Shorebirds Flock to Winter Beaches
Don #39;t have time for a walk on the beach? Then try this Charles Kuralt-style video, where all-natural sights sounds show tell what a beautiful wonderland ...
By: DVDesigns
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Shorebirds Flock to Winter Beaches
Don #39;t have time for a walk on the beach? Then try this Charles Kuralt-style video, where all-natural sights sounds show tell what a beautiful wonderland ...
By: DVDesigns
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Protecting S.Africa #39;s beaches from dangerous sharks
The planned Durban dugout port at the old airport is said to boost the country #39;s competitive edge while creating thousands of new jobs for more Eye on KZN sp...
By: CNBCAfrica
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Westerly engineers non-biodegradable system to protect beaches
Westerly #39;s engineer has designed a system to protect the town #39;s beaches using non-biodegradable bags filled with sand that would shield the dunes from powerf...
By: WPRI
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Westerly engineers non-biodegradable system to protect beaches - Video
Florida - The Beaches of Fort Myers Sanibel - LEE COUNTY HISTORY AND CULTURE - travel destination
View more travel videos from all over the world; find information on destination hotels, attractions and more at videoglobetrotter.com.
By: videoglobetrotter
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162 Lee Ave, Beaches, Toronto, Presented by Kendra Connelly, Sotheby #39;s International Realty Canada
3 Storey Impeccable Custom Built Residence In The Heart Of The Beach with 3000Sqft Of Living Space, This stunning abode has everything you need in a family h...
By: Kendra Connelly
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These Cali beaches are greedy as fuck.
Took this cali girl out and she ate more than i did.
By: Michael Blackson
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By Emma Creamer
PUBLISHED: 12:42 EST, 5 March 2014 | UPDATED: 13:30 EST, 5 March 2014
My seven-year-old daughter bursts into tears and flings herself on to her immaculate white bed. I dont want to go home! she sobs as I zip up our cases.
Weve just come to the end of a week-long, all-inclusive stay at the Beaches Negril Resort in Jamaica, and according to Lily-Rose its been: The best week of my life.
Which is why she doesnt fancy returning to rainy London.
Paradise found: Beaches resort is set in 20 acres of wooded grounds on Negril's famous seven-mile beach
It feels good to know that shes had such a fantastic experience.
Having been a single parent for more than six years I know that holidays can be tricky when youre not in a conventional family set up.
You worry that youll be desperately craving adult company after a day, or that your child will get bored with no dad to throw them around the swimming pool.
I even worry about whether it will look odd just me and my little girl dining out in the evening - will people feel sorry for me?
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Beaches Negril Resort in Jamaica is perfect for family holidays
Just in time for swimsuit season, federal researchers are touting a faster, more accurate water-quality test to keep beaches open and people healthy. But its expensive
Flickr/David Dufresne
Just in time for swimsuit season, federal researchers are touting a faster, more accurate water-quality test to keep beaches open and people healthy.
But its expensive, and most of the nations cash-strapped cities and counties can afford it.
Local officials traditionally check for bacteria in ocean and lake water with tests that take about 24 hours to complete. Now the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is recommending testing at the molecular level tagging DNA and counting bacteria which provides results within hours.
Water quality can change significantly in 24 hours. This way were identifying threats to human health almost immediately,said Meredith Nevers, a research ecologist with the U.S. Geological Survey who is studying theEPAs new DNA test.
An estimated 3.5 million people get sick every year after a trip to the beach because of E. coli or other pathogens from sewage overflows, spills and polluted runoff, according to the EPA. Exposure can cause gastrointestinal illness, skin rashes and infections.
About 43 percent of beaches along the East and West coasts and the Great Lakes had at least one water-quality advisory in 2011, according to EPA data.
Counties and cities test beaches routinely often weekly but depending on the location and season. Beaches also are tested after spills to determine when they can be reopened.
Slow results Traditional tests involve waiting 24 hours to allow E. coli, coliform or enterococci to grow in a water sample, then counting the colonies. That means decisions to close down beaches are based on samples collected the day before.
