100,000 signatures to win a parliamentary debate about the ownership of the water industry
'It's really hot, let's have a swim!' | ... Water ... |
Public services Public health |
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https://x.com/Feargal_Sharkey
Hodges' model is a conceptual framework to support reflection and critical thinking. Situated, the model can help integrate all disciplines (academic and professional). Amid news items, are posts that illustrate the scope and application of the model. A bibliography and A4 template are provided in the sidebar. Welcome to the QUAD ...
'It's really hot, let's have a swim!' | ... Water ... |
Public services Public health |
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Posted by Peter Jones at 10:38 pm | PERMALINK
Labels: accountability , crime , dividends , duty of candour , duty of care , ecology , governance , law , ownership , policy , pollution , profit , public health , public safety , public services , quality , shareholder , standards , utilities , water
Posted by Peter Jones at 4:55 pm | PERMALINK
Labels: air pollution , children , climate change , conflict , development , equality , equity , finance , global health , inclusion , land , nutrition , oceans , poverty , SDGs , security , Sustainable Development Goals , UN , water
'Some time in the late 1800s, the body of a young woman was pulled from the River Seine. Lacking any signs of struggle or foul play, her death was ruled a suicide. She was displayed on a slab of marble in the window of the Paris morgue - standard procedure for corpses awaiting identification. At the time, the morgue was a popular, albeit gruesome, attraction which drew more daily visitors than the Louvre. ... Apparently, the forensic scientist assigned to the drowned girl's cadaver became so captivated by her that he paid a moulder to make a plaster cast of her face.' p.16.
'The face is important. The face: pleasant, delicate features, all languid curves, a relaxed, even blissful expression. Her long, matted eyelashes stuck, as if still wet, to plump cheeks. Her mouth curved into an enigmatic smile. The face, gone unclaimed, triggered an intense, cultish frenzy across Europe. She was dubbed the L'Inconnue de la Seine (the Unknown Woman of the Seine). ... The advent of mechanical reproduction allowed the mask to be copied and sold on a massive scale. ... Widely replicated in plaster, wax and then plastic, L'Inconnue's dead face was used as a model for artists at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, and apprentices at beautician training schools.' p.16. | |
'You may have seen her face yourself. In fact, odds are you've kissed it - indeed, 300 million people have. In 1955, tasked with the job of creating a life-size doll for teaching mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, Norwegian toymaker Åsmund Lærdal thought back to a death mask he'd noticed years ago, hung in his wife's family home. Lærdal wanted the face to be inviting, not dead-looking. It had to be female, of course, the kind of face men undergoing CPR training would be inclined to kiss. L`Inconnue was, perhaps, the obvious choice for Resuscì Anne, the doll that is still used in schools and swimming pools across the UK and US. Lærdal's website nods to the mask's origins, writing that "the face of death became the face of life".' p.16. |
Ack. Sarah Haque, https://www.sarahhaque.co.uk/
The strange allure of L'Inconnue de la Seine, FT Magazine, 1,149, November 1, 2025. p.16-17. https://www.ft.com/content/64c930ac-b2b7-4314-b915-eb93c87a451f
See also: Wikipedia - L'Inconnue de la Seine
Posted by Peter Jones at 10:22 pm | PERMALINK
Labels: children , culture , death , doll , drowning , drowning prevention , Europe , face , FT , history , life , life-saving , realisation , resuscitation , safety , simulation , society , water , woman , women
Posted by Peter Jones at 11:54 pm | PERMALINK
Labels: approach , arts , belief , book , culture , environment , global , history , humanities , love , nature , open access , plants , pollution , practice , protection , society , trees , UN , water
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| Apollo 17 1972 NASA Original Blue Marble Photograph |
'NASA’s archival designation for it is AS17-148-22727, and the original image was taken upside down with the South Pole at the top. In its myriad reproductions, it’s flipped up to match what we would normally expect to see.'
Text: https://www.thephoblographer.com/2013/12/09/behind-blue-marble/
POLITICAL | SOCIOLOGY |
SCIENCES | INTERPERSONAL |
Posted by Peter Jones at 1:15 pm | PERMALINK
Labels: Antarctica , Apollo , astronautics , climate , colonial , Earth , expectations , future , global South , history , ice , observation , Oceania , oceans , orientation , perspective , photos , space , water , weather
Every year, an estimated 236,000 people drown, making drowning a major public health problem worldwide. Drowning is one of the leading causes of death globally for children and young people aged 1-24 years. Drowning is the 3rd leading cause of unintentional injury death, accounting for 7% of all injury-related deaths.
