Everything posted by Dr_-_PiKaChU
-
It was a fairly quiet day in baseball, as the country continues to mourn the loss of Hank Aaron. The Braves did make a transaction, however, and there were some other notable moves and rumors around the league. Braves News The biggest Braves news on Saturday was the acquisition of pitcher Victor Arano and outfielder Kyle Garlick via waivers from the Phillies. I wrote an article giving an overview of the two fairly interesting players, which you can read here. The 30,000 foot view is that they both could make the active roster out of spring training and contribute to some extent in the majors for Atlanta in 2020. These claims also filled the final two open spots on the 40-man roster, leaving the roster full. Brad and Eric also recorded a podcast talking about the rumor that the Braves are circling on JT Realmuto, George Springer and Michael Brantley signing elsewhere, a rumor that the Braves are looking to be active in the closer market, the aforementioned waiver claims, recently released prospect rankings, and more. MLB News Elsewhere in the NL East, the Nationals brought back a familiar face in 36 year old veteran Ryan Zimmerman on a one year deal. Zimmerman will re-join the team that drafted him for his 16th season with Washington after opting out of the 2020 season. The free agent market continued to move, as the Red Sox agreed to a one year deal with starting pitcher Garrett Richards. Boston is attempting to bolster their pitching staff that was nothing short of terrible in 2020, producing an absurdly low -0.1 fWAR on the season as a staff. In other news around the league, the Pirates are reportedly shopping starting pitcher Jameson Taillon, as Pittsburgh continues to sell off every piece they can for future assets. Mark Feinsand of MLB.com reports in addition to the Pirates willingness to trade Taillon that the Yankees appear to be frontrunners for the 29 year old starter at the moment.
-
• Your Nickname ( Must be same like teamspeak ) : Dr_-_PiKaChU • Your Age : 19 • Profile link :https://csblackdevil.com/forums/profile/83261-dr_-_pikachu/ • How much you can stay active in both forum & teamspeak ? : 5h+ • How you could help us a Devil harmony member ? : By Becoming a member of it, and helping it ❤️ • How much you rate Devil harmony project from 1 - 10 ? : 9/10 • Other informations about your request ? : No • Last request link : --
-
As reported, the Mustang Mach-E will have at least 56 percent residual value for the Select Standard Range (RWD), Select Standard Range (AWD), and GT Extended Range (AWD) trims. It will, however, have a whopping 58 percent residual value after the lease term for the California Route 1 Extended Range (RWD), Premium Extended Range (RWD), Premium Extended Range (AWD), and First Edition Extended Range (AWD) variants. In comparison, the 2021 Mustang Convertible EcoBoost has a residual value of 48 percent, while the GT coupe and Mach 1 will both have up to 53 percent residuals after leasing. Of note, having a better residual value means that the vehicle will retain its value well over the lease term, which could affect the lease rates. As the publication pointed out, it may even be better to get the Mach-E via the Ford Options Plan that involves balloon financing. Then again, rates may vary per state, so don't forget to compare and contrast your options when getting the new electric crossover, and choose the best one applicable to you.
-
Voted
-
ne of the most significant life transitions for our children is finishing high school forever. There is no question that many students feel hugely excited to have finished school and are buoyed up by never having to attend again. However for many students – especially those who don’t have a plan or who feel burnt out by years of study – it’s in these months after the summer holidays that reality sets in and some fall into what I call the “post-high school hole”. Today’s children and teens appear to be less resilient and capable of dealing with setbacks and disappointments than previous generations due to a complex set of contributing factors. Many lack confidence and the attributes that enable success – persistence, organisation skills, self-regulation, verbal communication skills, goal-setting strategies and the hunger to strive for excellence despite disappointment. The digital world, while having many positives, has contributed to a big increase in the entertainment sphere of our teens’ lives in particular. Whether it be never-ending social media updates, TikTok videos, selfies with an assortment of filters, sexting or gaming, today’s young people seem to spend less time in the real world developing the capacities to be competent, capable, resilient human beings. Sadly, in 2020, marinating in the 24/7 news cycle might have further added to our young people’s sense of powerlessness, disillusionment and despair. Class of 2020: Australian year 12 students on the year hijacked by a pandemic Read more Last year not only had a global pandemic, we saw racial tension and riots, natural disasters, a plethora of fake news and online nastiness, economic turmoil, joblessness, and a huge rise in the number of young people seeking mental health support and extra strain on frontline suicide prevention services. We must prioritise the wellbeing of our highly impressionable, emotionally vulnerable school leavers. For 2020’s graduates, the post-high school hole risks being a whole lot deeper. What’s worrying our young people In a 2019 survey of 12-18-year-old boys for my book From Boys to Men, I noticed significant concern about the future. Many boys expressed serious worries about climate change, political unrest, increasing violence, an inability to buy their own home and increased mental health challenges – and that was pre-Covid-19. I am sure teen girls share the same concerns and we know statistically many of them are struggling with much higher levels of self-harm, chronic anxiety and stress. In the latest Mission Australia annual survey of more than 25,800 young people aged 15-19, young people nominated as their the top three personal concerns coping with stress, mental health and body image.
