Maldives by Capital Travel
Maldives, officially Republic of Maldives, Dhivehi Raa #39;jeyge Jumhooriyya), also referred to as the Maldive Islands, is an island nation in the Indian Ocean f...
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Maldives by Capital Travel
Maldives, officially Republic of Maldives, Dhivehi Raa #39;jeyge Jumhooriyya), also referred to as the Maldive Islands, is an island nation in the Indian Ocean f...
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Minecraft: Castaway Islands Episode 7 - Resort Island
Subscribe to become an Electrician today: http://goo.gl/RAaR7C Please slap the shit out of that like button if you enjoyed! Server: play.castawaymc.net Get...
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Minecraft: Castaway Islands Episode 7 - Resort Island - Video
Adapting to Climate Change in the Cook Islands - The Health Dimension
Part of a series of documentaries produced by The Pacific Way Crew for our SPC Climate Change Program.
By: Cannibal Fiji
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Adapting to Climate Change in the Cook Islands - The Health Dimension - Video
New rules = Bad news ~ Minecraft Islands EP003
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Wednesday, February 26, 2014
Story last updated at 2/26/2014 - 1:49 pm
By Pat Roppel | For the Capital City Weekly
So many small islands in Southeast Alaska were dedicated in the 1920s and early 1930s to blue fox farming. It was fashionable in that era to wear fox fur coats, stoles, cuffs and collars. Two small islands, protecting Zarembo Island's St. John Harbor, nurtured foxes for their furs.
St. John Harbor indents the northwest side of Zarembo Island, off Sumner Strait and almost opposite the southern entrance to Wrangell Narrows. Today it is a favorite harbor for fishermen, fish tenders, vessels involved with nearby logging, and visiting yachts waiting for high tide to go through the narrows to Petersburg.
A number of years ago, my husband Frank and I, traveling aboard the Twinkle, decided to see if any remains could be found about 70 years after the farms were abandoned. Northerly Island - as the name implies - is an island that is at the northern mouth of the harbor. Officers on the gunboat USS Adams named it in 1885. Southerly Island is on the southwest entry. It too was named by the unimaginative officers of the Adams.
In the early 1920s, farming foxes on an island (where the animals could not swim away) became popular. W. W. McLaughlin, formerly in charge of the Petersburg Signal Corps office, decided Northerly Island suited his purposes. In 1921, he leased the island from the federal government and spent the next year building a dock and float to facilitate loading and unloading supplies.
We found where the dock had been located. The pilings were no longer visible, but we found a sturdy rock wall alongside a flat, rocked platform leading into the water. The location surprised us.
Why had he chosen this site? We knew from experience that southeast winds hit the island. Years before, on a sunny December trip, we tied to the face of the U.S. Forest Service dock on the westerly side of the bay. In the night, a strong southeaster blew up, slamming the Twinkle against the dock. The boat survived the night and in the morning we began, (after looking out at mountainous waves in Sumner Strait), a search for a protected anchorage.
The fox farm dock was on the southeasterly side, and it was uncomfortably rough there. We anchored on the westerly side of Northerly Island and still encountered wind-whipped water. With a smaller boat or skiff, the fox farmer had more choices than we did.
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DNA Genotek at ESHG 2013 - Dr. Calvin Harley, Ph.D. of Telomere Diagnostics presents at ESHG 2013
Calvin Harley, Ph.D., of Telomere Diagnostics shares his clinical research work into the impact of telemere length on health and aging at the 2013 European S...
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Today in Science
I am Syra Mehdi, and my purpose is to provide you with the latest most interesting and fascinating research in the world of science. -Biotechnology, the comb...
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By Dennis Thompson HealthDay Reporter
TUESDAY, Feb. 25, 2014 (HealthDay News) -- U.S. Food and Drug Administration hearings opened Tuesday on a controversial fertilization technique that uses the DNA from three people -- two women and one man -- with the goal of preventing inherited genetic diseases.
The technique involves the unfertilized eggs, or "oocytes," from two females. Parts of each egg are combined to weed out inherited genetic disorders contained in one woman's DNA, and the resulting healthy egg is then fertilized using a male's sperm.
