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"waterborne" Definitions
  1. spread or carried by water
"waterborne" Synonyms

300 Sentences With "waterborne"

How to use waterborne in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "waterborne" and check conjugation/comparative form for "waterborne". Mastering all the usages of "waterborne" from sentence examples published by news publications.

So do bacteria that cause deadly waterborne diseases like cholera.
People will be exposed to more foodborne and waterborne diseases.
"Waterborne disease is certainly a worry here," MSF's Verdonck said.
"What we're really worried about is waterborne disease outbreak," Olson said.
Thirteen people have died of the waterborne disease since Matthew struck.
In this sense, waterborne developments can be a catalyst for regeneration.
It warned the shortages could lead to outbreaks of waterborne disease.
The water is often soiled, leaving residents exposed to waterborne illnesses.
Floods can wash away farmland and homes and spread waterborne diseases.
Waterborne diseases are also a risk — only drink fresh, bottled water.
Emergency workers fear a second disaster from the spread of waterborne disease.
Once waterborne, whatever doesn't wash ashore eventually breaks down into itty bits.
But it was unclear how he may have contracted a waterborne illness.
China is the top destination for U.S. waterborne crude exports in 2202.
Take the riverside 72 bus or the waterborne Batobus — or just walk.
Second, it was intended to protect American control over local waterborne commerce.
Beyond the landslides and flooding, there are worries about waterborne diseases like cholera.
Every year, more than half a million people die from waterborne diarrhoea alone.
Extreme poverty makes life difficult here, and H.I.V. and waterborne illness are rife.
Many people will be exposed to waterborne illnesses, and some will get violently ill.
The light and compact device removes more than 99.9% of waterborne bacteria and parasites. 
This waterborne product is available in both a semi-solid and solid color stain.
"There is a high risk of an outbreak of waterborne diseases," Ms. Jalloh said.
There was one, for instance, pulled off grid, which is a floating waterborne community.
The Northeast could be less affected since it can get supplies via waterborne shippers.
The floods have also brought the threat of waterborne and respiratory diseases, including pneumonia.
" She added: "While we haven't seen an outbreak of waterborne disease, the risk is huge.
Waterborne shipments rose by about 58 percent and volumes rose by 23 percent between Sept.
Hunger and illness were growing concerns, with crops destroyed and waterborne diseases likely to spread.
The Puerto Rican government has confirmed multiple deaths linked to waterborne illness since the hurricane.
ClipperData offers a real-time database of worldwide waterborne flows of crude and oil products.
It was moving casually, but casual for a waterborne marine creature is still pretty fast.
With the rainy season in full swing, the outlook for containing a waterborne disease is grim.
The Viking captain was detained on suspicion of misconduct in waterborne traffic leading to mass casualties.
The region's refiners are fighting to survive, as they rely on foreign waterborne crude for supply.
Other waterborne diseases that could spread include hepatitis A, salmonellosis, shigellosis, typhoid and E. coli. 5.
They knew if human waste wasn't disposed of properly, waterborne disease could sicken hundreds of thousands.
Waste that goes uncollected can lead to blocked drains, flooding and the spread of waterborne diseases.
Hundreds of thousands of people got sick last year because of poor sanitation and waterborne diseases.
In Puerto Rico, a "toxic mix" of "poverty and lack of access to clean water practically guarantees that you're going to see outbreaks of waterborne infections, particularly waterborne diarrheal disease," said Peter Hotez, the dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine.
Waterborne diseases, like typhoid fever and cholera, are extremely dangerous — but they're not transmitted by rain drops.
President Edgar Lungu last week directed the military to help fight the spread of the waterborne disease.
A US Apache attack helicopter in July destroyed one such waterborne IED, a boat full of explosives.
The prevalence of waterborne disease outbreaks highlights how difficult they can be to prevent, the report says.
This increases the risk of outbreaks of waterborne diseases, such as cholera, particularly among children and women.
There are 22 waterborne vessels carrying U.S. sorghum that were loaded for China, the USDA data showed.
Similarly, climbing temperatures have been tied to an increased incidence of waterborne bacterial infections that cause diarrhea.
Any research showing that its filters had reduced waterborne illness among the Dominican families that received them?
In New York Harbor, about 47 marine workboats help vessels navigate shipping lanes and facilitate waterborne commerce.
Designers and engineers have proposed marine drones and waterborne kites, even huge artificial drains for the gyres.
Several people also died of leptospirosis, a waterborne disease, in the days following the hurricane, reports have found.
Meanwhile, the girls are staying in a U by Uniworld ship, which looks like a long, waterborne Hummer.
It's supposed to remove most waterborne microbes from my water, although I have yet to test it out.
The rain also heightens the risk of waterborne disease outbreaks such as cholera, said ACAPS analyst Alex Odlum.
"Waterborne infections with serious, even fatal, infant outcomes are a recognized complication associated with birth underwater," he said.
The danger of landslides will soon be pervasive and the risk of waterborne illness will soon be rampant.
"There is a major concern about the risk of waterborne diseases among children," UNICEF spokesman Christophe Boulierac said.
The Jones Act, also known as the cabotage act, establishes rules for waterborne cargo transportation within U.S. boundaries.
When the rains come, latrines are likely to overflow, bringing the risk of cholera and other waterborne diseases.
The former head of the unit, George E. Luber, has been reassigned to the agency's waterborne diseases unit.
More than 10,000 people have died from the waterborne disease since it broke out in Haiti in 2010.
The downpours haven't stopped either, upping the risk of waterborne diseases and raising fears that things may get worse.