My source (with video added above and Hodges' model below):
Jackeline. HIFA-Spanish Moderatorteaching swimming, water safety and safe rescue skills training bystanders in safe rescue and resuscitation awareness of risk situations confidence to learn to swim | installing barriers controlling access to water providing safe places away from water such as crèches for pre-school children with capable childcare improving flood risk management |
teaching swimming, water safety and safe rescue skills training bystanders in safe rescue and resuscitation family and community impacts SOCIO- | funding - prioritisation setting and enforcing safe boating, shipping and ferry regulations improving flood risk management facilities for safe & effective teaching -ECONOMIC LMICs |
Posted by Peter Jones at 8:33 am | PERMALINK
Labels: accidents , activism , barriers , children , death , drowning prevention , flood , global , international , management , prevention , rescue , resuscitation , risk , safety , teaching , training , trauma , United Nations , water
"The vast territory known as Owens Valley in California was home for centuries to Native Americans who lived along its rivers and creeks fed by snowmelt that cascaded down the eastern slopes of the Sierra Nevada. Then came the European settlers, and over time, the Native Americans tribes lost access to nearly all of that land. Eventually, the water was lost too: ...
Less familiar is what happened to the Owens Valley, and the people who lived there, after most of the water was sent south. Owens Lake is now a patchwork of saline pools covered in pink crystals and wetlands studded with gravel mounds designed to catch the dust. And today, the four recognized tribes in the area have less than 2,000 acres (800 hectares) of reservation land, estimated Teri Red owl, a local Native American leader.
But things are changing, tribal members say. They have recently reclaimed corners of the valley, buoyed by the growing momentum across the United States to return land to Indigenous stewardship, also known as the "Land Back" movement." p.7.
LAND | |
culture indigenous peoples history | BACK justice |
"Netflix has collaborated with A24, Motive Films, Ventureland and Raw on this gripping look at the undeniable connection forged between two athletes as they navigate the vigorous and competitive world of freediving. The Deepest Breath will have its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival in January 2023.
Logline: A champion freediver trains to break a world record with the help of an expert safety diver, and the two form an emotional bond that feels like fate. This heart-stopping film follows the paths they took to meet at the pinnacle of the freediving world, documenting the thrilling rewards – and inescapable risks – of chasing a dream through the silent depths of the ocean."
Image: c/o Netflix
Dear colleagues,
My source:
Politics of Health Group Mail List Messages
Visit the PoHG website for lots of interesting links and publications: http://www.pohg.org.uk/
Visit PoHG on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/282761111845400
Follow us on Twitter: @pohguk
Posted by Peter Jones at 4:09 pm | PERMALINK
Labels: belief , climate change , conflict , culture , education , geopolitical , geopsychiatry , health , insecurity , Middle East , nations , peace , policy , politics , pollution , research , resources , violence , war , water

World Health Day 2024
Around the world, the right to health of millions is increasingly coming under threat.
Diseases and disasters loom large as causes of death and disability.
Conflicts are devastating lives, causing death, pain, hunger and psychological distress.
The burning of fossil fuels is simultaneously driving the climate crisis and taking away our right to breathe clean air, with indoor and outdoor air pollution claiming a life every 5 seconds.
The WHO Council on the Economics of Health for All has found that at least 140 countries recognize health as a human right in their constitution. Yet countries are not passing and putting into practice laws to ensure their populations are entitled to access health services. This underpins the fact that at least 4.5 billion people — more than half of the world’s population — were not fully covered by essential health services in 2021.
To address these types of challenges, the theme for World Health Day 2024 is 'My health, my right’. ...
Posted by Peter Jones at 8:18 pm | PERMALINK
Labels: air pollution , climate , conflict , death , disability , global , global health , health , health services , HIFA , human rights , hunger , law , pain , population , psychology , universal access to health , water , WHO , world
Since 2006, the Geneva Health Forum (GHF) has been uniting stakeholders to address critical global health issues every two years. By amplifying the voices of field experts and facilitating connections with influential policymakers, the forum provides a platform for showcasing innovative, accessible, and sustainable practices, as well as significant initiatives. Through its editions, the GHF has emerged as a pivotal event in addressing global health challenges.
