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Riyadh Bans Most Residential Infrastructure Work
Riyadh Bans Most Residential Infrastructure Work

Gulf Insider

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • Gulf Insider

Riyadh Bans Most Residential Infrastructure Work

Riyadh has banned work on noisy infrastructure projects in residential areas during evenings and early morning. The Riyadh Infrastructure Projects Centre (RIPC) has introduced new regulations limiting the permitted working hours for infrastructure activities in residential areas. Under the updated Infrastructure Projects Code, work in sectors such as telecommunications, energy, water, sewage, and road construction will be allowed only between: Sunday to Thursday: 7am to 6pm Weekends: 7am to 1pm Any activity outside these hours will require an emergency permit. The RIPC said the move is aimed at minimising disruptions for residents, ensuring greater comfort during non-working hours, and cutting noise pollution — particularly during evenings and weekends. The updated Infrastructure Projects Code serves as a comprehensive regulatory and technical guide for infrastructure development in Riyadh. It outlines technical standards and coordination requirements for: Government entities Service agencies Contractors Consultants Laboratories By setting clear rules for planning, coordination, and execution, the RIPC aims to ensure infrastructure projects are efficiently managed while balancing development needs with community well-being. Also read: Lufthansa to Relaunch Riyadh–Munich Route in October 2025, Boosting Saudi Capacity by 50%

Riyadh bans most residential infrastructure work in evenings and weekend afternoons
Riyadh bans most residential infrastructure work in evenings and weekend afternoons

Arabian Business

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • Arabian Business

Riyadh bans most residential infrastructure work in evenings and weekend afternoons

Riyadh has banned work on noisy infrastructure projects in residential areas during evenings and early morning. The Riyadh Infrastructure Projects Centre (RIPC) has introduced new regulations limiting the permitted working hours for infrastructure activities in residential areas. Under the updated Infrastructure Projects Code, work in sectors such as telecommunications, energy, water, sewage, and road construction will be allowed only between: Sunday to Thursday: 7am to 6pm Weekends: 7am to 1pm Riyadh introduces new residential area rules Any activity outside these hours will require an emergency permit. The RIPC said the move is aimed at minimising disruptions for residents, ensuring greater comfort during non-working hours, and cutting noise pollution — particularly during evenings and weekends. The updated Infrastructure Projects Code serves as a comprehensive regulatory and technical guide for infrastructure development in Riyadh. It outlines technical standards and coordination requirements for: Government entities Service agencies Contractors Consultants Laboratories By setting clear rules for planning, coordination, and execution, the RIPC aims to ensure infrastructure projects are efficiently managed while balancing development needs with community well-being.

RIPC Shows No Benefit in Noncardiac Surgery
RIPC Shows No Benefit in Noncardiac Surgery

Medscape

time20-06-2025

  • Health
  • Medscape

RIPC Shows No Benefit in Noncardiac Surgery

TOPLINE: The application of remote ischemic preconditioning (RIPC), a noninvasive technique used to induce brief episodes of limb ischemia and reperfusion, did not reduce the rates of postoperative myocardial injury and other complications compared with sham RIPC among patients undergoing high- or intermediate-risk noncardiac surgery. METHODOLOGY: Researchers conducted a large, multinational randomized controlled trial (PRINCE) to assess whether RIPC reduces myocardial injury and other complications in high-risk adults undergoing noncardiac surgery. They included 1213 patients (mean age, 70 years; 60% men) undergoing intermediate- or high-risk noncardiac surgical procedures under general anesthesia across 25 hospitals in eight countries. The participants were randomly assigned to receive either RIPC or sham RIPC. The RIPC intervention consisted of three 5-minute cycles of ischemia induced by inflating a blood pressure cuff to 200 mm Hg, with each cycle followed by 5 minutes of reperfusion while the cuff was deflated. The primary outcome was the rate of postoperative myocardial injury, defined by serum cardiac troponin levels exceeding the 99th percentile of the reference limit. TAKEAWAY: The occurrence of myocardial injury did not differ significantly between patients in the RIPC group and those in the sham RIPC group (relative risk, 1.02; P = .84). The number of patients presenting with postoperative troponin values five times above the 99th percentile was not significantly different between the RIPC and sham-RIPC groups. Additionally, prespecified adverse events did not differ significantly between the groups, except for 30-day hospital readmission rates (6% vs 3.5%), and episodes of limb petechiae (1.7% vs 0.2%), which were significantly more frequent in the RIPC group than in the sham RIPC group. IN PRACTICE: 'In contrast to previous findings, the PRINCE trial provides robust evidence of the absence of beneficial effects of RIPC on biochemical and clinical outcomes in high- and intermediate-risk noncardiac surgery patients,' the authors wrote. SOURCE: The study was led by Massimiliano Greco, MD, of Humanitas University in Pieve Emanuele, Italy. It was published online on June 13, 2025, in Circulation. LIMITATIONS: The study did not protocolize anesthesia induction. Preoperative troponin levels were not measured. Additionally, as most participants were from high-income European countries, the findings may have limited generalizability to low- and middle-income settings. DISCLOSURES: This study was funded by the Italian Ministry of Health. The authors declared having no conflicts of interest. This article was created using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication.

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