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NHS: Idiot dentist policies have real world consequences
NHS: Idiot dentist policies have real world consequences

Powys County Times

time3 days ago

  • Health
  • Powys County Times

NHS: Idiot dentist policies have real world consequences

Rattus has heard that National Health dentists in Wales are giving up and going private in droves. In Wales, you no longer choose your National Health dentist, there is one chosen for you. This means that a good dentist who has given sterling service to a practice over 40 years loses the patients they know and love. It also means that any patient seeing a new dentist has to provide lots of information that their usual dentist already has and that the dental surgeon has to make a thorough examination rather than just do what is necessary. This is a complete waste of time. I think Welsh Government are trying to kill off National Health Dentistry completely so everyone has to go private. This actually puts an extra burden on our health service as a significant number of patients are admitted to hospital with acute dental problems and probably sepsis and a generation of children suffer from bad teeth. Rattus is delighted that it doesn't apply to patients who see National Health dentists in England - yet? Can we at the Senedd election next year choose people who can understand that idiot policies have consequences or shall we just have a vote on getting rid of the Senedd.

Climate Change Is Helping Fuel an Urban Rat Boom
Climate Change Is Helping Fuel an Urban Rat Boom

Bloomberg

time31-01-2025

  • Science
  • Bloomberg

Climate Change Is Helping Fuel an Urban Rat Boom

From Ratatouille 's Remy to New York's infamous pizza rat, there may be no animal more locked into a love-hate relationship with humans than the genus Rattus. Found on every continent but Antarctica, rats are often seen — with good reason — as a proxy for poverty, filth and disease. And a study published this week in the journal Science Advances suggests that as the climate warms, rat populations are increasing, too. Milder winters across the Northern Hemisphere are helping rats thrive in ever denser metropolitan areas. Just a handful of warmer weeks a year in a bustling city is enough to boost rodent population growth over time, according to the study. 'That's potentially two to four extra weeks a year that they can be above ground, foraging for food, acquiring those resources that they need to actually reproduce,' said Jonathan Richardson, an assistant professor of biology at the University of Richmond and lead author of the study. A ballooning rodent population has the potential to create added headaches for public officials already fighting infestations. Rats can damage urban infrastructure and act as a vector for disease. They also take 'a measurable toll' on the mental health of people coexisting with them, according to the study. And there's an economic cost — cities across the globe are already spending $500 million each year to try and keep the rats at bay. In New York, for example, Mayor Eric Adams has declared a ' war on rats,' appointed a rat czar tasked with rodent mitigation efforts and hosted the city's first-ever National Urban Rat Summit. Urban centers that saw larger increases in temperature over the study periods had larger increases in rat populations, the authors found. Of the 16 cities analyzed, 11 exhibited a growing rat population, including Washington, DC, San Francisco and New York. Population density was another contributing factor to the increase in rodents with denser cities seeing greater growth.

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