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Ludhiana records coolest July in 15 years amid higher rainfall
Ludhiana records coolest July in 15 years amid higher rainfall

Time of India

time04-08-2025

  • Climate
  • Time of India

Ludhiana records coolest July in 15 years amid higher rainfall

Ludhiana: This July was not as unforgiving as usual for the district. In fact, the generally sultry month turned out to be the coolest in 15 years, with the district recording its lowest average maximum temperature since 2011. Meteorological experts attribute the welcome change to above-normal rainfall this monsoon. According to the India Meteorological Department (IMD), Ludhiana received 180.3 mm of rainfall in July, 9% more than the normal average for the district. This marks a significant improvement from July, 2024, when rainfall was just 85.5mm, nearly 48% below normal. The highest July rainfall since 2000 was recorded in 2022, with 297.8mm. Cooler days, milder nights Average maximum temperature (daytime high) for July, 2025 was 33 degrees Celsius, lowest in 15 years, according to IMD data. The previous lowest was 33.1 degrees Celsius in 2023. Most other years saw highs ranging between 33.5 degrees Celsius and 35.5 degrees Celsius. The highest maximum temperature recorded on any single day in July, 2025 was 35.8 degrees Celsius, matching the lowest such record from 2011. This indicates that not only were average temperatures lower, but even the hottest day of the month was relatively mild as compared to previous years. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like I thought my dad was 'boring'. Now, I'm learning that boring stuff is often what matters most CNA Read More Undo Night temperatures also saw a slight dip. The average minimum temperature for July, 2025 was 26.8 degrees Celsius, lower than 27.8 degrees Celsius in 2024, though slightly higher than 26.7 degrees Celsius in 2023. Cooling effect Experts attribute the cooler temperatures to increased rainfall activity. Surinder Paul, director, met department, Chandigarh, told TOI that Ludhiana received good rainfall throughout July, which helped suppress daytime heat. He added that seasonal rainfall in Ludhiana is already 35% above normal, and the district is expected to receive more showers in August. Residents Notice the Change Locals also felt the difference. Barinder Singh, a resident, said the first half of July felt unusually pleasant. "It didn't feel like the typical monsoon season, which is usually hot and humid. Only in the second half did the weather turn sultry," he said. Comparative Data Across Punjab Ludhiana wasn't alone in experiencing cooler weather. Here's how it compared with other major districts in Punjab: Average Max Temperature in July District Avg. Max Temp (°C) Ludhiana 33 Amritsar 32.7 Patiala 33.6 Average Minimum Temperature in July 2025 District Avg Min Temp (°C) Ludhiana 26.8 Amritsar 26.7 Patiala 27.1 Rainfall in July 2025 District Rainfall (mm) Ludhiana 180.3 Amritsar 224.6 Historical Weather Snapshot Here's a look at Ludhiana's July weather trends over the past 15 years: Average Temperature in July (2011–2025) Year Avg. Min Temp (°C) Avg. Max Temp (°C) 2011 26.1 33.2 2012 26.7 35.5 2013 26.7 34.1 2014 27.2 35.0 2015 26.7 33.5 2016 26.8 33.6 2017 26.7 34.3 2018 26.5 33.8 2019 26.3 33.7 2020 26.4 34.6 2021 27.1 34.6 2022 26.9 33.7 2023 26.7 33.1 2024 27.8 35.2 2025 26.8 33.0 Rainfall in July (2010–2025) Year Rainfall (mm) 2010 248.9 2011 60.0 2012 71.9 2013 100.2 2014 90.8 2015 222.3 2016 153.7 2017 92.1 2018 185.9 2019 174.9 2020 177.6 2021 274.9 2022 297.8 2023 196.2 2024 85.5 2025 180.3

The cancer patients choosing natural remedies over treatment
The cancer patients choosing natural remedies over treatment

