Nixie
seen from United States
seen from Norway
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Maldives
seen from Malaysia

seen from Portugal
seen from Germany
seen from Yemen

seen from Germany
seen from Ukraine
seen from China
seen from France
seen from United States
seen from Japan

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Brazil

seen from Germany

seen from United States
Nixie

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
Work in progress, detail...
[Project name] Nixes: Rebuild
Mission complete
Yup! New version of Nixes the protogen!
It's not exactly a redesign, that's why I called it a rebuild. Let's say it's like a system actualization or even maturing. It's pretty visible what I mean, I think. Just, he looks older and more mature than before
Tho, both designs are still official! So you can draw him the way you prefer :3
(Also, it kinda shows my "improvement" I guess, but it's up to your opinion)
Please tell me whhat you think! X3c
Swimming up the sky.
The biggest surprise of the year: Polish pop/alternative music
Iâm not a huge pop fan, Iâm also not a huge fan of Polish music at all, but itâs great to see how pop/alternative music in Poland evolve. Great vocals, interesting, fresh sounds and the power of lyrics. Zalewski, PodsiadĹo, Kortez - during MÄskie Granie 2018 were simply amazing, Katarzyna Nosowska, Daria ZawiaĹow, Nixes, Sonbird, Barbara WroĹska, Mela Koteluk and others made my life in Poland less painful (disco polo and hip-hop are the source of infinite pain for me).

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
Major donor nixes effort to combat tuberculosis crisis in North Korea | Science
Workers prepare to use an aging x-ray machine in a pediatric tuberculosis clinic in Pyongyang.
Richard Stone
A fuse is about to be lit on an infectious disease powderkeg in northeast Asia. On 30 June, The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria will pull the plug on its grants to North Korea, which has one of the highest rates of tuberculosis (TB) in the world. The pullout leaves the isolated nation with about 1 year to line up a new source of medicines and diagnostics to combat a deepening TB crisis.
The Global Fundâs decision to sever ties to North Korea perplexes some humanitarian workers and medical researchers who operate there. âWe have not gotten any clarity on why they are doing this,â says Kwonjune Seung, a physician at Brigham and Womenâs Hospital in Boston and medical director of the Eugene Bell Foundation, a nonprofit in Andrews, South Carolina, that has supported TB clinics in North Korea since 2007. âI would hope it was something extremely egregious,â for the Global Fund âto take such a drastic step.â Some, however, see the move as a negotiating ploy and predict that the organization will be back in North Korea before TB supplies run out.
Since 2010, the Global Fund, a public-private partnership based in Geneva, Switzerland, has spent more than $100 million on TB and malaria control in North Korea through grants managed by two international organizations with offices in Pyongyangâthe World Health Organization (WHO) and UNICEFâas well as North Koreaâs Ministry of Public Health (MPH). âIt has been the biggest outside investment ever in public health in North Korea,â says Kee Park, a neurosurgeon at Harvard Medical School in Boston who leads biannual exchanges with North Korean health care specialists.
By all accounts, malaria control efforts in North Korea have been a clear success. Cases have fallen from 13,500 in 2010 to 2719 in 2016. The Global Fund has provided enough mosquito nets and antimalarial drugs to see the country through the 2018 malaria season, says spokesperson Seth Faison, who is based in Geneva.
But TB remains a stubborn and worsening problem. A quarter-century ago, North Koreaâs TB prevalenceâaround 50 cases per 100,000 peopleâwas approximately one-third of South Koreaâs. But after a severe, prolonged famine in the North in the mid-1990s, the TB bacterium spread rapidly among malnourished survivors. According to WHO, North Koreaâs TB incidence, or number of new cases, per 100,000 people shot up from under 200 in 2000 to 513 in 2016 (global incidence in 2016 was 140). An MPH survey carried out in 2015 and 2016âwhich outside experts laud for its rigorâpegged North Koreaâs TB prevalence, or total cases, at 640 per 100,000 people.
Most North Korean TB patients now under medical care are taking drugs purchased under Global Fund grants. The Eugene Bell Foundation is providing drugs to treat about 1200 North Koreans with multidrug resistant (MDR) TB each year. That represents about 10% to 15% of each yearâs new MDR cases, Seung says. MPH had proposed carrying out a drug-resistance survey in the next tranche of money from the Global Fund, he says, but that wonât happen now.
In announcing its decision last February to end grants to the Democratic Peopleâs Republic of Korea (DPRK)the Global Fund cited its concern that the countryâs âunique operating environmentâ prevented the group from providing âthe required level of assurance and risk managementâ for its grants. Humanitarian groups and medical researchers criticized the decision in letters to The Lancet and in other forums. They implored the Global Fund to reconsider, noting that transparency concerns and challenging operating environments exist in many countries with high TB burdens. The Global Fund âhas not modified its decisionâ to close the grants, Faison says. However, he says, âWe hope to re-engage with DPRK when the operating environment allows the access and oversight required.â
Still, âthe public outcry did have an effect,â Park says. The Global Fund recently agreed to allow leftover funds from its North Korea grants to be spent on a buffer stock of medications and diagnostics âsufficient to provide for continued treatment for TB patients [through] June 2019,â Faison says. There appear to be enough drugs on hand not only to treat existing patients, but also to enroll new patients through December, Park says. âThe hope is that will buy enough timeâ to find a successor to the Global Fund, says Heidi Linton, executive director of Christian Friends of Korea, a nonprofit in Black Mountain, North Carolina, that a few years ago helped establish a National Tuberculosis Reference Laboratory in Pyongyang.
That wonât be easy, Seung says. âTB is a tough sell. Itâs complex and messy, and makes donors tired.â He and observers hope the South Korean government will step in, if only to prevent TBâespecially MDR strainsâfrom spilling across the border.
One observerâa humanitarian worker who has discussed the issue privately with Global Fund officialsâsuggests the fundâs pullout is tactical. Closing the grants, he says, may give the fund leverage to negotiate access to more clinics in North Korea where TB drugs are dispensed, and on shorter notice. The expiring grants stipulate access to 70% of clinics on 4 daysâ notice; the Global Fund, he says, has been pushing for access to all clinics on as short as 1 dayâs notice.
In the meantime, humanitarian groups are bracing for tough times as international sanctions take an increasing toll. Many North Koreans âare struggling to make ends meet,â says Linton, who spends several weeks a year on the ground there. Malnutrition and a lack of access to clean water in many villages continue to make people vulnerable to TB, she says. The areas of North Korea that are most affected by TB âare disproportionately those without electricity, without access to health care, and most in need of assistance,â says Taehoon Kim, co-founder of DoDaum, a nonprofit in New York City with health programs in North Korea. North Koreaâs public health system âwill be tested more and more in the coming years,â he says. In the wake of the Global Fundâs pullout, Kim says, âIâm gravely concerned about whether it will be able to respond.â
New post published on: https://www.livescience.tech/2018/06/30/major-donor-nixes-effort-to-combat-tuberculosis-crisis-in-north-korea-science/
A few new OCs of mine who are Nixes, a German creature of the water said to have lived in the Rhine. Â They can shift between a disguised human form, snake, fish, and whatever they look like in the water. Â They donât have names yet, but they definately like @mygayartâs Kumiho. ;0