Categories
Australia

Sydney news: Former NSW deputy premier John Barilaro to face US trade role inquiry

Here’s what you need to know this morning.

Barilaro due to give evidence

Former NSW deputy premier John Barilaro will appear today before the inquiry created to investigate his appointment as NSW’s trade commissioner to the Americas.

Mr Barilaro has withdrawn from the $500.00-a-year job based in New York after a public outcry but he will be expected to answer “many questions” in his first appearance at the inquiry.

“You want to understand his role in the creation of these positions, his role in the changing nature of the way in which these positions were appointed,” leader of the opposition in the upper house, Penny Sharpe, said yesterday.

“And any of the discussions that he had with either Minister [Stuart] Ayres or… [NSW Premier Dominic] Perrottet, or indeed anyone else in the government, as he applied for and was eventually offered that job.”

Ms Sharpe also said Labor would seek to expand the inquiry’s terms of reference to include all international senior trade appointments after alleged reports the Premier had offered to create a parliamentary trade role for Transport Minister David Elliott, and had also spoken to him about the agent- general position in London.

In the afternoon, the inquiry will again hear from Investment NSW chief executive Amy Brown in her third appearance before the committee.

Plan to tackle high suicide rate

The NSW opposition has announced a plan to help reduce high rates of suicide.

The proposed legislation includes a specialized suicide-prevention council and mandatory suicide-prevention plans in state government departments.

Opposition Mental Health Spokesman Ryan Park said the legislation would be based on successful government programs in other countries.

“This is above politics,” Mr Park said.

“This is an issue that all of us as legislators have got to work with health experts, education experts, and community experts, as well as those with lived experience, from those with loved ones who have taken their own life, about what we can do in this area.”

NRL great weighs into oval upgrade debate after railing collapses

people standing on a stand as it collapses and they fall
Spectators fell after a railing gave way at Leichhardt Oval on Saturday.(Twitter: Ryan Fitzgerald)

Tigers legend Benny Elias says the collapse of a railing at Sydney’s Leichhardt Oval on Saturday shows why the ground needs an urgent upgrade.

Dozens of spectators fell several meters onto concrete at a schoolboys’ rugby match when a railing at the aging ground gave way.

Leichhardt is one of several suburban ovals the NRL wants the state government to pay to upgrade, threatening to take the grand finale elsewhere if it does not happen.

Mr Elias, who has watched and played many NRL games at the Tigers’ spiritual home, said it was for more than just rugby league.

In a statement, Sport Minister Alister Henskens said the government was committed to upgrading suburban stadiums.

“However, following recent natural disasters and the COVID-19 pandemic, it is appropriate that further investment … is staged,” he said.

The council is investigating the accident.

Foster children feel excluded, report finds

A report has found children and young people in out-of-home care in NSW feel excluded from critical decisions affecting their lives.

The NSW Advocate for Children and Young People report surveyed about 100 people aged from six to 24 years.

Spokesperson Zoe Robinson said the organization had made 19 recommendations to the government to ensure young people felt heard in the foster care system.

Monkeypox vaccine rollout

a person holding a vial of vaccine and injection
More than 5,000 doses of the Jynneos smallpox vaccine will be administered to targeted groups.(abcnews)

NSW’s monkeypox vaccine program starts today, with authorities targeting those deemed to be at the highest risk of contracting the virus.

NSW Health will supply 5,500 doses of the Jynneos smallpox vaccine to targeted groups.

There have been 33 confirmed cases in NSW, with the majority of those picked up overseas.

Men who have sex with men are considered most at risk of contracting monkeypox, which spreads through skin-to-skin contact.

Gay and bisexual men and men who have sex with men who are homeless, sex workers or have significant drug issues which impair their judgment are among the specific groups to receive the first doses.

Crown Sydney casino opens today

the outside of a tall building
Crown was granted a conditional license in June.(Facebook: Crown Sydney)

Crown Sydney casino will open its doors today, less than two years after it was deemed unfit to hold a gaming license.

The casino will be officially opened at an invitation-only event at Barangaroo tonight, with members and guests able to use the facilities on Tuesday.

