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滨州羊癫疯医院排名前十(德州哪里有看癫痫病医院) (今日更新中)

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2025-05-31 04:25:17
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  滨州羊癫疯医院排名前十   

(KGTV) - Solar panels are set to become a far more common sight atop homes in California.The California Energy Commission is set to adopt the new building energy standards that, in part, will require all new homes constructed to include solar panels.The mandate would affect all single-family and low-profile (three stories or less) homes, condos, and apartments that obtain building permits after Jan. 1, 2020.RELATED: Top candidates for California governor lay out plans to address affordable housing issueThe commission estimates new homes will cut energy use by more than 50 percent under the solar mandate.The standards also include updates to ventilation, nonresidential lighting, and heat transfer standards. Consumers may see an added to an average monthly payment but save an estimated on monthly heating, cooling, and lighting bills under the new standards, according to the commission.In California, solar panels can cost homeowners between ,928 to ,340 on average, according to Energy Sage. The new standards would add about ,000 to ,000 to the construction costs compared with homes built under 2006's state code, according to the OC Register.RELATED: Housing crunch persists despite massive projectsUnder the proposed standards, build credits would also be offered for installing batteries and exceptions could be made for homes shaded by trees and whose roofs are too small for panels.Commission leaders are set to vote on the new building standards on Wednesday, May 9. 1538

  滨州羊癫疯医院排名前十   

(KGTV) - Are some public restrooms in China really now using facial recognition?Yes.It's being used to keep people from using too much toilet paper.Each person who scans their face gets 15 inches of toilet paper from a dispenser. 242

  滨州羊癫疯医院排名前十   

(KGTV) — President-elect Joe Biden is set to select California Attorney General Xavier Becerra to lead the pandemic response as Health and Human Services secretary.According to Associated Press sources, Becerra will be nominated to lead the department, which will require confirmation. If confirmed, he will be the first Latino to lead the department.The HHS is a -trillion-plus agency with 80,000 employees and oversees several issues including drugs and vaccines, medical research, and health insurance programs. During his time as AG, Becerra has been an advocate of the Affordable Care Act.Biden has been under increasing pressure to expand racial and ideological diversity in his Cabinet and other top jobs, the AP reported. Of the nine major picks made so far, Biden has selected two white men: Secretary of State choice Antony Blinken and chief of staff Ron Klain.Civil rights leaders have called for diverse choices for the "big four" Cabinet positions of secretaries of state, defense, treasury, and the attorney general. Biden has not committed to appointing the positions to any specific nominees yet.The Associated Press contributed to this report. 1170

  

A 19-year-old died after inhaling deodorant spray to get high, according to a new case report, and doctors who treated the man in the Netherlands are using the case to highlight the fatal consequences of inhaling chemicals.Such cases are "very rare," according to Dr. Kelvin Harvey Kramp of Maasstad Hospital's intensive care unit in Rotterdam.Kramp explained that because deaths from deodorant inhalation are not common among the general population, the "consequences aren't really known," causing people to continue this dangerous behavior.The patient, who had a history of psychotic symptoms, had been admitted to a rehabilitation center for cannabis and ketamine abuse and was taking antipsychotic drugs.During a relapse in July, he placed a towel over his head and inhaled deodorant spray to get high, according to the report, published Thursday in the BMJ. He became hyperactive, jumping up and down, before blood flow stopped suddenly, causing him to go into cardiac arrest and collapse, the report says. He was admitted to the hospital and placed in a medically induced coma when staff failed to revive him.The "patient did not had enough brain function to sustain life," Kramp said. Nine days after he was admitted, doctors withdrew care, and the man died.There are three theories about what caused the cardiac arrest, Kramp said: The inhalant could have oversensitized the patient's heart, which can make any subsequent stress, like getting caught by a parent, cause cardiac arrest. Also, inhalants decrease the strength of contraction of the heart muscle. Another possibility is that inhalants can cause spasm of the coronary arteries.The patient's hyperactivity could mean he was experiencing a "scary hallucination," Kramp said, adding that if that was the case, the first theory would be applicable.Solvent abuse is not a new phenomenon, the report points out, and is primarily found in "young and vulnerable people," according to Kramp.The group most affected by solvent abuse is 15- to 19-year-olds, studies show. People in rehabilitation centers or prisons are more likely to abuse household products, the report added, meaning there could be a greater risk of cardiac deaths in these environments.In these secure environments, people have less access to other substances, and household products are easily available, explained Roz Gittins, director of pharmacy at the British drug charity Addaction, who was not involved in the report.The toxic chemical butane, often used in sprayable household products, has a similar effect to alcohol, Kramp said. "The intention of abusers is to experience feelings of euphoria and disinhibition."Other health effects of inhalants include liver and kidney damage, hearing loss, delayed behavioral development and brain damage.Chemicals like butane have a very quick and short-acting effect, which can make people want to take more, Gittins said.The report's authors hope increased awareness will help reduce further inhalant-related deaths, through education in schools around the fatal consequences of solvent abuse."To stop the abuse, we can only try to increase awareness about the possible dramatic consequences of inhalant abuse among youngsters, parents, medical personnel," Kramp said.Up to 125 deaths are caused by inhalant abuse every year in the United States, according to the report.Stephen Ream, director of UK-based charity Re-solv, said that in 2016, "there were 64 deaths associated with these products," with butane gas accounting for at least a third of those."The breakdown by product is more difficult to establish, but we would suspect that about four or five deaths a year are associated with aerosol products," he said."Solvent abuse is also more of a problem in the northern regions of the UK, with rates particularly higher in Scotland and the North East of England."According UK drug advice organization Talk to Frank, more 10- to 15-year-olds were killed from abusing glues, gases and aerosols than from illegal drugs combined between 2000 and 2008. 4074

  

(KGTV) - The world's oldest message in a bottle was discovered half-buried at a West Australian beach nearly 132 years since it was written.The Western Australian Museum confirmed Tuesday that the message is dated June 12, 1886 — dating back more than 48,000 days. The old gin bottle was jettisoned from the Germain sailing barque "Paula," according to the museum."It just looked like a lovely old bottle so I picked it up thinking it might look good in my bookcase. My son’s girlfriend was the one who discovered the note when she went to tip the sand out," Tonya Illman, the woman who discovered the bottle told the museum. "The note was damp, rolled tightly and wrapped with string. We took it home and dried it out, and when we opened it we saw it was a printed form, in German, with very faint German handwriting on it."RELATED: Billionaire explorer discovers sunken US WWII aircraft carrierIllman's husband then spent time researching the message before discover just how far back it dated.According to the museum, the bottles were part of an experiment by what was known as "Deutsche Seewarte," or German Naval Observatory. For 69 years, thousands of bottle were tossed overboard German ships studying ocean currents.The notes, which contained dates and coordinates, would instruct whoever finds the bottle to write back when and where they located the note to help researchers build data on currents. In total, the museum says 663 bottles as part of the experiment have been discovered.RELATED: Unprecedented 7,000-year-old Native American burial site found in FloridaThe Illmans have loaned the bottle to the museum to put on display. The previous record for oldest message in a bottle was 108 years, four months, and 18 days. 1788

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