Skip to content

Leading Aussies Lending a Hand Amid COVID

  • World

FedEx Cargo Jet Makes Predawn Emergency Landing in Los Angeles

Sparks erupted from the bottom of a FedEx cargo jet as it made a predawn emergency landing Wednesday at Los Angeles International Airport, officials said. A man who was hurt while leaving the aircraft was taken to a hospital, said airport spokeswoman Olga Gallardo. His condition was unknown, but the injury was described as not life-threatening. Only two people were on board, she said. FedEx Flight 1026, a Boeing 767, experienced a landing gear malfunction while landing about around 4:50 a.m. PDT, said Ian Gregor, a spokesman with the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). A pilot can be heard saying on an air traffic control audio recording: “I don’t think there’s much more we can do. So probably going to start hashing plans for an approach.” The crew was unable to…

Leading Aussies Lending a Hand Amid COVID

Middle-aged Australians have been the most likely to give help during the COVID-19 pandemic, and the least likely to receive it.

That’s just one snapshot from a survey looking at life during the deadly virus, which also highlighted the value of relatives during lockdown.

More than 7300 people took part in the questionnaire commissioned by the Australian Institute of Family Studies between May 1 and June 9.

Eighty percent of respondents aged 50 to 69 reported providing physical, emotional or financial support to someone outside their household. Most of that help went to relatives living at a different property.

In the same age bracket, 62 percent of people reported receiving no help themselves.

A 61-year-old woman spent more time caring for her elderly parents, “doing their shopping, getting their medication supplies, advocating during tele-health calls, house cleaning and general care.”

“Relatives were the most common source of help, with more than one in four people saying their household got help from a relative living elsewhere,” lead investigator Kelly Hand said.

“There was also a large number of people鈥攁round six in 10鈥攚ho said they had given some type of physical help to someone outside their household, things like shopping, dropping off food, domestic work or help with transport or personal care.”

The findings also showed that women were more likely than men to provide help to people outside their own home, and that second to relatives, friends provided the most help.

Top-Five Forms of Out-Of-Home Help During COVID-19:

1) Emotional support
2) Food shopping and delivery
3) Transport and errands
4) Financial support
5) Domestic work, household maintenance, gardening

Source: Families in Australia Survey鈥擫ife During COVID-19

Focus News: Leading Aussies Lending a Hand Amid COVID

J&J Strikes $6.5 Billion Deal for Autoimmune Disease Specialist Momenta

Johnson & Johnson agreed to buy Momenta Pharmaceuticals Inc for about $6.5 billion on Wednesday, to bolster its portfolio of drugs for hard-to-treat autoimmune diseases. The acquisition, latest in a recent spate of healthcare deals, comes just days after France’s Sanofi struck a $3.7 billion deal to buy Principia Biopharma Inc for its pipeline of autoimmune disease treatments. Treatments targeting autoimmune conditions have fetched billions of dollars in sales, including AbbVie Inc’s Humira, which is the world’s best-selling drug. J&J’s Janssen unit will gain access to Momenta’s experimental therapy, nipocalimab, which is in late-stage testing for warm antibody hemolytic anemia, a condition that causes destruction of healthy red blood cells, and mid-stage testing for myasthenia gravis, a neuromuscular disease. Nipocalimab is expected to eventually win approval to treat several conditions,…