A public inquiry into Crown revealed allegations of criminal activity and money laundering, and the company was deemed unfit to hold a gaming license.

However, in June the NSW Independent Liquor and Gaming Authority granted Crown a conditional licence, saying it would closely monitor initial operations.

Newmarch inquest entering third week

An inquest into 19 COVID-19 deaths in a Sydney aged care facility is entering its third week.

Deputy state coroner Derek Lee is investigating a two-month outbreak that resulted in 19 deaths at Newmarch House, Kingswood, in 2020.

The inquest has heard some workers refused to look after residents who had tested positive, and at one point there were no staff to serve meals.

It has heard there was intense pressure on staff, and some external staff replacements were so unskilled they were of no benefit.

Families and friends have raised concerns about why residents with COVID-19 were not transferred to hospital.

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Categories
US

Gunshots reported inside Tysons Corner Center; police say ‘nothing found’

Stores closed and shoppers fled from Tysons Corner Center mall Sunday afternoon after police said the crash of a falling light fixture — while officers were investigating a possible theft — was confused for gunshots.

No evidence of gunfire or injuries were found, police said, but the incident was enough to spark panic at the sprawling shopping center, just over a month after shots were fired in the mall during a fight in June.

Police received a report of gunshots inside Tysons at 2:49 pm and began clearing the mall, Fairfax County police second lieutenant Jason Chandler said. As of around 3:40 pm, the mall was clear and no threats were reported. The mall never went into a lockdown, Chandler said, but some stores closed.

Before the report of gunshots, Chandler said police responded to a possible theft in the mall near the glass elevator. A light fixture fell “in the general area” of the police activity causing a loud sound, Chandler said, which officers believe led to the panic in the mall.

A video posted on Twitter showed police officers leading several individuals away from the mall in handcuffs after reports of the gunshots were made. Chandler said no suspects were detained in response to the reports, but it was uncertain whether individuals were detained in the earlier response to a possible theft.

Other videos posted on social media show scores of customers fleeing from the mall. Tysons was advertising a tax-free weekend with discounted clothes and school supplies, according to the shopping center’s website.

In mid-June, gunshots were fired in Tysons after a fight, closing the mall and sparking a panic as customers fled or hid in stores. A boy was fatally shot at the Moechella concert in Northwest Washington that same weekend, and the week prior, three people were shot after a dispute at a shopping mall in Prince George’s County.

The incidents came amid a string of high-profile mass shootings across the country from Buffalo to Uvalde, Tex. In the wake of the killings, some DC and Virginia residents told The Washington Post they’d become more sensitive to the risk of gun violence, or hesitant to return to large gathering places.

Studies in 2019 and 2018 by the American Psychological Association and Pew Research Center conducted after high profile mass shootings found that, across the country, news of gun violence similarly exacerbated respondents’ fears and stress levels.

This developing story has been updated.

Categories
Business

5 things to watch on the ASX 200 on Monday 8 August 2022

Broker looking at the share price on her laptop with green and red points in the background.

Image source: Getty Images

On Friday, the S&P/ASX 200 Index (ASX: XJO) finished the week in a positive fashion. The benchmark index rose 0.6% to 7,015.6 points.

Will the market be able to build on this on Monday? Here are five things to watch:

ASX 200 expected to edge lower

The Australian share market looks set to start the week with a small decline following a mixed night on Wall Street on Friday. According to the latest SPI futures, the ASX 200 is expected to open the day 7 points or 0.1% lower this morning. On Wall Street, the Dow Jones was up 0.2%, the S&P 500 fell 0.15%, and the NASDAQ dropped 0.5%.

Oil prices rebound

energy producers Santos Ltd (ASX: STO) and Woodside Energy Group Ltd (ASX: WDS) could have a decent start to the week after oil prices pushed higher on Friday. According to Bloomberg, the WTI crude oil price rose 0.5% to US$89.01 a barrel and the Brent crude oil price climbed 0.85% to US$94.92 a barrel. Oil prices rebounded from their lowest levels since February after concerns about supply shortages offset expected declines in fuel demand.