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EAST London beaches were closed to bathers yesterday by Buffalo City Metro marine services officials after a red tide algal bloom was seen in city waters.
Marine services assistant programme manager Siani Tinley yesterday said the closure was a precautionary measure to allow officials time to test the bloom that was blown on shore by days of north-easterly winds.
COASTAL ISSUES: Eric Ngwani says hell be fishing until somebody warns him not to. This is after the red tide flowed into East London yesterday Picture: MARK ANDREWS
She also warned surfers to stay out of the water until the tests had been conducted.
Red tide is the common name used for a colony of red-brown micro-organisms which bloom at certain times of the year.
Although the red tide is believed to be the same non-toxic species that has been off the coast from False Bay to the outskirts of East London for several months, Tinley said it would be best to conduct tests before giving local beaches the all-clear.
Tinley said it was difficult to determine whether it was the same species of red tide found off the rest of the coast without doing tests.
It could be the same as the Port Elizabeth red tide which is relatively harmless.
However, we decided to close the beaches as a precautionary measure, she said.
Tinley said cold water from north east winds resulted in an upwelling of nutrients, and this encouraged the algal bloom.
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RAD@home Astronomy Collaboratory, India (Amit A. Kamble 28th Feb 2014)
By: RAD@home (Astronomy collaboratory, India)
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RAD@home Astronomy Collaboratory, India (Amit A. Kamble 28th Feb 2014) - Video
Astronomy for Everyone:; Size and Scale of the Universe
Astronomer Kevni Manning will teach us about the universe, the stars and other celestial wonders using hands-on activities and asorted visuals. Presentation ...
By: CityofPflugerville
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Astronomy for Everyone:; Size and Scale of the Universe - Video
Can a Biblical Creationist Make Sense of Astronomy Creation Today with David Rives
Can a Biblical Creationist Make Sense of Astronomy Creation Today with David Rives.
By: Jason Burns
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Can a Biblical Creationist Make Sense of Astronomy Creation Today with David Rives - Video
Which Planet Rolls on Its Side When It Orbits? : Planets Astronomy
Subscribe Now: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=ehoweducation Watch More: http://www.youtube.com/ehoweducation The planet that rolls on it...
By: eHowEducation
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Which Planet Rolls on Its Side When It Orbits? : Planets & Astronomy - Video
Astronomy - The Sun (3 of 17) Nuclear Fusion
Visit http://ilectureonline.com for more math and science lectures! In this video I will explain the nuclear fusion of the Sun.
By: Michel van Biezen
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Truth and Beauty in Astronomy Visualization
Please tune in (or join us in person, if you #39;re in the Austin, Texas area!) for a lecture by Hubble astrophysicist Dr. Frank Summers at the Astronomy Departm...
By: Hubble Space Telescope
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What Forms the Belt Between Mars Jupiter? : Planets Astronomy
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What Forms the Belt Between Mars & Jupiter? : Planets & Astronomy - Video
Arrangement of the Planets From Strongest to Weakest Magnetic Fields : Planets Astronomy
Subscribe Now: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=ehoweducation Watch More: http://www.youtube.com/ehoweducation All planets have magnetic f...
By: eHowEducation
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Arrangement of the Planets From Strongest to Weakest Magnetic Fields : Planets & Astronomy - Video
SIGNAL PEAK Central Arizona Colleges Science & Astronomy Night returns to the Signal Peak Campus on Friday from 6 to 9 p.m. for an evening of free family fun.
The event will feature a multitude of ongoing indoor and outdoor activities, including hands-on science experiments for kids and adults; discussions with CAC professor of astronomy and NASA scientist Wayne Pryor on the Rosetta Mission and a look at Jupiter through his telescopes; and a trip with Katy Wilkins inside STARLAB CACs inflatable planetarium.
The science comedy of Wildman Phil Rakoci and his cadre of desert critters also will visit the Signal Peak Campus.
CACs popular science and astronomy nights began as public viewing nights at the Signal Peak Campus. Over the past year and half, the program has been extended to other campuses throughout Pinal County, including the new Maricopa and San Tan campuses and the Superstition Mountain Campus in Apache Junction.
