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World Economy Mar 18, 2026

Preventable Child Deaths Soar as Aid Cuts Threaten Global Health Goals

A recent UN report reveals that 4.9 million children died in 2024, mostly from preventable causes. …
A staggering 4.9 million children died in 2024, with the majority of these deaths being preventable, according to a new UN report. The report warns that aid cuts could hinder the global goal of ending preventable child deaths. Progress towards ending preventable deaths of children under five by 2030 has slowed by 60% since 2015. UN experts are calling for sustained investment in health systems to reach this target. “No child should die from diseases that we know how to prevent,” said Unicef executive director Catherine Russell. “But we see worrying signs that progress in child survival is slowing – and at a time where we’re seeing further global budget cuts.” The report highlights that Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia have persistently had the worst rates of child death, largely due to newborn deaths. The most common causes of death were premature birth, pneumonia, and trauma during birth. Infectious diseases, including malaria, were also a major cause. 100,000 children died directly from severe acute malnutrition – with the highest numbers in Pakistan, Somalia, and Sudan. Aid cuts are threatening to close lifesaving facilities, humanitarian workers warn. “We are not moving far enough or fast enough and leaving 5 million [children] under the age of five vulnerable,” said Abdurahman Sharif, senior humanitarian affairs director at Save the Children. Aid cuts have affected 6,600 health facilities, with a third forced to close. Experts warn that without sustained investment, progress in reducing child deaths will slow further, and gains could begin to reverse.
#children #cuts #child
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Technology Mar 17, 2026

Mythmatch Review: A Heavenly Match-Three Game with a Twist of Ancient Greek Mythology

Mythmatch is a match-three game set in ancient Greece, where players take on the role of Artemis, t…
Mythmatch is a match-three game that has captured the essence of ancient Greek mythology, blending it with a heartwarming tale of friendship and community. Players take on the role of Artemis, the immortal daughter of Zeus, who is determined to become the God of the Hunt. To achieve her goal, Artemis must first earn favor with a council of her elders on Mount Olympus, and they all have puzzle-based jobs for her.The game seamlessly integrates elements from various puzzle games, such as Plants vs Zombies and Overcooked, into its match-three gameplay. As Artemis navigates her way through the challenges set by the gods, she gets cast out of Olympus and sent down to the mortal town of Ithaca, home of Odysseus. Here, the game transforms into a rural life sim, where players help the locals by constructing new buildings, assisting their trade with other settlements, and solving their complicated lives.The gameplay cycle revolves around spending days on Earth becoming a more useful deity and then returning to Olympus at night to try to better your score at the challenges set by the gods. As players become indispensable in the lives of the mortals, they reward Artemis with ecclesiastical XP (experience points), which can be spent to make the Olympian puzzle tasks easier.The visual style of Mythmatch is gentle and cartoonish without being overly cute, and the characters are well-drawn and sympathetic. The game tackles timeless sociopolitical themes, including unrequited love, social anxiety, absent fathers, corporate greed, and the philosophy of leadership. The game is also extremely funny, with a unique sense of humor that adds to its charm.Overall, Mythmatch is a lyrical poem about beautiful and rewarding game design. With its interlocking systems, pleasing pace, and ebb and flow between Olympus and the mortal realm, the game is almost hypnotic. If you're looking for a new game to get lost in, Mythmatch is available now for £16.75.
#you #game #can
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World Economy Mar 17, 2026

Climate Crisis Insurance May Save El Salvador's Surfing Waves

El Salvador's Oriente Salvaje surf spot is threatened by climate-related disruptions. A parametric …
In El Salvador, the Oriente Salvaje surf spot, known for its world-class breaks, Las Flores and Punta Mango, is facing significant threats from climate change. The local economy, heavily reliant on surf tourism, sputters to a halt due to intense tropical storms causing flooding and disrupting transport routes.To mitigate these risks, Rodrigo Barraza, a local surfer, teamed up with Save the Waves, an international surfing nonprofit organization. They took out a parametric insurance policy for Oriente Salvaje, which can be used to support recovery from climate change impacts. This policy is triggered when damaging conditions cross a predetermined threshold, such as wind speed or rainfall level.The project aims to provide rapid support for the local community, which includes hotels, restaurants, surf shops, fishers, and drone experts. A survey of 50 local businesses showed that, on average, 70% of their income was dependent on surf tourism. Several informal operators, such as surf photographers, guides, and boat drivers, are especially vulnerable to changeable weather.The payout will be triggered once weather conditions reach an extreme associated with observable income loss. It will be distributed to anywhere between a few hundred and several thousand beneficiaries in the region. The size of the payout is still being determined, as well as which insurer it will be, but Save the Waves hopes to have a pilot running by June.The pioneering program has not been hurdle-free. Angelo Picardo, Save the Waves' local coordinator, says: "El Salvador is a developing country and we don't have an insurance culture – people don't even have health insurance – so there's a lot of work you have to do on the ground to bring people on board."Another challenge has been funding the premiums without burdening local businesses. Save the Waves is in talks with the Salvadorian government, which since 2019 has been channelling millions from loans into a nationwide surf tourism initiative.This type of insurance is bound to spread as more communities and ecosystems experience weather extremes. However, Swenja Surminski, an international expert on innovative insurance for ecosystems, warns that "parametric solutions must be combined with broader resilience and adaptation strategies".
#surf #insurance #waves
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Technology Mar 16, 2026

Scientists Teach Human Brain Cells to Play Doom: A Leap in Biological Computing

Scientists have successfully taught a petri dish of 200,000 human brain cells to play the iconic vi…
Researchers at Cortical Labs in Melbourne have created a 'biological computer' using living human tissue, which can play the 1993 shooter game Doom. The team used 10ml of blood from CEO Hon Weng Chong to harvest 100 white blood cells, which were then reprogrammed into induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). These cells were used to create a dish of 200,000 neurons that can interface with a computer system.The brain cells were taught to play Doom by encoding game state information, passing it through a neural network, and converting it into signals the neurons can understand. The neurons then fire an output, which the system decodes and converts back into actions in the game. This process is similar to how humans operate, with information going into the retina, being converted into electrical signals, processed in the brain, and resulting in an output.While the achievement has sparked concerns about sentience and consciousness, Chong believes the brain cells are not conscious, stating, 'At first it didn’t know how to move, aim or shoot. Then it would shoot two enemies and stop. So it’s definitely learning.' The next step could be integrating this technology with Neuralink, a brain-machine interface developed by Elon Musk.The application of biological computing lies not in gaming, but in medicine, such as disease modeling for conditions like epilepsy. This technology could allow for personalized drug testing and tailored treatments. Meanwhile, Eon Systems in San Francisco has created a virtual insect brain that can behave like a real fly, challenging the assumption that intelligence must be acquired.Biological systems like these could eventually power robots, drones, and other machines that need to navigate complex environments. As Chong notes, 'Abstract reasoning, mathematics and language are relatively recent in evolutionary terms... but motor control and probabilistic decision-making are things we’ve inherited through millions of years of evolution.' While we're far from uploading human consciousness into the internet, this technology marks a significant step in the development of biological computing.
#brain #fly #neurons
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