-
ATLANTA — When Senator-elect Reverend Raphael Warnock embarked on his Senate race, he did so as a continuation of Dr. Martin Luther King’s work. Warnock serves as senior pastor of the congregation of Ebenezer Baptist Church, where King co-pastored from 1960 until his assassination in 1968. On Friday, Warnock delivered a sermon at The Temple, Atlanta’s oldest synagogue, as it hosted the 36th annual MLK Jr. Shabbat Service commemorating the rich history of Jewish and Christian communities’ shared fight for civil rights. There, for the 12th consecutive year, Warnock took to the pulpit to deliver a sermon to both congregations. This year, he did so as the victor in a runoff election that will make Warnock the first Black senator to represent Georgia. Also victorious was Senator-elect Jon Ossoff, who grew up attending the Temple where Rev. Warnock was speaking. “The election is now over, and standing together you have the pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church, where Martin Luther King stood,” said Warnock during the service, “standing alongside a young Jewish man, the son of immigrants on our way to represent this state in the Senate.” Warnock and Senator-elect Jon Ossoff’s political alliance in the runoff builds on the religious coalition of progress between the Jewish community and the Black Christian community that ran through Dr. King’s work in the Civil Rights Movement. “[King’s] work was addressing the triple evils of racism, poverty and militarism,” Rev. Warnock said. “But the full manifestation of his mission is left to us.” The mission has long brought Jewish and Black Christian communities together, and the mission has sometimes had grave consequences. In 1958, The Temple was bombed. While no arrests were ever made, it was understood as an anti-Semitic and racist attack. Rabbi Rothschild, The Temple’s leader at the time, was committed to addressing inequities and stood by Dr. King and other Black clergy members in their fight for civil rights. Now, in 2021, The Temple may have been the victim of another racist and anti-Semitic attack. During Friday’s broadcast, the synagogue’s livestream of the service was interrupted for over an hour, with viewers unable to access the service on any of the other synagogue client sites across the country. While the motives and culprits of the cyberattack are not clear, leaders at the synagogue speculate that it directly responds to the message of the service and Warnock’s presence. “One thing I know as a former U.S. attorney is not to rush to judgment but you do take the facts as you see them,” The Temple President Kent Alexander said. “And so, all I can do is speculate and it appears that somebody was trying to interfere with this service because of racism or anti-Semitism or both.” But just as Dr. King was undeterred by attacks, Warnock and the clergy of The Temple pushed through. At Sunday’s service at Ebenezer Baptist Church honoring Dr. King, Warnock shared a similar message, creating parallels between Dr. King’s work in the 1960s to the work communities continue today. Finding the commonality between King’s work in 1968 with Black sanitation workers in Memphis that led to the famous images of demonstrators holding the “I AM A MAN” signs and eventually, today’s Black Lives Matter movement. “Poor people, marginalized people, have to say the obvious and have to have movements to argue for themselves that which ought to be automatically given to them,” Warnock said. “There is equity in God’s vision,” Warnock declared, a sentiment that led his sermon through to its end. Warnock, a man intimately acquainted with the world’s inequities, aligned his Senate run with this very notion. As a Savannah native, he grew up in public housing with his 11 siblings. Both of his parents were pastors, though they struggled financially. He attended Morehouse College, one of the nation’s leading HBCUs and struggled to pay his tuition. Warnock credits these experiences for his understanding of what it truly means to be marginalized, he says. As Warnock closed Sunday’s service, he shared a striking allegory describing the power of geese flying in a V formation. In doing so, he pointed out that when the goose leading the V grows tired, it simply falls back further into the formation, giving way to a new leader who integrates itself seamlessly. “Geese understand that my individual location is not as important as our collective destination,” said Warnock, “and so that is why we have to stick together. We have to work together.” This story is part of a reporting effort by The GroundTruth Project on voting rights in America, with support from the Jesse and Betsy Fink Charitable Fund, Solutions Journalism Network and MacArthur Foundation.
