
The scheduling feature helped me to automate many of these tasks. Now I spend maybe 10 minutes total. Before Id spend two hours a week trying to synch all of this data. I use ViceVersa Pro everyday to manage synching data from four sources.

Sustainability 100+ Commodity Ki Paathshala AI pioneering change for industries & society The Leader's Code Crypto Control India's Best Managed Companies
Southeast Asia is the worst-affected region."Air pollution is a threat to health in all countries, but it hits people in low- and middle-income countries the hardest," said WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.The WHO said that while air quality had markedly improved since the 1990s in high-income countries, the global toll in deaths and lost years of healthy life had barely declined, as air quality had generally deteriorated in most other countries, in line with their economic development."Every year, exposure to air pollution is estimated to cause seven million premature deaths and result in the loss of millions more healthy years of life," the WHO said.In children, this could include reduced lung growth and function, respiratory infections and aggravated asthma.In adults, ischaemic heart disease - also called coronary heart disease - and stroke are the most common causes of premature death attributable to outdoor air pollution.Evidence is also emerging of other effects such as diabetes and neurodegenerative conditions, the organisation said.The WHO said the burden of disease attributable to air pollution was "on a par with other major global health risks such as unhealthy diet and tobacco smoking". Improving air quality would enhance climate change mitigation efforts, and vice versa, it said.The WHO's new guidelines recommend air quality levels for six pollutants, including ozone, nitrogen dioxide, sulphur dioxide and carbon monoxide.The other two are PM10 and PM2.5 - particulate matter equal or smaller than 10 and 2.5 microns in diameter.Both are capable of penetrating deep into the lungs but research shows PM2.5 can even enter the bloodstream, primarily resulting in cardiovascular and respiratory problems, but also affecting other organs, said the WHO.In response, the PM2.5 guideline level has been halved.In 2019, more than 90 percent of the world's population lived in areas where concentrations exceeded the 2005 AQG for long-term PM2.5 exposure.