They've also met with mayors from around the globe about bringing their waterborne vessels to a variety of cities.
"These cuts are coming amid a heat wave, putting children at a grave risk of waterborne diseases," UNICEF said.
United States crude oil exports are soaring this year, and China is its single largest buyer for waterborne sales.
"Waterborne diseases are the first threat to children in similar situations," Marc Vincent, the Unicef representative in Haiti, said.
And most important, how can we get the Metropolitan Transportation Authority to integrate waterborne transit within our varied network?
A study by the ministry of health found that slum-heavy townships were worst affected by waterborne ailments, like tuberculosis.
It was constructed in the STX France shipyard in Saint-Nazaire and is now in its final waterborne construction phase.
The Lincoln Memorial's Reflecting Pool will be drained and cleaned next week after a waterborne parasite killed dozens of ducklings.
In areas without safe drinking water, waterborne diseases are going to increase, compromising people's health, especially children and the elderly.
Patz analyzed 46 years of data and found that 68 percent of waterborne disease outbreaks were preceded by heavy rainfall.
One of the world's most infectious waterborne diseases, cholera spreads quickly and has proved extremely difficult to contain in Haiti.
The company did not respond to a specific request for comment regarding the shift to waterborne trading or proprietary trading.
The World Health Organization has warned of a "second disaster" if waterborne diseases like cholera spread in the impoverished nation.
The Bakken discount has disappeared, and so have the trains, forcing the region to rely more heavily on foreign, waterborne crude.
It is important, however, to know the risks involved—which of course include the potential for injury, drowning, and waterborne illness.
The juxtaposition between Jandice's very naked happiness and a covered-up Kathryn's warnings of waterborne "brain eating amoebas" wrap the pilot.
"In general, there are fewer waterborne disease outbreaks reported today in comparison to the late '70s or early '80s," said Benedict.
In January, Genesee County health officials reported another waterborne threat—87 cases of Legionnaires' disease in two years, with 10 deaths.
Extreme weather events and rising temperatures will leave more Americans more exposed to foodborne and waterborne illnesses, according to the report.
That open-air feast, overseen by beaming officials and filmed by state television, culminated in a waterborne procession of illuminated trawlers.
Flooding can increase the spread of waterborne diseases such as cholera, and Yemen is already experiencing the biggest cholera outbreak on record.
They also realize athletes will be immersing themselves in water with an insane amount of pathogens, viruses, bacteria, and other waterborne disease.
He read that 900 million people didn't have access to clean water and that 4500 kids die every day from waterborne disease.
For example, if LifeStraw, the plastic filter straw targeting the developing world, actually worked, nobody would be dying from waterborne illness anymore.
Weather that is bad for farmers is good for spreading food- and waterborne diseases, and more people will be exposed to them.
Parts of North America, particularly the Great Lakes, should expect substantially greater rainfall and therefore more outbreaks of waterborne disease as well.
With the immediate danger from the storm abated, the concern now is long-term disruption of the food supply and waterborne disease.
Using rainwater out of barrels gave Ms. Méndez a waterborne kidney infection that landed her in the hospital for nearly three months.
More than a third of the population has been without clean water for three weeks, and waterborne diseases appear to be spreading.
Waterborne adenoviruses can cause gastroenteritis, an infection which irritates the stomach and intestine and causes truly magical amounts of diarrhea amongst sufferers.
Rains are forecast to continue until the end of the year and humanitarian organizations are warning of waterborne diseases and mass displacement.
President Edgar Lungu had directed the military to help fight the spread of cholera under emergency measures to contain the waterborne disease.
The World Health Organization has warned of a "second disaster" if potentially lethal, waterborne diseases like cholera spread in the devastated region.
Lacking the ability to deal with heavy rainfall, flash floods have been known to destroy buildings and increase the risk of waterborne disease.
Aside from waterborne shipments, the United States also sends supplies to Mexico via rail and road, but those flows have been hit too.
"They have also been used by Daesh for waterborne improvised explosive device attacks," the spokesperson added, using another name for the terror group.
"It could be waterborne diseases which like having high temperatures because one degree or half degree will make their environment livable," she said.
The problem of underinvestment in water and sewage treatment is nationwide: Across Brazil, roughly two-thirds of hospitalizations are attributed to waterborne diseases.
This puts them at risk of contracting waterborne viruses that could sicken them and threatens the lives of children and the most vulnerable.
The U.N. warned the shortages could lead to waterborne disease outbreaks, and a spokesman has said sabotaging civilian water supplies constituted a war crime.
President Edgar Lungu last month directed the military to clean markets and unblock drains to help to fight the spread of the waterborne disease.
The forecast is solely for waterborne imports focusing on the different PADD regions as defined by the EIA, since the dataset is vessel-based.
"Climate change is already influencing the frequency of heatwaves, flooding events and famines, as well as epidemics of vector- and waterborne diseases," he said.
That 2000 study also showed vinegars to be quite effective against the waterborne bacteria Pseudomonas aeruginosa, mostly found in hospitals and untreated hot tubs.
It added that a sustained outage would mean "several hundred thousand bpd of additional waterborne gasoline and diesel flows" to the U.S. Atlantic Coast.
Suspected cases of leptospirosis, a waterborne disease known locally as 'rat fever', has climbed to 800 since mid-August, a health ministry spokesman said.
If waterborne imports pick up over the next couple of weeks, however, that could keep a lid on New York Harbor premiums, they said.
"Despite very strong demand from international waterborne customers at more than 7.711 million bpd, they were allocated only 7.150 million bpd," the statement said.
