❌

Normal view

There are new articles available, click to refresh the page.
Yesterday β€” 25 June 2024Main stream

A better way to measure the UK’s health and happiness | Letters

25 June 2024 at 12:10

Government policies should be judged by their effect on the life satisfaction of the population, not by economic growth alone, says Prof Richard Layard. Plus letters from Sarah Davidson and Ethan Oshoko

Your editorial rightly points out that GDP is not a good measure of how people are faring (19 June). As an alternative, you offer the UN’s human development index. But we already have a better British alternative – the measure of life satisfaction in the Office for National Statistics’ annual population survey.

The question asked is: β€œOverall, how satisfied are you with your life these days (0: not at all satisfied, 10: completely)?” The results are published every quarter. That is an excellent measure of the nation’s success. It provides a good account of how we are doing on average and of the degree of fundamental inequality in our society.

Continue reading...

πŸ’Ύ

Β© Photograph: RoBeDeRo/Getty Images

πŸ’Ύ

Β© Photograph: RoBeDeRo/Getty Images

Before yesterdayMain stream

Threat landscape for industrial automation systems, Q1 2024 – Source: securelist.com

threat-landscape-for-industrial-automation-systems,-q1-2024-–-source:-securelist.com

Source: securelist.com – Author: Kaspersky ICS CERT Global statistics Statistics across all threats In the first quarter of 2024, the percentage of ICS computers on which malicious objects were blocked decreased by 0.3Β pp from the previous quarter to 24.4%. Compared to the first quarter of 2023, the percentage decreased by 1.3 pp. Percentage of ICS […]

La entrada Threat landscape for industrial automation systems, Q1 2024 – Source: securelist.com se publicΓ³ primero en CISO2CISO.COM & CYBER SECURITY GROUP.

Overdose Deaths Dropped in U.S. in 2023 for First Time in Five Years

15 May 2024 at 11:40
Preliminary numbers show a nearly 4 percent decrease in deaths from opioids, largely fentanyl, but a rise in deaths from meth and cocaine.

Β© Erin Schaff/The New York Times

Empty cartridges of Kloxxado, a naloxone nasal spray that is twice as concentrated as Narcan, lay on the street after being used to revive a man in Portland, Ore., last year.
❌
❌