Health
Chicago teachers vow to fight order to drop mask mandates, Puerto Rico lifts restrictions
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With COVID-19 circumstances and hospitalizations persevering with to fall considerably throughout the U.S., native, state and territory governments and colleges have begun to take away masks mandates.
The governor of Puerto Rico introduced Monday that he would finish a requirement for masks use indoors.
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The shift on the island will take impact on Thursday and home vacationers will now not should current proof of vaccination or a unfavourable coronavirus check or fill out a at present required type starting on March 10.
Face masks will nonetheless be required in well being amenities and nursing houses.
As well as, Puerto Rico Gov. Pedro Pierluisi will carry all capability restrictions at private and non-private companies and stated proof of vaccination to enter will now not be required.
Vaccination necessities for public faculty college students, restaurant workers and well being employees might be lifted.
Within the contiguous U.S., officers introduced Monday that Chicago Public Faculties will cease requiring face masks for workers and college students starting on March 14.
“CPS was one of many first to require common masking in colleges, and we’d not be shifting to a mask-optional mannequin except the information and our public well being specialists indicated that it’s protected for our college communities,” CEO Pedro Martinez stated in an announcement.
The change applies inside faculty buildings, on faculty property and on faculty buses.
Nevertheless, college students and workers will nonetheless be inspired to put on masks, and particularly these in colleges with decrease vaccination charges.
MASK MANDATES GO AWAY IN SCHOOLS, BUT PARENT WORRIES PERSIST
Martinez pointed to different massive faculty districts’ choices to cease requiring face masks in current weeks.
On Monday, masks turned optionally available in New York Metropolis colleges and eating places and cultural sights may cease asking patrons for proof of vaccination.
Philadelphia is about to carry its mandate on Wednesday, becoming a member of a number of different massive cities.
However in Chicago, Martinez’s s announcement drew instant pushback from the Chicago Lecturers Union, which plans to file an unfair labor apply cost with the Illinois Instructional Labor Relations Board.
“Our metropolis is lucky that the numbers across the COVID-19 pandemic have shifted, with deaths, hospitalizations and constructive circumstances low,” the union stated in an announcement. “However CPS buildings are congregate settings the place vaccination charges additionally stay low, particularly in colleges with majority Black and Brown college students on the South and West sides of the town.”
In the meantime, in New York Metropolis, a bunch of oldsters plans to sue Mayor Eric Adams over his persevering with masks mandates for kids 4 and below in colleges.
Leaders have cited falling an infection charges and new federal well being steering, however these hesitant about ending faculty masks mandates usually level to low childhood vaccination charges amongst American youngsters.
Solely a few quarter of youngsters ages 5 to 11 have been totally vaccinated in opposition to the coronavirus, in response to the Facilities for Illness Management and Prevention (CDC).
The CDC lately issued tips saying that the majority People reside in areas the place wholesome folks can take away their masks.
The Related Press contributed to this report.
Health
Lack of sleep during pregnancy could impact baby's development, study reveals
Sleep is crucial, especially for pregnant women.
Inadequate sleep during pregnancy can have many negative effects, including neurodevelopmental delays for the child, according to a new study.
The research, which was published in the Endocrine Society’s Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, examined the effects of short sleep duration (SSD) — defined as sleeping fewer than seven hours per night — on pregnant women.
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The China-based researchers analyzed sleep data from 7,059 mother-child pairs from three Chinese hospitals. The children were screened for developmental delays from 6 months to 3 years old.
Insufficient sleep during pregnancy was associated with an increased risk of delays in nervous system development, the researchers found.
“Our findings highlight the importance of addressing sleep quality during pregnancy to potentially mitigate the risk of long-term cognitive and behavioral issues in children,” lead study author Peng Zhu, M.D., of Anhui Medical University and the MOE Key Laboratory of Population Health Across Life Cycle in Hefei, China, told Fox News Digital.
“Additionally, we discovered that cord blood C-peptide levels partially mediate this association, indicating that maternal sleep might impact fetal glucose metabolism and, consequently, the child’s neurodevelopment.”
LACK OF SLEEP POSES CONCERNING RISK FOR KIDS, STUDY FINDS
The neurodevelopmental delays can lead to slower development of social, emotional, behavioral, motor, cognitive or speech skills, the new study revealed.
Boys, compared to girls, have a higher risk of these issues when their mothers experience SSD, the researchers found.
“This suggests that male fetuses might be more sensitive to the metabolic environment influenced by maternal sleep patterns,” Zhu said.
“This insight could lead to tailored interventions and a deeper understanding of how prenatal factors affect neurodevelopmental outcomes in a sex-specific manner.”
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Pregnant women may have trouble sleeping due to hormonal changes, discomfort, frequent urination and other factors, the Endocrine Society noted in a press release.
Dr. Jillian LoPiano, a Miami-based OB-GYN and chief health officer at the reproductive telehealth platform Wisp, acknowledged that the study measured a “possible biological marker” in neurological development.
“Much more research is needed to assess this relationship, but adequate sleep is known to be associated with proper growth and socioemotional development,” she told Fox News Digital.
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Poor sleep during pregnancy is also associated with other complications, including preeclampsia and gestational diabetes, LoPiano detailed.
“Adequate sleep is known to be associated with proper growth and socioemotional development.”
The expert recommended that pregnant women who are experiencing trouble sleeping consult with a doctor.
She also shared a few simple methods that can help improve sleep, including sleeping in a cool, dark room, minimizing screen time and distractions before bed, having adequate wind-down time, meditating and using support pillows.
The study researchers reiterated the importance of sleep hygiene.
