Celebrity Strategy Consultant Predicts What Will Be The Most Impactful Area In The Pharmaceutical Industry – Forbes

Michael Ringel, PhD, JD, Managing Director & Senior Partner, Boston Consulting Group (BCG), ... [+] presenting at the 9th Aging Research and Drug Discovery meeting organized by the University of Copenhagen and Insilico Medicine. Presentation title "The Emerging Commercial Landscape for Aging Biology-Based Therapeutics"

While I had very high expectations traveling to the 9th Aging Research and Drug Discovery (ARDD) forum, the largest five-day annual gathering of the longevity biotechnology industry organized by the University of Copenhagen, the event did not fail to impress. I can spend endless hours covering the lectures of top-tier academics, pharmaceutical industry leaders, and venture capitalists, but these would be better covered in the conference proceedings. However, one lecture titled The Emerging Commercial Landscape for Aging Biology-Based Therapeutics by Dr. Michael Ringel, captivated even the most experienced industry executives and the established aging researchers.

Dr. Michael Ringel at the 9th ARDD conference

The sheer fact that Boston Consulting Group (BCG), the worlds most venerated consulting firm specializing primarily in strategy and management consulting, became a knowledge partner of the ARDD indicates that the meeting has reached a certain level of credibility and longevity biotechnology is a clear trend. BCG is known for being very impartial, knowledge- and experience-driven, and providing valuable strategic insights to the boards and CEOs of the worlds largest corporations. The firm is used by governments all around the world when they want to get deep industry insights or when they want to formulate a national strategy around a specific trend. From what I know, BCG was used by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia to help formulate their famous Longevity Strategy, which resulted in the creation of the $1 Billion a year non-profit, Hevolution Foundation.

Dr. Michael Ringel, BCG presenting at the 9th ARDD in Copenhagen

One differentiating feature of BCG is the quality of its slides. They often manage to turn a very complicated story into a set of visually appealing, easy-to-comprehend slides that provide a clear problem definition, recommendation, situation assessment, and alternatives. These slides are rarely shared by the customers as they usually represent a substantial investment and intellectual property.

Therefore, when during his 30-minute talk, Dr. Ringel went through over thirty of these valuable slides, those of us who understand the value made sure to get the recording of the lecture.

Here are some of the top takeaways from Dr. Ringels presentation that Im able to share:

Michael Ringel, PhD, JD, Managing Partner, BCG, presenting at the 9th Aging Research and Drug ... [+] Discovery meeting

I knew Dr. Michael Ringel prior to the ARDD as a well-known strategy and management consultant in the pharmaceutical industry. After almost 25 years at BCG in healthcare practice, he is on a first-name basis with every pharma CEO, board member, investor, and government official, and is a walking encyclopedia who also knows most of the emerging technologies and their applications.

From left to right: Eric Verdin, MD, CEO of the Buck Institute for Research on Aging, Mehmood Khan, ... [+] MD, CEO, Hevolution Foundation, Michael Ringel, PhD, JD, Managing Director, BCG, Alex Zhavoronkov, CEO, Insilico Medicine

Here, I asked Dr. Ringel a few questions to get his perspective on longevity biotechnology and the future of this exciting new field:

Alex Zhavoronkov: Michael, I know that aging biology is not only your professional focus but also your personal interest. What made you interested in this field?

Dr. Michael Ringel: Alex, thanks so much for having me. It truly is a pleasure to sit down with you. One disclosure before we start the discussion. One of the investors in your company, Insilico Medicine, is B Capital Group. My company, BCG, is a partner to B Capital Group, and so I have an indirect and small financial stake in your company that we need to mention.

As to my interest in the field, Ive spent my career working in healthcare, trying to help companies bring better medicines to people. And when I found out there is an area of biology that underpins not just one, but the majority of the chronic diseases that burden us, I realized the impact it might have on human health. Preventing multiple diseases with one intervention is a potential game-changer, if you can make it work. The key word being *if*. But when you dig into the science, you find out in fact theres really good evidence to support the notion. We just have to do the work to translate what weve seen in the lab to humans.

Alex Zhavoronkov: You have been in biopharma for over 25 years and you have seen everything. You saw Geron, Sirtris, ResTORbio, Unity, and many other companies in this area. How do you see the field of aging biology evolving and propagating into the biopharma industry and how did the field change over the past decade?

Dr. Michael Ringel: Understanding a new area of science can sometimes take a long time and then sometimes there are these great leaps forward. In my youth in the 70s we knew about caloric restriction, which is still one of the best-validated interventions. But we didnt know much about how it works. That began to change in the 90s, kicked off in part by Cynthia Kenyons seminal work in worms, as we began to understand the biological pathways involved. We saw the first pharmaceutical intervention proven to work in a mammal, in mice, just over a decade ago with the NIHs Interventions Testing Program. Today there is a small but growing pipeline of drug candidates in clinical testing. I believe we are on the cusp of the first demonstrated effective intervention in humans, which I believe will be one of those great leap-forward moments that galvanize interest in the field.

Alex Zhavoronkov: In your opinion, how long will it take the pharmaceutical industry to buy into the concept of utilizing aging biology as a platform for drug discovery for a range of therapeutic areas?

Dr. Michael Ringel: We are already seeing activity. We know from publicly available information that many companies have external partnerships or internal units, including AbbVie, Novartis, Regeneron, and others. For instance, UCB has partnered with your own company, Insilico Medicine. So it has already started. I believe that over the next decade, we will see a burgeoning pipeline focused on various pathways of longevity biology, and once the first clinical studies demonstrate proof-of-concept, we will really see interest grow.

Alex Zhavoronkov: Of course, you can not talk about Saudi Arabia and Hevolution since these are clients but I was one of the key opinion leaders interviewed for this project in 2019, and BCG was clearly involved. Why is longevity biotechnology so important for any emerging economy and do you think other countries should prioritize longevity in a similar way?

Dr. Michael Ringel:I cant give opinions on specific companies or foundations and would refer you to their leadership for questions about them. But as to the general point of why this matters all over the world, in developed and emerging economies, it is because it has the promise of being such a powerful way to improve human health. Weve seen that just throwing more money at the current healthcare system has not improved lifespan or healthspan, and we even have had retrograde motion in some areas, with lifespans declining. In part, that is due to the growing burden of metabolic disorders like diabetes. What we need is a better way, more focused on prevention an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. And thats where longevity biology is critical. It is, at heart, a preventative approach. And the core pathways are the very same ones that are implicated in the metabolic disorders that are a growing issue all over the world.

Alex Zhavoronkov: What is your advice to the young entrepreneurs in this nascent longevity biotechnology industry?

Dr. Michael Ringel: Theres a lot that you need to do as an entrepreneur you need to figure out funding, build a team, set up operations, choose your preclinical and development plans, develop partnerships, and a million other things Im always incredibly impressed by how much thesel young entrepreneurs can accomplish, juggling all these things at once. But the sine qua non, the thing you cannot do without in biotech, is good science. All the rest of the work is built on the foundation of a good idea, a new way to help people. So my advice is make sure youre investing your time and energy getting as deep into the science as you can.

Alex Zhavoronkov: Finally, how did you like the ARDD conference, what were your major takeaways, and will you come again next year?

Dr. Michael Ringel: To me ARDD is a unique conference in longevity, bringing a heavyweight mix of the most impressive scientists in the field together with the most promising start-ups and a great set of investors. For anyone already in the field, it is the place to be, and for anyone looking to learn more, I cannot think of a better place to get a crash course. Particularly the large pharmaceutical companies would benefit by bolstering their attendance to get deeper into this field.

The 9th Aging Research and Drug Discovery meeting, Grand Hall, University of Copenhagen, September ... [+] 2022

Michael Ringel, PhD, JD, Managing Director and Senior Partner, Boston Consulting Group

Michael Ringel, PhD, JD, is Boston Consulting Group's global leader for innovation analytics and research and product development, and is a core member of the firms Corporate Finance & Strategy practice. Michael is a frequent contributor to industry journals, including Nature Reviews Drug Discovery, and has coauthored numerous BCG reports on innovation, R&D, and corporate strategy. He received a BA in biology from Princeton, a PhD in biology from Imperial College London, and a JD from Harvard Law School.

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Celebrity Strategy Consultant Predicts What Will Be The Most Impactful Area In The Pharmaceutical Industry - Forbes

3 Research-Backed Tips To Make Your Muscles Act Younger – mindbodygreen

"If you haven't trained with any focus by the time you're 30, you need to be," says Lyon. Everyone's body is different, but if you can, she recommends a combination of cardiovascular activity (specifically zone 2 training) and resistance training. Zone 2 training really just refers to any cardio workout that gets your heart pumping to the point where you can still hold a conversation, but it might be difficult to do so. "That zone 2 training is critical for mitochondria," notes Lyon. "It's important for glucose utilization for the foods that you're eating, and overall it provides a base."

However, it's not enough: "In your 30s, I really believe everybody should be doing three to four days a week of hypertrophy training," she adds. Hypertrophy training is all about increasing muscle mass, namely through weight training. "As opposed to [using] much heavier weight and lower volume, the volume is important," Lyon adds. (Meaning, more sets and reps with less intensity.) "This is really about growing your muscles," she notes, and strong muscles are crucial for sustaining longevity.

Continued here:
3 Research-Backed Tips To Make Your Muscles Act Younger - mindbodygreen

Prioritizing Equity Spotlight series: Centering restorative justice in health innovation – American Medical Association

This Prioritizing EquitySpotlight session is sponsored by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the American Medical Association Foundation.

Over the past several years, there has been an increased awareness of the exclusionary policies and practices that have restricted and impacted the health innovation ecosystem for communities that have been historically marginalized and minoritized. These historical truths warrant restorative remedies to heal and reconcile past and current harms.

This session will explore restorative justice in the context of the health care innovation space and related policies, practices, politics and strategic opportunities to center healing and humanity in health care design and technology.

Keeys: All right. Good afternoon, everybody. Welcome. Well, welcome to us to the stage. I'm Mia Keeys and I'm so very glad to be joined today by all of you here. We're going to be talking about centering restorative justice within health innovation and I'm really quite honored to be joined by you all who are policymakers, whether you're tech innovators or C-suite level executives. All of you have quite the role with respect to standing up for restorative justice in your own practices and within your own communities.

During this session, as I've mentioned, we're uplifting restorative justice, and what we mean by that in the context of health care innovation and policymaking and practice refers to the collaborative approach that brings together those key constituents who have historically been marginalized or minoritized or just not a part of decision-making processes, bringing all of those persons together to bear on the decisions made around practices, policies that have historically been a part of different organizations and have been perpetuated by offending parties.

