Zoo Official Says Clinical Medicine is Best Treatment for Snake Bites  

While Adrian Cus might take a while to recover from the snake bite, taking him to the medical clinic was the right thing to do, says Jamal Andrewin-Bohn. Since the child was bitten, quite a few persons have commented that his family should have sought a herbal healer, otherwise known a bush doctor, to treat the snakebite. But Andrewin-Bohn, who is the conservation program manager at the Belize Zoo, told News Five that the best treatment for snake bites is clinical medicine.

 

Via phone: Jamal Andrewin-Bohn, Conservation Program Manager, the Belize Zoo

“With venomous snake bites, the challenge is that this venom that the snake produces, it’s a naturally occurring compound, they produce it, and really the only cure that there is for a venomous snake bite is derived from the venom itself, it’s the anti-venom which they develop in a lab and everything. They use the same compounds to create the cure. And so to completely cure the body or neutralize the effects of venom, you need anti-venom. The challenge is, in Belize we live in a developing nation where medical facilities might not be close by or   the amount of the antivenin that they carry might be limited. But generally what we recommend is the priority is getting any snakebite victim to the closest medical facility so they can start the process of administering the anti-venom.   What we have encountered over time, and this is the feedback from medical professionals, nurses, doctors that work in Belize and treat medical cases that deal with venomous snakebites. It’s usually when they get the referral it’s late. It’s very late and the situation is dire. This is when they would oftentimes see fatalities from snakebites, the victim waited too long to receive traditional medicine. They would have relied heavily on herbal remedies, home remedies to treat the symptoms, right? And so we don’t put down, or it’s not to discourage the use of traditional medicine, but it’s to recognize the difference between treating the symptoms and treating the cause. No compound has been  universally accepted to, to neutralize venom in the same way that antivenom does. So what you have are a lot of things that might help with the swelling, the pain, and elevated heart rate. We know that there’s things we take when it’s cold or flu season to boost our immune system. So there are things that can help with alleviating the pain and discomfort, but those shouldn’t be relied on as the sole cure. And I think that’s where a lot of the education and sensitization comes when dealing with venomous snakebites. There’s a lot of supportive auxiliary medicine that has to go into that. They have to worry about allergic reactions to the antivenin because it’s ultimately a foreign body and our body will treat it as such. Our body will attack it. So this is why it’s safer to do it in a medical facility because if there’s any allergic reaction, anything like that, they can manage it. And then they will give medication for pain, for swelling, all this stuff that we would try to solve in the home. But the priority is to get the venom under control. Then you could delete the secondary symptoms. We might take something home and that’s We feel better and that, that leaves the pain and that gives the impression that the venom has been dealt with when really it’s just, again, one of the symptoms that has been brought into under control and it gives the false hope that the venom has been neutralized. And so this is the kind of information we put out when we do education and training with respect to snake bites.”

 

STEAM Prepares Belizean Students for the Future

In a world where technology and innovation are rapidly reshaping the landscape of employment and creativity, a new educational model is emerging in classrooms around the globe.  STEAM is not just an acronym; it’s a revolution in learning.  Tonight’s Belize on Reel feature delves into the vibrant classrooms at Itz’at where STEAM is coming to life, exploring how this interdisciplinary approach is preparing today’s students for tomorrow’s challenges.  We’ll uncover the impact of integrating arts into the traditional STEM model, witness the transformation of young minds, and understand why educators and industry leaders alike are championing STEAM as the key to unlocking a brighter, more innovative future for Belize.  Here’s News Five’s Isani Cayetano.

 

Elroy Tucker

Elroy Tucker, Student, Itz’at STEAM Academy

“They had a very interactive approach towards learning because the first thing that they did with us was an activity where we were supposed to collaborate with our teammates in our primary school.”

 

Isani Cayetano, Reporting

STEAM education prepares students like Elroy Tucker Jr. to tackle real-world challenges by engaging in project-based learning that stimulates actual problems and scenarios they might encounter in their future careers.  It’s an approach that piqued his interest from the onset.

 

Elroy Tucker

“My sister is in St. Catherine Academy which is a traditional school and the rest of my family insisted that I should go to a traditional school until I saw Itz’at STEAM Academy.  It was roughly the first school that I actually felt interested in because I knew for a very long period of time that other schools were just a challenge that you get through so that you can get into the workforce.”

 

As the job market evolves, STEAM education equips students with the skills necessary to succeed in careers that may not even exist yet, ensuring that they are adaptable and ready for the future.

