‘A growing threat to human health’: we are ill-equipped for the dangers of fungal infections | Fungi

Qthe year is 2003, and a species of Cordyceps fungus has made the leap from ants to humans, transforming its hosts into frenzied, bloodthirsty zombies that spread the infection to everyone they bite. The solution proposed by a leading mycologist in Jakarta, Indonesia, where the first cases were detected, is radical, but in her view, essential: bomb the entire city and everyone in it to stop the infection in its tracks.

Last month, HBO’s long-awaited post-apocalyptic series The Last of Us hit our screens, to huge acclaim from both critics and fans. It posits that it isn’t viruses or bacteria that pose the greatest threat to society, but fungi – those same organisms beloved by brewers, bakers and wild-food enthusiasts. More specifically, climate change has prompted Ophiocordyceps unilateraliscommonly known as “zombie-ant fungus”, to adapt to surviving at higher temperatures, rendering humans an alternative host.

The writer-producer Craig Mazin

How Can I Preserve Wealth for Future Generations?

Some of our clients are interested in preserving wealth for future generations, and in that instance, we sometimes recommend starting a family bank.

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A family bank is an estate planning tactic to help preserve wealth for generations to come. They can be structured in a variety of ways to meet that family’s needs, however, they are intended to help benefit a group of family members.

If our clients give their children distributions at their death, it is usually gone quickly. Even if the child invests the money, it does not really transfer to future generations.

The family bank is an incredibly useful tool.

Our clients with family banks are able to charge less interest for loans, set different policies than

Langley, BC toddler allegedly made to wait hours at the emergency department – BC

A Langley, BC, family is sharing their health care experience after they say they spent hours in the emergency department with their extremely sick toddler.

Joel and Stefanie Ackley said after waiting two hours at the Langley Memorial Hospital on Jan. 26, medical officials checked their two-year-old Gracie’s vitals. Gracie had a fever of 103. A nurse gave Gracie a Tylenol to help bring it down.

“It was hard because she was looking at me for help, and I couldn’t give it to her. It hurt me,” Gracie’s father Joel said.

“She was having a lot of trouble breathing. She was taking two breaths at a time.”

Joel said by the time a doctor arrived and ordered an X-ray, which confirmed Gracie had pneumonia, the family had been at the ER for nearly nine hours.

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