The FDA's two-day hearing is meant to provide a forum for discussing how this technique might be tested in human clinical trials.
But the discussion is expected to veer into the ethics of manipulating human genetics to produce "perfect" babies.
"The potential benefits are huge, but the potential harms are also huge," said Dr. Michelle Huckaby Lewis, a faculty member at the Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics and the Genetics and Public Policy Center, in Washington, D.C.
The procedure could have unintended health consequences both for newborns and for future generations, as the genetic tinkering reverberates through time, Lewis said.
In addition, she said, the technique raises troubling questions of parental rights and family structure.
"When you use a technology in a new way like this, it really challenges our notions of what it means to be a parent and what it means to be a family," Lewis said.
The hearing was prompted by the work of Shoukhrat Mitalipov, an associate scientist at Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU).
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Story Created: Feb 26, 2014 at 12:27 AM ECT
Story Updated: Feb 26, 2014 at 12:27 AM ECT
INFECTIONS In addition to HPV infections discussed last week, there are other infections that can increase the risk of cancers. Hepatitis B and C viruses increases the risks of liver cancers. Human T-Cell Leukemia Virus -(HTLV-1)-Increases the risk of leukemia and lymphoma. Human Immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-increases the risk of lymphoma, and a rare cancer called Kaposi Sarcoma. Epstein Barr Virus (E.B. virus) is linked to increased risk of lymphoma. Human Herpes Virus is a risk factor for Kaposi Sarcoma Helicobacter Pylori-a is bacteria that causes stomach ulcers and is thought to increase the risk of stomach cancers and lymphomas.
ALCOHOL There are clear patterns that have emerged between alcohol consumption and certain types of cancer such as head and neck cancers, oesophageal, liver, breast and colon cancers. People who consume 50 or more grammes of alcohol per day have a two or three times greater risk of developing cancer than non drinkers. When alcohol is metabolised, it forms a compound known as Acetaldehyde which is toxic and a possible human carcinogen which damages human DNA. Alcohol also generates reactive oxygen species which damages the DNA, in addition, alcohol impairs the bodys ability to break down and absorb a variety of nutrients that may be associated with cancer risks. Alcohol also increases blood levels of oestrogen, a sex hormone linked to risk of breast cancers.
FOODS AND CHEMICALS Chemicals can be found in certain foods such as potato chips, French fries and other food products which are produced by high temperature cooking. One example is Asparagine which is an amino acid, a building block of proteins found in many vegetables and foods, such as potatoes. When heated to high temperatures, Asparagine, can form Acrylamide -a possible human carcinogen which can cause oral, pharynx, larynx, breast and ovarian cancers. Heterocyclic amines (HCA) and Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) have also been found to be cancer causing. These are produced when muscle meat, including beef, pork or poultry, is cooked at very high temperature. HCA and PAH can cause mutations or changes in DNA that may increase cancer risks. Artificial sweeteners: These are substances that are used instead of sucrose (table sugar) to sweeten food and beverages. They include; saccharin, aspartame, sucralose, neotame and cyclamate. Many of these chemicals are thought to be carcinogenic as they have been found to cause cancers in animal studies. Agricultural products: Researches have shown that people exposed to certain products may have an increased risk of developing one or more types of cancer. Farmers, farm workers and family members may be exposed to substances such as pesticides, herbicides, engine exhausts, solvents, dusts, animal viruses, fertilisers, fuels and certain microbes that may increase cancer risks. Chemicals such as Formaldehyde, a colorless, flammable, strong smelling chemical used in building materials and house hold products,is also carcinogenic especially in cases of long term exposures. It is used in pressed woods, particle boards, plywoods, fibre boards, glues and adhesives, and is also found in fungicides, germicides, disinfectants and in preservatives in mortuaries. People who have certain jobs like painters, construction workers and those in chemical industries have increased risk of certain cancers especially when exposed to chemicals such as Asbestos, benzene, cadmium, nickel and vinyl chloride.
