Daily Archives: August 20, 2017

Seychelles Constance Ephelia voted region’s leading green resort … – eTurboNews

Posted: August 20, 2017 at 6:36 pm


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Seychelles Constance Ephelia voted region's leading green resort ...
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Set within 120 hectares of land, surrounded by lush tropical vegetation, Constance Ephelia, located at Port Launay, opened its doors in February 2010.

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African slaves were both medical guinea pigs and scientists on … – Quartz

Posted: at 6:35 pm

In the natural course of events, humans fall sick and die. Patients hope for miraculous remedies to restore their health.

We all want our medicines to work for us in wondrous ways. But how are human subjects chosen for experiments? Who bears the burden of risk? What ethical brakes keep scientific enthusiasm from overwhelming vulnerable populations? Who goes first?

Today, the question of underrepresented minorities in medical experimentation is still volatile. Minorities, especially African-Americans in the U.S., tend to be simultaneously underrepresented in medical research and historically exploited in experimentation.

My new book, Secret Cures of Slaves: People, Plants, and Medicine in the Eighteenth-Century Atlantic, zeroes in on human experimentation on Caribbean slave plantations in the late 1700s. Were slaves on New World sugar plantations used as human guinea pigs in the same way African-Americans were in the American South centuries later?

History is littered with exploitative experiments in humans. The Tuskegee syphilis experiment is probably one of the most infamous. From 1932 to 1972, the U.S. Public Health Service offered 600 African-American men food, free medical care and burial insurance for participating in the study. About 400 of these poor Alabamans had syphilis. The government studied the natural progression of the disease until death, even though penicillin was an easy, cheap and safe cure.

This type of medical testing empirical study through controlled trials began in earnest in the late 1700s. Many poor souls were subjected to medical testing. In Europe and its American colonies, drug trials tended to over-select subjects from the poor and wards of the state, such as prisoners, hospital patients and orphans. Most experimental subjects came from the same groups used for dissection that is, persons with no next of kin to insist on burial rites or to pay for expensive cures.

I was surprised to learn that, in many instances, doctors did not as might be expected use slaves as guinea pigs. Slaves were valuable property of powerful masters. The masters will prevailed over a doctors advice.

A British physician in Jamaica reported he had developed a perfect cure for yaws, a horrid tropical infection of the skin, bones and joints bred of poverty and poor sanitation. The experimental treatment was slated to take three or four months. The masters, not caring to lose their Slaves labor for so long, denied the doctors request.

However, numerous slaves were exploited in medical experiments at this time. John Quier, a British doctor working in rural Jamaica, freely experimented with smallpox inoculation in a population of 850 slaves during the 1768 epidemic. Inoculation, a precursor to vaccine, involved inducing a light case of the disease in a healthy person in hopes of immunizing that person for life.

But Quier did not simply inoculate to prevent disease. We see from his reports that he used slaves to explore questions that doctors in Europe dared not. He wanted to know, for example, whether one could safely inoculate menstruating or pregnant women. He also wanted to know if it was safe to inoculate newborn infants or a person already suffering from dropsy, yaws or fever and the like.Quier was employed by slave owners and would have inoculated plantation slaves for smallpox, with or without his scientific experiments. In all instances, masters had the final word. There was no issue of slave consent, or, for that matter, often physician consent.

In his letters to colleagues in London, Quier reported that, to answer these questions, he sometimes inoculated repeatedly in the same person and at his own expense. Throughout his experiments, when pressed, Quier followed what he considered of interest to science and not necessarily what was best for the human being standing in front of him.

The history of human experimentation is not merely about subjects used and misused, but also about subjects excluded from testing and, as a consequence, from the potential benefits of a cure.

Today, medical researchers struggle to include women in clinical trials. Its impossible to say when women were defined out as proper subjects of human research. But women were regularly included in medical research in the 18th century.

