Wednesday, November 01, 2023

BUSTING ANOTHER COVID MYTH

COVID vaccination in female, male partners does not increase risk of miscarriage


The new study—which is the first to evaluate prospectively the relation between preconception COVID-19 vaccination in both partners and miscarriage—actually found a slightly lower risk of miscarriage among vaccinated partners trying to conceive.

Peer-Reviewed Publication

BOSTON UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH





Multiple studies have shown that the COVID-19 vaccines do not lead to infertility or pregnancy complications such as miscarriage, but many people are still wary of adverse effects from the vaccine on pregnancy.

A new study led by Boston University School of Public Health (BUSPH) researchers now provides deeper insight into the safety of COVID-19 vaccines for people planning to become pregnant.

Published in the journal Human Reproduction, the study found no increased risk of early or late miscarriage as a result of male or female partners getting a COVID-19 vaccine prior to conceiving.

The study is the first to evaluate the risk of early miscarriage (less than eight weeks’ gestation) following preconception COVID-19 vaccination, as well as the first to evaluate male vaccination and miscarriage.

The researchers hope these results provide useful information for individuals planning to become pregnant, as well as their healthcare providers.

“These findings should be replicated in other populations, but are reassuring for couples who are planning pregnancy,” says lead author Jennifer Yland, an epidemiology PhD student at BUSPH at the time of the study.

For the study, Yland and colleagues analyzed survey data on COVID-19 vaccination and miscarriage among female and male participants in the BUSPH-based Pregnancy Study Online (PRESTO), an ongoing National Institutes of Health-funded study that enrolls women trying to conceive, and follows them from preconception through six months after delivery. Participants in this new analysis included 1,815 female individuals in the US and Canada who were followed in the study from December 2020 through November 2022. They were observed from their first positive pregnancy test until a miscarriage or other event (such as induced abortion, ectopic pregnancy, or 20 weeks’ gestation)—whichever occurred first.

Among the female participants, 75 percent had received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine by the time they became pregnant. Almost a quarter of the pregnancies resulted in miscarriage, and 75 percent of these miscarriages occurred prior to 8 weeks’ gestation, but there was no increased risk.

Risk of miscarriage was 26.6 percent among unvaccinated female participants, 23.9 percent among female participants who had received one dose of the vaccine before conception, 24.5 percent among those who completed a full primary series before conception, 22.1 percent among those who completed the vaccine series three months before conception, and 20.1 percent among those who received only one dose of a two-dose vaccine before conception.

“The rate of miscarriage among vaccinated individuals was not only comparable with that of PRESTO participants who conceived before the pandemic, but our data indicated a slightly lower risk of miscarriage among vaccinated individuals compared to unvaccinated individuals,” Yland says.

Federal health officials continue to recommend COVID-19 vaccination to individuals planning to conceive, and stress that the benefits of receiving a COVID-19 vaccine outweigh potential risks of vaccination during preconception or pregnancy.

The study’s senior author is Lauren Wise, professor of epidemiology at BUSPH.

**

About Boston University School of Public Health

Founded in 1976, Boston University School of Public Health is one of the top ten ranked schools of public health in the world. It offers master's- and doctoral-level education in public health. The faculty in six departments conduct policy-changing public health research around the world, with the mission of improving the health of populations—especially the disadvantaged, underserved, and vulnerable—locally and globally.

 

Virtual cognitively enhanced tai chi program improves cognition and executive function in older adults with mild cognitive impairment


Peer-Reviewed Publication

AMERICAN COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS






Below please find summaries of new articles that will be published in the next issue of Annals of Internal Medicine. The summaries are not intended to substitute for the full articles as a source of information. This information is under strict embargo and by taking it into possession, media representatives are committing to the terms of the embargo not only on their own behalf, but also on behalf of the organization they represent.