RADIATION Ionising radiation can cause cell damage that leads to cancers. X rays medically used for diagnostic investigations can increase cancer risk, even though the risk is low. Radiation therapy used to treat certain cancers can also increase the risk of some other cancers. Its not uncommon to meet a patient who requests an X-ray even when it is not necessary. The fact is that x-rays are a diagnostic tool, not a treatment, and they are not always beneficial. Unnecessary demand and frequent exposure to them may not be a wise idea. Ultra Violet (UV) radiation from the sun is another risk factor. Our UV index is generally high each time you see the weather news. These rays cause the early aging of the skin and skin changes that can lead to skin cancers, especially in caucasians, albinos and people with low melanin (skin pigmentations).
HAIR DYES More than 5,000 different chemicals are used in hair dye products, some of which are reported to be carcinogenic. Over the years, some studies have found an increased risk of bladder cancers in hairdressers and barbers. Some studies also linked the personal use of hair dyes with increased risks of certain cancers of the blood and bone marrow. However some of these studies need further research to make definitive conclusions but given the widespread use of hair dye products, even a small increase in risk may have a considerable public health impact.
SMOKING The role of smoking in the development of many forms of cancers is well documented. Each cigarette consists of over 400 carcinogenic materials that causes DNA damage and increased cancer risks as well as other diseases.
AGEING Cancer risk increases as you grow older, with most cancers occuring in people during their fifties or sixties. However many other cancers do develop before then, and there are some forms of cancers that afflict children.
FAMILY HISTORY Certain cancers develop because of changes or mutations in genes and risk factors can trigger some of these changes. Several cases of the same cancer types in a family are linked to inherited gene changes. If you think you are at risk, talk to your doctor and get checked. Contact Dr Maxwell on 3631807/7575411.
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Whiplash Car Accident Injury Prevention Tips from Denver Aurora Lakewoond Chiropractor
Simple tip on reducing whiplash neck pain injuries. Fast and convenient way to prevent serious injury from a car accident. Call us now for a FREE Free Spinal...
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Whiplash Car Accident Injury Prevention Tips from Denver Aurora Lakewoond Chiropractor - Video
Holding Polluters Accountable: A Community-Nurse Collaboration Success Story
Join ANHE for this special conversation with Erin Heaney and Dr. Jessica Castner. They were part of the community efforts that led to the Tonawananda Coke Co...
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Holding Polluters Accountable: A Community-Nurse Collaboration Success Story - Video
Lobbying? "Big Companies Run This Country [UK] Not Politicians" Eileen Chubb
Privatisation does not work in health care. You can not have profit in health care. inquiringminds.cc/lobbying-big-companies-run-this-country-uk-not-politici...
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Lobbying? "Big Companies Run This Country [UK] Not Politicians" Eileen Chubb - Video
STROKE HOME CITE PROBLEM LINGKOD BAYAN MEDIA CBS DWAD 1098KHZ NEWS AM ZOE LIGHT TV33
YUJ GUANG DO GERONTOLOGIST MENTAL MARTIAL ART MEDICAL HEALTH CARE HEALING MISSIONARY CALL 544 66 41 AND 0916 436 88 75 AMEN FACEBOOK JESUS OGAYRE.
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STROKE HOME CITE PROBLEM LINGKOD BAYAN MEDIA CBS DWAD 1098KHZ NEWS AM ZOE LIGHT TV33 - Video
USMEDX
USMEDX is a healthcare management, billing and consulting company who works with health care providers who want to maximize revenue streams and improve inter...
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2/26/14 House Health Care Policy Hearing
Committee: Health Care Policy Chair: Frederick, Keith - (Rep-121) Vice Chair: Franklin, Diane-(Rep-123) Date: Wednesday, February 26, 2014 Time: 12:00 PM Loc...
By: Progress Missouri (Channel Two)
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CNIB Webinar Series: Diabetes Management with Vision Loss
This webinar is part of a series for health care professionals who play a critical role in assisting diabetic patients with vision loss. Starting with an ove...
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CNIB Webinar Series: Diabetes Management with Vision Loss - Video
To shop for health care, it would help to know what childbirth or a CT scan will cost ahead of time. But is it possible to actually list prices for medical procedures? And will patients armed with the information look for bargains when they seek care?
Massachusetts is trying to find out. Since Jan. 1, hospitals and doctors there have been required to tell patients how much things cost, if they ask. It's part of the state's health care cost control law. We set out to run a test.