In 1721, the iconic Newgate Prison trials in England tested the safety and efficacy of smallpox inoculation. Of the elected six condemned criminals, there were three women and three men, matched as closely as possible for age.

Women also featured in Quiers experiments, raising explosive questions about differences among women, many of which were about race.

For example, his London colleagues wondered whether his smallpox experiments done on Negro women were valid for English women. Some gentlemen in London were concerned that experiments done on slave women were not valid for women of fashion, and of delicate constitutions. Treatments appropriate for enslaved women, they warned, might well destroy ladies of delicate habits, educated in European luxury.

African, Amerindian and European knowledges mixed on Caribbean sugar plantations.

Europeans had little experience with the tropical disease they encountered in the Caribbean, but Africans did. One of my purposes in this book is to expand our knowledge of African contributions to science.

An extraordinary experiment in 1773 pitted purported slave cures against European treatments in Grenada, a small island south of Barbados. In something of a cure-off, a slaves remedy for yaws was tested against the standard European remedy. Under the masters careful eye, four slaves were treated by a European-trained surgeon, two by the slave doctor.

The surgeon employed a standard mercurial treatment, which, when taken over several years, tended to leave slaves health broken. Meanwhile, the slave set to work with methods learned in his own Country (presumably Africa). This consisted of sweating his patients powerfully twice a day in a cask with a small fire and by giving them a medicine made from two woods, known locally as Bois Royale and Bois fer.

The outcome? The slaves patients were cured within a fortnight; the surgeons patients were not. The plantation owner, a man of science, consequently put the man of African origins in charge of all yaws patients in his plantation hospital. In the process, the enslaved man who remained nameless and faceless throughout was elevated in status to a Negro Dr.

The Atlantic world represents a step in globalization, the potential enrichment of the human experience when worlds collide. But the extinction of peoples, such as the Amerindians in the Greater Antilles, coupled with the fear and secrecy bred in the enslavement of Africans, meant that knowledge did not circulate freely. Amerindians and enslaved Africans strategically held many secrets. Though hidden or suppressed, much of this knowledge can still be found today in local Caribbean remedies.

Bertrand Bajon, a French physician working in Cayenne, envied the numerous plant cures known to Indians and Negroes. Bajon pleaded that for the good of humanity slaves be obliged to communicate the plants he [or she] used and the manner in which they are employed. In return, Bajon recommended the slave be offered freedom but not until a great number of experiments confirmed the cures virtue.

We must remember that knowledge created in this period did not respond to science for its own sake, but was fired in the colonial crucible of conquest, slavery and violence.

Londa Schiebinger, Professor of History of Science, Stanford University

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

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A Taste Of The Caribbean In Philadelphia – CBS Philly

Posted: at 6:35 pm

August 20, 2017 4:55 PM By Justin Udo

PHILADELPHIA (CBS) A trip to the Caribbean without taking a step outside the Delaware Valley.

Music, dancing, crafts, and clothing all played a major part at the 31st Annual Philadelphia Caribbean Festival on Sunday at Penns Landing, but for many its the food that stole the show.

We have our special, wonderful jerked chicken, then we have a special rice and peas with ox tails, curry goat, curry chicken, a lovely macaroni pie, and also a wonderful bacon salt fish, said one food vendor, showing off their menu.

A food vendor at the Caribbean Festival. (credit: Justin Udo)

Many of the people who came say the Caribbean atmosphere and warm tempertatures almost made them forget where they were.

You can take a vacation without leaving the Philadelphia area. Its free festive fun, said one attendee.

(credit: Justin Udo)

Festival-goers say its a great educational experience on Caribbean places like Jamaica, Barbados, Grenada, and Hondorus.

Its a beautiful thing. Me personally, I always love learning about different cultures, said another attendee.

Money raised from the event goes to a scholarship fund benefiting Caribbean american students perusing higher education.

Justin Udo is a reporter and editor at KYW Newsradio 1060. He got his start in radio as an intern at his hometown CBS station, KDKA in Pittsburgh. He first came on board KYW Newsradio in 2009, working as a desk assistant, service aide,...