Now that definition was adapted from the American Association of Medical Colleges, also by the Restorative Justice Network, the UN Human Rights Commission and finally from the American Medical Association's organizational strategic plan for embedding equity and advancing racial justice and health equity. I'm really especially proud of that. I was a part of that mission when I was with AMA not too long ago, but today, we are really very excited to be joined by Dr. Jamila Michener.

She serves as the associate professor in the department of government at Cornell University, where she's also the co-director of the Cornell Center for Health Equity. She's known as the poverty scholar, right? Yes. I love that about you and your research. Dr. Michener's research focuses on poverty, racial inequality and public policy here in the United States. Her recent book, Fragmented Democracy: Medicaid, Federalism and Unequal Politics, examines how Medicaid in particular affects democratic scholarship and democratic citizenship. Dr. Michener, thank you so much for joining us.

Dr. Michener: Thank you for having me. Hi, everyone.

Keeys: We also have with us on the screenI can't see her heresomeone who I say is probably one of our most compelling voices and eloquent champions of all things related to justice, of really this century, Dr. Ruha Benjamin. Dr. Benjamin is the author of Race After Technology, and I'd be remiss if I didn't show you my dog-eared copy, right? You probably have the same thing on your shelf, right?

Dr. Michener: I love it, yep.

Keeys: Exactly. And she also has a forthcoming book, which I have to make sure to get. It's called Viral Justice: How we Grow the World We Want. She is a professor of African American studies at Princeton University, where she studies the social dimensions of science, medicine, technology, with a focus on the relationship between innovation and inequity, knowledge and power, race and citizenship, and health and justice. She's also a yogi and a recent beekeeper if I'm not mistaken.

Yeah. Thank you so very much, Dr. Benjamin, for joining us today and we really appreciate both of you being here. I'm going to go ahead and jump right into our questions. The first one is for you, Dr. Benjamin. The primary focus of your work is the relationship, as I mentioned before, between innovation and equity, particularly focusing on intersection of race, justice, and technology. Can you speak to the damage that's caused by structural racism in particular and especially the role of exclusionary practices within the field of innovation? Then I'm also wondering how do you feel in terms of hope for restoration?

Dr. Benjamin: Thank you for that question. I'm thrilled to be with you all virtually and so that's a heavy question. I call that a dissertation-worthy question because we could talk about it for hours but I'm going to limit my reflections to a couple of minutes. I think for starters, we have to understand that innovation doesn't necessarily lead to something that is good or desirable. As a starting point for this conversation, we have to disentangle what we think of as technological prowess from social progress, one that doesn't necessarily lead to the other. We can think of many examples. I'll just put a few on the table.

The first person who put up a "Whites Only" sign on their business was being innovative. They were doing something new to get to a certain end. Well, think specifically in terms of historical context. J. Marion Sims, who's sometimes referred to as the father of gynecology, who honed medical techniques by experimenting on enslaved Black women, he was being innovative. Likewise, something like the electric chair, at the time that it was developed, was considered a technological marvel, a more humane way of killing people but we have to ask ourselves, who was that making feel better, that more humane way of killing? Certainly not the person who was on the other end of that innovation.

As a starting point for this conversation, I want to encourage us not to conflate technological prowess with social progress. We should assume that any new invention is going to include social inequities unless and until proven otherwise. That is it is on the onus of those who are creating these new technologies to show us that they are not going to reinforce social inequity and injustice. We can't just go according to the marketing hype because there are all kind of buzzwords that create a shiny veneer of new technologies that hide the actual impact of these.

I'll just name two quick ones in the context of this pandemic and health technologies. Research has shown that the pulse ox that measures oxygen saturation level and many people have used it at home in order to decide when to rush to the hospital. It doesn't work as well on people with darker skin tones. Likewise, there are health care decision algorithms that are currently impacting millions of patients in this country that have shown to have a bias against Black patients even though the algorithms are seemingly color blind. The key here is to understand that glossy exteriors routinely hide dangerous interiors. They don't have to. It's not inevitable but it's predictable.

To this last part of your question, any hope for restoration, yes. But this hope isn't going to come in the form of glossy PR announcements and flashy, eventful initiatives that gather a lot of attention and credit for those who are finally doing something about these issues. Any way forward is not going to be for people but with people who are impacted by harmful systems. It's not going to be top-down but community-driven forms of redress. And also it's not going to make us feel warm and fuzzy if it's really reckoning with the forms of injustice, the complicity.

Here I'm thinking specifically about medical injustice but we can talk about economic injustice. We can talk about housing injustice, so it's not going to feel warm and fuzzy. If it is, then we're probably not doing it right. Finally, I want to say that the harms that are created, that we're talking about, they're created because of business as usual. That means that repair has to happen in everyday practices, in the nitty gritty, in the fine print, in the design of products, and so that's where we should focus our attention rather than on these big flashy forms of restitution that often are just rhetorical rather than substantive.

Keeys: Thank you so very much with that, Dr. Benjamin. I want to just hearken back to some of your words you said. Tech prowess is not equivalent of social progress and innovation is not always for the social good, and then finally you said reckoning is not warm and fuzzy. I'm surmising but I think that that really brings us, segues very well into something I'd like to talk with you about, Dr. Michener. You know, in your research and your writings you describe the application of a racial equity and policy framework. You call it the REAP framework, right? In terms of health policy being innovation, what does that form of innovation offer in terms of advancing restorative justice or that reckoning as Dr. Benjamin mentioned, particularly when it comes to those lasting harms related to unequal health care?

Dr. Michener: Yeah. Thank you for the great question and it's always unfortunate to go after Dr. Benjamin.

Keeys: No, no.

Dr. Michener: Because so much of the kind of core of the framework that I developed that you mentioned is actually reflected in those comments. Two core aspects of that that I'll point out, in particular, that will help me to sort of get to your question around health policy and what health policy has to offer around innovation and restoration, restorative justice. Two core aspects of that framework are as follows. One is that if we want to identify the kind of sources of things like structural racism, these injustices that embed in fundamental ways inequities in our society and in our practices, if we want to be able to identify those so that we can rectify them, we have to attend to the kind of nitty-gritty of process.

Process is more important in many ways than outcome. When it comes to racial disparities, for example, we tend to focus pretty heavily on outcomes. In fact, that's what disparities are. They're an outcome, and of course, there's good reason. Outcomes can flag problems for us but those problems are fundamentally in the process, so part of what I do in the framework is say what parts of the policy process do we need to attend to and where in those various parts of the policy process do opportunities for injustice, for structural racism to be perpetuated, where do those opportunities emerge?

There's a lot there, so I won't say anymore except to say process is crucial and attentiveness to it is crucial. The second partand this is part and parcel of the firstthat's a core aspect of the framework is to say that voice is crucial. In other words, for the folks who have power, who are making decisions, who are making policy at a national level, at a state level, at a local level, sometimes even at the level of specific institutions, businessesfor example, if those folks who have the decision making power and who often have other kinds of power and resources, economic power and so on and so forth, are the primary voices driving policies, those policies will inevitably disadvantage the folks who don't have power.

Whether intentional or not. Good intentions don't actually circumvent that core problem. We have to pay attention to process and a fundamental element that we have to build into process is voice. When it comes to health policy we see this in so many ways. I have a big study that I'm doing right now, a cross-state study, and we're talking to people who have struggled with health problems throughout the pandemic and getting a sense of the kind of nitty-gritty of their experiences and trying to understand what it looks like to create changes in those people's lives on a structural level.

We're working with and advising state and local governments around how they can make policy change to improve the lives of especially people who are at the economic and racial margins. What we're finding is that many of the kinds of innovations that we can get most excited about are experienced really differently in people's everyday lives. We talk to people about things like telehealth, which in many ways can be a great option for folks who have challenges around mobility or disability, for folks who have other kinds of challenges that make it hard for them to get traditional health care but for many other people and even for some of those folks, telehealth as it's actually implemented becomes a potential purveyor of bias and discrimination.

There are lots of examples of that, of things like that. For example, government agencies are constantly adapting new systems. They have these systems for managing their files and managing their clients, and managing their casesand they get pitches from whichever businesses are designing those systems and want to sell them to a government contract, want a government contract that can be very lucrative for them. They get these pitches, and they implement these systems and often have no idea what the consequences are for the people who are relying on the functioning of those systems in order for them to get vital resources for daily lives. Without robust incorporation of the voices and perspectives of those people, without, in fact, them having some power over the processes of innovation, the outcomes will inevitably lead to inequity. That's a lot of the kind of thing that the framework highlights.

Keeys: In your framework it's voice, right? It's voice, it's decentralization and you have to look up her framework, for sure.

Dr. Michener: It's a lot. I was sparing you all of the boring details and trying to draw out the highlights.

Keeys: My takeaway from your framework is that it's not as if legislators or persons in decision power can say we legislate that all people treat their neighbor with kindness and respect. That's not what you're going to see in a law, right? That gets back at the whole idea of good intentions don't necessarily always come through in the process. We're talking here about the process, and the process is not just something that happens in the middle. Restorative justice and bringing in those voices doesn't just happen as a checkpoint. It's continuously across the continuum of the process you referred to.

Dr. Benjamin, I want to bring you back in this conversation here. In your works, you've contributed a lot to a body of work that debates how science and technology shape the social world, in general, and how people can and should and do critically engage techno-science, grappling all the while with the fact that we might bring health and longevity to some, as in those innovative technologies might bring health and longevity to someand to Dr. Michener's pointreally very much leave others by the wayside. Can you speak to those shifts or changes that would likely occur if restorative justice were front and center or even mandatory for leaders and decision-makers within innovation?

Dr. Benjamin: Yeah, I want to talk about this not so much in generalities but I want to offer a very concrete example of this in action that people can study, learn from, adapt to their own context. Very recently two physician researchers at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, they analyzed 10 years of hospital data at Brigham and Women's, specifically among cardiology patients. They found significant disparities in how Black and Latinx patients on the one hand and their white counterparts on the other were being treated when they came to the hospital with heart failure. Black and Latinx patients were sent to general medicine service while white patients were referred to the specialty cardiology service where patients have much better outcomes.

They analyzed this data and then they created what they call the Healing ARCA-R-Cand ARC stands for acknowledge, redress and closure. This team, what they did was they presented this data to the priority neighborhoods around Brigham and Women's, those in which these patients were coming from and they're developing a community oversight initiative specifically around this issue. One of the concrete innovations that their team created was in the electronic medical recordnow you have a flag so that when a provider is looking at a patient's chart, for a Black and Latinx heart failure patient, it flags the provider to refer them to cardiology rather than leaving it to the discretion of the provider or relying on patient's self-advocacy.

