Fast and ultrafast thermal contrast amplification of gold nanoparticle-based immunoassays | Scientific Reports – Nature.com

Setting up TCA readers with CW vs. pulsed lasers

To achieve ultra-high signal amplification fold on the GNP labels, the TCA system can be improved by increasing the laser energy fluence. During laser irradiation, the heat generation of a GNP,(dot{{Q}_{GNS}}), can be estimated as

$$dot{{Q}_{GNP}}={C}_{abs}bullet {I}_{0},$$

(1)

where ({C}_{abs}) is GNPs absorption cross section (unit: ({mathrm{mm}}^{2})), and ({I}_{0}) is the energy fluence of laser irradiation (unit: (mathrm{W}cdot{mathrm{mm}}^{-2})). Increasing ({I}_{0}) creates a higher photothermal response from GNPs ((dot{{Q}_{GNS}})), which could help lower TCAs detection limit of GNPs in LFA. In most previous studies, a CW laser at 532nm was used in TCA and the regular irradiation power on LFAs was set as~25mW10,11,13,15. The measured diameter of the laser spot on LFA was about 0.1mm13, whose average input energy fluence, ({I}_{0}), was estimated as 3.2(mathrm{W}cdot{mathrm{mm}}^{-2}) (Table 1).

To maximize the photothermal response of GNPs, the traditional CW laser was upgraded to a pulsed laser with higher energy fluence. Here, a 1064nm Nd:YAG laser (iWeld 980 Series, 120J, LaserStar Technologies, FL, USA) was used to provide a high-energy singular millisecond pulse, as shown in Supplementary Fig. S1a. As calibrated, the highest laser pulse energy was 60.64J within 20ms16. For a 2mm spot, the energy fluence from the pulsed laser was up to 955.4(mathrm{W}cdot{mathrm{mm}}^{-2}), about 300-fold higher than that in previous studies10,11,13,15. To maximize (dot{{Q}_{GNP}}) under the same laser irradiation, the GNS was chosen over other GNPs, such as gold nanorods (about 90nm in length and 15nm in width) which also absorb strongly at 1064nm, because GNS has larger ({C}_{abs}) than other GNPs as characterized in a previous study17. Table 1 compares the (dot{{Q}_{GNP}}) of different GNP-laser settings. The GNS-pulsed laser (400V) setting has the highest heat generation which can be as high as 2080-fold of that for the 30nm gold nanosphere (GNSp)-CW laser (25mW) setting. Thus, it was chosen to test the limit of TCA. However, less than maximum pulsed laser intensity (22.3(mathrm{W}cdot{mathrm{mm}}^{-2})) was used to test GNS-loaded NC membrane (model LFA) since it was prone to burn under more intensive irradiation.

To test the limit of TCA, both TCA readers equipped with CW laser and pulsed laser were set up to compare their limits of detection (LoDs) for GNPs precoated in NC membrane and on coverslips as immunoassay models. Their schematic setup is shown in Fig.1a,c. More details on CW laser TCA can be referred to our previous work9,13. Details of ultrafast TCA setup and characterization are provided in Supplementary Sect. S1. As compared between Fig.1b,d, different lasers enable different heating intensity and speed. When heating a GNP spot with an ms pulsed laser, the heating energy from pulsed laser was confined within the laser spot which, in turn, enabled a much higher temperature increase than CW laser heating (detailed in Supplementary Sect. S4). The temperature increase of a GNP spot can be done within ms by pulsed laser heating while CW laser would need many seconds to heat the spot. As summarized in Fig.1e, faster reading can be achieved with the pulsed laser ultrafast TCA (seconds) than CW laser TCA either with discrete or continuous reading algorithms (115min) as detailed in previous work9,13,14. Additionally, different temperature measurement products (IR camera vs. sensor) were used to fit with the lasers as summarized in Fig.1e.

TCA readers equipped with continuous-wave (CW) laser vs. pulsed laser. (a) Arrangement of the laser path, IR camera, and testing platform, such as a substrate coated with gold nanoparticle (GNP) spot, in the CW laser TCA reader. (b) Schematic record of temperature response of a GNP spot heated by CW laser. (c) Arrangement of the laser path, IR sensor, and testing platform in the ultrafast TCA reader equipped with an ms pulsed laser. The gray area was the field of view of the IR sensor, which depends on the alignment parameters, d and (theta) (detailed in Supplementary Sect. S1). (d) Schematic record of temperature response of a GNP spot read by pulsed laser. (e) Comparison of reading time, laser heating time scale, and temperature measurement products in ultrafast TCA vs. CW laser TCA with continuous and discrete reading algorithms.

In addition to lasers, GNP-loaded substrates being irradiated also impact the thermal responses. In general, substrates with lower thermal mass and higher tolerance for laser intensity against thermal damages will achieve higher thermal signals. Table 2 lists three substrates (NC membrane, plastics, and coverslip) that can be potentially used for immunoassays and testing the limit of TCA. NC membrane (widely used in LFAs) and coverslip were chosen as substrates to be tested in this study since they had significant differences in both thermal mass normalized by volume and maximum temperature without thermal damage.

To test the limit of TCA, we compared thermal signals of the (pulsed laser) ultrafast TCA with CW laser TCA when reading the same model LFAs (GNS-loaded NC membrane) as seen in Fig.2. The UVvis-NIR extinction spectrum of the GNS is shown in Supplementary Fig. S3. The intensity output of the pulsed laser was set at 22.3(mathrm{W}cdot{mathrm{mm}}^{-2}) (Table 1) to avoid thermal damage to NC membrane, whose thermal signals are shown in Fig.2a. For CW laser TCA, both traditional discrete reading and continuous reading (i.e., fast reading) were applied and results were plotted in Fig.2b,c, respectively. The CW laser intensity was set at 12.7(mathrm{W}cdot{mathrm{mm}}^{-2}) (100mW, Table 1), nearly twofold lower than that from ultrafast TCA. Compared with visual reading of model LFAs, TCA readings showed a 10- to 20-fold reduction in LoD for GNSs loaded in NC membrane, as shown in Fig.2ac. The ultrafast TCA had higher thermal signals than CW laser TCA for the controlled GNS concentrations, as compared in Fig.2d. However, it also had much higher background noise for the blank NC membrane (i.e., without GNSs). We speculate that this is due to the limitation of the IR sensor. Ideally, the acquisition time of the IR sensor should be at least tenfold smaller than the pulse width (3ms) to ensure the accuracy and consistency of the signal acquisition. Unfortunately, in our case, the IR sensor, which was chosen based on its small size to fit into laser chamber and price consideration, had a comparable acquisition time of 3ms (Fig.1e) despite the claim that it could show interpolated temperature at 1ms interval; this may contribute to some noise or inconsistency in the reading. In contrast, the CW laser TCA had a much faster temperature acquisition (16.7ms) than the laser heating time scale (seconds), thus with high reading consistency. Perhaps, as a result, the current ultrafast TCA setup did not show an apparent benefit in signal amplification to read model LFA compared to the fast TCA. The lowest LoD was achieved by the fast TCA reading (i.e., using CW laser and continuous reading algorithm), and was twofold lower than those from ultrafast TCA and the other discrete reading algorithm. Future optimization may consider a more advanced IR sensor, although a higher cost is expected. Alternatively, increasing lasers pulse width can reduce the impact of IR sensors inadequate sampling, which can also enhance thermal signals with a significant increase in laser energy fluence. Since NC membrane was prone to pyrolysis and burn under intensive laser heating (Table 2), another assay substrate (i.e., glass) was considered to test the limit of TCA in the next section.

Reading gold nanoparticles in nitrocellulose (NC) membrane as model lateral flow immunoassays (LFAs) by TCAs with continuous wave (CW) laser vs. pulsed laser. NC membrane was precoated with diluted silica-cored gold nanoshells (GNSs) as model test regions in lateral flow immunoassays. (a) Thermal signals from ultrafast TCA reading with a pulsed laser (22.3(mathrm{W}cdot{mathrm{mm}}^{-2}), 170V, 1.41J, 3ms) (red). (b) Thermal signals from CW laser TCA reading with a discrete reading algorithm (yellow). (c) Thermal signals from fast TCA reading with CW laser and continuous reading algorithm (blue). (d) Comparison of these thermal signals from different TCA readings. Round shadows: limits of detection (LoDs) for GNSs. Square shadow (gray): visual cutoff to read GNS spot in NC membrane (model LFA). Statistical significance is indicated with asterisks: ns: p>0.05; *p<0.05; **p<0.01. The GNS concentration in NC membrane was the projected surface concentration=volumetric concentration (times) membrane thickness.

For even higher signal amplification, proof-of-concept measurement was conducted by TCA reading of GNSs pre-coated on a glass coverslip as a model MIA, which can tolerate much higher irradiation intensity than either paper or plastic (see Table 2 and Fig.3a). To maximize the thermal signals in measurement, the maximal energy output of the pulsed laser (400V, 60.64J, 20ms pulse width, and 2mm spot size, ({I}_{0}=) 955.4(mathrm{W}cdot{mathrm{mm}}^{-2})) in ultrafast TCA was applied to detect GNSs on the coverslips in Fig.3b. A stricter metric (IUPAC, see Methods) was applied to extrapolate the LoD for GNSs on coverslip by ultrafast TCA reading rather than ANOVA analysis which was used as default for other measurements. To understand the benefit of coverslip, its thermal signals were compared with those of model LFAs with NC membrane read by ultrafast TCA but at lower pulse energy (1.41J) to avoid thermal damage (Fig.3c). Unlike model LFAs, the GNS-coverslips in Fig.3b were all subvisual due to poor visual contrast, while the visual cutoff of model LFAs was shown in Fig.3c. Regarding ultrafast TCA reading as compared in Fig.3d, the coverslips had higher thermal responses than model LFAs for the same GNS concentrations. The thermal LoD for GNSs on coverslip was also lower (~57-fold) than the visual LoD for model LFAs. This suggests that increasing laser pulse energy enabled higher thermal responses, which compensated for the large thermal mass of coverslip. Since coverslip has better thermal tolerance, 20ms pulse was applied, which was~6.7-fold longer than the acquisition time of IR sensor (3ms). Thus, the sensor sampling issue that may have influenced readings in the model LFA case (Fig.3c) was likely not an issue here (Fig.3b). Further modeling and discussion on substrate comparison for TCA are provided in Supplementary Sect. S4 to potentially achieve even higher thermal signals and thus better signal amplification from TCA reading. Certainly, finding a sensor that can operate under even shorter pulses with improved signal-to-noise will also help.

Testing the limit of thermal contrast amplification (TCA) by improving substrates for ultrafast TCA reading. Thermal signals were measured through ultrafast TCA reading silica-cored gold nanoshells (GNSs) precoated in nitrocellulose (NC) membrane and on coverslips at the same projected surface concentrations as model test regions in immunoassays. (a) Experimental tolerance of laser pulse energy by the tested GNS-NC membrane and GNS-coverslip systems. (b) Thermal signals from GNS-coverslips with maximal laser pulse energy (60.64J) over 20ms. (c) Thermal signals from GNS-NC membrane with laser pulse energy at 1.41J over 3ms to avoid thermal damage. (d) Comparison of these thermal signals from different substrates. Blue round shadow: limits of detection (LoDs) for GNSs in NC membrane. Square shadow (gray): visual cutoff to read GNS spot in NC membrane. Dashed line: extrapolated LoD for GNSs on coverslip by IUPAC metric. All the coverslip cases were subvisual. Statistical significance is indicated with asterisks: ns: p>0.05; *p<0.05; **p<0.01; ***p<0.001; ****p<0.0001. The GNS concentration in NC membrane was the projected surface concentration=volumetric concentration (times) membrane thickness.