The island also saw widespread flooding, which comes with a risk of cross contamination of sewage and freshwater and can lead to waterborne illness.
"Despite very strong demand from international waterborne customers at more than 7.6 million bpd, customers were allocated less than 7 million bpd," the official said.
Save the Children is especially focused on the health care needs of families, addressing the potential for waterborne illnesses as a result of mass flooding.
Clemence Duri, Harare city's health director said more than 300 people had been hospitalized after contracting the waterborne disease which causes severe diarrhea and dehydration.
And the series' depictions of the "gyptians" (waterborne nomads whom Lyra allies with) and the Magisterium feel like pastiches of familiar fantasy and dystopian elements.
"Despite very strong demand from international waterborne customers at more than 7.6 million bpd, customers were allocated less than 7 million bpd," the official said.
People moved from tents and mud huts to split-levels and city condominiums, from waterborne diseases to 80-year life spans, from ignorance to literacy.
"The vast majority of the build was on the U.S. Gulf Coast - with refinery runs ticking lower and waterborne imports on the rise," he said.
And extreme flooding in the south has renewed concerns that another cholera outbreak will soon plague the country still coping with the deadly waterborne disease.
In the event of a cataclysmic emergency, bridges and tunnels may be closed, or choked off by marauding mobs, forcing survivors to consider waterborne escape.
But survey-based evidence collected by local health advocacy groups shows a correlation between the country's declining water supply and the rise of waterborne diseases.
Globally, one person dies from waterborne illness every 10 seconds, and half of all hospital beds occupied are attributed to diseases related to unsafe water.
The report also says more people will be exposed to more foodborne and waterborne diseases, particularly children, the elderly, the poor and communities of color.
And extreme flooding in the south has renewed concerns that another Cholera outbreak will soon plague the country still coping with the deadly waterborne disease.
She had the idea 20 years ago when she saw women and children in Indonesia contracting waterborne diseases, like cholera and typhoid, from drinking contaminated water.
Investigating craters and traces of waterborne rock beds, Opportunity lasted more than 22020,000 Mars days, called "sols," or about 5,200 Earth days, before its mission ended.
One installation showcases tangible and tradable goods in a store-like display, while the other attempts to visualize the oceanic enormity of today's waterborne trade system.
The overall winner was Gongali Model which provides a low-cost sustainable water filter (Nanofilter) for water purification, to overcome waterborne diseases and dental/bone fluorosis.
The death toll in Mozambique could rise steeply as receding floodwaters allow rescuers to access remote areas or if waterborne diseases like cholera gain a foothold.
Image: WikimediaDubbed a "waterborne pursuit-deterrent system," the defensive technique was discovered by marine biologist Hannah Sheppard-Brennand and her team from Australia's Southern Cross University.
Since 2010, most waterborne iron ore is priced on public markets such as the Dalian Commodity Exchange or is set using published indices such as Platts.
To make things worse, Haiti is in the path of many tropical storms, which cause flooding and destruction that only help waterborne diseases like cholera spread.
Officials have determined a cause for the waterborne bacterial infection that killed three premature babies at a Pennsylvania hospital and left at least five more ill.
Some 22019 percent of Puerto Ricans still don't have access to drinking water as of Saturday, and concerns are rising over the potential for waterborne illnesses.
The state's gas supplies were severely disrupted before and during the storm as ports were closed, cutting Florida off from waterborne deliveries the state relies on.
But, he emphasized that cruise passengers should not be overly concerned about getting the stomach bug because most cruises are safe from food- and waterborne illnesses.
Some 55 percent of Puerto Ricans still don't have access to drinking water as of Saturday, and concerns are rising over the potential for waterborne illnesses.
Of those, 51 deaths have been found to be hurricane-related, including two more recent deaths connected to waterborne illness, which the government confirmed this week.
President Edgar Lungu directed the military to help fight the spread of cholera under emergency measures to contain the waterborne disease, including the closure of markets.
The best thing for water access in Bangladesh is to dig deeper, more-expensive wells that don't pose any arsenic risk or any waterborne disease risk.
The risk of outbreaks of diarrhea and waterborne diseases was high as drinking water may be tainted with sewage, according to the Pan American Health Organization.
Themistocles' fleet staged a waterborne defense of land against human antagonists; the U.S. Navy fleet can defend its crews from landborne pestilence by remaining at sea.
As the battle has raged in recent days, it has inflicted further damage on the city's water and sewage network, elevating the risk of waterborne diseases.
In 22, hearing that floods from Hurricane Sandy had crippled New York City's food distribution system, he imagined that waterborne urban farms could boost food security.
That is how several million dollars of the Port Authority's tunnel money wound up subsidizing the waterborne commutes of about a single busload of New Jerseyans.
While some parts of Waterborne are difficult to hear, most of it is meditative, creating a space where participants can explore topics, which may normally be taboo.
Dr. Robert Tauxe, director of the CDC's Division of Foodborne, Waterborne and Environmental Diseases, says there is probably one more case for every case they know of.
GEBCO hopes to co-opt shipping companies and other waterborne industrial concerns, together with various academic groups, into contributing to an ad hoc fleet to do this.
With human and animal waste flowing freely in the streets of New York City, waterborne bacteria and diseases such as cholera and yellow fever plagued the city.
That was our first thought about upon viewing the Flyboard Air, a hovering waterborne device, but without the water jet pack and the splashy streams they produce.
Researchers from Germany and the U.S. revealed their solutions to surging meat demand and fatalities from waterborne diseases at the EMTech Asia conference in Singapore on Wednesday.
In addition to the dangers of fast-moving currents and waterborne disease, Louisiana residents have been warned of the presence of water snakes and alligators within floodwaters.
