Tag Archives: disruption

Sulfur smell Indiana: BP Whiting refinery disruption triggers unplanned flaring as NW Indiana residents report odor – WLS-TV

  1. Sulfur smell Indiana: BP Whiting refinery disruption triggers unplanned flaring as NW Indiana residents report odor WLS-TV
  2. 911 dispatchers receive ‘high volume’ of calls after unusual smell reported across NW Indiana NBC Chicago
  3. Portage police say they’ve gotten ‘hundreds’ of 911 calls about strange smell in Northwest Indiana FOX 32 Chicago
  4. Porter County Emergency Management blames storms for natural gas leak at Whiting BP refinery WSBT-TV
  5. Portage, Indiana, other officials urge residents to stop calling 911 over sulfur smell; NIPSCO investigating WLS-TV
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Strike Averted: Last Minute Agreement Saves WestJet Disruption – Simple Flying

  1. Strike Averted: Last Minute Agreement Saves WestJet Disruption Simple Flying
  2. Global National: May 19, 2023 | Full-blown WestJet strike averted as customers remain irked Global News
  3. Cranky Weekly Review Presented by Oakland International Airport: WestJet Fights off Strike, Breeze Gets Even Nicer, and More… – Cranky Flier Cranky Flier
  4. The industry needs to acknowledge significantly higher value of pilots: Flair CEO BNN Bloomberg
  5. Canadian airline WestJet, pilots reach 11th-hour deal as strike averted The Associated Press
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Pharmacological disruption of mSWI/SNF complex activity restricts SARS-CoV-2 infection – Nature.com

  1. Pharmacological disruption of mSWI/SNF complex activity restricts SARS-CoV-2 infection Nature.com
  2. Divalent siRNAs are bioavailable in the lung and efficiently block SARS-CoV-2 infection | Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences pnas.org
  3. ACE2: its diverse functions, relationship with SARS-CoV-2, and the implications for COVID-19 disease sequelae News-Medical.Net
  4. SARS-CoV-2 mRNA vaccines decouple anti-viral immunity from humoral autoimmunity Nature.com
  5. Antivirals for adult patients hospitalised with SARS-CoV-2 infection: a randomised, phase II/III, multicentre, placebo-controlled, adaptive study, with multiple arms and stages. COALITION COVID-19 BRAZIL IX – REVOLUTIOn trial The Lancet
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FAA system failure brings fresh round of disruption to U.S. air travel

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The failure of a key federal safety system Wednesday led to widespread disruptions in domestic air travel for the second time in two weeks, prompting a fresh round of scrutiny from lawmakers amid continued breakdowns in technology.

The Federal Aviation Administration said a preliminary examination traced the outage to a damaged database file, but the agency is continuing work to pinpoint the cause of the issue.

The White House and Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said they do not suspect a cyberattack or other external activity. Buttigieg said the FAA made the rare decision to shut down flight departures for about 90 minutes — a decision that wreaked havoc on the system much of the day — out of an abundance of caution.

“It’s been another challenging day for U.S. aviation,” Buttigieg told those who gathered at a transportation research conference Wednesday in Washington. Though the problems had been resolved, the nation continued to see effects “rippling through the system,” he said.

The failure of the FAA’s Notice to Air Missions system, or NOTAMs, came days after a meltdown at Southwest Airlines before Christmas that crippled flight operations, raising more questions about whether airlines and the agency that oversees them are doing enough to invest in and upgrade their technology infrastructure. Lawmakers pledged to probe the latest disruption as they begin work this year on a major package of legislation tied to FAA funding.

What is NOTAM, the FAA system that failed and led to mass delays?

The nationwide flight stoppage was the first of its kind since the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, said Michael McCormick, a former agency official.

“This is unheard of, and then the action that the FAA had to take in grounding all the flights makes it even more significant,” said McCormick, now a professor at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University.

The NOTAM system distributes warnings about potential safety hazards, such as closed runways, that an aircraft might face. Crews are required to consult the notices before taking off.

According to an FAA bulletin, the outage of the NOTAM service began at 3:28 p.m. Eastern time on Tuesday. A backup system went into effect, then the main system resumed before problems reappeared, Buttigieg said.

Shortly before 8 p.m. Tuesday, the FAA issued a bulletin saying it was activating a hotline to manage the problem, inviting airlines to join.