Figure4a compared thermal signals from GNS-coverslip and GNS-NC membrane (or model LFA) when being read by their respective optimal TCAs. The LoD for GNSs in the coverslip case (1.24E3 GNSs/mm2) was still about 2.85-fold lower than that of the NC membrane case. This further proved that increasing the laser fluence can improve thermal response and signal amplification fold via TCA reading, and thus the sensitivity of immunoassays. Figure4a also showed that the background noise of blank samples for ultrafast reading of GNS-coverslip was around 1C, much higher than GNS-NC membrane with fast TCA reading, which may set the major limit to an even lower LoD. This noise might be due to the system error of the ultrafast TCA, absorption of laser energy by glass, etc. For even greater MIA sensitivity enhancement by TCA, future efforts would be needed to reduce the background noise.

(a) Comparison of thermal signals from diluted silica-cored gold nanoshells (GNSs) precoated in nitrocellulose (NC) membrane (model LAF) and on coverslips as model test regions in immunoassays when being read by their respective optimal thermal contrast amplification (TCA) systems. Model LFA was read by fast TCA (i.e., continuous-wave (CW) laser with a continuous reading algorithm) while coverslips were read by ultrafast TCA at maximal energy output. Blue round shadow: limits of detection (LoDs) for GNSs in NC membrane. Square shadow (gray): visual cutoff to read GNS spots in NC membrane. All the coverslip cases were subvisual. Dashed line: extrapolated LoD for GNSs on coverslip by IUPAC metric. (b) Summary of the LoDs for GNSs precoated in/on different substrates (i.e., NC membrane or coverslip) and read by different TCA systems. Their corresponding amplification folds were calculated by comparing them with visual cutoff for reading GNSs in NC membrane. For NC membrane, GNS concentration was the projected surface concentration=volumetric concentration (times) membrane thickness.

To summarize, Fig.4b shows the LoDs for GNSs measured on various substrates (NC membrane vs. coverslip) when being read by different TCA systems (CW laser vs. pulsed laser). The signal amplification folds were normalized by the visual cutoff of reading model LFAs, which is a conventional readout format for commercial LFAs. The coverslip and ultrafast TCA with maximal pulsed laser energy output had the maximal signal amplification (57-fold), followed by the model LFA with fast TCA reading (20-fold). When reading model LFAs, the discrete reading by CW laser TCA showed a similar amplification fold (tenfold) to the ultrafast TCA. It is also expected that the amplification fold by ultrafast TCA could be further improved by reducing the background noise and/or using a better IR sensor (faster response), despite the higher cost and other changes in TCA setup. For future ultrafast TCA-MIA applications, the consideration of assay kinetics and design was also discussed in Supplementary Sect. S5 apart from signal amplification. Overall, TCA is able to enhance signals for both LFAs and MIAs. MIA with TCA is promising for future ultrasensitive POC diagnostics, although further improvement in reducing background noise will be needed if further signal amplification is needed or required.

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Fast and ultrafast thermal contrast amplification of gold nanoparticle-based immunoassays | Scientific Reports - Nature.com

Artificial Intelligence (AI), Cloud Computing, 5G, And Nanotech In Healthcare: How Organizations Are Preparing Best For The Future – Inventiva

Artificial Intelligence (AI), cloud computing, 5G, and Nanotech in healthcare: How organizations are preparing best for the future

Automation, digitalization, and technological enablement are having a significant impact on several industries. The healthcare industry is not an exception. The healthcare delivery system in India is changing and is about to advance significantly. The pandemic has shown that healthcare organizations can become innovative, flexible, and resilient by utilizing tech-enabled business models that place data at the core.

Additionally, healthcare organizations quickly realize that no matter how technically advanced their services or products are, they will no longer be applicable. To produce not just an enhanced product or service but also a better healthcare experience, it is imperative to connect with users along the healthcare value chain, be they patients or physicians. Fortunately, technological progress has accelerated the process of change required for Indian healthcare to become digitally linked and shown promise for enhancing peoples healthcare experiences.

India has already begun developing a national digital framework to create a digital health ecosystem on a national scale. The market for digital healthcare in India was estimated to be worth INR 116.61 billion in 2018 and is projected to reach INR 485.43 billion by 2024, growing at a CAGR of 27.41 per cent. Adopting electronic health records for the whole population is one of the several steps made in that regard.

Healthcare organizations are quickly embracing innovative technology to change how care is delivered in the nation and benefit the healthcare ecosystem as a solution to address the problems that the countrys healthcare system is now facing. Here are a few new technologies that are changing things:

Artificial Intelligence (AI)

Artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning (ML), and digital representations of the human bodys physiology make it possible to anticipate the chance that chronic diseases will advance based on the decisions being made. By using these simulations, healthcare professionals can better comprehend options and therapies and their consequences on patient health outcomes and influence on related expenditures.

Additionally, AI is helping healthcare professionals manage illnesses holistically, better coordinate care plans, and help patients manage and adhere to their treatment regimens. Further, statistics indicate that administrative expenses account for 30% of healthcare expenditures. The bulk of these duties, such as keeping track of bills that need to be paid and maintaining records, may be automated with AI, considerably cutting expenses.

Cloud Computing

The collaboration between physicians, nurses, and departments has grown crucial as healthcare organizations throughout the nation transition to value-based care. Thanks to cloud computing, accessing patient information has gone from a sluggish and laborious procedure to a quick and easy process.

With cloud computing, data may be stored centrally and made accessible from any location at any time. In addition, cloud infrastructure allows users to adjust health data storage depending on the new patient volume. IoT-enabled devices are being offered to patients by a variety of healthcare providers. By connecting these devices to a healthcare providers cloud system, patient data may be swiftly delivered to the doctor. This makes for a quicker diagnosis and better treatment.

The 5G Network

Every aspect of healthcare has the potential to be improved by a 5G connection, particularly since the healthcare sector is still recovering from the ravages of the epidemic. Large data files and real-time, high-definition video may be transmitted over a fast network to handle telemedicine appointments. Patients may reach medical professionals more quickly and receive treatment more quickly thanks to the use of 5G, especially in remote places.

Nanotech

Utilizing nanotechnology has given the healthcare sector new opportunities. Researchers and scientists use this technology to improve medical imaging, target tumours, and medication delivery systems. Additionally, the technique reduces costs, speeds up DNA sequencing, and provides scaffolding for tissue regeneration or wound healing. Further, artery obstructions are being removed by nanobots or micro-scale robots, as are quick biopsies of worrisome cancerous tumours.

The healthcare sector is anticipated to strengthen in 2022, thanks to groundbreaking discoveries and technologies. Most of the significant modifications are still in the future!

This article will examine the main medical technology developments and changes anticipated for the medical industry shortly.

The focus is often on lowering the cost, increasing access to healthcare services, and identifying and treating problems sooner rather than later. The US healthcare industry is expanding quickly; by 2026, the national healthcare products value is predicted to reach USD 6 trillion. Its never too late to prepare for the many available healthcare possibilities. Make sure to use digital technology to increase revenue, and staff productivity, achieve better financial results, and improve patient care.

Artificial intelligence (AI) technology has advanced quickly in recent years, and this trend will persist in 2022. Among the various sectors that gain from AI, medicine mainly uses it for accurate illness diagnosis and detection, albeit this is not the only use. IBM Watson, for instance, is one of the AI systems already accessible for use in business and healthcare.

Computed Tomography Scan Analysis

The demand for computed diagnostic professionals (radiologists) has significantly grown since the COVID-19 epidemic struck the worlds population.

AI-powered technology could provide a solution. AI systems can quickly evaluate CT images from hundreds of patients, identifying pneumonia patterns brought on by COVID-19 and informing physicians of these. That would make up for the lack of qualified labour in this industry.

Before our eyes, innovative ideas are taking shape. For instance, a deep learning model for imaging COVID-19 was developed to recognize COVID-19 patterns in CT images automatically. The Microsoft-sponsored InnerEye research project is another promising endeavour for processing computed tomography scans. Even though accuracy has significantly increased, radiologists are still hesitant to entrust the digital mind with crucial choices. AI cannot be held responsible for a poor diagnosis or ineffective course of therapy. Instead, the expert who decided to employ AI must pay for their error and take every precaution to limit the adverse effects while maximizing this digital health trend.

Because of this, most cutting-edge clinics employ AI as an additional tool rather than a stand-alone diagnostic or therapeutic method. It is excellent for validating current diagnoses or enhancing research data that has been gathered conventionally.

Machine Learning in Biopharma and Medtech

The pharmaceutical sector will effectively capitalize on technological advancements in healthcare by utilizing AI to discover new medications. A group of British and Japanese scientists filed a patent for the first medicinal molecule created by AI in January 2020. The drug will be used to treat obsessive-compulsive disorder after it passes muster for testing on humans.

AI-enhanced lab research has also led to the discovery of other intriguing formulations since late 2021, including some potential treatments for uncommon and extremely severe ailments. Numerous cutting-edge studies, such as molecular modelling and simulation of chemical reactions in multi-factor settings, leverage AI and machine learning approaches to support chemical experiments and therapeutic medication development.

Since many tests may be carried out electronically, this method enables scientists to reduce the number of expensive onsite experiments using reagents and high-tech lab equipment. It also hastens the discovery of critical scientific innovations.

Automating Hospital Workflows using Robotics

Startups from all over the world will pour hundreds of millions of dollars into creating AI projects in 2022, including various forms of robotic systems, which may enable them to reduce the cost of recruiting trained medical personnel. The intention is to assist medical facilities that already have a severe shortage of nurses and clinicians as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, which has put the entire healthcare system under unprecedented strain, rather than to replace people with machines, which would lead to unemployment and a decline in social standards. Learn more about creating medical HR software to assist HR professionals in addressing the U.S. medical workforce problem.

Innovative enterprises should keep in mind the medical communitys restrictions on AI-driven software, its capabilities, and its applications as they work to realize these lofty goals. Modern medicine has countless applications for robotic assistance and automated systems, including cleanliness, surgery, remote diagnostics, etc. However, the healthcare systems top goals will always be the well-being of medical personnel and the effective treatment of patients.

In light of this, robotic and AI-driven technologies will be employed to support current procedures rather than replace them, resulting in a potent fusion of the present and the future. Daring projects combined with sound regulation are a prominent trend in the digital health sector. It will enable physicians to utilize cutting-edge technology fully, learn to apply it in satisfying and secure ways, and steer clear of any pitfalls.

Symptom Checker Chatbots

Chatbots are computer programs with artificial intelligence (AI) support (often not true AI but powerful algorithms) that engage in meaningful conversations that resemble those between humans using voice, text, or option-based input.

Every area, including healthcare and medical consultancy, is seeing a rise in their use. These solutions, available around-the-clock online or via mobile devices, can provide preliminary medical diagnoses and health advice based on input and complaints from a patient. Chatbots can also be connected with unique patient portals for hospitals and clinics. When human medical assistants are unavailable, they can assist patients with their health issues and worries, even in acute situations (such as disaster-induced overloads of call centres, peak or non-operation hours, etc.)

These chatbots can aid patients in determining their subsequent actions and motivate them to seek professional medical advice when necessary. Care must be exercised, though, since it may result in inaccurate self-diagnosis and disinformation.

Globalization of AI Requirements in Healthcare

Ten recommendations that can serve as the foundation for the creation of GMLP have been developed by a powerful coalition of the U.S. FDA, Health Canada, and the United Kingdoms Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) (Good Machine Learning Practice). These guidelines will help programmers and AI engineers create secure medical equipment, software, and systems powered by artificial intelligence and machine learning (AI/ML) components. This shows that governments take the potential and hazards posed by AI exceptionally seriously and would want to regulate the use of AI in healthcare practices as soon as feasible.

Adoption of AI-backed Technologies

The main drawback of the advancement in artificial intelligence technology is that hackers will use it to target medical systems and steal secured healthcare information, rather than only to save human lives or help medical personnel with their everyday responsibilities. One of the growing dangers to the security of medical technology in 2022 and beyond is sophisticated malware with AI capabilities.

Which medical technology solutions are in jeopardy? Almost everything could have weak security or security flaws, such as wireless systems in hospitals, clinics, or health centres, EMR/EHR solutions, IoT, and computer-aided healthcare provider and health insurance company systems. Intricate phishing and social engineering assaults can also target clients and staff members.