 

Cristine Coc

Cristine Coc, Vice Principal, Itz’at STEAM Academy

“There needs to be a mindset shift.  When you come from traditional schools, you are expected to stand up when the teacher walks in, say good morning, and, you know, write a lot of notes and carry a lot of books.  And they come with that expectation.  And some of them come with dislike for math, they come with a dislike for science.  “I don’t like science, I don’t like math, give me art.  I love art.”

 

 

By including the arts with STEM, students are encouraged to think creatively and innovatively, combining analytical thinking with resourceful problem-solving.  This is necessary for the development of future innovators.  At thirteen years old, Tyler Gabourel is already thinking ahead.

 

Tyler Gabourel

Tyler Gabourel, Student, Itz’at STEAM Academy

“I want to be technological engineer and Itz’at is kind of like the perfect school for that because everything we do is on computers and we learn about the different machines and how to use them and how to use them appropriately and professionally.”

 

 

 

The STEAM approach provides an inclusive educational framework that allows all students, regardless of their natural aptitudes, to engage and contribute, ensuring that each student can find their niche within the curriculum.

 

Melanie Arias

Melanie Arias, Student, Itz’at STEAM Academy

“The curriculums are different than normal high schools but they are also fun and they show your creative and innovative side.”

 

 

 

It is not just about teaching individual subjects; it’s about preparing students for life, providing them with a versatile skill set that goes beyond traditional academic boundaries and empowers them to become lifelong learners and contributors to Belizean society.

 

 

 

Melanie Arias

“I decided on this because it was a new school and then I read a lot about it and then it was like very… it was a “wow” experience when I started reading about the school.

 

STEAM education can positively impact cognitive development, increase literacy and math skills, and help students reflect meaningfully on their work and that of their peers.

 

 

 

Jahzhia Morales

Jahzhia Morales, Student, Itz’at STEAM Academy

“So I really like the classroom experience because they make you feel very comfortable and safe where you can share your answers and you don’t feel. Itz’at is more tailored to my future career path that I would like to go.  I want to be an architect and in the STEAM school there is science, technology, engineering, arts and math which I would all need for my future career path.”

 

 

A holistic learning environment integrates various disciplines, encouraging students to make connections across subjects and apply their knowledge in a comprehensive manner.

 

Cristine Coc

“When we started, it was myself, Mr. Smith, Ms. Chable, Mr. Palacio and the principal.  We did not have this fancy campus, we were in a tiny room and that was where we came together and it came to my knowledge that everybody sitting in that room wanted a different type of schooling.  And as one of the administrators, my job was to hear them out.  What are your ideas, what are your thoughts?  And you know, they would express that and I would say, “Wow, we all have that same vision of what a different school may be.”

 

Isani Cayetano for News Five.

First Team to Summit Doyle’s Delight Since 2008

If you ask most people which peak is the highest in Belize, you will likely get Victoria Peak as an answer. Doyle’s Delight is, however, the tallest peak in Belize, with an elevation of one thousand, one hundred and twenty-four meters, it is four meters higher than Victoria Peak. And whereas many successful expeditions have been carried out on Victoria Peak over the last decade, the last time a team reached the top of Doyle’s Delight was in 2008. That changed on May tenth, when a team of twenty-two people completed the summit. The crew consisted of seven foreign nationals, eight B.D.F. soldiers, five Santa Cruz and San Jose villagers and two park rangers from Ya’axche Conservation Trust. We spoke with the organizer of this latest expedition, who told us that the grueling journey took the team five days, which is two days less than when it was done sixteen years ago.

 

                           Bruno Kuppinger

Bruno Kuppinger, Organizer, Doyle’s Delight Expedition 2024

We started the planning process in January so it was a long period of time, almost four months to get it off the ground, because safety is an issue, with satellite phones, back up of helicopters, snake bites and especially the lack of water. We knew we had done it before, where the rivers are and creeks but this year it was very challenging because of the drought. They started May fifth that was a Sunday at four o’clock in the morning and they came back safe with climbing the summit, Doyle’s Delight on the seventh and they came back the tenth of May in the morning eight o’clock in San Jose. It was a trek of sixty-three miles but it really is a rough terrain. It is going up and down. And then of course, the rations are a little bit of rice here and there, some of the ramen and cheese and whatever we have and a little bit of corn tortilla the first two days and the rest we would find in the jungle, like the heart of palms and other stuff. My wish for the past fifteen or twenty years, what I have done, I have done Victoria Peak, I have done The Maya Divide Trail, it is a trail from Toledo all the way to Cayo. Las Cuevas, Caracol, that takes eight days. I call it grand slam if you can do all three, Victoria Peak, Doyle’s Delight and the Maya Divide and I believe this is something that will definitely create jobs here for the tour guides, operators and other entities on the ground.”

