Exclusive Premiere: Laughing In the Sunshine by G. Love – American Songwriter

For years, G. Love has been bringing smiles and his own brand of sonic enlightenment to listeners all across the world.

From humble beginnings in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to a now-renowned reputation in all corners of the music-loving globe, the man is a hit.

And today, American Songwriter is pleased to premiere the latest single and accompanying music video from G. Love. That song, Laughing In The Sunshine, marks the forthcoming release of G. Loves next LP: Philadelphia Mississippi, which blends the sensibilities of his hometown with a region hes long-drawn fromthe south.

I grew up in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, but Ive spent my entire life steeped in the music of the Delta, so the idea that there was this whole other Philadelphia down there always fascinated me, G. Love says of the album For the last thirty years, Ive wanted to make a pilgrimagenot just a musical one, but a spiritual oneto the heart of the blues, and thats exactly what this album is.

Produced by North Mississippi All-Stars Luther Dickinson and featuring artists like Alvin Youngblood Hart, Christone Kingfish Ingram,Cam Kimbrough, Tikyra Jackson, and Schoolly D, the new record mixes old school Hill Country and Delta Blues with new school hip-hop and funk. And G. Loves newest single is emblematic of that.

Speaking about the new cut, G. Love says, Laughing In The Sunshine was written with Chuck Treece and its a summertime classic, a cool glass of lemonade and love. Performed by an all-star cast including myself, Chuck, Luther Dickinson, Tikyra Jackson, Boo Mitchell, Amy Bellamy, and Sharisse Norman, its sure to get you off your seat and looking for a backyard BBQ to strut your stuff. Living, Loving, Laughing people all around enjoying a perfect day.

Fans can check out the new single and video below and pre-order the new album, which drops on June 24, HERE.

Philadelphia Mississippi Track list:

1) Love From Philly (feat. Chuck Treece, Schoolly D and Trenton Ayers)

2) Mississippi (feat. Speech, Alvin Youngblood Hart and R.L. Boyce)

3) My Ball (feat. Freddie Foxx and Jontavious Willis)

4) Guitar Man (feat. Christone Kingfish Ingram)

5) Kickin

6) HipHopHarpin (feat. Alvin Youngblood Hart)

7) Laughing In The Sunshine

8) I Aint Living (feat. Tikyra Jackson)

9) Lemonades (feat. Cam Kimbrough, Luther Dickinson and Chuck Treece)

10) If My Mind Dont Change (feat. Sharde Thomas)

11) Sauce Up! (feat. Trenton Ayers)

12) The Philly Sound

13) Shouts Out

G. Love Tour Dates:

6/11 Annapolis, MD Bands in the Sands +

6/24 Des Moines, IA Des Moines Art Festival %

6/25 Rochester, NY Rochester Intl Jazz Festival %

7/3 Scranton, PA The Peach Music Festival +

7/8 Peoria, IL Lakeview Park

7/9 Jay, VT Jeezum Crow Festival %

7/12 Harwich, MA Cape Cod Jazz Festival

7/15 Mesa, AZ Mesa Amphitheatre #

7/16 Los Angeles, CA Hollywood Palladium #

7/17 San Diego, CA Cal Coast Credit Union Open Air Theatre #

7/19 Paso Robles, CA Vina Robles Amphitheatre #

7/20 Rohnert Park, CA SOMO Concerts #

7/22 Bend, OR Hayden Homes Amphitheater #

7/23 Redmond, WA Marymoor Park #

7/24 Bonner, MT KettleHouse Amphitheater #

7/26 Whitefish, MT The Remington Bar

7/28 Nampa, ID Ford Idaho Center Amphitheatre #

7/29 Salt Lake City, UT Red Butte Garden #

7/30 Denver, CO Fiddlers Green Amphitheatre #

7/31 Breckenridge, CO Riverwalk Center

8/3 Kansas City, MO The Record Bar

8/4 Memphis, TN The Crosstown Theater

8/5 Atlanta, GA Coca-Cola Roxy #

8/6 Nashville, TN Ascend Amphitheater #

8/7 Columbus, OH KEMBA Live! #

8/9 Indianapolis, IN TCU Amphitheater at White River State Park #

8/10 St. Louis, MO St. Louis Music Park #

8/12 Cleveland, OH Jacobs Pavilion at Nautica #

8/13 Highland Park, IL Ravinia Festival #

8/14 Sterling Heights, MI Michigan Lottery Amphitheatre at Freedom Hill #

8/15 Pittsburgh, PA Stage AE #

8/18 Philadelphia, PA TD Pavilion at the Mann #

8/19 Gilford, NH Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion #

8/20 Mansfield, MA Xfinity Center #

8/21 Saratoga Springs, NY Saratoga Performing Arts Center #

8/23 Lewiston, NY Artpark #

8/25 Bridgeport, CT Hartford HealthCare Amphitheater #

8/26 Columbia, MD Merriweather Post Pavillion #

8/27 Wantagh, NY Northwell Health at Jones Beach Theater #

8/28 Holmdel, NJ PNC Bank Arts Center #

8/30 Asheville, NC Salvage Station #

8/31 Charlotte, NC Charlotte Metro Credit Union Amphitheater #

9/1 Isle of Palms, SC The Windjammer

9/2 Virginia Beach, VA Veterans United Home Loans Amphitheatre #

9/3 Wilmington, NC Live Oak Bank Pavilion at Riverfront Park #

9/4 St. Augustine, FL St. Augustine Amphitheatre #

9/8 Austin, TX ACL Live at The Moody Theater #

9/9 Houston, TX The Lawn at White Oak Music Hall #

9/10 Irving, TX The Pavilion at Toyota Music Factory #

+ G. Love & The Juice

% G. Love & Special Sauce

# G. Love solo supporting O.A.R. and Dispatch

Photo by Joe Navas, courtesy Missing Piece Group

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Exclusive Premiere: Laughing In the Sunshine by G. Love - American Songwriter