-
Porsche lève le voile sur la version d’entrée de gamme de sa Taycan, démarrant alors sous la barre des 90 000 €, avec des performances qui restent intéressantes. Depuis son lancement en 2019, la gamme de la Porsche Taycan a pour le moins bien évolué. Alors que seules les versions Turbo et Turbo S avaient été dévoilées lors de sa révélation lors du salon de Francfort. Par la suite, le catalogue s’était alors enrichi d’une déclinaison 4S moins performante mais un peu plus accessible, dont nous avons pu prendre le volant il y a quelques mois. Pour rappel, celle-ci est alors en mesure de réaliser l’exercice du 0 à 100 km/h en seulement 4 secondes, contre 2,8 pour la Turbo S coiffant la gamme. Nous pensions alors que Porsche aurait pu s’arrêter là, avec un catalogue déjà bien complet. Mais c’est mal connaître la marque, qui nous gratifie en ce début d’année 2021 d’une toute nouvelle variante d’entée de gamme, sobrement baptisée Taycan, sans fioritures. Une nouvelle alternative qui permet alors d’abaisser le prix de la berline électrique, qui passe donc désormais sous la barre des 90 000 €, avec un ticket d’entrée affiché à 86 254 € très précisément. A ce prix-là, bien loin des 189 934 € de la Turbo S, soit plus de 100 000 € de plus, il reste néanmoins difficile de distinguer cette version de la 4S, alors que cette Taycan reprend les éléments stylistiques des versions plus haut de gamme. En réalité, seul le badge à l’arrière permettra de faire la différence, de même que les jantes aéro de 19 pouces, abritant des étriers de freins noirs. A l’intérieur, pas de gros changement à noter non plus, puisque l’écran tactile central de 10,9 pouces est toujours proposé de série, tandis qu’il est là encore possible d’opter pour une sellerie sans cuir. L’écran pour le passager est quant à lui également disponible en option, de même que l’affichage tête haute, tandis que le propriétaire peut s’offrir de nouvelles options à distance, sans avoir besoin de se rendre en atelier. Il peut même décider de profiter d’une fonctionnalité sur un temps limité, à la manière d’une location, alors que de plus en plus de marques se tournent vers ce modèle économique. Puissance en baisse En réalité, c’est du côté des performances qu’il faut regarder pour comprendre comment s’explique cette baisse de prix. En effet, la berline électrique n’est ici propulsée que par un seul moteur, contre deux pour la Turbo S. Placé à l’arrière, celui-ci est toujours associé à une boîte à deux rapports, améliorant considérablement l’efficacité, et permettant à la voiture de ne jamais s’essouffler à haute vitesse. Avec cette version, la marque de Stuttgart a tout de même souhaité laisser le choix à ses clients, en proposant deux niveaux de batteries différents, à savoir 79,2 kWh et 93,4 kWh, correspondant alors respectivement à des puissances de 326 (408 avec l’overboost) et 380 chevaux (476 avec l’overboost). Si l’autonomie maximale varie alors, passant de 431 à 484 kilomètres, le 0 à 100 km/h reste identique peu importe la batterie, et peut alors être réalisé en seulement 5,4 secondes, pour une vitesse maximale de 230 km/h. Autant dire que cette déclinaison n’a presque rien à envier à des versions plus haut de gamme et plus performantes ! L’auto peut alors encaisser une puissance de 225 ou 270 kW selon la version, alors que la recharge de 5 à 80 %- ne prend qu’une vingtaine de minutes. Concrètement, il est alors possible de récupérer pas moins de 100 kilomètres en seulement cinq minutes, réduisant alors considérablement la durée d’immobilisation de la voiture lors de longs trajets. Les premiers exemplaires de cette nouvelle Porsche Taycan devraient arriver dans les concessions de la marque d’ici au mois de mars prochain.