The Signal Peak Campus Science & Astronomy Night will feature an array of ongoing displays and scheduled shows throughout the evening.
As the sun goes down around 6 p.m., the observatory behind the S Building will come to life when Wayne Pryor unveils CACs powerful telescopes for the public to use to see Jupiter. At 7 p.m. and 8 p.m., Pryor will make a 20-minute presentation that will shed light on the ongoing Rosetta spacecraft mission.
Inside CACs nearby S and T Buildings is where the heavy-duty science and communications activities will take place, while the STARLAB will be held in the M (clock tower) Building.
Ongoing activities will feature Diane Beecroft and Bruce Martins Shock and Ahhhhh! presentations, which will feature shocking demonstrations and activities using oranges and cornstarch; Marilyn Edelman, Paul Tavares and Devin Fraleys Refreshing and Creepy Southwest with microscopes that feature the creepy creepers of the Sonoran Desert; and Luis Martinezs Chelyabinsk Meteor: How We Dodged a Bullet at 6:30 and 7:30. Dixie Kullman will host Roboroach, a bioengineering presentation.
Crystal McKenna will present proscopes and iPad telescopes, allowing attendees to see the world from a new perspective. Suzi Shoemaker and Clark Vangilder will collaborate on The Ahhhhhh of Physics, which features half-hour demonstrations and activities every hour beginning at 6 p.m. This presentation will include the use of magnets, motors and generators, and sound transfer. Tammy Janisko will also present Light Fantastic!, which allows attendees to explore light and sound waves and make a kaleidoscope to take home. This half-hour session, sure to please guests of all ages, is scheduled to begin every quarter-hour, beginning at 6:15 p.m.
English Professor Heather Moulton will present a child-friendly, drop-in literature session called Shocked to Life: Frankenstein. This activity, scheduled for 6 to 8:30 p.m., will feature coloring and storybook time and a PowerPoint presentation about Frankensteins monster and how he was brought to life. In addition, Animal Science Professor Bob Randall will show guests how to milk a cow.
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PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:
5-Mar-2014
Contact: Brittany Ashcroft press@astro.org 703-839-7336 American Society for Radiation Oncology
Fairfax, Va., March 5, 2014 The American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) has issued a new white paper, "A review of safety, quality management, and practice guidelines for high-dose-rate brachytherapy," that recommends specific guidance to follow in the delivery of high-dose-rate (HDR) brachytherapy to improve quality and patient safety, according to the manuscript published in the March-April 2014 print issue of Practical Radiation Oncology (PRO), the official clinical practice journal of ASTRO. The executive summary and supplemental material are also available as open-access articles online at http://www.practicalradonc.org.
Commissioned by ASTRO's Board of Directors as part of the Target Safely campaign, the white paper evaluates the current safety and practice guidance for HDR brachytherapy, makes recommendations for guidance applications to the delivery of HDR brachytherapy, suggests topics where additional guidance is needed and examines the adequacy of general physics, quality assurance (QA) and clinical guidance currently available for the most common treatment sites with regard to patient safety. The manuscript also addresses HDR brachytherapy procedures, the use of checklists and forms, the multidisciplinary treatment team, challenges to maintaining safe use of HDR brachytherapy and key measures for avoiding catastrophic failure.
To ensure correct actions are followed for a specific brachytherapy procedure, the white paper recommends the use of a quality management program, including checklists and forms to maintain quality and prevent errors. ASTRO's white paper references the American Association of Physicists in Medicine (AAPM) Task Group (TG) 59 report that includes examples of forms for quality control and checklists for the various stages of treatment, which can be customized by the treatment team. The AAPM TG-100 report that includes the tools and process for creating an effective quality management program is also cited.
