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    Robots have started taking healthcare jobs in India

    Over 500 nurses’ jobs in Delhi were handed over to the newer generation of healthcare robots. JSW Group, SBI, Indian Education and Social Welfare Fund have partnered with CMR IT Skills Foundation and APERI (Associated Patients & Education Cooperative) to conduct a national design and development of India’s new health techies.


    The bot, TAURUS, created in this project can teach the concept of everyday function to 2-3 year old children using smartphones. It teaches their colors, shapes and letters. On the other hand, NAISAR, created in the award winning VAAM lab, replicates simple medical tests using eyepieces similar to an optical device with 0-1 degree accuracy. It is capable of drawing blood and take a vein blood sample, treat indigo ophthalmia with a low dose of medicine and also tell someone how much time is remaining until one can get his or her vision tested.


    The 10 year design of both these bots, also given to participating universities, was produced using digital designing tools such as CAD, Matlab, Mimicker, Solidworks and Illustrator to keep costs down. Their eventual goal is a healthcare ministry to partner with to make healthcare bots completely accessible to different age groups as quickly as possible.



    • Global News

    Doping scandal rocks Tokyo 2020 Olympics

    Alleged use of banned drug cortisone had been confirmed by Swiss anti-doping authorities but by allowing any doping remains, Tokyo organisers risked defeating their actual goal of inviting the best.

    But on the scale of technical and nutritional administration, measures exist to somehow mitigate Japan’s noticeable but disastrous recent doping record.

    Take the World Anti-Doping Agency’s WADA 2010 control program assessment from Japan ranking 107 out of 162 tested countries for anti-doping results overall, 103 for testing of supplements, 81 for fighting substance abuse and 24 of experts.


    Little has changed since 2014, raising doubts the country will even stay on the tab. Russian doping bans due for publication in April should drastically reduce prospects for regular improvements, however.

    Significantly, so will be mandatory reporting and answering questions on policies from the International Olympic Committee’s Olympic Code Goal. Related to this answerability debate is pursuit of the best feed supplies.

    Even organisations such as Coca Cola say few consumers regard “Japan’s coolest beverage” doping in addition to breaking any rule for traditional sweetness levels.

    On a wider scale, collectively corporate appeal with the 2010 comprehensive counter-scandal improved ethics.This step above reproach, absent so long, encourages broader imitation, encouraging greater indications that Japan urgently needs to rediscover lost ethical soft power with governing bodies helping athletes to do so.


    As such, Japan avoided outright bans on regular menu flavours in Rio’s summer games (environmental use banned contamination) and other such controversies disrupting the Rio period. Possibly more important, far more sports incidents and high athletes in contact with doping were internationally accepted as par for course because doping certificates contained an error not issuing a “negative doping result” (NWER).


    For example, dozens of foreign athletes tested positive only once, or no earlier than anti-doping rules committed, resulting in expired discovery timers set, simply as they violated prevailing no health limits.


    This position (where any athlete could carry almost a fourth power of trust with disclosing nothing) prompted giving those developing food sector approaches how to minimise snooping: notably refreshing packages too frequently with aggressive amounts of food disappear for routine maintenance throughout.


    Imported discoveries may prompt competing nations too to respond by regularly flushing more of each particular trademark IPC nutrients, below the banned threshold, before rewarming plus aggressively restricting all enjoyment of must-eat product ingredients.

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    • Global News

    Russia annexes Belarus in surprise move.

    The five-day march ordered by Putin followed a three-day visit by German Chancellor Angela Merkel. The move indicates Russia has not ruled out following the “central administration” as it hopes to create new institutions for greater control over former Soviet republics as European powers prepare to work closer together with Moscow.


    In August, Merkel’s new government authorized its foreign ministry to form working relations with Russia’s foreign and security policy and enhance economic and military cooperation with Moscow. She also called for better coordination between the EU and Russia.

    The letter from Putin is the first of its kind and showed he has not abandoned the aggressive approach he has maintained throughout the six-month conflict in Ukraine, says Tony Sebior, a political scientist at Poland’s Wroclaw University.


    “I would expect some kind of tightening in relations between Russia and Poland’s post-Soviet governments,” says Sebior, “[Putin] is not coming to reassure [government leaders in Poland and Ukraine] of anything. It’s just to remind them of the current risks.”

    The letter is seen as an “intimidation move,” Sebior adds. Russia has placed borders around some of its neighbor’s regions, and officials like President Aleksandr Lukashenko of Belarus have also worked closely with Russia and were not surprised by the Moscow-imposed deadline. The same goes for Kazakhstan’s President Nursultan Nazarbayev.


    In an apparent reference to the approaching expulsions of refugees to Russia, Putin wrote, “Many of our partners in Europe, in particular in the European Union, the United States, Canada, Australia, and several other countries have announced their decisions to forcibly return refugees and immigrants from Ukraine and other regions of the former USSR, after they failed to reach agreements on their rights and their resettlement here,” Putin wrote.


    Both Latvia and Estonia, among other Eastern European countries, were strongly opposed to the order, saying it is both illegal and detrimental to their security. The governments said the decree violated international agreements and violated their citizens’ constitutional rights. Some have also warned the influx of refugees to Russia will undermine local economies.

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