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A top diversity consultancy has ties to every level of the private school accreditation process, a Washington Free Beacon analysis found, creating a lucrative diet of contracts and jobs for its employees. ....
A picture book about a transgender child has ignited a debate in the Eanes school district over if and when to talk about gender identity in the classroom. After a fourth grade teacher at Forest Trail Elementary showed a video in which the book “Call Me Max” by Kyle Lukoff was read aloud on March 4, social media was flooded with posts from parents weighing in, and many parents raised the issue at a school board meeting on March 9. A third grade teacher at Valley View Elementary, also in the Eanes district, also read the book to her class. The book tells the story of a transgender elementary student learning how to talk about his identity with family and friends. ....
Idea of securing Middleham chapel for affordable housing discussed darlingtonandstocktontimes.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from darlingtonandstocktontimes.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
BugBitten A newly discovered interaction between malaria and brain cells Recent research leads to a new hypothesis explaining the interaction between malaria parasites and receptors on the cells lining the brain microvasculature when patients have cerebral malaria. 12 Mar 2021 A red blood cell infected with malaria. Source Wikimedia Commons; attribution, Rick Fairhurst and Jordan Zuspann, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, NIH The most severe symptoms of malaria are associated with infection by the malaria parasite, Plasmodium falciparum, with pathologies including severe anaemia, acute respiratory disease and cerebral malaria. The latter is marked by the sequestration of infected red blood cells (IRBCs) in the brain microcirculation, resulting in blood vessel occlusion, inflammation and brain swelling that can lead to brain stem herniation, causing respiratory failure and death. ....
Certain malaria parasites use a mechanism to cross the blood–brain barrier Malaria is one of the most common causes of death in children in Africa and is triggered by a small parasite that lives in the blood. When the parasite builds up in the blood vessels of the brain, it develops into one of the most dangerous forms of the disease, cerebral malaria. So far, it has been the understanding that the malaria parasite was not able to penetrate the actual brain tissue, but now researchers from the University of Copenhagen have found malaria parasites can do that and have mapped the mechanism they utilize. ....