In the middle of the night Tuesday, “it became clear that there were still issues with the accuracy of the information that was moving through the NOTAM system,” Buttigieg said.

About 5 a.m. Wednesday, the FAA conducted a “complete reboot” of the system, Buttigieg said. That attempt at a fix was “not sufficiently validated to feel comfortable” that the issues were totally resolved, Buttigieg said.

“At that point, the move was made to institute a ground stop until FAA could completely validate not only that the NOTAMs were populating correctly, but that they were actually getting out to the aircraft,” Buttigieg said.

That rare nationwide ground stop was issued at 7:21 a.m., halting most commercial air travel in the country for about 90 minutes, although airports and airlines struggled for hours through the backlog.

President Biden, who was briefed on the failures of the FAA system, directed the Transportation Department to investigate its causes, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said Wednesday. Congress also vowed to examine such questions as it begins hearings on funding the FAA.

Your guide to surviving airport chaos

Wednesday’s issues came amid efforts to modernize the system and address other concerns that have arisen over the years. The FAA is well into a years-long effort to improve the pilot alert system, saying it has consolidated information into one place and facilitated the process for computers to ingest data.

“In short, no NOTAMs, no flight,” the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association said in a statement. “Everyone involved in this issue understands that systems and technology must be updated.”

Buttigieg said FAA safety systems constantly need to be upgraded and refreshed.

“There are a number of processes underway right now at the FAA to make sure that those systems stay up to date,” he said. “It’s been a big topic, certainly before, and since I arrived at this role.”

Sen. Maria Cantwell, (D-Wash.), chair of the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee, had previously announced plans to hold hearings into failures at Southwest Airlines that forced the carrier to cancel more than 16,000 flights between Dec. 21 and Dec. 31. Cantwell said Wednesday the committee also will review what caused the failure at the FAA.

Southwest will face congressional scrutiny as it works to make amends to customers

“We will be looking into what caused this outage and how redundancy plays a role in preventing future outages,” she said.

Rep. Rick Larsen (D-Wash.), his party’s leader on the House Transportation Committee, said he spoke with Buttigieg on Wednesday and would “continue to monitor this disruption to our air travel system until it is resolved.”

Two key Republican lawmakers were vowing to seek accountability and changes at the FAA.

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Tex.), the incoming top Republican on the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee, which oversees the FAA, said the agency’sinability to keep an important safety system up and running is completely unacceptable and just the latest example of dysfunction within the Department of Transportation.”

Rep. Sam Graves (R-Mo.), chairman of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee also vowed to hold those responsible accountable.

Robert Mann, an aviation consultant, said a key question for Congress as it works on FAA legislation this year — a process typically conducted every several years — is what the government can do to modernize its systems and handle the nation’s growing volume of air traffic. He said the FAA is too dependent on aging technology — an issue also blamed in the Southwest debacle.

“They just can’t continue to do what they’ve always done,” Mann said. “A lot of these systems are decades old, hardware and software.”

NAV CANADA, that country’s air traffic control provider, said it also had an outage affecting newly issued NOTAMs for about three hours, beginning at 10:20 a.m. Eastern time. Spokeswoman Vanessa Adams said the cause is under investigation, but they do not believe it is related to the FAA problems.

“Mitigations were in place to support continued operations,” Adams said, noting that Canada did not issue an order barring flights from taking off.

Even as U.S. flights resumed Wednesday, delays continued to reverberate throughout the system. More than 1,3o0 flights into, within or out of the U.S. were canceled, according to the flight-tracking website FlightAware, while nearly 10,000 were delayed.

American Airlines said the carrier canceled nearly 400 flights and delayed 850 flights as a result of the FAA problem.

According to a memo circulated by American Airlines’ flight operations director Wednesday, the outage meant the airline could not issue flight plans or fueling paperwork. A memo sent later in the day noted it also faced challenges in booking accommodations for crew members.

The failure of the FAA’s notification system also comes when the agency has been without a Senate-confirmed leader for nearly a year.

President Biden nominated Phillip Washington, chief executive of Denver International Airport, to run the agency after its former administrator retired last spring, partway through his five-year term. The Senate Commerce Committee did not hold a hearing or vote on Washington’s nomination last year.