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1. Virtual cognitively enhanced tai chi program improves cognition and executive function in older adults with mild cognitive impairment  

Abstracthttps://www.acpjournals.org/doi/10.7326/M23-1603   

URL goes live when the embargo lifts  

A study of more than 300 older adults experiencing mild cognitive impairment or self-reported memory concerns found that cognitively enriched tai ji quan, also known as tai chi, was superior to standard tai ji quan or stretching for improving global cognition and reducing walking interference associated with dual tasking. The authors note that the virtual, home-based exercise program also had high fidelity and adherence, suggesting that it could be a feasible, acceptable exercise-based therapy for older adults concerned about cognitive impairment. The findings are published in Annals of Internal Medicine.  

 

Mild cognitive impairment is characterized by decline in functional cognition and affects 16 to 20 percent of people aged older than 65 years. The condition can cause memory and thinking problems and impair dual-task performance and, consequently, interfere with complex tasks of daily living. Both cognitive decline and impaired dual-task performance are associated with a higher risk for falls, increased health care costs, and increased mortality. Current clinical guidelines recommend exercise to preserve cognitive function and mitigate decline in older adults, but the effects of cognitively enhanced tai chi are not fully understood. 

 

Researchers from Oregon Research Institute randomly assigned 318 adults with self-reported memory decline and a Clinical Dementia Rating (CDR) global score of 0.5 or lower at baseline to engage in cognitively enhanced tai ji quan, standard tai ji quan, or stretching 1 hour twice weekly for 24 weeks via videoconferencing to compare the effectiveness of the interventions for improving global cognition and reducing dual-task walking costs. The authors found that cognitively enhanced tai ji quan significantly improved global cognition and lowered cognitive costs associated with dual-task walking at 24 weeks compared with standard tai ji quan or stretching. Favorable improvements were also seen in cognition and function, executive function, and working memory compared with the other two interventions and the effects were sustained at 48 weeks. The intervention was safe, with few mild adverse events reported.  

 

Media contacts: For an embargoed PDF, please contact Angela Collom at acollom@acponline.org. To speak with an author from the study, please contact Dr. Peter Harmer at pharmer@willamette.edu.

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2. New ACP position paper addresses the ethical concepts related to health as a human right 

Abstract: https://www.acpjournals.org/doi/10.7326/M23-1900

Editorial : https://www.acpjournals.org/doi/10.7326/M23-2606   
URL goes live when the embargo lifts 
The American College of Physicians (ACP) today issued a new position paper addressing health as a human right and examining the intersection of human rights, ethical obligations, and health reform in recognizing health as a human right. The position paper is published in Annals of Internal Medicine.

 

The concept of health as a human right is complex. Rights, human rights, and ethical obligations are not synonymous. ACP has longstanding policy on the ethical responsibility of physicians to provide care for all and maintain the patient-physician relationship as central to care; the ethical obligation of society to provide equitable and universal access to appropriate health care; and the continuing need for health reform in the United States to increase access to care. By recognizing health as a human right and supporting the patient–physician relationship and health systems that promote access to care, the United States can move closer to respecting, protecting, and fulfilling for all the opportunity for health. 

 

Developed by ACP’s Ethics, Professionalism and Human Rights Committee, ACP’s positions state the following:  

  • ACP views health as a human right based in the intrinsic dignity and equality of all patients.  
  • ACP recognizes that implementing health as a human right requires ethical and evidence-based medical care but also, the consideration of social determinants of health and states that health is more than health services, providing a benchmark for health equity. 
  • ACP understands that health as a human right can inform the ethical design, implementation, and evaluation of health care delivery. Viewing health care as human right does not directly imply a particular health system design but can be translated to practical actions and accountability measures to assess health care performance striving for the well-being of individuals and communities.  
  • ACP believes that health as a human right aligns with – but does not fully encompass – the ethical obligations of physicians, the medical profession, and a just society and stresses the urgency and importance of health as part of a physician’s commitment to the best in patient interests, thus empowering them to make choices in pursuing their health.    

 

An accompanying editorial, “ACP and the Human Right to Health” is published with the paper.

