Santa Barbara County News and Events

What to know about the Nipah virus

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By Michal Ruprecht, CNN

(CNN) — The World Health Organization reported two cases of a rare virus in an eastern Indian state on Thursday.

The virus — called Nipah — kills more than half of the people it infects. Nipah virus, which was named after the village in Malaysia where the first known patient lived, is part of the same family of viruses as measles. Despite that, it’s not as infectious as measles, but it is significantly more deadly.

How is it transmitted?

Nipah is a zoonotic virus, meaning it can be transmitted from animals to humans. Most commonly, that happens through direct contact with an infected pig or bat, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Eating fruits or fruit products — such as raw date palm juice — contaminated with urine or saliva from infected fruit bats also contributes to spread.

It can also spread directly from person to person. Transmission, however, occurs through very close contact with the infected individual.

What are the signs of illness?

It can take four to 14 days for symptoms to appear after a person is infected, according to WHO, and asymptomatic cases are rare.

The first signs of infection are non-specific and include flu-like symptoms like fever, headaches, muscle pain, vomiting and sore throat. In about two-thirds of patients, the disease rapidly progresses, and coma can strike within five to seven days. Some infections also lead to respiratory symptoms like cough and abnormal chest X-rays.

Most patients show changes in the fluid that surrounds the brain, commonly seen in other viral brain infections. Changes caused by tissue death can be seen on brain imaging, and electrical activity of the brain predicts the severity of the disease.

How dangerous is it?

The virus is classified by the CDC as biosafety level four — the highest category, with the most dangerous pathogens like Ebola — and it has the potential to serve as an agent for bioterrorism.

Though there have been only a few outbreaks, Nipah is considered a public health threat because of its high case fatality rate, potential for human-to-human transmission, capacity to cause outbreaks and lack of approved vaccines or treatment.

In severe cases, the virus can attack parts of the brain that control basic life functions like eye movement, heart rate and blood pressure, causing permanent damage.

Those who survive often experience fatigue and changes in how their nervous system works. These effects often persist for years.

How is it diagnosed?

Testing is often done Read more

Australia’s hottest towns hit 120F in a grueling heat wave: ‘It’s just damn hot’

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CNN

By Helen Regan, Angus Watson, CNN

(CNN) — Vast swaths of southeastern Australia are sweltering in a heat wave that’s pushed temperatures to close to 50 degrees Celsius (122 degrees Fahrenheit) and forced some residents to protect their properties as wildfires race through parts of rural Victoria.

Karlee Smith jumped on a quad bike to help herd sheep away from the fast-moving flames on a farm in the town of Gellibrand, a small rural town, about 200 kilometers (125 miles) southwest of Melbourne.

“We actually had to ride through where the fire was burning,” Smith said. “Grass fire, it’s patchy, it’s hot and it’s on fire.”

As her dad and brother battled the flames with a water tanker hitched onto the back of a tractor, they spied a male koala on the ground that had emerged from the burned bushland, tired and in shock.

The current heat wave is the most severe in 16 years, according to the Australian Bureau of Meteorology. Victoria saw its hottest day on record Tuesday, with the towns of Hopetoun and Walpeup reaching 48.9 C (120F), while the state capital Melbourne passed 45 C (113 F).

Temperature records have been smashed in the neighboring states of New South Wales and South Australia, with several towns hovering around 50 C this week, close to the Australian all-time record of 50.7 C last set in 2022 on the West Australian coast.

Heat is the deadliest type of extreme weather, and the human-caused climate crisis is making heat waves more severe and prolonged. Add humidity into the mix, and conditions can approach the limits of human survivability — the point at which our bodies simply cannot adapt.

Smith said conditions had been dry, but they had experienced dry years before.

“I had been thinking, every time summer comes around, I do think, is it Gellibrand’s turn to burn?” she said.

The state’s hottest towns

Steve Mccullough runs the local hotel in Hopetoun, where, along with the nearby town of Walpeup, temperatures hit a state record this week of 48.9 C (120 F).

He said locals in the rural farming community, home to just 700 people, are used to extreme heat. As the temperature rose, Mccullough said some workers clocked off at lunchtime, and other businesses closed early.

