Tech
Now You Can Get Your Flu Vaccine at Home

Instead of going to the pharmacy to get the annual flu vaccine, many people in the US will now be able to get it shipped to their door to take at home themselves.
Starting today, AstraZeneca’s FluMist is available through an online pharmacy in 34 states. FluMist is not a new vaccine. It was originally approved by the Food and Drug Administration in 2003 and previously could only be administered by a health care professional. But last September, the FDA said the vaccine could be self-administered.
It’s AstraZeneca’s first foray into direct-to-consumer medicine—a trend being spearheaded by Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly to sell their popular GLP-1 drugs for diabetes and weight management to patients.
“We recognized that people’s daily lives are busier than ever, and we knew we needed to meet people where they are facing the realities of real life,” said Tonya Villafana, vice president of medical and scientific affairs at AstraZeneca, at a press conference on Thursday. “FluMist Home is designed to remove traditional obstacles to vaccination, things like scheduling clinic visits, waiting in line, and the fear of needles.”
AstraZeneca is hoping that an at-home offering will help boost flu vaccination rates. Only about 47 percent of adults get vaccinated against flu, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Among children, flu vaccination rates are dropping along with those of other routine childhood vaccines. As of April 26 this year, 49.2 percent of children received a flu vaccination—lower than 53.4 percent at the same time the previous season, per the CDC.
“Getting vaccinated each year is the best way to prevent influenza, which causes illness in a substantial proportion of the US population every year and may result in serious complications, including hospitalization and death,” said Peter Marks, former director of the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, in a statement last year on FluMist’s approval for self-administration.
The CDC classified the 2024-2025 flu season as high severity across all age groups in the US, resulting in at least 610,000 hospitalizations and 27,000 deaths. It was the most severe flu season since the 2009 H1N1 swine flu pandemic.
AstraZeneca’s September 2024 approval was based on a study with vaccine recipients and caregivers to evaluate whether the instructions for use were appropriately designed so that they could safely and effectively use the vaccine.
The vaccine contains a weakened form of the live influenza virus and protects against four types of flu strains. It is approved for ages 2 through 49. For those under 18, it must be administered by a caregiver.
To order, customers will need to complete a medical screening questionnaire. A licensed health care provider will review each submission to determine eligibility. Once eligibility is confirmed and insurance is verified, the vaccine will be prescribed and shipped directly to the purchaser’s home on a date they select. FluMist is covered by most insurance plans, but consumers will need to pay an $8.99 delivery fee.
AstraZeneca says FluMist is not yet available in all states due to local pharmacy laws, but the company aims to be able to provide the at-home spray to all the contiguous states in the future. The vaccine will continue to be available in doctors’ offices and pharmacies for administration by health care professionals across the country.
Tech
Air conditioning isn’t the only answer

I recently returned from visiting family in America and was struck by how hot I felt back home in London, despite the temperatures being lower. Partly, this was down to humidity: London is sticky in summer, while Utah, where my uncle lives, is very dry.
But it’s also down to the buildings. My brick house absorbs and retains heat while every building I went to in America was either well ventilated or had air conditioning blasting away.
That contrast got me thinking: as the UK warms, can it keep its homes and workplaces comfortable without relying solely on air-con?
Jesus Lizana, Nicole Miranda and Radhika Khosla at the University of Oxford say that northern Europe is dangerously unprepared for the heat of the near future.
They looked at the coming demand for cooling using the concept of “cooling degree days,” which essentially assesses how often people will need to take extra measures, like switching the air-conditioning on, to keep themselves cool.
They found countries like Nigeria and Chad will see the biggest absolute rise in cooling degree days. “A clear indication that Africa is shouldering the burden of a problem it did not create,” they note.
But they also found that countries in northern latitudes will face the greatest relative increase in uncomfortably hot days.
“Of the top ten countries with the most significant relative change in cooling degree days as global warming exceeds 1.5°C and reaches 2°C, eight are located in northern Europe.”
It gets worse. “Buildings in the northern hemisphere,” they write, “are primarily designed to withstand cold seasons by maximizing solar gains and minimizing ventilation—like greenhouses.”
The solution seems obvious: let’s all get air-con.
Coal-powered air-con?
But Mehri Khosravi says it isn’t that simple. An energy researcher at the University of East London, she warns that:
“Cooling requires huge amounts of energy at the exact moments when demand is already high. In 2022 and 2023, the UK had to briefly restart a coal power plant to keep the lights—and the air conditioners—on.”
Khosravi says the UK and similar countries should instead focus on reducing demand for cooling.