 

Media contacts: For an embargoed PDF, please contact Angela Collom at acollom@acponline.org. To speak with someone from ACP, please contact Andy Hachadorian at ahachadorian@acponline.org.

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3. Teamwork interventions may have a positive effect on hospital climate for nurses but do not improve patient outcomes 

Abstract: https://www.acpjournals.org/doi/10.7326/M23-0953  

URL goes live when the embargo lifts  
A pragmatic controlled trial found interventions to redesign care for hospitalized medical patients helped to improve the perceived level of teamwork from nurses' perspectives but did not seem to affect patient outcomes. According to the authors, health care leaders should consider these findings in the context of their improvement priorities before implementing similar interventions. The study is published in Annals of Internal Medicine.  

 

Medically challenging patients require care from multiple teams across several professions in one hospital. Teams providing care to hospitalized medical patients are large, team membership changes continually, and physicians often care for patients across multiple units simultaneously. A growing body of research has evaluated individual interventions to address these challenges by redesigning aspects of the care delivery system. The interventions seem to improve interprofessional teamwork, but the evidence that patient outcomes are improved is unclear.  

 

Researchers from Northwestern University studied medical units at 4 U.S. hospitals to evaluate the effect of combined interventions to redesign hospital care delivery on teamwork and patient outcomes. Each hospital selected one unit for implementation of interventions and a second to serve as a control. Interventions included unit-based physician teams, unit nurse-physician co-leadership, enhanced interprofessional rounds, unit-level performance reports, and patient engagement activities. After implementation of the complementary interventions to redesign care, nurses gave higher ratings to their teamwork climate score. While the authors hypothesized that greater teamwork and interprofessional communication would improve patient outcomes, they found that adverse events, length of stay, 30-day readmissions, and reported patient experience did not improve. 

  

Media contacts: For an embargoed PDF, please contact Angela Collom at acollom@acponline.org. To speak with the corresponding author Kevin J. O’Leary, MD, MS, please contact Kevin.OLeary@nm.org.

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4. Nirmatrelvir-ritonavir not effective for reducing most post-COVID-19 conditions 

Abstract: https://www.acpjournals.org/doi/10.7326/M23-1394   
URL goes live when the embargo lifts  
A trial emulation study of veterans with COVID-19 found that the use of the antiviral nirmatrelvir–ritonavir was not effective for reducing the risk for many post-COVID-19 conditions, including cardiac, pulmonary, renal, gastrointestinal, neurologic, mental health, musculoskeletal, or endocrine symptoms. Nirmatrelvir–ritonavir was associated only with a reduced risk for combined thromboembolic events. The study is published in Annals of Internal Medicine.  

 

A study from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention suggested that 1 in 5 COVID-19 survivors aged 18 to 64 years and 1 in 4 survivors aged 65 years or older experienced an incident condition that was potentially attributable to previous COVID-19 infection. Nirmatrelvir–ritonavir is often recommended to nonhospitalized persons with symptomatic COVID-19 who are at high risk for severe COVID-19. However, its ability to reduce risk for post-COVID-19 conditions is unknown.  

 

Researchers from the Veterans Administration Puget Sound Healthcare System evaluated 9,593 nonhospitalized patients treated with nirmatrelvir-ritonavir and their matched untreated cohorts for 31 PCCs to measure the effectiveness of outpatient treatment of COVID-19 with nirmatrelvir–ritonavir in preventing PCCs. No differences were observed between the two groups except for a lower combined risk for venous thromboembolism and pulmonary embolism. According to the authors, their results suggest that considerations about PCCs may not be an important factor in COVID-19 treatment decisions. 

 

Media contacts: For an embargoed PDF, please contact Angela Collom at acollom@acponline.org. To speak with the corresponding author, George N. Ioannou, BMBCh, MS, please contact George.Ioannou@va.gov.