He has faced scrutiny over reports of a possible connection to a Los Angeles investigation linked to that city’s transit agency, which he previously led, and questions about whether he had enough aviation experience after a career spent largely in transit.

Wednesday’s problems could also exacerbate tension between airlines and the Department of Transportation, which disputed the causes of delays and cancellations last summer amid debate over how much responsibility air traffic controllers should bear. McCormick said the outage would prompt airlines to further question the reliability of the FAA’s infrastructure.

Some industry leaders pointed to the system failure as another example of the need to modernize the agency that regulates and oversees the nation’s airspace.

“Today’s FAA catastrophic system failure is a clear sign that America’s transportation network desperately needs significant upgrades,” said Geoff Freeman, president and chief executive of the U.S. Travel Association. “Americans deserve an end-to-end travel experience that is seamless and secure.”

The problems made for a difficult start to the day for many travelers.

Don Cleary, president of Marriott Hotels of Canada, was supposed to be on a 9:30 a.m. Air Canada flight from Washington to Toronto for an afternoon of back-to-back meetings. Instead, he was working on his laptop at Reagan National Airport and checking airline apps to see whether the Air Canada flight would leave Toronto before an American flight left Upstate New York. That would signal which one was likely to arrive in and leave Washington — with him aboard — first.

As delays on his Air Canada flight grew, he had booked another ticket on American as a backup. Meanwhile, at 9:30 a.m., he kept an eye on the terminal window, watching the runway as jets began to taxi out. It was a promising sign, but he said he wouldn’t become hopeful until one of his two flights had taken off. His afternoon meetings already were rescheduled for Thursday.

“I need to get there today, but I’m fully anticipating things will continue to get delayed,” said Cleary, a Bethesda resident who flies to Canada almost weekly. “It’s a mess … This is my first trip of the year. It’s not off to a good start.”

Doug and Lynn Fuchs, both professors at Vanderbilt University, took a seat on a dormant luggage conveyor belt at National for Lynn to work on her laptop. They had just rebooked their 11:35 a.m. Southwest flight, already delayed about 15 minutes, to Nashville for 6 a.m. Thursday. They said they assumed there was a good chance their original flight would be canceled as delays mounted across the country.

“We decided to just cut our losses,” said Doug Fuchs, as they prepared to head back to their D.C. home. “We didn’t want to spend all day in the airport.”

Those whose trips were disrupted may find themselves out of luck if they seek compensation beyond a ticket refund.

Carriers said cancellations and delays tied to Wednesday’s outage could spill into Thursday, but barring any additional problems, they expect normal operations on Friday.

Unlike Southwest’s flight disruptions, which were caused in large part by a breakdown of the carrier’s software, Wednesday’s canceled and delayed flights weren’t the fault of any airline. As a result, carriers are only required to get customers to their final destination or offer a refund if they opt not to take the rebooked flight.

As the end of the ground stop approached at Baltimore-Washington International Marshall Airport, pilots began asking air traffic controllers for guidance. A pilot asked at 9:02 a.m. if the situation had been resolved, according to a feed from LiveATC.net. “No, all is not good, but we are letting some people go,” the controller replied.

A few minutes later another pilot came on the radio: “What a morning.”

Natalie B. Compton, Aaron C. Davis, Annabelle Timsit and Timothy Bella contributed to this report.

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Southwest Airlines disruption leaves customers stranded, call centers swamped

(CNN) — Last week’s winter weather travel mess is lingering like a hangover into this week — and the headaches are migraine-proportioned for Southwest Airlines and its frustrated passengers on Monday.

More than 3,200 flights within, into or out of the US had already been canceled by 2:30 p.m. ET Monday, according to flight tracking website FlightAware, while almost 5,000 flights had been delayed.

But Southwest accounts for a whopping share of those.

The Dallas-based airline has canceled more than half of its flights — more than 2,300 total flights — as 2:30 p.m. Monday, according to FlightAware.

On social media, customers are complaining about long lines to speak with representatives, problems with lost bags and excessive wait times or busy signals on the airline’s customer service telephone lines.

‘Disruptions across our network’

Customers encountered long lines at Southwest counters on Monday at Raleigh-Durham International Airport.