Suncorp results

the Suncorp Group Ltd (ASX: SUN) share price will be on watch on Monday when the insurance giant releases its full year results. According to CommSec, the market is expecting the company to report a net profit after tax of $699 million for FY 2022. This is expected to underpin a final fully franked 23 cents per share dividend.

Gold price slides

gold miners Newcrest Mining Limited (ASX: NCM) and Northern Star Resources Ltd (ASX: NST) could have a poor start to the week after the gold price tumbled on Friday night. According to CNBC, the spot gold price was down 0.8% to US$1,792.40 an ounce. A strong US jobs report eased recession fears and reduced the appeal of the safe haven asset.

Aurizon results

the Aurizon Holdings Limited (ASX: AZJ) share price will be in focus on Monday when the rail freight operator releases its full year results. The market is expecting the company to report a net profit after tax of $513 million and a final dividend of 10.9 cents.

Categories
Technology

Canon EOS R7 vs Fujifilm X-H2S

the Canon EOS R7 and Fujifilm X-H2S were announced within a few days of each other, both sitting at the top of their manufacturer’s APS-C mirrorless camera line-up.

They are also both vying for the attention of dedicated enthusiast photographers who want the smaller size, lower weight and greater ‘reach’ of an APC-S format mirrorless camera system instead of the bulk and extra cost of a full-frame model. In this post, we’ll take a look at some of the key features of the Canon EOS R7 and Fujifilm X-H2S to see how they compare to help you decide which it is the best APS-C format camera for you.

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Both cameras have APS-C sensors, but the Canon’s has a higher resolution of 32.5MP. (Image credit: Canon)

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•Canon EOS R7: 32.5Mp APS-C format CMOS
• Fujifilm X-H2S: 26.1MP APS-C format X-Trans CMOS 5HS

Categories
Entertainment

My Kitchen Rules viewers praise new judge Nigella Lawson: ‘Massive upgrade’

Nigella Lawson has completely charmed viewers with her My Kitchen Rules debut, as fans declared she will “save the series”.

The British home cooking queen, who was earlier announced as Pete Evans’ replacement for the 2022 season, appeared alongside French chef Manu Feildel on Sunday night for the struggling cooking show’s much-anticipated return to screens.

And her star-power could prove to be the winning ingredient to bolster MKR‘s ratings, with viewers rushing to social media to give the 62-year-old their tick of approval.

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At one stage during the premiere episode, which saw Victorian father-and-daughter duo Peter and Alice cooking first, Lawson ditched her cutlery to chomp into a lamb cutlet, much to the delight of people watching from home.

Prior to the show airing, Lawson took to Twitter to say she was “excited and nervous in equal measure”, as she urged her followers to tune in with a “glass of wine or mug of tea”.

The 12th season of the Channel 7 cooking show follows a two-year hiatus for MKRwhich suffered declining ratings in 2019 and 2020.

Presumably in a bid to compete with its rival prime-time show, Channel 9’s Married At First Sightthe series was copping criticism for overdoing it on the dramatics and straying from its humble roots.

In an effort to reinvigorate the franchise, the network parted ways with original Judge Evans following a slew of controversies, and promised the series would be bouncing back to its core values ​​of “real food and real people” in 2022.

Meanwhile Evans, 49, responded to the news of Lawson’s appointment back in April, wishing his “dear mate Manu” the best for the future of the series.

“I wish Channel 7, the crew and my dear mate Manu ️all the very best on their upcoming series,” he wrote on social media at the time.

“I will always cherish the many years we spent together, creating so many wonderful memories.”

It’s understood Lawson will only feature in half of the season, with former MasterChef judge Matt Preston joining Feildel for the back half.

Celebrity chefs Colin Fassnidge and Curtis Stone are also set to return as guest judges.

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Categories
Sports

Nick Kyrgios wins Citi Open final v Yoshihito Nishioka score, video, reaction, doubles final v Jack Sock

Nick Kyrgios has claimed his seventh career ATP singles title — and first in three years — by defeating Japan’s Yoshihito Nishioka to win the ATP Citi Open final in Washington.

