Why Should Uxbridge Restaurants Invest in Security Cameras Solutions?

Are you ready for the ultimate way to enhance the safety and security of your Uxbridge restaurant? In today’s fast-paced world, safety concerns have become a top priority for restaurant owners, and rightfully so. Restaurants are bustling spaces where numerous activities occur simultaneously.

From the customers enjoying their meals to the staff ensuring seamless operations, it’s vital to keep an eye on everything to ensure the safety and security of everyone involved. This is why investing in a security camera system for your restaurant is no longer just a smart option—it’s a necessity.

When it comes to Uxbridge, a thriving suburban area in Ontario, Canada, the demand for heightened security in local restaurants has significantly increased. With t…

Unlocking the Power of Super Health Keto Gummies: A Comprehensive Guide to Achieving Your Health Goals

In the realm of health and wellness, the journey to achieving optimal fitness and well-being can sometimes feel like an uphill battle. With countless diets, supplements, and exercise regimens flooding the market, it s easy to feel overwhelmed and unsure of where to start. However, amidst this sea of options, one product has been gaining significant attention for its potential to support weight management and overall health: Super Health Keto Gummies. In this comprehensive guide, we will delve deep into what Super Health Keto Gummies are, how they work, their benefits, potential side effects, and everything else you need to know to make an informed decision about incorporating them into your wellness routine.

What Are Super Health Keto Gummies?

Super Health Keto Gummie…

HEALTH-SWAZILAND: TB: ‘Indeed We Have a Problem’

Mantoe Phakathi

MBABANE, Apr 22 2009 (IPS) – The Swazi government s slow response to a fast-growing tuberculosis epidemic has eroded the possibility of controlling it.
Themba Dlamini, the National TB Control Programme manager, says there has been a nearly ten-fold increase in the last 20 years from about 1 000 TB cases per year in 1987 to over 9,600 cases in 2007. Swaziland also has the world s highest HIV prevalence rate; people living with HIV/AIDS are significantly more vulnerable to catching tuberculosis.

This escalation of TB cases can be attributed to the HIV/AIDS epidemic, said Dlamini. 80 percent of the TB cases are also co-infected with HIV.

The country is falling short of meeting the World Health Organisation (WHO) TB treatment rate of 85 percent. …

Spanish Cities Far From Sustainable

MADRID, Mar 1 2012 (IPS) – Though Vitoria-Gasteiz, capital of the Basque Country, was elected the European Green Capital of 2012 – an award presented by the European Union to promote and reward efforts to mitigate climate change – Spain still has a long way to go to earn the label of ‘sustainable’ for others cities around the country.

The air that the citizens of Vitoria-Gasteiz breathe is of the highest quality, according to the score given by the European Union, thanks to campaigns to increase bicycle use around the city and the promotion of a new bus network together with tram routes and new parking regulations.

In contrast, cities such as Madrid, Barcelona, Sevilla or Bilbao have been consistently exceeding standard levels of pollution as a result of a lack o…

Effective Smog Monitoring Urgently Needed in Mexican Cities

The urgent task of reducing dangerous levels of air pollution in large urban centres cannot be achieved without proper monitoring and measurement of air quality.

A neighbourhood in southern Mexico City, where visibility is limited because of the smog. Credit: Emilio Godoy/IPS

MEXICO CITY, Jun 23 2013 (IPS) – Mexican cities with populations of more than 500,000 face serious obstacles in monitoring air quality and reducing air pollution, but as of July local authorities will be required to do both, and to submit mandatory reports on their efforts to the federal government.

The new requirements that will soon enter into effect were approved by the Mexican …

Using Ethiopia’s Healthcare Gaps to Do Good and Make a Profit

Ethiopians waiting inside a hospital in Addis Ababa on the weekend. The capital has only four stationary MRI scanners, providing services to 30 government- and private-run hospitals. Credit: James Jeffrey/IPS

ADDIS ABABA, Apr 3 2014 (IPS) – For a while now, Magnetic Resonance Imaging or MRI scanners have typically been a luxury that both government and private hospitals in Ethiopia have struggled to afford to purchase for in-house use.

Addis Ababa, the Ethiopian capital with an ever-growing population of around 3.8 million, currently has only four stationary MRI scanners that provide services to 30 government and private hospitals, according to Zelalem Molla, a surgeon based …

2019 – A Devastating Year in Review

Farhana Haque Rahman is Senior Vice President of IPS Inter Press Service; a journalist and communications expert, she is a former senior official of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization and the International Fund for Agricultural Development.

The glaciers of the Andes Mountains are threatened by global warming. Credit: Julieta Sokolowicz/IPS

ROME, Dec 16 2019 (IPS) – By any measure this has been a devastating year: fires across the Amazon, the Arctic and beyond; floods and drought in Africa; rising temperatures, carbon emissions and sea levels; accelerating loss of species, and mass forced migrations of people.

As seen thro…

Allow Least Developed Countries to Develop

SYDNEY and KUALA LUMPUR, Aug 31 2021 (IPS) – The pandemic is pushing back the world’s poorest countries with the least means to finance economic recovery and contagion containment efforts. Without international solidarity, economic gaps will grow again as COVID-19 threatens humanity for years to come.

Least developed
While bringing some concessions, the ‘least developed countries’ (LDCs) designation – introduced five decades ago – has not generated changes needed to accelerate sustainable development for all.

Anis Chowdhury

The United Nations (UN) General Assembly created the LDCs category for its Second (1971-80). Its sought support for its…

To End AIDS, We Need to End Punitive Laws Perpetuating the Pandemic

The 24th International AIDS Conference is taking place in Montreal, July 29 to August 2.

A man is tested for HIV at a health centre in Odienné, Côte d’Ivoire. Credit: UNICEF/Frank Dejongh

MONTREAL, Aug 2 2022 (IPS) – This week, the global HIV response community is to address the crisis of stalling progress that is putting .

Delegates here are clear on two things: first, the world is not on track to end AIDS, second, the world can still get on track and end AIDS as a public health crisis by 2030, but only if leaders are bold. This includes removing laws which are perpetuating the pandemic.

Punitive and criminalizing approaches to law have been cat…