WRAL

In a statement to CNN, Southwest Airlines said it is “experiencing disruptions across our network as a result of (the winter storm’s) lingering effects on the totality of our operation.”

Some of the airports seeing the biggest issue are Denver, Las Vegas, Chicago Midway, Baltimore/Washington, and Dallas Love Field where Southwest operates.

Calls to Southwest’s customer service attempted Monday afternoon by CNN did not go through, so customers couldn’t even get in the queue to speak to a representative. Southwest told CNN it is “fully staffed to answer calls.”

The airline also says, “those whose flights have been canceled may request a full refund or receive a flight credit, which does not expire.”

Meanwhile, in hard-hit western New York, Buffalo International Airport said in its most recent tweet that it plans to resume passenger flights at 11 a.m. ET Tuesday.

The temperature at the airport was 18 degrees Fahrenheit around 2 p.m. ET, with light snow falling on top of the huge amounts the area has already seen.

Bad road conditions

Road travel remained treacherous in parts of the US because of extreme wintry conditions.

In New York state’s western Erie County, emergency restrictions on driving were lifted in some communities but remained in place in Buffalo, County Executive Mark Poloncarz said Monday.

“The City of Buffalo is impassable in most areas, while mains may have a lane open for emergency traffic or two, most secondaries as well as side streets have not been touched yet,” Poloncarz said.

He adding that the cleared main roads are primarily for the use of life-saving measures to open up areas around hospitals and nursing homes.

A rough past week

A winter storm that swept across the US was ill-timed for travelers who had started pushing Christmas week flying numbers back toward pre-pandemic levels.

On Christmas Day, there were 3,178 flights canceled and 6,870 flight delayed, according to FlightAware.

On Christmas Eve, there were a total of 3,487 flights canceled, according to FlightAware.

Friday was the worst day of this streak with 5,934 cancellations, while Thursday saw almost 2,700 cancellations.

This megablast of winter weather across the eastern two-thirds of the nation is forecast to slowly moderate this week.

More developments to come on this breaking news story.

CNN’s Ross Levitt, Chris Boyette and Artemis Moshtaghian contributed to this story.

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U.K. set for Christmas travel disruption amid air and rail strikes

A train makes its way through the snow in Penistone, South Yorkshire, in March 2022. Passengers face Christmas travel disruption as workers strike over pay and working conditions.

Nurphoto | Nurphoto | Getty Images

LONDON — Passengers traveling into or around the U.K. over the holiday period face significant disruption due to strikes, with the government urging people to reconsider their plans.

Airport staff working for the U.K. Border Force are due to walk out from Dec. 23 to 26, and again from Dec. 28 to New Year’s Eve.

It will impact services at the U.K.’s busiest airport, London Heathrow, as well as London Gatwick, Manchester, Birmingham, Cardiff and Glasgow. The government is set to bring in soldiers to assist at passport control and with staffing, it confirmed Thursday, as between 2,000 and 3,000 workers plan to strike.

Suella Braverman, the U.K.’s interior minister, warned there would be “undeniable, serious disruption,” and said people planning to travel abroad should “think carefully about their plans because they may well be impacted.”

The affected airports are due to see 10,072 flight arrivals, totaling more than 2 million seats, between Dec. 23 and 31, according to aviation analytics firm Cirium. One million of those are into Heathrow.

The head of the Public and Commercial Services Union, Mark Serwotka, said the government could stop the strikes by meeting their demands, which include a pay raise, job security and no cuts to redundancy terms. Serwotka said some of its members were using food banks due to low pay.

Meanwhile the RMT, the rail workers’ union, has confirmed strikes will take place on Dec. 13 to 14, Dec. 16 to 17, and from 6 p.m. on Christmas Eve until Dec. 27, as well as on some days in January. Around half of railways are due to be shut on these dates.

Rail bosses have said people should only travel if necessary and check their train operator’s network for the status of their particular journey. Travel may also be disrupted on non-strike days due to trains being in the wrong location.

Some pub and restaurant traders have said they fear a reduction in trade during what is usually the busiest time of the year as a result.

The union is calling for a pay raise in line with inflation, a guarantee of no compulsory redundancies until April 2024, and changes to working conditions, which it says currently make train travel less safe.

December is set to see a wave of strike action in the U.K., including by postal and ambulance workers.