The lesson here that Morse and Wispelwey, who are the two physicians leading this research, the lesson here is that not only do they call for society-wide restitution, kind of federal level laws and policies but they are encouraging every single institution and organization to look at the history of racism and inequity in their own locale. What's happening under our own roofs? What forms of disparities are being produced because of business as usual? It doesn't rely on the malice or the hate in someone's heart but it's a combination of a lot of factors that they identified that was leading to these disparities.

What they encourage us to do is to engage in local anti-racist efforts, and in this case, it's a combination of what we might call social innovation that is letting communities lead the process, including them in the research, having their oversight. Remember, community-driven, not top-down, but it also includes a technological component. That is including this flagging function in the electronic medical record that forces providers to reckon with their own bias, not letting them sort of rest on their own assumptions. The last resource I'll just put on the table in addition to Professor Michener's important framework is something everyone can look up called Beyond the Statement, by Color of Change.

Statement there is referring to all of those anti-racist statements that have come out in the last two years in which corporations and organizations and universities lay claim to a certain set of values and commitments. Beyond the Statement is getting us to think about concrete actions, taking those statements and actually directing them into the business as usual. Two things stand out when you look up the Beyond the Statement recommendations. One is incorporating racial equity audits.

That is evaluating the products, the policies, the data that we are producing for discrimination and the other thing, there's a number of recommendations but the other thing I'm just going to highlight for sake of time is that we have to create civil rights-oriented accountability systems that are tied to performance evaluations for employees. That is, what we're talking about here can't be extra icing, only those who self-select into DEI work. It has to be tied to performance evaluations and it has to be civil rights oriented. I would encourage everyone to download and study Beyond the Statement by Color of Change, to really think about how they can implement those recommendations in their own businesses and organizations.

Keeys: I think we had a couple of snaps in the audience with everything you all are saying. We're coming close to time but I just want to give you one last question here, Dr. Michener. With all that you both have identified, what are your overall thoughts in designing practices and policies for monitoring, for building access, for building in accountability at the civil rights level, at the local level with respect to your work?

Dr. Michener: Yeah. You know, again, Dr. Benjamin offered some really, I think, important concrete illustrations and a great resource that she pointed to. I mean, given time to wrap us up, I would emphasize two things and the first, I think, is I always want to say this to people. There are no easy answers and so this is a long game. It's not a game but it's a long process and I can't tell you how many studentsI teach lots of students at Cornelland we will look at policies that were intended to be, whether they were using the language at the time, anti-racist, that were implemented in the 1990s or the early 2000s or the 1960s. We've been trying to do this for so long. Maybe these problems are intractable. Maybe these people, maybe there's something wrong with them and not the systems because we've been trying. We've been doing all of these things.

Certainly, in the wake of George Floyd's murder, there were a whole flurry of policies that were implemented or practices that were implemented, statements that were made across all levels of government, in the business world and beyond, and some of these things are going to come to fruition and perhaps there will be progress clear. Some of them we won't know because no one's measuring or evaluating them, so that's one concrete point. We have to pay attention to the outcomes connected to what it is, the changes that we're making. But some of them are going to fall flat.

They're just not going to work and the temptation is to say, Well, we tried. But the problems are entrenched enough that the focus has to be on long-term solutions and long-term mapping out the processes that work, holding onto the things that show promise, letting go of the things that don't, learning lessons along the way. I want to emphasize that this isn't like, I'm going to think of the cool next DEI thing that's going to fix everything. Just like policy, processes don't unfold like that in government. They don't unfold like that anywhere, so the question is how are we going to deal with mistakes? How are we going to understand what success looks like?

I would emphasize that the voice component is crucial in both of them. Dealing with mistakes, in fact, is a question about restoration and restorative justice. Wow, we didn't mean to do this. We haven't meant to do this but we keep finding ways that we're perpetuating inequities. We can try to ignore it. We can sweep it under the rug. We can deny it. We can point out the things we're doing right so that we can draw attention away from the harms or we can actually focus on restoration and change, and we can get there and can identify and rectify the harms only if we pay attention to the folks who have the most at stake and we ensure that they have power in the processes that are unfolding. The last thing that I would say is that none of this is comfortable. Part of what I always tell people is that power isn't a zero-sum thing. It's not exactly as if the more power I have, the less Mia has but power dynamics do change environments.

If the people who are most affected by things like structural racism, folks at the economic and racial margins, have more power and if we build our practices and our processes to ensure that, it means that the folks who have power now who are comfortable, who are at the top, who are getting to determine what innovation looks like and what the important outcomes are and what success isthose people will have to now share power with others who before didn't have it. Maybe that's some of you, many of you in this room. It's uncomfortable and so recognizing that change that leads us towards restorative justice, social justice, however it is that you frame what the goal is with respect to justice, is uncomfortable and often means sacrifice, and doesn't feel good. I think that's a really important aspect of the commitment.

Keeys: The process of restorative justice. That's it. That's it. Thank you. Dr. Jamila Michener, thank you so very much for your work. Dr. Ruha Benjamin, on a personal level, I studied both of your works for my own dissertation and then also I'll say just by serendipityDr. Ruha Benjamin is a good friend of my late sister and I think if she were here in the flesh, she would be so very proud. So, thank you so much for your attention. Please make sure that you read these ladies' works and apply, apply, apply restorative justice in your own processes through your strategies and thank you so much for your attention.

Disclaimer:The viewpoints expressed in this video are those of the participants and/or do not necessarily reflect the views and policies of the AMA.

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Prioritizing Equity Spotlight series: Centering restorative justice in health innovation - American Medical Association

Nova Vita Redefines Longevity With Innovative Wellness Solutions – PRUnderground

Nova Vita Wellness Centers, whose parent company is Intiva Health, is redefining how patients view longevity with its innovative wellness solutions.

There is more to longevity than the number of candles on a birthday cake. Nova Vita Wellness Centers offers services which slow the progression of aging on the inside and on the outside.

An essential part of Nova Vitas mission is to help people achieve longer memories, enjoy longer activities, and prosper with longer happiness. Their wellness solutions are designed to help people feel better, look better, and be better so they can enjoy living a higher quality of life for many years to come.

Starting With the Basics:

Nova Vita Wellness Centers developed their own trifecta of longevity solutions. The building blocks of longevity boil down to whole-body health and wellness. The human body is made up of eight main systems that function independently and synergistically. Utilizing a comprehensive lab panel, Nova Vita can identify a persons specific needs to help all systems run like a well-oiled machine.

Innovative Wellness Solutions:

The journey to wellness doesnt have a final destination and new avenues to improved health are constantly being discovered. Nova Vita routinely updates their solutions based on the latest scientific evidence to provide clients with the foundations for longevity, contemporary services for optimal nutrition, and pathways for personal improvement. Their unique approach involves a combination of cellular therapy, 3D Body Scanning, advanced aesthetics, and customized vitamin formulations based on a persons specific needs.

IV Vitamin Infusions

There are 13 essential vitamins, 15 essential minerals, and a long list of amino acids that the human body needs for optimal function. The body can only synthesize a fraction of the optimal amount required of these vitamins, minerals, and amino acids. The rest are obtained by eating specific foods or dietary supplements. While a healthy diet is undoubtedly an important steppingstone for longevity, the body is only absorbing a small percentage of the nutrients a person consumeseven with traditional oral supplements.

IV Vitamin Infusions at Nova Vita provides the body with 100% of the vitamins within the formulation since it bypasses the digestive system. Each IV Vitamin Infusion is specially formulated to provide targeted benefits and address individual wellness journeys, allowing a person to choose an infusion specific to their needsfrom whole-body optimization to specific health concerns and vitamin deficienciesall of which boost longevity.

NAD+ Therapy

NAD+ is found naturally in all living cells and plays a crucial role in whole body health. As we get older, the levels of NAD+ in our body decreases which contributes to the leading causes of aging. An NAD+ Infusion directly provides the cells in your body with this important coenzyme to improve a range of bodily functions directly related to longevity.

Nova Vita Wellness Centers provides NAD+ Therapy both as a standalone treatment or an adjunct therapy to boost the effectiveness of its other wellness solutions.

About Nova Vita Wellness Centers

Nova Vita is a specialized health and wellness center, dedicated to bridging the gap traditional medicine left behind through the recovery, optimization and integrity of a persons physical and mental health through evidence-based advances in neuroscience and customized wellness solutions. Nova Vita offers dozens of IV vitamin infusion therapies, ketamine infusion therapy, and additional services tailored to the individual patient. Nova Vita opened their second Texas location just outside of Austin in 2021, doubled their wellness service offerings, and has plans for additional locations in Florida, Utah, Arizona, Illinois, and Nevada.

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Nova Vita Redefines Longevity With Innovative Wellness Solutions - PRUnderground

QC Kinetix (Freeport) is a Premier Sports Medicine Clinic, Improving the Performance of Athletes – Yahoo Finance

Freeport, ME - (NewMediaWire) - September 19, 2022 - via QC Kinetix - Sports medicine physicians have special training to restore movement/function to injured patients, allowing them to get back into the field or gym. While they work with professional or amateur athletes, they treat children/teens involved in sports, personal fitness enthusiasts, adults who love outdoor activities, and workers with physically demanding jobs. At QC Kinetix (Freeport), a team of medical providers treats physical conditions, dislocations, fractures, strains, sprains, and other sports injuries. They use advanced diagnostic equipment, medical technology, and techniques to discover and treat the root cause of pain.

To further its mission of improving the quality of life of athletes, QC Kinetix partnered with the NFL's all-time leading rusher and Dancing with the Stars Champion, Emmitt Smith. Between injuries on the field and the wear/tear on his joints dancing his way to a Mirror Ball Trophy, Mr. Smith prioritized taking care of his body. He credits the longevity of his joints to the regenerative therapies offered at the clinic.

"QC Kinetix provides several therapies and advanced treatments which complement and promote the body's natural healing process. It's always exciting to partner with a company when you've experienced first-hand the quality and effectiveness of their products." Emmitt Smith.

Minor and severe sports injuries that affect the tendons and ligaments take several weeks/months to heal, even with extensive rest. Traditional sports physicians recommend ice, elevation, compression, physical therapy, or medication to see an athlete through an injury. However, the regenerative medicine clinic offers a reliable and effective way of treating sports injuries. Their protocols are minimally invasive and aim to trigger the healing/repair of damaged tissue. In sports medicine, regenerative therapies speed up what the body naturally does by taking advantage of its healing capabilities.

The regenerative medicine protocols at QC Kinetix (Freeport) work best as part of a recovery routine that includes extended rest and bracing. By combining alternative therapies with traditional sports treatments, patients recover faster and experience improved performance/mobility. Sports medicine therapies restore degenerated tissues for athletes with a torn rotator cuff, torn Achilles tendon, shoulder pain, wrist pain, tennis elbow, golfer's elbow, low back pain, and ligament tears.