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Australasia’s hidden pollination crisis could threaten biodiversity and food security


Peer-Reviewed Publication

MACQUARIE UNIVERSITY



Australasia has likely overlooked a pollination crisis, according to new research published today in the journal Ecology and Evolution. The research, led by Macquarie University, also underscores a pressing need for intervention to avoid biodiversity loss and long-term food insecurity in the region.

The authors analysed thousands of research papers on human-induced pollinator decline globally, and found despite only a tiny portion mentioning Australasia, the causes of pollinator decline in the northern hemisphere were mirrored in this region.

Research in Europe and North America finds threats that include loss of natural habitat, climate change, pesticide use, pathogen spread, and introduced species all contribute to population decline in animals (including birds and insects) that act as pollinators and in the plants they pollinate.

“At first glance it seems Australasia has dodged a bullet and missed the so-called insect apocalypse and other declines in pollinators,” says lead author, Honorary Professor Graham Pyke, from Macquarie University’s School of Natural Sciences.

But despite little research into pollinator shortages in Australasia, Professor Pyke’s team has found serious environmental threats to local pollinators that suggests Australasia’s own pollination crisis has gone largely unnoticed.

“The same environmental threats to plants and their pollinators are happening in this region – but we haven’t been monitoring their impact,” he says.

A pollination crisis is the decline in abundance, including to the point of extinction, of animals that act as pollinators and of the plants they pollinate.

“This is not a trivial issue,” says Professor Pyke. “In Australia, we estimate 15,000 animal species act as plant pollinators. Declines in these pollinator species will cascade through to the estimated 20,000 species of flowering plants in Australia that rely on or benefit from animal pollination to reproduce.

“This includes many food plants such as most fruits and many vegetables, ranging from tomatoes and beans to coffee, strawberries, canola and even cacao – essential for chocolate, which rely partially or totally on animal pollination.”

Professor Pyke says the collection of detailed taxonomic and other research data on Australasian flora and fauna is required to better understand the region’s position and plan appropriate interventions.

Study co-author Dr Kit Prendergast, adjunct researcher at Curtin University, says that neglecting to conserve local indigenous pollinators exacerbates the pollination crisis.

The introduced European honeybee has spread throughout Australia, playing a key role in pollination of some crops, but competes with native bees and other pollinators and can disrupt pollination systems.

“There are currently 1660 native bee species which are described, and hundreds more that remain undescribed. The investment into these bees is vastly overshadowed by the investment into the introduced honeybee,” Dr Prendergast says.

Study co-author Associate Professor Zong-Xin Ren, from Kunming Institute of Botany at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, plans to extend the study to include China and other parts of Asia.

The authors say that the region needs to step up its game in monitoring and improving conditions for pollinators to prevent widespread impact on food security.

“Neglecting the pollination crisis in Australasia could reverberate globally, and even jeopardise biodiversity and food supply,” says Professor Pyke.

 

END

 

 

 

Breaking glass ceilings instead of feet


New book unveils the glamorous and dark sides of modernity in earth 20th Century Asia


Book Announcement

WORLD SCIENTIFIC

As Equals: The Oei Women of Java 

IMAGE: 

COVER OF "AS EQUALS: THE OEI WOMEN OF JAVA"

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CREDIT: WORLD SCIENTIFIC



In a time when bound feet, arranged marriages, and subservience were prevalent, Hui-lan, Ida, and Lucy forged a path that broke free from cultural stereotypes. They skilfully flew airplanes, managed Asia's most opulent estates, and charmed the Western world with their impeccable sense of style and sophistication. Their courage and determination not only shattered stereotypes but also paved the way for countless others to follow in their footsteps.

Daryl Yeap, a celebrated author and historian, invites readers on a captivating journey into the lives of three remarkable women—Hui-lan, Ida, and Lucy—in her upcoming book, As Equals: The Oei Women of Java. This compelling narrative sheds light on their extraordinary lives as daughters and the wife of Oei Tiong-ham, Asia's wealthiest magnate at the cusp of the 20th century. These women soared to unprecedented heights, defying societal norms and expectations of the era. They not only challenged traditional gender roles but also left an indelible mark on the history of Asia. Written in a distinct style, the book is revealing, holding surprises even for those familiar with their stories.