SeaBubbles is a startup that aims to revolutionize waterborne transportation through fleets of sleek, hydrofoil-equipped shuttles designed to make city travel more convenient, leisurely, and sustainable.
The waterborne bacteria Vibrio, which is already causing thousands of illnesses a year, will expand to seafood in northern seas and affect oysters grown in the Northeast.
"Despite very strong demand from international waterborne customers at more than 7.711 million bpd, they were allocated only 7.150 million bpd," the spokesman said in a statement.
Despite the setbacks, the demand for waterborne transportation is also fueling the expansion of commuter ferry service across the Hudson River between New York and New Jersey.
A shortage of chemicals has led to a decommissioning of 1 water-treatment plant and inadequate supply from another, as well as an uptick in waterborne diseases.
The World Health Organization is raising concerns about a jump in waterborne and respiratory illnesses with infrastructure devastated and many medical facilities severely damaged or not functioning.
The waterborne disease has spread rapidly since mid-February due to poor sanitation and lack of clean water in the camps, said IFRC emergency operations coordinator Andreas Sandin.
Its most memorable passages lace between the exploits and reflections of great swimming writers—Rupert Brooke, Lord Byron, André Gide, Jack London—and the author's own waterborne life.
Many of the country's 56 million Hispanics live in coastal areas where sea-level rise and hurricane-driven floods threaten wellbeing through injury, property loss, and waterborne illness.
Formed into waterborne "people's militias", their vessels have grabbed fishing grounds far from home by chasing off their counterparts from neighbouring countries, such as the Philippines and Vietnam.
Cryptosporidium is the leading cause of waterborne disease among humans in the United States, and it's spread when someone swallows water that's come in contact with infected feces.
Because many waterborne industries are controlled by relatively few companies, new players' entry on the market may force them to be more competitive and ultimately drive down costs.
Chicago's population is divided almost equally among African-Americans, Latinos and whites, and the geographic Balkanization allows segregation to infect neighborhoods with the graveness of a waterborne disease.
Hundreds of people have already died in the floods, and authorities warn the death toll could rise further amid dwindling food supplies and the spread of waterborne disease.
The chemical conversation between cells and air- and waterborne aromatic molecules unites all living beings, from animal noses to plant root tips to the cell surfaces of bacteria.
A mysterious waterborne bacteria has killed three babies at a Pennsylvania hospital and impacted at least five more as officials race to determine how this could have happened.
Cholera, a waterborne disease that can quickly explode into a public health disaster, has begun to spread in Yemen, a war-ravaged country ill equipped to fight it.
Over its years of use, it has become functionally obsolete, officials said — even as trucks continue to rumble across, bringing 15 percent of the nation's incoming waterborne cargo.
Parents have been forced to make a heartbreaking decision: watch their children die of dehydration or give them contaminated water, which has ignited the spread of waterborne diseases.
"This is more about people being sick [than anything else]," lead author Michele C. Hlavsa, a member of the CDC's Division of Foodborne, Waterborne, and Environmental Diseases, told Gizmodo.
Oil terminals and distributors in Florida are tracking the storm, which could curtail fuel shipments to the state, which is largely dependent upon waterborne deliveries of gasoline and diesel.
Investment bank RBC said it estimated U.S. "Houston barrels can economically move anywhere globally when priced at a discount of $1.70 per barrel relative to the waterborne Brent benchmark".
While it's not a purifier (which would also filter out any waterborne viruses), it's about as simple and reliable as it gets in terms of a water filtration system.
Kangchag Mro, 50, said she used to spend hours in search of water in springs and streams, and was afraid of catching waterborne diseases such as diarrhea and cholera.
Refiners there have binged on the country's crude in recent months as economics have shifted in favor of waterborne barrels rather than buying from the U.S. Bakken shale heartland.
I asked Seibel outright: Is it dishonest for Fathom to go on telling its passengers that the water filters those volunteers make will reduce waterborne illness for those families?
The International Committee of the Red Cross said on Monday that the new blockade put 2.5 million people at risk of a renewed cholera outbreak and other waterborne diseases.
The Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund – an account which collects an excise tax assessed to shippers on all waterborne commerce (except exports) – is flush with cash; $22019 billion of it.
"As a result, the domestic crude discount once enjoyed by [PES] was eroded and [PES] began, once again, relying on foreign, waterborne crude oil at more expensive prices," it said.
As space and clean drinking water run out, aid organizations are working overtime to prevent possible outbreaks of waterborne diseases like cholera or diarrhea, which can be deadly for children.
An epidemic of the waterborne disease broke out after peacekeepers accidentally dumped infected sewage into a river during recovery efforts after an earthquake in 2010 killed more than 300,000 people.
The United Nations said on Friday that children were at risk of waterborne diseases in Damascus where 5.5 million people have had little or no running water for two weeks.
"While outbound shipments recently approached 2 million bpd, our math suggests that physical bottlenecks are unlikely to kick in until waterborne exports approach 3.2 million bpd," RBC Capital Markets said.
Of course, it's related to Maria if you can't get to the hospital because the roads are closed down or you have a waterborne illness because the water is dirty.
Some varieties may undergo special processing such as ionization (which works by concentrating hydroxide ions, the HO part of H20) or UV purification (which kills waterborne bacteria with ultraviolet light).
"The number of drinking water outbreaks has increased from 22011 in 22012-263," said Kathy Benedict, lead author of the report and an epidemiologist in CDC's Waterborne Disease Prevention Branch.
