The Upload: Your tech news briefing for Friday, March 20

Some on FTC wanted antitrust suit against Google

Google came close to having to defend antitrust charges in the U.S.: Staff at the U.S. Federal Trade Commission who monitor competition pushed for an antitrust lawsuit against it in 2012, the Wall Street Journal reported. A staff report that has just come to light concluded that the search giant used anticompetitive tactics and abused its monopoly power in ways that harmed Internet users and competitors, the paper said. Another faction at the Commission, the economics bureau, issued a report advising against a lawsuit and no action was taken. Among the most damning findings: there was evidence that Google gamed its system to promote its own services and demote rivals, and scraped content from other sites.

Target data breach lawsuit will cost $10 million to settle

A class-action lawsuit brought against Target for harm caused by its massive 2013 data breach will cost the retailer $10 million if a proposed settlement is finalized by the court. Individual victims could receive up to $10,000. Target would also have to develop and test a security program for protecting consumer data and implement a process of monitoring and identifying security threats.

Teslas over-the-air upgrades will add autonomous driving features

Teslas Model S electric cars will receive over-the-air software upgrades, including some self-driving capabilities. Were now almost able to travel from San Francisco to Seattle with the driver barely touching the wheel at all, founder Elon Musk said during a conference call today. Other features that could be delivered over the air include an Auto Steering function that allows drivers to summon their cars while on private property, and a Valet feature, which is a smartphone app that can be used to call the car to the front door or instruct it to park. Those may face some regulatory hurdles as current rules only allow the testing of autonomous cars with a driver present in the vehicle.

Amazon can test delivery drones outside now

Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos captured the publics imagination when he floated the idea of delivery-by-drone in a television interview more than a year ago. Now, the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration is bringing what sounded like a wild scenario closer to reality, by approving the companys plan to test drones outside, re/code reports. Recently proposed rules still dont permit the kind of commercial use Amazon wants, but its obviously keeping its goal in mind.

ISPs gave their customers routers with security holes

ISPs have handed out at least 700,000 routers containing a security vulnerability to customers in several countries. The flaw could let an attacker change the DNS server a router users and then divert people to malicious websites, according to security researcher Kyle Lovett, who came across the flaw in his spare time. Most of the affected routers are in Asia and South America, with some in the U.S. and Italy.

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The Upload: Your tech news briefing for Friday, March 20

Access music stored on OneDrive using Xbox Music

Microsoft now lets you store music in your OneDrive account for streaming on your Xbox. Here's what you need to know.

Xbox Music. Jason Cipriani/CNET

On Wednesday, Microsoft expanded the functionality of Xbox Music beyond that of strictly a paid streaming service. The added functionality allows you to upload music you already own to your OneDrive account and access it on your Xbox.

It's a welcome addition to the service, especially for those who'd rather not pay a monthly fee for access to Microsoft's music catalog. Which was, up until now, all Xbox Music was good for.

The service is similar to that of Apple's iTunes Match or Google's Play Music. The former is $25 a year, while both Google and Microsoft offer their services for free.

The process as outlined by Microsoft. Screenshot by Jason Cipriani/CNET

The process for using Xbox Music to stream your own music is simple.

First, you need to decide if you want to install the OneDrive app on your computer or use the website to upload your music. A limitation to keep in mind as you decide: the website doesn't allow you to upload folders. Meaning, if you have 10,000 songs (the limit is 50,000) you can't simply drag-and-drop your Music folder onto the website and watch as it uploads your content.

The OneDrive app, however, does allow you to upload entire folders. I suggest going this route, especially if you have a large music catalog. Download OneDrive here.

Next, sign into OneDrive using the same Microsoft account you use on your Xbox. Once you're signed in, begin uploading your music to the Music folder in your OneDrive account. This is an important detail; if the music is stored anywhere else, Xbox Music won't see it.

