섹션에서 중국 및 기타 국가의 코로나 4차 확산 현황을 공유해 주세요.

    下記のコメント欄で、中国およびその他の国におけるコロナ第4波の状況を共有してください。

    請在下面的評論部分分享中國和其他國家/地區的第 4 波電暈的狀況。

    MCD Trifurcation - Cash crunch at EDMC - East Delhi suffered badly !

    In 2011, the Sheila Dikshit government moved a proposal to divide the MCD into three separate bodies, arguing that it will improve overall efficiency. In November 2011, the Union home ministry cleared the proposal. 


    The Delhi government convened a special assembly session and passed the Delhi Municipal Corporation (Amendment) Bill in December 2011. Then-President Pratibha Patil cleared it in the same month.

    The final notification for the trifurcation was issued in January 2012, carving North, South, and East Delhi Municipal Corporations with 104 wards given to the first two and 64 to the third respectively.

    We knew that EDMC will face a severe cash crunch & we opposed the proposal from day one.

    And we faced the Strike by the Sanitation workers in East Delhi. In fact, there were multiple strikes & residents faced garbage all over. 

    We can just hope that the Unification of MCD will improve the overall situation of the areas under EDMC, which has so many issues such as Air - Pollution, Waterlogging, Parking, Traffic jam, Encroachment, Right to walk, etc.

    EAST DELHI RWAs JOINT FRONT

    www.RWABhagidari.com

    Watch Rollout of Our Mega Moon Rocket

    NASA EMAIL:

    The launch of our uncrewed Artemis I Moon mission is fast approaching, and we’re inviting you to join us for the final test before liftoff.  

    Starting March 17, our teams will roll the 322-foot-tall Space Launch System rocket and Orion spacecraft out of the Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB) at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida and onto the launchpad for the first time. 

    The rollout involves placing the entire integrated launch system atop a crawler-transporter, which will traverse the 4-mile distance between the VAB and Launch Complex 39B in a journey that is expected to take somewhere between six and 12 hours. Approximately two weeks after arrival at 39B, our launch teams will conduct a “wet dress rehearsal”, a final prelaunch test that includes loading the large, central core stage of the rocket with liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen – that’s the “wet” part – and a mock countdown to launch. 

    Join us for a live broadcast of the rollout starting at 5 p.m. EDT on March 17, which will include live remarks from NASA Administrator Bill Nelson and other guests. Coverage will air on NASA Television, the NASA app, and our official social media channels. 

    PLUS: Is wet-dress whetting your appetite for launch? Register to be a NASA virtual guest for the launch of Artemis I and get curated resources, interaction opportunities, schedule changes, and mission-specific information straight to your inbox. Following the launch, virtual guests will be sent a stamp for their virtual guest passports! 


    Must Wach BloggerPride Video:

    Wednesday, March 9, 2022

    你喜欢印度菜吗?인도 음식을 좋아하세요? あなたはインド料理が好きですか

     你喜欢印度菜吗?您想观看印度美食的视频吗?请订阅 BloggerPride YouTube 频道。.


    인도 음식을 좋아하세요? 인도 음식의 영상을 보고 싶으세요? BloggerPride YouTube 채널을 구독하십시오.

    あなたはインド料理が好きですか?インド料理のビデオを見たいですか? BloggerPrideYouTubeチャンネルに登録してください。

    WHO issues new guidelines on abortion to help countries deliver lifesaving care

    GENEVA, March 9th, 2022 -- The World Health Organization (WHO) is releasing new guidelines on abortion care today, in a bid to protect the health of women and girls and help prevent over 25 million unsafe abortions that currently occur each year.

    “Being able to obtain a safe abortion is a crucial part of health care,” said Craig Lissner, acting Director for Sexual and Reproductive Health and Research at WHO. “Nearly every death and injury that results from unsafe abortion is entirely preventable. That’s why we recommend women and girls can access abortion and family planning services when they need them.”

    Based on the latest scientific evidence, these consolidated guidelines bring together over 50 recommendations spanning clinical practice, health service delivery, and legal and policy interventions to support quality abortion care.

    New recommendations to improve access to high quality, person-centered services

    When abortion is carried out using a method recommended by WHO, appropriate to the duration of the pregnancy, and assisted by someone with the necessary information or skills, it is a simple and extremely safe procedure.