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Harvey Could Rebound in the Western Caribbean; Two Other Areas Are Being Monitored For Tropical Development – Wunderground.com (blog)

Posted: at 6:35 pm

August 20, 2017

The remnants of former Tropical Storm Harvey will continue to track westwardthrough the Caribbean Sea and possibly into the Bay of Campeche where a regeneration of the system could occur this week.

Hostile winds aloft shredded Harvey apart on Saturday, and the National Hurricane Center issued its final advisory.

(MORE: Hurricane Central)

What is left of Harveyis a cluster ofshower and thunderstorm activity to the south of Jamaica, which became more concentrated Sunday afternoon.

However, ahurricane hunter aircraft investigated the remnants of Harvey Sunday afternoon and found that the system hadn'tregenerated into a tropical depression or tropical storm because it lackeda well-defined center of circulation, and there was also no indication of tropical-storm-force winds.

Through Monday, Harvey is forecast to enter the western Caribbean where conditions could be somewhat conducive for the gradual reorganization of the system as it moves west-northwestward.

Heavy rain from this system could cause flooding in Central America and the Yucatan Peninsula by Monday or Tuesday regardless of whether Harvey can reform prior to reaching those land areas.

By the middle portion of this week, Harvey's remnants may move into the Bay of Campeche (southwest Gulf of Mexico) where they will have to be monitored closely. Some forecast guidance suggests Harvey could reform over this region even if it doesn't get its act together prior to reaching Central America and the Yucatan.

Residents and visitors in eastern Mexico and south Texas should continue to follow the progress of Harvey's remnants, as uncertainty remains with forecast details.

Invest 92L continues tofesterto the north of the Lesser Antilles.

Wind shear has chipped away at 92L's structure and overall development chances. Hostile wind sheartypically rips apart tropical disturbances and weaker tropical cyclones.

We will continue to monitor the progress of Invest 92L as it moves west-northwestward during the next several days in the general direction of the Bahamas, but overall, development chances are low.

This system will enhance rainfall chances in the Bahamas, as well as much ofFlorida, early this week.

It may eventually interact with a cold front near Florida by later this week, and that's when we'll keep a close eye on it for any potential increase in organization.

Finally,a tropical wave in the central Atlantic Ocean is not expected todevelop, but we will watch it over the next several days. Its future trackis expected to be northwestward into the open Atlantic Ocean.

We are in the climatological peak of the hurricane season, so each tropical wave or area of low pressure in the Atlantic Basin must be watched closely for development.

(MORE: Where Every U.S. Landfalling Hurricane Began Its Journey)

Now is a good time to make sure you have a plan in case of a hurricane strike. The Federal Alliance for Safe Homes has an excellent website to help you make your plan.

Check back with weather.com for updates in the days ahead on these latest systems and the rest of hurricane season.

(MORE: NOAA Predicts Active Rest of the Hurricane Season)

The Weather Companys primary journalistic mission is to report on breaking weather news, the environment and the importance of science to our lives. This story does not necessarily represent the position of our parent company, IBM.

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Harvey Could Rebound in the Western Caribbean; Two Other Areas Are Being Monitored For Tropical Development - Wunderground.com (blog)

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Caribbean Premier League 2017: 5 players who performed well during Week Two – Yahoo Cricket

Posted: at 6:35 pm

Rashid Khan has been outstanding with the ball

The sixth season of the Hero Caribbean Premier League got off to a blistering start and the tournament has gotten even better in the last week. There hasnt been any dearth of excitement and credit goes to the players for making the event an absolute exhibition.

Over the course of the second week, there have been several players who churned out exceptional performances for their respective sides.

As we move along, we take you through the stand-out players in the second week of the Hero Caribbean Premier League.

Afghanistans very own Rashid Khan has been taking rapid strides into the cricketing world at a tender age of 18 years. In the first week of the Caribbean Premier League, he struggled to add on to the wickets column but turned things around in the events second week.

