According to the WHO’s recent investigation into the
pandemic's origins, Covid-19 likely started this way too.
Some governments have expressed concerns about this inquiry — but there’s no denying that the threat of zoonotic diseases is real and urgent bloom.bg/2QVvGuw
China, whose legal wildlife trade was estimated to be worth $80 billion in 2016, should be at the center of efforts to prevent this.
The government already banned the breeding and sale for consumption of most terrestrial wildlife, but it’s not enough bloom.bg/2QVvGuw
Chinese authorities have:
➡️Shut down thousands of farms where wild animals were raised for meat
➡️Closed several markets, including online, where they were sold
➡️Added more than 500 species to its protected wildlife list bloom.bg/2QVvGuw
The law has loopholes. Many wild animals can still be bred for:
➡️Fur
➡️Research
➡️Use in traditional Chinese medicine
Unless farms follow strict quarantine, veterinary and butchering protocols — which they typically haven’t — new diseases could develop bloom.bg/2QVvGuw
The problem certainly isn’t confined to China:
Cramped and unsanitary wildlife markets are trading in many other parts of the world, notably Southeast Asia and Africa. Phasing out such markets demands a global effort bloom.bg/2QVvGuw
Illegal wildlife trafficking needs cracking down on. A dip in seizures during the pandemic may be temporary.
As cross-border trade picks up, poachers and traffickers should be identified and prosecuted.
The legal trade in wild animals needs attention, too.
The U.S. is the world’s largest importer of wildlife — and no animals are inspected for novel pathogens.
U.S. agencies should develop a system to ensure imports are tested bloom.bg/2QVvGuw
Finally, the world should focus on the main underlying cause of zoonotic transmission: Habitat destruction bloom.bg/2QVvGuw
Different species are being shoved into closer contact with one another and with humans, thanks to:
🌳Deforestation
⛏Mining
🚜Intensive farming
🏗Other development bloom.bg/2QVvGuw
This close contact enables viruses to mutate and spread.
The pandemic might serve to heighten this danger, because countries will put reviving their economies first, and hesitate to hold such activities back bloom.bg/2QVvGuw
Governments everywhere need to think very hard. Ignoring the issue now is a formula for more pandemics in future.
And, difficult as this might be to believe, next time could be worse bloom.bg/2QVvGuw
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Following pandemic news too closely can be an emotional roller coaster, with dire public health warnings immediately followed by hopeful new studies.
Here’s a hopeful new study: Vaccines sharply cut all Covid-19 infections — not just symptoms trib.al/O7A3VUE
The new data were collected from 4,000 people who were vaccinated with the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines between December 2020 and March 2021. The group was made up of:
👩🏽⚕️Health care workers
🚑First responders
🥡Delivery workers
👨🏼🏫Teachers trib.al/O7A3VUE
The participants were asked not only to monitor symptoms but also to test themselves weekly.
The study authors concluded the vaccines caused a 90% reduction in all infections. If people aren’t getting infected, they can’t transmit the virus to others trib.al/O7A3VUE
This week, Volkswagen taught us how not to do an April Fool’s Day joke.
It also provided us a lesson in just how difficult it is to emulate Elon Musk trib.al/VRBiCHj
Here’s the lowdown if you haven’t heard:
⚡️VW’s U.S. arm claimed it was changing its corporate name to “Voltswagen”
⚡️Denied it was an April Fools’ Day joke
⚡️Then admitted that it actually was an April Fools gone wrong
VW has been riding a wave of investor excitement about its electric cars.
Thanks in part to some clever marketing, it seemed to have cracked Elon Musk’s knack for share-price boosting publicity. VW preference shares are close to a six-year high trib.al/VRBiCHj
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit has published a notice “to encourage the use of typefaces that are easier to read and to discourage use of Garamond.”
To be fair on the judges, when a big part of your job involves reviewing deadly dull legal briefs, readability matters.
Yet we can’t help but wonder, in all seriousness, whether the court might be making a mistake bloom.bg/3fwGsSv
The D.C. Circuit is worried that use of a narrow font like Garamond allows lawyers to squeeze extra text into mandated page limits. But the font has other virtues:
🖋Elegant
👓High legibility
📄Ideal for reading material that includes continuous text bloom.bg/3fwGsSv
It’s taken a year of pandemic but one of the world’s biggest banks has finally acknowledged the huge toll that working remotely is taking on its staff.
Citigroup CEO Jane Fraser wants to ease Zoom fatigue and go back to regular working hours trib.al/DmWj1wd
In a long memo to Citi’s workers, Fraser laid out three measures to immediately relieve the pressure:
💻Limiting video calls on Fridays to clients only
📲Scheduling business calls at normal work hours
🌴Encouraging people to take vacations trib.al/DmWj1wd
Citi will also create a company-wide day of rest — May 28 — the “Citi Reset Day.”
That kind of initiative can feel a little gimmicky sometimes, but if it’s tied to genuine improvements to the working week, then what’s the harm? trib.al/DmWj1wd
#EqualPayDay illustrates how far into the new year women would have to work to make as much as men did the previous year.
But women come in a variety of races, ethnicities, marital statuses, education levels and more, all of which intersect bloomberg.com/opinion/articl…
Most commonly, “women” is assumed to be synonymous with White women.
All too often, @RhondaVSharpe finds herself participating in programs and gatherings dedicated to “women and minorities,” as if the former were only White and the latter weren’t women bloomberg.com/opinion/articl…