-
All eyes were on Lady Gaga when she stepped out to sing the national anthem at Kamala Harris-Joe Biden Inauguration on January 20. Not just with her performance, the international sensation stunned the audience with her flamboyant outfit too. Netizens were quick to point out how the Shallow singer’s outfit bore resemblance to that of Hunger Games, a po[CENSORED]r trilogy that was made into a film, starring Jennifer Lawrence. The singer looked marvellous in a massive floor-length custom Schiaparelli red skirt and a long black-sleeved top, and black leather gloves. It was particularly the huge gold dove brooch she wore that caught attention. Netizens, of course, compared it to Hunger Games’ Katniss Everdeen’s mockingjay pin. Here’s what they said:
-
Nickname: @Dr_-_PiKaChU Age: 19 Link with your forum profile: https://csblackdevil.com/forums/profile/83261-dr_-_pikachu/ How much time do you spend on our channel ts every day?: 6+ Where do you want to moderate? Check this topic: Free Time /Media ScreenShot as you have over 30 hours on CSBD TS3 Server (type ''!info'' in CSBD Guard) : https://www.zinguard.net/user/60055ea16d2e93ea17f2465b/info Link with your last request to join in our Team: -- Last 5 topics that you made on our section:
-
US President-elect Joe Biden has appointed Indian-American Sameera Fazili to a key White House position related to economy. Sameera Fazili has been named as Deputy Director, National Economic Council at the White House, the Biden-Harris Transition announced on Friday. The National Economic Council coordinates the economic policy making process and provide economic policy advice to the US president. Fazili is currently the Economic Agency lead on the Biden-Harris Transition. She was earlier posted at the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta where she served as the Director of Engagement for Community and Economic Development. Fazili is the second Kashmiri-origin Indian-American appointed to a key position in the incoming Biden administration. In December, Aisha Shah was named as Partnerships Manager at the White House Office of Digital Strategy. In the Obama-Biden administration, Fazili served as a senior policy advisor on the White House’s National Economic Council and as a senior advisor at the US Treasury Department in both Domestic Finance and International Affairs. Prior to that she was a clinical lecturer of law at Yale Law School. Originally from Buffalo, she now lives in Georgia with her husband and three children. Fazili is a graduate of Yale Law School and Harvard College. Before her time in government, Fazili was a clinical lecturer at Yale Law School’s community and economic development clinic, where she helped start a CDFI bank and a local anti-foreclosure initiative, and expanded the clinic’s work to international microfinance. She also worked at ShoreBank, the nation’s first CDFI (community development financial institution) bank. Her work in finance has spanned consumer, housing, small business and microfinance. She received her law degree from Yale Law School and her bachelor of arts in social studies from Harvard College.
-
FILE - Falih al-Fayyadh, Iraqi's then-national security adviser, gives a press conference in the southern city of Basra, March 7, 2018. The recent designation of a key Iraqi politician as a human rights violator by the U.S. Treasury Department has triggered mixed reactions in the conflict-ridden country, where the government has publicly joined pro-Iran voices to condemn the blacklisting. The U.S. said its sanctions, announced last week against Falih al-Fayyadh, head of the government’s Po[CENSORED]r Mobilization Commission (PMC) that regulates armed militias, were levied because of Fayyadh's alleged involvement in the killings of peaceful anti-government protesters two years ago. Fayyadh, a former national security adviser, is believed to be the most senior Iraqi figure sanctioned by Washington in recent years, increasing the possibility for further complication in relations between the two countries as some Iraqi lawmakers have renewed calls for the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq. The U.S. has about 2,500 troops in Iraq as part of a global coalition against Islamic State (IS). Iraq’s Foreign Ministry called Fayyadh’s designation “unacceptable.” “We stress that the decision was an unacceptable surprise and point out that the Ministry will carefully follow up with the current and new administration in Washington all decisions issued by the U.S. Treasury Department against Iraqi names and work to address this matter,” it said Saturday in a statement. FILE - Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi Despite Fayyadh’s high-profile status, the country’s top leaders — including Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi and President Barham Salih — have remained publicly silent on the designation. Analysts say al-Kadhimi, who has long struggled to rein in violent Iran-backed militia groups, is walking a tightrope to balance his country’s relations with both the U.S. and Iran. “Iraqi politicians have come to be chronically deferential to militias, especially since the 2018 elections that brought the militias to greater political prominence,” said Bilal Wahab, an Iraq expert at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. “The militias’ political agenda is pushed through a media network that is louder than that of the state and is enforced violently,” he told