Our shopper: Caroline Collins, a 32-year-old pregnant real estate agent from Fitchburg who is trying to compare prices for a vaginal delivery. Her first call is to the main number at Health Alliance Hospital in nearby Leominster. From there, she is transferred to the hospital's obstetrics department. A receptionist there tells Collins to call the billing office at UMass Memorial Medical Center in Worcester, which is part of the same hospital network as Health Alliance.
When a customer service rep answers, Collins launches right in: "I'm due in June and my husband and I have pretty minimal coverage, just a really high deductible, so I just wanted to check and see what the cost would be." Collins' deductible is $3,000 a year, but she expects the delivery to cost more than that. She just wants to know how much more.
Collins is directed to the extension of someone named Cathy, who apparently has the price list for services at UMass member hospitals. Turns out Cathy will be out for two weeks. Collins leaves a message, tries another number in the billing office and leaves another message.
She moves on to Emerson Hospital, where she's transferred from the main switchboard four times before leaving a message for a woman who has not called back after two days. Massachusetts law requires a callback within two days.
The only place where she reaches a person who gives her a price after one call is a natural birth center called the Birth Cottage. Their price: $3,000 to $5,000 for a normal vaginal delivery.
The third day, Collins hears from UMass Memorial. "She did give me an average price," Collins says. A vaginal delivery would cost "between $10,000 and $16,000." If her delivery turned into an emergency C-section, the cost would be between $20,000 and $30,000 "depending on the operation and how it went," Collins says.
Collins is told she will probably only have to pay her $3,000 deductible of whatever the price is in the end, but she's not sure. She's getting conflicting information about what is and isn't covered from her obstetrician, the hospitals and her insurer.
No one said this would be easy. Each hospital negotiates prices with each insurer. Sometimes the hospital and physician charges are separate, sometimes they are not. And what the patient pays on top of their premium varies if they have a deductible or coinsurance.
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This afternoon the last in a series of sector profiles will be launched in Palmerston North. The Health Care and Social Assistance sector is the largest sector in the Manawat and is achieving the highest rate of growth of all sectors.
The sector profile is authored by Palmerston North City Councils economic policy advisor Peter Crawford. He says the Health and Social Assistance Sector took over in 2012 from education as Manatwats largest sector in terms of economic activity.
The report also found that:
- Earnings generated in the sector (salaries, wages, self-employment) equalled $347 million in the year to March 2012 (12.8% of total earnings in the region).
- Annual earnings increased by $204 million between 2000 and 2012, an increase of 143%: 17% of total income growth in the region. Total income growth in the region was 78% so health is growing at nearly twice the rate of the rest of the economy.
Peter Crawford says nationally the health sector is also the fastest growing sector. "Manawat is fortunate to have significant strengths in the sector since it will continue to be a significant contributor to strong economic growth in the region."
Palmerston North Mayor Jono Naylor says it is easy in a developed nation like ours to forget how fundamental good health is to general well-being and economic prosperity.
"There has been significant growth in residential care services, 62% job growth since 2000, nearly double the rate of growth nationally," the Mayor said. "While retirement village growth is a factor in this, the strongest growth has been in other care services. Included in this category are the Hospice, mental health services and care services for people with an intellectual disability. Providing high quality of care isnt just about the amount of economic activity created but about enhancing the quality of life for all people in our community."
While the MidCentral District Health Board is the largest employer in the sector it is obvious the strength of the region in health and care services reflects strength in the government, business and not-for-profit sector organisations in the region. It is hard to list all of the major participants without overlooking key organisations but many of them are represented at the profile launch.
The Health Care and Social Assistance sector profile is being launched at the Palmerston North Convention Centre at 4:30, speakers include Ian McKelvie, MP for Rangitkei, Murray Georgel, chief executive MidCentral District Health Board; Clare Crawley, acting chief executive - strategy at UCOL; and, Cynric Temple-Camp, chief executive officer of Medlab Central.
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PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:
26-Feb-2014
Contact: Michael Bernstein m_bernstein@acs.org 202-872-6042 American Chemical Society
As the price for decoding a person's DNA keeps dropping, expectations for personalized medicine based on specific genetic profiling rise. But translating an individual's genetic data into finely tailored medical treatments still faces major challenges, explains a new article in Chemical & Engineering News (C&EN), the weekly magazine of the American Chemical Society.