Hackers may use this feature to simulate personal identities as part of next-generation super-personalized social engineering and phishing campaigns, which have the potential to be as dangerous and deceptive as ever before due to AIs growing capacity to mimic photorealistic 3D faces or organically sounding voices. This necessitates installing high-end data protection methods that can mitigate any hazards by hacker techniques aided by AI.

Despite all the technological safeguards and healthcare providers knowledge, statistics on data breaches show a sharp rise over the previous ten years, with infractions peaking in 20202021. These data breaches impact thousands of patients around the US. Hopefully, healthcare organizations will focus more on data security and their digital ecosystems in 2022. Healthcare cybersecurity is quickly emerging as a popular technological topic this decade.

How to Prevent Data Breaches in Healthcare?

The security of medical records, which is governed by HIPAA and EDI in the healthcare industry, is a top priority for the US government.

Every healthcare professional should follow a few effective procedures:

Facial Recognition With Masks

Face recognition technology, which permits approved access for medical professionals to mobile devices or workstations, rose to popularity due to its ease.

Deep learning facial recognition algorithms must be used in the COVID-19 pandemic to distinguish staff members wearing masks. Specific sources claim that some businesses have already achieved 99.9% accuracy in the face recognition of people wearing masks.

Nanotechnology may still seem like science fiction, yet it is steadily influencing our daily lives. By the end of 2021, fantastic news about the creation of tiny, organic robots that can reproduce themselves will reach every part of the globe. Therefore, it is realistic to anticipate that 2022 will bring forth several significant advancements in the nanomedicine sector. Early investments are welcome in the burgeoning nanomedicine industry.

Here is a brief explanation of what nanomedicine is: it uses nanoscale (microscopically small) materials and objects, like biocompatible nanoparticles, nanoelectronic devices, or even nanorobots, for specific medical uses and manipulations, like the diagnosis or treatment of living organisms. The injection of a group of nanorobots into a humans blood vessels might be utilized as a possible hunter for cancer cells or viruses, for instance. This method is anticipated to effectively combat a wide range of cancers, rheumatoid arthritis, and other hereditary, oncologic, or auto-immune illnesses on a cellular level (or even become an ultimate solution to them).

Even though the IoMT will not be a novel concept by 2022, this industry will experience exponential growth. Every one of the several digital health developments in this sector has excellent applications for healthcare professionals and has the potential to save billions of dollars.

Apps for remote health monitoring and wellness will continue to grow in popularity in 2022. You may discover a decent number of professional (and many other semi-professionals) mobile applications for healthcare and health in the GooglePlay or iTunes libraries.

Some mobile applications can connect to wearables like pulsometers or fitness trackers to use the information gathered by the sensors attached to your body to report or evaluate your health problems, including blood pressure, body temperature, pulse, and other metrics.

Autonomous nursing robots or self-moving smart gadgets can substantially assist by minimizing the tasks linked to supply management or sanitary maintenance that medical professionals must perform.

Different types of robots can work in various hospital-based settings and jobs, protecting human workers from infection risks or stress from the extreme burden imposed on many US hospitals by a COVID-19 patient overflow. An Italian hospital, for instance, employed robot nurses during a COVID-19 severe epidemic. These clever assistants were utilized to remotely check patients blood pressure and oxygen saturation levels because they are two critical indicators of their present state of health. Those levels might decline quickly, necessitating emergency intervention for the patient. This drastically decreased the requirement for nurses to visit patients in person.

Healthcare systems primarily concentrate on elements within their area of expertise: quality and price of medical services while generating risk assessments and accumulating illness data. However, they represent the very beginning. Before patients feel symptoms and seek the help of physicians, a host of other less apparent circumstances impact them.

Initial health problems are caused by factors other than a lack of care. Their origins are deeper; they are found in social, environmental, and demographic contexts that are rarely taken into account in the context of conventional clinical diagnoses.

Medical institutions mainly handle symptoms and offer advice on lifestyle modifications, having a minimally significant influence on treatment results (between 10% and 20%). In addition, between 80% and 90% of health outcomes are determined by non-medical variables. The term social determinants of health refers to these elements (SDOH).

In 2022, healthcare providers will approach SDOH with greater caution than ever before and carefully review patients medical histories, taking into account details that were overlooked in earlier years.

Doctors will shift from treating symptoms to prediction and prevention based on patients SDOH predisposition to particular diseases to stop the advancement of dangerous health concerns and reduce individual medical expenditures.

More implant-related options and technology will hit the global and American healthcare markets in 2022. This offers dramatically improved regenerative medicine effectiveness, patient rehabilitation, and a solution for many disabilities previously thought to be incurable.

Increasing the Use of 3D Bioprinting

By 2027, it is anticipated that the medical industrys volume of 3D printing potential will surpass $6 billion. Even if 3D printing biocompatible implants is not a novel technique in 2022, new materials and more advanced prosthetic methods will make this technology more dependable and available to a more extensive range of patients. In particular, it is anticipated that advancements in 3D bioprinting technology would improve the following areas:

Neural Implants

In 2022, effective options for brain-computer implants are anticipated to debut. Neuralink plans to begin inserting its devices into human brains at least in 2022. More businesses, groups, initiatives, and startups are preparing to market their neuro-implants for various medical requirements, including regaining functional independence in patients with multiple forms of paralysis or blindness.

For instance, it was stated that by the end of 2021, a team of scientists had implanted a microelectrode array (a penny-sized implant) into the visual brain of a blind individual, enabling her to recognize several letters and shapes. Although there is still a long way to go, brain implants potential to help people with various disabilities seems to have a genuinely fantastic and promising future.

Healthcare businesses will employ an exponentially growing number of data sources, and the volume of gathered healthcare data (including patient records, DICOM files, and medical IoT solutions) will also rapidly increase. Medical service providers will seek contemporary platforms, such as data fabrics, to combine and handle massive amounts of dispersed and structured data.

It will be among the tasks to build safe multi-cloud solutions capable of transporting significant amounts of data to manage, store, and mine it for valuable insights and to link siloed data with the healthcare systems.

Healthcare payers and providers frequently have interests that clash. The standard of their collaborative work decreases when both sides take absolutist positions. Patients, therefore, do not get the care they need. They are frequently mistreated, have to wait longer, and pay more.

Both payers and providers should embrace a value-oriented mindset and work toward group goals rather than individual success. All parties must understand that they are working for the same purposeproviding high-end healthcare to the publicand that if either suffers losses, the other will no longer support them. All organizations involved in the healthcare sector will hopefully try their utmost to learn how to collaborate in 2021. They will concentrate on delivering complete care, move from settling disagreements to cooperation, and communicate information to support successful decision-making.

The healthcare sector is already seeing the effects of the vast diversity, universality, and growth of digital communication channels. A brand-new channel for distributing medical data is telehealth. It entails delivering healthcare services remotely through the Internet, videoconferencing, streaming services, and other communication technologies. Long-distance education for patients and medical professionals is included in telehealth. Telehealth has achieved widespread acceptance and has evolved into a regular procedure in 2021. Modern clinics already counsel their patients electronically. This kind of communication will replace conventional internal dialogues and receive full regulatory permission in the upcoming years.

With the introduction of 5G wireless, telehealth will expand rapidly and be universally adopted shortly.

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Artificial Intelligence (AI), Cloud Computing, 5G, And Nanotech In Healthcare: How Organizations Are Preparing Best For The Future - Inventiva

UConn Medical School Selected for First ‘Creative Community’ of the National Board of Medical Examiners (NBME) – UConn Today – UConn

UConn School of Medicine is one of 10 medical schools nationwide prestigiously selected to participate in the National Board of Medical Examiners (NBME) first Creative Community to innovate medical education.

The Creative Community participation will support the work of UConns Principal Investigator Dr. Laurie Caines with a $150,000 grant over two-years to focus on identifying and developing enhancements to the objective structured clinical examination (OSCE) specificallyfor clinical reasoning.

It is a great honor to be one of the schools chosen to participate in the OSCE for Clinical Reasoning Creative Community, shared Dr. Ellen Nestler, associate dean for clinical medical education at UConn School of Medicine.

Clinical reasoning is a challenging skill to learn and to assess.It is a privilege towork with the NBME and other members of the OSCE for Clinical ReasoningCreative Community on a pilot project focusing on this importantarea of medical education, said Caines, associate professor of medicine and director of UConns Clinical Skills Assessment Program.

Caines adds: The Clinical Skills Assessment Program at UConn has had a long history of success in teaching our students the skills they need to be excellent clinicians. Thisgrant is both a recognition of that success andprovidesan opportunity forour school to contribute tothe forefront of innovationin medical education.

The 10 institutions selected to participate in the Creative Community, include:

The goals of the Creative Community are to: enhance the development, characterization and assessment of learner clinical reasoning skills; present patient groups without bias or stereotypes; minimize group differences in learner outcomes; and enable all institutions to better support learner skill development across the continuum of medical education and training.

The OSCE for Clinical Reasoning Creative Community is the first program to launch and the NBME plans to launch additional Creative Communities in 2022 and 2023. It is all part of theNBME Assessment Alliance, an initiative designed to facilitate productive and creative collaborations to bring medical school faculty, staff and students together with NBME staff to solve the pressing challenges faced by the medical education community today.

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UConn Medical School Selected for First 'Creative Community' of the National Board of Medical Examiners (NBME) - UConn Today - UConn

Penn med school partners with Spelman, Morehouse, other HBCUs to increase diversity – The Atlanta Journal Constitution

While the program has existed since 2008, Penn this year announced an expanded, formal partnership with five historically Black colleges Howard, Spelman and Morehouse in Atlanta, Xavier University of Louisiana, and Oakwood in Alabama.

We are talking about identifying students who show great potential and then we provide further enrichment, said Horace DeLisser, associate dean for diversity and inclusion and a 1981 Penn medical school graduate and pulmonary medicine specialist who has spent his entire career there.

For years, medical schools have struggled to diversify their pools. In 2020-21, only 8% or 7,710 of medical school students nationally identified as Black, according to the Association of American Medical Colleges. About 6.7% were Hispanic. Another 10.3% identified as multiple race/ethnicity.

While we have seen some increases over the years, the numbers in particular when we look at those who identify as Black or African American have been relatively flat, said Geoffrey H. Young, the associations senior director for transforming the health-care workforce. That doesnt mean that our schools havent been working diligently to increase diversity. They have.

Financial challenges, as well as structural racism, including disparities in K-12 education and access to housing, are among barriers, he said. Also complicating efforts to diversify student bodies is the high demand for students of color, said Annette C. Reboli, dean of Cooper Medical School of Rowan University. Smaller schools can lose admitted students to larger medical schools able to offer more generous scholarships.

Thats been a challenge that weve faced, that were also trying to raise money for scholarships so were not disadvantaged, said Reboli.

Nearly all medical schools that responded to a 2021 survey have pathway programs to attract more students of color, though they vary widely in structure and capacity, Young said. Locally, Cooper Medical School, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School at Rutgers, and Rutgers New Jersey Medical School all offer some form of preparatory programs or pipelines for college students from underrepresented or disadvantaged backgrounds to aid acceptance to medical school. Some of the programs require a student to have already taken the MCATs.

PCOM and Cooper also conduct outreach to students as young as elementary school age to encourage them to see a viable future in a medical profession.

Its not unusual for underrepresented students to not aspire to becoming a physician, said Reboli. They dont see many physicians who look like them.

Guaranteeing admission if students meet certain requirements and waiving the MCAT, as Penn does, is more rare, Young said.

Admitted students to Penn typically score in the top 1% on MCATs, DeLisser said.

If we had that as a filter, we would potentially lose the opportunity to really go after some talented diverse students, he said.

The program, he said, allows Penn to assess the students potential without MCATs in a way that is rigorous.

Jonathan Gaither, 20, who proudly wore a sweatshirt from Howard where he is a rising senior, wants to become a physician scientist and get both a doctorate and medical degree. The Colorado Springs resident said he views the Penn opportunity as a mandate to work doubly hard, not just for myself but for my peers.