Athletes who've had trouble walking or performing activities can visit the clinic for natural knee pain treatments. The providers eliminate the need for total knee replacement surgery, where surgeons replace damaged cartilage and bone with metal implants and a plastic spacer. With regenerative therapies, patients can recover from chronic knee pain, bone-on-bone osteoarthritis, decreased range of motion, torn meniscus, and torn ACL/MCL without steroids, arthroscopic surgery, or physical therapy. Natural knee treatments reduce pain with fewer side effects and minimal recovery time.

Alongside sports injury treatments, QC Kinetix (Freeport) treats patients with non-sports-related musculoskeletal pain resulting from poor body mechanics, muscle overuse, repetitive/jerking movements, and physical trauma. Regenerative medicine is well known for joint pain relief and treatment of soft tissue injuries as they rely on stimulating the body's natural healing response. It's also an aggressive, minimally invasive alternative to anti-inflammatories, painkillers, physical therapy, and therapeutic massages. Besides helping patients avoid complicated and costly surgical procedures, regenerative therapies are an option where other traditional orthopedic treatments have failed to offer relief.

On a patient's first visit, the providers conduct extensive consultations to understand their conditions and overall health goals before determining and diagnosing the root cause of joint pain/musculoskeletal injuries. Once completed, they educate the patient about the therapies they offer and the most appropriate treatment methods to improve pain, decrease inflammation, or repair degenerated tissues.

"Our mission is to help as many patients as possible enjoy a higher quality of life by improving their musculoskeletal pain and injuries with natural treatment options, thereby prolonging or eliminating the need for surgical intervention." Company Representative.

The patient experience at QC Kinetix (Freeport) is unmatched in the medical field as the team provides concierge-level service, compassionate care, and mutual respect. Their approach to treatment has earned the clinic many 5-star reviews, positive testimonials, and long-term relationships with the local communities. Learn more about their Freeport office by visiting their website or calling (207) 800-1452. The clinic is located at 23 Durham Rd, Suite 301, Freeport, ME, 04032, US.

Media Contact:

Company Name: QC Kinetix (Freeport)

Contact Person: Scott Hoots

Phone: (207) 800-1452

Address: 23 Durham Rd, Suite 301

City: Freeport

State: ME

Postal Code: 04032

Country: US

Website: https://qckinetix.com/portland-me/freeport/

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QC Kinetix (Freeport) is a Premier Sports Medicine Clinic, Improving the Performance of Athletes - Yahoo Finance

Turn back the clock with collaborative care solutions Peace Arch News – Peace Arch News

With our ever-increasing levels of stress, lack of sleep, poor diet and pollutants in our environment, our bodies are experiencing increasing strain.

The good news is that by bringing together traditional medicine and groundbreaking wellness therapies through programs such as biohacking, health weight management, hormone balancing and skin rejuvenation, it is possible to address the effects of age-related issues.

These various stressors can increase overall levels of stress hormones like cortisol, says Dr. Jean Paul Lim, from Ageless Living, with locations in Langley, Victoria and coming soon to Kelowna. This has a negative impact on the body by suppressing certain functions required for optimum health and wellness and can lead to weight gain, acne, inflammation, decreased sexual function, low energy, brain fog and a variety of diseases.

One of the various Biohacking treatments at Ageless Living is their hyperbaric oxygen chamber.

What is Biohacking?

The term biohacking refers to making small incremental changes that can have big effects on the bodys ability to optimally perform, Dr. Lim explores, pointing to tools such as their infrared sauna, hyperbaric oxygen chamber, pulsed electromagnetic field therapy and other therapies designed to encourage rejuvenation and increase performance.

What is Hormone Balancing?

Unlike earlier therapies like Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) that used animal hormones, our hormone balancing treatments use bio-identical hormone restoration, Dr. Lim says. This means they look chemically identical to our own natural hormones, and besides helping to boost our natural levels, may help reduce the risk of some chronic health conditions.

With physicians board-certified in anti-aging and regenerative medicine, Ageless Livings MD-directed hormone balancing and health weight programs can help both men and women of all ages achieve optimal health and function.

The team of professionals offer traditional medicine and groundbreaking wellness therapies as a collaborative care solution.

Initial consultation what to expect

Your Ageless Living physician will review your medical history and hormone cascade, and run some tests which may include serum, saliva and/or urine. You may also have a nutritionist do a full nutritional history review, review test results with your physician, and then theyll create your treatment plan.

The goal is not only to increase longevity, but also quality of life, allowing you to live your life to the fullest, Dr. Lim says.

Other clinics offer just aesthetics or hormone balancing, he says. We stand apart because we offer team-based, integrated solutions that bring all these tools and technologies together as a collaborative care solution.

Find out more on Facebook and Instagram, or book a treatment online.

Health and wellness

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Turn back the clock with collaborative care solutions Peace Arch News - Peace Arch News

Array of health threats to Native Hawaiians focus of $22.5M grant | University of Hawaii System News – University of Hawaii

The John A. Burns School of Medicine

Hawaii has the highest life expectancy at birth, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Still, that success is not reflected in Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islander (NHOPI) populations. State data show NHOPI have seven to 10 years less in life expectancy than other Hawaii residents, and researchers from the University of Hawaii at Mnoa John A. Burns School of Medicine (JABSOM) and other UH health sciences units are investigating the sources of the disparities and ways to close the gap.

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) awarded Ola HAWAII researchers a five-year, $22,557,840-million U54 grant to foster research into health disparities and to conduct three large studies to explore genetic, environmental and socio-economic related disparities in health and health-care access for specific communities in Hawaii. Specifically, the studies focus on the long-term impact of COVID-19, the role of exercise with type 2 diabetes and dietary impacts on the Native Hawaiian population.

JABSOM Dean Jerris Hedges and Thompson School of Social Work & Public Health Dean Emeritus Noreen Mokuau serve as multiple principal investigators for Ola HAWAII.

Hedges said, This grant helps unite UH and community members seeking to improve health in Hawaii through sound science.

Funding from the NIH is the premiere form of health research funding because everything you do for NIH connects back to the larger, national agenda on public health and healthcare, said Mokuau.

Based at JABSOM, Ola HAWAII (Ola means health or to heal in Hawaiian, and HAWAII stands for Health And Wellness Achieved by Impacting Inequalities) collaborates with community and UH Mnoa partners. Ola HAWAII investigators seek to close the health and longevity gap between NHOPI and the rest of Hawaiis population through biomedical, behavioral and clinical research.

Its about seeding ideas that best benefit the people of Hawaii, in areas such as cardiovascular health, diabetes and COVID-19, Mokuau added. The John A. Burns School of Medicine is the essential leader in the state of Hawaii for health, in general, and in reducing health care disparities in particular. Ola HAWAIIs work focuses on the kinds of research that help us find new interventions and treatments to support underserved populations who sometimes have less direct access to health care.

As we conduct research that will lead to interventions which help people, at some point, we begin to extend and enhance lives. Thats what this is about.

The three projects part of the grant include:

Exercise, Exosomes & Metabolic Health in Type-2 Diabetes

Native Hawaiians and other Pacific Islanders are disproportionately affected by type 2 diabetes. While exercise can successfully reduce the risk of developing type 2 diabetes, the exercise benefits for the NHOPI population are not as significant when compared to Whites. This study will investigate the role that nano-sized sacs play in lowering the risk of diabetes while identifying exercise and lifestyle guidelines that could be tailored for the NHOPI population. Noemi Polgar, Nicholas James and Scott Ferguson are the principal investigators.

MALAMA: Backyard Aquaponics to Promote Healthy Eating & Reduce Cardiometabolic Risk

Native Hawaiians have the highest mortality rates of cardiometabolic diseases, like heart disease and diabetes. Researchers are testing the efficacy of MALAMA, a culturally-grounded, family-centered backyard aquaponics program thats planted in multiple Native Hawaiian communities. The goal is to reduce food insecurity, while increasing the consumption of healthy foods, which could lower the risk of cardiometabolic diseases in the Native Hawaiian population. Jane Chung-Do and Heidi Ilima Ho-Lastimosa are the principal investigators.

Factors Responsible for the Development of Post-Acute Sequelae of Acute COVID Infection in Hawaii

Nearly a third of people who recover from acute COVID-19 will have whats known as long-COVID. Many of those with long-COVID also have pulmonary problems like persistent cough and labored breathing. Researchers are investigating the change in the bodys function that causes disease, and how social and psychological situations could contribute to long-term outcomes, particularly for Native Hawaiians and other Pacific Islanders and Filipinos. Gehan Devendra and Juwon Park are the principal investigators.

For more information, go to JABSOMs website.

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Array of health threats to Native Hawaiians focus of $22.5M grant | University of Hawaii System News - University of Hawaii

Scientists identify mutated protein linked to Alzheimers disease risk – The Hill

New research is uncovering the role a specific protein might play in developing Alzheimers, a disease that affects 5 million people in the U.S., according to estimates from 2020.

In a study published today in Molecular Psychiatry, researchers identified a new gene from mitochondrial DNA that encodes for a microprotein, named SHMOOSE. They analyzed the default and mutated versions of this small protein and found that the mutated version is associated with increased risk of Alzheimers disease, brain atrophy and changes in energy metabolism.

The recent discovery of SHMOOSE comes as some are questioning the validity of research on amyloids, or plaques that form in the brain.

The team thinks that SHMOOSE, which they found in the mitochondria of neurons, is important for energy signaling and metabolism in the central nervous system. Levels of the microprotein found in the cerebrospinal fluid correlated with other markers of Alzheimers disease.

In an experiment, they administered SHMOOSE directly into a rats brain and found evidence that the protein was active in the hypothalamus, the part of the brain that produces hormones for body temperature, heart rate and hunger. Further experiments in the laboratory using cultured cells confirmed that the unmutated forms of the microprotein can affect mitochondrial metabolism.

This discovery opens exciting new directions for developing precision medicine-based therapies for Alzheimers disease, focusing on SHMOOSE as a target area, said Pinchas Cohen, a professor of gerontology, medicine and biological sciences and senior author of the study, in a press release. Administration of SHMOOSE analogs in individuals who carry the mutation and produce the mutant protein may prove to have benefit in neurodegenerative and other diseases of aging.

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Scientists identify mutated protein linked to Alzheimers disease risk - The Hill

Cognition declines with age, but mental well-being may increase – The Hill

Story at a glance

While its generally known cognitive function declines with age, new research suggests mental well-being may increase as people grow older.