Against the Trinbago Knight Riders, he was the Warriors most economical bowler with figures of 4-0-18-0, which included a maiden. In the next game, he got a stranglehold on the St Lucia Stars batsmen with a spell of 4-0-9-2, which completely took the momentum out of the Stars innings.

Khan was a touch expensive in the Warriors next game against the Jamaica Tallawahs. However, during his spell, he picked up two vital wickets of Lendl Simmons and Jonathan Foo.

Shadab Khan after picking up a wicket

Shadab Khan, the 18-year-old leg-spinner from Pakistan, has received appreciations from the cricketing fraternity ever since he made his debut in Pakistan colours. He was then rewarded with a spot in the Trinbago Knight Riders team in the Caribbean Premier League.

In the second week of the season, Khan was outstanding will the ball. His figures of 4-0-28-4 rocked the Guyana Amazon Warriors. Against the Barbados Tridents, he choked Kieron Pollard and Co with a spell of 4-0-20-1.

He was a touch expensive against the St Kitts and Nevis Patriots, but picked up the crucial wicket of Shamarh Brooks when was threatening to take the game away from the Knight Riders at Port of Spain.

Colin Munro has carried on from where he left in the first week

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Colin Munro is renowned for playing his strokes and taking the opposition bowling by the scruff of the neck through his aggressive intent. After an impressive first week in the Caribbean Premier League, the Kiwi carried forward his form in the second week.

He failed in the one odd game, but was yet again the Knight Riders man with the bat at the top of the order. He started the week with the Man of the Match award against the Guyana Amazon Warriors when he scored 70 runs from 47 balls that helped his team chase down a target of 156 without much fuss.

He struggled in the next game against the Barbados Tridents, but made amends with a quick-fire knock of 36 runs in 30 balls against the St Kitts and Nevis Patriots.

Andre Fletcher has been the silver lining in the dark clouds of the St Lucia Stars

St Lucia Stars campaign in the Caribbean Premier League has been an absolute disaster. Nevertheless, there has been one genuine positive for them in the form of West Indies international Andre Fletcher, who has been the stand-out batsman for the Stars.

In the first game of the week, the Stars stumbled to chase down a target of 197 set by the St Kitts and Nevis Patriots after Fletcher got them off to a flier with a knock of 48 runs in 33 balls. Against the Guyana Amazon Warriors, Fletcher didnt go big, but he set the tone for the innings with a couple of boundaries.

He played a superlative hand against the Jamaica Tallawahs with an innings of 84 runs in 53 balls, which helped the Stars put up a decent total of 173 on the board. However, even after Fletcher's batting spectacle, the Tallawahs traced down the target.

Sunil Narine has been outstanding in all departments on the field

Sunil Narine has easily been the pick of the players in the second week of the Caribbean Premier League. Apart from his skills with the ball, the off-spinner has shown tremendous potential with the bat in the recent times.

Against the Guyana Amazon Warriors, Narine returned with figures of 4-0-16-2 and also scored 23 runs with a four and a six. The next game against the Barbados Tridents was more of Narine with the bat than with the ball.

He bowled well with figures of 4-0-17-0, but his batting overshadowed it on the day as he piled on his career best score of 79 runs in 45 balls. In the next encounter too, he was right on the money as he conceded only 26 runs for 2 wickets.