He kept the pub open this week to give residents refuge – especially those who feared sky-high power bills from cranking up their aircon.

“We opened our doors and made it known that anyone who was hot could come in here and just sit with no obligation to buy anything,” he said.

The menu was altered to spare his staff extra radiant heat from the grill. As always, cold beers were on tap in a place where 40 C temperatures are not unusual, he said.

“Once you cross 40 C, it doesn’t matter whether it’s 42 or 49 C, it’s just damn hot,” Mccullough told CNN. “You gotta work with it.”

Australian health authorities have urged people to stay hydrated and check in on the elderly, children and those with compromised immune systems who are more vulnerable to the worst impacts of the heat.

“Signs of heatstroke are loss of consciousness, confusion, seizures,” said Michael Georgiou, executive director of regional operations at Ambulance Victoria, who stressed that these are “life threatening emergencies.”

In Victoria’s hottest town, Mccullough said residents were looking out for each other.

“Everyone will tell you a story about knocking on someone’s door to make sure their neighbors are

Australia’s hottest towns hit 120F in a grueling heatwave: ‘It’s just damn hot’

Kraig Pakulski 0 21 Article rating: No rating

By Helen Regan, Angus Watson, CNN

(CNN) — Vast swaths of southeastern Australia are sweltering in a heat wave that’s pushed temperatures to close to 50 degrees Celsius (122 degrees Fahrenheit) and forced some residents to protect their properties as wildfires race through parts of rural Victoria.

Karlee Smith jumped on a quad bike to help herd sheep away from the fast-moving flames on a farm in the town of Gellibrand, a small rural town, about 200 kilometers (125 miles) southwest of Melbourne.

“We actually had to ride through where the fire was burning,” Smith said. “Grass fire, it’s patchy, it’s hot and it’s on fire.”

As her dad and brother battled the flames with a water tanker hitched onto the back of a tractor, they spied a male koala on the ground that had emerged from the burned bushland, tired and in shock.

The current heat wave is the most severe in 16 years, according to the Australian Bureau of Meteorology. Victoria saw its hottest day on record Tuesday, with the towns of Hopetoun and Walpeup reaching 48.9 C (120F), while the state capital Melbourne passed 45 C (113 F).

Temperature records have been smashed in the neighboring states of New South Wales and South Australia, with several towns hovering around 50 C this week, close to the Australian all-time record of 50.7 C last set in 2022 on the West Australian coast.

Heat is the deadliest type of extreme weather, and the human-caused climate crisis is making heat waves more severe and prolonged. Add humidity into the mix, and conditions can approach the limits of human survivability — the point at which our bodies simply cannot adapt.

Smith said conditions had been dry, but they had experienced dry years before.

“I had been thinking, every time summer comes around, I do think, is it Gellibrand’s turn to burn?” she said.

The state’s hottest towns

Steve Mccullough runs the local hotel in Hopetoun, where, along with the nearby town of Walpeup, temperatures hit a state record this week of 48.9 C (120 F).

He said locals in the rural farming community, home to just 700 people, are used to extreme heat. As the temperature rose, Mccullough said some workers clocked off at lunchtime, and other businesses closed early.

He kept the pub open this week to give residents refuge – especially those who feared sky-high power bills from cranking up their aircon.

“We opened our doors and made it known that anyone who was hot could come in here and just sit with no obligation to buy anything,” he said.

The menu was altered to spare his staff extra radiant heat from the grill. As always, cold beers were on tap in a place where 40 C temperatures are not unusual, he said.

“Once you cross 40 C, it doesn’t matter whether it’s 42 or 49 C, it’s just damn hot,” Mccullough told CNN. “You gotta work with it.”

Australian health authorities have urged people to stay hydrated and check in on the elderly, children and those with compromised immune systems who are more vulnerable to the worst impacts of the heat.

“Signs of heatstroke are loss of consciousness, confusion, seizures,” said Michael Georgiou, executive director of regional operations at Ambulance Victoria, who stressed that these are “life threatening emergencies.”

In Victoria’s hottest town, Mccullough said residents were looking out for each other.

“Everyone will tell you a story about knocking on someone’s door to make sure their neighbors are all right,” he said.

