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  • Early Adopters Embracing AI Transcription Tool

    Early Adopters Embracing AI Transcription Tool

    More UConn Health providers are using — and liking — the artificial intelligence transcription tool DAX™ (Dragon Ambient eXperience) Ambient Listening to capture their patient interactions and generate encounter notes in Epic in near real time.

    “We’re deploying it for our providers to allow them to have a phone in the patient’s exam room while they’re doing their visit,” says Ingrid Napoletano, UConn Health’s associate vice president for information technology clinical systems. “Then they can just listen to their patient, look at them, and the system is actually using generative AI to generate the note for them.”

    Dr. Lenora Williams is a UConn Health OB-GYN physician and early adopter of DAX Ambient Listening as a documentation tool. (Peter Morenus/UConn Photo)

    Providers only use the tool if the patient gives permission.

    Dr. Lenora Williams, who sees OB-GYN patients in UConn Health’s Storrs office, was among the first providers to try it.

    “Being fairly confident that the most important aspects of the encounter will be accurately documented allows me to be more attentive and takes the pressure off of documenting right away,” Williams says. “DAX is most efficient with problem visits, which are the ones that typically require more comprehensive documentation.”

    Starting with internal medicine, dermatology and Mohs surgery, orthopedics, comprehensive spine, and neurosurgery, UConn Health is expanding the use of the DAX technology throughout the outpatient practices this year, then bringing it to the emergency department and inpatient settings next year. It will become the first AI solution UConn Health deploys across the entire clinical enterprise.

    “It really is to help reduce burnout for the providers, also to increase the engagement between the patient and the provider,” Napoletano says. “And also, we’re seeing, because of the efficiencies, that providers are actually able to see more patients.”

    The AI-generated notes form in the electronic medical record without the providers having to type anything; then they can go into the record to customize and edit their notes.

    “It’s much easier for me to edit it than it is for me to come up with it from scratch and write the whole thing out, so it definitely saves me time,” says Dr. Darlene Oksanen, primary care physician and another early adopter. “I would say, 90% of the time I’m getting out of clinic when I can. … I noticed a big improvement. And I can spend more time on the important parts of the note, which are basically the assessment and plan and my thought process, rather than just writing down history.”

    Another option for providers is “monologue mode,” which allows them to record parts or all of a note before or after the appointment. This enhanced form of dictation is effective for pre-visit planning or post-encounter summaries, allowing providers to speak naturally and still benefit from ambient documentation.

    Oksanen says it helps her have a better personal connection during patient interactions and improves her train of thought.

    “Surprisingly, I realized after using DAX how much of the small complaints that my patients were bringing in with them I wasn’t really capturing in my note just because of time,” she says.

    Williams estimates the tool, which some providers also refer to as DAX Copilot, saves her up to 30 minutes a day finishing notes, and when she does have a backlog, the tool helps her get caught up more quickly.

    “As a tool to improve patient care, assist with efficiency, and improve work-life balance, it is a welcomed and appreciated start,” Williams says.

    Rave Reviews

    Halfway through a 90-day pilot launched in the spring, UConn Health surveyed the 30 physicians, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants who’d been trying it. The following comments are from their responses:

    • “It allows me to look at patients and build rapport because I am not looking at the computer. I have definitely done less charting at home and almost always finish my notes before I leave clinic.”
    • “I spend more time caring for my patients and addressing paperwork rather than writing notes, I also spend more time teaching students and residents instead of writing my notes.”
    • “It greatly reduces my burnout. It greatly increases my job satisfaction. I really cannot imagine my life without it now.”
    • “Notes are well done. Concise. Very little needs to be edited when I read them at the end of the day. probably saves about 20 min of documenting at the end of the day, which I can use to do other inbox tasks.”
    • “The accuracy is invaluable. It catches the multiple things that you talk to a patient about and organizes them by problems.”
    • “This is a blessing, I have actually time to connect with the patients without taking my attention from them. The documentation is rich, full of important patient details. My notes are already complex with a lot of technical data to review, so DAX is helping dramatically.”
    • “I feel like a weight has been lifted off my shoulders and that I can connect more fully with my patients during the visits. I can also complete more inbox tasks during regular work hours which has been great. I am also pleased because the quality of my documentation has improved.”
    • “It is much easier to engage with patients. I don’t have to focus on typing everything they are mentioning. I can sit and look at the patients while they are speaking with me. This allows for better patient/physician connection, and allows the patient to feel listened to. DAX also records the HPI (history of present illness), and I only have to review it afterwards, to change some grammar and the arrangement of how it was recorded. This makes it much easier to look back to determine what the patient said.”
    • “This is amazing! Using DAX has completely changed how I feel about a day in the office. I truly can focus on patients.”

