Author: sp (sp )

Home sp
A Drug Costing Less Than €2 a Day Helps in the Treatment of Severely Ill Covid-19 Patients
Post

A Drug Costing Less Than €2 a Day Helps in the Treatment of Severely Ill Covid-19 Patients

Metoprolol, a drug widely used to treat cardiovascular disease, is beneficial when administered to COVID-19patients. This is the finding of a study by investigators at the Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares (CNIC), published today in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology (JACC). The most severe form of COVID-19 is severe respiratory failure, which requires intubation and is...

Auto Draft
Post

After Ida, Energy Facilities in Gulf Inching Back to Life

Oil companies began gradually restarting some of their refineries in Louisiana, and key fuel pipelines fully reopened Tuesday, providing hopeful signs that the region’s crucial energy industry can soon recover from Hurricane Ida’s onslaught. Exxon Mobil said crews were starting to resume normal operations at its Hoover platform in the Gulf of Mexico that managed...

Ida’s Sweltering Aftermath: No Power, No Water, No Gasoline
Post

Ida’s Sweltering Aftermath: No Power, No Water, No Gasoline

Hundreds of thousands of Louisianans sweltered in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida on Tuesday with no electricity, no tap water, precious little gasoline and no clear idea of when things might improve. Long lines that wrapped around the block formed at the few gas stations that had fuel and generator power to pump it. People...

New Archaeological Discoveries Highlight Lack of Protections for Submerged Indigenous Sites
Post

New Archaeological Discoveries Highlight Lack of Protections for Submerged Indigenous Sites

New archaeological research highlights major blind spots in Australia’s environmental management policies, placing submerged Indigenous heritage at risk. The Deep History of Sea Country (DHSC) project team have uncovered a new intertidal stone quarry and stone tool manufacturing site, as well as coastal rock art and engravings, during a land-and-sea archaeological survey off the Pilbara...

A Running Timeline of Fashion and Luxury Mergers, Acquisitions & Investments
Post

A Running Timeline of Fashion and Luxury Mergers, Acquisitions & Investments

In November, a $1.15 billion deal came to light, bringing together Cartier’s parent company Richemont, Chinese e-commerce titan Alibaba, and fashion retail platform Farfetch. The headline-making transaction followed from reports that a “mega deal” was in the making. In addition to proving noteworthy because it brought together three very big names in the fashion sphere...

Auto Draft
Post

As Brands Adopt New Bangladesh Accord, a Look at How Disputes Are Handled by the Legally-Binding Pact

An updated version of the Bangladesh Accord will get a two-year term, following months-long back-and-forth between international brands and retailers, and local trade unions, in furtherance of the aim of “working towards a safe and healthy garment and textile industry in Bangladesh.” Primarily governing factories producing Ready-Made Garments, such as those used by H&M and Zara’s...

Simple Safety Measures Reduce Musical Covid-19 Transmission
Post

Simple Safety Measures Reduce Musical Covid-19 Transmission

As the COVID-19 pandemic swept the globe in 2020, musicians around the world were desperate for the answers to two pressing questions: Can playing musical instruments transmit COVID-19? And if so, what can be done? Now, halfway through 2021, the first official research results are in—and it’s good news: The show can go on. Published...

Sin Taxes Could Unintentionally Make Others Pay
Post

Sin Taxes Could Unintentionally Make Others Pay

When an excise tax hike was levied on cigarettes, New York City taxi drivers who smoked were one and a half times more likely to cheat their customers by overcharging the fare than those who didn’t smoke. That finding comes from forthcoming research in Accounting, Organizations, and Society. In the first-known study to document that sin...

Ending Prices with “.99” Can Backfire on Sellers
Post

Ending Prices with “.99” Can Backfire on Sellers

Setting a price just below a round number ($39.99 instead of $40) may lead consumers into thinking a product is less expensive than it really is – but it can sometimes backfire on sellers, a new study shows. Researchers found that this “just-below” pricing makes consumers less likely to upgrade to a more expensive version...

One in Three Americans Had Covid-19 by the End of 2020
Post

One in Three Americans Had Covid-19 by the End of 2020

A new study published in the journal Nature estimates that 103 million Americans, or 31 percent of the U.S. population, had been infected with SARS-CoV-2 by the end of 2020. Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health researchers modeled the spread of the coronavirus, finding that fewer than one-quarter of infections (22%) were accounted for in cases...