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Aussies warned of major shark danger: 'Huge numbers'

Aussies warned of major shark danger: 'Huge numbers'

Yahoo05-03-2025
As millions of Aussies brace for the impact of Tropical Cyclone Alfred, experts are warning of a hidden danger that could linger in the water for days after the wild weather disappears.
From Thursday to Saturday, Brisbane locals can expect wind gusts of up to 125km/h and rainfalls of up to 150mm each day – more than three times the total rainfall for the entire month of February. While rainfall may be heaviest around south-east Queensland, it's also scattered down the coast of NSW, prompting a warning for swimmers to 'stay out of the water' after the rain.
For up to a week after heavy rainfall, the number of bull sharks in rivers and waterways spikes, driven largely by the shark's instinct to scavenge.
'It is likely that dead things get washed out of rivers during heavy rainfall. So obviously they are looking for a free lunch,' Professor Culum Brown from Macquarie University told Yahoo News.
'The other theory is that the freshwater plumes coming into the ocean bring with them lots of nutrients which ultimately encourage plankton growth, which in turn attracts fish. The sharks then chase the fish.'
Prof Brown said there is often a lag between the rain and when the number of sharks spike. But, as shown in a number of studies, the link between the rain and shark activity is clear.
'Several studies, including our own, show that bull sharks do respond to heavy rainfall,' he said. 'One study conducted in Sydney showed that male bull sharks move upstream almost immediately after rainfall and females follow a few days later, but in general bull sharks are attracted to estuaries and rivers during and after heavy rainfall.
'Another study in Queensland found that bull sharks are most often caught in the shark nets when rainfall exceeds 100mm between one and eight days after rainfall. Our own study based in South East Queensland based on data from 1996 - 2022 also found that sharks are more likely to be caught in the shark nets after rainfall.
"In our paper, we also found that 14 out of 15 shark bites in SEQ occurred between one and seven days after rainfall.
'So the take-home message is pretty simple... stay out of the water after rainfall. Particularly stay away from estuaries.'
Over his years as a fisherman and owner of Hunter Shark Jaw Restoration, Joel Nancarrow has noticed an increase in shark activity after rain events and expects "huge numbers" following the Cyclone Alfred's downpours.
"I'm lucky because I'm one of the few remaining shark jaw taxidermists left in Australia, so I'm usually kept up to date on what's being caught," Joel told Yahoo News."In the last two weeks I have received 12 bull sharks, eight tigers and six mako sharks. After this rain, I would expect that they are almost all bull sharks and the numbers will be huge."
Joel feels bull shark numbers have steadily increased over the past decade, and while rain can create more shark activity, he believes the predators are now easily found in any weather conditions.
"If you had asked me the difference in fishing success due to rain 10 years ago, I would have hands down said the flood waters were better. These days, I could take you to any reef along the coast in any weather conditions and guarantee you that we would catch multiple large bull sharks in a short period of time.
"You will find the mid range sharks 200-250kg will be in very big numbers after this rain, in my experience. The XL sharks – 300kg plus – will still be on the reefs and beaches."
In a sandy, protected bay popular with swimmers in NSW, Joel said he's recently caught three bull sharks "well over 300kg" after the beachgoers leave in the late afternoons.
The amount of large sharks he's seen and caught close to shore has led to his choice to no longer swim in the ocean.
"I used to stay out of the water after rain and the usual 6am/6pm feeding times, but things have changed," he said. "I would honestly not swim anymore and while I let my children make up their own mind, they don't either. There's a video on my page from last week where I put a large bait out in the middle of the day and hooked a 300kg shark in under a minute.
"That stuff is terrifying, I don't think I'll ever be back [swimming] in salt water again, the last few years has really opened our eyes. The shark situation that used to be a Queensland thing has well and truly spilled over into NSW."
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Psychotherapy Offers Chronic Back Pain Relief for Three Years
Psychotherapy Offers Chronic Back Pain Relief for Three Years

Newsweek

time06-08-2025

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Psychotherapy Offers Chronic Back Pain Relief for Three Years

