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California freshwater fish found to be teeming with parasites

California freshwater fish found to be teeming with parasites

The Star04-06-2025

NEW YORK, June 4 (Xinhua) -- More than 90 percent of popular freshwater fish in U.S. Southern California are carrying human-infecting parasites, posing a significant danger for those who like to eat freshly caught freshwater fish, according to a study published on Tuesday in the Journal of Infectious Diseases.
The parasites are called trematodes. Two species of the flatworms were discovered in California's freshwater fish. The tiny, flattened and sluglike creatures can cause gastrointestinal problems, weight loss and lethargy when a person eats an infected fish. In some rare and severe cases, the parasites have caused strokes or heart attacks.
"Americans don't usually think about parasites when they eat freshwater fish because it hasn't historically been an issue here," the Los Angeles Times quoted Ryan Hechinger, the study's senior author, as saying.
In fact, even when a person has fallen ill from a locally caught infected freshwater fish, their healthcare provider will typically ask if the patient has recently traveled outside of the United States, Hechinger said.

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A Chinese cultural guardian holds heritage in his hands
A Chinese cultural guardian holds heritage in his hands

Borneo Post

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A Chinese cultural guardian holds heritage in his hands

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Wu remembers every piece. For each, he can recount its origin, its damage, and the choices made during restoration with the clarity of someone who has lived beside them. 'In some of the older scrolls, we can still see traces left by earlier restorers, subtle patches, new backings, brushwork slightly different in hand,' Wu said. 'It's like having a quiet conversation across time.' To Wu, restoration is more than a craft. It's a responsibility — a handover of history and a dialogue with ancestors. It is about repairing what was broken, preserving what was fading, and passing forward what once seemed lost. 'Traditional culture must be carried forward by someone,' Wu said. 'It can't remain only a memory. It must become a living craft for the next generation.' – Xinhua Arts and Culture China cultural relics

Chinese medical team provides free healthcare to children in Botswana
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Chinese medical team provides free healthcare to children in Botswana

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Chinese medical team offers free healthcare to over 200 orphans in Tanzania's Zanzibar
Chinese medical team offers free healthcare to over 200 orphans in Tanzania's Zanzibar

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Chinese medical team offers free healthcare to over 200 orphans in Tanzania's Zanzibar

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