Rick Mullin, senior editor at C&EN, notes that advances in DNA sequencing have allowed researchers to design some therapies, particularly in the cancer realm, for patients with certain genetic traits. As the technology for reading people's genes improves and drops even further in cost, more progress is on the horizon. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration, the government body responsible for approving pharmaceuticals for commercialization, supports these efforts. With the stars seemingly aligned, some industry experts have declared that the age of personalized medicine has arrived. So why do others claim that victory is still a long way off?
The article points out that when pharmaceutical labs launched their search for new drugs based on genomics more than 15 years ago, the focus was almost exclusively on DNA sequences. But now researchers have realized that for personalized medicine to truly take hold, they need to also pay attention to individuals' health histories, their environments and how their genes actually translate into physical traits. This requires a shift in thinking, plus closer ties between the research and clinical sides, and ultimately, insurers. But perhaps the tallest barrier is cultural an attitude among some in the health care industry to simply continue business as usual.
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The American Chemical Society is a nonprofit organization chartered by the U.S. Congress. With more than 161,000 members, ACS is the world's largest scientific society and a global leader in providing access to chemistry-related research through its multiple databases, peer-reviewed journals and scientific conferences. Its main offices are in Washington, D.C., and Columbus, Ohio.
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Researchers from LSTM have found that a single genetic mutation causes resistance to DDT and pyrethroids (an insecticide class used in mosquito nets). With the continuing rise of resistance the research, published in the journal Genome Biology, is key as scientists say that this knowledge could help improve malaria control strategies.
The researchers, led by Dr Charles Wondji, used a wide range of methods to narrow down how the resistance works, finding a single mutation in the GSTe2 gene, which makes insects break down DDT so it's no longer toxic. They have also shown that this gene makes insects resistant to pyrethroids raising the concern that GSTe2 gene could protect mosquitoes against the major insecticides used in public health.
Mosquitoes (Anopheles funestus) are vectors of malaria, and most strategies for combating the spread of the disease focus on control of mosquito populations using insecticides. The spread of resistance genes could hold back efforts to prevent the disease. The authors say that knowing how resistance works will help to develop tests, and stop these genes from spreading amongst mosquito populations.
Charles Wondji said: 'We found a population of mosquitoes fully resistant to DDT (no mortality when they were treated with DDT) but also to pyrethroids. So we wanted to elucidate the molecular basis of that resistance in the population and design a field applicable diagnostic assay for its monitoring.'
They took mosquitoes from Pahou in Benin, which were resistant to DDT and pyrethroids, and mosquitoes from a laboratory fully susceptible strain and did a genome wide comparison study. They identified the GSTe2 gene as being upregulated -- producing a lot of protein -- in Benin mosquitoes.
They found that a single mutation (L119F) changed a non-resistant version of the GSTe2 gene to a DDT resistant version. They designed a DNA-based diagnostic test for this type of resistance (metabolic resistance) and confirmed that this mutation was found in mosquitoes from other areas of the world with DDT resistance but was completely absent in regions without. X-ray crystallography of the protein coded by the gene illustrated exactly how the mutation conferred resistance, by opening up the 'active site' where DDT molecules bind to the protein, so more can be broken down. This means that the mosquito can survive by breaking down the poison into non-toxic substances..
They also introduced the gene into fruit flies (Drosophila melanogaster) and found they became resistant to DDT and pyrethroids compared to controls, confirming that just this single mutation is enough to make mosquitoes resistant to both DDT and permethrin.
Wondji says: 'For the first time, we have been able to identify a molecular marker for metabolic resistance (the type of resistance most likely to lead to control failure) in a mosquito population and to design a DNA-based diagnostic assay. Such tools will allow control programs to detect and track resistance at an early stage in the field, which is an essential requirement to successfully tackle the growing problem of insecticide resistance in vector control. This significant progress opens the door for us to do this with other forms of resistance as well and in other vector species.'
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The above story is based on materials provided by Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
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Genetic secret of mosquito resistance to DDT, bed net insecticides discovered