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Sunday, March 17, 2024

Health risks rise with temperature (Poll Inside)

 

Words of caution: Dr Azizan advised the public avoid outdoor activities while Prof Tangang says hot and dry conditions are expected to last for the next two weeks.

PETALING JAYA: Health experts have advised the public to take precautions against heat-related health issues as daytime temperatures are anticipated to soar beyond 35ºC in the coming weeks.

They warn that prolonged exposure to high temperatures can heighten the risk of heat-related ailments, potentially leading to severe health complications.

Malaysian Medical Association president Dr Azizan Abdul Aziz said extremely hot weather can increase the risk of dehydration and heat stroke.

“Children, people engaging in outdoor sports during the day and elderly with long-term health conditions like heart disease or diabetes, are most at risk,” she said, adding that untreated heat stress can lead to heatstroke, which is a medical emergency.

Dr Azizan also advised Muslims to replenish fluids whenever breaking fast, recommending drinking between six to eight glasses of water between iftar and sahur.

“Those going outdoors during the day are advised to use an umbrella and to wear thinner and light-coloured clothing.

“If possible, avoid outdoor activities between 11am to 4pm. The public should also keep themselves updated on any weather developments through official sources,” she added.

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POLL: Have you experienced heat-related illnesses during hot spells?

According to the Centre for Disease Control and Prevention of the United States, heat stroke, heat exhaustion, heat cramps and heat rash are heat-related illnesses.

Symptoms for heat stroke are hot, red and dry skin, headaches and dizziness, while symptoms for heat exhaustion include heavy sweating, cold, pale and clammy skin, and feeling nauseous.

Heat cramps, meanwhile, have symptoms such as heavy sweating during intense exercise while heat rash results in small clusters of blisters that look like pimples. Heat rashes are usually on the neck, chest, groin or in elbow creases.

Apart from those with existing health conditions, Prof Dr Sharifa Ezat Wan Puteh of Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia said the disabled, pregnant women and children, were also at risk for heat-related ailments.

“Deter children from playing long hours outside as they may come down with fever.

“Fever with heat spells also may predispose the child to further harm and heat exhaustion,” she said.

She also advised parents whose children were down with fever to get medical attention as soon as possible if they were unsure what to do.

“High temperatures may damage a child’s brain and certain neurological complications may occur,” she said.

For those fasting, Dr Sharifa said the recommended intake of eight glasses of water a day can be broken into a 2:4:2 ratio, where two glasses can be consumed during iftar, four through the night and two during sahur.

“Try to maintain usual food portions instead of having grand feasts for sahur,” she added. Meanwhile, climatologist and Academy of Sciences Malaysia Fellow Prof Dr Fredolin Tangang said the hot and generally dry conditions over the peninsula and Sabah are expected to last for the next two weeks.

He cited several possible factors, namely the impact of the El Nino phenomenon, which is in the weakening phase.

“This typically results in hot conditions over the entire South-East Asia region, especially over northern parts of the peninsula and Sabah,” said Fredolin, who also highlighted how the spring equinox was approaching.

“With less cloud coverage due to El Nino, the amount of heat reaching and absorbed by the earth increases, thus elevating surface temperatures,” he said, adding that the public was advised to pay attention to MetMalaysia’s forecasts.

On Tuesday, MetMalaysia forecast dry and hot weather with temperatures exceeding 35ºC in most places in the peninsula and Sabah over the coming week.

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Wednesday, March 13, 2024

Hidden windfall for many people (Poll Inside)

 



PETALING JAYA: Homemaker Jessica Lai thought it was a scam when she was told she could find unclaimed money on the government portal eGUMIS.

But she tried her luck anyway – and found that she could claim RM1,000.

“I had never heard of it, and I thought it was a scam, but I only believed it when my daughter showed me some news articles about it,” said the 53-year-old, who has yet to claim the money.

“Some of my money was from 2012; I will have to claim it quickly now,” she said after being told that the government was shortening the claim period from 15 to 10 years.

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She will lose the money if government legislation to shorten the period is passed this year.

“I don’t understand why the government wants to shorten the claimable period, and there should have been more awareness about this in public. I have to tell my husband to check quickly and claim soon,” she said.

Senior writer Syed Umar Syed Ariff found the process of claiming the money to be swift and convenient.

“I was actually surprised to know that I had about RM400 in unclaimed money. I decided to claim it, and I just needed to fill in a few particulars and submit a few documents.

“A week later, the money was in my bank account,” he added.

Civil servant Y. Ravi Varman, 28, agreed that the claiming process was easy.

“Just key in your details, and if you have unclaimed money, just upload the documents needed,” he said.

On shortening the claim period, Ravi said the government should keep the public informed if it is to be implemented.

“The government should spread the word to all Malaysians to give them a chance to claim their money,” he added.

However, engineer Mohd Azim Akmal, 35, said the process to claim the money he has in the system was not worth the hassle.

He found out that he had unclaimed money worth RM50.

“It is a very small amount. I saw the steps needed to claim it, and I just don’t think it was worth the time.

“If the government wants to take it, that should be fine, as long as it benefits Malaysians as a whole,” he said.

The eGUMIS portal, which was launched in 2020, received about 17.2 million visitors as of last March and has almost 4.4 million registered users.

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POLL: Have you checked for unclaimed money on eGumis yet?