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Access music stored on OneDrive using Xbox Music

Lofty – Buy, Sell or Appraise Review Your Valuable Fine Art, Antiques, Jewelry and Collectibles with Authenticity …

By Lofty | March 19, 2015

Welcome to the world largest online marketplace for valuable fine art, antiques and collectibles!You want to buy or sell an item? Let Lofty make your life easier and be the expert for you.Our carefully selected professionals will provide transparent evaluation of an items history, fair value, and the most important thing, your peace of mind.Lofty removes the guesswork that bewilders buyers and sellers of antiques, jewelry an fine art online - art daily.comHow selling works:- just make an account and upload photos and a description of your item;- after a free evaluation from Loftys experts, you can decide to sell in just one click.Lofty takes care of the rest: shipping, insurance and payment.How buying works:- a 100% money-back satisfaction guarantee ensuring that any item can be returned within seven days of delivery;- a 5 years Authenticity Guarantee certifying that the item is discovered to have been misrepresented.Have questions, problems or feedback? Reach out us at mobile@lofty.com

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Lofty - Buy, Sell or Appraise Review Your Valuable Fine Art, Antiques, Jewelry and Collectibles with Authenticity ...

Open Discussion March 20, 2015

Nave Kent2 hours ago

(wouldve been Twilight only I didnt see it) (wouldve been Fifty Shades of Grey, only I didnt bother with it)

In the last 10 years my list would include (in no specific order):

Prometheus Guardians of the Galaxy (seriously its good and all but not great) The Insidious Trilogy Annabelle (shouldve seen how people gagged over its release in the Bangladesh theatres) Elysium TMNT The Bayformers Trilogy (2-4, I actually dug the first one) Alvin and the Chipmunks (er) Ted (I mean, whats up with that?) The Amazing Spider-Man 2 (wayy too much advertisement on Sonys end) Frank Millers The Spirit (sadly) oh oh! X-MEN ORIGINS: WOLVERINE and X3: THE LAST STAND Superman Returns (people bash MoS but this was the Superman movie that launched a thousand butts out of the the genre and actually made people LOSE hope in the genre).

Of course, the OPPOSITE, that being the best movie with the best hype which exceeded the hype still has to be THE DARK KNIGHT and its awesome, awesome viral campaign (Harvey friggin Dent making an international phone call for a call to arms ?? Fuggetaboutit!)

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Open Discussion March 20, 2015

How to make those last-gen Borderlands save files more Handsome for PS4 and Xbox One

AsBorderlands: The Handsome Collections release draws closer, its time to dust off your old PlayStation 3, PS Vita, or Xbox 360 and salvage those save files fromBorderlands 2 andBorderlands: The Pre-Sequel.Gearbox has shared details on how to bring those saves along to the new consoles so you can pick up rightwhere you left off.

In order to migrate your saves, make sure youve downloaded the latest patches for the older games, which will be available prior toThe Handsome Collections release. After the game is up to date, there should be a new option in the main menu for Cross Save (PlayStation) or Cloud Save (Xbox), then Upload Save. Once the file has been copied, load upThe Handsome Collection, select Cloud/Cross Save and then simply download. Note that you need the games day one patch in order for the feature to work.

Save files can only be transferred within the Xbox or PlayStation ecosystems, not between. PlayStation 3/4 and Vita can all exchange files freely in a triangle (althoughThe Pre-Sequel is not on Vita). Similarly, saves can be transferred between Xbox 360 and Xbox One.

Related:The next Borderlands: The Pre-Sequel DLC invites you into the twisted mind of Claptrap

Transferred saves bring over all of your character and mission progress, inventory, weapon, cash and other currencies, skins, and items in the bank. Badass Points all transfer as well, but you have to re-spend them, which could be a great chance to re-spec your characters anyway.

