Evolv Health Showcasing the Benefits of Using Evolv Health Products – Video


Evolv Health Showcasing the Benefits of Using Evolv Health Products
Evolve Health Products Showcasing the Benefits of Using Evolv Health Products to Promote Healthy Lifestyle The entire line of Evolv Health products will help you transform your health while...

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Evolv Health Showcasing the Benefits of Using Evolv Health Products - Video

Victorian Aboriginal Health Service VAHS Healthy Lifestyle Team Northern Health Community Fun Run – Video


Victorian Aboriginal Health Service VAHS Healthy Lifestyle Team Northern Health Community Fun Run
The VAHS Healthy Lifestyle and Tackling Smoking Team is one of 60 teams nationally. This short documentary showcases the Healthy Lifestyle Team and the role ...

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Victorian Aboriginal Health Service VAHS Healthy Lifestyle Team Northern Health Community Fun Run - Video

Health is Beauty: Current Healthy Lifestyle Favorites BeautyBuzzHub – Video


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Health is Beauty: Current Healthy Lifestyle Favorites BeautyBuzzHub - Video

Clemson, Greenwood Genetic Center research into autism, cancer funded by Self Healthcare

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

13-Jun-2014

Contact: Peter Kent pkent@clemson.edu 864-723-0491 Clemson University

GREENWOOD, S.C. Seven research projects from Greenwood Genetic Center and Clemson University faculty were selected to receive the first round of funding provided by Self Regional Healthcare (SRHC).

In February, SRHC announced a partnership with Clemson and GGC to serve as the lead hospital partner in the collaborative. As part of that commitment, the hospital pledged a total of $5.6 million toward the project, including $1.2 million per year for three years to fund genetic research.

Fourteen projects were submitted from faculty at both Greenwood Genetic Center and Clemson University. Each project was evaluated by an independent team, and final selections were announced this week by Dr. Steve Skinner, director of the Greenwood Genetic Center, and Steve Kresovich, the Robert and Lois Coker Trustees Chair of Genetics/SmartState Chair of Genomics at Clemson.

Five of the funded projects focus on the understanding and treatment of autism spectrum disorders, while two proposals were combined to study improved diagnostics for hereditary cancers.

"The blending of research teams from both Clemson and GGC will allow our institutions to build on the strengths of one another," said Skinner. "Self Regional's commitment to supporting these endeavors is a vital part of understanding, and ultimately treating, disorders like autism and cancer that impact so many families."

Each selected project includes team members from both Clemson and Greenwood Genetic Center. The following proposals were funded:

Modi Wetzler from Clemson's department of chemistry will work on developing a therapy for autism patients who have a specific known mutation.

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Clemson, Greenwood Genetic Center research into autism, cancer funded by Self Healthcare

Harvard study finds substance abuse & mental health problems in MSM interfere with HIV medication adherence

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

11-Jun-2014

Contact: Bill Schappert bschappert@liebertpub.com 914-740-2100 Mary Ann Liebert, Inc./Genetic Engineering News

New Rochelle, NY, June 11, 2014Men who have sex with men (MSM) account for more than 60% of HIV infections in the U.S. and 78% of new infections in men. Antiretroviral therapy can control HIV infection and suppress viral load, but mental health and substance abuse problems common among MSM can interfere with medication adherence. How conditions such as depression and alcohol and drug abuse can affect anti-HIV therapy and the success of various interventions are explored in an article published in LGBT Health, a peer-reviewed journal from Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers. The article is available free on the LGBT Health website.

Jaclyn White, MPH, Janna Gordon, and Matthew Mimiaga, ScD, MPH, Fenway Health, Massachusetts General Hospital/Harvard Medical School, and Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA, review the mental health problems and specific substances that pose the greatest threat to medication adherence among MSM. Targeted interventions can improve MSM's psychosocial problems while also helping them adhere to their antiretroviral drug regimens. Effective strategies identified through rigorous clinical trials must be translated into clinical practice, suggest the authors in the article "The Role of Substance Use and Mental Health Problems in Medication Adherence among HIV-Infected MSM."

"For people living with HIV, the importance of adherence to antiretroviral therapy cannot be over-emphasized," says Editor-in-Chief William Byne, MD, PhD, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY. "It is essential to preventing both the manifestations of infection in the individual and the sexual transmission of the virus to others. In this article, White and colleagues show the importance of addressing mental health and substance use in antiretroviral adherence interventions for MSM."