I wont just be with [Penn Access Summer Scholars] students in medical school, said Gaither, the first in his family to pursue medicine. So I cant see myself as other.

Bryson Houston, 22, a 2021 graduate of Morehouse who completed Penns summer program, started medical school at Perelman last fall. His experience there helped him tremendously, he said.

I began to be more comfortable around these high-name professors and doctors and researchers and started to see myself in these spaces, he said.

Still, the strong support he got once in medical school made the difference.

It was insane to feel the love of the professors and my advisers, when I was going through tough times in the classroom, he said.

A native of the Dallas area and the son of a high school principal and X-ray technician, Houston hadnt considered Penn until his adviser called him one day when he was a sophomore.

He said, Hey can you put on a suit and meet me in my office in 15 minutes? Houston recalled.

Thats when he met DeLisser, who told him about the research opportunity and MCAT waiver. Though he thought it was pretty cool, he didnt apply immediately. Two weeks before the deadline, DeLisser reached out again, and Houston applied.

Penns medical school receives more than 7,000 applications annually, accepting about 250 or 3%-4%.

Thirty-nine of 150 students in the 2021 medical class at Penn 26% come from underrepresented groups. Penn ranks 28th in the country in medical school student diversity, according to U.S. News and World Report. Temple by comparison is sixth, while Drexel ranks 81st.

The summer scholars program started with promising undergraduates from Penn, Princeton and Haverford and eventually Bryn Mawr. Eighty-six students have participated since its inception, including 21 who are currently enrolled. Nearly all have gone on to medical school, and of those who went to Penn, all either graduated or are still enrolled.

The expansion to historically Black colleges began informally several years ago with DeLisser visiting and meeting with promising students. He coached them on medical school applications and offered advice.

Now we are getting students from Xavier who grew up in Arkansas, he said.

Much of the students summer research focuses on medical issues facing people of color, which appealed to Gabrielle Scales, 21, a rising senior at Spelman. Her research involves breast density of Black women as it relates to cancer.

She looks forward to advocating for patients from underrepresented groups.

There are not a lot of doctors who look like me and there could be a lot more, she said.

DeLisser eventually hopes to add Hispanic-serving colleges, once he can find donor support for tuition.

Growing the effort is important, especially considering that those from underrepresented backgrounds are more likely to serve those communities, the AAMCs Young said.

Thats what Johnson plans to do.

A lot of people from underrepresented communities, they benefit more from having physicians who look like them, she said, and understand the things they are going through.

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Seven from School of Medicine recognized as Health Care Heroes – Tulane University

CityBusiness, a New Orleans-based publication, recently announced its 2022 list of Health Care Heroes, including one School of Medicine professional and six Tulane physicians: (top row, from left) Bennetta Horne, PhD, Dr. Jacey Jones, Dr. Keith Ferdinand; (bottom row, from left) Dr. Mary Mulcahey, Dr. Adrian Baudy, Dr. Myo Thwin Myint and Dr. Meghan Howell (Ferdinand photo by Paula Burch-Celentano; Jones photo by Sally Asher; others provided by Tulane School of Medicine. Graphic by Kim Rainey).

CityBusiness, a New Orleans-based publication, recently announced its 2022 list of Health Care Heroes, including six School of Medicine physicians and one leader in its professional category. Started in 2007, the annual Health Care Heroes list honors healthcare professionals in the New Orleans area in the following categories: first responders, nursing, physicians, professionals and volunteers. Honorees are selected based on industry achievement and community involvement. This year, Tulane had six of the 22 doctors recognized in the physician category. To see the full list, click here.

Professional

Bennetta Horne, PhD, Assistant Dean for Equity, Diversity and Inclusion, and Director, Office of Multicultural Affairs

Bennetta Horne has built her career on seeing the possibilities. Shes helped countless students make their dreams of attending a university and medical school become realities. Horne was recently named assistant dean for Equity, Diversity and Inclusion, and shes also director of the Office of Multicultural Affairs at the School of Medicine.

Physician

Adrian Baudy, MD, Associate Professor and Program Director of the Nephrology Fellowship

Dr. Adrian Baudy grew up watching his family undergo treatments for heart disease, kidney disease, high blood pressure and stroke. His loved ones experiences with doctors inspired him to become one himself. Baudy came up with an idea to help lower their sodium intake. He knew his patients wouldn't give up their spicy foods, so Baudy developed a salt-free hot sauce and began giving it to his patients. He now sells it to people around the world, not for profit, but in an effort to show that eating healthier doesn't have to be boring.

Keith Ferdinand, MD, Professor of Medicine and Gerald S. Berenson Chair in Preventative Cardiology

Dr. Keith Ferdinand has been a leader in communicating the health issues related to COVID-19 for the Black community in New Orleans, providing scientific facts on the condition and the vaccine. He has been and is still heavily involved in many national organizations including the Association of Black Cardiologists, the American Society of Hypertension, and the Healthy Heart Community Prevention Program, a cardiovascular risk program targeting African American and other high-risk populations.

Meghan Howell, MD, Assistant Professor of Pediatrics

Dr. Meghan Howell is a Childrens Hospital pediatrician and is the clinical director of the hospitals NICU graduate program. She also serves as Childrens Hospitals school wellness program and ThriveKids liaison. A fierce advocate for her patients, she is passionate about reaching children and families where they are every day, to promote health and wellness at home and in school settings. She has built and expanded the NICU graduate clinic, which treats growth issues associated with premature birth in babies and children who have experienced time in NICU.

Jacey Jones, MD, Assistant Professor of Clinical Medicine

Dr. Jacey Jones came home to New Orleans after medical school because she wanted to take care of the same community who raised her. Both of Jones parents are doctors, and she followed their lead. She says growing up in her New Orleans East neighborhood and understanding the challenges and the reasons to celebrate help her connect with patients. Jones also volunteers her time and expertise outside the hospital, including speaking to area high schools about the importance of getting the COVID-19 vaccine.

Mary Mulcahey, MD, Associate Professor in Orthopaedics and Assistant Dean of Faculty Affairs

Dr. Mary Mulcahey uses her knowledge and experience to help her patients in New Orleans. She is also extremely passionate about trying to inspire women to become orthopedic surgeons. In February 2022, Mulcahey was appointed as an assistant dean of Faculty Affairs at the School of Medicine. She is also the assistant residency program director and director of the Womens Sports Medicine Program. Mulcahey is the team physician for several area sports teams. She is also passionate about trying to expand the diversity of future orthopedic surgeons.Myo Thwin Myint, MD, Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Pediatrics and Program Director of Fellowship/Residency Training

Dr. Myo Thwin Myint advocates for patients and families, especially LGBTQ+ and minority/marginalized populations, to have access to care that is collaborative, coordinated, and that integrates physical and mental health. Myint serves as co-chair on one of the committees within the Presidential Commission on Racial Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion (REDI) and promotes systemic changes for the well-being of students, residents, fellows, faculty and staff.

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Specific Brain Responses to Traumatic Stress Linked to PTSD Risk | Newsroom – UNC Health and UNC School of Medicine

Led by Temple University scientists and involving a national collaboration among researchers, a new study shows how decreased hippocampus engagement is associated with the development of posttraumatic stress disorder. Sam McLean, MD, MPH, leads the NIH-funded AURORA study.

CHAPEL HILL, NC Results from the largest prospective study of its kind indicate that in the initial days and weeks after experiencing trauma, individuals facing potentially threatening situations who had less activity in their hippocampus a brain structure critical for forming memories of situations that are dangerous and that are safe developed more severe posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms.

This association between reduced hippocampal activity and risk of PTSD was particularly strong in individuals who had greater involuntary defensive reactions to being startled.

This research, published in the journal JNeurosci, suggests that individuals with greater defensive reactions to potentially threatening events might have a harder time learning whether an event is dangerous or safe. They also are more likely to experience severe forms of PTSD, which include symptoms such as always being on guard for danger, self-destructive behavior like drinking too much or driving too fast, trouble sleeping and concentrating, irritability, angry outbursts, and nightmares.

These findings are important both to identify specific brain responses associated with vulnerability to develop PTSD, and to identify potential treatments focused on memory processes for these individuals to prevent or treat PTSD, said senior author Vishnu Murty, PhD, assistant professor of psychology and neuroscience at Temple University.

This research is part of the national Advancing Understanding of RecOvery afteR traumA (AURORA) Study, a multi-institution project funded by the National Institutes of Health, non-profit funding organizations such as One Mind, and partnerships with leading tech companies. The organizing principal investigator is Samuel McLean, MD, MPH, professor of psychiatry and emergency medicine at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine and director of the UNC Institute for Trauma Recovery.

AURORA allows researchers to leverage data from patient participants who enter emergency departments at hospitals across the country after experiencing trauma, such as car accidents or other serious incidents. The ultimate goal of AURORA is to spur on the development and testing of preventive and treatment interventions for individuals who have experienced traumatic events.

AURORA scientists have known that only a subset of trauma survivors develop PTSD, and that PTSD is associated with increased sensitivity to threats and decreased ability to engage neural structures retrieving emotional memories. Yet how these two processes interact to increase risk for developing PTSD is not clear. To better understand these processes, Murty and colleagues characterized brain and behavioral responses from individuals two weeks following trauma.

Using brain-imaging techniques coupled with laboratory and survey-based tests for trauma, researchers found that the individuals with less activity in their hippocampus and greatest defensive responses to startling events following trauma had the most severe symptoms.

In these individuals, greater defensive reactions to threats may bias them against learning information about what is happening so that they can discern what is safe and what is dangerous, said Bra Tanriverdi, the lead researcher on the study and graduate student at Temple. These findings highlight an important PTSD biomarker focused on how people form and retrieve memories after trauma.

These latest findings add to our list of AURORA discoveries that are helping us understand the differences between individuals who go on to develop posttraumatic stress disorder and those who do not, said McLean, an author on the paper. Studies focusing on the early aftermath of trauma are critical because we need a better understanding of how PTSD develops so we can prevent PTSD and best treat PTSD.

Since initiating our financial support of the AURORA Study in 2016, we remain steadfast in our commitment to helping AURORA investigators make important discoveries and to bridge the gaps that exist in mental health research funding and patient support, said Brandon Staglin, president of One Mind.

Check the AURORA website for Prediction tools, presentations, and publications resulting from AURORA studies.JNeurosciis the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience.

Research and clinical staff at the following institutions were critical in the care of patients and for this research study: Albert Einstein Healthcare, Baystate Medical Center, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston Medical Center, Brigham and Womens Hospital, Cooper Health Institute, Emory University, Henry Ford Health System, Indiana University, Massachusetts General Hospital, Rhode Island Hospital, The Miriam Hospital, St. Joseph Hospital, Temple University, Thomas Jefferson University, University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School, University of Alabama at Birmingham, University of Cincinnati, University of Florida College of MedicineJacksonville, University of Pennsylvania, Vanderbilt University, Washington University in St. Louis, Wayne State University, Ascension St. John Hospital, Wayne State University, Detroit Receiving Hospital, William Beaumont Hospital, Wayne State University, McLean Hospital, University of Missouri-St. Louis, UNC Medical Center, UNC School of Medicine, University of California San Francisco, Northern California Institute for Research and Education, Harvard University Medical School, and Harvard University School of Public Health.

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Vice Chancellor Barish appointed to Association of American Medical Colleges board – UIC Today

By Brian Tibbs

UIC Vice Chancellor for Health Affairs Dr. Robert Barish has been appointed to the 2022-2023 Board of Directors for the Association of American Medical Colleges, a nonprofit association dedicated to improving the health of people everywhere through medical education, health care, medical research, and community collaborations, a mission that is congruent with that of UI Health.