Due to the multidisciplinary nature of HDR brachytherapy treatment, the modality requires coordination among several clinicians to treat the patient accurately and safely. The white paper details the roles and qualifications of those directly involved with radiation therapy decisions: the radiation oncologist, medical physicist, medical dosimetrist, radiation therapist and surgeon. The roles and qualifications are based on ASTRO's Safety is No Accident: A Framework for Quality Radiation Oncology and Care, a comprehensive book detailing minimum recommended guidelines for radiation oncology practices, and the AAPM TG 59 report specific to HDR brachytherapy.
The white paper addresses 12 anticipated challenges to maintaining quality in HDR brachytherapy because of the constant changes in the modality. Anticipated challenges include the replacement of the traditional radiation therapy simulator with a computed tomographic simulator, which requires significant changes in how HDR brachytherapy procedures are performed; the use of new procedures and methods, which can lead to mistakes due to inadequate training, QA or inappropriate procedures; the proliferation of devices, applicators and radionuclides used for brachytherapy treatment, which leads to an increased number of possible processes, types of equipment and clinical uses, making it increasingly difficult to determine how to assure that all of the variations are used with appropriate process control and quality management; and the potential for increased use of model-based algorithms such as Monte Carlo methods for dose calculations for brachytherapy sources, which will require new procedures for commissioning, new algorithm QA and new patient-specific planning checks. The full list of anticipated challenges is available in the supplemental material.
The manuscript makes seven recommendations for improved safety and quality in HDR brachytherapy. The white paper recommends that practitioners follow relevant guidance documents and that deviation from consensus recommendations should be supported by clinical studies or pursued in the setting of a clinical trial approved by an institutional review board; that practitioners receive training in a new procedure before beginning its practice, that the training should include a practical, "hands-on" component and that all team members directly involved with the radiation therapy decisions should participate in at least five proctored cases before performing similar procedures independently; and that professional societies should accelerate the generation of new or updated guidance documents for the following disease sites and techniques: skin, central nervous system, gastrointestinal, lung or endobronchial and esophagus, and, while outside the charge of this panel, assess the need for updated guidance documents for accelerated partial breast irradiation using electronic brachytherapy. The complete list of recommendations is available in the supplemental material.
The white paper describes six benchmarks to provide facilities with measures to evaluate compliance with the seven recommendations in the manuscript. The six benchmarks are: 1) HDR brachytherapy procedures are supported with the appropriate team as described in the report of the AAPM TG 59 and the American College of Radiology HDR Brachytherapy Practice Standard; 2) commissioning of the treatment unit, treatment planning system and each new source is performed by a qualified medical physicist and verified through a QA process; 3) assay of the HDR brachytherapy unit source is performed using a well-type ionization chamber with a calibration traceable to the National Institute of Standards and Technology, and this assay is performed or confirmed for each source change. Planning system source strength parameters must be updated with each source change; 4) treatments are performed according to the guidelines from the American Brachytherapy Society when available for the treatment site; 5) treatment plans and programs are checked through independent verification before treatment delivery; and 6) daily QA checks of the HDR brachytherapy system are performed before any treatment.
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ASTRO white paper provides guidance for optimal quality, safety of HDR brachytherapy
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Newswise Fairfax, Va., March 5, 2014 The American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) has issued a new white paper, A review of safety, quality management, and practice guidelines for high-dose-rate brachytherapy, that recommends specific guidance to follow in the delivery of high-dose-rate (HDR) brachytherapy to improve quality and patient safety, according to the manuscript published in the March-April 2014 print issue of Practical Radiation Oncology (PRO), the official clinical practice journal of ASTRO. The executive summary and supplemental material are also available as open-access articles online at http://www.practicalradonc.org.
Commissioned by ASTROs Board of Directors as part of the Target Safely campaign, the white paper evaluates the current safety and practice guidance for HDR brachytherapy, makes recommendations for guidance applications to the delivery of HDR brachytherapy, suggests topics where additional guidance is needed and examines the adequacy of general physics, quality assurance (QA) and clinical guidance currently available for the most common treatment sites with regard to patient safety. The manuscript also addresses HDR brachytherapy procedures, the use of checklists and forms, the multidisciplinary treatment team, challenges to maintaining safe use of HDR brachytherapy and key measures for avoiding catastrophic failure.