A study published in Psychology and Aging found healthy older adults displayed greater mental well-being but worse cognitive performance than younger adults. Researchers from the University of California San Diego School of Medicine sampled a total of 62 healthy younger adults in their 20s and 54 healthy older adults over the age of 60.

Participants were surveyed on symptoms of anxiety, depression, loneliness and overall mental well-being and were also tasked with performing a series of cognitively demanding tasks while their brain activity was measured using electroencephalography (EEG).

Results showed young adults experienced higher rates of anxiety, depression and loneliness compared to adults over the age of 60. Older adults showed higher levels of well-being but did worse in performing the cognition tests.

According to the study, EEG recordings among older adults showed greater activity in the anterior parts of the brains default mode network during cognition tests. This part of the brain is more active during passive tasks, such as thinking about the future and daydreaming, and is typically suppressed during tasks demanding focused external attention.

The default mode network is useful in other contexts, helping us process the past and imagine the future, but its distracting when youre trying to focus on the present to tackle a demanding task with speed and accuracy, Jyoti Mishra, senior author of the study and associate professor of psychiatry at UC San Diego School of Medicine, said in a statement.

Meanwhile, high cognitive scores among young participants were associated with greater activity in part of the brains executive control system, the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. But among older adults, those with higher cognitive performances showed increased activity in an area of the brain associated with attention and avoiding distractions, the inferior frontal cortex. Researchers note the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex degrades with aging, suggesting the inferior frontal cortex may pick up the slack for older adults when concentrating on a task.

We tend to think of people in their twenties as being at their peak cognitive performance, but it is also a very stressful time in their lives, so when it comes to mental well-being, there may be lessons to be learned from older adults and their brains, Mishra added.

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Cognition declines with age, but mental well-being may increase - The Hill

Smith+Nephew Academy expands global access to professional medical education through virtual reality and other advanced simulation technologies -…

LONDON, Sept. 21, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Smith+Nephew (LSE:SN, NYSE:SNN), the global medical technology company, today announces it is expanding the reach of its medical education curriculum through a suite of advanced simulation technologies. Healthcare professionals can now conveniently access core orthopaedic, robotics and sports medicine procedural skills-training using virtual and augmented reality, haptics, and 3D interactive gaming at every Smith+Nephew Academy centre of excellence around the world.

Healthcare professionals are universally acknowledging the benefits that simulation technology can deliver as part of their continuous education journey. Reinforcing procedural, psychomotor and cognitive skills by simulating a surgeons decision making process delivers an immersive learning experience that traditional training methods cannot match.

Mr. Stephen Mitchell, Consultant Trauma & Orthopaedic Surgeon at University Hospitals Bristol NHS Foundation Trust recently led a hip fracture management course for Smith+Nephew using virtual reality. He commented, "There is a huge opportunity with virtual reality for future training applications to drive both an accelerated learning process and distance training. It lends itself perfectly to the 2D/3D nature of trauma, arthroscopy and arthroplasty procedures."

Recent randomized controlled trials have generated data which indicates that virtual reality training programs can be a more effective modality of learning orthopaedic surgical techniques compared to passive learning tools such as a standard guide training.1 The training groups completed their assessments faster, with a higher Global Rating Score, and demonstrated greater retention with higher scores upon re-testing at two weeks.1

A recent Smith+Nephew survey for participants in a virtual reality training course concluded that they felt the workshop increased their surgical procedure knowledge and better prepared them for the cadaveric lab because of the instrumentation walk through.2 When asked if they would like to see more virtual reality sessions as part of future medical educational programmes, 90% of the participants responded "yes".2

Story continues

"Central to Smith+Nephew's commitment to being a global leader in medical education and improving patient outcomes isproviding a state-of-the-art, interactive learning environment tailored to the needs of the healthcare professional," said Cindy Walker, Senior Vice President of Global Medical Education for Smith+Nephew. "With Smith+Nephew Academy, we are actively transforming the way we educate our customers around the world by surrounding them with leading edge technology, clinical content and scientific data."

A number of educational VR modules are currently available including the world's first for arthroscopic meniscal repair launched earlier this year. Additionally, a module for the JOURNEY II BCS Total Knee Arthroplasty using a robotic-assisted CORI Surgical System will launch globally in October.

If you are a healthcare professional and you wish to learn more about Smith+Nephew's world-class medical education offerings, please visit our booth at OSET (#110) and our global platform Education Unlimited https://educationunlimited.smith-nephew.com/

References1. Blumstein G, Zukotynski B, Cevallos N, et al. Randomized Trial of a Virtual Reality Tool to Teach Surgical Technique for Tibial Shaft Fracture Intramedullary Nailing. J Surg Educ. 2020;77(4): 9699772. Smith+Nephew survey results on file

About Smith+NephewSmith+Nephew is a portfolio medical technology business focused on the repair, regeneration and replacement of soft and hard tissue. We exist to restore people's bodies and their self-belief by using technology to take the limits off living. We call this purpose 'Life Unlimited'. Our 18,000 employees deliver this mission every day, making a difference to patients'lives through the excellence of our product portfolio, and the invention and application of new technologies acrossour three global franchises of Orthopaedics, Sports Medicine & ENT and Advanced Wound Management.

Founded in Hull, UK, in 1856, we now operate in more than 100 countries, and generated annual sales of $5.2 billion in 2021. Smith+Nephew is a constituent of the FTSE100 (LSE:SN, NYSE:SNN). The terms 'Group' and 'Smith+Nephew' are used to refer to Smith & Nephew plcand its consolidated subsidiaries, unless the context requires otherwise.

For more information about Smith+Nephew, please visitwww.smith-nephew.comand follow us onTwitter,LinkedIn,InstagramorFacebook.

Forward-looking StatementsThis document may contain forward-looking statements that may or may not prove accurate. For example, statements regarding expected revenue growth and trading margins, market trends and our product pipeline are forward-looking statements. Phrases such as "aim", "plan", "intend", "anticipate", "well-placed", "believe", "estimate", "expect", "target", "consider" and similar expressions are generally intended to identify forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from what is expressed or implied by the statements. For Smith+Nephew, these factors include: risks related to the impact of COVID-19, such as the depth and longevity of its impact, government actions and other restrictive measures taken in response, material delays and cancellations of elective procedures, reduced procedure capacity at medical facilities, restricted access for sales representatives to medical facilities, or our ability to execute business continuity plans as a result of COVID-19; economic and financial conditions in the markets we serve, especially those affecting health care providers, payers and customers (including, without limitation, as a result of COVID-19); price levels for established and innovative medical devices; developments in medical technology; regulatory approvals, reimbursement decisions or other government actions; product defects or recalls or other problems with quality management systems or failure to comply with related regulations; litigation relating to patent or other claims; legal compliance risks and related investigative, remedial or enforcement actions; disruption to our supply chain or operations or those of our suppliers (including, without limitation, as a result of COVID-19); competition for qualified personnel; strategic actions, including acquisitions and dispositions, our success in performing due diligence, valuing and integrating acquired businesses; disruption that may result from transactions or other changes we make in our business plans or organisation to adapt to market developments; and numerous other matters that affect us or our markets, including those of a political, economic, business, competitive or reputational nature. Please refer to the documents that Smith+Nephew has filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission under the U.S. Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, including Smith+Nephew's most recent annual report on Form 20-F, for a discussion of certain of these factors. Any forward-looking statement is based on information available to Smith+Nephew as of the date of the statement. All written or oral forward-looking statements attributable to Smith+Nephew are qualified by this caution. Smith+Nephew does not undertake any obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statement to reflect any change in circumstances or in Smith+Nephew's expectations.

Trademark of Smith+Nephew. Certain marks registered US Patent and Trademark Office.

Smith & Nephew logo. (PRNewsFoto/Smith & Nephew)

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Smith+Nephew Academy expands global access to professional medical education through virtual reality and other advanced simulation technologies -...

Top experts to attend Precision Medicine and Functional Genomics conference – Gulf Times

The Precision Medicine and Functional Genomics (PMFG) 2022 conference is all set to take place from September 23 to 26 at St Regis Doha, bringing together researchers, healthcare professionals, policymakers, and community members from different countries.Precision Medicine takes individual variations in genetics, pharmacogenomics, proteomics, microbiome, environmental, lifestyle factors, and others into account, allowing healthcare providers to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of disease prevention, diagnosis, and treatment, Sidra Medicines chief research officer Dr Khalid Fakhro said in a statement.The sixth edition of the annual event, which will be preceded by a pre-symposium Biotech Forum tomorrow (September 22) at Sidra Medicines hospital auditorium, aims to explore the latest developments and innovations in biomedical research and how they translate into precision medicine solutions.According to the organisers, the four-day in-person symposium has pre-and post-conference workshops, as well as a satellite half-day meeting focusing on two major themes: How cellular, organoid, and animal models are being used to facilitate the discovery of basic disease mechanisms and potential cures; and The development of advanced therapies to treat diseases.Over the years, the PMFG series has grown significantly in topics and diversity with a wide range of speakers and a growing audience worldwide. As part of its National Vision 2030, Qatar is committed to building a knowledge-based economy in the biomedical and health sciences. Sidra Medicine supports this goal by actively engaging clinical and scientific expertise to establish a leading model for Precision Medicine in the region, Dr Fakhro said. He noted that the conference also aims to discover how personalised medicine can move from vision to practice and to draft with us the roadmap for a personalised health data ecosystem.Organisers noted that the conference provides an opportunity for participants to: Learn about co-ordinated efforts to develop precision medicine around the world and specifically in the Middle Eastern region, best practices for conducting successful precision medicine clinical trials, learn how advanced diagnostics and personalised treatments improve the quality of care for children with rare and chronic diseases (i.e. immune deficiency, hemoglobinopathy, cancer, etc), understand the value of using cell, organoid, and animals as disease models in biomedical research and learn about modelling of human tissues and diseases and how large-scale data resources, genome sequencing and novel technologies are driving precision medicine.

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Top experts to attend Precision Medicine and Functional Genomics conference - Gulf Times

Chocolate, Red Wine, And More: 5 Surprising Foods That May Help In Weight Loss – NDTV Food

Oats, daliya, quinoa, green leafy vegetables, and various kinds of fruits are some of the common things that we often add to our weight loss diet. Although many of us add these foods to our menu, we painstakingly eat them. Many are still not accustomed to their taste and may try to avoid them. However, when it comes to weight loss, your diet always doesn't need to be so boring. Many fun and delicious foods can also be added to your diet. But, if you are unsure of what can be eaten, here we bring you a list of some surprising foods that can aid in weight loss. Check them below:

(Also Read:10 Mistakes To Avoid When You Are On Weight Loss Diet)

Surprising, isn't it? Chocolate is a much-loved ingredient for many of us. But did you know that this can help in weight loss as well!? Researchers at Louisiana State University discovered that eating chocolate can increase the body's production of polyphenolic compounds that are good for the stomach, such as a fatty acid that switches off genes associated with inflammation and encourages the body to burn fat for energy.