Goodies stored in Claptraps Secret Stash inBorderlands 2, however, donot go along for the ride, so be sure to move anything you need to your personal inventory or the bank. Golden Keys also donttransfer, but players can snag 75 new keys along with a healthy chunk of Badass Rank and some new weapons or customizations for signing in to 2Ks SHiFT service for the first time with bothBorderlands 2andThe Pre-Sequel inThe Handsome Collection.

Borderlands: The HandsomeCollectioncombinesBorderlands 2 andBorderlands: The Pre-Sequel with all of their respective DLC into a single, HD collection for PlayStation 4 and Xbox One. It arrives for all platforms on March 24.

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Penn Medicine: Potential new drug target may protect against certain neurodegenerative diseases

Findings could pave way for precision medicine approach to treatment of neurological diseases

PHILADELPHIA- Penn Medicine researchers have discovered that hypermethylation - the epigenetic ability to turn down or turn off a bad gene implicated in 10 to 30 percent of patients with Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) and Frontotemporal Degeneration (FTD) - serves as a protective barrier inhibiting the development of these diseases. Their work, published this month in Neurology, may suggest a neuroprotective target for drug discovery efforts.

"This is the first epigenetic modification of a gene that seems to be protective against neuronal disease," says lead author Corey McMillan, PhD, research assistant professor of Neurology in the Frontotemporal Degeneration Center in the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania.

Expansions in the offending gene, C9orf72, have been linked with TAR DNA binding protein (TDP-43) which is the pathological source that causes ALS and FTD. "Understanding the role of C9orf72 has the possibility to be truly translational and improve the lives of patients suffering from these devastating diseases," says senior author, Edward Lee, MD, PhD, assistant professor of Neuropathology in Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at Penn.

McMillan and team evaluated 20 patients recruited from both the FTD Center and the ALS Center at the University of Pennsylvania who screened positive for a mutation in the C9orf72 gene and were clinically diagnosed with FTD or ALS. All patients completed a neuroimaging study, a blood test to evaluate C9orf72 methylation levels, and a brief neuropsychological screening assessment. The study also included 25 heathy controls with no history of neurological or psychiatric disease.

MRI revealed reduced grey matter in several regions that were affected in patients compared to controls. Grey matter is needed for the proper function of the brain in regions involved with muscle control, memory, emotions, speech and decision-making. Critically, patients with hypermethylation of C9orf72 showed more dense grey matter in the hippocampus, frontal cortex, and thalamus, regions of the brain important for the above described tasks and affected in ALS and FTD, suggesting that hypermethylation is neuroprotective in these regions.

To validate these findings, the Penn team also looked at autopsies of 35 patients with C9orf72 expansions and found that their pathology also suggested that increased methylation was associated with reduced neuronal loss in both the frontal cortex and hippocampus.

Longitudinal analysis was performed in 11 of the study patients to evaluate the neuroprotective effects of hypermethylation in individuals over their disease course. This showed reduced changes in grey matter of the hippocampus, thalamus, and frontal cortex, associated with hypermethlation suggesting that disease progresses more slowly over time in individuals with C9orf72 hypermethylation. Longitudinal neuropsychological assessments also showed a correlation between protected memory decline and hypermethylation.

These findings are consistent with a growing number of studies which have suggested the neuroprotective effects of the hypermethylation of C9orf72. "We believe that this work provides additional data supporting the notion that C9orf72 methylation is neuroprotective and therefore opens up the exciting possibility of a new avenue for precision medicine treatments and targets for drug development in neurodegenerative disease," says McMillan.

###

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Penn Medicine: Potential new drug target may protect against certain neurodegenerative diseases

AAFP Celebrates New Recruits to Family Medicine, Acknowledges Work Ahead

It's a family affair for Brian Blank at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where he celebrates with his wife, Laura, and daughter Lillian after learning that he's going to his number one pick, Duke Family Medicine Residency in Durham, N.C.

Pause for just a moment to cheer this fact: Today, 3,060 graduating medical students choose a career in family medicine.

That's the news just released by the National Resident Matching Program (NRMP) for this annual celebratory event commonly referred to as the Match.