VOA. “Fear aside, such deference is in effect extended to Iran, especially in an election year that would soon invite Iran’s brokerage services to form the next Iraqi government.” ‘Political revenge’ The Fatah Coalition is the political front that represents the Shi’ite militia groups in the Iraqi parliament. In a statement, it called the designation of the government official a predictable attack on “the Iraqi state” itself. “We were confident that the outgoing U.S. administration would take a series of crazy and childish decisions and carry out a series of provocative moves,” the Fatah said in a statement on Saturday. Fadhil al-Fatlawi, a lawmaker with the pro-Iran Al-Sadiqoun Bloc, called Fayyadh’s designation an “Israeli project.” “America does not like the victories achieved by the Po[CENSORED]r Mobilization Forces against its project and Israel’s project in the region, which is represented by the terrorist gangs of Daesh,” he said, using an Arabic acronym for IS. Washington leads an international coalition against IS, which includes providing weapons and training to Iraqi security forces battling the terror group. Not all criticism of Fayyadh’s designation came from Iran’s proxies, however. Izzat Shabandar, an independent and influential Iraqi politician, called the U.S. designation “political revenge.” Leaders of Kurdish and Sunni minority groups have not publicly addressed the designation. Iraq announced Monday that its National Security Adviser Qassem al-Araji had met with U.S. Ambassador to Iraq Matthew H. Tuelle to “reject” the designation and discuss ways to “strengthen relations between Baghdad and Washington.” U.S. officials say Fayyadh has played a major role in violence against Iraqi protesters in 2019. FILE - Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin “By directing and supervising the murder of peaceful Iraqi demonstrators, Iran-aligned militants and politicians such as Falih al-Fayyadh have been waging a violent campaign against Iraqi democracy and civil society,” Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said in a statement following the designation. The U.S. sanctions aim at freezing any assets Fayyadh has under U.S. jurisdiction and bans U.S. firms from doing business with him. More sanctions Fayyadh’s designation comes as part of a broader Trump administration strategy to ratchet up sanctions against Iranian proxy groups throughout the Middle East. On Sunday, the U.S. added the Ansarallah group — also known as the Houthis in Yemen — to its list of foreign terrorist organizations. FILE - Houthi followers stand by bills of Yemeni currency during a ceremony held by Houthis to collect supplies for their fighters battling government forces in various front lines, in Sanaa, Yemen, Sept. 24, 2020. In Iraq, the U.S. has targeted several other pro-Iranian militia leaders in recent years, including Qais al-Khazali and Hussein Falah al-Lami. Experts say the most powerful U.S. blow to the Iraqi militias came last year when a U.S. drone strike killed powerful Iranian Gen. Qassem Soleimani and Iraqi militia leader Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis in Baghdad. Fayyadh was targeted under the Global Magnitsky Human Rights Accountability Act, named after an outspoken Russian activist who died in police custody in 2009. The U.S. says such sanctions target serious human rights abusers around the world.
-
People from the Shiite Hazara community gather around the bodies of coal mine workers who were killed by unknown gunmen near the Machh coal field, in Quetta, Pakistan, Jan. 3, 2021. QUETTA, PAKISTAN - Members of the Shi'ite Hazara minority in Pakistan who have blockaded a highway in Quetta with the bodies of slain coal miners said on Tuesday they will not withdraw until Prime Minister Imran Khan meets them and the killers are brought to justice. Islamic State militants slit the throats of 11 miners in a residential compound near a mine site in Pakistan's Balochistan province on Sunday, filming the entire incident and later posting it online. Thousands of Hazaras have since staged a protest, arranging the coffins across a highway in the provincial capital Quetta. "We have become tired of picking up the bodies of our people," Syed Agha Raza, a Hazara Shi'ite political leader, told Reuters. Masooma Yaqoob Ali told Reuters her elder brother along with four other relatives were among those killed. “Now we have no male member [of our family] to take coffins of our brother and other relatives to the graveyard for burial,” she said, shedding tears as she spoke. The protesters are refusing to bury the victims of the attack until demands, which include the resignation of the provincial government, are met. Protests also occurred on Tuesday in Karachi, Pakistan's large southern city. Balochistan Home Secretary Hafiz Basid told Reuters at least nine of the victims were from neighboring Afghanistan, and two bodies had thus far been taken there for burial. Afghanistan's Foreign Office said in a statement that seven of the dead were Afghan, and both sides were investigating the incident together. Hazaras have faced persecution by extremists in both countries, where Sunni Islam predominates. Some Afghan Hazaras come to Pakistan for work in the winter, including at the coal mine in Balochistan. Hundreds of Hazara have been killed over the last decade in attacks in Pakistan, including bombings in schools and crowded markets and brazen ambushes of buses along Pakistani roads.
