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发布时间: 2025-06-05 02:27:58北京青年报社官方账号
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(CNN) — A huge double asteroid is streaking toward Earth, but scientists say it will pass by with plenty of room to spare.The asteroid, known as 157

  宜宾彩光祛斑哪里好   

A gun rights group is cheering the Trump administration’s designation of the firearms industry, including retailers, as part of the nation’s critical infrastructure during the coronavirus emergency.The designation by the federal Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency is advisory. The agency notes that the designation does not override determinations by individual jurisdictions of what they consider critical infrastructure sectors.The firearms industry was not part of the federal agency’s original list of critical infrastructure issued just over a week ago. The designation in an update released Saturday follows a brewing legal battle between gun rights groups and California officials.The group Gun Owners of America says in a statement Saturday that it is encouraged that the Trump administration is not ignoring what it calls “the ability to protect yourself” during the emergency stemming from the pandemic.Gun rights groups filed suit last Friday after the Los Angeles County sheriff closed gun stores in the wake of California Gov. Gavin Newsom saying that each of the state’s 58 counties could decide for themselves whether to list firearms dealers as nonessential businesses that should be subject to closure while the state seeks to limit the spread of the virus.The lawsuit claims that the designation violates the Second Amendment, but officials cite a public health issue. 1412

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The opioid crisis has had a devastating impact across the country.Now, doctors in one state are tackling the problem head on, and it starts with how they treat pain in the emergency room. When Dr. Donald Stader walks through his emergency room these days, it's almost like he's a different doctor. “I used to over prescribe opioids for the first several years of my career and residency,” he says. “I was giving them out like Tic Tacs, if you will.” All that changed a few years ago, when he met a woman overdosing on heroin. “She told me that she actually got hooked after being prescribed Percocet for an ankle sprain,” Dr. Stader says. “And one thing that struck me, earlier that day I had prescribed Percocet for an ankle sprain and thought that I was practicing really good medicine.” Now, he and his hospital, Swedish Medical Center, are a part of the Colorado Hospital Association’s ALTO Project, a program aiming to reduce the use of opioids in emergency rooms in the state, using alternative pain treatment.The program is paying off.However, experts say it's too late. The crisis is so bad, so simply improving prescription practices is not enough to combat opioid abuse. In an article published in JAMA Psychiatry, doctors say in addition to tighter drug restrictions, psychiatrists specializing in depression and suicide, along with new research and treatments, are needed. Now, they treat patients with medications like Tylenol and ibuprofen. For stronger pain, they use ketamine, bentyl and lidocaine, which is often used in the dentist’s office. Two million Americans struggle with opioid addiction and 42,000 people died of overdoses in 2016 alone. 1678

  

A bull was on the loose in West Baltimore on Wednesday after first being sighted in the area of Coppin State University.At approximately 3:10 p.m., BPD officers received a report of a loose bull on North Avenue in West Baltimore. The bull is currently in the area of Presbury and Warwick Avenue. Please avoid this area.— Baltimore Police (@BaltimorePolice) 369

  

[Breaking news update at 2:54 p.m. ET]The 11-day Chicago teachers' strike is over and classes will resume Friday, Mayor Lori Lightfoot said.School officials and the Chicago Teachers Union reached an agreement, Lightfoot told reporters Thursday afternoon.The mayor said the deal will result in five days of classes being made up. The union wanted twice as many days, but agreed to the compromise, a mayoral spokesperson said.[Previous story, published at 2:28 p.m. ET]Chicago Public Schools has reached a tentative agreement with the city's teachers' union, but the union is asking for extra school days to make up the strike time before returning to the classroom.A House of Delegates vote on Wednesday approved the agreement, but Chicago Teachers Union President Jesse Sharkey told reporters that did not include a return to work agreement. 853

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