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Warning has been issued in Plymouth due to an increase in drug overdose which have been linked to substances like heroin or pregabalin. Naloxone Advocates Plymouth, also known as NAP issued the warning for people to take "extra care". NAP is a community interest company or a CIC, which is made of volunteers who work to reduce drug-related deaths in Plymouth.
On March 2, NAP shared a Facebook post, where the NAP spokesperson said: "A quick heads up for people in Plymouth/ We have recently seen more overdoses than usual linked to substances that slow breathing (such as heroin or pregabalin). We want people to be aware so they can take extra care."
NAP also said if someone becomes unwell, one must immediately call 999, and place the person in the recovery position if they are breathing.
NAP also noted emergency antidote, as reported by Plymouth Herald too, in the event of an overdose of heroin or other opiated or opioids. NAP noted that even if you are unaware of what the unwell person has takes, the antidote "will not harm them, and sometimes drugs contain opioids even when they are not sold as such". NAP said one can administer naloxone as an antidote.
NAP also asked the person to stay with the unwell person for 20 minutes or until help arrives as the person could go back into overdose once naloxone wears off.
If the person is not breathing, one should immediately call 999 and start CPR, noted NAP.

As per the National Institute on Drug Abuse, NIH, US, naloxone is a medicine that rapidly reverses an opioid overdose. It is an opioid antagonist. This means that it attaches to opioid receptors and reverses and blocks the effects of other opioids. Naloxone can quickly restore normal breathing to a person if their breathing has slowed or stopped because of an opioid overdose. But, naloxone has no effect on someone who does not have opioids in their system, and it is not a treatment for opioid use disorder.
It should be given to any person who shows signs of an opioid overdose or when an overdose is suspected. It could be administered through nasal spray or injected through the muscle, under the skin or into the veins.
The National Institute on Drug Abuse notes that families and loved ones could carry naloxone with them if they know someone in their family struggles with drug abuse. However, they can ask pharmacists or health care provider on how to administer the antidote.
However one must not that it works in the body for only 30 to 90 minutes, whereas some opioids could stay longer than that. This is why it is important to call for help. Furthermore, people given naloxone must be observed and monitored even after the last dose of naloxone to make sure their breathing do not slow down.
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The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has stated that an unvaccinated person who traveled to the US from Europe spread measles to 17 others in the country last year.
In a paper published in The Journal of Infectious Diseases, the CDC highlighted the case of an unvaccinated traveler who arrived at the Denver International Airport in Colorado in May 2025.
The person traveled with a fever, persistent cough, cold-like symptoms, and conjunctivitis (“pink eye”). He stayed overnight in a hotel and then boarded another flight to North Dakota. A day later, the person developed a rash.
“The index case was in an unvaccinated adult. Aircraft contact investigations identified 135 exposed domestic travelers. Fifteen secondary cases were identified among people exposed during the international (5) and domestic (3) flights, and at the airport (7),” the CDC said in the paper.
“Two tertiary case-patients were also identified. Five of the secondary case-patients had at least one documented prior measles vaccination,” it added.
While measles was declared eliminated in the US in 2000, and sporadic outbreaks were controlled quickly, falling vaccination rates, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic, raise the risk of larger, harder-to-contain outbreaks.
This was further compounded by the anti-vaccine stance of President Donald Trump and his Health Secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr.
As per the CDC, a total of 2,281 confirmed measles cases were reported in the US in 2025. In 2026, the agency reported 10 new outbreaks, with more than 1,000 measles cases confirmed to date. More than 90 percent cases each year occurred in the unvaccinated.
Recently, two passengers from India infected with measles landed in Auckland, New Zealand, via Singapore Airlines.
The Straits Times quoted Associate Professor Lim Poh Lian, group director of the Communicable Disease Agency’s (CDA) Communicable Disease Program, who noted that the individuals developed symptoms only while onboard the flight from Singapore to Auckland.
“Measles transmission may occur during travel. Travelers with fever and other overt signs of transmissible illness, such as coughing or malaise, should be strongly encouraged to delay travel while symptomatic,” the US CDC said.
Measles is a highly infectious disease characterized by the three Cs:
It easily spreads from one infected person to another through breaths, coughs, or sneezes and could cause severe disease, complications, and even death.
Even though a safe and cost-effective vaccine is available, in 2024, there were an estimated 95,000 measles deaths globally, mostly among unvaccinated or under-vaccinated children under the age of 5 years, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).
The CDC recommends that all travelers aged 6 months or older get vaccinated before international travel.
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Sacred Games actress Rajshri Deshpande today informed of being diagnosed with grade 1 breast cancer and shared her journey of recovery.