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About the Journal

Spanning a broad array of disciplines LGBT Health, published quarterly online with Open Access options and in print, brings together the LGBT research, health care, and advocacy communities to address current challenges and improve the health, well-being, and clinical outcomes of LGBT persons. The Journal publishes original research, review articles, clinical reports, case studies, legal and policy perspectives, and much more. Complete tables of content and a sample issue may be viewed on the LGBT Health website.

About the Publisher

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Harvard study finds substance abuse & mental health problems in MSM interfere with HIV medication adherence

Students Mind Ticks With Science

Written by Steve Mosco, smosco@antonnews.com Tuesday, 17 June 2014 16:52

As Plainview Old-Bethpage High School senior Hannah Stewart prepares to ship off to Brandeis University in the fall, she, like most young adults here age, will remember the best parts of high school: spirit week, homecoming, prom and, of course, gathering lizards and ticks in northern New Jersey.

The science-minded senior recently worked under the auspices of Dr. Russell Burke, chair of the Biology Department at Hofstra University, in a research project with the goal of finding out why cases of Lyme Disease are so prevalent here in the north, but so rare down south.

This is a part of biology that Dr. Burke introduced me to that I never thought about, working with lizards and insects, said Stewart. It was far more interesting than I ever thought it could be.

For her efforts with Burke, Stewart received a third place award for a research project, titled Host Preference of Wild Northern and Southern Ixodes scapularis, at the International Science and Engineering Fair in Los Angeles in May. Hannah additionally tied for first place in the Behavioral and Social Sciences Division of the 2014 Long Island Science & Engineering Fair.

Her research with Burke involved a laboratory study of the black-legged tick and the spread of Lyme Disease. Burkes lab has been exploring the ecology of Lyme disease since 2007, focusing on the role that lizards play in reducing the prevalence of the disease.

Stewarts summer 2013 work explored the leading hypothesis that attempts to explain why human cases of Lyme disease are so much more common in the northern U.S. than in the south, although both the necessary ticks and bacteria occur throughout both areas.

This hypothesis is based on the observation that ticks in the south often feed on different animal host species than ticks in the north. Stewart tested whether ticks choose their hosts randomly or whether ticks from different places have different host preferences. Her work showed that both northern and southern black-legged ticks preferred lizard hosts over mammal hosts, and therefore they only feed on mammals in the north when there are no lizards available.

We found that lizards are crummy hosts for the Lyme disease bacteria, said Burke. Down south, lizards dont pass on Lyme disease and this keeps the rate of the disease low. Hannah did some experiments to find out whether ticks actually prefer to feed off of lizards or mice, and her work shows that ticks, if given the choice, will choose to feed off of lizards. Her work will help us move forward with our studies in our effort to understand the spread of this disease.

Burke said he received an email from Stewart requesting an opportunity to work in his lab. In these independent research projects, Burke chooses students that boast a high interest in biology and perform well in school. Burke said Stewart was impressive on both counts.

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Students Mind Ticks With Science

Pierre-Antoine Gourraud, Assist. Prof., UCSF Neurology @ Digital Health Summer Summit S.F. 2014 – Video


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Digital Health LIVE Sponsored by Ideal Life at CES 2014 Title Sponsor: http:www.ideallifeonline.com Digital Health Summit at CES 2014 Web: http:;//www.digita...

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Pierre-Antoine Gourraud, Assist. Prof., UCSF Neurology @ Digital Health Summer Summit S.F. 2014 - Video

Adam Gazzaley, Professor, Neurology, UCSF @ Digital Health Summer Summit S.F. 2014 – Video


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Dr. Omar Gonzalez presents Best Stem Cell Therapy in Mexico: Integrative Medicine Clinic – Video


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http://www.placidway.com/profile/705/ - Watch this Video as Dr.Omar Gonzalez, MD, specialist in Stem Cell Therapy, Integrative Medicine and Chronic Diseases, presents his new clinic located...

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Dr. Omar Gonzalez presents Best Stem Cell Therapy in Mexico: Integrative Medicine Clinic - Video

‘Population Bomb’ Author Still Claiming Government Should Control Human Reproduction – Video


#39;Population Bomb #39; Author Still Claiming Government Should Control Human Reproduction
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'Population Bomb' Author Still Claiming Government Should Control Human Reproduction - Video