hepakrese
hepakrese t1_jdc5ce7 wrote
Reply to comment by --atiqa-- in Overconsumption of water 'draining humanity's lifeblood,' UN chief says by No-Drawing-6975
It gets bright up because golf courses in the US are built in places otherwise unsuitable for grass. Like the desert.
hepakrese t1_j6ocb4p wrote
Reply to Compensation Question by [deleted]
I'd be looking for a higher wage job, and especially one that doesn't rely on bonuses to make it palatable.
hepakrese t1_j0itq9r wrote
Reply to comment by shfiven in Aromatherapy spray that killed two people in a multistate outbreak also killed pet raccoon by AudibleNod
When I was a child, one of my elementary school friend's parents had a bobcat cub as a pet. The arrangement didn't last long.
hepakrese t1_iym4h9e wrote
Reply to comment by Diamond4Hands4Ever in Traffic related air pollution is associated with an increased likelihood of having multiple long-term physical and mental health conditions, research on 364,000 people found. Simple measures to reduce traffic levels could potentially improve lives and lessen the pressure on our healthcare systems. by Wagamaga
The exploits of mining specifically are far more broadly reaching than the interior of a mine or quarry where the worker is. It pollutes the land, air, and water in the community and that affects everyone in the area regardless of whether they work in the mine. Further, the guise of choice does a lot of heavy lifting in your query, when one may not be able to afford to live anywhere else; the community may not have other jobs, and saying nothing of underage children who don't have the luxury of 'choice.'
As such, you cannot limit the study simply to the people who 'choose' to work and live there, and the very premise of choice itself is flawed.
The same can be said for traffic congested areas.
hepakrese t1_ixyw0i7 wrote
Reply to comment by twelveski in Dissociative symptoms are common among individuals with depression, study finds by chrisdh79
Ask your therapist/doctor about genetic testing to help identify medications or therapies that may be more or less likely to be helpful for you and your issue. The tests may help shed light on how your body processes chemicals in each medication. Some are metabolized quickly or slowly, others not well at all, which affects how well you respond to the medication and at dosages. There are variations for other conditions and medication types.
I've had severe depression many times in my life and tried upward of 20 medications with intolerable side effects. The genetic testing corroborated what I knew: most don't affect me like intended, so just don't. Don't bother prescribing ::gestures broadly:: those ones.
It doesn't tell you what will cure you, but it may help inform decisionmaking during conversations with your care team.
hepakrese t1_iv9xkhy wrote
This graph is impossible to read.
hepakrese t1_iuriwz3 wrote
Reply to White House announces $13.5 bln funding to help households with energy bills by Cyberdragofinale
This is insane! We have energy companies posting record profits - why is our government bailing them out by proxy?! This is a corporate grift.
Our government should stop providing tax incentives to such companies, and create regulation that prevents utilities from unnecessarily boosting prices to consumers (as it only lines their own pockets).
hepakrese t1_jdc8g98 wrote
Reply to comment by --atiqa-- in Overconsumption of water 'draining humanity's lifeblood,' UN chief says by No-Drawing-6975
🤷 It was brought up elsewhere in the comments and I was simply replying to your response about the US & golf anyway.