And with that announcement comes the realization that for the sixth straight year, the family medicine match rate ticked upward. Furthermore, 3,216 family medicine residency positions were offered in 2015, an increase of 84 positions compared to 2014.

That overall family medicine fill rate of 95.1 percent -- down slightly from 95.8 percent in 2014 -- represents 60 more positions accepted by graduates compared to last year.

The AAFP Medical Education Division's count of students matching to family medicine includes students who matched into traditional family medicine residency programs as well as into programs that combine family medicine education with other focused training. Those additional programs are

"The Academy congratulates and welcomes these new family medicine recruits," said AAFP President Robert Wergin, M.D., of Milford, Neb., in an interview with AAFP News. "When these residents complete their training programs, there will be plenty of patients across the country eager to welcome new family physicians to their communities."

All the well-wishing must be tempered by this sobering reality: The number of U.S. seniors choosing family medicine slowed at an unexpected rate in 2015, to 1,422 -- with just six more U.S. seniors lining up for the specialty than last year.

Although the Academy will work in coming weeks and months to determine specific factors for that slowing, Wergin pointed to a health care environment in which policymakers and payers have caused instability by shifting positions, reversing decisions and changing the rules -- sometimes simultaneously.

"This uneven environment likely is taking its toll on medical students who are anxious to finish their clinical training and move on with their careers," said Wergin.

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AAFP Celebrates New Recruits to Family Medicine, Acknowledges Work Ahead

Penn Medicine study finds being near greened vacant lots lowers heart rates

PHILADELPHIA - Greening vacant lots may be associated with biologic reductions in stress, according to a new study from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. Residents who walked near newly greened vacant lots had significantly lower heart rates compared to walking near a blighted, or neglected, vacant lot.

"Our goal was to scientifically explore the connection between city environments and stress," said the study's lead author, Eugenia C. South, MD, MHSP, a physician in the department of Emergency Medicine at Penn. "We used heart rate as a physiologic marker of acute stress, and the reduction we found suggests a biological link between urban blight reduction strategies like vacant lot greening and reductions in stress." The study, published online by the American Journal of Public Health, is the first known neighborhood walking trial in which a physiological marker was measured in real-time for residents in their own communities.

The researchers used a heart rate monitor with GPS to measure the stress response in study participants in two randomly selected Philadelphia neighborhoods as they went on a prescribed walk around their neighborhood. Vacant lots in one neighborhood randomly received a greening treatment, while the other neighborhood served as a control and received no treatment. Participants walked past vacant lots before, and then three months after, the greening treatment of randomly selected lots. The greening treatment, performed by the Pennsylvania Horticulture Society, is a low-cost environmental improvement that includes cleaning and removing debris, planting grass and trees, and installing a low wooden post-and-rail fence.

The average heart rate reduction attributable to being in view of the greened lots was over 5 beats per minute (bpm) lower than when near non-greened lots. In contrast, at the control site, there was minimal change in heart rate from the pre- to post-time period when walking past control lots versus non-study vacant lots. In a second analysis, the total net reduction of heart rate when near and in view of greened vacant lots was over 15 bpm. Walks ranged from about 1,500 to 2,000 feet in length.

These data support the conclusion that proximity to greened lots versus trash-strewn lots results in lower heart rates. In response to an acute stressor, the body activates the sympathetic nervous system, resulting in the release of epinephrine, which in turn increases heart rate. Thus, higher heart rates at unexpected moments and because of urban blight, which can be ubiquitous in some city neighborhoods, can be inferred to be evidence of stress. Heart rate change has been used in a few previous studies to evaluate acute stress response, although primarily in indoor laboratory settings.

The current research builds on previously published findings by South and her colleagues, which found that residents living near greened vacant lots feel safer than those near non-greened sites. "Our hypothesis in the earlier published work was that transforming vacant lots from being overrun with weeds and filled with trash to a clean and green space may make it difficult for people to hide weapons and conduct illegal activities such as drug use in or near the space. Thus the lower heart rate response we found in the newly published study may be tied to residents feeling safer and experiencing less stress from their environment."

