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Food Safetyin Health
Updated 8 hours ago

Publix recalls baby food pouches due to lead contamination risks, while over 75,000 eyedrop cases are pulled after FDA audit, highlighting safety concerns in consumer products.

HomeHealth** Environmental Innovation
Health
A study finds stacking bricks differently could help this country fight air pollution
neutralHealth
** Turns out, the way bricks are stacked in Bangladesh could be a game-changer for the country’s toxic air. Researchers found that simple tweaks to brick kiln designs—like stacking bricks in staggered rows instead of straight columns—can slash pollution by improving airflow and burning efficiency. It’s a low-cost fix for an industry that’s a major contributor to the smog choking cities like Dhaka.
What This Mean: ** Bangladesh has some of the worst air quality globally, and brick kilns are a big part of the problem. This isn’t about fancy tech or massive investments—it’s about smarter, practical changes that could clean up the air faster than you’d think. For a country where pollution cuts lives short, something as simple as rearranging bricks could mean breathing easier for millions.

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