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  • Pakistan prime minister signs $8.5 billion in investment deals with China – The Washington Post

    1. Pakistan prime minister signs $8.5 billion in investment deals with China  The Washington Post
    2. PM Shehbaz, Chinese premier reaffirm working on CPEC 2.0 as firms ink 21 MoUs  Dawn
    3. Pakistan-China B2B investment conference yields $8.5 billion in agreements and MoUs  ptv.com.pk
    4. PM assures facilitation to investors as Pakistan, China sign $4.2bn business pacts under CPEC 2.0  Geo.tv
    5. CPEC-2: a shot in the arm  The Express Tribune

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  • Chelsea vs Man City live: Result and reaction updates in WSL opener

    Chelsea vs Man City live: Result and reaction updates in WSL opener

    Report: Chelsea grit out victory over Man City in injury-marred WSL opener

    Read the full report below:

    Will Castle5 September 2025 23:00

    Sonia Bompastor reaching new heights

    Sonia Bompastor has become the fastest manager to ever reach 20 wins in the WSL.

    And we thought Chelsea might struggle without Emma Hayes…

    (WSL Football via Getty Images)

    Will Castle5 September 2025 22:40

    Aggie Beever-Jones hails ‘outstanding’ Ellie Carpenter

    “Ellie put it on a plate for me,” Beever-Jones told Sky Sports. “It was incredible. I thought Ellie was outstanding today. I’m delighted to come away with a win and start the season strong.

    “I think for me, Ellie is a world-class player and genuinely one of the quickest players ever, so I knew she was going to get there. For me, it was about keeping my head and putting it in the back of the net.

    “Watching it again, Ellie’s put it on a plate, so I’ve got to say many thanks to her but it’s about doing a good pre-season and we’re ready to start a good campaign. We’re feeling good with ourselves and we’re happy.

    Will Castle5 September 2025 22:30

    Worrying scenes in the final moments

    Hoping Lily Murphy’s injury isn’t nearly as serious as it looks.

    (WSL Football via Getty Images)
    (WSL Football via Getty Images)

    Will Castle5 September 2025 22:20

    Ellie Carpenter on ‘jelling’ with her new team

    “We’re playing with a five back, so it allows me to get up more in attack,” the player of the match said. “We’ve been working a lot in training and pre-season for six weeks.

    “Obviously, the early cross in behind and Aggie [Beever-Jones] tapped it in, so made me look good. Very happy with the win. We wanted to start strong and get the three points and we did that.”

    “Pre-season was hard. It was actually my first pre-season I’ve ever done with a team. It was really nice to create those relationships with the team, being new. I think we worked on those foundations and really jelling as a team.”

    Will Castle5 September 2025 22:10

    Man City left to rue missed chances

    (WSL Football via Getty Images)
    (WSL Football via Getty Images)
    (WSL Football via Getty Images)

    Will Castle5 September 2025 22:00

    Chelsea grit out victory in WSL opener

    (WSL Football via Getty Images)
    (Getty Images)
    (WSL Football via Getty Images)

    Will Castle5 September 2025 21:40

    FULL-TIME! Chelsea 2-1 Man City

    There goes the whistle and Chelsea begin their sixth successive title defence in winning style.

    Concern for Andree Jeglertz after two late injuries, with the latter to Lily Murphy looking particularly serious.

    Will Castle5 September 2025 21:33

    Chelsea 2-1 Man City

    90+13 mins: City have used up all their subs so are down to 10. Let’s see how long we have left to play.

    Will Castle5 September 2025 21:32

    Chelsea 2-1 Man City

    90+12 mins: Murphy gets a standing ovation as she’s stretchered off.