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Circadian Rhythm Disruption Found to Be Common Among Mental Health Disorders

Summary: Circadian rhythm disruption is a psychopathological factor shared by a broad range of mental illnesses.

Source: UC Irvine

Anxiety, autism, schizophrenia and Tourette syndrome each have their own distinguishing characteristics, but one factor bridging these and most other mental disorders is circadian rhythm disruption, according to a team of neuroscience, pharmaceutical sciences and computer science researchers at the University of California, Irvine.

In an article published recently in the Nature journal Translational Psychiatry, the scientists hypothesize that CRD is a psychopathology factor shared by a broad range of mental illnesses and that research into its molecular foundation could be key to unlocking better therapies and treatments.

“Circadian rhythms play a fundamental role in all biological systems at all scales, from molecules to populations,” said senior author Pierre Baldi, UCI Distinguished Professor of computer science. “Our analysis found that circadian rhythm disruption is a factor that broadly overlaps the entire spectrum of mental health disorders.”

Lead author Amal Alachkar, a neuroscientist and professor of teaching in UCI’s Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, noted the challenges of testing the team’s hypothesis at the molecular level but said the researchers found ample evidence of the connection by thoroughly examining peer-reviewed literature on the most prevalent mental health disorders.

“The telltale sign of circadian rhythm disruption – a problem with sleep – was present in each disorder,” Alachkar said.

“While our focus was on widely known conditions including autism, ADHD and bipolar disorder, we argue that the CRD psychopathology factor hypothesis can be generalized to other mental health issues, such as obsessive-compulsive disorder, anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, food addiction and Parkinson’s disease.”

Circadian rhythms regulate our bodies’ physiological activity and biological processes during each solar day. Synchronized to a 24-hour light/dark cycle, circadian rhythms influence when we normally need to sleep and when we’re awake.

They also manage other functions such as hormone production and release, body temperature maintenance and consolidation of memories. Effective, nondisrupted operation of this natural timekeeping system is necessary for the survival of all living organisms, according to the paper’s authors.

Circadian rhythms are intrinsically sensitive to light/dark cues, so they can be easily disrupted by light exposure at night, and the level of disruption appears to be sex-dependent and changes with age. One example is a hormonal response to CRD felt by pregnant women; both the mother and the fetus can experience clinical effects from CRD and chronic stress.

“An interesting issue that we explored is the interplay of circadian rhythms and mental disorders with sex,” said Baldi, director of UCI’s Institute for Genomics and Bioinformatics. “For instance, Tourette syndrome is present primarily in males, and Alzheimer’s disease is more common in females by a ratio of roughly two-thirds to one-third.”

Age also is an important factor, according to scientists, as CRD can affect neurodevelopment in early life in addition to leading to the onset of aging-related mental disorders among the elderly.

Baldi said an important unresolved issue centers on the causal relationship between CRD and mental health disorders: Is CRD a key player in the origin and onset of these maladies or a self-reinforcing symptom in the progression of disease?

To answer this and other questions, the UCI-led team suggests an examination of CRD at the molecular level using transcriptomic (gene expression) and metabolomic technologies in mouse models.

Circadian rhythms regulate our bodies’ physiological activity and biological processes during each solar day. Image is in the public domain

“This will be a high-throughput process with researchers acquiring samples from healthy and diseased subjects every few hours along the circadian cycle,” Baldi said.

“This approach can be applied with limitations in humans, since only serum samples can really be used, but it could be applied on a large scale in animal models, particularly mice, by sampling tissues from different brain areas and different organs, in addition to serum. These are extensive, painstaking experiments that could benefit from having a consortium of laboratories.”

He added that if the experiments were conducted in a systematic way with respect to age, sex and brain areas to investigate circadian molecular rhythmicity before and during disease progression, it would help the mental health research community identify potential biomarkers, causal relationships, and novel therapeutic targets and avenues.

This project involved scientists from UCI’s Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Center for the Neurobiology of Learning and Memory, Department of Computer Science, Department of Neurobiology and Behavior, and Institute for Genomics and Bioinformatics; as well as UCLA’s Oppenheimer Center for Neurobiology of Stress and Resilience and Goodman-Luskin Microbiome Center.

Funding: The National Institutes of Health provided financial support.