The 6-4 6-3 victory gave the 27-year-old Australian his second win at the event after he triumphed there in 2019 — his most recent singles title. Remarkably he did not drop serve in the entire tournament.

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Kyrgios cruises into Citi Open final | 01:17

Kyrgios is not finished in Washington either, he will back up for the men’s doubles final later on Monday morning (AEST) alongside American Jack Sock.

The Australian, who reached the Wimbledon singles final last month, is set to climb from 63rd to 37th in the ATP rankings and he shapes as a nightmare proposition for the top-ranked stars at the US Open starting later this month.

“It’s very emotional for me. To see where I was at last year to now it’s just an incredible transformation, ”said Kyrgios, who has opened up recently on his mental health battles.

“I just came out with great energy, I knew I had experience on my side today. I love this court, I’ve played so many great matches here so I’m just really really happy with it.

“I’ve been in some really dark places and just to be able to turn it around … there’s so many people that helped me get there but just myself, I’ve shown some serious strength to just persevere and continue and get through all those times and to still be able to perform.”

World number 63 Kyrgios fired 12 aces and 32 winners against four double faults and 20 unforced errors while taking 22 of 25 first-serve points to defeat Nishioka in 81 minutes.

Kyrgios improved to 4-0 against Nishioka, the most recent prior win coming in the third round of his 2019 Washington title run.

Nishioka netted a backhand to surrender a break in the opening game and Kyrgios denied the Asian southpaw’s lone break chance with a backhand winner in the sixth game, holding out to claim the first set with his seventh ace.

Kyrgios broke in the first game of the second set when Nishioka sent a forehand long and again in the final game when Nishioka netted a backhand on the Aussie’s third match point.

Nishioka, who captured his only ATP crown in 2018 at Shenzhen, hadn’t won a tour-level match since March until this week, when he upset eighth-ranked Andrey Rublev in the semi-finals. He will jump 42 spots to 54th in Monday’s world rankings.

“At the beginning of the year I had a nightmare,” Nishioka said. “I thought if I can’t make the top 50 again I will retire. Now I think maybe I can play a few more years.” Kyrgios will leap to 37th in the world rankings. He would have been 15th had world ranking points been awarded at Wimbledon.

In the women’s final, Liudmila Samsonova won her second career WTA title by beating Estonia’s Kaia Kanepi 4-6, 6-3, 6-3. Her first title for her came at last year’s German Open on Berlin grass.

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Categories
Australia

Lismore floods buyback scheme details revealed by Northern Rivers Reconstruction Corporation chief executive David Witherdin

The government set up the Northern Rivers Reconstruction Corporation in April to lead the reconstruction effort in the Northern Rivers. It is charged with co-ordinating the planning, rebuilding and construction work of essential services, infrastructure and housing.

Witherdin said his team was still finalizing the details of the buy-back scheme, and the number of houses it would target, but senior government ministers had been briefed on it.

The corporation had also been working closely with the federal government, which is expected to co-fund the reconstruction plans.

The buy-back scheme would be voluntary, Witherdin said, and based on the pre-flood value of properties. Other affected home-owners would be offered funding to rebuild their properties using more flood-resilient materials and design, or to raise their homes.

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According to the Lismore City Local Flood Plan, only 60 per cent of houses in the flood-prone areas of Lismore are raised above the one-in-100-year flood level, although this year’s flood was more than two meters higher than that.

Hundreds of people had to be rescued from their rooftops and four people died on February 28, when the Wilsons River reached 14.4 meters – a height which was not predicted in flood bulletins until it was too late for people to leave.

“Even once we’ve worked through this program, after a number of years, I think it’s highly likely people will choose to remain [in the flood-prone area],” Witherdin said, adding the government had a responsibility to warn those people of any impending flood and evacuate them early.

“We will be able to install early warning systems that really do give that community some peace of mind in the future.”

Residents living in and moving into flood-prone areas would also be provided with better information about the risks they face, and the risks they pose to rescuers if they do not evacuate during a flood.

On Saturday, community leaders said the demand for a buy-back scheme was likely to be high, and the challenge would be meeting that demand.

