Health & Wellness
Originally, the team of Russian, Swiss, British, American and Finnish scientists was developing polysulfur heterocycles to tackle cancer when they suddenly realized the implications of the drug's mechanism were much bigger than anticipated.
"From the very beginning, the most promising direction of the study seemed to us to study the anticancer activity of this class of compounds, but it unexpectedly turned out that such compounds can also have high and selective activity against feline immunodeficiency virus, which is the closest analogue of the human immunodeficiency virus," Rakitin said.
A press release from South Ural State University (SUSU) claims the discovery could pave the way for a whole new class of antiviral drugs which could be used for numerous diseases.
"I'd suffered two minor strokes, but it didn't stop me from going to hotels every night and drinking until stumps. Then I'd take a bottle of bourbon home with me," the 53-year-old Victorian father of two said.
He would keep a bottle of whiskey next to his bed, but if he couldn't afford spirits that week, he'd mix methylated spirits with soft drink.
"I couldn't keep down a morning coffee," he said. "I'd have to have alcohol to settle me for the day."
Alcohol causes the most overall harm to the Australian community, surpassing crystal methamphetamine (ice) and heroin, a new national study suggests.

Growing grain for cattle — who eat grass, not grain — is one of the worst idea humans have had.
On the face of it, that's an understandable response. Much forest destruction is caused by agriculture, mostly livestock farming. About 80% of Amazonian soya grown is for cattle feed. About 60% of the cleared land is used for pasture. Horrendous. But "Stop eating meat" is a simplistic response that ignores the bigger problem: destructive agriculture.
We've been increasingly dividing diets into plant vs animal. It's a split that fits nicely into social media virtue-signaling and current (insanely misguided) nutritional advice. It's an ideological division. Viewing this sort of compartmentalising through the prism of rainforest concerns highlights its unhelpfulness.
The Norwegian Food Safety Authority confirmed another six cases of dogs falling ill on Saturday, of which two had already died.
The illness has struck pets across the country from the northern province of Nordland to cities like Trondheim Bergen and Oslo, where the majority of cases have been reported.
All of those to have died experienced the same symptoms of vomiting and diarrhoea.
Autopsies of the first three dogs to have died is yet to prove what is causing the sickness, with veterinarians considering the potential for viral, bacterial, fungal and parasitic causes.
The cases span 33 different states, with deaths confirmed in California, Illinois, Indiana, Minnesota and Oregon, according to the CDC.
The disease has not been connected to a specific e-cig device, liquid, pod or cartridge, but officials said all reported cases involve people with a history of vaping. Many of the sufferers said they had been inhaling THC, the primary element of marijuana. It's unclear whether the illness is a new phenomenon, or if cases before this year were unreported.
"We're all wondering if this is new or just newly recognized," Dr. Dana Meaney-Delman of the CDC told reporters Friday, according to the Associated Press.
New York state, which has reported 34 cases of severe lung disease, said its health department is investigating vitamin E acetate, which it found in both nicotine- and THC-based products. Vitamin E acetate is a commonly available nutritional supplement, and while it's not known to cause harm when ingested as a vitamin supplement or applied to the skin, the health effects of inhaling the oil are unclear.
Comment: Why bother with vaping, when you can light up? See also: Vaping, on the other hand, is a risky alternative:
- Three people have now died from lung disease after vaping
- FDA investigating 127 reports of seizures and neurological symptoms after vaping
- Teenager left in coma after vaping every day led to deadly disease
- Vaping damages DNA and may increase cancer risks, says study
They had 10 fewer cases of heart disease and three more strokes per 1,000 people compared with the meat-eaters.
The research, published in the British Medical Journal, looked at 48,000 people for up to 18 years.
However, it cannot prove whether the effect is down to their diet or some other aspect of their lifestyle.
Comment: It's funny how the 'experts' will point out a study is observational, and therefore limited, when it shows correlations they don't like. Yet in the same breath they'll trot out smears against red meat that come from observational studies! The hypocrisy is stunning!
See also:
- A comprehensive list of reasons why vegan and vegetarian diets easily ruin your body
- Parents sentenced over neglect of child on vegan-only diet
- Poster girl for the meat-free revolution, Virpi Mikkonen: 'My vegan diet brought on early menopause'
- Even celebrities can return to sanity: Going back to meat after eating vegan made Anne Hathaway feel 'like a computer rebooting'
- The vegan blogger world is in meltdown
- Is a vegan diet safe for infants and children?
Most will remember the Chinese scientist last year who shocked the world claiming to have genetically modified human embryos to be immune to HIV infection. What was shocking was not the science, which many experts claimed was underwhelming and sloppy, but the simple fact that he had undertaken this endeavor under the radar.
Few people realized then, but this incident has brought it home, that all this is taking place almost entirely without any serious health and safety regulation, nor have the ethical implications been fully explored. GMO 2.0 makes the process of genetic modification much simpler and, as a result, much more in reach for those with less training and understanding. It really seems like we're on the precipice of home genetic modification kits, designer babies and all the other horror stories science fiction has been warning us of for decades.
Join us on this episode of Objective:Health as we discuss the implications of this new gene tech. Do we really want to be on this train?
And stay tuned for Zoya's Pet Health Segment as she tells us all about the ups and downs of pet hedgehogs.
And check us out on Brighteon!
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Running Time: 01:08:29
Download: MP3 — 62.3 MB
How did these deaths occur?
In July, an Illinois resident developed a lung infection and died after using a vaping device that contained marijuana oil. Yesterday, officials in Oregon said that a resident of the state who used e-cigarettes had also died after being hospitalised for a severe lung infection. It's not clear why these respiratory problems led to the people's deaths. It could be that something either in the e-cigarette or the substances smoked through them caused serious inflammation of the lungs.
Has anyone else got ill from vaping?
The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) says that as of 27 August, 215 possible cases of vaping-related severe lung disease have been reported by 25 states. In addition to the deaths in Illinois and Oregon, this multistate outbreak includes people who have reported coughs, shortness of breath, chest pain, fever, fatigue, nausea, vomiting and diarrhoea. These symptoms developed over days or weeks. Some people turn up to hospital with symptoms that look like pneumonia, and have been put on ventilators or treated in intensive care units.
The study, published Tuesday by the Journal of the American Medical Association, found that people who drank two or more glasses of soft drinks per day were more likely to die from all types of ailments, compared with people who drank less than one glass per month.
"Results of this study appear to support ongoing public-health measures to reduce the consumption of soft drinks," the researchers concluded.
The victim, whose name and age was not made public, died in Oregon in July after using an e-cigarette or vaping device that contained marijuana, according to the state's Health Authority.
Officials with the agency said the person's symptoms were consistent with the hundreds of similar cases of respiratory illnesses that have been reported in the U.S., most of which are affecting teenagers and young adults.














Comment: Objective:Health #29 - Drop That Burger! The Amazon is on Fire!