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  • SSRI and Heat Intolerance: Why Your Antidepressants Might Be Making You Sweat

    SSRI and Heat Intolerance: Why Your Antidepressants Might Be Making You Sweat

    As climate change accelerates, summer is only getting longer – and hotter. Though the extreme heat can be difficult for anyone to deal with, it seems that it can be particularly arduous for people with certain mental health conditions.

    During a recent heat wave, scores of people on TikTok posted about experiencing heat intolerance while taking serotonin reuptake inhibitors, also known as SSRIs, a type of antidepressant. The videos range from funny (relatable POV shots of people sweating profusely) to educational (some doctors weighed in on the medical reasons behind the phenomenon). It’s true that SSRIs can impact how your body reacts to heat, but as with anything on social media, the truth about SSRI heat intolerance is more complicated than it seems.

    About 13% of adults in the United States take antidepressants (of which SSRIs are the most common form). SSRIs are commonly prescribed to treat depression, anxiety, and panic disorders and include commonly known medications like Prozac and Zoloft. The drugs function by blocking the brain’s reuptake of serotonin, which is a naturally occurring chemical that regulates mood. But regulating mood isn’t serotonin’s only job, says Dr. Joshua Wortzel, MD, a psychiatrist and assistant professor at the Yale School of Medicine.

    “Sertonin plays a fundamental role in regulating the body’s main thermostat, the hypothalamus,” says Dr. Wortzel. “SSRIs [are] obviously going to have a number of effects on the body’s ability to thermoregulate. Ten percent of people on SSRIs will report increased sweating, especially in the beginning.”

    Still, Dr. Wortzel says that SSRIs don’t necessarily lead to heat intolerance — it might be the mental health condition the drugs treat that changes how you react to heat. Research suggests that people with depression tend to have higher body temperatures, prompting scientists to look at whether lowering body temperature might have a therapeutic effect. Dr. Wortzel says increased sweating on SSRIs can be a cooling mechanism for the body, which helps regulate that core temperature.

    So, do SSRIs cause heat intolerance? Not necessarily — but they do impact how your body regulates temperature, which we know can already be a struggle during the summer months. How can you handle all that sweating in the heat? Dr. Elizabeth Haase, MD, a psychiatrist who is part of the Climate Psychiatry Alliance, says it’s key to know your limits.

    “The basic advice would be to be aware that you’re going to be less able to adapt to the heat than other people and to come in out of the heat earlier,” says Dr. Haase. “You just want to be more cautious.”

    Dr. Haase stresses that the potential of heat intolerance should not keep someone from taking their prescribed medications. Instead, Dr. Wortzel says patients may reach out to their doctors to discuss SSRI heat intolerance and plan coping strategies.

    “My number one advice would be to talk to your medical provider about how you’re going to manage your medicines in the heat,” says Dr. Wortzel. He notes that sleep is negatively impacted by rising temperatures and heat so if a person has to limit where they’re going to use air conditioning or other measures, it’s best to use it in the room where they sleep. “Air conditioning is huge because we know that sleep disruption can increase risks of depression, mood instability, emotional stability, and suicidality. Try to stay cool at night.”


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  • Artificial Light Lengthens the Urban Growing Season

    Artificial Light Lengthens the Urban Growing Season

    Artificial light and higher temperatures in cities may lengthen the growing season by up to 24 days, according to a new study in Nature Cities.

    Previous studies have observed that plant growth starts earlier and ends later in cities than in rural areas. But these studies haven’t concluded whether this difference depends more on heat or light, both of which regulate the growing season and are amplified in urban centers.

    The new study’s authors used satellite data to estimate nighttime light pollution in cities and pinpoint the start and end of the growing season. They found that the amount of artificial light at night plays a bigger role in growing season length than temperature does, especially by delaying the end of the season.

    “This study highlights artificial light at night as a powerful and independent force on plant phenology,” said Shuqing Zhao, an urban ecologist at Hainan University in China who was not involved in the research. “It marks a major step forward in our understanding of how nonclimatic urban factors influence plant life cycles.”

    City Lights Trick Plants

    “Plants rely on both temperature and light as environmental cues to regulate their growth,” explained Lin Meng, an environmental scientist at Vanderbilt University and a coauthor of the study. In the spring, warmer temperatures and lengthening days signal to plants that it’s time to bud and produce new leaves. In the fall, colder, shorter days prompt plants to drop their leaves and prepare for winter.