    Tragically, however, only around half of all abortions take place under such conditions, with unsafe abortions causing around 39,000 deaths every year and resulting in millions more women hospitalized with complications. Most of these deaths are concentrated in lower-income countries – with over 60 percent in Africa and 30 percent in Asia - and among those living in the most vulnerable situations.

    The guideline includes recommendations on many simple primary care level interventions that improve the quality of abortion care provided to women and girls. These include task sharing by a wider range of health workers; ensuring access to medical abortion pills, which means more women can obtain safe abortion services, and making sure that accurate information on care is available to all those who need it.

    For the first time, the guidelines also include recommendations for use where appropriate of telemedicine, which helped support access to abortion and family planning services during the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Removing unnecessary policy barriers facilitates safe abortion access

    Alongside the clinical and service delivery recommendations, the guidelines recommend removing medically unnecessary policy barriers to safe abortion, such as criminalization, mandatory waiting times, the requirement that approval must be given by other people (e.g., partners or family members) or institutions, and limits on when during pregnancy an abortion can take place. Such barriers can lead to critical delays in accessing treatment and put women and girls at greater risk of unsafe abortion, stigmatization, and health complications while increasing disruptions to education and their ability to work.

    While most countries permit abortion under specified circumstances, about 20 countries provide no legal grounds for abortion. More than 3 in 4 countries have legal penalties for abortion, which can include lengthy prison sentences or heavy fines for people having or assisting with the procedure.

    “It’s vital that an abortion is safe in medical terms,” said Dr. Bela Ganatra, Head of WHO’s Prevention of Unsafe Abortion Unit. “But that’s not enough on its own. As with any other health services, abortion care needs to respect the decisions and needs of women and girls, ensuring that they are treated with dignity and without stigma or judgment. No one should be exposed to abuse or harms like being reported to the police or put in jail because they have sought or provided abortion care."

    Evidence shows that restricting access to abortions does not reduce the number of abortions that take place. In fact, restrictions are more likely to drive women and girls towards unsafe procedures. In countries where abortion is most restricted, only 1 in 4 abortions is safe, compared to nearly 9 in 10 in countries where the procedure is broadly legal.

    “The evidence is clear – if you want to prevent unintended pregnancies and unsafe abortions, you need to provide women and girls with a comprehensive package of sexuality education, accurate family planning information and services, and access to quality abortion care,” Dr. Ganatra added.

    Following the launch of the guidelines, WHO will support interested countries to implement these new guidelines and strengthen national policies and programs related to contraception, family planning, and abortion services, helping them provide the highest standard of care for women and girls.

    #Motherhood - Mata Sahib Kaur Ji #shorts #Punjabi #animatedmovie





    Saturday, March 5, 2022

    Fly Your Name Around The Moon with #nasa #artemis #moon #shorts Get Boarding pass


    Fly Your Name Around The Moon with #NASA Rocket #Artemis #moon #orbit #shorts चाँद के चक्कर लगाते हुए नासा के राकेट में आपका नाम भी चाँद के चक्कर लगा सकता है. Get your Boarding pass now: youtu.be/jvrBJ4PN5Qk

    Thursday, March 3, 2022

    Alfredo Pasta & peri peri fries #shorts #alfredopasta #periperifries #streetfood

    Amazing Gud making from Sugar cane juice #shorts #trending #viral #viralvideo #viralshorts #गुड़

    Blueberry Cake Cutting #shorts #blueberrycake #cake #cakes

    DSGMC to send a 20-members delegation to help the stranded Indian students in Ukraine

    New Delhi, March 3,  Harmeet Singh Kalka, President, and Jagdip Singh Kahlon, General Secretary, Delhi Sikh Gurdwara Management Committee (DSGMC) has informed the media that Delhi Sikh Committee will send a 20-member delegation to help the stranded people in Ukraine. The delegation will comprise of senior members, staff, and volunteers. 


    The delegation will be divided into two parts- one part will visit the border of Poland and the other will visit Slovakia to help the stranded people there.  Special camps will be organized there to distribute langar, medical assistance and extend all possible assistance to the stranded people on humanitarian grounds. They said after the war, the situation gets worsened and people need much more assistance. DSGMC deems its duty to send the delegation to serve the people in distress. 