For its 10th edition, from May 27 – 29, 2024, the GHF will address crucial issues for our future under the theme “Health, A Common Good!” The GHF transcends the boundaries of the healthcare system, considering the social and environmental determinants of health, with a specific focus on how environmental degradation is profoundly impacting human health.
mental health emotional distress anxiety - impact on life chances, ability to study, earn knowledge - awareness my health literacy access to knowledge brokers respect what is 'old' but what is new - insight? |
"Dracunculiasis is a crippling parasitic disease on the verge of eradication, with 27 human cases reported in 2020. From the time infection occurs, it takes between 10–14 months for the transmission cycle to complete. About this time, a mature female worm emerges from the body. The parasite is transmitted mostly when people drink stagnant water contaminated with parasite-infected water fleas. Dracunculiasis was endemic in 20 countries in the mid-1980s." |
rural - remote communities daily practices access to information (valid, evidence-based) stigma - disgust | "March 27 is the anniversary of the start of the Guinea worm cease-fire that former U.S. President Jimmy Carter brokered in 1995 during the Second Sudanese Civil War." |
SUN & AMON (2018). Addressing Inequity: Neglected Tropical Diseases and Human Rights. Health and Human Rights, 20(1), 11–25. http://www.jstor.org/stable/90023050 |
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Curtis, V. (2011). Why disgust matters. Philosophical Transactions: Biological Sciences, 366(1583), 3478–3490. http://www.jstor.org/stable/23035750 | AMON & ADDISS (2018). “Equipping Practitioners”: Linking Neglected Tropical Diseases and Human Rights. Health and Human Rights, 20(1), 5–10. http://www.jstor.org/stable/90023049 |
Posted by Peter Jones at 4:44 pm | PERMALINK
Labels: Africa , dracunculiasis , drinking water , economics , education , eradication , global health , information , neglected tropical diseases , parasite , prevention , progress , public health , tropical medicine , water , WHO
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Posted by Peter Jones at 4:42 pm | PERMALINK
Labels: abstract , art , borders , climate change , complexity , ellipsis , environment , history , Hodges' model , life , maths , meaning , media , oceans , reflection , relational , safety , simplicity , symbols , water
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We used to till the land, |
Hearers - needed here. |
My source:
Heathcote, E. 'Space - but not as we knew it', Venice Biennale, Life&Arts FT Weekend, 22-23 May 2021. p.1.
I see and hear you too Talio Havini, 'Deep listening across time', p.3.
Posted by Peter Jones at 10:39 am | PERMALINK
Labels: activism , architecture , art , capitalism , climate change , design , environment , flood , FT , group , hearing , Hodges' model , image , life , listening , meaning , reflection , sculpture , Venice , water
I can learn to swim? Yes, you can - it's fun too! Even if you can swim: Respect the water! Be aware - of water depth, the water's temperature and your body's reaction to cold, what lies beneath, and the effect of alcohol and substances, and that recent meal... Be safe - while having fun! | |
| Local Community Knowledge of local risk |
Policy Facilities Development aid/funding |
individual
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Posted by Peter Jones at 10:34 pm | PERMALINK
Labels: art , biosphere , Earth , environment , Hodges' model , identity , inner space , inverse , journey , life , meaning , nature , oceans , photos , reflection , reflexive , space , water , whales
Forget the Golden Ratio ... |
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| ... | it's time to get real ... |
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| Mathematics and Art: A Cultural History, |
"The Renaissance friar Fra Luca Pacioli singled out one of Euclid's irrational ratios - the division of a line into extreme and mean ratio - and proclaimed that it was a metaphor for the Almighty because divine nature is irrational in the sense of being beyond the understanding of rational mortals. Thus Pacioli associated Euclid's ratio with theology. But neither Pacioli nor the ancients associated the ratio with art or beauty.
That association was not made until the early 1800s, when German mathematicians first referred to Euclid's division (sectioning) of the line as "golden"; adopted from them and popularized by Adolf Zeising's New System of Human Proportions (1854), the term became central to the (false) historical claim that ancient, medieval, and Renaissance artists and architects had used the ratio to determine ideal proportions." p.73.
Gamwell (2016).
“Due to the flexibility of the nexus concept, its application in empirical studies has best served to expand, rather than direct, study scope. Insights tend to be high-level, while identified actionable management and policy proscriptions are not broadly applicable. We found no clear methodology uniting nexus studies, and a lack of improvement of resource management and governance outcomes.” p.5.