See also

About this mental health research news

Author: Brian Bell
Source: UC Irvine
Contact: Brian Bell – UC Irvine
Image: The image is in the public domain

Original Research: Open access.
“The hidden link between circadian entropy and mental health disorders” by Pierre Baldi et al. Translational Psychiatry


Abstract

The hidden link between circadian entropy and mental health disorders

The high overlapping nature of various features across multiple mental health disorders suggests the existence of common psychopathology factor(s) (p-factors) that mediate similar phenotypic presentations across distinct but relatable disorders.

In this perspective, we argue that circadian rhythm disruption (CRD) is a common underlying p-factor that bridges across mental health disorders within their age and sex contexts.

We present and analyze evidence from the literature for the critical roles circadian rhythmicity plays in regulating mental, emotional, and behavioral functions throughout the lifespan.

A review of the literature shows that coarse CRD, such as sleep disruption, is prevalent in all mental health disorders at the level of etiological and pathophysiological mechanisms and clinical phenotypical manifestations.

Finally, we discuss the subtle interplay of CRD with sex in relation to these disorders across different stages of life.

Our perspective highlights the need to shift investigations towards molecular levels, for instance, by using spatiotemporal circadian “omic” studies in animal models to identify the complex and causal relationships between CRD and mental health disorders.

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Solar storm warning: Air traffic facing disruption as huge sunspot turns to face Earth | Science | News

Experts have warned that a massive solar spot on the far side of the Sun is facing us this weekend, which could result in a potential geomagnetic storm that disrupts satellites, and even causes chaos in airline navigation systems. These sunspots as they are known, appear darker than their surrounding on the surface of the Sun, and can stretch for hundreds of millions of miles.

Sunspots are a result of magnetic disruptions in the photosphere — the lowest layer of the sun’s atmosphere — with these disturbances exposing the cooler layers of the star underneath.

According to experts at Spaceweather.com, the sunspot is “so big it is changing the way the sun vibrates.”

If the Sun’s darkened region lashes out by releasing a solar flare towards Earth, it could affect the Earth’s magnetic field, and cause disruptions in GPS and communication satellites that orbit close to the planet, as well as affect airplane navigation systems.

The US-based National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Space Weather Prediction Center predicted that over the weekend, the geomagnetic field around Earth would be unsettled.

This prediction suggests that regions in the higher northern latitudes could see dazzling auroras, although it is unclear whether it will turn into a full-blown solar storm. 

While the current sunspot was on the far side of the Sun, scientists were able to track it by studying how to affected the Star’s vibrations

Speaking to Live Science, Dean Pesnell, project scientist of NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) said: “The Sun continually vibrates because of convection bubbles hitting the surface.”

The temperature differences inside the Sun cause hot and cool bubbles to continually rise and fall, which moves energy and causes vibrations that can be detected by solar observatories like NASA’s SDO. 

READ MORE: Solar storm horror: Blast from Sun threatens power grid failure

Solar flares are triggered by a process called “magnetic reconnection”, in which the geometry of the magnetic field in the Sun’s plasma is altered.

These flares could affect the earth by heating up clouds of electrically charged particles in the upper atmosphere of the Sun to extremely high temperatures, unleashing a mass of plasma coronal mass ejections (CMEs),

Mr Pesnell noted it is likely that the Earth sees solar flares heading towards it, and there could be some CMEs.

The NASA expert noted: “Solar flares and CMEs are the major way solar activity affects the Earth.

“From my work, higher levels of solar activity mean increased drag on satellites orbiting close to the Earth — and satellite operators will lose income if that drag de-orbits a working satellite.”



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UK launches aviation charter to address airport disruption

LONDON, July 17 (Reuters) – The British government launched an “Aviation Passenger Charter” on Sunday to help passengers know their rights if they are faced with problems at airports after the widespread disruption seen this year.

Long queues and cancelled flights caused by staff shortages have caused chaos at times, prompting airlines to cut back their schedules as the industry struggles to keep up with a surge in demand after the COVID-19 pandemic.

The new charter will help passengers know what to do if they are confronted by cancellations, delays or missing baggage, the government said, with guidance on how to complain if they feel they have been treated unfairly.

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“Passengers deserve reliable services, and to be properly compensated if things don’t go to plan, and the chaotic scenes we’ve seen at airports are unacceptable,” transport minister Grant Shapps said.

