Post by account_disabled on Mar 9, 2024 2:15:45 GMT -5
Here I find it much more interesting because I see concretely how work changes people,” says Thomas Jacob, a French designer who has left his position at Chanel to create his own brand, where those responsible for the clothing are the prisoners, comments on his new job. of the Lima prisons of San Pedro and Santa Mónica. “And from a personal point of view, it is interesting for me to participate in the development of something concrete, rather than being a small tool within a global company,” commented the 29-year-old businessman in his interview with RT correspondent Segovia. The creator of the clothing brand ('Pity'), teaches inmates a new trade, which at the same time helps them reduce their sentence. “There are people who have benefits for their crime, so each day of work reduces their sentence by two days, depending on the benefit they request,” comments the person responsible for the prints, Carlos, who entered the San Pedro prison 12 years ago. for drug trafficking, and adds that "at the same time they work, at the same time they receive remuneration, it also helps them get out of prison sooner." “More than a job, it is a learning center,” said Walter '' Iglesias, the manager of the San Pedro workshop who confessed to Segovia that he had never used a sewing machine before.
Thomas is now considering opening a network of physical stores in Lima, since half of the production is sold in the Peruvian market. The designer foresees a future job for the inmates: "The idea America Mobile Number List of the project is that in the medium term we can count on people who are released from prison and that they can continue working in the stores as salespeople. But since the researchers reviewed published guidelines over a 20-year period, Schillinger said, they are likely to find inconsistencies. "It's pretty well known that science evolves over time," he added. "Furthermore, their claims about the low quality of the guidelines are based on the application of the wrong metrics," he said. One of the methods the researchers used in the paper "is the wrong tool for the job and virtually guarantees that they will falsely conclude that the guidelines are of low quality," Schillinger said. Schillinger also pointed to the funding of the new paper as a major limitation, something that has been seen before in the history of sugar research. The Sugar Association, formerly the Sugar Research Foundation, funded studies on the health risks of sugar consumption in the 1960s and 1970s, according to a landmark analysis published in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine in September. Those previous studies pointed to fat consumption as the main factor in heart disease and avoided putting sugar on the list of culprits, according to the analysis.
Another paper published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine in October shed light on how Coca-Cola and PepsiCo have sponsored national medical and health organizations in the US. "Not only do sticky sugars provide unnecessary, 'empty' calories, they appear to affect unique, specific unhealthy metabolic pathways that contribute to obesity, diabetes and heart disease, independent of calories," Schillinger said. «We are in a public health war against diabetes, we need to create intelligent strategies to win it and prevent unnecessary suffering and death. “This is a serious matter,” she added. "To illustrate the seriousness of our war on diabetes, in the first ten years of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, nearly 1,500 American soldiers lost a limb in battle," Schillinger said, citing a 2015 report published by Congressional Research. Service. By comparison, in the same period, about 730,000 adults with diabetes lost limbs, Schillinger said. In 2010 alone, nearly 73,000 lower limb amputations were performed on adults with diagnosed diabetes, according to a national diabetes statistics report. "It's time for us to fight a frontal war against diabetes," he said. Schillinger added that he supports current government guidelines, which recommend that added sugar should not exceed five to ten percent of daily calories. "This translates to about 80 to 160 calories from added sugars for a young person," added Schillinger, who stated that one can of soda contains about 150 calories of sugar.
Thomas is now considering opening a network of physical stores in Lima, since half of the production is sold in the Peruvian market. The designer foresees a future job for the inmates: "The idea America Mobile Number List of the project is that in the medium term we can count on people who are released from prison and that they can continue working in the stores as salespeople. But since the researchers reviewed published guidelines over a 20-year period, Schillinger said, they are likely to find inconsistencies. "It's pretty well known that science evolves over time," he added. "Furthermore, their claims about the low quality of the guidelines are based on the application of the wrong metrics," he said. One of the methods the researchers used in the paper "is the wrong tool for the job and virtually guarantees that they will falsely conclude that the guidelines are of low quality," Schillinger said. Schillinger also pointed to the funding of the new paper as a major limitation, something that has been seen before in the history of sugar research. The Sugar Association, formerly the Sugar Research Foundation, funded studies on the health risks of sugar consumption in the 1960s and 1970s, according to a landmark analysis published in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine in September. Those previous studies pointed to fat consumption as the main factor in heart disease and avoided putting sugar on the list of culprits, according to the analysis.
Another paper published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine in October shed light on how Coca-Cola and PepsiCo have sponsored national medical and health organizations in the US. "Not only do sticky sugars provide unnecessary, 'empty' calories, they appear to affect unique, specific unhealthy metabolic pathways that contribute to obesity, diabetes and heart disease, independent of calories," Schillinger said. «We are in a public health war against diabetes, we need to create intelligent strategies to win it and prevent unnecessary suffering and death. “This is a serious matter,” she added. "To illustrate the seriousness of our war on diabetes, in the first ten years of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, nearly 1,500 American soldiers lost a limb in battle," Schillinger said, citing a 2015 report published by Congressional Research. Service. By comparison, in the same period, about 730,000 adults with diabetes lost limbs, Schillinger said. In 2010 alone, nearly 73,000 lower limb amputations were performed on adults with diagnosed diabetes, according to a national diabetes statistics report. "It's time for us to fight a frontal war against diabetes," he said. Schillinger added that he supports current government guidelines, which recommend that added sugar should not exceed five to ten percent of daily calories. "This translates to about 80 to 160 calories from added sugars for a young person," added Schillinger, who stated that one can of soda contains about 150 calories of sugar.