Now, this is good news for all wine lovers! According to a study published in Nutrition Review, resveratrol and other antioxidants found in red wine may help with blood sugar regulation, heart health, and inflammation. Furthermore, moderate wine consumption could assist prevent excessive weight gain.

(Also Read:Weight Loss: 5 Healthy Diet Facts That Anyone Wanting To Lose Weight Must Know)

Popcorn has a low energy density, a lot of fiber, and few calories. These are all qualities of a food that can promote weight loss. Air-popped popcorn has 31 calories per cup, which is significantly less than many other common snack items.

Coffee is excellent for boosting your metabolism, as long as you drink it black without any artificial sweetener or creamers. Research in the journal Physiology and Behavior found that people who drank caffeinated coffee had an average metabolic rate of 16% higher than those who drank decaf.

Mustard is widely used in Indian cooking. According to research from the Oxford Polytechnic Institute in England, one teaspoon of mustard can increase your metabolism by up to 25% for hours after eating it. This may help you lose weight!

When you add these foods to your diet, make sure to have them in moderation as too much of anything can take a toll on your health.

Disclaimer: This content including advice provides generic information only. It is in no way a substitute for qualified medical opinion. Always consult a specialist or your own doctor for more information. NDTV does not claim responsibility for this information.

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Chocolate, Red Wine, And More: 5 Surprising Foods That May Help In Weight Loss - NDTV Food

WHAT SEPARATES UK ONLINE CASINOS FROM OTHER IGAMING SITES? – London On The Inside

The UK is undoubtedly one of the most interesting destinations regarding online betting and casino games. Although most punters in the country are more interested in sports betting, casinos are also gaining new fans. Thats the reason why Silent bet offers a detailed review of both types of betting platforms. Going through the content will help you find the casino with the best games, features, bonuses, and loads of other perks.

Even though there are sites that only focus on casino games, most of the top-tier betting platforms provide both things. In fact, many of them started as bookmakers but added a casino section so that they could gain more customers. The casinos in the UK are slightly different than those found elsewhere, so lets see why this is the case.

Some of the online casinos in the UK provide fewer games than their counterparts

One of the first things that online gamblers will notice once they start using a casino in the UK is the number of games. Those whove had access to offshore betting sites know that most casinos have thousands of titles. However, this is usually not the case in the UK.

Since local online casinos must adhere to the regulations from the UKGC, they cant allow the same number of games. Thats because these companies work with third-party brands that do not have permission to offer their services in the country. As a result, casinos in the UK usually have fewer titles than their counterparts.

Fortunately, there is an exception because some online casinos create their own games. In this case, operators can provide significantly more options because the licensing authority will approve their titles.

Some of the bonuses from the casino categories may also apply to sports

One of the things weve mentioned about the betting sites in the UK is that most of them have a sportsbook and a casino section. To make a name for themselves, these companies often come up with special kinds of bonuses. Some of them are mainly focusing on existing players, but the most attractive ones are for new users.

Regardless of the casino promotion, you may want to use, the sites in the UK will probably allow you to take advantage of it even while betting on sports. In other words, it doesnt matter which section you decide to play because the operator will allow you to choose both.

With that said, there might be one big difference regarding the bonuses that you must keep in mind, and it is related to the promo codes. While the offers for sports usually do not require such things, most casino bonuses require a special bonus code. You can learn more about it by skimming through the given offers T&C.

Online casinos in the UK offer better customer support

Although there are some exceptions, our experience reveals that UK online casinos provide significantly better customer support options than their counterparts. Regardless of your query, the people who work in these departments will be happy to answer and help resolve your issue.

Aside from being easier to use, the contact departments of UKs online casinos usually have more options to pick from. In addition to the standard live chat and email services, most sites have things like phone numbers. They even use social media and offer an on-site message form that people can use to ask questions.

Some of the best casino brands in the world even offer their own forum where people can go and share their thoughts about different things. Needless to say, some users are helpful and will always try to help other players.

UK casinos usually have an affiliate program

Even though most casinos have no problems gaining new clients, they always want to achieve the best results possible. Consequently, most of the online casinos in the UK allow people to take part in their affiliate programs and promote the brand. There are other sports betting jobs and things related to promoting casinos and iGaming sites, but this one is the most popular.

Those who become a part of the affiliate group have to share their link and get people to sign up. The most successful affiliates can earn a lot of money because these affiliate programs have revenue share that can reach north of 40%.

Sadly, becoming a success in the affiliate market is not easy, even for the most experienced marketers. It takes a lot of time and resources, so you need to be prepared.

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WHAT SEPARATES UK ONLINE CASINOS FROM OTHER IGAMING SITES? - London On The Inside

Miles Nielsen and the Rusted Hearts Kick Off ’22-23 IceHogs Season – Rockford IceHogs

The Rockford IceHogs, alongside the Hard Rock Casino Rockford, celebrate The IceHogs Opening Act of the 2022-23 season with a block party on Saturday, Oct. 22 from 4:30-6:30 p.m. outside the BMO Harris Bank Center featuring Rockford band, Miles Nielsen and the Rusted Hearts. The party, sponsored by Hard Rock Casino - Rockford, showcases popular local food trucks, drink specials, giveaways, and more ahead of the IceHogs taking on the Chicago Wolves inside the BMO at 7 p.m.

Food trucks from Olivo Tacos, 15th and Chris, TNT Funnel Cakes, Inzombia coffee and more will fuel fans who can participate in exciting pregame events like axe throwing, giant Jenga, giant Connect Four, bags/cornhole and more! The block party will take place at the intersection of Elm and Main St., outside of the BMO Harris Bank Center Box Office.

Double T and 96.7 The Eagle will broadcast live from the block party, joined by channel 23 WIFR.

The IceHogs and Hard Rock Casino Rockford are also teaming up on an exclusive Opening Night Block Party T-shirt giveaway. Fans attending the block party will have the first chance to get a shirt with the remaining shirts available to fans upon entry to the BMO Harris Bank Center.

The 2022-23 promotional calendar will be announced on Monday, Sept. 26 and individual game tickets for the 2022-23 regular season will go on sale on Monday, Oct. 3at 10 a.m. through IceHogs.com, the IceHogs app, by calling (815) 968-5222 or in person at the BMO Harris Bank Center Box Office.

Be Close to the FUN with an IceHogs Group Ticket Package!

Group ticket packages are on sale now! Experience the excitement of IceHogs hockey with a group of 10 or more family and friends! From skating on the ice before the game, watching pregame warmups from the bench, performing during the game, or high-fiving the IceHogs as they take the ice, an IceHogs Group Ticket Package brings you closer to the FUN! Reserve your group experience all season at IceHogs.com.

Season Ticket Memberships for 2022-23 are on Sale Now!Dont miss a moment of the action next season! Reserve your seats for the IceHogs 16th season as the top AHL affiliate of the Chicago Blackhawks. Celebrate Opening Night on Saturday, Oct. 22 at 7 p.m. at BMO Harris Bank Center against the Chicago Wolves! Contact us at 815-847-6399, at [emailprotected] , or visit IceHogs.com to claim your seats for this upcoming season.

The Rockford IceHogs open their 16th American Hockey League season and 24th in the Stateline on Saturday, Oct. 15 against the Manitoba Moose at 2 p.m. CT at Canada Life Centre and wrap up their season-opening weekend on Sunday, Oct. 16 against the Moose at 2 p.m. Listen and watch every game this season on the IceHogs Broadcast Network presented by BMO Harris Bank! Listen and watch every game from your favorite device on AHLTV, at home, or on the road at IceHogs.com and on the IceHogs app!

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Miles Nielsen and the Rusted Hearts Kick Off '22-23 IceHogs Season - Rockford IceHogs

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Part of IM-Aesthetics (INFORMA Medical Aesthetics), EuroMediCom is the official producer of leading international congresses and training courses specializing in aesthetics and anti-aging medicine. Notable events include AMWC Monaco, FACE Conference, and more.In partnership with the Aesthetic Multispecialty Society (AMS), state-of the-art presentations from our events (including AMWC Monaco) are available year-round for AMS premium members via the AMS digital platform.

Premium congress and courses across the globe

Certified Aesthetic Practice Program

Certified Aesthetic Practice Program

Aesthetic & Anti-Aging Medicine World Congress

Aesthetic & Anti-Aging Medicine World Congress - China

October 21 to 23, 2022

VISAGE

Academic Institute Certificateon Aesthetics of the Face

November 4 to 5, 2022

Aesthetic & Anti-Aging Medicine World Congress

Aesthetic & Anti-Aging Medicine World Congress - Japan

November 5 to 6, 2022

Aesthetic & Anti-Aging Medicine World Congress

Aesthetic & Anti-Aging Medicine World Congress - Latin America

November 17 to 19, 2022

International Congress of Aesthetic Dermatology

International Congress of Aesthetic Dermatology

November 24 to 26, 2022

FACE Bali 2023

Facial Aesthetic Conference and Exhibition - ASEAN

February 4 to 5, 2023

Aesthetic & Anti-Aging Medicine World Congress - India

Aesthetic & Anti-Aging Medicine World Congress - India

February 24-25, 2023

Monaco Advanced Facial Aesthetic Masterclass

Monaco Advanced Facial Aesthetic Masterclass

March 29, 2023

Aesthetic & Anti-Aging Medicine World Congress

Aesthetic & Anti-Aging Medicine World Congress

March 30 to April 1, 2023

Aesthetic & Anti-Aging Medicine World Congress

Aesthetic & Anti-Aging Medicine World Congress

May 5-7, 2023

Aesthetic Facial Anatomy

Aesthetic Facial Anatomy

May 12-13, 2023

Facial Aesthetic Conference and Exhibition

FACE 2023

June 23-24, 2023

For the first time ever, this world-class scientific powerhouse is coming to North America!

See you all in Miami on February 23-25, 2023!

Please be wary of scammers offering accommodation and registration services for EuroMediCom Congresses.Only trust the information provided on our official websites.

The Aesthetic Multispecialty Society (AMS) is the official scientific partner of our conference and course portfolio. Run by a committee of recognized global experts in the field of aesthetic & anti-aging medicine, AMS ensures that our programs are top-tier and presented by only the best industry speakers.

The AMS is also the worlds fastest growing online medical society. It hosts to a digital portal that provides a community of over 16,000 professionals with an online space dedicated to facilitating further education and encouraging networking opportunities.

Replay your favorite Conferences

Replay your favorite conferences at your own pace. AMS Premium members get unlimited access to a vast educational library featuring 100s of on-demand webinars and presentations from leading international congresses and courses!