"We concluded that a portion of the narcotic had been removed and replaced with an equal volume of tap water, which contaminated the [intravenous drugs] with waterborne bacteria," they wrote.
"You'd probably get bilharzia," she quipped, referring to a waterborne disease, also known as schistosomiasis, that is spread by parasitic worms and that the Egyptian government has struggled to eradicate.
UK researchers found that microplastics -- pieces of plastic less than 5 millimeters in size -- remain in the bodies of mosquitoes and other waterborne insects even after they become flying adults.
To delve deepest into Keys history, Brad Bertelli, the curator of the Florida Keys History & Discovery Center told me, travelers have to leave the road at Islamorada, and become waterborne.
Waterborne shipments could be expensive, in part due to the Jones Act, a maritime policy which requires goods transported by water between U.S. ports to be carried on U.S.-flagged ships.
A January United Nations report said existing measures would not protect ships against attacks involving waterborne improvised explosive devices, anti-ship missiles, land based anti-tank guided missiles or sea mines.
According to the CDC's Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, around one-third of the treated recreational waterborne disease outbreaks reported between 2000 and 2014 occurred in hotel pools or hot tubs.
Image: Rebecca Blackwell/APOne of the biggest threats facing Haiti right now is cholera, a waterborne illness that was, tragically, introduced to the country years ago by UN peacekeepers from Nepal.
General climate change-related health impacts named in the report include in the areas of mental illness, undernutrition, injuries, respiratory disease, allergies, cardiovascular disease, infectious diseases, poisoning, waterborne diseases and heatstroke.
Waterborne and communicable respiratory and gastrointestinal disease can spread amid the breakdown in water sanitation, contamination from industrial or hazardous waste sites, or the higher density of people crowding into shelters.
It&aposs not a purifier (which would also filter out any waterborne viruses), but it is about as simple and reliable as it gets in terms of a water filtration system.
The event will feature a waterborne concert by the Northern Cree Singers, an acclaimed powwow drum and vocal group from Alberta, Canada, accompanied by Metís fiddlers and the park's natural soundscape.
The first thing to know is that any contact with the water virtually guarantees infection, according to Kristina Mena, a waterborne pathogen expert who conducted a risk analysis based on Spilki's data.
The unit of measure will be yen per kilolitre (kl) for waterborne cargoes of 1,000 kl to 2,000 kl and loading 7 to 20 days from the date of publication, it added.
Aid organizations and health workers have other concerns as well -- waterborne diseases like diarrhea are known to spread in the aftermath of floods, and destroyed sewage systems could exacerbate those sanitation issues.
More than 500,000 residents practice open defecation, and more than one million people discharge wastewater directly into the river, resulting in deteriorated groundwater quality and putting residents at risk to waterborne diseases.
Scientists have determined that United Nations peacekeepers from Nepal introduced cholera, a waterborne disease, to Haiti by allowing their infected feces to enter the country's most important river system in October 2010.
Another exhibit tells of the Jews' Channel in the lagoon, dug so they could remove their dead for burial without crossing the centre of Venice, where louts would stone the waterborne hearses.
Jonathan Patz, director of the Global Health Institute at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, stresses that waterborne diseases like gastroenteritis, pediatric diarrheal disease, and cholera are highly susceptible to changes in climate.
The rise in refinery runs has paled in comparison to the jump in imports, particularly waterborne imports to the Gulf and West Coasts, said Matt Smith, director of commodity research at ClipperData.
"We want to bring back regional waterborne transportation at a reasonable cost to areas that want locally produced food," said Mr. Kunkel, who also operates a ship design and construction management firm.
Locals in the iconic waterborne city are leaving at a rate of 29.3,22017 people per year, according to Carlo Beltrame, temporary spokesperson for the Gruppo 75.63 Aprile, the organisation behind the protest.
The secretary general of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) said after a visit to Mozambique that the situation there was a "ticking bomb" as regards waterborne diseases.
The little water that is available through wells and tanks is not nearly enough to sustain the population through the scorching Syrian summer, with children particularly at risk of waterborne disease, he added.
Prices of the five waterborne and the rack Japan oil products will be assessed for the locations of Tokyo Bay, Chukyo and Hanshin and reflect a Tokyo market close of 3:30 p.m.
Mr Rauner is in hot water over the way he failed to deal with 13 deaths from waterborne Legionnaires' disease, a nasty kind of pneumonia, of veterans at a home in Quincy, Illinois.
Waterborne disease During the same 2013-14 time frame, 15 outbreaks associated with an environmental exposure to water contaminated with harmful pathogens, chemicals or toxins were reported to the CDC by 10 states.
Vasquez tells us that each family we make a filter for today will experience a 4 percent reduction in waterborne illness, which will lower unemployment, keep children in schools, and save families money.
GENEVA (Reuters) - Children are at risk of waterborne diseases in Syria's capital Damascus where 5.5 million people have had little or no running water for two weeks, the United Nations said on Friday.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads Jonathas de Andrade's short film "O Peixe" ("The Fish," 2016) appears first as an enveloping, relaxing, waterborne journey through tropical mangroves and around palm-tree dotted islands.
Dr. Peter J. Hotez, director of the Texas Children's Hospital Center for Vaccine Development, has vaccines against hookworm and schistosomiasis, a waterborne liver fluke, in clinical trials and is working on eight others.
Aid workers are now concerned about secondary waves of suffering, in the form of waterborne diseases such as diarrhea and malaria, and are prioritizing securing clean water and sanitation facilities for the millions affected.
More than 3,20103 people are thought to have contracted the waterborne disease since Hurricane Matthew washed over Haiti on October 4th, felling trees, destroying houses, schools and clinics, and polluting sources of clean water.