In winter, she says, we rightly focus on better insulation to reduce heating demand, as “it’s a lot harder to warm a house than it is to stop heat escaping in the first place.”
So how do we stop a northern European brick house from heating up in the first place?
Khosravi suggests we look to southern Europe for inspiration, where 35°C summers were common long before climate change. Her suggestions include shading and shutters to block sunlight before it enters a building, natural ventilation to let heat escape in cooler hours, and reflective or light-colored buildings that reflect sunlight.
It’s hard to imagine Scarborough being turned into Santorini any time soon. But while we wait to adapt our buildings for the new normal, Khosravi says we should adapt our behavior too.
In Spain, the hottest hours are for siestas. Outdoor activities are paused, and people are more active in the mornings and evenings. Culturally, they understand that keeping curtains closed during the day and opening windows at night can prevent homes from overheating.
In the UK, heat is still culturally framed as “good weather”. Sunny weekends trigger beach trips, barbecues and more outdoor activity, even when it’s dangerously hot. This mismatch between perception and risk is a major public health challenge.
Smarter cooling
Perhaps there are smarter ways to cool down. Academics in Australia recently published research suggesting a “fan first” approach, even when air-conditioning is installed.
“The approach is simple,” they write: “use electric fans as your first cooling strategy, and only turn on air conditioning when the indoor temperature exceeds 27°C.”
These fans use only a tiny fraction of the electricity used to run air conditioning, but “can make you feel up to 4°C cooler.” In their research, the Australian team increased an office’s air conditioning set-point from 24 to 26.5°C, with supplementary air movement from desk and ceiling fans. This “reduced energy consumption by 32%, without compromising thermal comfort.”
Air conditioning doesn’t have to mean the typical rows of humming white boxes. Heat pumps—already central to Britain’s low-carbon heating plans—can also keep homes cool in summer.
Essentially, they’re able to act like reversible air conditioners: in winter, they draw warmth into a building, and in summer they can run in reverse to push heat out.
Crucially, they do so with far greater efficiency than traditional systems. Theresa Pistochini, an engineer at UC Davis in California, points out that heat pumps can be “anywhere from 200% to 400% efficient,” meaning they move more than twice as much energy (heat) than the energy required to operate them.
Her analysis found that “buying a heat pump today will reduce global-warming impact in almost all geographical locations.”
For households, this could mean one appliance that covers both heating and cooling, slashes energy bills, and avoids the climate-damaging lock-in of conventional air conditioning. For policymakers, heat pumps may offer a way to meet surging cooling demand without blowing the carbon budget.
But heat pumps aren’t a perfect fix. Installation is costly, many older homes will still need upgrades, and there aren’t enough trained engineers. They’ll need further support if they’re to become a mainstream alternative to air-con.
Nonetheless, together with simple measures like fans and shutters, heat pumps point to a smarter approach to cooling. And it could be made even more sustainable if paired with clean energy from rooftop solar.
Homes equipped with solar panels can generate electricity during the hottest parts of the day—exactly when air conditioners or heat pumps are working hardest.
Tom Rogers and colleagues at Nottingham Trent University say solar will play a “pivotal role” in “addressing summer cooling demand and enhancing climate resilience.” They analyzed satellite images to estimate that rooftop solar could provide “nearly one third” of the city’s electricity demand.
The UK is warming, and staying comfortable in hotter summers is a must. But there’s more than one way to cool down. Simple measures like fans, efficient heat pumps and rooftop solar—combined with smarter building design and passive cooling—could keep homes safe, energy use low and emissions in check.
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
Citation:
Air conditioning isn’t the only answer (2025, August 28)
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Tech
Minimal 3D model reveals fundamental mechanisms behind toughening of soft–hard composites

Engineers have long grappled with a fundamental challenge: creating materials that are both strong and tough enough to resist deformation and prevent fractures. These two properties typically exist in opposition, as materials that excel in one area often fail in the other.
Nature, however, has elegantly solved this trade-off in biological materials like bone, teeth, and nacre, which strategically combine soft and hard components in multi-layered architectures. These blueprints have inspired scientists to develop artificial soft–hard composites—from advanced dual-phase steels to specialized gels and reinforced rubbers—that demonstrate performance exceeding that of their individual components.
While artificial soft–hard composites have shown impressive performance in laboratory tests and real-world applications, the fundamental mechanisms behind their enhanced properties remain largely unclear. The inherent complexity of these materials, encompassing nonlinear behaviors, intricate internal structures, and multi-scale interactions, has made it difficult to isolate the essential design principles.