-
Wedged-shaped supercars are undoubtedly etched in the history of motoring. Their futuristic appeal, partnered with impressive performance figures makes them poster-worthy. One of the notable nameplates during the early '90s was the Vector W8, created by entrepreneur Gerald "Jerry" Wiegert, who founded the company in 1971. He initially called the company the "Vehicle Design Force," which he later renamed Vector after partnering with Hollywood movie car expert Lee Brown. Unfortunately, Wiegert has reportedly passed on January 15 in California at the age of 76, Automotive News reports. The cause of death hasn't been disclosed at the time of this writing. Wiegert was born in Dearborn in 1944. He attended Detroit's College for Creative Studies and completed an internship at General Motors' Technical Center. He also graduated from ArtCenter College of Design in California then later worked as a freelance designer before putting up Vector to rival po[CENSORED]r European supercars like Lamborghini and Ferrari. The Vector W8 supercar, though short-lived, was Wiegert's greatest creation. It made an impact in the motoring industry, debuting in 1989 with the first two prototypes – one running and one static. Part of the Vector W8's acclaim was its reported top speed of 242 miles per hour (389 kilometers per hour), and 0 to 60 mph sprint of just 3.9 seconds. The pull comes from a twin-turbocharged 6.0-liter V8 that initially makes 625 horsepower (466 kilowatts) and 649 pound-feet (880 Newton-meters) of torque on 8 PSI of boost. Pumping up the boost to 14 PSI can make the same power plant churn out 1,200 hp (895 kW), according to the company. The Vector W8 didn't have a wide customer base, only producing up to 17 customer cars (and two prototypes) during its production period. It was also Wiegert's swan song to the company as it was taken over by the Indonesian company, Megatech, giving birth to the M12 supercar in 1995.
-
The chilly season brings along a lot of troubles for our skin, and can even lead to eczema flares ups. “One of the major reasons it worsens during the winter season is because the skin can’t keep itself moisturised. Moreover, wearing too many layers of clothes along with the use of heaters can cause the skin to turn red and itchy,” said Dr Aakriti Mehra, dermatologist, cosmetologist, and trichologist at Skingenius, Colaba. Below, she explains the skin condition, its triggers, and also shares how one can treat the same. Read on to know more. What is Eczema? Eczema (dermatitis) is a rash that can appear anywhere on the body. It appears as inflamed, itchy, red, and very dry, explains Dr Mehra. “This happens to be the most common type is atopic dermatitis, which is usually a lifelong condition present since childhood. It is more commonly found in individuals who have a family history of atopy. Moreover, it is seen most commonly in skin flexures and can be triggered by multiple internal or external factors,” adds the dermatologist The most common cause of atopic eczema is dry skin. People who suffer from this condition lack the ability to pull moisture into the upper layers of the skin and therefore various triggers can irritate the skin, in turn, exacerbating the condition, says Dr Mehra. These triggers range from environmental factors such as dust, pollen, perfumes, or even food allergies such as nuts, vegetables, and even from seafood. However, stress happens to be a prominent reason along with sweating. What are the signs and symptoms? The major signs, as mentioned above, include dry, red, and itchy skin. However, it can also be associated with excessive sebum production, but according to Dr Mehra, “the chances are rare”. “The condition occurs because of a gene variation, and therefore there isn’t any cure available. However, it can be managed symptomatically with topical and oral medication as well as a few lifestyle modifications,” says the dermatologist. Other than that, one should ensure their skin is thoroughly moisturised, and avoid the triggers as much as possible. Here are to avoid flaring up of the skincare issue.
-