    Let’s pray that isn’t as serious as it looks.

    Will Castle5 September 2025 21:31

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  • Google Gemini dubbed ‘high risk’ for kids and teens in new safety assessment

    Google Gemini dubbed ‘high risk’ for kids and teens in new safety assessment

    Common Sense Media, a kids-safety-focused nonprofit offering ratings and reviews of media and technology, released its risk assessment of Google’s Gemini AI products on Friday. While the organization found that Google’s AI clearly told kids it was a computer, not a friend — something that’s associated with helping drive delusional thinking and psychosis in emotionally vulnerable individuals — it did suggest that there was room for improvement across several other fronts.

    Notably, Common Sense said that Gemini’s “Under 13” and “Teen Experience” tiers both appeared to be the adult versions of Gemini under the hood, with only some additional safety features added on top. The organization believes that for AI products to truly be safer for kids, they should be built with child safety in mind from the ground up.

    For example, its analysis found that Gemini could still share “inappropriate and unsafe” material with children, which they may not be ready for, including information related to sex, drugs, alcohol, and other unsafe mental health advice.

    The latter could be of particular concern to parents, as AI has reportedly played a role in some teen suicides in recent months. OpenAI is facing its first wrongful death lawsuit after a 16-year-old boy died by suicide after allegedly consulting with ChatGPT for months about his plans, having successfully bypassed the chatbot’s safety guardrails. Previously, the AI companion maker Character.AI was also sued over a teen user’s suicide.

    In addition, the analysis comes as news leaks indicate that Apple is considering Gemini as the LLM (large language model) that will help to power its forthcoming AI-enabled Siri, due out next year. This could expose more teens to risks, unless Apple mitigates the safety concerns somehow.

    Common Sense also said that Gemini’s products for kids and teens ignored how younger users needed different guidance and information than older ones. As a result, both were labeled as “High Risk” in the overall rating, despite the filters added for safety.

    “Gemini gets some basics right, but it stumbles on the details,” Common Sense Media Senior Director of AI Programs Robbie Torney said in a statement about the new assessment viewed by TechCrunch. “An AI platform for kids should meet them where they are, not take a one-size-fits-all approach to kids at different stages of development. For AI to be safe and effective for kids, it must be designed with their needs and development in mind, not just a modified version of a product built for adults,” Torney added.

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    Google pushed back against the assessment, while noting that its safety features were improving.

    The company told TechCrunch it has specific policies and safeguards in place for users under 18 to help prevent harmful outputs and that it red-teams and consults with outside experts to improve its protections. However, it also admitted that some of Gemini’s responses weren’t working as intended, so it added additional safeguards to address those concerns.

    The company pointed out (as Common Sense had also noted) that it does have safeguards to prevent its models from engaging in conversations that could give the semblance of real relationships. Plus, Google suggested that Common Sense’s report seemed to have referenced features that weren’t available to users under 18, but it didn’t have access to the questions the organization used in its tests to be sure.

    Common Sense Media has previously performed other assessments of AI services, including those from OpenAI, Perplexity, Claude, Meta AI, and more. It found that Meta AI and Character.AI were “unacceptable” — meaning the risk was severe, not just high. Perplexity was deemed high risk, ChatGPT was labeled “moderate,” and Claude (targeted at users 18 and up) was found to be a minimal risk.

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  • Study suggests breast milk hormones affect babies’ sleep patterns

    Study suggests breast milk hormones affect babies’ sleep patterns

    The composition of breast milk changes throughout the day, including hormones thought to influence babies’ wake/sleep patterns, researchers said in a new study. Photo by Adobe Stock/Pixabay.com

    Busy moms might be sending their babies the wrong signal if they feed evening breast milk that was expressed in the morning, a new study suggests.

    The composition of breast milk changes throughout the day, including hormones thought to influence babies’ wake/sleep patterns, researchers reported Friday in Frontiers in Nutrition.

    A mother might unintentionally disturb her infant’s rest if she stores breast milk in the morning and then provides it in the afternoon or evening, researchers warned.

