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‘Guilty’ Dog Escapes Within Seconds of Getting Caught by Owner in Funny Video

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Columnists   来源:Commodities  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:Emma works from a tiny office known as the spider milking room. On a typical day, she milks - or extracts the venom from - 80 of these Sydney funnel-web spiders.

Emma works from a tiny office known as the spider milking room. On a typical day, she milks - or extracts the venom from - 80 of these Sydney funnel-web spiders.

Public Health Scotland said it was also working on plans to launch its own programme for high-risk individuals.Northern Ireland's Department of Health said the issue is being considered, with an announcement expected shortly.

‘Guilty’ Dog Escapes Within Seconds of Getting Caught by Owner in Funny Video

BBC Newsbeat has also asked health leaders in Wales whether they intend to do the same.This vaccine wasn't designed for gonorrhoea. It's the meningitis B vaccine currently given to babies.But the bacteria that cause the two diseases are so closely related that the MenB jab appears to cut gonorrhoea cases by around a third.

‘Guilty’ Dog Escapes Within Seconds of Getting Caught by Owner in Funny Video

That will require a delicate conversation in sexual health clinics as the vaccine will not eliminate the risk of catching gonorrhoea. It is normally caught while having sex without a condom.But Prof Andrew Pollard, the chair of the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI), which recommended the vaccine, said despite it only being 30% effective, it was "worth having" and could have "a huge impact" overall.

‘Guilty’ Dog Escapes Within Seconds of Getting Caught by Owner in Funny Video

The decision is not just about the record numbers of cases. Gonorrhoea is becoming increasingly difficult to treat.

Most cases are treated with a single dose of antibiotics, but there is an 80-year history of the bacterium which causes gonorrhoea repeatedly evolving resistance to our antibiotics.Rather, they're asking that if someone comes across one, they safely capture it rather than kill it.

"Saying that this is the world's most deadly spider and then [asking the public to] catch it and bring it to us does sound counter-intuitive," she says."[But] that spider there now, thanks to Charlie, will… effectively save someone's life."

All of the spiders her team collects get brought back to the Australian Reptile Park where they are catalogued, sorted by sex and stored.Any females that get dropped off are considered for a breeding programme, which helps supplement the number of spiders donated by the public.

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