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. A type of psychotherapy called cognitive functional therapy (CFT) could help give people with chronic low back pain lasting relief for at least three years. This is the conclusion of a study led by researchers at Curtin University and Macquarie University in Australia, which demonstrated that CFT is the first treatment with good evidence to show that it can effectively reduce patient's pain-induced disability for more than a year. Around 8.2 percent of American adults have chronic severe back pain and nearly three-quarters of these patients have difficulties with mobility, social participation, self-care or work participation, according to the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health. 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RESTORE included 492 patients with chronic low back pain in Australia, who were randomly assigned to receive eight treatment sessions of usual care, CFT, or CFT plus biofeedback (which uses sensors to measure body functions like heart rate and enable the patient to modify them.) "CFT was delivered in the first three months [for those who had it] with one top up session at six months. There was no CFT intervention after this. This is the exciting finding—that the effect lasted. The intervention focuses on empowering patients to understand and manage their condition, so while we were pleased we were also not surprised," Hancock explained. While those who received CFT and CFT plus biofeedback saw improvements in their physical activity participation over usual care, the difference between these two groups at three years was small and insignificant, also consistent with the three-month and one-year results. Therapist with smiling patient on sofa. Therapist with smiling patient on CFT significantly reduced people's back pain and improved their function, which was largely maintained over three years of follow-up. "CFT uses a multi-dimensional clinical reasoning framework to identify and target the key factors contributing to each person's chronic back pain. It has three key elements," said Hancock. The first is "making sense of pain"—helping to guide a reconceptualization of pain from what the researchers call a 'biopsychosocial' perspective through the lens of the patient's own experience. Second is "exposure with control"—guiding pain and movement control strategies to build confidence for people to re-engage in valued activities like physical activity, work and social life. The third elemtent is "lifestyle changes"—promoting positive physical, social and psychological health. "It targets the root causes and that is why we believe it has long term effects unlike most treatments for back pain that just address the symptoms," Hancock added. "Mind and body approaches are key because beliefs impact our behaviors and pain experience [also building anxiety and fear]. If people believe their back is fragile, unstable and damaged, they brace and avoid activity. This sets off a negative spiral. Effective care must address both the physical and psychological factors that can't be separated." Woman lifting small dumbbells with medical professional. Woman lifting small dumbbells with medical professional. Harbucks/Getty Images In all groups in the study patients could receive other interventions if they wanted, so the difference between groups was the CFT, Hancock explained. RESTORE demonstrates that CFT has long-term benefits on physical activity of those with low back pain and provides an opportunity to markedly reduce its impact if the intervention can be widely implemented, the authors said. Its implementation requires scaling up of clinician training to increase accessibility and replication studies in diverse healthcare systems. "CFT can help almost all people with chronic low back pain, apart from those with serious causes like cancer, infection or fracture. That said it is not a magic cure, and there is more work to do. We found about 70 percent of people responded well but we still need to explore how we help the others. Interestingly, the effects were greatest for the worst affected patients," said Hancock. "Almost certainly, these principles extend beyond back pain and research is underway for other conditions." Hancock believes health policies should support interventions like CFT due to them being high-value, low-risk and sustained. 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Cognitive functional therapy with or without movement sensor biofeedback versus usual care for chronic, disabling low back pain (RESTORE): 3-year follow-up of a randomised, controlled trial. The Lancet Rheumatology.

New personalized therapy may provide long-term relief for chronic back pain, study finds