The study's senior author, Charles C. Branas, PhD, professor of Epidemiology and director of the Urban Health Lab at Penn, observes, "This research on greening urban lots provides an important scientific impetus for urban planners and city officials to take relatively low-cost steps toward improving health for their residents. Future trials that dynamically measure additional biological information, such as cortisol levels (another marker of stress) and blood pressure, are now warranted to further advance our understanding of the relationship between stress and blighted urban environments."

###

Other Penn co-authors are Michelle C. Kondo, PhD, and Rose A. Cheney, PhD.

This work was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health (R01AA020331 and R01AA016187), the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (U49CE001093), and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Health and Society Education Fund, with additional funding from the U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service.

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Penn Medicine study finds being near greened vacant lots lowers heart rates

Modernizing Medicine gets investment from IBM

IBM has invested in Modernizing Medicine of Boca Raton, capping a $20 million financing round for the electronic medical records and data company begun by entrepreneur Daniel Cane.

The amount from IBM was not disclosed.

Modernizing Medicine has raised $49 million since its founding in 2010.

The company has been working with IBM Watson for more than a year. The new investment will help Modernizing Medicine expand its market from dermatology to eight medical specialties. It also will further develop schEMA, a mobile app that leverages the cognitive computer power of Watson to give physicians clinical information at the point of patient care, the company said.

The app is designed to analyze massive amounts of published, peer-reviewed medical data and health-care research to help physicians in their practice.

mpounds@sunsentinel.com or 561-243-6650

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Modernizing Medicine gets investment from IBM

Penn Medicine Researchers Pinpoint Potential New Drug Target for Protection against Certain Neurodegenerative Diseases

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Newswise PHILADELPHIA- Penn Medicine researchers have discovered that hypermethylation - the epigenetic ability to turn down or turn off a bad gene implicated in 10 to 30 percent of patients with Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) and Frontotemporal Degeneration (FTD) - serves as a protective barrier inhibiting the development of these diseases. Their work, published this month in Neurology, may suggest a neuroprotective target for drug discovery efforts.

This is the first epigenetic modification of a gene that seems to be protective against neuronal disease, says lead author Corey McMillan, PhD, research assistant professor of Neurology in the Frontotemporal Degeneration Center in the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. Expansions in the offending gene, C9orf72, have been linked with TAR DNA binding protein (TDP-43) which is the pathological source that causes ALS and FTD.

Understanding the role of C9orf72 has the possibility to be truly translational and improve the lives of patients suffering from these devastating diseases, says senior author, Edward Lee, MD, PhD, assistant professor of Neuropathology in Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at Penn.

McMillan and team evaluated 20 patients recruited from both the FTD Center and the ALS Center at the University of Pennsylvania who screened positive for a mutation in the C9orf72 gene and were clinically diagnosed with FTD or ALS. All patients completed a neuroimaging study, a blood test to evaluate C9orf72 methylation levels, and a brief neuropsychological screening assessment. The study also included 25 heathy controls with no history of neurological or psychiatric disease.

MRI revealed reduced grey matter in several regions that were affected in patients compared to controls. Grey matter is needed for the proper function of the brain in regions involved with muscle control, memory, emotions, speech and decision-making. Critically, patients with hypermethylation of C9orf72 showed more dense grey matter in the hippocampus, frontal cortex, and thalamus, regions of the brain important for the above described tasks and affected in ALS and FTD, suggesting that hypermethylation is neuroprotective in these regions.

To validate these findings, the Penn team also looked at autopsies of 35 patients with C9orf72 expansions and found that their pathology also suggested that increased methylation was associated with reduced neuronal loss in both the frontal cortex and hippocampus.