Association members comprise all 155 accredited U.S. and 16 accredited Canadian medical schools; approximately 400 teaching hospitals and health systems, including Department of Veterans Affairs medical centers; and more than 70 academic societies. Through these institutions and organizations, the Association of American Medical Colleges leads and serves medical schools and teaching hospitals and the millions of individuals employed across academic medicine, including more than 191,000 full-time faculty members, 95,000 medical students, 149,000 resident physicians and 60,000 graduate students and postdoctoral researchers in the biomedical sciences.

It is indeed an honor to join the board of directors of this esteemed and important organization, and I am looking forward to contributing my experience and background to its mission of advancing excellence in healthcare, Barish said. UI Health is already a leader among academic health enterprises. By collaborating with other health care leaders from across the nation, we can continue to advance education, care delivery and health equity.

Prior to joining UIC as vice chancellor of health affairs, Barish served as chancellor of the LSU Health Sciences Center at Shreveport from 2009 to 2015, where he provided leadership for the schools of medicine, allied health and graduate programs; a major academic medical center; and two affiliated hospitals.

Barish spent 24 years at the University of Maryland School of Medicine. He served as chief of emergency medicine from 1985 to 1996 and built a nationally recognized program. He was named associate dean for clinical affairs in 1998 and vice dean for clinical affairs in 2005.

That same year, following the devastation of Hurricane Katrina on the Gulf Coast, Barish helped lead a medical regiment dispatched by the state of Maryland to deliver emergency care to more than 6,000 hurricane victims in Jefferson Parish.

In addition to his medical duties at Maryland, Barish earned an MBA from Loyola College in 1995. From 1996 to 1998, he served as the chief executive officer of UniversityCARE, a University of Maryland physician-hospital network of family-oriented health centers located in neighborhoods throughout the Baltimore metropolitan area.

Barishs board appointment begins Nov. 15and will end at the conclusion of Learn Serve Lead: The AAMC Annual Meetingin November 2023.

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Vice Chancellor Barish appointed to Association of American Medical Colleges board - UIC Today

Harr Toyota announced as presenting sponsor of UMass Cancer Walk and Run – UMass Medical School

The 2021 UMass Cancer Walk and Run raised more than $700,000 for cancer research and clinical trials. The fundraising goal for this years event is $850,000 and carries a superhero theme.

UMass Chan Medical School has announced Harr Toyota as the presenting sponsor of the 24th annual UMass Cancer Walk and Run to be held on Sunday, Oct. 2, at Polar Park.

Harr Toyota is honored to serve as the presenting sponsor of this critically important event in Central Massachusetts, said Mike Gross, president/general manager of Harr Toyota. Many of us have been touched by cancerperhaps through personal diagnosisor by a family member, friend or colleague diagnosed with the disease. Our donation will help reduce the suffering and deaths caused by this disease.

Each year thousands take part in the event and 100 percent of the money donated supports adult and pediatric cancer research and care, and clinical trials of potentially lifesaving therapies at UMass Chan.

Harr Toyota has been a steadfast partner of the UMass Cancer Walk and Run and we are grateful for their ongoing support, said Traci Heath, manager of the UMass Cancer Walk and community fundraising. This signature sponsorship will help us continue to conduct cutting-edge cancer research at the highest level.

The walk and run has become one of the regions signature fundraising events. The Worcester Telegram & Gazette named the walk the Best Fundraising Event in 2021 and 2020 and the Worcester Business Journal chose it as the best nonprofit fundraiser event in Central Massachusetts. The 2021 event raised more than $700,000 for cancer research and clinical trials. The fundraising goal for this years event is $850,000 and carries a superhero theme.

Throughout the course of its history, thousands upon thousands of superheroes from across the region have emerged to lace their sneakers and take part in the walk. This year we honor these superheroespatients with cancer and their family members, health care providers, researchers, volunteersand you. By raising money and taking part in the walk, you have the power to save lives, UMass Chan Medical School Chancellor Michael F. Collins said in a video earlier this year.

Visit umasscancerwalk.org to start a fundraising page, start a team or make a donation.

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Harr Toyota announced as presenting sponsor of UMass Cancer Walk and Run - UMass Medical School

UM School of Medicine to Expand Innovative Medical Education Spaces with Gift from Entrepreneurial Leader and Alumnus Maurice N. Reid, MD ’99 – PR…

$1 Million Gift will Support New State-of-the-Art Gross Anatomy Laboratory

BALTIMORE, July 25, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- University of Maryland School of Medicine (UMSOM) DeanE. Albert Reece, MD, PhD, MBA, announced today that UMSOM will receive a new $1 million gift fromMaurice N. Reid, MD '99, CEO and Medical Director, ExpressCare Urgent Care Centers, bringing his total giving to nearly $2.2 million. Dr. Reid, who has been a longtime supporter the School's initiatives, is a proud School of Medicine alumnus and member of the Dean's Board of Visitors.

The gift, in support of medical education and the recently implemented Renaissance Curriculum, will be used to renovate UMSOM's gross anatomy laboratories and modernize that teaching environment for medical students.

"The School of Medicine is deeply grateful to Dr. Reid for his generosity in providing a transformational gift that will undoubtedly improve the learning environment for all of our students," said Dean Reece, who is also Executive Vice President for Medical Affairs, University of Maryland, Baltimore, and the John Z. and Akiko K. Bowers Distinguished Professor. "This gift will help guide UMSOM into the future by providing the technologically advanced infrastructure required to equip our students with the fundamental knowledge and skills necessary to practice medicine."

Dr. Reid noted that modernized teaching facilities and new technology are essential for the implementation of innovative learning methods. "As a physician and graduate of the School of Medicine, I recognize the importance of being on the front lines of medicine and medical education," said Dr. Reid. "I am thrilled to be able to support the Renaissance Curriculum by supporting the creation of a state-of-the art anatomical learning facility that will help train future generations of physicians."

The UMSOM's commitment to providing and maintaining an appropriate educational environment that is comfortable, technologically current, and conducive to learning is a leading priority for the Office of Medical Education. Donna L. Parker, MD, FACP, Professor of Medicine and Senior Associate Dean for Undergraduate Medical Education, believes the anatomy lab renovations afforded by Dr. Reid's gift will benefit students for the entirety of their pre-clerkship studies. "With our Renaissance Curriculum, students no longer learn anatomy in one course at the beginning of first year," she said. "They now revisit anatomy subject matter the anatomy laboratory during different blocks over the entire pre-clerkship curriculum. This allows them to learn anatomy along with the physiology and pathophysiology of each organ system."

The current laboratory, originally built in the 1970s, will receive various "infrastructure improvements along with new equipment, such as moveable and height-adjustable operating bed stations with smart monitors and surgical drop lighting," said Dr. Parker. "We are also looking to add innovative technology to the facility. This gift from Dr. Reid will make it possible to provide our students with a wonderful and updated environment in which to learn."

Adam C. Puche, PhD, Professor and Vice Chair of the Dept of Anatomy & Neurobiology at the UMSOM, added: "As part of the Renaissance Curriculum, the teaching of anatomy was restructured with heightened clinical relevancy and tight integration into systems-based learning. During this process, we recognized the existing UMSOM gross anatomy laboratory infrastructure was inadequate to deliver modern teaching technologies to our students.The renovations possible with this gift will upgrade the UMSOM gross anatomy teaching laboratories to a state-of-the-art facility, providing our medical students a modern teaching environment for the study of anatomy."

Dr. Reid's record of philanthropic giving to UMSOM is highly notable. His most recent contributions include a donation of $500,000 given in 2019 to support The Maurice N. Reid, MD Collaborative Learning Space. In 2021, he committed to more than $300,000 to support a pilot cohort for Point of Care Ultrasound training for medical students, along with a more recent $100,000 pledge to support the Center for Advanced Research Training & Innovation (CARTI).

Dr. Reid earned his medical degree from the University of Maryland School of Medicine in 1999, followed by a residency in Emergency Medicine at the University of Maryland Medical Center. After completing his residency, he served as Assistant Professor in the Department of Emergency Medicine at the UMSOM and later worked as Clinical Director of the Emergency department at Bon Secours Hospital in Baltimore, MD. In 2004, Dr. Reid left academia to pursue his desire to open an urgent care center in Harford County. In March of 2005, Dr. Reid founded ExpressCare Urgent Care Centers and opened its first location in Bel Air, MD. Since opening its doors, ExpressCare has grown to over 30 locations in three states and has formed a strategic partnership with LifeBridge Health, which now owns a minority share of ExpressCare.

About the University of Maryland School of Medicine

Now in its third century, the University of Maryland School of Medicine was chartered in 1807 as the first public medical school in the United States.It continues today as one of the fastest growing, top-tier biomedical research enterprises in the world -- with 46 academic departments, centers, institutes, and programs, and a faculty of more than 3,000 physicians, scientists, and allied health professionals, including members of the National Academy of Medicineand the National Academy of Sciences, and a distinguished two-time winner of the Albert E. Lasker Award in Medical Research. With an operating budget of more than $1.3 billion, the School of Medicine works closely in partnership with the University of Maryland Medical Center and Medical System to provide research-intensive, academic and clinically based care for nearly 2 million patients each year. The School of Medicine has nearly $600 million in extramural funding, with most of its academic departments highly ranked among all medical schools in the nation in research funding. As one of the seven professional schools that make up the University of Maryland, Baltimore campus, the School of Medicine has a total population of nearly 9,000 faculty and staff, including 2,500 students, trainees, residents, and fellows. The combined School of Medicine and Medical System ("University of Maryland Medicine") has an annual budget of over $6 billion and an economic impact of nearly $20 billion on the state and local community. The School of Medicine, which ranks as the 8thhighest among public medical schools in research productivity (according to the Association of American Medical Colleges profile) is an innovator in translational medicine, with 606 active patents and 52 start-up companies. In the latestU.S. News & World Reportranking of the Best Medical Schools, published in 2021, the UM School of Medicine isranked #9among the 92 public medical schoolsin the U.S., and in the top 15 percent(#27) of all 192public and private U.S. medical schools. The School of Medicine works locally, nationally, and globally, with research and treatment facilities in 36 countries around the world. Visitmedschool.umaryland.edu

SOURCE The University of Maryland School of Medicine

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UM School of Medicine to Expand Innovative Medical Education Spaces with Gift from Entrepreneurial Leader and Alumnus Maurice N. Reid, MD '99 - PR...

UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND SCHOOL OF MEDICINE FACULTY MEMBER FEATURED ON NBC NIGHTLY NEWS SPECIAL REPORT ON GUN VIOLENCE IN AMERICA – PR Newswire

UM School of Medicine Professor of Trauma Surgery Dr. Thomas Scalea Featured on National Network News Highlighting State of the Art Care Provided atUniversity of Maryland Medical Center's R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center

BALTIMORE, July 25, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- A University of Maryland School of Medicine (UMSOM) faculty member was featured in a prestigious national news program over the weekend highlighting the lifesaving critical care medicine practiced at the R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center at the University of Maryland Medical Center (UMMC). In an extended segment called "One Night in America" that comprised half of the evening newscast for NBC Nightly News and additional coverage on MSNBC, a reporter was embedded at Shock Trauma for more than nine hours from Saturday evening, July 16, into Sunday morning to document emergency trauma cases caused by gun violence. Reporters were also embedded in three other major cities showing different perspectives including police response to shootings and community support from a local street pastor.

The special report aired on Sunday evening and prominently featured Thomas Scalea, MD, The Honorable Francis X. Kelly Distinguished Professor of Trauma Surgery at UMSOM and Physician-in-Chief of the R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center at UMMC. He also serves as Chief of Critical Care Services for the University of Maryland Medical System (UMMS).

Reflecting on the death of one of his patients, Dr. Scalea said in the segment, that gunshot deaths are an unnecessary injury in a civilized society. "This is one night in one city in the richest country in the world. How can this make any sense?"

For more than 50 years, the R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center has been a worldwide leader in trauma care and innovation, training some of the leading trauma physicians in the U.S. and around the globe. SOM physician-scientists have pioneered major advances in trauma care through research. Shock Trauma is the nation's first and only integrated trauma hospital and is considered a national model of excellence with a 96 percent survival rate. It is Maryland's Primary Adult Resource Center (PARC) designated to treat the most severely injured and critically ill patients. The Program in Trauma at UMSOM is the only multidisciplinary dedicated physician group practice that cares for injury in the United States.