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Caribbean Premier League 2017: 5 players who performed well during Week Two - Yahoo Cricket

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Tropical cyclone expected Thursday from wave nearing Caribbean – Miami Herald

Posted: at 6:35 pm


Miami Herald
Tropical cyclone expected Thursday from wave nearing Caribbean
Miami Herald
A tropical cyclone will likely develop from a wave of storms rolling toward the Caribbean later today, National Hurricane Center forecasters said early Thursday. Located about 550 miles east of the Lesser Antilles, the system became better organized ...
Florida on alert for disturbances behind Tropical Storm HarveySun Sentinel
Tropical Storm Harvey rolls into the Caribbean SeaWJXT Jacksonville
UK weather: Hurricane Gert could save Britain's summer with blast of warm Caribbean airTelegraph.co.uk

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Royal Caribbean Post Round-Up: August 20, 2017 – Royal Caribbean Blog (blog)

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Royal Caribbean Blog (blog)
Royal Caribbean Post Round-Up: August 20, 2017
Royal Caribbean Blog (blog)
Welcome to this week's edition of the Royal Caribbean post round-up, where we summarize all of the Royal Caribbean news and information from this week into one handy-dandy post! There is plenty of great content to enjoy, so sit back, relax, and enjoy ...

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Tropical moisture to bring uptick in downpours to Florida, Bahamas early this week – AccuWeather.com

Posted: at 6:34 pm

By Renee Duff, AccuWeather meteorologist August 20, 2017, 3:23:32 PM EDT

A tropical disturbance will sweep across Florida and the Bahamas with enhanced downpours and rough surf into the middle of the week.

The feature, dubbed 92L, is a disorganized cluster of showers and thunderstorms located north of Puerto Rico. A continued track to the northwest is expected over the next few days.

The chance of 92L becoming the next tropical depression or storm of the 2017 Atlantic hurricane season remains low during the first part of this week.

Ninety-two L is expected to remain in a strongly sheared environment for the next several days, AccuWeather Hurricane Expert Dan Kottlowski said. So, the potential for further development looks low at this time.

Wind shear, or the change in wind speed and direction with altitude, can prevent disorganized features from developing and shred apart mature tropical systems, as was the case with Harvey.

Regardless of development, this system will bring gusty winds and downpours into the Turks and Caicos Islands, as well as the southern Bahamas on Monday, Kottlowski said.

This image shows 92L just north of Puerto Rico and Hispaniola on Sunday, Aug. 20, 2017. (NOAA/satellite)

Hispaniola and Cuba are also likely to experience and uptick in shower and thunderstorm activity as 92L sweeps by to the north.

Downpours will arrive over the rest of the Bahamas on Tuesday, then into southern Florida Tuesday night and Wednesday, Kottlowski said.

A separate tropical feature in front of 92L began to spread showers and thunderstorms across the Florida Peninsula on Sunday. This feature has lost any opportunity to develop into a depression or storm.

Enhanced surf and rip currents will progress northwestward with the storm. Boaters and beachgoers should exercise caution and heed all advisories.

Rainfall associated with 92L could be heavy enough to trigger flash and urban flooding.

RELATED: AccuWeather hurricane center Florida interactive radar How do hurricanes get their names? Harvey to threaten Central America with flooding, rough surf

A push of dry and cooler air scheduled to move across the Southeast late in the week could interact with 92L and further enhance torrential rainfall across the Sunshine State.

Motorists and airline travelers around Florida should expect an increase in delays toward the middle and latter half of the week.

"It is possible that 92L lingers near Florida and is then steered back out over the Atlantic late in the week or next weekend," according to AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Alex Sosnowski. "At that point, some development could occur."

Should 92L beat the odds and strengthen to a tropical depression or storm, downpours, gusty winds and rough surf would be enhanced even more.

Another area of disorganized showers and thunderstorms located about 1,000 miles east of the Leeward Islands will likely be steered to the north, well away from any land mass.

If this circulation can manage to hang together during the next few days, it might have some opportunity to become more organized during this week and become a tropical depression, Kottlowski said.

The next few weeks are historically the most active in the Atlantic Basin with the peak of hurricane season not until Sept. 10.

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Puerto Rico Blows Out Bahamas By 64 Points – Bahamas Tribune

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The Bahamas in action against Puerto Rico.

By BRENT STUBBS

Senior Sports Reporter

bstubbs@tribunemedia.net

The Bahamas couldnt stop the up-tempo game from host Puerto Rica and ended up getting blown out by 64 points.