The captain is a 64-year-old Ukrainian citizen identified as C. Yury, from Odessa, whose arrest was initiated for reckless misconduct in waterborne traffic leading to mass casualties, police said on its website.
TOKYO (Reuters) - Platts will launch new daily domestic Japanese waterborne price assessments for five different oil products, starting April 25, after receiving strong interest from market participants, the oil-pricing agency said on Tuesday.
As Pomeroy notes in his new book, Pod Off-Grid: Exploration into Low Energy Waterborne Communities, people in Venice, Italy, and at the Bangkok Floating Market, in Thailand, have been doing it for centuries.
Dr. Chris Braden, director of the division of foodborne, waterborne and environmental diseases at the CDC's National Center for Emerging Zoonotic and Infectious Diseases, said the finding helps inform and focus mosquito-control measures.
The New-York based firm in November said it would seek to maximize the value of its waterborne propane terminals across the United States, including the Tampa propane terminal and the one in Newington.
The United Nations has said some seven million people in Yemen are on the brink of famine and nearly 900,000 have been infected with cholera, a waterborne disease that causes acute diarrhea and dehydration.
Crude rail volumes have dropped significantly in the past year as the economics have favored waterborne imports, leaving a trail of unused tank cars and plenty of uncertainty about the future of the business.
Develop a rapid response plan to deal with weather and climate extremes, with special attention to the spread of waterborne and vector-borne diseases; mental health impacts of losing loved ones and property. 2.
"We have six patrol boats in Budapest... and a further nine downstream from the capital... all the way to the Serbian border," the captain of the Danube Waterborne Police, Richard Prohaszka, said on Friday.
In the meantime, authorities and the Red Cross have started spraying the capital with disinfectant to stop the spread of waterborne diseases, said Agus Wibowo, a spokesman for the Indonesian National Disaster Mitigation Agency.
Children account for nearly a third of infections of the waterborne disease, spread by food or water contaminated with human feces, that causes acute diarrhoea and dehydration and can kill within hours if untreated.
With the country in turmoil, cholera began to rear its ugly head in October 2016, but the epidemic escalated rapidly in April 2017 when the waterborne disease began infecting an estimated 5,000 people per day.
Waterborne illnesses, including cholera and malaria, kill 3.4 million people a year, with many of the victims under the age of five, and is especially prevalent in rural areas with little access to potable water.
The CDC's National Outbreak Reporting System (NORS) gathers data on food and waterborne pathogens from states according to the type of pathogen and the setting of infection, such as hospital cafeterias, nursing homes or restaurants.
When people are exposed to mercury, lead or other air- and waterborne pollutants, we know their health is affected, whether or not E.P.A. is allowed to use the scientific studies that confirm those health impacts.
"We share our experience to alert health care providers that, in this age of profound prevalence of opioid addiction, drug diversion is an important consideration when a cluster of waterborne bacteremia is identified," they wrote.
"The first step in any of these large outbreaks is to understand we have a problem," said Matthew Wise, deputy chief for outbreak response in the C.D.C.'s division of foodborne, waterborne and environmental diseases.
The head teacher at Simukombo Primary School, Richard Simfukwe, said that since the well began operating, the rate of waterborne diseases within the community has fallen, while class attendance has improved to above 70 percent.
Barry Levinson's The Bay (2012) is another respectable (and utterly disgusting) climate nightmare in which industrial chicken shit dumpage in the Chesapeake Bay causes waterborne isopod parasites to grow and devour people from the inside out.
The Jones Act, also known as the Merchant Marine Act of 21625, adds costs by preventing waterborne merchandise from being transported between two points in the United States unless it's done on an American-built ship.
But we're very concerned about the risk of cholera at this time and that's why we put public health, and particularly prevention of waterborne diseases, right at the center of our response strategy for the hurricane.
And in exchange for learning about floating waterborne architecture, I provided lectures in zero carbon development and we created this floating city concept, which then became a book, which then became part of a TV series.
It has been known to cause intense flooding across eastern sections of Africa, leading to landslides, an increase in waterborne diseases and even food shortages, while northern and southern parts of the continent experience severe drought.
"Depriving children of water puts them at risk of catastrophic outbreaks of waterborne diseases and adds to the suffering, fear and horror that children in Aleppo live through every day," said Hanaa Singer, UNICEF's representative in Syria.
That being said, there have surely been outbreaks of Crypto and other waterborne outbreaks caused by older swimmers who should know better than to cannonball into a pool when they're still trying to keep their shit together.
"Cholera is difficult for young children to withstand at any time, but becomes a crisis for survival when their resilience is already weakened by malnutrition, malaria and other waterborne diseases," UNICEF's Pernille Ironside said in a statement.
"The scale of extreme damage will likely lead to a dramatic increase of waterborne diseases, skin infections, respiratory tract infections and malaria in the coming days and weeks," said Gert Verdonck, the group's emergency coordinator in Beira.
"The number of treated recreational water-associated outbreaks caused by cryptosporidium drives the summer seasonal peak in both waterborne cryptosporidiosis outbreaks and cryptosporidiosis outbreaks overall," according to a statement from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Moreover, individuals who are victims of climate-related illnesses, such as heat stroke or waterborne diseases, are also liable to experience mental trauma as a result of these experiences, particularly those who were already dealing with mental illness.
Haidar Said, managing director of Sewerage Systems Ghana Limited, said work began on the new plant at Lavender Hill in 2012, in an effort to tackle waterborne diseases and stop the discharge of raw sewage into the ocean.