    “Plants evolved with predictable cycles of light and darkness—now, cities are flipping that on its head.”

    But in cities, these essential cues can be disrupted. Cities are typically hotter than surrounding rural areas—the so-called urban heat island effect—and much brighter because of the abundance of artificial light. These disrupted cues “can trick plants into thinking the growing season is longer than it actually is,” Meng said. “Plants evolved with predictable cycles of light and darkness—now, cities are flipping that on its head.”

    To assess how heat and light are affecting urban plants, Meng and her coauthors used satellite data from 428 cities in the Northern Hemisphere, collected from 2014 to 2020. For each city, the researchers analyzed correlations between the amount of artificial light at night (ALAN), air temperature, and the length of the growing season.

    The scientists found that on average, the growing season started 12.6 days earlier and ended 11.2 days later in city centers compared with rural areas. ALAN apparently played an important role in extending the growing season, especially in the autumn, when ALAN’s influence exceeded that of temperature.

    Anna Kołton, a plant scientist at the University of Agriculture in Krakow who was not part of the research, highlighted the significance of this result. “The impact of climate change, including increased temperatures on plant functioning, is widely discussed, but light pollution is hardly considered by anyone as a significant factor affecting plant life.” The new study is among the first to bring ALAN’s effects into the spotlight.

    “Every Day Needs a Night”

    “The extension of urban vegetation may at first glance appear positive,” said Kołton. But this positive impression is deceiving. In reality, an extended growing season “poses a threat to the functioning of urban greenery.”

    Delaying the end of the growing season may be especially disruptive. In the fall, shortening days prompt plants to reduce their metabolic activity, drop their leaves, and toughen up their cell walls to withstand the coming winter. But if they are constantly stimulated by artificial light, Kołton pointed out, urban plants may miss their cue and be unprepared when the cold hits.

    “Every day needs a night, and so do our trees, pollinators, and the rhythms of nature we all depend on.”

    Longer growing seasons also affect animals and people. “Flowers might bloom before their pollinators are active, or leaf-out might not align with bird migration,” said Meng. “And for people, a longer growing season means earlier and prolonged pollen exposure, which can make allergy seasons worse.”

    As cities become bigger and brighter, their growing seasons will likely continue to lengthen unless the impacts of ALAN are addressed. “The good news is that unlike temperature, artificial light is something we can manage relatively easily,” said Meng. She and Zhao both suggested that swapping blue-rich LED lamps for warmer LEDs (which are less stimulating to plants), introducing motion-activated or shielded lights, and reducing lighting in green spaces could limit light pollution in cities.

    “Every day needs a night,” Meng said, “and so do our trees, pollinators, and the rhythms of nature we all depend on.”

    —Caroline Hasler (@carbonbasedcary), Science Writer

    Citation: Hasler, C. (2025), Artificial light lengthens the urban growing season, Eos, 106, https://doi.org/10.1029/2025EO250254. Published on [DAY MONTH] 2025.
    Text © 2025. The authors. CC BY-NC-ND 3.0
    Except where otherwise noted, images are subject to copyright. Any reuse without express permission from the copyright owner is prohibited.


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  • Lions vs Australia: Andy Farrell’s side hot favourites to win Test series

    Lions vs Australia: Andy Farrell’s side hot favourites to win Test series

    By early evening on Friday in Australia the poll in the Sydney Morning Herald had recorded 23,585 votes on the outcome of the series between the Wallabies and the British and Irish Lions.

    A Wallabies 3-0 whitewash got a dismal 5%. A 2-1 victory for the home nation sat at 26%. A 2-1 Lions success story attracted 34% of the vote, but sitting at the top, as the most likely outcome in the eyes of the contributors, was a Lions clean sweep – 3-0 getting 36% backing.

    “I don’t know how much respect we’ve been shown,” said Wallaby coach and Andy Farrell mentor, Joe Schmidt, the other day. Well, there’s more of it.

    These are unprecedented times. Every bookmaker, from Brisbane to Ballydehob, makes the Lions favourites, not just for Saturday’s first Test at the Suncorp Stadium, where they are traditionally strong, but across the span of the series.

    When was the last time they were so hotly fancied on a tour such as this? That’s to say, the main body of the tour as opposed to the era when the Lions used Australia for warm-up Tests ahead of the big stuff against South and New Zealand? One hundred years and more. Maybe even as far back as the 1800s when the Lions wore red, white and blue stripes and the Wallabies pale blue.