Telegraph

time15-07-2025

  • Health
  • Telegraph

The cancer patients choosing natural remedies over treatment

When Surinder Paul, 48, was diagnosed with invasive carcinoma of the breast in 2012, she was unequivocal: she was going to live. Not because of the 'barbaric' mastectomy proposed by her consultant, or chemotherapy. But via treatments that she was convinced could 'naturally' cure her grade-two disease. 'I feel inside my heart and soul, I am completely, 100 per cent clear that this is the right path for me,' she says in The Cancer Conflict, a documentary currently on Netflix. It charts her cancer battle over the course of seven brutal years. Paul, a former social worker and physical therapist, had always eschewed Western medicine, refusing even painkillers for 30 years prior to her diagnosis. Her ethos was shared by many within her family. They had known a number of people with cancer who undertook chemotherapy and died, her niece, Jasmine Paul, says, leaving the rest of them feeling 'hope' that alternative methods might be the answer this time. Paul was glamorous and filled with energy at times, dancing with her beloved nieces and nephews at family parties, and going speed-dating. Mainly, she was forensic in her approach to her health and diet, from taking over 200 supplements a week and spending hours researching hemp oils and carrot juicing, to avoiding foods that had touched tins or microwaves. Paul is far from alone in her unconventional attitude towards cancer treatment. Patients, many of whom are professionals, educated and informed, pursue them, swayed by convincing posts on social media in an age where misinformation is rife, and convincing, with often, tragic results. As a Journal of the National Cancer Institute paper reveals, those who opted for alternative treatment were more than twice as likely to die from the disease, while according to Cancer Research UK, 'there is no evidence that [alternative methods] can prevent or treat cancer'. The pervasive influence of misinformation At the American Society for Clinical Oncology general meeting last month – the world's largest cancer conference – doctors warned that patients were falling victim to bad actors who 'deliberately push unproven treatments or ideas'. They said the cancer field was increasingly 'losing the battle'. A 2022 analysis of posts about cancer found that almost a third shared contained misinformation, with these articles receiving 'significantly more engagement from online readers than factual ones'. And although healthy eating and exercise are recommended in conjunction with cancer care, oncologists warn that there is a rising tide of patients choosing this over proven kinds of treatment entirely, with fatal consequences. In The Cancer Conflict, it is said that 50 to 90 per cent of all patients turn to alternative treatments at some stage. In an extreme, tragic case last month, a BBC Panorama documentary told the story of 23-year-old Paloma Shemirani, a Cambridge graduate diagnosed with non-Hodgkin lymphoma in 2023. Doctors assured her that she had an 80 per cent chance of survival with chemotherapy, but she refused – something her brothers allege is down to their mother, Kate, a known Covid-19 denier and former nurse with a significant online presence, who sells apricot kernels on her website for their 'potential health benefits'. Shemirani opted for Gerson therapy, which involves a strict plant-based diet and coffee enemas. She died the following year. (Her parents told the BBC that they have evidence 'Paloma died as a result of medical interventions given without confirmed diagnosis or lawful consent', though documents to support this were not disclosed.) In a statement from the June 26, Shemirani's parents said: 'Paloma was never 'coerced'. She was never 'radicalised'. She was a woman of conviction and clarity.' An inquest into her death is due to begin this month. The dangerous impact of bogus theories Liz O'Riordan, a former breast cancer surgeon who has faced the disease herself three times, says that in recent years, bogus theories have 'grown and grown and grown on social media, podcasts and TikTok. There are people with millions of followers talking about detoxing and bicarb and methylene blue and ivermectin.' None of these have been found to improve the outlook of the disease – yet posts extolling their virtues are 'everywhere you look'. During her time as a surgeon, O'Riordan was confronted with patients who would tell her they were going on a juicing retreat, rather than undergoing mastectomies, chemotherapy or radiation as advised. 'These patients were adamant that they were going to be cured.' O'Riordan says that while from a clinical perspective, 'it was really hard to understand why they would turn down evidence-based medicine', as a patient, she understands that 'you're vulnerable, you're scared, you are desperate for control, you want a cure.'. While exotically-located clinics promising the Earth are incredibly tempting for those in the throes of disease, 'they don't work and people do die'. The 'natural' cures that have become mainstream These alternative ideas are not just flourishing within the fringes of social media either, O'Riordan says such routes are often followed by 'educated women with money'. (A 2010 study from Annals of Oncology found that 'patients in the homeopathy cohort are younger, better educated and more often employed than patients in the conventional care cohort'.) O'Riordan receives up to 20 messages per day, often from such patients, saying ''My oncologist said it's safe to use deodorant, but I saw a TikTok video saying that it could cause cancer, so what do you think?' People asking if they should start detox protocols; people asking if they need to throw their makeup away because of parabens, should they go on juicing diets. And it's just terrifying.' Between Covid triggering distrust in mainstream medicine and convincing-looking 'testimonials' online – shared by many who peddle fear for profit, as they sell unregulated supplements and consultations – the NHS cannot compete. 'It's really hard because what we're saying is not sexy. It's not exciting. We don't have millions of followers,' O'Riordan explains. 'It takes an awful lot of time and energy and hard work to make the videos, to grow the profile, to get that content, to get it out there into the public voice.' What cancer patients are asking for now The feedback loop of social media is increasingly difficult to overcome, says Hannah Furness, an oncology and palliative care physiotherapist, who says that she has grappled with patients doubting conventional treatment because of things they've seen online. Clients have come to her asking about alkaline diets and avoiding exercise during chemotherapy 'when the research tells us that staying physically active during treatment helps to achieve the best possible outcomes and minimise side effects'. Others have enquired about avoiding massage, 'due to the risk of spreading cancer around the body'. Furness sees it as 'unfair that misinformation prevents people from accessing care and treatments they may benefit from; especially when the 'alternative' way to manage these symptoms involves taking more pills'. She is conscious too that today's technology means those with a foot in the rabbit hole are more likely to fall down it completely. ' Algorithms are the scary thing now as well, where it's not just Googling something and choosing what you click on – you're actually being fed it. When you click on one thing, it's going to feed you more of the same type of content. And sometimes when you see the same thing repeated over and over, you start to think, 'I've read that in five different places, so that must be true.'' At a follow-up meeting, several years into her disease, Paul's niece, Jasmine, remembers the surgeon telling her aunt, 'Whatever you're doing is working in your favour. Keep doing it.' But around five years after her diagnosis, the cancer spread to her arm via lymphoedema. 'It was really painful for her, but also really hard for us to see and cope with,' remembers Jasmine. Yet 'right up until the very end, she was fighting… our conversations were never: 'I'm going [to die]'. It was always: 'I'm going to get through this.''Paul passed away in 2020, aged 56. Jasmine's mother, who was also very close to Paul, has admitted that, 'there were times when I felt that having conventional treatment could have saved her life… it was quite challenging to support her journey at times as I believed there was not enough conclusive evidence to back up all the claims made by alternative therapies and medicine.' Still, no one suggested that she change tack. 'We all respected her wishes and tried to support her.' O'Riordan adds that while many more seem to be considering switching from conventional to alternative treatment, this rarely swings back the other way. Some patients' relatives have got in touch at a point 'when alternative treatments didn't work and they changed their mind, but it was too late'. Their main regret, she says, was 'trusting the people who promised they could cure them'.