    “Breast milk is a dynamic food: Consideration should be given to the time it is fed to the infant when expressed breast milk is used,” lead researcher Melissa Woortman said in a news release. She’s a recent doctoral graduate in nutritional sciences of Rutgers University in New Brunswick, N.J.

    “The timing of these cues would be particularly critical in early life, when the infant’s internal circadian clock is still maturing,” senior investigator Maria Gloria Dominguez-Bello, a professor in biochemistry and microbiology at Rutgers, said in a news release.

    Doctors consider breast milk a baby “super food” that is chock full of vitamins, minerals and compounds that help build the young immune system and feed the growing body, researchers said.

    It’s widely thought to be the best source of infant nutrition, but many moms aren’t able to directly breastfeed multiple times throughout the day and night. Instead, they use a pump to express and store milk for later feedings.

    For the study, researchers took 10 milliliter breast milk samples from 21 women at specific intervals on two days, roughly a month apart: 6 a.m., noon, 6 p.m. and midnight. Another 17 participants provided one day’s worth of samples taken at the same times.

    Researchers analyzed the samples for levels of three hormones: melatonin, cortisol and oxytocin. Melatonin and cortisol are involved in regulation of wake/sleep cycles.

    The breast milk samples also were analyzed for levels of immunoglobulin A, an antibody protein produced by the immune system, and the milk protein lactoferrin. These influence the baby’s digestive system.

    Results showed that melatonin and cortisol varied over the course of a day. Melatonin peaks at midnight, while cortisol is highest in the early morning.

    “We all have circadian rhythms in our blood, and in lactating mothers, these are often reflected in breast milk,” Woortman said. “Hormones like melatonin and cortisol follow these rhythms and enter milk from maternal circulation.”

    The other breast milk components were mostly stable throughout the day. This might be because they aren’t as strongly influenced by signals dictating circadian rhythms, researchers said.

    The results suggest that moms should try to feed their expressed milk to reflect the time when it was gathered and stored, researchers said.

    “Labeling expressed milk as ‘morning,’ ‘afternoon,’ or ‘evening’ and feeding it correspondingly could help align expressing and feeding times and preserve the natural hormonal and microbial composition of the milk, as well as circadian signals,” Dominguez-Bello said.

    For busy moms, that adjustment stands to be a practical one, Woortman said.

    “In modern societies where it may not be feasible for mothers to stay with their infants throughout the day, aligning feeding times with the time of milk expression is a simple, practical step that maximizes the benefits of breast milk when feeding expressed milk,” she concluded.

    More information

    The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has more about the benefits of breast feeding.

    Copyright © 2025 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

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  • Prostate Cancer Cases Rising After Years of Decline, Study Finds

    Prostate Cancer Cases Rising After Years of Decline, Study Finds

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    Prostate cancer cases have risen steadily over the past decade, a new report found. Maskot/Getty Images
    • Prostate cancer rates rose over the past decade, following years of decline.
    • The increase is driven by advanced prostate cancer diagnoses, even in males as young as 55.
    • Experts say it’s time to reevaluate recommendations for PSA screening to ensure prostate cancer is caught early.

    Prostate cancer rates have risen steadily over the past decade, reversing course after years of decline.

    Diagnoses of prostate cancer rose by 3% annually between 2014 and 2021, following year-over-year declines of 6.4% in the late 2000s and early 2010s, according to the latest statistics from the American Cancer Society (ACS).

    Even more worrisome, the growth is driven by late-stage cancer diagnoses, the most dangerous form, in which the cancer has spread to other parts of the body. Advanced prostate cancer increased by up to 6.2% annually, with the most precipitous increase observed in males over the age of 70.

    Prostate cancer is the second-leading cause of cancer-related death for men in the United States, second only to lung cancer. One in eight men will be diagnosed with prostate cancer during their lifetime. In 2025, the ACS estimates 313,780 new cases of prostate cancer and 35,770 deaths from the disease.

    Declines in mortality have also slowed. Between 1993 and 2012, deaths from prostate cancer fell about 3.5% per year, before slowing to a trickle — just 0.6% per year during the following decade.

    For males ages 55–59, USPTF guidelines remain a “C” score, stating that periodic screening can be considered.

