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We need this. Good news from around the world

We could all use some positive news for once. Here are happy news stories from around the world, thanks to Positive.news.

Breast cancer drug

England licensed a drug to prevent breast cancer 

More than a quarter of a million women in England could soon benefit from a drug shown to prevent breast cancer. 

Anastrozole has been used for years to treat the disease. However, recent trials found that it can reduce the incidence of breast cancer by almost 50% in post-menopausal women at risk of the disease.

The drug was licensed in England on Tuesday, a move described by Cancer Research UK as “a welcome announcement”. 

The charity said that because anastrozole is an older drug, it’s now off-patent. This means more than one company can produce it, which has driven down prices. A five-year course now costs around £0.04 a day, it added.  

Image: National Cancer Institute

Immigration

British attitudes towards immigration softened 

Immigration has been the subject of bitter political debate in the UK, and Brexit was seen as a vote to curb it. But a social attitudes survey paints a more positive picture. 

The European Social Survey has sampled British attitudes every two years since 2001, conducting face-to-face interviews with around 1,150 people. Its latest poll suggests that views on immigration have undergone an “about-turn”, becoming more favourable since Brexit.

For the first time, a majority (59%) thought immigration was very positive for the UK economy, enriched the country’s cultural life (58%), and made the country a better place to live (56%). In 2002, the figures were 17%, 33% and 20% respectively.

In May, the Office for National Statistics posted record immigration figures for the UK. Home secretary Suella Braverman has since tried to make it an election issue. But that could be misguided, reckons the National Centre for Social Research, which oversaw the survey

“People in Britain have become much more positive in their attitudes to immigration and on balance now see it in a positive light,” it said.

Image: Christian Battaglia

Bangladesh

Bangladesh eliminated a deadly disease 

Most people probably haven’t heard of visceral leishmaniasis. But for impoverished communities in Bangladesh, this life-threatening disease is something that is all too familiar. 

Not for much longer, perhaps. In what is being hailed as a “monumental achievement”, Bangladesh has become the first country to eliminate the disease as a public health problem, according to the World Health Organization. 

Visceral leishmaniasis is caused by a parasite carried by infected sandflies and can prove fatal, particularly in communities with poor sanitation. A health programme to tackle the disease launched in 2005, involving early diagnosis, disease surveillance and improved treatment options. Those efforts have now paid off, potentially saving many lives. 

Image: Kelly

Pregnancy health care

The DRC pledged free healthcare for mothers 

Pregnant women in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) are to be offered free healthcare in a bid to cut the country’s high rates of maternal and neonatal deaths, the Guardian reported this week. 

By the end of the year, women in 13 out of 26 regions will be entitled to free care during pregnancy and for a month after childbirth, as part of a World Bank-backed programme. Eventually, women and babies across the whole country will benefit, but there is no timetable for rolling out the service. 

The development received a cautious welcome amid concerns that the DRC’s creaking health service will struggle to cope with an increase in demand. 

Image: SHVETS production

Green energy

Portugal produced a surfeit of green energy 

It has one of the most ambitious timeframes in Europe for being carbon neutral. 

And this week Portugal made strides to meet its 2045 deadline, by producing more renewable energy than it needed for 149 hours straight – a new record. 

Portugal aims to generate 85% of its electricity from renewable sources by 2030 and be carbon neutral by 2045 – five years earlier than most European nations. 

Image: Red Zeppelin

This article was originally published on Positive.news and was republished here, with permission, under a CC BY-ND 4.0 license.