    On Saturday, the Lions will face the world number six side, promoted from world number eight on the back of Argentina dropping down after losing to England and Scotland falling after losing to Fiji.

    Australia are missing two of their heaviest hitters – their best player, Rob Valetini, and their hulking lock, Will Skelton. Their fly-half Tom Lynagh has never started a Test before. One of their back rows is making his debut. One of their wings has played once since the end of March and the other has played once since the end of May.

    Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii, the talented Wallaby centre, is described as the man who can save Australian rugby. Suaalii is 21 and has played five times for the Wallabies, one of them being a humbling loss to Scotland last autumn when he came out on the wrong side of a collision with Sione Tuipulotu and had to go off injured. There’s not a lot of love lost there. The pair will face each other again at the Suncorp.

    As a collective, the Wallabies have had one game – a scratchy win over Fiji – since last November. They’re not so much undercooked as frozen solid. Somehow, Schmidt has to thaw them out in time for Saturday.

    Do they have a hope? This is a good Lions squad – extremely creative at their best and capable of brutal physicality up front through some seriously hardy ball-carriers. There’s a power in this Lions team that’s going to be hard to contain.

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  • General Assembly Adopts Resolution Urging Action on Secretary-General’s Initiative to Modernize United Nations System | Meetings Coverage and Press Releases – UN Press Releases

    1. General Assembly Adopts Resolution Urging Action on Secretary-General’s Initiative to Modernize United Nations System | Meetings Coverage and Press Releases  UN Press Releases
    2. UN80 initiative should be ‘inclusive and transparent’, recognises General Assembly  UN News
    3. Voices from the Arab press: The need to reform the UN  The Jerusalem Post
    4. Reforms are vital to free UN of chains  Dawn
    5. Role Of The United Nations In Global Peace  Daily Parliament Times

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  • Sub-Saharan Africa’s Mobile Money Drives Savings for 23% of Adults in 2024 (World Bank)

    Sub-Saharan Africa’s Mobile Money Drives Savings for 23% of Adults in 2024 (World Bank)

    • 23% of adults in Sub-Saharan Africa saved money using mobile accounts in 2024, well above the 9% average in low- and middle-income countries.

    • Mobile money accounts now fuel nearly 60% of formal borrowing in the region, with Kenya leading in digital lending.

    • Mobile payments grew rapidly, but only 20% of mobile money users pay merchants digitally.

    Mobile money accounts are revolutionizing financial access in Sub-Saharan Africa. Traditional banks have long struggled to reach rural and low-income populations. However, mobile money now enables millions to save, borrow, and make payments through formal channels.

    The World Bank reported on July 16, 2025, that 23% of adults in Sub-Saharan Africa saved money via mobile accounts in 2024. This rate far surpasses the 9% average across all low- and middle-income countries. The report, The Global Findex Database 2025: Connectivity and Financial Inclusion in the Digital Economy, highlights significant progress in mobile financial services.

    In five countries—Ghana, Kenya, Senegal, Uganda, and Zambia—around half of adults saved with mobile money accounts. Overall, 40% of adults in Sub-Saharan Africa had a mobile money account in 2024, up from 27% just three years earlier. This surge drives growth for mobile network operators like MTN Group, Orange, Vodacom, Airtel Africa, and Safaricom.

    The rise in mobile savings pushed total savings in the region to its highest point in a decade. The World Bank’s survey, covering 145,000 adults across 141 countries, found formal savings in Sub-Saharan Africa increased by 12 percentage points since 2021 to 35%. This figure is the second-highest globally, trailing only East Asia and the Pacific.

    About 60% of adults now save formally or informally, up from just over 50% in 2021.

    Mobile Money Accounts for Nearly 60% of Formal Borrowing

    Mobile money also dominates formal borrowing. In low- and middle-income countries, 40% of adults saved formally last year via bank or mobile accounts. Formal saving rose over 23 percentage points since 2011, helping finance national investments and economic growth.

    Yet, only 12% of adults in Sub-Saharan Africa borrowed formally in 2024, below the 24% global average for similar economies. Among them, 7% borrowed from mobile money providers, who account for nearly 60% of all formal borrowing in the region.

    Kenya leads the mobile borrowing scene. There, 32% of adults borrowed from mobile money providers, representing 86% of formal borrowers. A quarter of these borrowed exclusively this way.

    On payments, 80% of mobile money account holders use their accounts for digital payments. However, only 20% use mobile money to pay merchants directly.