Longitudinal analysis was performed in 11 of the study patients to evaluate the neuroprotective effects of hypermethylation in individuals over their disease course. This showed reduced changes in grey matter of the hippocampus, thalamus, and frontal cortex, associated with hypermethlation suggesting that disease progresses more slowly over time in individuals with C9orf72 hypermethylation. Longitudinal neuropsychological assessments also showed a correlation between protected memory decline and hypermethylation.

These findings are consistent with a growing number of studies which have suggested the neuroprotective effects of the hypermethylation of C9orf72. "We believe that this work provides additional data supporting the notion that C9orf72 methylation is neuroprotective and therefore opens up the exciting possibility of a new avenue for precision medicine treatments and targets for drug development in neurodegenerative disease, says McMillan.

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Penn Medicine Researchers Pinpoint Potential New Drug Target for Protection against Certain Neurodegenerative Diseases

Dell Medical School teams up with UT for Design Institute for Health – Video


Dell Medical School teams up with UT for Design Institute for Health
Dell Medical School is teaming up with the University of Texas College of Fine Arts in what officials are calling a unique collaboration designed to integrate design and health care.

By: kxan

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Dell Medical School teams up with UT for Design Institute for Health - Video

David Roberts Hot Topics presentation: Fluorescence-guided Resection of Intracranial Tumor – Video


David Roberts Hot Topics presentation: Fluorescence-guided Resection of Intracranial Tumor
Presented at SPIE Photonics West 2015 - http://spie.org/pw In this Hot Topics presentation, David Roberts describes recent work in image-guided neurosurgery. Gliomas can present a challenge...

By: SPIETV

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David Roberts Hot Topics presentation: Fluorescence-guided Resection of Intracranial Tumor - Video

Tufts University School of Medicine and Maine Medical Center Celebrate Third Class of "Maine Track MD" Students

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Newswise BOSTON (March 23, 2015) This years Match Day at Tufts celebrated the third cohort of students in the Maine Track MD program. A partnership between Tufts University School of Medicine and Maine Medical Center, the Maine Track MD program trains medical students interested in practicing medicine in underserved urban and rural communities in Maine where the shortage of physicians is acute. Match Day is when medical students across the country learn where they will begin their residency training following graduation this spring.

Of the 34 students in the Maine Track MD program, 24 (71%) matched in the primary care fields of family medicine, internal medicine, and pediatrics, while five (15%) matched in surgical specialties. Ten will be at residency programs in Maine, while others will be moving to West Virginia, Tennessee, Minnesota, California or other states.

Research shows that medical students who have experiences in primary care or rural settings are more likely to pursue careers in these areas, said Harris Berman, M.D., dean of Tufts University School of Medicine. The Maine Track MD students have an opportunity to practice in a community and experience what it is like to have a relationship with patients over nine months, much longer than is standard in medical school.

The Maine Track MD program includes an option for students in their third year to spend nine months practicing in small towns and rural communities. This Longitudinal Integrated Clerkship replaces the standard rotations through various medical specialties. The clerkship provides students with hands-on training in settings that combine training in rural practice as well as at a major medical center.

The campus for these students is the state of Maine, said Peter Bates, M.D., chief medical officer at Maine Medical Center and academic dean for the Maine Track MD program. Family practices, community hospitals, and Maine Medical Center all serve as training sites for these medical students. While not all graduates will match in Maine, their experiences in the Maine Track MD program will have far-reaching benefits for underserved communities in Maine. In addition, their residencies will give them a broader base of clinical experience, leading to improved care if they choose to practice here.

Most counties in the state of Maine have federally designated shortage areas in primary care (communities with more than 3,500 people per one doctor to provide care). The Association of American Medical Colleges Center for Workforce Studies estimates the U.S. will face a shortage of 45,000 primary care physicians and 46,100 surgeons and medical specialists by 2020.