Daryl Yeap's distinct writing style provides an in-depth look into the lives of these extraordinary women. "As Equals" is a narrative that is both revealing and surprising, offering fresh insights even to those familiar with their stories. Through meticulous research and engaging storytelling, Yeap brings to life the glamour and darkness of modernity in early 20th century Asia.

As Equals: The Oei Women of Java promises to be a riveting addition to the literary landscape, offering a fresh perspective on the lives of three exceptional women who defied the odds and transformed the course of history. Prepare to be inspired and enlightened by this engaging and thought-provoking narrative.

Print editions of As Equals: The Oei Women of Java are available in paperback and hardcover editions. Electronic formats are also available on leading eBook platforms. To order or find out more about the book, visit http://www.worldscientific.com/worldscibooks/10.1142/13489.

###

About the Author

Daryl Yeap is the author of As Equals: The Oei Women of Java. For the most part of her career, she has worked in the finance industry as a banking analyst for various financial institutions before joining her family company. Her first book, The King's Chinese, tells the story of the Straits British Chinese immigrants, told through the life of her great-grandfather, Yeap Chor Ee. She now spends her spare time as an independent researcher.

About World Scientific Publishing Co.

World Scientific Publishing is a leading international independent publisher of books and journals for the scholarly, research and professional communities. World Scientific collaborates with prestigious organisations like the Nobel Foundation and US National Academies Press to bring high quality academic and professional content to researchers and academics worldwide. The company publishes about 600 books and over 170 journals in various fields annually. To find out more about World Scientific, please visit www.worldscientific.com.

For more information, contact WSPC Communications at communications@wspc.com.

 

NYU Abu Dhabi researchers reveal how common desert shrub efficiently harvests water from the air


New understanding of this unique mechanism could inform new, sustainable approaches for water collection


Peer-Reviewed Publication

NEW YORK UNIVERSITY

Figure 1 

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TAMARIX APHYLLA, OR ATHEL TAMARISK, IS A HALOPHYTIC DESERT SHRUB, MEANING IT CAN SURVIVE IN HYPERSALINE CONDITIONS.

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CREDIT: POST-DOCTORAL ASSOCIATE MARIEH AL-HANDAWI, NYU ABU DHABI




Abu Dhabi, UAE, October 2023: A team of scientists, led by Post-Doctoral Associate Marieh Al-Handawi and Professor of Chemistry Panče Naumov from NYU Abu Dhabi’s Smart Materials Lab and NYU Abu Dhabi Institute’s Center for Smart Engineering Materials (CSEM) has revealed the mechanism a desert plant native to the United Arab Emirates uses to capture moisture from the desert air in order to survive. The identification of this unique mechanism, in which the plant excretes salts to extract and condense water onto the surface of its leaves, has the potential to inspire the development of new technologies, and improve existing ones such as cloud seeding, to harness atmospheric water resources.

Tamarix aphylla, or athel tamarisk, is a halophytic desert shrub, meaning it can survive in hypersaline conditions. Over time, the plant has evolved to take full advantage of the prevalent humidity and fog occurrences in the UAE. Many plants and animals that inhabit arid regions have developed water-harvesting mechanisms and morphophysiological traits which have given them the ability to utilize abundant, untapped sources of water such as fog and dew. The fundamental principles governing this natural water collection serve as an inspiration for emerging water-collection technologies, which are developed to maximize the efficiency of the existing methods for harvesting aerial humidity.

In the paper titled Harvesting of Aerial Humidity with Natural Hygroscopic Salt Excretions published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, the researchers present their exploration of the physicochemical aspects of salt release and water collection mechanisms by Tamarix aphylla that has allowed it to thrive in hypersaline sands.