“Lots of people are ready to go,” Resilient Lismore co-ordinator and local councilor Elly Bird said. “They’re just waiting to see what the government will deliver before they decide what they’ll do.”

Houses bought under the scheme would be demolished and the zoning changed on the land to prevent any future development.

Much of the flood-affected parts of Lismore are low socioeconomic areas, where housing is most affordable. Witherdin said the provision of more affordable housing in flood-free parts of the Northern Rivers would also form part of the scheme, to address those needs.

South Lismore residents Rita and Johan Spek said they were living in limbo waiting to find out if they would be able to sell their house to the government.

The February 28 flood was the first one to enter their house, which they bought 30 years ago. For the past four months, they have been living in the home’s outdoor barbecue area and sleeping in a van out the front, with their adult daughter.

“We don’t want to be here any more,” Rita said. “We definitely want the buy-back as soon as possible… [the flood] could be higher next time.“

Categories
US

DC lightning strike survivor had been fundraising for refugees

All day long, the tall, leafy tree had been a source of shade and comfort for Amber Escudero-Kontostathis.

Amid 90-some degree heat, she’d spent hours canvassing tourists in front of the White House for donations to help refugees in Ukraine, her family said. As she finished her shift on Thursday last week, a storm gathered overhead, thickening with clouds, rain and thunder.

That Thursday happened to be her 28th birthday, her family said. So while Amber waited for her husband to pick her up for a celebratory dinner, she sought shelter once again from the same tree, huddling with three others under its outstretched branches, according to her family and authorities.

Three people dead after lightning strike Thursday near White House

One was Brooks Lambertson, a young and rising bank vice president from Los Angeles. There was Donna Mueller, 75, a retired teacher, and her husband of Ella James Mueller, 76, who came from Wisconsin to Washington to celebrate their 56th wedding anniversary. And there was Amber, a young woman from California whose travels in the Middle East teaching English had kindled a desire to help those stricken by war and poverty in that region.

They were strangers brought to that precise spot on the east side of the Lafayette Square, at that precise moment for different reasons — business, vacation, a passion to help.

just before 7pm, it was at that spot—under a leafy tree about 100 feet from a statue of President Andrew Jackson — that lightning struck.

Experts would later record a strike in the area as six individual surges of electricity that hit the same point in the space of half a second. If the electricity struck the tree first, experts said, it would have sent hundreds of millions of volts coursing through it before passing into the bodies of those gathered beneath it.

“It shook the whole area,” an eyewitness later recounted. “Literally like a bomb went off, that’s how it sounded.”

the strike left all four grievously wounded. Secret Service and US Park Police — who keep the park in front of the White House under constant patrol — ran to help.

On Friday morning, police announced the elderly couple from Wisconsin had died. Later that night, the banker from Los Angeles also passed away, police said.

Amber would be the sole survivor.

What happens when lightning strikes — and how to stay safe

The lightning strike stopped Amber’s heart, said her brother Robert F. Escudero. Two nurses, who happened to be visiting the White House on vacation and saw the Secret Service running to help her, immediately started giving her CPR and managed to restore her pulse, he said.

The lightning strike left her unable to walk and caused severe burns along the left side of her body and arm, her family said. That’s the side her bag de ella was on, carrying the iPad she used to sign people up for refugee donations.

Her parents rushed to Washington from California, and her mother has documented her fight to recover on Facebook. The lightning strike left Amber struggling at first to breathe, her mother, Julie Escudero, wrote. But by Friday, nurses were able to take her off the ventilator.

The lightning also damaged her short-term memory. She was scared and confused about what happened to her. “We definitely do not want her to remember the incident right now,” her mother de ella wrote on Facebook. But every time she wakes up, her mother de ella wrote, she asks what happened to her, is she going to die and will she be able to walk? Her family de ella said one thing she has been particularly worried about is her work fundraising for refugees.

She had majored in international studies in college and traveled to Morocco and the United Arab Emirates, according to her brother and her work profile. She spent a year teaching English in Jordan and soon after began fundraising for nonprofits. She started working in Washington last year for a group called Threshold Giving and focused especially on fundraising for the International Rescue Committee, a global relief agency.