Premium membership from 29 /month only.

Attend Premium Scientific Webinars

Enjoy live webinars presented by top key opinion leaders spanning all disciplines of aesthetics all for free.

Sign up for a free membership and get a taste of how the AMS can benefit you!

Free membership is just one click away!

Join a community of 16.000 Professionals

Enter an online space designed to help you share ideas, network with others, and boost your professional development through webinars, discussion forums, on-demand presentations, and more!

Join the fastest growing aesthetic medicine society

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4 Anti-Aging Products Youre Using All Wrong, According To Skincare Experts – SheFinds

Before you apply yet another anti-aging cream, serum, or other product, stop right there you could be using it all wrong. Many people are unknowingly applying some of the most effective ingredients to their skin all wrong. As a result, they are wasting both precious time and money on products that could be effective if used correctly. From sunscreen tips to retinol mistakes, these are the anti-aging products skincare experts say youre using all wrong.

For starters, you are probably not applying sunscreen daily, which means youre missing out on opportunities to protect your skin from the damaging, aging effects of UV light, whether its July or December.

Preventative care is the most important step inanti-aging, says Dr. Adrienne OConnell, medical director and president ofLaguna Beach Aesthetics. You must wear sunscreen that protects against both UVA and UVB rays (broad spectrum) with an SPF 30 or higher every single day, no matter the weather. I highly recommend a 100% mineral sunscreen, which is much safer for sensitive skin and contains no added chemicals.

The second most misused product is Retinol, according to Dr. OConnell.As the ultimate go-to skincare ingredient for a younger look, retinol speeds up your cell turnover so your body can replace damaged surface cells with brighter, younger skin cells, Dr. OConnell says.More is not better when it comes to this product. It can over-dry or irritate your skin.It is also dangerous to use in the morning because it makes your skin more sensitive to sunlight.

If you choose to use a Retinol product, Dr. OConnell says it is best used at night and washed off in the morning.You also must apply sunscreen in the morning as an added precaution, Dr. OConnell says.Also, start slow.Use the product once a week and gradually increase until you are using it according to the products instructions and never use more than the instructions direct you to.

Often, people buy the products they see on TV or are advertised by a favorite celebrity without caution, warns Dr. Nadir Qazi, DO, a board-certified physician, cosmetic dermatology surgeon, and owner ofQazi Clinic. Then when you look at the ingredient list it can contain ingredients known to cause harm to skin instead. For example, a product may contain retinol to combat wrinkles, Dr. Qazi says. However, if that same product contains a coconut oil derivative like Coco-Caprylate, the product might slow wrinkling but clog the pores and cause acne.Or they may only put a small amount of active ingredients in the product. Suppose an under-eye cream advertises vitamin C as its main active ingredient. Then, using a name like sodium ascorbate, they put it at the bottom of the ingredients list. All the while, that product uses silica as a main ingredient and filler to smooth the appearance of under-eye circles while using the product without treating them.

Thats why Dr. Qazi says its imperative to look at ingredients and do your own research on whether a product can be harmful or beneficial.

Exfoliation is wonderful it makes the skin fresh and rejuvenated, Dr. Qazi says. It feels so nice and vibrant that people are often tempted to exfoliate more often than they should, and with products that do more harm than good.

Over-exfoliation makes the skin sensitive and inflamed, and the skin can begin to flake and peel away, Dr. Qazi says. In addition, as skin becomes dehydrated from over-exfoliating, collagen breaks down, which causes the skin to lose its firmness and elasticity, creating wrinkles.

To maintain a youthful glow, chemical exfoliants are a good substitute for the abrasive scrubs one might have used growing up, Dr. Qazi says. Look for alpha-hydroxy acids like glycolic and mandelic acids. These acids exfoliate efficiently, and it is easy to find lower concentrations or limit how often you use them to avoid over-exfoliation. Mandelic acid can be especially beneficial for sensitive skin as it has a larger molecular structure and is very gentle as an exfoliant.

It isnt enough to own a bathroom medicine cabinets worth of expensive anti-aging skincare products. Learning which ones you could be using wrong is key to getting healthier, more glowy skin at any age.

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4 Anti-Aging Products Youre Using All Wrong, According To Skincare Experts - SheFinds

Discovering the Benefits of Nanoparticles – Muscle & Fitness

There have been many advances in health and wellness since the turn of the 21st century, ranging from the world of sports nutrition to stem cells. Thanks to these breakthroughs, athletes and fitness minded people can now stay healthy and fit beyond the years of intense training and competitive sports. Thus, there is a sense of anticipation for what may come along next, and nanoparticles may be that next advancement that everyone is waiting for.

Nanoparticles are very similar to stem cells because they have regenerative properties, however, they are not one and the same. Nanoparticles are comprised of hyaluronic acid, various proteins, and growth factors that aid in cellular repair. They can be sourced from different human fluids from donors by consent.

Nurse Practitioner, Kristian Adair, works in the field of biologics and functional medicine. She began her career as a registered nurse and has worked in advanced fields of care. Adair has experience working with cancer patients, post-surgical patients, pandemic, emergency, intensive care, and even newborn and pediatric care. Her career eventually led her to sports medicine, where she started networking with professionals specializing in the unique study of biologics. She also leads a very active lifestyle and considers herself a fitness enthusiast.

Fitness is my life, she said proudly. Adair has been studying nanoparticles for quite some time, and shes excited about the potential that they offer for many people that are looking to achieve personal fitness success. She makes it a priority to introduce nanoparticles to the clinics she works with because she feels that strongly about the positive differences they can make in those that receive application and undergo treatment.

For clinics that work with alternative, functional, and holistic medicine, this is right up their alley, explained Adair. They can be used for many different things.

Nanoparticles can help reverse tissue damage and improve healing processes because the proteins have properties that aid in cellular communication, as well as promote tissue growth. Strength sports athletes and people that commit to developing their physiques would benefit as a result.

Furthermore, they can delay cartilage breakdown and help protect the joints by forming a protective layer. Athletes that have wear and tear from competing over a long period of time or people that struggle with osteoarthritis may find that to be good news. Adair feels that this would be a much better solution than using something that will only mask or relieve symptoms.

When you think about athletes and the stress that they are placing on their muscles and joints, some of them are being diagnosed with osteoarthritis at very young ages. Nanoparticles can actually repair and restore injured areas, and treat the underlying issue.

Adair also emphasized that the benefits that come with nanoparticles arent designed to be short-term. Since they can help the person receiving them overcome the issues facing them, they can get back to whatever activities and sports they enjoy.

Nanoparticles wont only serve athletes, but they can help everyone even members of the military. Veterans that have served their country by taking part in tours while on duty may have regular reminders of that in the form of injuries they have to heal from or issues that lingered long after they called it a career. Adair feels that nanoparticles would be a great ally for those that either are or have been in service.

Soldiers that have chronic injuries that are affecting their joints or even ligaments and tendons would benefit, but it goes far beyond the musculoskeletal issues. Nanoparticles can help with the cardiovascular system, even the lungs. It has been shown to help people that have Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD). Thats a huge deal for veterans or other people that have had exposure to chemicals. These nanoparticles can reverse that damage to those lung tissues.

People that are even living with neurovascular issues, such as epilepsy or those that have seizures, may see positive outcomes from nanoparticles treatment as well.

Many nerve issues are caused by initial trauma or inflammation without ever fully being repaired, explained Adair. These treatments can help do that.

Outside of underlying health issues, Adair also shared that people that are focusing on anti-aging or addressing aesthetic concerns such as wrinkles or sunspots, hair loss, and sagging skin can also see results from nanoparticles.

Results are gradual and every week you can notice improvements. There are different ways nanoparticles can be applied.

Treatments should be recommended by a physician or provider. At the providers discretion, nanoparticles may be injected directly to the area being treated, such as a joint for local injury or the scalp if the intent is for hair growth. It can also be applied by microneedling for anti-aging benefits or through an IV injection for overall health. The advantage of IV administration is that the entire body receives treatment, unlike oral supplements or medication that are subject to being impacted by the digestive process. The number of treatments varies and is based on the issue being treated or if it is for general health and wellness. Aesthetic treatments have demonstrated results lasting over three years.

Adair shared that people that want to simply focus on optimal health would benefit from a single treatment. However, people that are facing one or more issues, like those previously discussed, may consider multiple treatments.

Nanoparticles are not intended to temporarily reduce unwanted symptoms or act as a band-aid treatment. So, you wont notice results tomorrow, she advised. They stimulate your body to heal itself, so benefits take time.

The highlight for athletes is that this is something that can enhance recovery and improve their performance, helping them in the long term and for life, she explained.

One issue that potential patients may face is finding places or physicians that offer nanoparticle treatments because they arent readily available everywhere. Doctors and primary care providers that are willing to offer treatments can reach out to a biologic medicine company, such as Organicell, to order them. If it is more for quality of life, functional or overall health reasons, you might consider going to a provider who offers alternative medicine, Adair suggests.

There may be little exposure of nanoparticles now, but the FDA is studying nanoparticles for potential approval as of this writing. Adair is confident that there will be much more exposure to come, which she hopes ultimately will lead to more people improving their quantity and quality of life.

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Discovering the Benefits of Nanoparticles - Muscle & Fitness

Medical Aesthetics Market to Showcase Vigorous Demand During the Upcoming Years, Forecast Till 2029 – Digital Journal

The persuasive Medical Aesthetics market survey report revises a range of parameters all through the report which analyses the market status in detail. As todays businesses greatly demand market research analysis before taking any verdict about the products, opting for such a market report is vital for the businesses. Market segmentation gives a clear idea about product consumption based on several factors that include but are not limited to type, application, deployment model, end user and geographical region. The finest Medical Aesthetics market report is a proven source to gain valuable market insights and take better decisions about important business strategies.

Aesthetic medicine is a broad word for specializations that focus on improving the appearance of cosmetic products by treating scars, skin laxity, wrinkles, moles, and liver spots. Dermatology, dental and maxillofacial surgery, reconstructive surgery, and plastic surgery are all traditionally included. Procedures in aesthetic medicine are typically sufficient. The demand for healthcare services has increased around the world as technology and equipment have advanced,

The facial aesthetic devices segment is expected to hold the largest share due to the patient demand for facial aesthetic treatments is increasing, as is disposable income and spending power, as well as the global elderly population.

Data Bridge Market Research analyses that the medical aesthetics market was valued at USD 10.47 billion in 2021 and is further estimated to reach USD 24.84 billion by 2029, and is expected to grow at a CAGR of 11.4% during the forecast period of 2022 to 2029.