The plant absorbs saline water from the soil through its roots, filters out the salt, and expels the concentrated salt solution onto the outer surface of its leaves. The researchers found that as the salt solution undergoes evaporation, it transforms into a hygroscopic crystalline mixture composed of at least ten different minerals. It was discovered that some of these salt crystals have the ability to attract moisture from the air even when the humidity levels are reasonably low (~55% relative humidity). This moisture condenses onto the surface of the plant's leaves and is then absorbed.

“Our findings not only reveal a unique, natural complex mechanism for water utilization, they also open prospects for designing environmentally benign formulations based on a biogenic salt mixture that could be used for efficient harvesting of aerial water or cloud seeding at low humidity,” said lead author Al-Handawi. “This holds the promise of revolutionizing cloud seeding practices by rendering them more effective and environmentally friendly, while also aligning with our responsibility to use the planet's scarce water resources wisely.”

The global scarcity of freshwater has stimulated research into alternative water-harvesting technologies to supplement the existing conventional resources in water-stressed locations. Within a broader context, this natural mechanism developed by the research team for harvesting humidity using environmentally benign salts as moisture adsorbents could provide a bioinspired approach that complements the currently available water collection or cloud-seeding technologies.

This research is being carried out in the same period that NYUAD is chairing the Universities Climate Network (UCN). Comprising UAE-based universities and higher education institutions, the UCN collaborates on facilitating dialogues, workshops, public events, policy briefs, and youth participation in the lead up to and beyond COP28.

# # #

About NYU Abu Dhabi

www.nyuad.nyu.edu
NYU Abu Dhabi is the first comprehensive liberal arts and research campus in the Middle East to be operated abroad by a major American research university. NYU Abu Dhabi has integrated a highly selective program with majors in the sciences, engineering, social sciences, arts, and humanities with a world center for advanced research. Its campus enables students to succeed in an increasingly interdependent world, and to advance cooperation and progress on humanity’s shared challenges. NYU Abu Dhabi’s high-achieving students have come from some 125 countries and speak over 100 languages. Together, NYU's campuses in New York, Abu Dhabi, and Shanghai form the backbone of a unique global university, giving faculty and students opportunities to experience varied learning environments and immersion in other cultures at one or more of the numerous study-abroad sites NYU maintains on six continents. 

 POSTMODERN MESMERISM

First-ever wireless device developed to make magnetism appear in non-magnetic materials


Peer-Reviewed Publication

UNIVERSITAT AUTONOMA DE BARCELONA


Researchers at the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (UAB) and ICMAB have succeeded in bringing wireless technology to the fundamental level of magnetic devices. The emergence and control of magnetic properties in cobalt nitride layers (initially non-magnetic) by voltage, without connecting the sample to electrical wiring, published in Nature Communications, represents a paradigm shift that can facilitate the creation of magnetic nanorobots for biomedicine and computing systems where basic information management processes do not require wiring.

Electronic devices rely on manipulating the electrical and magnetic properties of components, whether for computing or storing information, among other processes. Controlling magnetism using voltage instead of electric currents has become a very important control method to improve energy efficiency in many devices, since currents heat up circuits. In recent years, much research has been carried out to implement protocols for applying voltages to carry out this control, but always through electrical connections directly on the materials.

A research team formed by members of the UAB Department of Physics and ICMAB, with the collaboration of the Institute of Microelectronics of Barcelona CNM-CSIC and the ALBA synchrotron, has managed for the first time to modify the magnetic properties of a thin layer of cobalt nitride (CoN) by applying electrical voltage without the use of wires. To do this, researchers placed the sample of magnetic material in a liquid with ionic conductivity and applied the voltage to the liquid via two platinum plates, without connecting any wires directly to the sample. This generated an induced electric field that caused the nitrogen ions to leave the CoN and caused magnetism to appear in the sample, which changed from non-magnetic to magnetic. The induced magnetic properties can be modulated as a function of the applied voltage and actuation time, as well as the arrangement of the sample, and temporary or permanent changes in magnetism can also be conducted, depending on the orientation of the sample with respect to the imposed electric field.