Earlier this year, Dr. Scalea celebrated his 25thanniversary with the Shock Trauma Center. Among his many accomplishments, he cared for tens of thousands of Marylanders critically injured in motor vehicle collisions, falls and violent attacks, traveled to China and Haiti to render assistance to earthquake victims, helped train thousands of U.S. Air Force personnel and worked alongside military physicians in war-torn Afghanistan. He has steered Maryland's highest-level trauma center through two years of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Footage from Dr. Scalea's interviews and patient care in the Shock Trauma Center can be found in the links below.

About theUniversity of Maryland School of Medicine

Now in its third century, the University of Maryland School of Medicine was chartered in 1807 as the first public medical school in the United States. It continues today as one of the fastest growing, top-tier biomedical research enterprises in the world -- with 46 academic departments, centers, institutes, and programs, and a faculty of more than 3,000 physicians, scientists, and allied health professionals, including members of the National Academy of Medicine and the National Academy of Sciences, and a distinguished two-time winner of the Albert E. Lasker Award in Medical Research. With an operating budget of more than $1.2 billion, the School of Medicine works closely in partnership with the University of Maryland Medical Center and Medical System to provide research-intensive, academic and clinically based care for nearly 2 million patients each year. The School of Medicine has nearly $600 million in extramural funding, with most of its academic departments highly ranked among all medical schools in the nation in research funding. As one of the seven professional schools that make up the University of Maryland, Baltimore campus, the School of Medicine has a total population of nearly 9,000 faculty and staff, including 2,500 students, trainees, residents, and fellows. The combined School of Medicine and Medical System ("University of Maryland Medicine") has an annual budget of over $6 billion and an economic impact of nearly $20 billion on the state and local community. The School of Medicine, which ranks as the 8th highest among public medical schools in research productivity (according to the Association of American Medical Colleges profile) is an innovator in translational medicine, with 606 active patents and 52 start-up companies. In the latest U.S. News & World Report ranking of the Best Medical Schools, published in 2021, the UM School of Medicine is ranked #9 among the 92 public medical schools in the U.S., and in the top 15 percent(#27) of all 192 public and private U.S. medical schools. The School of Medicine works locally, nationally, and globally, with research and treatment facilities in 36 countries around the world. Visit medschool.umaryland.edu

About the R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center

The R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center, University of Maryland was the first fully integrated trauma center in the world and remains at the epicenter for trauma research, patient care and teaching, both nationally and internationally today. Shock Trauma is where the "golden hour" concept of trauma was born and where many lifesaving practices in modern trauma medicine were pioneered. Shock Trauma is also at the heart of the Maryland's unparalleled Emergency Medical Service System. Learn more about Shock Trauma.

About theUniversity of Maryland Medical Center

The University of Maryland Medical Center (UMMC) is comprised of two hospital campuses in Baltimore: the 800-bed flagship institution of the 13-hospital University of Maryland Medical System (UMMS) -- and the 200-bed UMMC Midtown Campus, both academic medical centers training physicians and health professionals and pursuing research and innovation to improve health. UMMC's downtown campus is a national and regional referral center for trauma, cancer care, neurosciences, advanced cardiovascular care, women's and children's health, and has one of the largest solid organ transplant programs in the country. All physicians on staff at the downtown campus are clinical faculty physicians of the University of Maryland School of Medicine. The UMMC Midtown Campus medical staff is predominately faculty physicians specializing in diabetes, chronic diseases, behavioral health, long-term acute care and an array of outpatient primary care and specially services. UMMC Midtown has been a teaching hospital for 140 years and is located one mile away from the downtown campus. For more information, visit http://www.umm.edu.

This news release was issued on behalf of Newswise. For more information, visit http://www.newswise.com.

SOURCE University of Maryland School of Medicine

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UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND SCHOOL OF MEDICINE FACULTY MEMBER FEATURED ON NBC NIGHTLY NEWS SPECIAL REPORT ON GUN VIOLENCE IN AMERICA - PR Newswire

Totally Not Fake News: Battle Red Helmets and How We Got There – Battle Red Blog

Houston - This season, the NFL is allowing teams to wear alternate helmets, with the premise that it will allow teams to sell more over-priced merchandise to fill the coffers of a multi-billion dollar businessoh, wait, what? Oh, we meant to say that it will allow teams to demonstrate a different look for fans to watch as they cheer on their favorite teams on the field of play. So far, the reaction have beenok. [That will get edited out, right? Right???]

Hey, the idea is kinda cool. It can be fun to show off the different logos and designs. Dont know if it will help us out, but thats why we play the games, noted Texans WR Brandin Cooks.

What Cooks referred to was the release of a new helmet design, which will be part of the Texans Battle Red uniform, now slated for the Battle Red home game against the Philadelphia Eagles on November 3rd.

[Easterby], it cant hurt us. Aint never beaten the Eagles since Ive been here. Not sure I can recall if the city has ever beaten the Eagles in pro footballand Ive seen a few things grumbled veteran Jon Weeks. He was about to offer up some more sage wisdom about the helmets, but was interrupted by new offensive guard Kenyon Green, who once against asked Weeks what it was like to practice with Earl Campbell when the Campbell first played as a pro. Weeks told the young whippersnapper to get the [Easterby] off of his lawn.

Yet, the design of the helmet didnt start out that way. There were quite a number of design concepts leading up to the call to just take a red helmet and slap a logo on to it.

Oh, when the Texans started mulling the concept, you knew that it was just a matter of time before the all-powerful Executive Vice President of Football Operations was going to get involved sighed one unnamed Texans staffer.

When he heard about our plans, man, he jumped right in, offering at least 24 designs within the first 20 minutes of discussion continued the staffer.

Look, the wearing of the uniform is a big part of football operations, which I am the Grand Master/Overlord/Ayatollah. So, when I got word about the discussions of an alternate helmet, of course that is in my purview and therefore, my overall responsibility to resolve. This is all part of my job responsibilities, and has nothing to do with the fact that I have a LOT more time on my hands or that my previous responsibilities seem to be shifted over to other people lectured the Executive Vice President of Football Operations Jack Easterby.

So, once I saw my chance to regain my influence, er, help out the organization, I stepped in. So many divinely inspired ideas. Here is just a sampling:

Hey, I have gigabytes of these things. Wanna see more?

Our reporter politely declined, and once he left the office, immediately sprinted away.

Still, it didnt quite answer our question about just how the Texans came to this decision about the helmet.

Well, ok, we did take all of the designs, er, excuse me, the divinely ordained messages from the enlightened EVP of Football Operations. We were ordered to run them up to [Texans CEO] Cal [McNair]. He was busy, as usual. Still, we did manage to sneak a minute into his office. Anyway, he took a glance over at a few of the ideas. Not sure he was all that impressed. When we pressed him for a decision, especially since the uniform/helmet designers needed that information, he was really annoyed.

[Easterby] it! Cant you see that I am busy on this Fortnite Level!!! Oh, great, now you made me lose to those punks from Alvin! 5th graders!!!! And I thought I finally had them!!!! [Easterby]!!! Back to playing 2nd graders...and to the bottle to soothe the pain. Ok, now that you [Easterbyed] up my work, what do you have for me?

Well, we showed him the design concepts and logos. His response:

Who...who...whodesignedthosethings [belch]?? Thats gonna (hic)...thats gonna (hic)...cost money. MONEY!!! We doin this for Battle Red Day, or whatever we call it? [Easterby] it! Just slap our logo on a red helmet and be done with it.

Never would have guessed, but Cal actually made a brilliant call. The best part, well, other than he forgot to fire us in the post-gamer hangover, is that we will make a lot of money from people buying these silly helmets. As if anyone not playing for the Texans that day would ever buy them. Still, people still spend money on this franchise. Who are we to stop them?

We tried to reach back out to Jack Easterby, who informed us that we could submit the question through his new and improved website, but, er, there were some problems...

Until next time, it will bear watching to figure out just how many people will fork over the money for the new Battle Red helmets, and/or just how these uniforms will be the key to any potential Texans success against the Eagles.

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Totally Not Fake News: Battle Red Helmets and How We Got There - Battle Red Blog

#WorldPRDay: The public relations industry must lead the fight against fake news – TheCable

BY FATIHAH AYINDE, OYINDAMOLA ABDULFATAI AND EDWARD ISRAEL-AYIDE

The prevalence of social media has revolutionised the dissemination rate of fake news. With social media becoming the easiest way for the public to consume information, we have witnessed the propagation of fake news on a scale only comparable to the days of yellow journalism.

Fake news, spin, and disinformation spread through online channels, which eventually land offline, shape global issues as they did in the 19th century. For example, consider the difficult terrain in which world leaders and medical experts found themselves when they recognised the necessity to confront the twin epidemics of coronavirus and fake news.

In Kano, Nigeria, 74.2% of respondents in a study agreed that social media aided the spread of fake news on Covid-19. To stem the tide, communication and public awareness campaigns such as Stop The Spread (developed by the WHO and the UK Government) and the Afghan governments Citizens Charter program were designed to counter the spread of false information regarding Covid-19.

The fight against fake news is urgent

Information travels faster and has become ubiquitous; this is what the world feeds on to shape perspectives. Claire Wardle, PhD of the Annenberg School of Communication at the University of Pennsylvania, argues that the biggest shift (today) is everybody is completely overwhelmed by information. We are taking in so much more information than we ever used to. In a news-saturated society, Wardle believes consumers have an inherently limited ability to distinguish between correct and false information.

To tell the difference, Richard Hillgrove suggests looking at other credible news outlets to ascertain the validity of the information. If it stands alone in a vacuum, theres a good chance its a manufactured lie. He, however, warns that the content might be lifted from a credible source and then de-plagiarised by being slightly rewritten. This is the gravity of the war the public relations industry is up against.

It is why as communicators, we must exercise extreme vigilance when it comes to fake news. While speaking on a World PR Day panel, Wimbart PR CEO Wimbart Hope asked PR professionals to interrogate the brief to avoid being conduits for fake news. Her point is well taken because public relations experts are increasingly likely to be misled into creating or disseminating bogus information on behalf of clients.

We must fight fake news because it harms PR

Although some will not agree, the art of planned persuasion and relationship building will never die. Indeed, one of the most notable public relations functions is fostering engaging conversations that result in meaningful change. The power of this industry is required in the fight that we advocate.

Because the public relations industry is a critical media stakeholder, the profession will suffer severely if the threat of fake news is not handled. As a result, when it comes to fake news, there is no circumstance in which staying on the fence is a good move. As stakeholders, we must build the defences that help the public rebuild trust in the media.

Rachel Gilley of Clarity PR was right when she said, To fight fake news and the spread of misinformation, as an industry, we need to uplift the content we know to be quality and ensure we look at stories with a critical lens. As we partner with clients and brands to tell their narratives, we need to take a collaborative approach with reporters, only working with the trusted publications, so we are not fuelling fake news hubs.

In the Pedagogy of Freedom, Paulo Freire calls our attention to ethics, democracy, and civic courage and responsibility in a way that demands that citizens have a moral duty to speak against acts perpetuated with the motive to cause unrest. Anyone can call him or herself a PR practitioner, but the mark of an ingenious public relations practitioner is in their ability to conscientise society.

Apart from the moral obligation, another ground for the fight against fake news is that it directly affects the PR market, so much so that when it comes to publishing media content on mainstream media, for example, the public relations practitioner is limited since the public has come to associate certain media stations with fake news.

Preserving the sanctity of what constitutes authentic information tends to have a positive ripple effect on the public relations industry. Knowing that critics of public relations associate public relations with propaganda as it is, it is indefensible not to take a stand against fake news.

To present a case for fake news, consider the authoritarian government systems in many countries. Fake news is an obvious outcome of censorship and restrictions on access to information to fact-check news. Regardless, PR practitioners cannot afford a declining public trust in traditional journalism and, by extension, new media.

