A woman wearing a mask walks on a street in Beijing on Nov 14, 2018. [Photo/IC] Meteorological conditions in northern China will generally be unfavorable for the dispersal of air pollutants until February, as the region enters the period that typically features the highest air pollution, authorities said. The assessment by the National Climate Center and China National Environmental Monitoring Center was published on Thursday, as northern parts of the country officially started to supply heat to buildings. Cold air movement from northern parts of the country are expected to be weak from December to February this winter, leading to calm air masses. That means air pollutants will be more difficult to disperse, according to a statement to media from the China Meteorological Administration, which oversees the National Climate Center. Most parts of the country will experience a warmer winter than average, though there will be a comparatively colder start to the season, it said. Precipitation will be unevenly distributed, with northern and southern China wetter than average. But central areas will see more dry weather, it said. The eastern part of Northwest China and western parts of North China will see precipitation 20 to 50 percent less than average this coming winter, it said. Without adequate precipitation, more dust is likely to be blown into the air, raising PM2.5 particulate concentrations. Moreover, the use of coal to warm homes makes winter the season with the most air pollution in northern China. He Kebin, dean of the School of Environment at Tsinghua University, said sulfur dioxide emissions were expected to increase by almost 50 percent in the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei cluster after the start of heating season. The cluster includes 28 major cities in Hebei, Shandong, Shanxi and Henan provinces as well as Beijing and Tianjin. There will also be a 30 percent increase of PM2.5-fine particles that can enter the bloodstream-from emissions. Even without the burning of coal for heating, the cluster is still one of the most heavily polluted regions, with a large concentration of industrial smokestacks for steel, construction materials and chemicals, and a dependence on diesel-powered trucks for transportation, said He, who is also a member of the Chinese Academy of Engineering. custom wristbands canada
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Children learn about earcare in Baotou, Inner Mongolia autonomous region, on March 3, 2017. [Photo/Baotou Daily] BEIJING -- Chinese experts have called for improved awareness of hearing impairment and increasing the use of hearing aids as the country has about 100 million people with hearing disabilities. Long Mo, deputy director of the China Rehabilitation Research Center for Hearing and Speech Impairment, said only 7.9 percent of Chinese who suffer from medium-level or worse hearing impairments use hearing aids or artificial cochleas. Gao Zhiqiang, director of the Department of Otolaryngology with the Peking Union Medical College Hospital, said people also tend to make mistakes in wearing hearing aids, causing further deterioration of their hearing abilities. Patients with hearing loss in both ears are recommended to wear hearing aids on both sides, Gao said. But only 15 percent of those wearing hearing aids go through fitting for both of their ears. Wang Shuo, a researcher at the Beijing Institute of Otolaryngology, said hearing aids with Chinese language processors can help improve the equipment's recognition of speech and therefore better suit users whose mother tongue is Chinese.
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