time05-08-2025

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A new treatment called cognitive functional therapy, or CFT, may provide long-lasting relief for people with chronic lower back pain, a condition that the Centers for Disease and Control and Prevention says affects one in five U.S. adults. Cognitive functional therapy differs from standard physical therapy, according to the results from the RESTORE trial, published today in The Lancet Rheumatology. It helps people understand their pain, overcome fear of movement, and rebuild confidence through tailored physical activity and lifestyle coaching, according to the study. Researchers at Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia, and Perth, Australia's Curtin University followed over 300 adults with chronic lower back pain for three years across 20 physical therapy clinics in Australia. Study participants reported fewer pain symptoms at the end of the study after participating in just eight CFT sessions over six months, compared to those who used some other type of therapy to manage their back pain. 'Cognitive functional therapy is putting the patient in charge, addressing the person very holistically and looking at all the factors that are relevant,' said Dr. Mark Hancock, lead author of the study and professor of physiotherapy at Macquarie University. Unlike many conventional treatments, CFT doesn't focus on short-term symptom relief. Instead, it teaches patients to reframe how they think about pain, and to shift away from protective or fear-driven behaviors and build self-management skills that ideally last long after the sessions end. "Pain patients often have kinesiophobia, where the thought of being in pain and the fear of what it might do to them results in them moving less. But a part of what makes back pain worse is that thought process, so I often tell my patients, 'if you don't use it, you'll lose it,'" said Dr. Rohan Jotwani, an interventional pain specialist and anesthesiologist at Och Spine at New York-Presbyterian Hospital and Weill Cornell Medicine. CFT doesn't involve pills or surgery but can be used alongside other treatments, the study says. While it can be used on its own, it also complements other approaches by helping patients build the skills and confidence to stay active and engaged in daily life, Hancock explained. 'There's something happening at a deeper level related to how patients appreciate and process their pain that's changing, and those skills over time are helping patients feel better even when the therapy ends,' said Jotwani. The treatment worked across a broad range of patients, according to the study, including with participants that had been living with disabling back pain for years and many had tried multiple treatments without success. Even in this group, a relatively short course of CFT led to meaningful, lasting improvements. The researchers said the key is not just what's done during the sessions but the shift in the participant's mindset that it creates, giving people tools to manage flare-ups, move with less fear and regain more control over their daily lives. The researchers noted some limitations to their study, including that some of the participants dropped out before it was complete. Additionally, all of the subjects were Australian, so it's unclear whether Americans would respond as positively to CFT. Jotwani said he finds the results promising, especially for patients who haven't found relief through conventional treatments. 'There's not many things that we can say that gives patients three years of relief after an intervention … so these results are quite encouraging,' he said.

2 stars in 'serpent god of destruction' system are hurling their blazing guts at each other, James Webb telescope reveals
2 stars in 'serpent god of destruction' system are hurling their blazing guts at each other, James Webb telescope reveals

Yahoo

time27-07-2025

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2 stars in 'serpent god of destruction' system are hurling their blazing guts at each other, James Webb telescope reveals

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. The James Webb Space Telescope has captured a stunning new image of two dying stars wreathed in a spiral of dust. The highly rare star system is located some 8,000 light-years from Earth, within our Milky Way galaxy. Upon its discovery in 2018, it was nicknamed Apep, after the ancient Egyptian serpent god of chaos and destruction, as its writhing pattern of shed dust resembles a snake eating its own tail. Now, a new image taken by the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has captured the system in unprecedented detail, revealing that it doesn't contain just one dying star, but two — with a third star chomping on their dust shrouds. The researchers published their findings July 19 in two papers on the preprint server arXiv, and they have not been peer-reviewed yet. "We expected Apep to look like one of these elegant pinwheel nebulas," study co-author Benjamin Pope, a professor in statistical data science at Macquarie University in Sydney, wrote in The Conversation. "To our surprise, it did not." Nebulas such as these are formed by Wolf-Rayet stars. These rare, slowly dying stars have lost their outer hydrogen shells, leaving them to spew gusts of ionized helium, carbon and nitrogen from their insides. Wolf-Rayet stars explode as supernovas after a few million years of sputtering, at most. But until then, the radiation pressure from their light unfurls their innards, stretching them out into giant phantom jellyfish in the night sky. Related: Space photo of the week: James Webb telescope reveals mysterious 'light echo' in the broken heart of Cassiopeia These superheated contents, especially carbon dust that is later recycled into planets and the material in our own bodies, is so hot that it glows brightly in the infrared spectrum. By capturing these infrared photons with the Very Large Telescope in Chile, astronomers got their first peek at the system in 2018. Now, by training JWST's sensitive Mid-Infrared Instrument on Apep, the team has captured it in even more detail, revealing it to be even more unusual than first thought. RELATED STORIES —James Webb telescope shocks scientists with image of ancient galaxy roaring back to life —Dry ice 'geysers' erupt on Mars as spring hits the Red Planet —James Webb and Hubble telescopes unite to solve 'impossible' planet mystery "It turns out Apep isn't just one powerful star blasting a weaker companion, but two Wolf-Rayet stars," Pope wrote. "The rivals have near-equal strength winds, and the dust is spread out in a very wide cone and wrapped into a wind-sock shape." Making the situation even more complex is a third star — a stable giant that's carving out a cavity in the dust spit out by its dying siblings. Beyond making for a stunning picture, Pope said, studying Apep could tell us more about how stars die and the carbon dust they leave behind. "The violence of stellar death carves puzzles that would make sense to Newton and Archimedes, and it is a scientific joy to solve them and share them," Pope wrote. Solve the daily Crossword

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