    “It appears that we are still experiencing some of the detrimental effects of the USPSTF recommendations against PSA screening, as we continue to see an increase in distant-stage disease across age groups,” said Jeffrey Tosoian, MD, MPH, an assistant professor of urology and director of Translational Cancer Research at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. Tosoian was not involved in the research.

    “The hope is that as updated recommendations based on best-available evidence take hold, this trend will reverse, and the harm caused by prostate cancer can be significantly reduced,” he told Healthline.

    The report highlights in stark detail consistent disparities in prostate cancer diagnosis and treatment due to race and ethnicity.

    Black men have the highest incidence rate of prostate cancer of all racial or ethnic groups — 67% higher than white men. They experience higher rates of the disease at every age compared to white men, and have the lowest age of diagnosis (65 years old) out of all racial groups.

    Black men also fare significantly worse disease outcomes than their peers: they are twice as likely to die from prostate cancer as any other racial or ethnic group.

    “Though this disparity has improved from a 2.5-fold increase in 2001, it underscores the importance of ensuring equal access to quality healthcare, among other potential factors,” said Tosoian.

    Disparities in mortality are present in other groups as well. For example, despite overall lower incidence of prostate cancer among American Indian and Alaska Natives (AIAN), they have a 12% higher mortality rate than White men.

    The reason for these disparities is multifactorial and includes factors like:

    • later stage diagnosis
    • higher prevalence of comorbidities
    • barriers to receiving high-quality treatment

    “Improving access to care, particularly early detection and high quality treatment, is important for reducing the disparity for Black men,” said Tyler Kratzer, MPH, first author of the report, and associate research scientist, surveillance research, at the American Cancer Society.

    “Prior research has shown that when Black men and white men with similar prostate cancer are treated equally, they have equivalent outcomes,” Kratzer told Healthline.

    Kratzer and his team also identified significant geographic prostate cancer trends in the United States, which may also be driven by racial disparities. They note that Washington, DC, and Mississippi, the two jurisdictions with the highest death rates from prostate cancer, also have higher proportions of Black residents.

    The ACS report suggests that climbing prostate cancer incidence rates, particularly at later stages, may be the result of declining PSA screening.

    PSA screening is a simple blood test that measures prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels. PSA is naturally produced by the prostate gland, but elevated levels may indicate the presence of cancer. PSA testing can detect prostate cancer up to 7 years before it becomes symptomatic.

    Despite these benefits, screening is also associated with overdiagnosis — when a tumor that is unlikely to cause symptoms is treated, leading to unnecessary harm to the patient.

    How to strike a balance between the harms and benefits of PSA testing is the “central question in the field” according to Tosoian.

    In 2018, the USPSTF again updated its recommendations for PSA screening for males ages 55–69, urging them to “make individual decisions” about the test and discuss potential harms and benefits with their doctor.

    For patients, navigating these vague recommendations may be difficult.

    “The recommendations certainly can be inconsistent from one guideline to the next, yet the majority of them are aligned on major points,” said Tosoian.

    “Men with a life expectancy of 10 years or more should consider PSA screening to avoid long-term risk of harm from prostate cancer. The exact age at which guidelines recommend beginning to screen does vary among guidelines, but most agree on beginning in the range of 45 to 55,” he said.

    Kratzer suggested that having informed discussions with family members and healthcare practitioners is essential for anyone considering prostate cancer screening.

    “Patients should talk with their family members to learn about any history of prostate cancer and then have a conversation with their healthcare provider about if and when screening is in their best interest, beginning at age 50 for most men or earlier for those with higher risk,” he said.

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  • H5N1 detected in Texas dairy herd; researchers can’t pinpoint source of California child’s illness

    H5N1 detected in Texas dairy herd; researchers can’t pinpoint source of California child’s illness

    After a month with no H5N1 avian flu detections in dairy cattle, the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) today reported a positive test involving a herd from Texas, raising the nation’s total since early 2024 to 1,079 infected herds in 17 states.

    The detection is Texas’s first since May.

    Also, APHIS reported another H5N1 outbreak at a commercial turkey farm, the second recent detection in South Dakota. The new report involves a facility in Beadle County that houses 52,600 birds. Other outbreaks in turkeys over the past week occurred in flocks in Faulk County, South Dakota, and in Dickey County, North Dakota.

