VanosEnigmA 097 AI Digital Ethics Transhuman Health Care Creepy RFID MindControl Technology Bitcoin – Video


VanosEnigmA 097 AI Digital Ethics Transhuman Health Care Creepy RFID MindControl Technology Bitcoin
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VanosEnigmA 097 AI Digital Ethics Transhuman Health Care Creepy RFID MindControl Technology Bitcoin - Video

Media portray unrealistic timelines for stem cell therapies

A new study by University of Alberta law researchers reveals sometimes overly optimistic news coverage of clinical translation of stem cell therapies--and as spokespeople, scientists need to be mindful of harnessing public expectations.

"As the dominant voice in respect to timelines for stem cell therapies, the scientists quoted in these stories need to be more aware of the importance of communicating realistic timelines to the press," said researcher Kalina Kamenova, who co-authored the study with professor Timothy Caulfield in the University of Alberta's Health Law Institute, based in the Faculty of Law.

Their analysis of media coverage showed that most news reports were highly optimistic about the future of stem cell therapies and forecasted unrealistic timelines for clinical use. The study, published in the latest issue of Science Translational Medicine, examined 307 news reports covering translational stem cell research in major daily newspapers in Canada, the United States and the United Kingdom between 2010 and 2013.

While the field of stem cell research holds tremendous promise, "it has also been surrounded by tremendous hype, and we wanted to quantify that in some degree," Caulfield said. "Pop culture representations have an impact on how the public perceives the readiness of stem cell research, and that in turn feeds into stem cell tourism, marketing of unproven therapies and even the public's trust in research. We wanted to provide findings that would help inform the issue."

Their study found that 69 per cent of all news stories citing timelines predicted that therapies would be available within five to 10 years or even sooner. At the same time, the press overlooked challenges and failures in therapy translation, such as the discontinuation of the first FDA-approved clinical trial of an embryonic stem cell-derived therapy for spinal cord injuries in 2011. The biotech company conducting the trial was a leader in embryonic stem cell therapies and its decision to stop its work on stem cells was considered a significant setback for the field.

As well, ethical concerns about the use of human embryonic stem cells were displaced from the forefront of news coverage, while the clinical translation of stem cell therapies and new discoveries, such as hockey star Gordie Howe's recent treatment, grabbed the headlines instead.

"Our findings showed that many scientists have often provided either by implication or direct quotes, authoritative statements regarding unrealistic timelines for stem cell therapies and media hype can foster unrealistic public expectations about clinical translation and increased patient demand for unproven stem cell therapies," Caulfield noted.

While stem cell therapy research is progressing and has seen a dramatic increase in the past decade of clinical trials for treatments, the vast majority of these studies are still in the safety-testing stage and involve a limited number of participants, Kamenova noted.

"The approval process for new treatments is long and complicated, and only a few of all drugs that enter pre-clinical testing are approved for human clinical trials. It takes on average 12 years to get a new drug from the lab to the market, and additional 11 to 14 years of post-market surveillance," she added.

The science world is under pressure to come up with cures for what ails us, but "care needs to be taken by the media and the research community so that advances in research and therapy are portrayed in a realistic manner," Caulfield said.

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Media portray unrealistic timelines for stem cell therapies

Magical Moments: The Spirituality of Wonder in Religion and Literature – Video


Magical Moments: The Spirituality of Wonder in Religion and Literature
Alex Nava Explore the metaphor of wonder in the history of the Spanish exploration of the New World, beginning with the period of the Conquest through the 20th century style of literature...

By: The University of Arizona

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Magical Moments: The Spirituality of Wonder in Religion and Literature - Video

Lawyers battle in yoga case

Jaysea DeVoe leading a yoga class in Encinitas.

An Escondido lawyer trying to force the Encinitas Union School District to end its school yoga program because it has religious roots, squared off in a state appeals court Wednesday against district lawyers who say the program only promotes physical exercise not mystical or spiritual enlightenment.

The Fourth District Court of Appeal is expected to rule in the case by June 9, but in court Wednesday the panel of judges seemed skeptical that the program was somehow still tainted by religion.

Yoga has been a health and wellness activity in the Encinitas school district since 2012, when the Encinitas-based Sonima Foundation gave the district $2 million to add yoga to all physical education classes.

That same year, attorney Dean Broyles who runs the National Center for Law & Policy sued the district on behalf of several parents, saying the program violated the separation of church and state by endorsing Hindu religious beliefs promoted in Ashtanga yoga.

In 2013, a lower court sided with the district, finding that school program had been stripped of any religious overtones and could therefore remain. Broyles and his clients appealed.

In a hearing Wednesday, judges seemed impatient with Broyles contention that the yoga program had spiritual underpinnings.

Its void of religious, mystical or spiritual trappings, Judge Cynthia Aaron said. The judges interrupted Broyles several times during his nearly 30-minute oral argument to the court.

Broyles described the panel later as a hot bench that peppered him with lots of tough but legitimate questions.

They were very animated, Broyles observed.

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Lawyers battle in yoga case

Year in Space, Twin Test: NASA astronaut tells RT about upcoming mission – Video


Year in Space, Twin Test: NASA astronaut tells RT about upcoming mission
For the first time NASA is planning to send an astronaut to the International Space Station for a whole year. RT spoke to Scott Kelly, who #39;s currently getting ready to blast on his fourth ISS...

By: RT

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Year in Space, Twin Test: NASA astronaut tells RT about upcoming mission - Video