Belize to Undergo Chemical Waste Management Training

Belize has signed on to an initiative that aims to develop management and disposal strategies to eliminate pesticides, chemicals, and other harmful materials in waste electrical and electronic equipment. During this project, key stakeholders in the chemicals and waste management sectors will undergo technical training on how to manage these chemicals and stabilization strategies for products containing added mercury, based on stocks identified in-country. The facilitation of the training is part of the GEF ISLANDS Projects, which is the Implementing Sustainable Low and Non-Chemical Development in Small Island Developing States program. The Department of the Environment partnered with the Basel Convention Regional Centre for Training and Technology Transfer for the Caribbean to execute the project. Belize is one of twelve other Caribbean nations to participate in this project.

Soft Drink Production Drops while Bowen on Standby with B.E.L.  

Amidst Belize’s ongoing energy crisis and negotiations with Mexico, Bowen and Bowen, Belize’s largest beverage production company, was asked by Belize Electricity limited to temporarily come off the power grid and switch over to generator, while B.E.L. works towards a solution. However, on Monday, Prime Minister John Briceño, revealed that C.F.E. has agreed to supply Belize with seventy-five megawatts of power, committing twenty megawatts more than the previous arrangement. We asked Bowen and Bowen Corporate Relations Manager, Rosanna Villanueva if the company has been in discussion regarding the possibility of returning to the grid soon. Here’s what she had to say.

 

Rosanna Villanueva, Corporate Relations Manager, B&B Ltd.

 “It has curtailed our production a bit, simply because the generators that we have are not able to power all the lines All at the same time. So on a regular basis on a normal times, we would have all our production lines running at the same time. The generators are not able to sustain that level of production. So it essentially means that we then have to pick and choose which lines are going to be running which lines are going to be producing. We do have a third generator that is in the process of being brought up. And that is going to assist us a great deal in trying to get back to our normal production. When we’re off the grid. As I mentioned, this would happen when we’re off the grid. We do understand BEL needs to meet the power needs of other critical services of, households. It’s not just Bowen and Bowen going through this. It’s the entire country. So we try as much as possible to work along with them and assist where we can.”

 

Britney Gordon

“The government has been in talks with Mexico, CFE to increase the amount of energy we received from them. Has there been any word to your company and the other parties that were asked to come off the grid about possibly getting back on the grid and going back to your normal production?”

 

Rosanna Villanueva

“Okay, so that is a great development for the country. We would be, along with all other Belizeans we would be updated as progress is made on that. And for us, it would be of course beneficial for us because the less we come off the grid, the greater the more we’re able to produce, I should say. It’s a good thing for the entire country. As I said, it’s not just Bowen and Bowen experiencing this. So yeah, I think that would be a good development and we’re waiting along with everyone else to see what happens and what progress is made in that regard.”

Bowen says Shortage Partly due to Maintenance  

If you have noticed that recently, the shelves at your neighborhood corner store have had significantly less Bowen and Bowen products in stock, then you are not alone.  Due to the ongoing energy crisis, the company was asked by Belize Electricity Limited to temporarily power their operation via generators, resulting in the slowing down of production. We spoke with Bowen and Bowen’s Corporate Relations Manager, Rosanna Villanueva, who said that the shortage is also due, in part, to maintenance.

 

                          Rosanna Villanueva

Rosanna Villanueva, Corporate Relations Manager, B&B Ltd.

“Production has been down from what it should be. We’ve also had the case where we have scheduled production, scheduled maintenance on some of our production lines. So we schedule maintenance way in advance. These are machines and they need to be maintained so that they can continue working. And so when we have a line down for maintenance, and then on top of that, we’re asked to come off the grid, it does tend to compound the issue. We also had that happening. We expect within the next couple of weeks to have all our maintenance completed. We are hoping to have the third generator back online or online again within the next week or two. So all of that will assist us in getting back to normal. And of course, as I said, the less we have to come off the grid, the better. But I think that goes for all Belizeans, not just Bowen and Bowen. So we’re looking forward to things settling down and getting back to normal.”