    Mobile money’s rise is reshaping Africa’s financial landscape—expanding inclusion, unlocking savings, and creating new ways to borrow.

    Walid Kéfi


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  • Pakistan’s auto financing hits new high

    Pakistan’s auto financing hits new high

    Low interest rates continue to attract buyers towards auto financing, pushing outstanding car loans to Rs 276.6 billion by the end of June. This marks the seventh consecutive month of growth, according to a report by Dawn. Despite this growth, current loan volumes remain below the record Rs 368 billion seen in June 2022.

    The drop in interest rates from 22% in June 2024 to 11% now has revived demand for auto loans. However, a recent levy on new energy vehicles starting July 1 may raise car prices and slow future financing activity. Market experts have mixed views on this impact.

    Some analysts, like Samiullah Tariq of Pak-Kuwait Investment Company, expect slower sales in July due to June’s high purchases. Others, including Topline Securities CEO Sohail, believe economic recovery and cheaper loans will sustain growth in both car sales and auto financing.

    Auto assemblers attribute recent financing increases to the lower interest rates, despite the Rs 3 million loan cap. They suggest the State Bank raise this cap to Rs 6 million to help more low- and middle-income buyers access financing. However, many still find car leasing difficult due to strict terms, including short repayment periods and high down payments.

    Car sales, including pickups, SUVs, and vans, rose 43% year-on-year to 148,023 units in fiscal year 2025. Topline Securities forecasts total vehicle sales, including imports, to surpass 217,000 units this fiscal year—a 31% rise. Yet, this figure remains 33-38% below the peak sales seen in fiscal year 2018.


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  • Does sustained lung inflation improve survival and other important outcomes for newborn babies receiving resuscitation at birth?

    Key messages

    • One in every 20 to 30 newborn babies receives help to start breathing well on their own after birth. ‘Sustained lung inflation’ is when a baby is given a long, steady breath, usually lasting about 10 to 15 seconds, to try to help them start normal breathing.

    • Compared to standard, intermittent, resuscitation (when a baby’s lungs are inflated repeatedly for less than 1 second), giving newborn babies an initial sustained lung inflation may make little to no difference to the number of babies who die in the delivery room or before discharge from hospital.

    • Sustained inflation may reduce the need for newborns to be put on a breathing machine (mechanical ventilation), compared to standard inflation.

    Why do some babies have difficulty establishing effective breathing at birth?

    At birth, the lungs are filled with fluid which must be replaced by air for babies to breathe properly. Some babies – especially if they are born too early (preterm) – have difficulty establishing effective breathing at birth. One in every 20 to 30 babies receives resuscitation, or help to start breathing well on their own.

    What is sustained lung inflation?

    A variety of devices are used to help newborn babies begin normal breathing. Some of these devices allow caregivers to give long (or sustained) inflations. ‘Sustained lung inflation’ gently gives the baby an initial long, steady breath, usually lasting about 10 to 15 seconds, to help fill the lungs with air and push fluid out. This can make it easier for a newborn to start breathing on their own. These sustained inflations may be better than ‘standard intermittent resuscitation’, which involves giving the baby short, gentle breaths through a mask, one at a time, to help inflate the lungs. Each breath usually lasts less than 1 second.

    What did we want to find out?

    We wanted to find out if sustained lung inflation (more than 1 second in duration) is better than standard inflation (up to and including 1 second in duration) to improve survival and other important outcomes among newborn babies receiving resuscitation at birth.

    What did we do?

    We searched for studies that compared sustained inflation with standard inflation in babies having difficulty establishing effective breathing at birth. We compared and summarised the results of the studies and rated our confidence in the evidence, based on factors such as study methods and sizes.

    What did we find?

    We found 14 studies that involved 1766 infants. In all studies, babies were born preterm (from 23 to 36 weeks of gestational age). The sustained inflation lasted between 15 and 20 seconds. Most studies gave the babies one or more additional sustained inflations if the babies did not respond well to the first inflation (for example, if they had a persistent low heart rate). We analysed two studies separately because, in addition to sustained or standard inflations, healthcare professionals treated babies with chest compressions, an additional step that might help them begin normal breathing.

    Main results

    Compared to standard inflation, sustained inflation with no chest compression may make little to no difference to the number of babies who:
    • die in the delivery room;
    • die before hospital discharge;
    • develop chronic lung disease (a form of lung injury);
    • develop pneumothorax (an air leak into the chest); or
    • develop severe intraventricular haemorrhage (bleeding into the brain’s fluid-filled spaces).