Spring melts into sizzling summer as mercury crosses 40-degree mark
Spring melts into sizzling summer as mercury crosses 40-degree mark

Time of India

time24-04-2025

  • Climate
  • Time of India

Spring melts into sizzling summer as mercury crosses 40-degree mark

Ludhiana: The city saw the last of the mellow spring as the mercury reached the 40-degree mark. Meteorological department authorities said that temperature is expected to rise slightly over the next three to four days. The sun blazed in a clear sky on Thursday, which took maximum temperature in the city to 40.1 degrees Celsius, 3.2 degrees above normal and 1.1 degrees more than the day before. Minimum temperature was recorded at 21 degrees Celsius, 1.3 degrees above normal and 0.1 degree more than the day before. The meteorological department confirmed that Thursday was the hottest day of the year so far. Director, meteorological department, Chandigarh, Surinder Paul, said that the mercury had crossed the 40-degree mark for the first time in 2025. Attributing the high temperature to absence of western disturbance and dry air, Paul said that there were no chances of rain and advised people to take precautions. Meanwhile, the meteorological department predicts mainly clear sky in Ludhiana for the next six days. Day temperature is expected to rise to 41 degrees Celsius on Saturday, remain the same the next day before falling to 40.9 degrees Celsius on Monday. It is expected to remain 40 degrees on Tuesday and Wednesday. Night temperature is expected to rise to 22.3 degrees Celsius by Tuesday. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Google Brain Co-Founder Andrew Ng, Recommends: Read These 5 Books And Turn Your Life Around Blinkist: Andrew Ng's Reading List Undo Former IMA, Punjab president, Dr Sunil Katyal, advised people to keep themselves hydrated and avoid the sun during the day, especially between 12 noon and around 4pm. He also asked people to cover themselves well if they needed to step out. 24 40.1 MSID:: 120588448 413 |

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