Download Sample Report: https://www.databridgemarketresearch.com/request-a-sample/?dbmr=global-medical-aesthetics-market&AC

Industry Definition and Major Players Medical Aesthetics Market

The medical aesthetics market competitive landscape provides details by competitor. Details included are company overview, company financials, revenue generated, market potential, investment in research and development, new market initiatives, global presence, production sites and facilities, production capacities, company strengths and weaknesses, product launch, product width and breadth, application dominance. The above data points provided are only related to the companies focus related to medical aesthetics market.

Some of the major players operating in the medical aesthetics market are

Lumenis (Israel), Shanghai Fosun Pharmaceutical Group Co. Ltd. (China), Cynosure (US), Candela Medical (US), Aerolase Corp. (US), A.R.C. Laser Gmbh (Germany), Asclepion Laser Technologies Gmbh (Germany), Cutera. (US), Eclipse (US), Lutronic (South Korea), Medical Device Business Services, Inc. (US), Merz Pharma (Germany), Quanta System. (Italy), Sciton. (US), SharpLight Technologies Inc. (Canada), Syneron Medical Ltd. (US), Venus Concept. (Canada), Allergan, Inc. (Ireland) and Bausch Health Companies Inc. (Canada) among others.

The worldwide Medical Aesthetics market report includes a number of market dynamics and estimations of the growth rate and the market value based on market dynamics and growth inducing factors. DBMR team with project supervisors, introduces the customers on each key viewpoint including product improvement, key regions of advancement, application demonstrating, utilization of innovations, the obtaining methodologies, investigating specialty development openings and new markets. Not to mention, a high-quality global Medical Aesthetics market report is amazingly characterized with the application of several charts, graphs and tables depending on the extent of data and information involved.

Market Segments Covered in the Market Analysis Medical Aesthetics Market

The medical aesthetics market is segmented on the basis of product type, application, end user and distribution channel. The growth amongst these segments will help you analyze meager growth segments in the industries and provide the users with a valuable market overview and market insights to help them make strategic decisions for identifying core market applications.

Product Type

Aesthetic LasersEnergy DevicesBody Contouring DevicesFacial Aesthetic DevicesAesthetic ImplantsSkin Aesthetic DevicesOn the basis of product type, the medical aesthetics market is segmented into aesthetic lasers, energy devices, body contouring devices, facial aesthetic devices, aesthetic implants, and skin aesthetic devices. Facial aesthetic products are further sub segmented into dermal fillers, botulinum toxin, microdermabrasion and chemical peels. Body contouring devices are further sub segmented into nonsurgical fat reduction devices, cellulite reduction devices and liposuction devices. Cosmetic implants are further sub segmented into breast implants, facial implants and gluteal implants. Hair removal devices are further sub segmented into laser hair removal devices and IPL hair removal devices. Skin aesthetic devices are further sub segmented into laser resurfacing devices, nonsurgical skin tightening devices, micro-needling products and light therapy devices.

Application

Anti-Aging and WrinklesFacial and Skin RejuvenationBreast EnhancementBody Shaping and CelluliteTattoo RemovalVascular LesionsPsoriasis and VitiligoOthersOn the basis application, the medical aesthetics market is segmented into anti-aging and wrinkles, facial and skin rejuvenation, breast enhancement, body shaping and cellulite, tattoo removal, vascular lesions, psoriasis and vitiligo and others.

End User

Cosmetic CentersDermatology ClinicsHospitalsMedical Spas and Beauty CentersOn the basis of end user, the medical aesthetics market is segmented into cosmetic centers, dermatology clinics, hospitals, and medical spas and beauty centers.

Distribution Channel

Direct TenderRetailOn the basis of distribution channel, the medical aesthetics market is segmented into direct tender, and retail.

Access the full study findings here: https://www.databridgemarketresearch.com/reports/global-medical-aesthetics-market?AC

Regions Covered in the Market Report Medical Aesthetics Market

The medical aesthetics market is analysed and market size insights and trends are provided by country, product type, application, end user and distribution channel as referenced above.

The countries covered in the medical aesthetics market report are U.S., Canada and Mexico in North America, Germany, France, U.K., Netherlands, Switzerland, Belgium, Russia, Italy, Spain, Turkey, Rest of Europe in Europe, China, Japan, India, South Korea, Singapore, Malaysia, Australia, Thailand, Indonesia, Philippines, Rest of Asia-Pacific (APAC) in the Asia-Pacific (APAC), Saudi Arabia, U.A.E, South Africa, Egypt, Israel, Rest of Middle East and Africa (MEA) as a part of Middle East and Africa (MEA), Brazil, Argentina and Rest of South America as part of South America.

North America dominates the medical aesthetics market due to the rise in the adoption of cosmetic procedures. Furthermore, the increase in the incidence of skin disorders will further boost the growth of the medical aesthetics market in the region during the forecast period.

Asia-Pacific is projected to observe significant amount of growth during the forecast period of 2022 to 2029 of the medical aesthetics market due to the accessibility of technologically advanced products. Moreover, the increase in the attention towards physical appearance is further anticipated to propel the growth of the medical aesthetics market in the region in the coming years.

The Medical Aesthetics Market Report gives answers to the following questions:

Important Sections from the Table of Contents

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Consumption in Different Regions

Trends in Production, Revenue, and Price by Type

Analysis of the Global Microalgae Market by Applications

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Customers, Distributors, and Marketing Channel

Conclusion

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Research Methodology: Global Medical Aesthetics Market

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Data Bridge Market Research has over 500 analysts working in different industries. We have catered to more than 40% of the fortune 500 companies globally and have a network of more than 5000+ clientele around the globe. Data Bridge is adept at creating satisfied clients who reckon upon our services and rely on our hard work with certitude. We are content with our glorious 99.9 % client satisfaction rate.

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Medical Aesthetics Market to Showcase Vigorous Demand During the Upcoming Years, Forecast Till 2029 - Digital Journal

Lisa A. Zdinak, M.D. Selected by BTL to be the Recipient of Their New EMFACE Face-Lifting Device in New York City! – PR Newswire

Doctor Lisa Zdinak was chosen by BTL as one of only five physicians in NYC to be given the EMFACEdevice. The selection was based upon her role as a popular physician-trainer and her pioneering use of the sequential combination of radiofrequency energy and electromagnetic energy to lift skin and tighten muscle. She has performed thousands of procedures in her boutique practice in Manhattan's Upper West Side,Precision Aesthetics. Dr. Zdinak has travelled the globe and taught other physicians around the world how to get the best results from their techniques.

EMFACEachieves its result via the simultaneous delivery of two powerful technologies: monopolar radiofrequency skin-tightening combined with High Intensity Focused Electromagnetic [HIFES] energy to tighten the facial muscles.

HIFESuses a powerful but comfortable and safe amount of fast moving electromagnetic stimulation to contract the facial muscles hundreds of times faster than one can do alone.

"EMFACEpacks a one-two punch to get your facial muscles in shape again while tightening any loose skin that has lost its grip!"Lisa A. Zdinak, M.D.

EMFACEwith its unrivalled combination of mRF and HIFEShas finally granted Dr. Zdinak's wish after 15 years of brow-beating the device manufacturer:

"Give me a device that tightens the muscles of the face!"Lisa A. Zdinak, M.D.

EMFACEhas a profound effect on loose skin along the jawline andmore importantlyEMFACEHIFESselectivelystrengthens the muscles that lift up the face to restore the natural muscle balance lost to the perpetual "tug-of-war" with time and gravity.

After four EMFACEtreatment sessions, patients enjoy on average 37% wrinklereduction, 23% lifting effect and 30% increase in muscle tone. EMFACEtreats the full face in 20 minutes with NO NEEDLES! EMFACEcan be safely used on all skin types with no skin-tone restrictions and no downtime!

EMFACETMtherapy feels like a hot Swedish tapping massage with soothing mechanical vibrations. There is no downtime. Most patients undergo four (4) treatments scheduled once or twice a week. A treatment typically takes about twenty (20) minutes depending on the treated area. Patients have reported improvements after a single treatment session.The benefits of EMFACEcontinue to improve over the next three to six months.

Lisa A. Zdinak, M.D. is recognized as a go-to expert in the field of non-invasive face and body rejuvenation. Dr. Zdinak frequently lectures to medical professionals and media consultants on the latest aesthetic technologies and techniques. She is a respected physician instructor and has lectured extensively in the United States and abroad. She is a faculty lecturer to the World Congress on Anti-Aging and Aesthetic Medicine in Paris and Monte Carlo, and has been featured on Fox News, CBS News, WPIX News as well as in the New York Times, Vogue, Elle, People, Health Magazine, and In Touch magazines.

Dr. Lisa Zdinak attends her clientele at 10 West 74th Street in Manhattan's historic Upper West Side neighborhood.

For More Information Contact John Aslanian 212-799-1411www.precisionaestheticsmd.com 10 West 74TH Street, Suite 1A, New York, NY 10023

SOURCE Precision Aesthetics

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Lisa A. Zdinak, M.D. Selected by BTL to be the Recipient of Their New EMFACE Face-Lifting Device in New York City! - PR Newswire

Give This Sore Throat Tea Hack a Try This Winter – wkdq.com

If you or the kiddos are prone to soar throats, this tea hack might help.

Fall is officially upon us. As the leaves begin to change colors, the weather will get even cooler than it is now. With that, you might develop a cold or sore throat. Sure, you can take some over-the-counter medication.However, noone likes the taste of cold and sore throat medicine. Everyone makes that "disgusted" face after they take it...even adults. While kids usually put up a fight over it,these medications areone of the best remedies.That being said, there is another option that you can make yourself which will taste much better, and more importantly, might even do the trick.

I noticed a lot of my friends share a post that has recently gone viral on Facebook over the past few days. The post shows you how to make a tea that works great on sore throats and chest colds. The Facebook page Sparkles to Sprinkles says that you will want to make sure you have these ingredients on hand because you will want to store it in the fridge for two to three months, which should give you plenty of time to get it ready for the cold winter months. You can see how to make this tea below.

Thisisn't the only home remedy that we have discovered over the years for cold/flu season. You can learn how to clear out clogged sinuses and nostrils ina matter of seconds byclicking here. Oh, and iftea isn't really your thing, there are a couple of other home remedies for adults that you might want to try.One is calledGrandma's Cold Medicine, and it is a peppermint puff and whiskey cold medicine. You can find out how to make it by clicking here. The other one is a bourbon cough syrup which can be found byclicking here.

Drinking wine, in moderation, can be good for your health.

Reasons why you should be drinking lemon water every day.

I thought it would be fun to ask you what crazy things your grandparents would say to you and they are more than funny, they are hilarious.

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Give This Sore Throat Tea Hack a Try This Winter - wkdq.com