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  • How experts expect artificial intelligence to advance health care in 2024

    TORONTO - The rise of technologies such as ChatGPT has thrust artificial intelligence into the spotlight throughout 2023 — and health care is no exception.
  • Millennial Money: Would your documents survive a disaster? What to protect and how to do it

    Floods, fires, historic storms — severe weather events are on the rise. If your home was hit by high water or a wildfire, would your important papers be safe?
  • Lean green flying machines take wing in Paris, heralding transport revolution

    LE BOURGET, France (AP) — Just a dot on the horizon at first, the bug-like and surprisingly quiet electrically-powered craft buzzes over Paris and its traffic snarls, treating its doubtless awestruck passenger to privileged vistas of the Eiffel Tower and the city's signature zinc-grey rooftops before landing him or her with a gentle downward hover. And thus, if all goes to plan, could a new page in aviation history be written.
  • Master business skills without paying for an MBA

    Lindsay Mack earned her bachelor’s degree from Georgetown University in 2005. Nearly 15 years later, when she considered the best way to grow her business acumen, an MBA was not it.
  • 'He just understood everything': Therapists gets cultural training at CAMH to help treat South Asian patients

    Anxiety fuelled by loneliness and self-doubt had such a grip on Sidra Mobin that she couldn't get out of bed some days and took a leave from work. When the family she'd recently left in Pakistan called, she would keep her troubles in Canada to herself for fear of worrying them.
  • WHO Syria boss accused of corruption, fraud, abuse, AP finds

    LONDON (AP) — Staffers at the World Health Organization’s Syrian office have alleged that their boss mismanaged millions of dollars, plied government officials with gifts -- including computers, gold coins and cars -- and acted frivolously as COVID-19 swept the country.
  • For young workers hoping to move up, hybrid work model creates unique challenges

    TORONTO - After working remotely since starting a new job at the beginning of the year, Madison Rogers was excited to get into the office in March and spend time collaborating with her co-workers at Toronto-based Fuse Create.
  • So you want a new job? Here’s how to retrain

    The tens of millions of workers who have left their jobs in the “Great Resignation” — 4.4 million in September alone, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics — won’t necessarily need to retrain before they land their next job. But those who want a new career entirely may find little financial help and social support to acquire the skills they need for the future, labor experts say.
  • Michigan city on edge as lead water crisis persists

    BENTON HARBOR, Mich. (AP) — Shortly after sunrise on a recent Saturday in Benton Harbor, Michigan, residents began lining up for free bottled water so they could drink and cook without fear of the high levels of lead in the city’s tap water.
  • Small islands caught between tourism economy, climate change

    NEW YORK (AP) — Come visit the Maldives, its president entreated the world at this year's United Nations General Assembly, moments before switching to an impassioned plea for help combating climate change. The adjacent appeals illustrated a central dilemma for many small island developing states: their livelihoods, or their lives?

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