Tuesday, March 12, 2024

Why West misreads new development paradigm

 

A view of Beijing's CBD area. [Photo/VCG] - China Daily/ANN

IN all ancient civilisations, especially in Asia, material and socio-cultural-spiritual development progressed more or less hand-in-hand. Hence, there was generally balanced human progress, even though all the civilisations had their share of shortcomings.

A major disruption occurred with the Industrial Revolution in the late 18th and 19th centuries. Spurred by new productive forces, the Industrial Revolution facilitated epoch-changing discoveries in science and innovations in technology, which exponentially raised many European nations’ capability to generate material prosperity.

As a result, European countries became fabulously wealthy.

However, the European countries used, rather misused, the new productive forces to consolidate their hold on their colonies in Asia, Africa and Latin America. They ruthlessly exploited and pillaged the colonies’ resources, seeking to destroy native cultures and establish European civilisational superiority.

Their fierce internal rivalry, though, led to two horrific world wars, which claimed millions of lives and ruined the economies of both the victims and perpetrators.

Hence, Western nations, despite their superior material wealth, became culturally, morally and spiritually impoverished. Even the birth of the United States was an outcome of the sordid history of colonisation. European powers literally mass-annihilated almost all the Indigenous peoples in the Americas in their lust for land and riches.

The United States, in the last century, contributed to the further explosive growth of productive forces with revolutionary advances in science and technology, especially in computers and the Internet, heralding the “information age”.

Nevertheless, these productive forces, being at the service of an uncontrolled capitalist system, have been misused leading to the extreme concentration of wealth and power in the hands of a minority.

Moreover, US administrations have abjured neither the Western instinct for global domination nor the habit of using their country’s powerful productive forces to launch illegitimate wars.

The importance of the rise of “new quality productive forces” in China needs to be understood against this historical background. Many in the West have dismissed it as just another “buzzword” meant to divert the international community’s attention away from China’s economic slowdown.

However, the concept can be properly understood only in the context of the Chinese leadership’s goal of developing “China into a great modern socialist country that is prosperous, strong, democratic, culturally advanced, harmonious and beautiful”.

Seen from this perspective, the new quality productive forces, wedded to people-centric and planet-protective development, could be the harbinger of a significantly different kind of, and balanced, human development.

The rise of new quality productive forces in China will have both domestic and global impacts. It is accompanied by, and is contributing to, positive changes in the West-dominated world order.

For the first time in modern history, China is surging ahead of Europe and the United States in scientific research and innovations in technology, especially in deploying new technologies and innovations.

China’s new quality productive forces are primarily in the areas of new energy, new materials, new hi-tech manufacturing systems and new applications of artificial intelligence.

In terms of the production and use of solar photovoltaic panels and other clean and green energy products, China is far ahead of the rest of the world. In fact, China installed more solar panels in 2023 than the United States has ever built, setting new standards in low-carbon footprints.

Besides, there are more industrial robots in Chinese factories than in any other country. In space and ocean research, too, China is advancing at a pace faster than the West. For instance, it is developing the world’s first quantum communications satellite network. China now ranks No. 1 in science and technology innovation clusters in the world.

While China is making rapid strides in developing its strategic industries, its agriculture and traditional industries are also becoming smarter and more innovative. As a result of the huge innovation-led increases in productivity, quality and efficiency, the Chinese economy is sure to navigate its current challenges satisfactorily.

However, China’s new development paradigm differs from that of the West in the past in one crucial respect: Chinese leaders have time and again emphasised that China will never seek hegemony irrespective of how prosperous it becomes. China is not trying to replace the West in global domination. Instead, it aims to help improve the world order by making it equitable, fairer, more representative and more democratic.

Five features set apart China’s new quality productive forces from the Western template.

First, China has not become the world’s second-largest economy by colonising any other country or by exploiting or stealing other countries’ resources. On the contrary, it has made much of the self-reliant technological advances despite the unlawful sanctions imposed by the United States and other Western countries.

Second, China has not misused its technological prowess by waging deadly wars against far-off countries. As a matter of fact, it advocates resolving disputes through dialogue.

Third, China aims to use the scientific and technological breakthroughs primarily for boosting all-round development so its vast population can lead a high-quality life and the country can achieve common prosperity. It has already lifted about 800 million people out of extreme poverty within a short span of four decades – a feat unparalleled in history.

The fact that the common people are living much better lives, as I have seen during my travels across the country, shows China is committed to using its resources to enrich its human capital, an obligation many Western governments have nearly abandoned.

Fourth, China is sharing its development experiences with other countries so they can learn from them and apply them, if necessary, to boost their development. As a matter of fact, the Belt and Road Initiative shows China is committed to helping build a community with a shared future for mankind.

And fifth, in its 5,000-year history, China has achieved great feats in arts, culture and science and technology, while seeking harmony in society – and in the world at large – although it has suffered many setbacks and foreign aggressions.

Now that China has become a moderately prosperous society in all respects, it views its development propelled by new quality productive forces as a contributor to the rejuvenation of the Chinese nation and a driving force behind the creation of a better world order.

Most Western observers fail to understand this civilisational wisdom guiding China’s modernisation. — China Daily/ANN

By Sudheendra Kulkarni,  an advocate of India-China-Pakistan cooperation for a New South Asia and was an aide to former Indian prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee. The views expressed are the writer’s own.

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