Mayor Wally Nunez Denied Permission to Run Against Area Rep, Andre Perez

Three weeks ago, San Pedro Mayor, Wally Nunez made his intention to run against the Belize Rural South’s Area Representative, Andre Perez, public. Nunez took to his Facebook page to inform the constituents that he would be applying to the P.U.P. Executive to enter his name as a contender for an election convention.  But today we learned that Nunez’s hopes were dashed when the executive’s response was that he was not going to get that permission to challenge Perez. In a Facebook post on the matter today, Nunez wrote in part, “Guided by the voice of the people I decided to continue leading them as their area representative. I have now been made to understand that this will not be possible. I respect the decision of our party and hold dear the mandate given to me by the people. I, Wally Nunez, will continue to work and walk with the people of Belize Rural South. I will continue to serve the people. I will continue to lead them forward! Adelante!,”. News Five tried to reach Nunez to get his reaction to the P.U.P. executive’s decision, but our attempts were unsuccessful.

Dara Raffling House to Upgrade Farm  

Philanthropist Joel ‘Dara’ Robinson is popular in Belize for his generosity in feeding some of the Old Capital’s poorest schoolchildren every weekday, free of cost to them. For over a decade, Robinson provided free hot meals for close to fifty primary school children who would have otherwise gone hungry at lunch time. Now, Robinson says he is raffling a small, fully-sealed and wired building that you can use for a single bedroom or a food booth. He stopped by Channel Five today and told us that he still feeds the children three times a week, but that he is spending more time on his farm which needs a proper irrigation system.  He says that raffling the structure will provide that opportunity for him.  

 

                         Joel “Dara” Robinson

Joel “Dara” Robinson, Philanthropist

“I di give somebody an opportunity fi win a 12 by 12, you could call it a small house or building, fully burglar-barred, sealed and wired. I di raffle it da the Lucky Dube show on the 4th of August. And the purpose behind it – there are other things I got to do, especially on the farm and thing, so I decide the only way I could try raise some funds da if I raffle the house. I had it sitting there and thing, basically never made use of it. I just make sure I keep it clean, fix it up and thing, and I decide somebody could win a whole house for just $20 a chance. When you win it, also along with that, you want to get it delivered to your place, but it has to be within rural Belize and Belize City. That also comes along with the raffle, you understand? The reason I start early fi try juggle because definitely this value over $8,000.I nuh di get any younger. I need fi find something weh I love and weh I can go into with less stress, and somehow when I go up to my place, it doesn’t matter if it’s a few hours or overnight, I feel relaxed the most. The phone ring less. You’re the one with nature so that my focus.”

Alaine Postpones Reggae Sundays Performance

If you bought tickets and made plans to attend this weekend’s Reggae Sundays event, well, we have news for you. 

The featured guest, Jamaican-American singer Alaine, has rescheduled. In a video message, Alaine says these are doctor’s orders. She said she is recuperating from the flu. 

I will not be able to make it this week…doctor’s orders, but I promise thatwill be there next weekend, and we are going to have the best time together.” 

 

The organiser of the event said, “I was contacted by Alaine and her management a few minutes ago and informed that the artist due to circumstances beyond her control, is unable make an appearance in Belize this weekend as planned. As a consequence the management of Reggae Sundays is forced to push the slated Reggae Sundays All White Mother’s Day edition to the following Sunday May 26th 2024.” 

Some social media users expressed disappointment. One said, “Disappointed. Won’t even be in the country that weekend.” While another said, “Beyond your Control. Get well soon Alaine!” 

 

 

Cartel Clashes in Mexican City Leave 11 Dead 

At least 11 people have been killed in clashes between rival cartels in the southern Mexican state of Chiapas. Among the victims are two nuns and a teenager.

The area is contested by the Sinaloa cartel and the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG). Residents reported hearing intense gunfire on Monday night. On Tuesday, police and soldiers confirmed finding 11 bodies in and around the village of Nuevo Morelia.

The diocese of San Cristóbal, which includes Nuevo Morelia, confirmed that two women “who served the Catholic Church” were among the deceased. A 15-year-old boy was also identified as one of the victims. It remains unclear if the women were nuns or lay members of the Church, as some local media reported.

Fighting between the rival cartels has been ongoing since Friday. The Sinaloa cartel and the CJNG have been battling for control of the area for several years, often extorting migrants crossing the southern state on their way to the U.S. border.

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