"Being able wirelessly to control the magnetism of a sample by modifying the voltage represents a paradigm shift in this area of research," explains Jordi Sort, ICREA researcher at the UAB Department of Physics. "This is a finding that could have applications in a wide range of fields such as biomedicine, to control the magnetic properties of nanorobots without wires, or in wireless computing, to write and erase information in magnetic memories with voltage but without wiring.”

The methodology presented by the researchers to achieve wireless magnetic control is not exclusive to the material used in the experiments, cobalt nitride. For ICMAB researcher Nieves Casañ-Pastor, "these protocols can be extrapolated to other materials to control other physical properties wirelessly, such as superconductivity, memristor control, catalysis or transitions between insulator and metal, as well as wireless electrodes for neuronal electrostimulation, to cite a few examples that can expand the scope of application and technological impact of this research".

The study was recently published in the latest issue of Nature Communications and was led by ICREA researcher in the UAB Department of Physics Jordi Sort and ICMAB researcher Nieves Casañ-Pastor; and with the participation of Zheng-Ma, from the UAB Department of Physics, and Laura Fuentes, from ICMAB and the Institute of Microelectronics of Barcelona CNM-CSIC, both first authors of the research article; Zhengwei Tan, Eva Pellicer and Enric Menéndez, from the UAB Department of Physics; Libertad Abad, from the Institute of Microelectronics of Barcelona CNM-CSIC; and Javier Herrero Martín, from the ALBA synchrotron.

 

Natural disasters vs. Natural hazards: risk-mitigation public campaigns might need rewording



People would be more likely to act if they feel threatened by a hazard, rather than a disaster, concludes a new study from New Zealand


Peer-Reviewed Publication

THE POLISH ASSOCIATION OF SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY

Every year, over $500 billion is lost from the global economy as a result, and between 1998 to 2017, over a billion people were impacted by disasters resulting from natural hazards, including over a million fatalities. 

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THE WRECKAGE OF A COLLAPSED BUILDING, DIYARBAKIR, TURKEY (2023).

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CREDIT: VOA, HTTPS://WWW.VOATURKCE.COM/A/IZMIR-DEPREM-BOLGESINE-YARDIM-SEFERBERLIGI/6949935.HTML




While people think similarly about natural hazards and natural disasters, they might act quite differently about each, concludes a study by New Zealand researchers:  Dr Lauren J. Vinnell (Massey University, Wellington), Professor Taciano L. Milfont (University of Waikato, Tauranga) and Emeritus Professor John McClure (Victoria University of Wellington), recently published in the open-access scholarly journal Social Psychological Bulletin.

Having surveyed 604 people in Wellington, New Zealand, the team concluded public communication, meant to encourage risk-reduction behaviour, should rather opt for the term natural hazard. While a hazard denotes a potential for negative consequences, a disaster implies that these negative consequences are inevitable, the researchers argue.

In recent years, there has been a debate about replacing the term natural disaster with an alternative that would better communicate the role of humans in the devastating impacts of natural events, for example, living near fault lines or overlooking building regulations. Previously, in a similar manner, global warming was replaced with climate change, which has reportedly led to wider belief and intentions to act.

Calling disasters natural puts the blame on nature and downplays the role of people's choices, the researchers explain. While some argue that we should simply drop the word natural and instead refer only to disasters, there is little evidence that the public actually interpret the term in this way. Instead, the team fears, the proposed solution would simply mix disasters such as earthquakes together with the likes of nuclear plant meltdowns, terrorism and pandemics. So, the team set out to explore whether it would make a difference if they talked to people about preparing for natural hazards instead of natural disasters.

As part of their study, the researchers measured key factors related to preparation, including social norms, beliefs about whether preparing is helpful, and perceived ability to undertake preparation actions. Interestingly, scores on these factors did not differ significantly when the people were asked about natural hazards and about natural disasters. Thus, the researchers concluded that the terms don’t have much, if any, impact on key perceptions.