    Source of California child’s H5N1 infection still a mystery

    In related news, investigators from California and their partners at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) yesterday published their investigation findings into one of two unexplained H5N1 infections in California children. They published the details in Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.

    The school-age child’s symptoms included fever, muscle pain, abdominal pain, and conjunctivitis (“pink eye”). They began on December 13, 2024, lasting 1 week and involving two healthcare visits. 

    The first visit was at a local emergency department, where staff collected a nasopharyngeal sample that tested positive for influenza A and was sent to the San Francisco Department of Public Health’s lab as part of enhanced surveillance. Further subtyping identified H5N1 on January 9, and follow-up sequencing revealed that the virus belonged to the B3.13 genotype that had been circulating in dairy cattle, other mammals, poultry, and wild birds.

    No other family members had been sick, and polymerase chain reaction and serology testing of some of the child’s close contacts revealed no evidence of human-to-human spread. A sample collected from the child on January 10 was still positive, but specimens collected 4 days after that were negative.

    Poultry not likely the cause

    The family lived in an urban environment and had a pet dog. A family member had bought raw poultry at a live-bird market more than 2 weeks before the child’s symptoms began. It was cooked and eaten the same day. Investigators wrote that poultry wasn’t the likely source, given that poultry-market testing was negative, the child wasn’t exposed to raw poultry, and the parents weren’t sick. The investigators said the child spent time outdoors at school and may have had environmental exposure to the virus.

    The researchers said continued surveillance and real-time subtyping at public health labs is a key part of novel flu surveillance and that detection of B3.13 serves as a reminder that the virus continues to transmit across susceptible species, requiring a strong One Health approach.

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  • PM seeks climate resilience plan within two weeks to counter 2026 monsoon threats

    • PM Shehbaz declares flood rehabilitation as top national priority, pledging full support to provinces
    • Forms special committee to facilitate financial aid for unregistered flood victims
    • The premier briefed floodwaters from Ravi, Sutlej and Chenab moving towards Panjnad; over 2m people evacuated nationwide
    • Over 6,300 tons of relief goods dispatched, 2,400 medical camps set up in flood-hit regions with 80pc of damaged power network restored

    ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Friday directed the Ministry of Climate Change and Environmental Coordination to begin immediate preparations for the 2026 monsoon season and submit a comprehensive climate resilience action plan within two weeks to address Pakistan’s growing vulnerability to climate change, including increasingly intense rainfall and flooding.

    Chairing a high-level review meeting here, the prime minister assessed the damage caused by recent heavy rains and flooding, along with the ongoing rescue, relief, and rehabilitation efforts, according to a news release from the PM’s Office.

    Declaring the rehabilitation of flood-affected citizens a top national priority, PM Shehbaz ordered authorities to ensure full preparedness in river-adjacent areas of southern Pakistan, which remain highly vulnerable to floods. He stressed that the federal government stands fully ready to support provincial administrations in all aspects of relief and rehabilitation, while emphasizing the need for real-time monitoring of evacuation and relief operations to guarantee timely assistance.

    The Prime Minister also instructed the formation of a special committee to facilitate financial assistance for flood victims not currently registered with NADRA. He reiterated his call to the Climate Change Ministry for a climate resilience action plan within two weeks, highlighting that it must effectively address Pakistan’s exposure to climate-related disasters.

    During the briefing, PM Shehbaz praised the coordinated rescue and relief efforts of the NDMA, PDMAs, Pakistan Army, and federal and provincial agencies. Officials reported that floodwaters from the Ravi, Sutlej, and Chenab rivers have reached central and southern Punjab and are expected to pass through Panjnad. Preparations have been made to handle a water flow of 1 to 1.2 million cusecs; however, the actual flow is projected at around 600,000 cusecs—significantly below earlier estimates.

    In Multan, district administration, military, and rescue teams are fully mobilized to safely manage the floodwaters without damaging embankments. Restoration of electricity infrastructure is progressing, with 80 percent of the damaged network in northern and central Pakistan already restored. Damaged roads and bridges have also been reopened, facilitating relief supply movement.