    Kalka and Kahlon further said that DSGMC stands at the forefront to provide its services to needy people at the time of natural calamities. In the past, DSGMC has done commendable service whenever the country needed for example at the time of natural calamities in Uttrakhand, Gujarat, Kashmir, Uttar Pradesh, Punjab and in Nepal and other places in abroad. The motto of the DSGMC is to serve humanity following the teachings of our Guru Sahibs

    WHO updates its treatment guidelines to include molnupiravir

    This ninth update of WHO’s guideline on therapeutics includes a recommendation that casirivimab-imdevimab not be used for patients infected with the Omicron variant



    Geneva, 3 March 2022 | WHO has updated its living guidelines on COVID-19 therapeutics to include a conditional recommendation on molnupiravir, a new antiviral medicine.

    This is the first oral antiviral drug to be included in the treatment guidelines for COVID-19. As this is a new medicine, there is little safety data. WHO recommends active monitoring for drug safety, along with other strategies to mitigate potential harms.

    Because of these concerns and data gaps, molnupiravir should be provided only to non-severe COVID-19 patients with the highest risk of hospitalization. These are typically people who have not received a COVID-19 vaccination, older people, people with immunodeficiencies and people living with chronic diseases.

    Children, and pregnant and breastfeeding women should not be given the drug. People who take molnupiravir should have a contraceptive plan, and health systems should ensure access to pregnancy testing and contraceptives at the point of care.

    Under the care of a health care provider, molnupiravir, an oral tablet, is given as four tablets (total 800 mg) twice daily for five days; within 5 days of symptom onset. Used as early as possible after infection, it can help prevent hospitalization.

    Today’s recommendation is based on new data from six randomized controlled trials involving 4,796 patients. This is the largest dataset on this drug so far.

    Along with a recommendation on molnupiravir, this ninth update of WHO’s living guideline on therapeutics includes an update on casirivimab-imdevimab, a monoclonal antibody cocktail. Based on evidence that this combination of drugs is ineffective against the Omicron variant of concern, WHO now recommends that it is only given when the infection is caused by another variant.

    Molnupiravir is not widely available but steps have been taken towards increasing access, including the signing of a voluntary licensing agreement. The Access to COVID-19 Tools Accelerator (ACT-A) is making a limited supply available to countries with access constraints.

    WHO has also invited manufacturers to submit their products for prequalification, with a number of manufacturers of molnupiravir going through assessment now. WHO evaluates the quality, safety and efficacy of medical products for United Nations and other large suppliers to low- and middle-income countries. More WHO quality-assured manufacturers mean that countries have a greater choice of products and more competitive prices.  

    Thanks: WHO

    WHO and MPP welcome NIH’s offer of COVID-19 health technologies to C-TAP

    Geneva, 3 March 2022 – The World Health Organization (WHO) and the Medicines Patent Pool (MPP) jointly welcome the announcement that the United States National Institutes of Health (NIH) will offer several technologies to the COVID-19 Technology Access Pool (C-TAP) for potential licensing through MPP. The announcement was made today at the U.S. COVID-19 Dialogue with Ministers of Health meeting in the presence of WHO Director-General, Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, and NIAID Director and Chief Medical Advisor to the President of United States, Anthony Fauci.


    “I thank NIH for its offer of innovative therapeutics, vaccines and diagnostic methods for COVID-19,” said WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus. “Voluntary sharing of technologies through non-exclusive agreements will not only help us put the pandemic behind us; it will also empower low- and middle-income countries to produce their own medical products and achieve equitable access.”

    “NIH were the first to share their patents with MPP for an HIV product back in 2010 when we were created,” said Charles Gore, MPP Executive Director. “We will be honoured to sign public health-driven transparent non-exclusive licence agreements with NIH under the auspices of C-TAP when the negotiations have concluded, with the goal to provide access of these innovative technologies to people in need around the world and help put an end to the pandemic.”

    Launched in 2020 by the WHO Director-General and the President of Costa Rica, and supported by 43 Member States, C-TAP aims to facilitate timely, equitable and affordable access to COVID-19 health products by boosting their production and supply through open, non-exclusive licensing agreements. MPP provides the licensing expertise to this initiative and holds the licences.

    Thanks: WHO

    Wednesday, March 2, 2022

    COVID-19 pandemic triggers 25% increase in prevalence of anxiety and depression worldwide

    A wake-up call to all countries to step up mental health services and support


    2 March 2022 - In the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, global prevalence of anxiety and depression increased by a massive 25%, according to a scientific brief released by the World Health Organization (WHO) today. The brief also highlights who has been most affected and summarizes the effect of the pandemic on the availability of mental health services and how this has changed during the pandemic.