    Compared to standard inflation, sustained lung inflation may reduce the need for newborns to be put on a breathing machine (mechanical ventilation).

    Based on the current evidence, we cannot rule out small to moderate differences between the two treatments in terms of these outcomes.

    What are the limitations of the evidence?

    We have little confidence in the evidence because some studies could have been better designed. The babies’ parents, the delivery room caregivers, and other staff involved in the studies were aware of which treatment the babies were being given. Not all studies provided data about everything that we were interested in. Moreover, only a few studies have explored this treatment approach, and relatively few babies were included in these studies.

    How current is this evidence?

    The evidence is current to April 2024.

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  • I Bought an 18-Pound Mystery Box of Watches From Goodwill—Here’s What Was Inside

    I Bought an 18-Pound Mystery Box of Watches From Goodwill—Here’s What Was Inside

    Here’s how the Goodwill auction site works. You place a maximum bid, but the site will only go $1 over the existing top bid. So if my maximum bid was $200 and someone bid $150, it would put me as the leader at $151. However, if your highest bid isn’t enough to beat out your opposition’s maximum, you immediately get an email notification that you’ve been outbid. (In my attempt to buy the 38-pound box, I got hit with 13 emails within two minutes, all of which informed me there was someone else who wanted these watches a lot more than I did.)

    At exactly 4:41 p.m., 19 minutes before the auction was set to end, I got an email that I had been outbid. Bastard! So while at an event for my son’s preschool, I covertly unpocketed my phone and started to fight back. I offered $250. Outbid. $275. Outbid. $300. Outbid. $330. Outbid. I put up $360 and waited for my phone to buzz with the email alerting me I was still in second place. But it never came. A few minutes later, the lot was mine for $359 (before taxes and shipping).

    According to Burt, watches are one of the biggest sellers on Goodwill’s ecommerce site. Jewelry, the category that includes watches, accounts for 30% of the site’s total sales, and Burt said timepieces are “definitely a healthy percentage of that number.” In 2024, Goodwill sold 133,558 watches on its website. This year, it’s on track to move even more. As of last month, the organization has sold $69,595 timepieces in 2025, including some mega-expensive models. Just a couple of weeks ago, bidders duked it out over an Audemars Piguet Royal Oak that sold for $26,104, which overtook a $25,001 Rolex from 2019 as Goodwill’s biggest watch sale ever.

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  • Analysis reveals the role of biocontrol reagents against tomato bacterial wilt

    Analysis reveals the role of biocontrol reagents against tomato bacterial wilt











    Bacterial wilt caused by Ralstonia solanacearum is considered one of the most important diseases that cause economic losses to tomato.

    Currently, eco-friendly biocontrol agents have been increasingly considered as effective approaches to control tomato bacterial wilt. However, the specific mechanisms by which biocontrol bacteria with distinct functions exert their effects remain unclear. In this study, researchers employed a combination of amplicon sequencing, transcriptomics, and metabolomics analysis to investigate how Bacillus velezensis and Pseudomonas fluorescens affect the defense responses against R. solanacearum in tomato. The researchers showed that the fermentation broth of these biocontrol agents inhibited the growth of R. solanacearum in vitro, and improves the ability of tomato plants against bacterial wilt. In general, different biocontrol agents protect plants from bacterial wilt in many ways, by recruiting specific microbial communities in rhizosphere soil and activating different synthetic/metabolic and signaling pathways.

    Collectively, the findings contribute to a more in-depth understanding in disease resistance mechanisms of biocontrol agents, and provide a theoretical foundation for the development of targeted strategies using beneficial microorganisms to suppress disease occurrence.

    Du X-Q, Sun T-X, Xu W-L, Zhu T, Wang Q, Gu P-W and Lu J (2025) Multi-omics analysis reveals the specific role of biocontrol reagents against tomato bacterial wilt. Front. Plant Sci. 16:1620460. doi: 10.3389/fpls.2025.1620460

    Source: Frontiers In



    Frontpage photo: © Miyuki Satake | Dreamstime



    Publication date:













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  • Man Utd have done it! Bryan Mbeumo to join Red Devils in £71m deal after breakthrough in negotiations with Brentford

    Man Utd have done it! Bryan Mbeumo to join Red Devils in £71m deal after breakthrough in negotiations with Brentford

    • Man Utd agree £71m deal to sign Mbeumo
    • Cameroonian chose Old Trafford over others
    • Set to become third summer signing

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