The public relations industry needs to realise that fake news has the power to dismantle structures and platforms used by public relations practitioners to reach audiences. Without these platforms returning to their original state, the use of crisis communications to assist organisations, clients, individuals, and others in dealing with crises will lose effectiveness.

Freire believed that the prevalent ideas of a society are always the ideas of those groups who hold power. It is therefore naive to think that the public relations industry can combat this threat to the profession and society on its own. This necessitates collaboration with regulatory agencies to ensure due diligence and act as fact-checking bodies before fake news and content go viral.

The public relations industry must recognise the importance of addressing this issue. It must acknowledge it as a global issue and understand that it will not be resolved overnight. We must continue to hold one another accountable in the industry to reinforce that fake news and misinformation have no place in our profession or the media.

Ayinde, Abdulfatai and Israel-Ayide of Carpe Diem Solutions Ltd write from Lagos, Nigeria

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#WorldPRDay: The public relations industry must lead the fight against fake news - TheCable

Annuar: Viral video on PMs goreng pisang statement in Parliament fake news, MCMC to act against TikTok creator – Malay Mail

The video depicted Prime Minister Datuk Seri Ismail Sabri Yaakob as saying that goreng pisang sellers cannot use the subsidised packet cooking oil as it is meant for domestic use only. Bernama pic

By Radzi Razak

Tuesday, 19 Jul 2022 1:55 PM MYT

KUALA LUMPUR, July 19 The Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC) is looking into claims that an individual from a political party spread fake news on Prime Minister Datuk Seri Ismail Sabri Yaakob.

Communications and Multimedia Minister Tan Sri Annuar Musa revealed the matter today as he expressed his disappointment over the sharing of a video of Ismail Sabri talking about subsidised packet cooking oil being used illegally by goreng pisang (banana fritter) sellers without context.

I was told that MCMC had identified an individual making a TikTok posting in his account, and we asked MCMC to act.

The individual is not an MP, but he holds a position in a certain political party, he told a press conference in Parliament today.

The video depicted Ismail Sabri as saying that goreng pisang sellers cannot use the subsidised packet cooking oil as it is meant for domestic use only.

However, Annuar said the video was cut short and it depicted Ismail Sabri as making an example out of such sellers because it would be difficult to ban restaurants and hawkers from using the oil.

Yesterday, Ismail Sabri told the Dewan Rakyat that the government risked incurring public backlash if it sent enforcement officers from the Domestic Trade and Consumer Affairs Ministry after hawkers who used the subsidised cooking oil for commercial purposes.

If the enforcers fine them or seize the cooking oil packets from them, we will be labelled as acting cruelly towards the poor.

There are many things that the government needs to consider, but believe me, the government will not stay silent. We will do our best for the country, he said.

He was responding to a question from Opposition leader Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim (Port Dickson-PH) on targeted subsidies during Question Time.

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Annuar: Viral video on PMs goreng pisang statement in Parliament fake news, MCMC to act against TikTok creator - Malay Mail

Islamists, Congress leaders spread fake news that Hindus posed as Muslims to offer namaz at Lulu Mall: The reliance on conspiracy theories to shield…

Earlier last week, a controversy erupted in Lulu Mall, Lucknow, after a video of Muslims offering namaz inside the mall premises went viral on the internet. Following the incident, a conscious effort is undertaken by sympathisers of Islamists to peddle an alternative theory that Hindus were the ones who had offered the namaz inside the mall.

Social media platforms are awash with conspiracy theories saying that people who offered namaz in Lulu Mall were Hindus and not Muslims. They cited the arrest of Hindus in a different case to allege that those who were offering namaz inside the mall were not Muslims, but Hindus.

Ahmed Khabeer, Editor of the Islamist propaganda portal The Jamia Times, shared a screenshot of a tweet posted by Lucknow Police to allege that Hindus posing as Muslims had offered namaz in the mall.

The screenshot of the tweet posted by DCP Lucknow carried the press note of the police about the arrests made in connection with the offering of unauthorised religious activities inside the Lulu Mall. The press note was about the arrest made on July 15 of youths who had gathered outside the mall for the recitation of Sundar Kand.

However, in his bid to malign Hindus, Khabeer conveniently ignores to share the complete details of the case. The four men arrested in the case were taken under custody on July 15 after they had gathered outside the Lulu Mall to recite Sundar Kand to oppose the offering of namaz inside the mall, videos of which had gone viral on the internet on July 13, two days before their arrest. One Arshad Ali was also arrested by the police on July 15 after he had gone to the mall to offer namaz.

But Khabeer used the press report of their arrest to weave a twisted narrative that depicted Hindus as villains for defaming Muslims by assuming their identity and offering namaz in a public place. The group of Muslims offered namaz on July 12, while the arrests of Hindu youths for gathering outside the mall for the recital of Sundar Kand took place on July 15. But Khabeer expediently muddled the facts to assert that the Hindu men arrested by police were held for offering namaz.

As it turned out, Khabeer was just a cog in the wheel of the giant and rampant propaganda effort aimed at shielding Muslims who offered namaz inside the mall and placing its blame at the feet of Hindus. The well-oiled Congress ecosystem also partook in the efforts to malign Hindus as imposters who posed as Muslims and offered namaz inside the mall premises.

Congress supporter Dr Pooja Tripathi quoted the UP polices tweet on men arrested for reciting Sundar Kand, claiming that they posed as Muslims to offer namaz in the mall. Pawan Khera, chairman of the media and publicity department of the All India Congress Committee, also participated in this disinformation campaign as he quoted Tripathis tweet and lent his support to the insidious propaganda that entailed misrepresenting police communication of Hindus arrested as taken under custody for offering namaz.

Congress leader Salman Nizami also shared the fake news that said Hindu men posing as Muslims were arrested by the police. However, after being called out over his fake news, Niazi promptly deleted the tweet.

Radio Mirchis Sayema, who has often displayed little hesitation in promoting fake news that serves to bolster Islamist propaganda, also shared the misinformation being peddled about the arrest of Hindu men. Sayema quoted Khabeers tweet and promoted the misinformation that Hindu men posed as Muslims to offer namaz inside the mall.

Islamist website Siasat, too, played its part in perpetuating the warped propaganda that men who offered namaz in the mall are not Muslim. In an article, the portal claimed that the CCTV evidence confirmed that it was a purposeful prank intended to tarnish the mall and incite communal hatred. Interestingly, the article offers no evidence to substantiate the claim that CCTV footage from the mall proved that those who offered namaz were not Muslims.

Realising how the propagandists were using the news of the arrest of Hindu men to fuel disinformation, the official Twitter account of Lucknow Police issued a clarification, stating that the claims made on social media that men were arrested for offering namaz are misleading and baseless.

For a long time now, apologists have either shifted the blame on the victims or appropriated their identity to shield their Islamist brethren. A certain section of the Muslim fundamentalists and their supporters loves peddling such conspiracy theories as it shows Hindus in a bad light while whitewashing the crimes of the Islamists.

While the intellectuals resort to twisting facts and weaving an alternate reality to absolve the Muslim fundamentalists and frame Hindus as the guilty, their allies in the form of Islamists and Islamic terrorists use Hindu disguises while carrying out attacks to shield their coreligionists from the fallout.

For instance, during the Godhra Train burning incident, the propagandists tried to deflect the blame of the tragedy on the Hindus, promoting preposterous theories to claim that the conflagration took place from within the bogey and the Islamists did not attack the train from the outside.

Even during the 9/11 attacks, the Islamists and their supporters had tried to play down the involvement of Muslim fundamentalists, alleging that the terror attack was a result of sabotage carried out by Americans and pinned on the Islamists to justify the subsequent invasion of Afghanistan and other Muslim countries.

In India, too, such conspiracy theories blaming everyone but the Islamists have taken root, especially in the immediate aftermath of the incidents when factual details are scarce. After the 26/11 attacks in Mumbai, a section of propagandists pushed conspiracy theories linking the lone terrorist captured alive, Ajmal Kasab, to Hindu organisations, citing the Kalwa he wore as a symbol of his Hinduness.

However, the plan to implicate Hindus as terrorists went awry after Mohammed Ajmal Kasab shed light on their nefarious plan to portray the attack as a case of a Hindu terror attack. It came to light that fake Hindu identities and Hindu symbols were deliberately attached to the terrorists, to project the attack as a handiwork of Hindu terrorists.

Nevertheless, it did not stop the Congress party from linking the terror attack to Hindus. Congress leader Digvijaya Singh released a book that blamed RSS for the terror attack, whitewashing the Pakistani antecedents of the terrorists and pinning the blame of the tragedy on Hindus.

It is worth noting that Congress was the first one to invent the Hindu Terror bogey in the wake of the 2006 Malegaon blasts as a parallel to Islamic terrorism. With this imaginary construct, the Congress party wanted to assert that terror has no religion. However, their real intention was to shield Islamic extremism that was responsible for a string of terror attacks in the tumultuous decade between 2000 to 2010. The Congress party then wrongly implicated Sadhvi Pragya to firm up their Hindu Terror fabrication.

More recently, the same methodology was once again employed to assassinate Hindu samaj leader Kamlesh Tiwari. Two assassins, Farid-ud-Din Shaikh and Ashfaq Shaikh came dressed in saffron kurtas at Tiwaris office-cum-residence at Lucknow andassassinatedhim. They carried sweet boxes in which they had concealed weapons with which they killed the Hindu leader. They were able to get close to Kamlesh Tiwari by the virtue of being dressed in saffron robes, which attracted little suspicions about their possible intentions to make the visit.

Similarly, earlier last year, a foiled assassination plot to kill Yati Narsighanand Saraswati, the chief abbot of the Dasna Devi Temple, revealed how the Islamists planned to use Hindu disguises to execute their nefarious designs. The terrorist who was planning to kill Yati Narsighanand Saraswati was caught and the police recovered a Bhagwa kurta, a Kalava, a Mala and a Chandan-tika from the terrorist, highlighting how he was working straight out of the Islamist playbook that ordains radicals to commit the acts of terror under Hindu disguises.

As the controversy over namaz offered inside the Lulu Mall erupted, the left-liberal intelligentsia and the Congress party resorted to distorting facts and using the arrest of three Hindu youth for the recital of Sundar Kand to propagate fake news that they had been arrested for offering namaz in the mall.

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Islamists, Congress leaders spread fake news that Hindus posed as Muslims to offer namaz at Lulu Mall: The reliance on conspiracy theories to shield...

OPINION: Honor our lost loved ones by ending the war on drugs – HubcitySPOKES.com

My son, Robert, passed away in January 2017. He died of an accidental overdose of opioids. For me and my family, the last five years have been filled with minutes, hours, and days of tremendous sadness with grief gripping every ounce of us. How can we use our horrific loss and heartbreak? We can wield it in anger and bitterness, or we can use it to support life-giving solutions.

Recently I recalled some of my thoughts from the night of Roberts death. I thought of all the moms who lost their sons and daughters in war. Someone had appeared at their doorstep with the horrific life-altering news that their precious child had died in battle. The one held most dear to their heart had passed from this world. I remember thinking they died for a cause.

Our present-day battle is the War on Drugs, where we are using our criminal justice system to handle a health crisis. For the loved ones we lost in its collateral damage, bringing an end to it is perhaps the best way to honor them.

I can't help but wonder what our lost loved ones would say if they were able to speak. Would their message be for more jailing to heal the problem? Would their message be for long sentences? Or would it be listening to the stories of people using drugs and in addiction?

Would our loved ones want more and more punitive reactions? Or would they want us to look for the best way to keep people in the struggle alive and functioning?

What would those who have died want for other people using drugs who are still here?

Perhaps they would challenge us to sit in on an open AA meeting or any support group, coming face to face with people who are in the struggle. Those who are walking the walk. The people in these groups are real people exposing their thoughts and fears. Each one can share and is understood. Being able to totally relate gives strength and courage.