“The new charter will help to give UK passengers peace of mind as they enjoy the renewed freedom to travel, whether for holidays, business or to visit loved ones.”

Last month, the government published a 22-point support plan to avoid further disruption, including telling airlines to run “realistic” summer schedules and promising to speed up security checks. It said these were now being processed in “record time”.

In a sign of the problems, London’s Heathrow Airport this week asked airlines to stop selling tickets for summer departures and capped the number of passengers flying from Britain’s busiest hub at 100,000 a day. read more

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Reporting by Michael Holden; Editing by Nick Macfie

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Antibiotics Can Lead to Life-Threatening Fungal Infection Because of Disruption to the Gut’s Immune System

Hospital patients that are prescribed antibiotics are more likely to get fungal infections because of disruption to the immune system in the gut. Immune-boosting drugs could reduce the health risks from complex infections.

Patients prescribed antibiotics in the hospital are more likely to get fungal infections because of disruption to the immune system in the gut.

Using immune-boosting drugs alongside the antibiotics could reduce the health risks from these complex infections, according to a new study from the

Candidiasis is a fungal infection caused by a yeast (a type of fungus) called Candida. Some species of Candida can cause infection in people; the most common is Candida albicans. Candida normally lives on the skin and in places on the body, such as the mouth, throat, gut, and vagina, without causing any problems. Candida can cause infections if it grows out of control or if it enters deep into the body (for example, the bloodstream or internal organs like the kidney, heart, or brain).

A team in the University’s Institute of Immunology and Immunotherapy, in conjunction with researchers at the National Institutes of Health, discovered that antibiotics disrupt the immune system in the intestines, meaning that fungal infections were poorly controlled in that area. Unexpectedly, the team also found that where fungal infections developed, gut bacteria were also able to escape, leading to the additional risk of bacterial infection.

The study, published in Cell Host and Microbe, demonstrates the potential for immune-boosting drugs, but the researchers also say their work also highlights how antibiotics can have additional effects on our bodies that affect how we fight infection and disease. This in turn underscores the importance of careful stewardship of available antibiotics.

Lead author Dr. Rebecca Drummond said: “We knew that antibiotics make fungal infections worse, but the discovery that bacterial co-infections can also develop through these interactions in the gut was surprising. These factors can add up to a complicated clinical situation – and by understanding these underlying causes, doctors will be better able to treat these patients effectively.”

In the study, the team used mice treated with a broad-spectrum antibiotic cocktail and then infected these animals with Candida albicans, the most common fungus that causes invasive candidiasis in humans. They found that although infected mice had increased mortality, this was caused by infection in the intestine, rather than in the kidneys or other organs.

“These factors can add up to a complicated clinical situation – and by understanding these underlying causes, doctors will be better able to treat these patients effectively.”

Dr. Rebecca Drummond, Institute of Immunology and Immunotherapy

In a further step, the team pinpointed what parts of the immune system were missing from the gut after antibiotic treatment, and then added these back into the mice using immune-boosting drugs similar to those used in humans. They found this approach helped reduce the severity of the fungal infection.

The researchers followed up the experiment by studying hospital records, where they were able to show that similar co-infections might occur in humans after they have been treated with antibiotics.

“These findings demonstrate the possible consequences of using antibiotics in patients who are at risk of developing fungal infections,” added Dr Drummond. “If we limit or change how we prescribe antibiotics we can help reduce the number of people who become very ill from these additional infections – as well as tackling the huge and growing problem of antibiotic resistance.”

Reference: “Long-term antibiotic exposure promotes mortality after systemic fungal infection by driving lymphocyte dysfunction and systemic escape of commensal bacteria” by Rebecca A. Drummond, Jigar V. Desai, Emily E. Ricotta, Muthulekha Swamydas, Clay Deming, Sean Conlan, Mariam Quinones, Veronika Matei-Rascu, Lozan Sherif, David Lecky, Chyi-Chia R. Lee, Nathaniel M. Green, Nicholas Collins, Adrian M. Zelazny, D. Rebecca Prevots, David Bending, David Withers, Yasmine Belkaid, Julia A. Segre and Michail S. Lionakis, 13 May 2022, Cell Host & Microbe.
DOI: 10.1016/j.chom.2022.04.013



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