The only thing that the undefeated Puerto Ricans didnt do in their near flawless feature game on day three of the championships on Thursday night was reach the 100 century mark in pulling of their 99-35 massacre over the Bahamas.

Puerto Rico used an impressive 21-9 first quarter to propel them to a 49-19 advantage at the half. They came out of the locker room and the Puerto Ricans out-scored the Bahamas 28-5 as they extended their comfortable lead to 77-24 spurt at the end of the final break.

In the fourth quarter, the Bahamas got some contribution of the bench, but it wasnt enough as Puerto Rico cruised to a 22-11 margin to drop the Bahamas to 1-2 in the tournament after splitting their first two games, beating Suriname 86-69 the day before and losing 53-39 to Costa Rica on opening day.

Before fouling out in the third quarter, forward Valencia Demeritte ended up leading the Bahamas once again with just seven points. In the 19 minutes and 23 seconds she played, Demeritte shot 3-for-9 from the field and 1-for-2 from the free throw line.

Guard Alana Pinder, in playing all but 13 seconds, had six points with eight rebounds, four steals and three assists. Team captain Tanea Bowleg also came up with six points with three assists. Michell Butler was the only other player that scored more than two points She had four points with three rebounds.

Puerto Rico had seven players in double figures with Sheslanie Laureano scoring a game high 23 points with nine rebounds, five assists and as many steals.

The Bahamas was dominated in each statistical category, except for turnovers where they had a 37-20 advantage and the team committed 37 fouls, compared to just 20 by Puerto Rico.

Puerto Rico enjoyed its biggest margin by 70 points, while the Bahamas only had one lead and that was 3-2 at the start of the game, thanks to a 3-pointer from with the first 4:44 into the game in the first quarter.

The Bahamas didnt get into 7:21 into the second quarter on a free throw from Bowleg. Demeritte, who had picked up three fouls in the first quarter, came back into the game and scored on a lay-up for a 45-15 deficit.

But on the next ply, she committed her fourth foul and had to go back on the bench.

Without Demeritte in the line-up, the Bahamas found it difficult to score, coming up with just five points in the period.

The Bahamas, coached by Varel Davis and assisted by Terrance Red Eye McSweeney and Deven Johnson, will have to play a reclassification game today to determine the final position they will finish in.

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Nema Director Urges Caution As Weather System Moves Towards Bahamas – Bahamas Tribune

Posted: at 6:34 pm

By AVA TURNQUEST

Tribune Chief Reporter

aturnquest@tribunemedia.net

NATIONAL Emergency Management Agency Director Capt Stephen Russell yesterday urged residents throughout the country to finalise hurricane preparations as the country enters the peak of the 2017 Atlantic Hurricane season.

Capt Russell cautioned residents to routinely check local media and social media platforms for updates, pointing to the projected path of current system Invest 92 L through the Bahamas.

An invest is an area of disturbed weather that has been designated as a system of interest by the National Hurricane Centre with potential of subtropical or tropical development.

On Friday, the NHC forecasters said Invest 92L has a 60 per cent chance of becoming Tropical Storm Irma, with a projected path that will move in a west-northwestward direction towards The Bahamas and Florida through Tuesday.

Capt Russell said: "You should all be aware at this time that there are a number of tropical systems in the Atlantic Ocean, and one or two are projected to cross over, or come near The Bahamas during the upcoming week.

"Even though the systems have not been named, I would like to urge all residents throughout The Bahamas to continue to monitor these systems as we go into the weekend.

He continued: "We are all aware that in 2015, Tropical Storm Joaquin, rapidly intensified and became a major hurricane, which impacted islands in the Central and Southeast Bahamas."

"As long as the current system (Invest 92 L) is projected to pass through The Bahamas, I would like to urge all residents to make those final preparations to protect homes, businesses, check your family disaster plan, family emergency kits, and your communications plans."

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