I pray those we have lost have not died in vain. And their legacy collectively can be for more understanding and compassion and less shame. Maybe they will be known in years to come as trailblazers in the fight against the War on Drugs. And their lives will be viewed as a sacrifice to upend the old way of using the criminal justice system to tackle our drug problems. Maybe this is part of the battle. Maybe our loved ones have died for a cause. I feel that would be the most amazing blessing that could develop from this tragedy that is being played out before us.

Will apathy progress us? Will turning a blind eye advance solutions? Will the same old path of punishment lead us to a better place? It hasn't yet. How can we fight for the betterment of those still on earth, those still enveloped in the struggle? I think I know what our loved ones would say. Let's give them a voice.

Lee Malouf is an advocate for health-centered responses to drug use. She can be reached at missyazoo@aol.com

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OPINION: Honor our lost loved ones by ending the war on drugs - HubcitySPOKES.com

The New War on Drugs Will Be Fought With Trade Policy – The Wall Street Journal

Regarding your editorial Bidens Missing Trade Agenda (July 6): What should have been a precondition to the Trump administrations trade talks with China, and what should now be a precondition to the Bidens administrations decision to lift tariffs, is a demand that China stops the production and export of synthetic opioids, like fentanyl, and their precursor chemicals. Concerns about prices of pork, soybeans and solar panels are small beer in light of this scourge, which is now responsible for the annual deaths of tens of thousands of Americans.

Chinese manufacturers make this stuff. The Chinese Communist Party knows this and knows who they are. It allows the material to be shipped to Mexico for distribution by the drug cartels, enabled by a porous southern border. This is the new war on drugs. Fight it with trade policy. China fought the same war against the British opium trade for the same reasons.

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The New War on Drugs Will Be Fought With Trade Policy - The Wall Street Journal

‘One Pill Can Kill’: How Fentanyl changed the war on drugs – – KUSI

SAN DIEGO (KUSI) The fentanyl epidemic in the US is unprecedented, and the DEA has seized enough fentanyl to give a lethal dose to every person in America.

San Diego is the gateway for the majority of those pills coming over the border, and the special agent in charge of the DEA says everyone in the community needs to be aware of the fentanyl epidemic, before you make a deadly mistake.

KUSIs Ginger Jeffries has spent endless hours getting to the bottom of this epidemic, getting facts on how it is impacting Americans, specifically our children.

Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid 50 to 100 times stronger than morphine. It was originally developed for pain management applied in a patch on the skin. However, because of its high-powered ability drug dealers started to add it to heroin to either increase the potency or even disguise it as a cheap alternative.

It works by binding the areas of the brain that control pain. Someone on fentanyl will experience sedation, often confusion, and extreme emotions. A lethal dose is as small as 3 granules of salt.

The DEA launched the One Pill can Kill public awareness campaign in September of last year, to attack this growing problem on every level.

The majority of the counterfeit drug production is happening in other countries, mainly China and Mexico, and then trafficked here to the US.

Common emojis for fake prescription drugs include, a blue dot, or a banana for Oxy and Percocet.

Other signs to watch out for is how a dealer will try to advertise by using the plug or money bag and how potent a batch is and if they have a lot or a little.

As a parent, knowing what your kids are communicating about could be the difference between life and death!

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'One Pill Can Kill': How Fentanyl changed the war on drugs - - KUSI

A welcome retreat in the drug war – Toronto Star

Most wars are easier to start than to end, and the misguided and often malevolent War on Drugs is no exception.

Little by little, however, that dubious campaign is in sensible and overdue retreat.

As the Stars Jacques Gallant reported this week, Canadians with criminal records for drug possession will see them effectively vanish within two years after the federal governments criminal justice reform bill becomes law, a measure that could affect hundreds of thousands of people.

The landscape has changed.

Cannabis is now legal in Canada. Drug addiction is widely seen as a health rather than criminal issue. There is greater support for harm-reduction strategies and safe-injection sites. And, recently, selected exemptions were granted for possession of small amounts of harder drugs for personal use.

But largely owing to the stigma attached to drug use and addiction, each step has been controversial, fiercely opposed, and slow in coming.

Drug laws in Canada and elsewhere have been deeply tinged with racism, disproportionately affecting and incarcerating racialized individuals, Indigenous people and those living in poverty.

A study published last year looking at arrest data in five Canadian cities found an over-representation of Black and Indigenous people arrested for cannabis possession in all but one.

The consequent burden of a criminal record, which hugely impedes chances of employment, housing, travel and increases likelihood of future criminality, flies in the face of fairness and the pretence of the justice system as concerned chiefly with rehabilitation.

The proposed bills automatic sequestration of drug possession records which means they wont show up on a criminal records check was made possible due to a New Democratic amendment to the Liberal governments Bill C-5.

Randall Garrison, NDP justice critic, said the government has assure him that in two years from the passage of the bill criminal records for personal possession for all drugs will disappear.

The bill, to be studied by a Senate committee this fall after passage by the Commons in June, would also repeal mandatory minimum sentence for all drug offences, expand the use of conditional sentences, and require police and prosecutors to use their discretion to keep drug possession cases out of the courts.

It's estimated that as many as 250,000 Canadians may have drug-possession convictions stemming from cannabis possession alone when it was still illegal.

Three years ago, the government launched a revamped pardon application process, but Garrison said only a few hundred people have been successful because of the convoluted, expensive process involved.

The bill stops short of decriminalizing drug possession, a step health advocates have long called for.

The opioid epidemic that has hit communities across the country and is especially lethal in Vancouver and Toronto has changed the views on how drug crises should be seen and tackled.

The moralizing tough on crime rhetoric so favoured by conservative politicians, and so dismissive of public health and harm reduction approaches, no longer resonates quite so viscerally with those encountering addiction in their own neighbourhoods and families.

By legalizing cannabis, the federal government admitted that 100 years of prohibition of the drug in Canada was at the very least unwarranted, and more bluntly put a huge injustice against hundreds of thousands of people.

The Garrison amendment is a good step in the large project of righting the lifelong consequences of damage done by what was essentially a war not on drugs, but on people.

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A welcome retreat in the drug war - Toronto Star

Cannabis Laws in France Have Disproportionately Affected Muslims – High Times

In the U.S., its an all-too-familiar story that Black and Mexican folks have been disproportionately impacted by the War on Drugs, but in France, they have a similar issue with the impact cannabis laws have on Muslims.

France, like many other countries around the world, are finally flirting with the idea of ending prohibition. They have CBD cafes now, which are gaining popularity, and the European Union is slowly starting to change the tune about how they treat cannabis. But like in many other spots, it is the marginalized folks who have been impacted the most.

New research shows that the past 50 years have been rough for Muslims when it comes to the War on Drugs. Close to one-fifth of prisoners in the French prison system currently were arrested for drug offenses, and most of them are men. It is hard to gain specific demographics in France because their absolute equality law makes it illegal to collect data based on race, ethnicity, or religion.

However, sociologist Farhad Khosrokhavar studies the French prison system and found that half the people incarcerated today in France are either of Muslim or Arab descent. This means that half of the 69,000 people who are incarcerated are Muslim or Arab, although those demographics only make up 9% of the 67 million people in France.

Another study from 2018 commissioned by the French National Assembly shows that when looking at the 117,420 of the arrests in 2010, 86% of them were over cannabis charges, and the amount of people arrested for cannabis use between 2000 and 2015 rose from 14,501 to 139,683. When all these studies are compared, it paints a clear picture of Muslim and Arab folks being arrested for cannabis at a disproportionate rate.

Much like how America demonized cannabis by equating it to a poison pedaled by Mexican drug cartels and Black criminalsa largely false and inflated narrativeFrench historians have done something similar with Muslims. French fiction talked of Muslim hashish-eating assassins who were deranged, violent, and dangerous. French researchers also grew tired of working with cannabis when it was clear it was not a cure for cholera. The combined lack of medical interest and racist propaganda led to a distrust of cannabis throughout the culture. In 1953, medical hashish became illegal.

They even have their own version of reefer madness: folie haschischique. French colonialists in Algeria claimed that hashish caused insanity and violent criminal behavior, often putting sober or self-medicating mentally ill folks into psychiatric care and claiming cannabis was the cause.

In 1968, again mirroring events in the U.S., there were racial tensions against the North Africans who emigrated to France, claiming they were prone to violence and criminality due to the use of cannabis in their culture. This led to even harsher criminalization of the plant. The drug problem in France was referred to as a foreign plague and blamed on Arab and Muslim drug traffickers, people of color, and immigrants. There was talk of a cult of Muslim murderers inspired by cannabis and known as the Hachichins.

Today, of course, France is making a stand against such racist phrasing and thought, but it is still inherently a part of their culture when it comes to the backlash against cannabis, and it clearly shows in the numbers when prison data is pulled. Like many other places in the world, France has a lot of work to do when it comes to separating out what truly needs to be regulated about cannabis and what just comes from a history of racist propaganda.

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Cannabis Laws in France Have Disproportionately Affected Muslims - High Times

Safe consumption sites: End the war on people who use drugs! – Workers World

New York City 2020. In the shadow of the COVID-19 epidemic are two others: the opioid and overdose epidemics. Since the start of epidemics, there have been thousands of deaths from overdoses, even when the people who OD dont even know theyve consumed opioids.

What is the difference between the two? The opioid epidemic is the epidemic of people knowingly abusing opioids. The overdose epidemic is the epidemic of people overdosing from fentanyl analogues and other opioids unknowingly, such as overdoses when non-opioid drugs are tainted by dangerous opioids such as acrylfentanyl, acetylfentanyl, ohmefentanyl and carfentanil.

What are the preventative measures to keep people from overdosing on opioids, knowingly or unknowingly? One is to keep naloxone (Narcan, Evzio) on hand to ensure that users can have their overdoses reversed. Another is to keep fentanyl test strips on hand, to catch the presence of fentanyl or most fentanyl analogues before one uses tainted substances. These methods save lives. But they require people being ready ahead of time. So what can consistently save the lives of drug addicts and others with Substance Use Disorder?

Safe consumption sites

Safe consumption site, OnPoint NYC, East Harlem location. Credit: New York Harm Reduction Educators

The operation and usage of safe consumption sites are places that addicted people can go to to keep from overdosing. These provide clean needles, fentanyl test strips, naloxone rescues. Some even provide methadone and buprenorphine referrals or treatment. Around the world where these services are offered, peoples lives have been saved in more than one way.

Whether its being rescued with Narcan or saved from the risk of HIV and Hepatitis B and C, the sites work to serve working and oppressed people with Substance Use Disorder.

In the U.S., there has been a so-called War on Drugs that began in the 1980s under President Ronald Reagan, continued under the Clinton administration in the 1990s, the George W. Bush administration in the 2000s and the Trump administration in the 2010s. The decades of anti-drug measures were in fact a war on communities of color, with many young people sent to jail for life.

Now theres good news from the Journal of the American Medical Association. In a July 15 research letter to the JAMA Open Network, there is proof that safe consumption sites in the U.S. work here, just like in other countries. (tinyurl.com/4eyhbtx4)

Despite the continued demonization of people who use drugs, the City of New York authorized the two safe consumption sites by OnPoint NYC: one in East Harlem and the other in Washington Heights. From the JAMA report, its now known that within the first two months of operations of the two sites, 613 people used the services almost 6,000 times.

Opioid overdoses required 19 naloxone and 35 oxygen interventions, while overall overdose prevention strategies were used 125 times overall. Other than overdose interventions, additional services were utilized at OnPoints two locations: naloxone distribution, counseling, Hepatitis C virus testing, HIV testing, medical care and holistic services such as acupuncture.

The sites give a wide variety of services to the most oppressed and crushed people and provide them with love for themselves. A popular phrase used in addiction and recovery is We will love you until you learn to love yourself. The services provided at the sites demonstrate the power of that process for the actively using addict.

This is only the beginning of studies into the usefulness of safe consumption sites in the United States. And the future looks promising, indeed.

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Safe consumption sites: End the war on people who use drugs! - Workers World