However, when the team asked questions about factors related to one’s intentions to prepare - one of the best predictors of actual behaviour - they found a significant difference in the responses when they used natural hazards instead of natural disasters.

“Perhaps most importantly, we found that intentions to prepare for natural hazards predicted actual behaviour, but intentions to prepare for natural disasters didn't,”

say the researchers.

“In terms of the bigger picture, these mixed findings show that we need more evidence on how the general public understands the terms we use, and that it should be this evidence, which drives our word choices when we communicate,”

they add in conclusion.

To explain the rationale behind their research topic, the team reminds that,

“the impacts of disasters (triggered by natural hazards) have been increasing through a combination of population growth, rendering more people and property vulnerable in risk-prone areas, and an increase in the frequency and severity of high-impact weather events, particularly those driven by climate change.” 

“Every year, over $500 billion is lost from the global economy as a result, and between 1998 to 2017, over a billion people were impacted by disasters resulting from natural hazards, including over a million fatalities. It is therefore vital that we find the best ways to reduce this harm.”

 

Research article:

Vinnell, L. J., Milfont, T. L., & McClure, J. (2023). Natural Hazard Versus Natural Disaster: Does Framing the Event Affect Preparedness Intentions, Attitudes, and Behaviour?. Social Psychological Bulletin, 18, 1-26. https://doi.org/10.32872/spb.8357

 

UMaine, UVM researchers conduct first-ever study of cultural adaptation to climate change


Peer-Reviewed Publication

UNIVERSITY OF MAINE




As the impacts of climate change grow, society and people struggle to adapt to the challenges of the new reality. Change, however, is difficult, and adapting to new ways of life or new ways of doing business often requires a change in culture. 

To determine how culture and society adapt to a changing climate, a team of researchers from the University of Maine and the University of Vermont (UVM) have conducted the first-ever study of cultural adaptation to climate change. Using the science of cultural evolution to examine data on which crops farmers plant across the U.S., their work can help inspire more effective policy solutions to survive in the face of the harmful effects of global warming.  

Tim Waring, associate professor with the UMaine Senator George J. Mitchell Center for Sustainability Solutions and the School of Economics, spearheaded the project, funded by a $4 million grant from the National Science Foundation. 

“Adaptation is about finding a better match to the environment. We know that humans evolve and adapt by changing their culture.” Waring says. “But we know very little about if or how culture is adapting to ongoing climate change today.”

In their paper, published in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B, Waring and his colleagues define cultural adaptation as a population-level change, or the spread of a behavior that provides a benefit in a changed environment. 

“There are three ingredients for adaptation,” says Waring, “a new practice, which provides a benefit, and then spreads.”

With these criteria, researchers compared the climate in which different crops grow best to the actual climate, using data on crops planted in each county across the U.S. for the last 14 years. They found that for much of the U.S., farmers have changed which crops they plant in a way that better matches crops to recent changes in climate. 

Studying cultural adaptation to climate change can improve research because it enables more rigorous comparisons to show where adaptation is happening. 

For example, in Maine, northern and western counties have changed crops in a way that follows recent climate change. But the researchers found that crop adaptation to climate change is not happening everywhere. In some regions, planted crops have become even less suited to climate change. 

“Our research shows that many Maine farmers are already adapting to climate change. They always have. That’s what farmers do,” Waring says. 

This new culture-based approach to climate adaptation can also provide insight to policymakers by distinguishing the process of adaptation from policy goals and beneficial outcomes for society. 

For example, the team also explored if climate change influenced the use of cover crops in the U.S. They concluded that the recent surge in cover cropping may be due to cultural adaptation, but just not to climate change. Instead, many farmers are adapting their practices to take advantage of financial incentives for cover cropping. 

“This shows why understanding cultural adaptation is so important. Adaptation is a powerful force, but we need to aim it at the problems we want to solve,” says Waring. “This approach opens a new frontier in climate adaptation research and policy. We are only just getting started.”