“The first thing she told me when we FaceTimed is, ‘I need to get back to work on Saturday,’” Robert Escudero said. “She’s worried about raising money for the refugee kids. She asked me ‘Who’s going to get the money for them if I’m not out there?’”

A friend started a GoFundMe page to raise money for her medical bills. So her brother de ella said he promised Amber he’d work with Threshold Giving in the coming days to also create a way for people who learn about her survival story to donate to refugees.

The one thing her family has not yet broached with her is the fate of the others who were with her that night under the tree.

“She is starting to realize there were others and she wants to know how they are doing and what she did wrong,” her mother said in a Facebook post on Sunday. “She cares so much for others, it will be hard for her.”

On Sunday, many signs of the fatal lightning strike were still visible at Lafayette Square.

A tree bore streaks of charred bark, cracks and a large gash in the main trunk where the wood remained warped like a bruise. Folks passing through Lafayette Square paused at the tree to stare at the scars.

One of them was Cal Vargas, a childhood friend of Lambertson, who died. He brought a wreath and bouquet of white flowers to lay at the base of the tree. Vargas and Lambertson had been friends since kindergarten and grew up together in Folsom, Calif., where they shared a passion for sports and the Sacramento Kings.

“He was an amazing individual,” Vargas said quietly. “He always had a smile on his face, he always looked at the bright side of things.”

Earlier on the day the lightning struck, Lambertson, 29, had arrived in Washington on a business trip from Los Angeles. He was passing time before a dinner reservation when he got caught in the storm, Vargas said.

In a phone interview, Lambertson’s father, who The Washington Post is not identifying by name to protect his privacy, said his son was “probably the best human being that I know.” He said his son’s kindness, generosity and humility “showed up in everything he did, in all his interactions with people.”

He worked at City National Bank as a vice president managing sponsorships for the company. He had done marketing for the NBA’s Los Angeles Clippers, and graduated from California Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo, according to a statement from the bank.

The elderly Wisconsin couple who also died that day were celebrating their 56th wedding anniversary, family members said.

Donna Mueller, 75, and her husband, James Mueller, 76, had been high school sweethearts before marrying. James had owned a drywall business for decades while his wife de ella worked as a teacher, according to one of their daughters-in-law, who also spoke on the condition of anonymity to protect her privacy de ella.

The couple lived in Janesville, Wis., about 70 miles west of Milwaukee, and had five grown children, ten grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. “Both would do anything for their family and friends,” relatives said in a statement.

The odds of someone being killed by lightning are extremely rare. In the past decade, only an average of 23 people in the United States have died each year.

Multiple fatalities are even more rare. Before last week’s strike, the last time three people died in a single incident was more than 18 years ago on June 27, 2004, when three people in Georgia were struck under trees at Bedford Dam State Park, said John Jensenius, a specialist at the National Lightning Safety Council.

Because lightning tends to strike tall objects, experts warn that taking shelter under a tree during a thunderstorm is highly dangerous. When a tree is hit by the electrical charge, moisture and sap in the tree easily conducts the electricity, carrying it to the ground around the tree, experts say.

“When lightning strikes a tree, the charge doesn’t penetrate deep into the ground, but rather spreads out along the ground surface,” Jensenius said. “That makes the entire area around a tree dangerous, and anyone standing under or near a tree is vulnerable.”

For that and other reasons, Amber’s survival has felt miraculous, her family said. If it hadn’t happened right in front of the White House where secret service agents are stationed. If the two nurses who revived her hadn’t been on vacation and seen what happened.

Saturday night, Amber was finally able to take a few steps on her own, her family said. She was supposed to start a master’s program in international relations this fall at Johns Hopkins University — the latest step in her work trying to help refugees and those suffering abroad.

“She’s an amazing, strong-willed person. And ella she has such a heart for others, ”her brother de ella said. “So the goal now is to get her walking again by the time classes start in a few weeks.”

Magda Jean-Louis contributed to this report.

Categories
Business

Dr Zac Turner on how microwaving food, microplastics can affect your health

Welcome to Ask Doctor Zac, a weekly column from news.com.au. This week, Dr Zac talks about microplastics and whether they can affect your health.