"The great breadth of the WEF nexus provides an intellectual home for an expansive array of research objectives, methods, and conclusions. This has produced some valuable scholarship but simultaneously limits overall insights and lessons that can be drawn from empirical nexus work. Our review identified some high-level insights and commonalities related to the definition of the WEF nexus (centring on linkages between WEF systems), the motivations for empirical nexus study, the importance of economics and governance in the nexus and nexus analyses, and the role of social and physical factors in constructing nexus interdependencies. Beyond these, however, the findings and specific technical and policy solutions proposed in the reviewed studies are difficult to synthesize as they lack coherence." p.14.Galaitsi, S., Veysey, J. and Huber-Lee, A. (2018). Where is the added value? A review of the water-energy-food nexus literature. SEI working paper. Stockholm Environment Institute, Stockholm.
"In this light, the ‘nexus’ has gained significant interest as a potentially effective approach for considering the interdependencies between WEF security and climate change at various scales. Put simply, a nexus is defined as one or more connections linking two or more things. The term is widely used (e.g. the environment — development nexus, the population —migration nexus, etc.)." p.445-446.
"Analytical eclecticism* is characterised by the following: (i) a pragmatic ethos that targets the world of policy and practice; (ii) interest in wide-scoped problems (in contrast to narrowly defined theoretical dilemmas) that ‘incorporate more of the complexity and messiness of particular real-world situations’, and (iii) the aim of providing complex causal stories that account for multiple causal mechanisms predominantly explored in isolation within particular research traditions (Sil and Katzenstein 2010, 412). Notwithstanding the potential of transdisciplinary approaches and analytical eclecticism, some still argue that more research and criticaltheoretical engagement is required to advance the nexus (Harris and Lyon 2014)" p. 452.
Posted by Peter Jones at 9:27 pm | PERMALINK
Labels: applications , concepts , countries , energy , environment , food , global , governance , interdependence , literature review , organisations , outcomes , research , resources , study , sustainability , systems , value , water
Today is Blog Action Day and the theme is water.
Below I have added a selection of water related links across the domains of the health career model:
Water use - You?
Water Encyclopedia
water in Philosophy
National Geographic
the Water project
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Properties of water The water cycle Water, sanitation & health: WHO Water on the Sun SI water Homeostasis |
| Water mythology
WaterWired
Water development photos
Costing the Earth BBC:
Cleaning Up the Ganges
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Waternet:
Geopolitics of water scarcity in the Middle East
World Water Day
Water, health and economics:WHO
Water.org
UNESCO
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Posted by Peter Jones at 12:00 am | PERMALINK
Labels: activism , Blog Action Day , democracy , demographics , developing world , environment , equality , global health , health promotion , justice , mental health , physical health , poverty , statistics , water

The latest ERCIM News is available and since the last issue highlighted on W2tQ I've been looking forward to this one. The copy covers Everyday Maths with articles on health and the human body pp.12-18, society pp.31-36 and much more. I was tantalised by The Continuum Hypothesis: A Mystery of Mathematics, p.37, which had me thinking - surely that is a mystery of the social sciences? ;-)
Something to contemplate in retirement that - reliving the pain of mathematical encounters as a youngster. I do plan to go back to school for maths - if granted the time. ...
What would it be like to see the world with true mathematical vision?
I wonder....?
P.S. Don't miss p.26 listed under Water and Weather 'Maths Improves Quality of Life: An Early-Warning System for Environmental Effects on Public Health'.
ERCIM: European Research Consortium for Informatics and Mathematics
Posted by Peter Jones at 9:36 pm | PERMALINK
Labels: body , continua , EU , Europe , health , Health Art and Science , innovation , maths , news , physical , public health , research , sciences , social sciences , theory , water
Born in Liverpool, UK.
Community Mental Health Nurse NHS, Part-time Lecturer,
Researcher Nursing & Technology Enhanced Learning
Registered Nurse - Mental Health & General
Community Psychiatric Nursing (Cert.) MMU
PG Cert. Ed.
BA(Joint Hons.) Computing and Philosophy - BIHE - Bolton
PG(Dip.) Collaboration on Psychosocial Education [COPE] Univ. Man.
MRES. e-Research and Technology Enhanced Learning, Lancaster Univ.
Live and work in NW England - seeking a global perspective.
The views expressed on W2tQ are entirely my own, unless stated otherwise.
Comments are disabled.
If you would like to get in touch please e-mail me at
h2cmng AT yahoo.co.uk
orcid.org/0000-0002-0192-8965-=<>=-
