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SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- Forbes has released its list of America’s best employers of 2018 and two San Diego employers made the list.Both Qualcomm and the County of San Diego made the list coming in at 111 and 268.According to Forbes, Qualcomm employs more than 30,000 people and the County of San Diego employs over 20,000 people.Qualcomm made headlines recently after news that President Trump blocked Broadcom’s 7 billion bid to buy the company citing national security concerns. The company also recently laid off more than 1,000 people.RELATED: After Trump's block, Qualcomm facing post-Broadcom uncertainties To make the list, Forbes surveyed 30,000 Americans working for businesses with at least 1,000 employees.The U.S. economy is marking its 90th consecutive month of job gains as the unemployment rate continues to hover at a very low 4.1 percent. 868
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- Firefighters are trying to determine what caused a brush fire in Mission Valley Wednesday afternoon.The fire erupted along Interstate 8 and Texas Street near iFLY around 3:00 p.m.Firefighters say steady wind carried flames from a tree across the overpass, catching dry brush on fire near Camino Del Rio.The Texas Street off-ramp from Interstate 8 was closed in both directions due to the blaze. Firefighters say a quarter of an acre was burned in the fire.Thick brush and trees were burned, but no business in the area were damaged. Crews had to conduct about six water drops in the area to extinguish the flames. 646

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - Fire officials and city leaders credit timely preparation and resources for helping to knock down the fast-moving Lilac Fire last December.In an after-action report released Friday, the county said the massive show of firefighting effort and management, and a break in the weather, helped to contain the fire's spread within 12 hours."However, as destructive and disruptive as the disaster was, it could have become much larger and destroyed thousands of homes," the report stated.INTERACTIVE LILAC FIRE MAP | LILAC FIRE PHOTOS | MORE THAN 0K RAISED FOR VICTIMSCounty officials also praised the response of fire and emergency personnel as "second-to-none" and "spontaneous care and generosity of residents made the Lilac Fire response and ongoing recovery efforts a success."The county also released a list of recommendations based on the response to the fire, which stated in part: 932
y have, be grateful for the fact that we exist," says Chopra.For those who have lost a loved one: "Grief is something we must embrace. You can't bypass...If you resist grief you get worse, it causes more stress," Chopra added.But for everyone else, the worst use of our imagination is fear."That fearful thought is recycling through social media, through television, through everything that we see ... So first recognize that 99% of your thoughts is just recycling of everyone else's fear. So why do you take ownership of thoughts that didn't come from you?" asked Chopra. Professional and personal change, forced on so many now, is a moment to look inside. It's time for self-care and it starts with our thoughts."Ask yourself who am I? Want do I really want? What's my purpose? What am I grateful for? And you'll pivot," says Chopra. "So, mindfulness is nothing more than being aware of the choices you're making, and the experiences you're having right now, and if your experiences are not pleasant."The world in crisis, can also be inside us as hostility, resentment, and grievances — all toxic."So, get rid of toxicity in your life, this is the opportunity ... Toxic emotions, toxic relationships, toxic environments, toxic food...Time to detox," Chopra said.Chopra is blunt about the turmoil in the world. But as we rely on science and technology to find a creative response to COVID, we can lessen exhaustion by not living in the future.We must right now confront that reality. Strident, extreme atmosphere, politically, racially. What's it doing? Creating a world that frankly speaking is idiotic," Chopra said. "If you live in the present, then all you do is say: I want today, my body to be joyful and energetic, my emotions to be loving, have empathy and compassion ... My mind to clear and my soul to be light, today. That's it." 3011
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — Even though Americans could start getting vaccinated in days, experts say people who get the shot will still need to wear masks and practice social distancing until scientists can answer a key question: whether immunized people can continue to spread COVID-19.The clinical trials by Pfizer and Moderna showed the two vaccines were about 95 percent effective, but what that really means is they were 95 percent effective at preventing COVID-19 symptoms.The trials did not measure whether vaccinated volunteers got infected without showing symptoms.That means “it is possible and conceivable” that immunized individuals could still be silent spreaders, said Dr. Christian Ramers of Family Health Centers of San Diego. “You’re not going to get sick, but you still get an asymptomatic case, pass it on to your grandmother and kill her.”Both the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines are injected into the arm muscle to stimulate production of antibodies. From there, the antibodies can quickly get to the lungs to fend off severe infection. But experts say the antibodies may have less access to the nose and throat, the primary entry points for the virus.Some studies have suggested that people without symptoms can still have high enough levels of coronavirus in their nose to infect other people.“The vaccine is doing something to prevent disease. We don't really know yet if it prevents transmission,” said Dr. Ramers. “So we have to fall back on all those fundamental things like distancing, masking and washing hands.”Still, experts say there are encouraging clues that vaccinated people may be less contagious. A study in October found antibody levels in the blood were similar to levels in saliva.AstraZeneca had volunteers in its trial test themselves for signs of infection and reported there were fewer asymptomatic cases. However, the company has not yet provided details and its vaccine relies on different technology than Pfizer and Moderna’s mRNA candidates.Until we know more, doctors say vaccinated people will have to keep wearing masks -- potentially until there we achieve herd immunity.“There is modeling to suggest that it will be summer until we reach the point where there are enough people vaccinated that this curve of new cases really starts to go down,” Ramers said.There’s a chance we could get good news before then. Both Pfizer and Moderna say they’ll start testing their volunteers’ blood to reveal if they got infected after vaccination.Pfizer plans to examine a subset of its volunteers. Moderna said it will analyze blood from everyone in the trial.Moderna said it will take several weeks to produce results. 2656
来源:资阳报