"Despite very strong demand from international waterborne customers at more than 7.6 million bpd, customers were allocated less than 7 million bpd," the official said, adding that Saudi exports in March would also be below 7 million bpd.
It turns out that the alternatives to the wells, for most people in Bangladesh, were all worse — surface water contaminated with waterborne diseases, or extended storage of water in the home, which is also a major disease risk.
WHO cholera expert Dominique Legros told reporters in Geneva that the UN's global public health body had decided Monday to send the vaccines to the hurricane-ravaged Caribbean nation, to attempt to prevent an outbreak of the waterborne disease.
Details: This weekend, charity confederation Oxfam intends to start distributing aid, including water purification tabs and hygiene kits, as hundreds of thousands of survivors in Malawi, Mozambique and Zimbabwe run the risk of waterborne illness including cholera and diarrhea.
"The reason that we're seeing the selloff today and really for this week has been related to the fact that we're seeing higher waterborne imports arriving from the Middle East," said Matt Smith, director of commodity research at Clipperdata.
"The concern we have is the bacteria on the meat and poultry that are resistant to antibiotics and can cause disease," said Dr. Robert Tauxe, director of the division of food-borne, waterborne and environmental diseases at the agency.
The gross failure in this country to recognize the human right to safe and affordable water permits water utilities to cut off water delivery to families unable to pay utility bills, which leads directly to increases in waterborne diseases.
Several cities were cut off from supplies of fuel for pumping in fresh water and processing sewage during the blockade, which the International Committee of the Red Cross said was putting 2.5 million people at risk of waterborne disease.
LifeStraw Personal Water Filter, available on Amazon for $14.99If you run out of clean water or find yourself without it, LifeStraws uses a microfiltration membrane to remove 99.9% of waterborne bacteria, parasites, and microplastics (as small as 1 micron).
"This is a big tragedy of biblical proportions," he said, adding that major work will be needed, including the restoration of electricity, water and sanitation to prevent the emergence of waterborne diseases, as well as repairs to public infrastructure.
America's worst traffic jam this fall occurred on the Ohio River, where a line of about 50 miles of boats hauling grains and other products turned into a waterborne parking lot, as ship captains waited for the river to reopen.
The new domestic Japanese waterborne assessments will cover 89-octane gasoline, kerosene, gasoil with a sulphur content of 10 parts per million, high-sulphur fuel oil and low-sulphur fuel oil, according to note sent to subscribers on the Platts website.
Underwater drones are harder to detect, and thus counter, than surface drones are because sound radiates from them through the water as a sphere, rather than the hemisphere occupied by the waterborne sonic emissions of a drone at the surface.
"We have six patrol boats in Budapest... and a further nine downstream from the capital... all the way to the Serbian border," the captain of the Danube Waterborne Police, Richard Prohaszka, said on Friday, describing the search for more bodies.
Another impact of climate change will be on the health of Americans, whether because of extreme heat and higher temperatures, diseases (like Zika) that come from mosquitoes and ticks, more food and waterborne diseases, or higher risk of asthma and allergies.
As a backup to C. elegans Dr Rothman's laboratory is also studying another group of potential starchip travellers—waterborne micro-animals called tardigrades (pictured) that, when cold and dehydrated, can withstand suspended animation for at least a century and perhaps millennia.
Even with the increase in mortality in the weeks after Hurricane Maria, authorities insisted that the official death toll remained at 55: 20 direct deaths; 203 indirect deaths, such as suicides; and four more from leptospirosis, a waterborne bacterial disease.
"The lower sulphur specifications reflect changing supply and demand trends across the regions, as well as the fact that global waterborne diesel trade is now predominantly maximum 10 ppm, known as ultra-low sulphur diesel," it said in the note.
Both refineries cut back production last week after a chemical spill from the site of a massive fire in mid-March initially led to a stoppage of all waterborne supply and then choked it down to about half of normal.
For those who don't know much about the history of cholera, Ms. Shah's dense, compact book is a decent primer, explaining how new forms of transportation encouraged the spread of this waterborne disease, as did rising urban density, as did political corruption.
You should be covered for anywhere in the US. But if you're going to countries where waterborne viruses are a problem, you'll need something bigger, like the MSR Guardian Purifier, which provides military-grade filtration (including viruses) and a high flow rate.
During the crisis, caused in part by substandard water treatment, 100,163 residents were exposed to elevated levels of lead, a dangerous neurotoxin, and were at elevated risk for legionnaire's disease, a waterborne illness linked to 14 deaths in the city since 2014.
International aid agencies said there was a big risk of an outbreak of waterborne diseases in the Rohingya camps in Cox's Bazar, where nearly a million people live, mostly in shacks made of bamboo and plastic sheets that cling to steep, denuded hills.
"Changes in the waterborne trade since 0003, coupled with new goals set by countries to move to even lower-sulphur fuel, suggest that the time is ripe to begin discussing further potential changes in the benchmark," Platts said in the subscriber note.
"Heading into the Thanksgiving holiday, it is critically important to avoid buying or eating romaine lettuce from the Salinas growing area so you can protect yourself and your family," said Robert Tauxe, CDC's director of the division of foodborne, waterborne and environmental diseases.
The increase in illnesses comes as climate change and coastal urbanization create a perfect storm for waterborne bacteria, said Geoff Scott, clinical professor and chair of the department of environmental health sciences in the Arnold School of Public Health at the University of South Carolina.
"The fact that it was the same strain over the last five years suggests it could have lurked somewhere in the factory the whole time," Dr. Robert Tauxe, deputy director of the CDC Division of Foodborne, Waterborne and Environmental Diseases, told CNN last April.