    The meeting was informed that more than two million people have been evacuated from flood-prone regions nationwide, while over 4,100 stranded individuals have been rescued. The federal government has dispatched 6,300 tons of relief goods, and more than 2,400 medical camps are operating in flood-hit areas to provide healthcare support. Compensation for deceased persons, the injured, and property damages is being processed through NADRA, with priority for the hardest-hit families.

    Chief secretaries from all four provinces, as well as Gilgit-Baltistan and Azad Jammu and Kashmir, joined the meeting via video link and shared detailed situation reports.

    The Prime Minister reaffirmed the federal government’s commitment to standing with provincial administrations until the complete rehabilitation of all flood victims. He directed ministries and departments to ensure uninterrupted support to the provinces.

    The meeting was attended by federal ministers Ahad Khan Cheema, Attaullah Tarar, and Sardar Awais Khan Leghari, along with the chairmen of NDMA and NADRA and other senior officials.

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  • Former US pilot accused of trying to cut engines reaches plea agreement | US news

    Former US pilot accused of trying to cut engines reaches plea agreement | US news

    A former Alaska Airlines pilot accused of trying to cut the engines of a passenger flight in 2023 while riding off-duty in the cockpit is due to enter guilty and no-contest pleas in federal and state courts on Friday as part of agreements with prosecutors.

    Joseph Emerson reached the plea agreements because he wants to take responsibility for his actions and hopes to avoid further time behind bars, said his attorney, Noah Horst.

    Emerson was subdued by the flight crew after trying to cut the engines of a Horizon Air flight from Everett, Washington, to San Francisco on 22 October 2023, while he was riding in an extra seat in the cockpit. The plane was diverted to Portland, where it landed safely with more than 80 people on board.

    Emerson told police he was despondent over a friend’s recent death, had taken psychedelic mushrooms about two days earlier, and hadn’t slept in more than 40 hours. He has said he believed he was dreaming at the time and that he was trying to wake himself up by grabbing two red handles that would have activated the plane’s fire suppression system and cut off fuel to its engines.

    Emerson, of Pleasant Hill, California, was charged in federal court with interfering with a flight crew. A state indictment in Oregon separately charged him with 83 counts of endangering another person and one count of endangering an aircraft.

    He previously pleaded not guilty to all the charges, and in December 2023 he was released from custody pending trial, with requirements that he undergo mental health services, stay off drugs and alcohol, and keep away from aircraft.

    On Friday, Emerson was expected to plead guilty to the federal count and no-contest to the state charges, which carries the same legal effect as a guilty plea.

    Under the federal agreement, prosecutors can recommend that Emerson serve up to a year in prison, while his attorneys will ask that he serve no additional time. The conditions of the state agreement include five years of probation, 664 hours of community service – eight hours for each person he endangered – and $60,569 in restitution, nearly all of it to Alaska Air Group, Horst said.

    Half of his community service can be performed at a pilot health non-profit Emerson founded after his arrest. He must also undergo assessments for drug and alcohol and mental health treatment, refrain from using any non-prescribed drugs, and keep at least 25ft (7.6 meters) away from operable aircraft unless he has permission from his probation officer.

    The averted disaster renewed attention on cockpit safety and the mental fitness of those allowed in them.

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  • Meta is fixing threads on Threads

    Meta is fixing threads on Threads

    Meta is finally fixing how threads work on its social network Threads. Prior to this, there was no real way to know how long a thread was or even if a post was part of a longer discussion.

    The company has made “several changes that display threaded posts more clearly.” These include a new “view more” label that indicates a post is part of a longer thread. This is an easy way to instantly know if someone’s thoughts continue past an initial post.

    There’s also a new design element that automatically stacks posts back-to-back when clicking into a series. Each of these posts now displays a number that shows its place in the thread, along with the total number of posts in a given thread. That sounds much easier than manually adding something like “part one of 12” to each post. These tools are rolling out soon for both mobile and web users.

    The platform recently reached the significant milestone of 400 million active monthly users. Meta has been busy adding new features to accommodate the growing audience, like the ability to attach lengthy text documents of up to 10,000 characters.

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