“Pregnant women should be advised on strategies to improve sleep hygiene, such as maintaining a consistent sleep schedule, creating a relaxing bedtime environment, and avoiding caffeine and electronic devices before bed,” Zhu told Fox News Digital.
BEST AND WORST BEDTIMES FOR VARIOUS GENERATIONS
The researchers also recommend that health care providers screen pregnant women for sleep quality and provide guidance on achieving sufficient sleep.
“Furthermore, monitoring and managing gestational diabetes, which is linked to sleep patterns, should be emphasized,” Zhu added.
The study did have some potential limitations, the researchers acknowledged.
“As an observational study, we can only establish associations rather than causality,” Zhu told Fox News Digital.
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“Additionally, sleep duration was self-reported, which may introduce some level of bias.”
Future studies with objective sleep measurements and larger sample sizes could help to validate the findings, the researcher added.
Health
Best friends have babies on the same day, at the same hospital: ‘Can’t make this stuff up’
Two best friends in Florida got to experience one of life’s most meaningful experiences together — becoming mothers — and it was caught on camera.
It started in May 2024, when Carolynn Shada announced her pregnancy to her best friend, Kali Gaynor — only to get a surprise of her own when her friend said she was also expecting.
“Our due dates were eight days apart, so we always joked around with the idea that we all could be at the hospital at the same time,” she wrote on Instagram.
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“NEVER did we ever think our BOYS would be born on the same day.”
Yet that’s exactly what happened — in August, the best friends went into labor and delivered their baby boys on the same day, in the same hospital.
“Her precious baby boy was born a bit after 12AM on Tuesday,” Shada wrote of her friend.
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“The hospital we were at was at a max capacity, so a few hours after she birthed her baby they moved her to triage. As morning rolls around, I head to the hospital and was placed in the EXACT room she delivered her baby in. My son was born later that afternoon with the same midwife group.”
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“You can’t make this stuff up!”
Fox News Digital reached out to Shada and Gaynor for comment.
Health
Health, happiness and helping others are vital parts of free and responsible society, Founding Fathers taught
It’s well known that Ben Franklin was a morning person. In his “Poor Richard’s Almanac,” he famously said, “Early to bed, early to rise, makes a man healthy, wealthy and wise.”
But what did Ben Franklin do when he got up early? What was his morning ritual?
That is less well known. In his autobiography, Ben Franklin wrote that the first thing he did when he woke up each day was to ask himself the following question: “What good shall I do this day?” (See the video at the top of this article.)
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I love Ben Franklin’s ritual.
For most of my adult life, my default morning thoughts included questions such as, “What annoying tasks do I have to do this day?” and “What terrible things have happened in the world that I’ll read about when I open my laptop?”
Nowadays, I try instead to do what Ben Franklin advises: I ask myself, “What good can I do today?”
Written on a piece of paper, it now hangs over my desk as a reminder.
This new habit is the result of the year I spent recently trying to live like the Founding Fathers. I wrote about the wisdom I learned in my new book, “The Year of Living Constitutionally.”
“The Founders’ idea of virtue meant public-mindedness. A virtuous person puts the interests of others before their own interests.”
As Franklin’s morning ritual implies, the Founders were obsessed with the idea of virtue.
Nowadays, the word “virtue” has a bit of a cringey and fusty ring to it.
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I hear the word most often used in the phrase “virtue signaling,” which is not a compliment.
“Virtue signaling” refers to someone who is ostentatiously trying to show off how righteous they are by, for instance, loudly asking a waiter about the living conditions of the bees that produced the honey for their oatmeal.
In the Founders’ era, the word virtue had no such mixed connotations.
Virtue was a cherished ideal. In his book “First Principles,” Thomas E. Ricks writes that the Founders used the word virtue about 6,000 times in the collected writings from the Revolutionary era.
That’s more often than the word “freedom.”
“I almost wish the Constitution had a Bill of Responsibilities.”
The Founders’ idea of virtue meant public-mindedness. A virtuous person puts the interests of others before their own interests. A virtuous person focuses on those two key words in the Constitution’s preamble: “General Welfare.”
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I think we’re due for a resurgence of virtue. I know I could use more of it.
As a rule, I’m too focused on my individual rights. Rights are wonderful, and I’m grateful that I live in a country that puts an emphasis on individual rights. But rights come with responsibilities.
I almost wish the Constitution had a Bill of Responsibilities.
The idea of public responsibility, I believe, was more ingrained in the 18th century and didn’t need to be spelled out. You were expected to sacrifice for your community.
If there was a fire, you were expected to be part of the bucket brigade, helping to save your neighbor’s house. If you were a man, you were expected to be a part of your local militia.
“If I’m depressed, I find the best thing to do is to help others. It gets me out of my head.”
When my wife and kids and I wrote a Constitution for our family — an exercise I fully recommend — we included a Bill of Rights, but also a Bill of Responsibilities.
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It’s not about being saintly.
Service actually wasn’t opposed to happiness. It was integral to it.
As Jeffrey Rosen, president of the National Constitution Center, has said, “Happiness wasn’t about feeling good. It was about doing good.”
I find this observation to be true in my own life. If I’m depressed, I find the best thing to do is to help others. It gets me out of my head.
That piece of paper over my desk serves as a moral North Star and helps tamp down my Larry David side.
When I start to get angry about something silly — such as my Instagram post didn’t get enough likes — I can look at the phrase and get a reality check.
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It reminds me of the big picture.
“The Year of Living Constitutionally: One Man’s Humble Quest to Follow the Constitution’s Original Meaning” by A.J. Jacobs (2024) is published by Crown.
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Health, happiness and helping others are vital parts of free and responsible society, Founding Fathers taught