It's not the food itself First, the good news: The virus is not likely to be transmitted by food itself, said Dr. Ian Williams, chief of the Outbreak Response and Prevention Branch of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which investigates foodborne and waterborne illnesses.
Penelope Ajani, a marine biologist at the University of Technology Sydney, said that waterborne ash can have a number of effects on estuaries, including shading them and preventing phytoplankton growth, fertilizing them and promoting phytoplankton growth, and coating the estuary floor and organisms with fine sediment.
"If somebody sneezes into their hands, that creates an opportunity for those germs to be passed on to other people, or contaminate other objects that people touch," said Dr. Vincent Hill, chief of the waterborne disease prevention branch of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The urban environment is linked to a large number of noncommunicable diseases such as obesity, heart disease and pulmonary disease, as well as communicable diseases such as tuberculosis from crowding and poor ventilation, and waterborne and vector-borne diseases such as dengue, according to the WHO.
Waterborne commerce already plays a major role in the U.S. economy generating nearly $5 trillion in economic activity and bringing $41 billion to federal, state and local coffers annually, but a nearly complete Panama Canal expansion project could push these numbers even higher – if we're ready.
Flint's water crisis was declared a federal emergency last year when Flint children, particularly in the poorest neighborhoods, were found to have elevated blood lead levels (which can cause irreversible brain damage) and 12 deaths were linked to Legionnaires' disease, a form of pneumonia caused by waterborne bacteria.
And while most people who swim at public beaches and lakes will never get a waterborne illness, the Portland Press Herald reported Friday that the effects of climate change are causing bodies of water to be more populated in the summertime — and more conducive to hosting viruses and bacteria.
"These major shifts in weather and environment have disastrous consequences for public health, including worsened symptoms of lung disease and other chronic illnesses; higher risk of heatstroke and heat exhaustion; new threats of food- and waterborne diseases; and increased hospital admissions for cardiovascular and kidney disorders," the declaration read.
ABOARD THE OLIVER C. SHEARER, Ohio River (Reuters) - America's worst traffic jam this fall occurred on the Ohio River, where a line of about 50 miles of boats hauling grains and other products turned into a waterborne parking lot, as ship captains waited for the river to reopen.
"We're not trying to ruin people's holidays but we want them to be aware of the risks," said Samuel J. Crowe, the lead author of the study and an epidemiologist with the division of food-borne, waterborne and environmental diseases at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The Lancet study, by researchers at Harvard University Medical School and the School of Public Health, cited examples in several countries, beginning in the late 773s, in which the Rohingya suffered from poor access to obstetric care and a high prevalence of waterborne illnesses, among other health problems.
And as hours went by after the mudslide and bodies began to decompose in the soggy heat, volunteers knew from dealing with the highly contagious Ebola virus that small measures — like wearing masks and gloves then safely disposing of them, to prevent the risk of waterborne disease — took on outsized significance.
"We do expect more reports of illness since there is a two-week delay between when a person becomes ill and when they are confirmed to be part of an outbreak," said Matthew Wise, deputy branch chief for outbreak response at the CDC's Division of Foodborne, Waterborne, and Environmental Diseases.
The earlier mentioned 2006 report carried out by American and Indian microbiologists found the incidence of waterborne disease among residents who had access to city-treated water was around 38 percent, but for poorer residents who rely specifically on the river for everyday water supplies, it's around 80 to 90 percent.
U.S. waterborne shipments of crude oil by destination Source: S&P Global Platts The main reason the United States has become a major crude exporter is the rapid growth of U.S. light, sweet shale crude production coupled with a U.S. refining system that operates most economically with a heavier slate.
The origin of the strain was then unknown, but "the fact that it was the same strain over the last five years suggests it could have lurked somewhere in the factory the whole time," Dr. Robert Tauxe, deputy director of the CDC Division of Foodborne, Waterborne and Environmental Diseases, told CNN last April.
It also refused, along with the World Health Organization and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, to carefully investigate whether its base was the source of the epidemic — even as thousands of Haitians were dying from the waterborne disease and medical responders were scrambling to figure out how to control its spread.
This cultural moment is now receiving a deep dive at the Pérez Art Museum Miami with "Christo and Jeanne-Claude: Surrounded Islands, Biscayne Bay, Greater Miami, Florida, 1980-1983/A Documentary Exhibition," an exhaustive chronicle of the project from conception through legal hurdles to the nuts and bolts of its waterborne installation.
"Only after completing selection do candidates enter the core of small-boat training: Seven weeks of Basic Crewman Training, with instruction on combat casualty care, small arms and communications; and Crewman Qualification Training, 13 weeks of training on "seamanship and navigation, waterborne patrolling and how to plan and execute full mission profiles.
A prominent expert on the links between rising temperatures and problems like waterborne diseases or heatstroke, he had made several media appearances before the start of the Trump administration, including in a television documentary on the dangers of more frequent heat waves in which he flew over Los Angeles in a helicopter with the actor Matt Damon.
For the Love of God, Keep Your Literal Ass Away From the Pool When You&aposre SickGiven that summer is somehow only a short while off for Americans, here's a timely reminder…Read more ReadCrypto is the leading cause of waterborne outbreaks in the U.S. It can be caught from handling farm livestock or from taking care of people, usually children, already sick with it.
"From a public health standpoint, what's really concerning is that they did not address the drinking water quality" in Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria, he said, citing reports of waterborne illnesses and widespread bacterial contamination, boil water advisories for a majority of the island and reports that people were getting their drinking water from Superfund sites had not been properly locked down by the EPA.

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