    Concerns about potential increases in mental health conditions had already prompted 90% of countries surveyed to include mental health and psychosocial support in their COVID-19 response plans, but major gaps and concerns remain.

    “The information we have now about the impact of COVID-19 on the world’s mental health is just the tip of the iceberg,” said Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General. “This is a wake-up call to all countries to pay more attention to mental health and do a better job of supporting their populations’ mental health.”

    Multiple stress factors

    One major explanation for the increase is the unprecedented stress caused by the social isolation resulting from the pandemic. Linked to this were constraints on people’s ability to work, seek support from loved ones and engage in their communities.

    Loneliness, fear of infection, suffering and death for oneself and for loved ones, grief after bereavement and financial worries have also all been cited as stressors leading to anxiety and depression. Among health workers, exhaustion has been a major trigger for suicidal thinking.

    Young people and women worst hit

    The brief, which is informed by a comprehensive review of existing evidence about the impact of COVID-19 on mental health and mental health services, and includes estimates from the latest Global Burden of Disease study, shows that the pandemic has affected the mental health of young people and that they are disproportionally at risk of suicidal and self-harming behaviours. It also indicates that women have been more severely impacted than men and that people with pre-existing physical health conditions, such as asthma, cancer and heart disease, were more likely to develop symptoms of mental disorders.

    Data suggests that people with pre-existing mental disorders do not appear to be disproportionately vulnerable to COVID-19 infection. Yet, when these people do become infected, they are more likely to suffer hospitalization, severe illness and death compared with people without mental disorders. People with more severe mental disorders, such as psychoses, and young people with mental disorders, are particularly at risk.

    Gaps in care

    This increase in the prevalence of mental health problems has coincided with severe disruptions to mental health services, leaving huge gaps in care for those who need it most. For much of the pandemic, services for mental, neurological and substance use conditions were the most disrupted among all essential health services reported by WHO Member States. Many countries also reported major disruptions in life-saving services for mental health, including for suicide prevention.

    By the end of 2021 the situation had somewhat improved but today too many people remain unable to get the care and support they need for both pre-existing and newly developed mental health conditions.

    Unable to access face-to-face care, many people have sought support online, signaling an urgent need to make reliable and effective digital tools available and easily accessible. However, developing and deploying digital interventions remains a major challenge in resource-limited countries and settings.

    WHO and country action

    Since the early days of the pandemic, WHO and partners have worked to develop and disseminate resources in multiple languages and formats to help different groups cope with and respond to the mental health impacts of COVID-19. For example, WHO produced a story book for 6-11-year-olds, My Hero is You, now available in 142 languages and 61 multimedia adaptations, as well as a toolkit for supporting older adults available in 16 languages.

    At the same time, the Organization has worked with partners, including other United Nations agencies, international nongovernmental organizations and the Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, to lead an interagency mental health and psychosocial response to COVID-19. Throughout the pandemic, WHO  has also worked to promote the integration of mental health and psychosocial support across and within all aspects of the global response. 

    WHO Member States have recognized the impact of COVID-19 on mental health and are taking action. WHO’s most recent pulse survey on continuity of essential health services indicated that 90% of countries are working to provide mental health and psychosocial support to COVID-19 patients and responders alike. Moreover, at last year’s World Health Assembly, countries emphasized the need to develop and strengthen mental health and psychosocial support services as part of strengthening preparedness, response and resilience to COVID-19 and future public health emergencies. They adopted the updated Comprehensive Mental Health Action Plan 2013-2030, which includes an indicator on preparedness for mental health and psychosocial support in public health emergencies.

    Step up investment

    However, this commitment to mental health needs to be accompanied by a global step up in investment. Unfortunately, the situation underscores a chronic global shortage of mental health resources that continues today. WHO’s most recent Mental Health Atlas showed that in 2020, governments worldwide spent on average just over 2% of their health budgets on mental health and many low-income countries reported having fewer than 1 mental health worker per 100 000 people.

    Dévora Kestel, Director of the Department of Mental Health and Substance Use at WHO, sums up the situation: ”While the pandemic has generated interest in and concern for mental health, it has also revealed historical under-investment in mental health services. Countries must act urgently to ensure that mental health support is available to all.”

    with thanks : WHO