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Novel, discreet, and simple insulin-delivery system can replace need for mealtime injections for people with diabetes Largest fundraising to date for a privately held medtech company in Europe ....
COVID-19 Pandemic Leaves Consumers Vulnerable to Cybercrime apnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from apnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace February 09, 2021 Source: Getty Summary: Indian Americans are now the second-largest immigrant group in the United States. Their growing political influence and the role the diaspora plays in Indian foreign policy therefore raises important questionsâabout how Indian Americans view India, the political changes underway there, and the course of U.S.-India relations. Related Media and Tools If you enjoyed reading this, subscribe for more! Thank you! Summary Since coming to power in 2014, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has made outreach to the far-flung Indian diaspora a signature element of his government’s foreign policy. Modi’s courtship of the diaspora has been especially notable in the United States, where the Indian American population has swelled to more than 4 million and has become the second-largest immigrant group in the United States. ....
People gather at Echo Park in Los Angeles for the Let Us Worship event, Dec. 31, 2020. | Facebook/Sean Feucht More than one-quarter of Americans say that the COVID-19 pandemic has strengthened their faith, giving the United States the highest percentage among 14 developed countries analyzed for a new Pew Research Center report. In a report published last week, Pew found that nearly three out of 10 Americans (28%) say that their faith has grown stronger during the pandemic, while nearly four out of 10 say the pandemic has helped strengthen their family bonds. The Pew report drew from data collected via its Summer 2020 Global Attitudes Survey, which was built on interviews conducted among 480,000 individuals in 91 countries. The survey is based on national samples. The U.S. sample consists of a plus or minus 3.7-percentage-point error margin. ....
Photo: 123rf.com There is no better catalyst for self-reflection than the solitude a pandemic offers. It applies even more so when an entire nation has to swallow the bitter pill and look at its imperfect visage in the mirror, identifying how we have collectively fallen short in flattening the infection curve months into the Covid-19 crisis. A stricter movement control order (MCO) has been announced amid rising numbers of cases and deaths and a healthcare system stretched to capacity. And, as usual, we incessantly play the blame game at times like this: It’s the government’s fault for slowly relaxing the MCO even when cases first began hitting four figures, it’s the local authorities’ fault for lax enforcement, businesses’ fault for compromising on SOP implementation to make up for months of lost profits, people s fault for flagrant SOP violation – everyone’s fault but our own. ....