DOMESTIC TIPS
World Drowning Prevention Day: WHO tips to avoid accidents
Last 25 July was World Drowning Prevention Day, proclaimed by a UN General Assembly resolution in 2021 and celebrated annually around the world.
This day serves "as an opportunity to highlight the impact of drowning on families and communities and to offer life-saving solutions to prevent it," the WHO recalls.
The same organisation, on the occasion of this very important day, had issued a list with some practical tips to avoid drowning accidents as much as possible.
World Drowning Prevention Day.
On the occasion of World Drowning Prevention Day on 25 July, the WHO released some data on drowning in recent years. Official numbers speak of 236,000 people dying from drowning each year, a total of about 2.5 million deaths in the last decade. The accidents are mainly in the open sea, in rivers, but also in pools only a few centimetres high should not be underestimated. The most frequent victims are children between one and four years old, followed by those between five and nine years old.
More WHO data on drownings.
According to WHO data, drowning has a 75 per cent impact on deaths during river floods, which are also becoming increasingly normal due to climate change. Drowning, the UN adds, is among the leading causes of death in children, young people and young adults in general up to the age of 24. Speaking in large numbers, drowning is the third leading cause of death from unintentional injuries worldwide. Ninety per cent of deaths occur in the poorest countries.
WHO's advice.
On the occasion of the World Drowning Prevention Day mentioned above, the WHO has issued a list of six prevention measures to minimise the risk of accidents. The first, fundamental tip is to enrol children in swimming lessons from an early age, and generally teach them to swim well first in the pool. The ability to swim well is very important for children, much more so than equipping them with floaties and life jackets, as these are by no means life-saving measures.
Always supervise children
Whether by a pond, river, beach or bathtub, children always need adult supervision so that they can immediately respond to any cries for help. This should be a fairly obvious rule, but evidently not for everyone.
Di WHOhttp://www.who.int/about/licensing/emblem/en/ - Open Clip Arthttp://www.who.int/about/licensin
Promote life-saving and resuscitation courses
The WHO is also trying to promote the participation of the population in first aid, sea rescue and on-site resuscitation courses. Indeed, it has been proven that survival after drowning improves if CPR is performed as soon as the person is taken out of the water.
Life jackets
One of the other WHO guidelines is to always wear a life jacket, whether you are on a speedboat, sailboat, canoe or dinghy. Even if you know how to swim, the low temperatures in certain places may prevent your muscles from working and therefore drown. In addition, swimming with all your clothes on, or in a severe state of shock, is really difficult. This device, unlike the armrests, is a real lifesaver.
Check the weather conditions
Obviously, we are not talking about swimming here, but mainly about boat trips. It is very important to consult the daily weather report issued by the various harbour masters' offices, so that you are always informed about disturbances in the area. In addition, again for boat trips, you should always check that all safety devices are present and in perfect condition.
The security measures identified by the UN
The measures identified by the UN to prevent drowning also range from installing barriers to providing safe places away from water, such as nurseries, for pre-school children. But also teaching swimming, training people in rescue and resuscitation, defining and enforcing safe navigation rules, improving flood risk management. In short, very similar to what the WHO has already said.
Nature
22/09/2023
Climate change is presenting us with greater and different challenges than ever before. In fact, the lack of rainfall and snowfall is pushing the world towards water shortages. Of course, we are not only talking about drinking water, which is used to quench our thirst, but also the water needed for energy plants and agriculture.
Some of our behaviors in fact, still linked to the old habits of abundance of our parents, are totally detrimental to the environment, as well as useless for practical purposes. Of course, there is a lack of proper environmental culture in schools in the first place, and that is where we step in.
In this little guide, we want to give you 10 quick tips on how to save water in everyday life.
science
20/09/2023
It often happens, especially during adolescence, that one realizes that one is more gifted in languages than in mathematics, or vice versa. Or that one's thought processes are different from those of a friend or classmate. This aspect depends not only on personal interests, but also on the way our brains work.
In fact, the way to process information is different from person to person, but it can be grouped into some predefined categories. Some are more predisposed to creative work, others to relationships with other people, and still others can hear and understand music in a way unthinkable for others.
According to a study carried out since the 1980s by the American psychologist Howard Gardner, we have as many as nine different types of intelligence, to which the tenth would be added. These intelligences could also theoretically be linked to certain types of jobs.
Art galleries private collections
19/09/2023
Food has undoubtedly been of paramount importance in the development of our modern civilization. Food in particular made our bodies stronger and helped extend the average lifespan of early humans by many decades.
The ability to create particular foods and dishes, in short, to process food, is still valued today, and, interestingly, many of the things that are the basis of our meals go back to ideas far into the past. Bread, wine, beer, oil, cheese, so many things go back even thousands of years.
In this short article, we will take you along with us to discover the origins of our most common foods.
Tablet computers and tech gadgets
science
17/09/2023
The Six Degrees of Separation Theory, which assumes that each person can be connected to any other in the world through a chain of knowledge with no more than five intermediaries, is one of the most popular and suggestive social theories ever created, and may still be valid today in the age of social networking.
It was in the mid-1960s when a Harvard professor sent a letter to an unknown farmer in Nebraska, hoping that, through a completely random network of contacts, the letter would reach its true recipient in Boston.
Today, a study co-ordinated by the Institute of Complex Systems of the National Research Council in Florence (CNR-Isc) - signed by researchers from Spain, Israel, Russia, Slovenia and Chile - has shown that connections on social networks resemble those found by Milgram in the 1960s.
Art galleries private collections