To ensure correct actions are followed for a specific brachytherapy procedure, the white paper recommends the use of a quality management program, including checklists and forms to maintain quality and prevent errors. ASTROs white paper references the American Association of Physicists in Medicine (AAPM) Task Group (TG) 59 report that includes examples of forms for quality control and checklists for the various stages of treatment, which can be customized by the treatment team. The AAPM TG-100 report that includes the tools and process for creating an effective quality management program is also cited.
Due to the multidisciplinary nature of HDR brachytherapy treatment, the modality requires coordination among several clinicians to treat the patient accurately and safely. The white paper details the roles and qualifications of those directly involved with radiation therapy decisions: the radiation oncologist, medical physicist, medical dosimetrist, radiation therapist and surgeon. The roles and qualifications are based on ASTROs Safety is No Accident: A Framework for Quality Radiation Oncology and Care, a comprehensive book detailing minimum recommended guidelines for radiation oncology practices, and the AAPM TG 59 report specific to HDR brachytherapy.
The white paper addresses 12 anticipated challenges to maintaining quality in HDR brachytherapy because of the constant changes in the modality. Anticipated challenges include the replacement of the traditional radiation therapy simulator with a computed tomographic simulator, which requires significant changes in how HDR brachytherapy procedures are performed; the use of new procedures and methods, which can lead to mistakes due to inadequate training, QA or inappropriate procedures; the proliferation of devices, applicators and radionuclides used for brachytherapy treatment, which leads to an increased number of possible processes, types of equipment and clinical uses, making it increasingly difficult to determine how to assure that all of the variations are used with appropriate process control and quality management; and the potential for increased use of model-based algorithms such as Monte Carlo methods for dose calculations for brachytherapy sources, which will require new procedures for commissioning, new algorithm QA and new patient-specific planning checks. The full list of anticipated challenges is available in the supplemental material.
The manuscript makes seven recommendations for improved safety and quality in HDR brachytherapy. The white paper recommends that practitioners follow relevant guidance documents and that deviation from consensus recommendations should be supported by clinical studies or pursued in the setting of a clinical trial approved by an institutional review board; that practitioners receive training in a new procedure before beginning its practice, that the training should include a practical, hands-on component and that all team members directly involved with the radiation therapy decisions should participate in at least five proctored cases before performing similar procedures independently; and that professional societies should accelerate the generation of new or updated guidance documents for the following disease sites and techniques: skin, central nervous system, gastrointestinal, lung or endobronchial and esophagus, and, while outside the charge of this panel, assess the need for updated guidance documents for accelerated partial breast irradiation using electronic brachytherapy. The complete list of recommendations is available in the supplemental material.
The white paper describes six benchmarks to provide facilities with measures to evaluate compliance with the seven recommendations in the manuscript. The six benchmarks are: 1) HDR brachytherapy procedures are supported with the appropriate team as described in the report of the AAPM TG 59 and the American College of Radiology HDR Brachytherapy Practice Standard; 2) commissioning of the treatment unit, treatment planning system and each new source is performed by a qualified medical physicist and verified through a QA process; 3) assay of the HDR brachytherapy unit source is performed using a well-type ionization chamber with a calibration traceable to the National Institute of Standards and Technology, and this assay is performed or confirmed for each source change. Planning system source strength parameters must be updated with each source change; 4) treatments are performed according to the guidelines from the American Brachytherapy Society when available for the treatment site; 5) treatment plans and programs are checked through independent verification before treatment delivery; and 6) daily QA checks of the HDR brachytherapy system are performed before any treatment.
As the technology and use of HDR brachytherapy advances, it is imperative that clinical, physics and quality assurance guidance be reviewed and updated, as necessary, to ensure quality and patient safety in the treatment delivery, said Bruce R. Thomadsen, PhD, a professor in the Department of Medical Physics at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health. This white paper affirms that HDR brachytherapy is a safe treatment option when current process guidance is followed and appropriate clinical decisions are made based on clinical guidance provided in white papers such as this.
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