In an Instagram post, the 43-year-old actress announced being diagnosed with the Infiltrating ductal carcinoma (NOS) -- the most common breast cancer type, accounting for roughly 80 percent of cases.
Importantly, the actress known for her work in Trial by Fire and Manto said that the deadly disease was detected during routine screening, initiating the road to early recovery.
“As you’re reading this, it means I’ve finally found the courage to tell my parents that I have been diagnosed with Infiltrating ductal carcinoma (NOS), a grade 1 Breast cancer. Now it’s time you all know,” the Instagram post read.
“We fortunately caught this early in a routine checkup, which gave us a fighting chance,” she added.
Rajshri called her treatment with ‘tons of tests and surgery” “a rollercoaster ride”.
“Trust me, it was everyone’s love and warmth that carried me through,” she said, while thanking her fans and her parents whose “faces after surgery melted my fears into unbreakable strength”.
“With everyone’s support, I feel am ready to take on the world,” Rajshri said, adding that she “is recovering beautifully and soon heading home from the hospital”.
Also known as Invasive ductal carcinoma, the cancer occurs when abnormal cells growing in the lining of the milk ducts change and invade breast tissue beyond the walls of the duct.
Breast ducts are the passageways where milk from the milk glands (lobules) flows to the nipple.
Common symptoms of IDC include
Key risk factors of IDC include
The recent The Lancet Oncology study mentioned a rise in new cases in women aged 20-54 years (up 29 percent) since 1990.
Recently, American actress Christy Carlson Romano announced a positive cancer screening test.
Cancer is everywhere, said Romano, 41, in a tearful video on social media platform Instagram.
A 2025 study by Duke Cancer Institute in the US revealed that for women younger than 50, the risk of developing cancer is 82 percent higher than that of men, up from 51 percent in 2022.
The 2025 annual report from the American Cancer Society (ACS) also showed that cancer rates in young and middle-aged women are rising past those of men in the same age group, but especially among women under age 50.
As with Rajshri, catching cancer in its early stages can help individuals experience less severe symptoms, minimize discomfort, and improve overall quality of life.
Detection of cancer at an early stage can boost survival rates. It can increase the chances of successful treatment.
Common screening methods include
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Punjab is grappling with an outbreak of leptospirosis, a rare bacterial disease, with 36 confirmed cases, including 19 children who have been hospitalized.
The outbreak is part of a larger water‑borne infection that has affected 110 people so far in Hazara Singh Wala, a border village in Ferozepur district. The hospitalized children are receiving care at Ferozepur Civil Hospital and are reported to be stable, according to media reports.
Leptospirosis spreads to humans through contact with the urine of infected animals such as dogs and rats. The disease previously made headlines in 2024 when Punjab Chief Minister Bhagwant Mann was hospitalized after contracting it.
The state health department reports that the outbreak is affecting mainly children and young people aged 3-25, with nearly 90 of the 110 symptomatic patients being minors, most of whom are school-going children, the Indian Express reported. Commonly reported symptoms include fever, abdominal pain, and jaundice.
Alarm was heightened in the district following the death of 12-year-old Sehaj Kaur from suspected Hepatitis E on February 24.
Investigations revealed that contaminated water, including rodent droppings and dead pigeons, contributed to the outbreak, causing widespread concern among villagers.
Media reports stated that health officials in the states are taking steps to prevent further spread of the outbreak. They are conducting house-to-house screenings, distributing chlorine tablets and oral rehydration solutions, as well as repairing water supply lines to contain the outbreak.
Leptospirosis is usually a disease of animals like dogs, mostly rats, and some farm animals. It has also been reported in pigs, zebras, and horses.
It mainly spreads via contamination or through direct contact with loosely available food items or water infected with rat urine.
Common symptoms include:
While the disease is usually self-limiting and treatable with antibiotics, in severe cases it can spread to the kidney, brain, spinal cord, and liver and lead to death. It can also cause pulmonary haemorrhage, leading to respiratory failure and death.
The neglected zoonotic disease is endemic to India due to a tropical climate that complements the transmission of infection.
The first disease outbreak was reported in the 1920s in the Andaman Islands.
As per the National Centre for Disease Control (NCDC), India is expected to report 0.1-1.0 million cases per year, but less than 10,000 cases are reported.
Only four states, i.e., Kerala, Gujarat, Tamil Nadu, and Maharashtra, report more than 500 cases per year as per IDSP Disease Alert.
Andaman, Andhra Pradesh, Assam, Goa, Delhi, Karnataka, Odisha, Puducherry, and Uttar Pradesh also report cases.
Due to a lack of awareness of the disease and a lack of suitable laboratory diagnostic capabilities in most regions of the country, leptospirosis has been under-reported and under-diagnosed in India.
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