QUESTION: Hi Dr Zac, my new girlfriend is vegan and I thought when we first started dating she would complain about my diet choices, but it turns out what she actually gets upset about is how I store my food.

After our third date she raided my fridge and started spruiking all this nonsense about how my health and fertility is impacted by me living on takeaway food reheated in plastic containers in the microwave. She even had a go at me for drinking water from a reused water bottle – I thought I was doing good drinking two liters of water a day.

Should I believe her, or is this a red flag? Chris, 35, Sydney

ANSWER: Hi Chris, I recommend you get your eyes checked for color blindness, as this is a green flag not a red one.

Many vegans have a more comprehensive knowledge of nutrition compared to others as they have to think more about the food they eat. I recommend you take more note of what your partner tells you about food – you’ll most likely learn a thing or two. But always remember if something sounds fishy, ​​get a second opinion from your doctor.

I believe your girlfriend is referring to microplastics.

These are tiny plastics (so small you can’t see them) which are derived from petrochemicals extracted from oil and gas products. A number of these tiny plastics are toxic, and contain carcinogenic chemicals which can cause cancer. Some are even mutagenic, which means they can damage DNA.

Laboratory tests have shown microplastics can cause damage to human cells, including both allergic reactions and cell death. A few have shown a connection to infertility, however, they are not concrete.

Tiny plastics derive from plastic as it weathers and ages. Almost 400 million tonnes of plastics are produced each year. If you consider how many things in our world are packed in plastic, including food and drink, you will realize how much of a ticking bomb this could be.

Microplastics enter the body through either ingesting or inhaling, and end up in various organs. When you heat food in your plastic takeaway containers, you are potentially leaching microplastics into your meal. Not only is the food you are eating most likely nutritionally inferior, you could also be eating troublesome plastics.

Drinking from a disposable plastic bottle may also lead to chemical leaching and toxicity over time. It’s more likely if your bottle becomes heated, by putting it in the sun, as this will increase the level of microplastics being leached. I recommend you swap your single-use plastic bottle for a metal bottle or more durable plastic or smash-proof glass one.

Microplastics aren’t a conspiracy – they are prevalent in all of our lives and are nearly impossible to escape entirely. One study even discovered 90 per cent of table salt is contaminated with microplastics.

Investigating microplastics levels in Australian homes, a study found that 42 per cent of collected dust was microplastics. An easy way to minimize plastics in your home is by having hard surfaces, like polished wood floors, instead of carpet. You should also vacuum weekly to reduce dust levels in your home.

Now I need to say that the studies are not conclusive, and it has not been proven to cause harm to humans, however research is indicating that it will soon become fact.

Follow in the footsteps of your partner, I advise you to eat fresh, real food! Plant-based alternatives are generally always better for you and the environment.

Heat your food up in non-plastic containers and buy your produce with as little plastic wrapping as possible. Farmers’ markets and local fruit and veg shops are always a safer bet.

Got a question:[email protected]

Dr Zac Turner has a Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery from the University of Sydney. He is both a medical practitioner and a co-owner of telehealth service, Concierge Doctors. He was also a registered nurse and is also a qualified and experienced biomedical scientist along with being a PhD candidate in Biomedical Engineering

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Categories
Technology

Microsoft launches .NET Community Toolkit

Credit: Dreamtime

Microsoft has officially launched the .NET Community Toolkit, providing developers with a collection of helpers and APIs for .NET developers, agnostic of any UI platform.

Redmond said an updated release of the MVVM (model-view-model) Toolkit is the biggest new feature in the toolkit.

A spin-off of the Windows Community Toolkit, .NET Community Toolkit 8.0.0 was announced August 4, following a preview phase that began in January.

Included with the MVVM Toolkit are new source generators intended to greatly reduce boilerplate code for setting up an application leveraging MVVM. These generators have been rewritten to run faster than before. Writing observable properties has been simplified, C# development enhanced, and messenger APIs have been improved for MVVM applications as well.

The .NET Community Toolkit 8.0.0 also brings improvements to the diagnostics package. The toolkit can be accessed from GitHub.

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