The first class of 32 Maine Track MD students graduated in 2013. Ten of these graduates are in physician residency programs in Maine while the remaining are in Alaska, Iowa, New Hampshire, Wisconsin and elsewhere. Two are in the military. Sixteen (50%) of the first graduating class were selected into residencies in primary care, including seven in family medicine. Another seven are pursuing surgical specialties.

The second class of 29 students graduated in 2014 with four doing residencies in Maine while the remaining are in Colorado, Maryland, Alaska and other states. Thirteen (46%) of the Maine Track students are in residencies in primary care fields. Another five students are pursuing surgical specialties.

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Tufts University School of Medicine and Maine Medical Center Celebrate Third Class of "Maine Track MD" Students

UT medical students meet their 'match'

Published: Friday, 3/20/2015 - Updated: 1 minute ago

BY VANESSA McCRAY BLADE STAFF WRITER

Anxiety gave way to applause today as 166 fourth-year University of Toledo medical school students learned where theyll serve their residency in a scene filled with whoops and cheers that played out simultaneously across the nation.

Match Day is the thrilling, grand-finale for medical students. Its when they find out where a computerized program run by the National Resident Matching Program has placed them to fulfill their residencies, which take three to seven years to complete depending on the students specialty.

Among the UT students who learned their residency match results today was Sonya Naganathan, daughter ofUTs interim president Nagi Naganathan, who will go to Barnes-Jewish Hospital in St. Louis, among her top choices.

Mr. Naganathan addressed students at Stranahan Theater just before they rushed from tables decorated with blue and gold balloons to the front of a room, where they picked up envelopes containing their results. He compared the excitement to the day his daughter was born.

I wish you all the very best, but you will always be part of the Rocket Nation, he said.

PHOTO GALLERY: Click here for more photos from the ceremony

Students were joined by family and friends at the event, stopping to snap photographs and confer with other students after ripping open, or sometimes hesitantly unsealing, their envelopes.

So many hugs ensued.

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UT medical students meet their 'match'

Medical Profession Facing Physician Shortage and Residency Funding Cuts

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Newswise MAYWOOD, Ill. -- On Friday, March 20, fourth-year medical school students learned where they will serve their hospital residencies. But with tight state and federal budgets, residency programs are being cut.

To practice in the U.S. all new physicians must complete residency programs in their chosen specialties. Because of program cuts, some medical school graduates will not find residency positions.

The Association of American Medical Colleges projects the US will face a shortage of as many as 90,000 physicians by 2025. The shortage will be most severe among primary care physicians, and underserved patients will be the hardest hit.

Every day, people are unable to get needed care. This is unacceptable. Our nation desperately needs doctors, and we must make sure our student doctors get the opportunity to serve, especially those most in need, said Linda Brubaker, MD, MS, FACS, FACOG, dean and chief diversity officer of Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine.

Loyola is a leader in training medical students to care for patients who are often underserved or marginalized. Fifty-one percent of Loyolas 2015 graduating class will pursue residencies in primary care, up from 34 percent in 2014.

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The stress and joy of Match Day for Virginia Tech-Carilion Medical School students

ROANOKE, Va. -

If high drama is your kind of thing, the Virginia Tech-Carilion Medical School was the place to be. Friday, fourth-year medical students found out which residencies they've been selected for across the country.

The day is circled on everyone's calender: Match Day.

If medical school doesn't sound grueling enough, the wait from Monday to today sure is.

"At the first of the week, when they find out do they match with a position, and they did. And at exactly 12 o'clock, every place in the country, everybody finds out where they matched," said Dean Cynda Johnson.

"It's definitely a stressful process," student Carlie Blake said.

"Today is the culmination of four years of really hard work," Rohini Mehta added.

All these students have spent the past couple months picking a specialty and interviewing at the places across the country to practice them.

In a private ceremony, the students got those envelopes.

Dean Cynda Johnson says the sheer joy on their faces tells you everything you need to know.

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The stress and joy of Match Day for Virginia Tech-Carilion Medical School students