Extreme heat fuels out of control bushfires

Bushfires, fueled by the soaring temperatures, have menaced towns in the state of Victoria, prompting evacuations as volunteer firefighters attempted to douse flames around homes. A state of disaster remains in pla

Trump está por anunciar el reemplazo de Powell. Un finalista apoyó a demócratas, impuestos más altos y más inmigración

Kraig Pakulski 0 16 Article rating: No rating

Por Matt Egan, CNN

El presidente Donald Trump planea anunciar el viernes por la mañana a su candidato para presidir la Junta de la Reserva Federal (Fed), el banco central de Estados Unidos. Entre los finalistas está Rick Rieder, ejecutivo de BlackRock, quien cumple con muchos de los requisitos.

Este influyente inversionista cuenta con el respeto de Wall Street y un profundo conocimiento de los mercados financieros. Se cree que Rieder prefiere tasas de interés más bajas, una prioridad para un presidente que busca recortes significativos. Además, Rieder tiene una presencia mediática que agrada en la Casa Blanca.

Por eso, Rieder ascendió en los mercados de predicción como favorito para presidir la Fed en los últimos días.

Sin embargo, esto cambió este jueves por la noche, cuando Trump dijo que su elección no sorprendería a nadie y que “mucha gente piensa que esta persona pudo haber estado allí hace unos años”. Esto sugiere fuertemente a Kevin Warsh, exfuncionario de la Fed y finalista en 2017, cuando Trump eligió finalmente a Jerome Powell. Warsh estuvo en la Casa Blanca este jueves, poco después de que Trump calificara a Powell de “idiota”.

No obstante, Rieder sigue teniendo mejores probabilidades en el mercado Kalshi que el economista de la Casa Blanca Kevin Hassett y el actual gobernador de la Fed, Christopher Waller.

Aun así, algunos comentarios previos de Rieder sobre políticas de Trump, su falta de experiencia en el sector público y sus donaciones políticas a críticos de Trump podrían jugar en su contra para este cargo.

Rieder, considerado una opción sorpresiva, ha criticado en el pasado una de las principales medidas legislativas de Trump en su primer mandato: la reducción del impuesto sobre la renta corporativa al 21 %.

“Creo que el 21 % es demasiado bajo”, dijo Rieder a CNN en marzo de 2021. El ejecutivo de BlackRock argumentó que el beneficio para las empresas era “demasiado alto”, señalando que muchas compañías usaron esos ahorros para recomprar acciones y beneficiar a los accionistas.

Durante la campaña de 2020, Joe Biden propuso aumentar la tasa del impuesto corporativo.

Rieder afirmó entonces que la economía estadounidense “definitivamente” podría soportar un aumento de ese impuesto.

“Imagino que no mencionó eso durante su entrevista en la Casa Blanca”, bromeó Stephanie Roth, economista jefe de Wolfe Research.

No está claro si Rieder sigue apoyando una tasa más alta, algo sobre lo que el presidente de la Fed no tiene injerencia directa.

Un portavoz de BlackRock declinó comentar sobre las declaraciones de Rieder de hace cinco años.

En esa misma entrevista de 2021, Rieder minimizó las preocupaciones sobre la inflación que surgían en ese momento. Dijo que la inflación podría llegar a 2,5 %, pero enfatizó que no le preocupaba un aumento “explosivo” de los precios.

Sus comentarios coincidían con el consenso de economistas y funcionarios de la Fed, quienes entonces no preveían una inflación persistente.

Pero en junio de 2022, tras la invasión rusa a Ucrania, la ruptura de cadenas de suministro y el estímulo fiscal, la inflación se disparó a un máximo de cuatro décadas: 9,1 %.

Rieder también podría diferir de Trump en otro tema clave: la inmigración.

En abril de 2023, Rieder expresó su apoyo a lo opuesto de la política migratoria de Trump.

Coincidiendo con muchos economistas, Rieder dijo que Estados Unidos necesita más, no menos, trabajadores nacidos en el extranjero para compensar el retiro de los baby boomers.

“En la mayoría de las economías del mundo, se necesita inmigración”, dijo Rieder en un Read more

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