Specifically, scientists have struggled to understand how these materials transition from brittle-to-ductile (BTD) fracture behavior, and what the minimum requirements are for constituent components to achieve this toughening effect.
In this vein, a research team including Dr. Fucheng Tian and Professor Jian Ping Gong from the Faculty of Advanced Life Science, Hokkaido University, Japan, as well as Specially Appointed Professor Katsuhiko Sato from the Program of Mathematics and Informatics, University of Toyama, Japan, recently undertook a study to tackle this complex problem.
In their pioneering work published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the researchers introduce a minimal three-dimensional soft–hard composite (SH-com) framework. By eliminating complicated nonlinear effects and intricate network structures, their model enabled them to focus on the core underlying principles governing the toughening effect.
The SH-com model uses randomly distributed linear-elastic soft and hard elements, each characterized by its elastic stiffness and the energy required for failure. Despite its simplicity, this model successfully reproduced several hallmark behaviors of tough composite materials, including mechanical hysteresis (the Mullins effect), sacrificial bond-driven toughening, and the critical BTD transition fracture behavior. Through systematic testing of different compositions, the team discovered that the BTD transition occurs when the soft and hard phases reach a specific mechanical equilibrium.
Moreover, they found that optimal toughening occurs at a specific ratio of soft to hard components, governed by a universal scaling relationship linked to the differences in fracture toughness between components. When an optimal composition is achieved, the composite can exceed the toughness of its individual constituents.
“Though the SH-com model is anchored in the fundamental linear-elastic regime, the outcomes exhibit compelling consistency with the experimental findings from nonlinear soft–hard composite materials. This consistency emphasizes the fundamental principles underlying the toughening mechanisms in general soft–hard composite materials,” remarks Dr. Fucheng.
Based on these insights, the team developed a “toughening phase diagram,” which serves as a practical guide illustrating the optimal combinations of stiffness and toughness between components to achieve superior material performance. Notably, the simplicity and universality of their model suggest that these principles can be applied broadly.
“Our study reveals the fundamental toughening mechanisms of SH-com systems, offering insights for designing tougher materials,” conclude the authors. “In fields such as regenerative medicine, the development of tough gels is required, and we expect our study to contribute to those efforts.”
From the development of more resilient components for aerospace and automotive applications to advanced biomaterials for tissue engineering and medical devices, this research provides a powerful theoretical foundation for engineering materials that are both strong and tough.
More information:
Fucheng Tian et al, Fundamental toughening landscape in soft–hard composites: Insights from a minimal framework, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2025). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2506071122
Citation:
Minimal 3D model reveals fundamental mechanisms behind toughening of soft–hard composites (2025, August 28)
retrieved 28 August 2025
from https://techxplore.com/news/2025-08-minimal-3d-reveals-fundamental-mechanisms.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no
part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.
Tech
Data visualization emerges a key driver of decision-making at organizational and community levels

Data visualization has emerged as a powerful tool for enabling data-driven decision-making across diverse domains, including business, medicine, and scientific research. However, no comprehensive analysis has previously addressed the types of decision-making problems supported by data visualization or how its role has evolved.
Researchers have conducted a systematic review of significant data visualization research over the past 16 years, classifying and analyzing the studies within a multidimensional decision-making framework. They determined that data visualization primarily facilitates decision-making at the organizational and community levels. Their study is published as part of the 2025 IEEE 18th Pacific Visualization Conference (PacificVis).
Although earlier efforts primarily addressed “evaluative” decision-making, recent trends indicate increasing support for a broader range of decision-making types, including “constructive” and “cognitive dominance” decision-making. Moreover, the structure of decision-making problems addressed by data visualization has expanded from “largely structured problems” to “semi-structured problems.”
The findings indicate that data visualization increasingly supports advanced decision-making by experts in fields such as business and public policy, particularly concerning semi-structured problems.
The findings of this study clarify the current scope of decision-making support provided by data visualization and offer insights to guide the development of new visualization techniques. They also highlight the need for further research into visualization methods capable of supporting individual-level decision-making and unstructured problems.
More information:
Midori Sugihara et al, Contribution of Data Visualization to Decision-Making: A Classification of Data Visualization Research Based on the Characteristics of Decision Problems, 2025 IEEE 18th Pacific Visualization Conference (PacificVis) (2025). DOI: 10.1109/PacificVis64226.2025.00033
Citation:
Data visualization emerges a key driver of decision-making at organizational and community levels (2025, August 28)
retrieved 28 August 2025
from https://techxplore.com/news/2025-08-visualization-emerges-key-driver-decision.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no
part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.
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