Violent Femmes Kick Off Their Tour at the Marquee Theater Tuesday, May 10 – Phoenix New Times

On Tuesday, May 10, it's tour kick-off time as Violent Femmes take the stage at the Marquee Theatre in Tempe. Gordon Gano, lead vocalist of the seminal folk-punk act, promises a very lively show.

Dont take that guarantee lightly. The Milwaukee-born band has been going strong minus a couple of breaks since the 1970s took its last breath. And they always deliver.

Their mix of styles, from stompy front-porch acoustic rock to country to jazz, blended up with an anything-goes, punk rock attitude has resulted in too many addictive singles to count: American Music, Blister in the Sun, and Gone Daddy Gone, are just a few drops in their 40-year-career bucket.

Gano says that at 20, they werent thinking about how far theyd make it. He recalls that an initial plan would only keep them together for a very brief time.

We were playing and calling ourselves Violent Femmes in the summer of 1981. The definite plan was to do so until the fall of 1981. We were going to split after a couple of months because (original lineup) Brian Ritchie (bass) and Victor DeLorenzo (drums) were going to move to Minneapolis to do a band with friends there. That plan didnt work out, so we just kept going.

Weve had times where we split up, and I thought maybe it was over, but something would happen, and wed play again, and it would sound so good to us. Theres something special about the way we play together, and that always has brought us together again, Gano adds.

While the bands iconic first, self-titled record was full of so much nuance and so many undeniably catchy-as-hell songs that it created a devoted fan base, their drive didnt stop with that initial adoration.

The Femmes have followed that up with several full-length records that show their interest in a wild mix of instrumentation. Their tunes are peppered with sounds from the likes of clarinets, kazoos, xylophones, horns, and flutes. The group continues to add new followers on this lengthy journey it is reflected in the attendees at live shows.

We have had the observation, Gano says, that as we started to get older, our audience kept getting younger. It really is a mix. We see people that would have been there when we first toured, to younger people and children if the venue allows for it.

Humbly, Gano isnt looking for credit when we bring up the bands influence on so many bands that came after them. As if to shift the praise, Gano mentions that many legendary acts inspired the Femmes, but with a little prodding, he did come back to acknowledge the effect theyve had on many musicians.

It is just an honor to hear that. It is something that feels good, whether someone tells us directly or passes on a quote where someone mentioned our influence. Theres a Portuguese band called Ornatos Violeta, who I learned decided to have a band because the band that all had in common that they could agree on was Violent Femmes. I even ended up singing in Portuguese on one of their albums. It really is amazing making those kinds of connections its wonderful.

He sometimes notices the bands sound in the work of these groups that cite the Femmes as important, but his takeaway doesnt focus on the sonic aspect. Its a very specific sound, sure, but what I hear is maybe an influence or inspiration from us, but mostly that theyre doing it their own way, doing their own thing.

Doing your own thing is what the band has exemplified from the jump. Its a massive part of what defined them. They didnt sound like other punk bands of the early '80s. We certainly had a different orientation, Gano tells New Times. Acoustic instruments in rock or punk worlds there were a lot of people who were initially opposed to it. They did it, though, making them punk as anyone else by an unwavering devotion to doing what they wanted.

Before COVID, Violent Femmes released Hotel Last Resort, their 10th studio record, which received critical praise. Its depth of sound and crafty lyrics prove the band not only stands the test of time but continues to build on its foundation in new and unpredictable ways. Tom Verlaine of NYC rock legends Television appears on this most recent release.

The band got to tour when the record came out, so this current tour wont be a focus on that release, but some of its songs will surely be in the mix. Well be drawing from the whole catalog whatever we feel like playing, Gano tells us.

They may take some fun risks and twists. Sometimes, Ill have something in mind that no ones heard before and think we should play that, and we will. Through the years, we've had some tunes wed work up just like that playing it live as we learn the tune. Brian is such an amazing musician; he just makes it sound good from the first time hes even hearing something. I wanna, like, not play it safe, have a great time, and make sure that everyone has fun. We cant wait."

Violent Femmes. With Bhi Bhiman. 8 p.m. Tuesday, May 8. Marquee Theatre, 730 North Mill Avenue, Tempe. Tickets are $18.

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Violent Femmes Kick Off Their Tour at the Marquee Theater Tuesday, May 10 - Phoenix New Times

Pro-life, regardless of skin color | WORLD – WORLD News Group

Did you know that there are women who were raised in conservative evangelical homes who now support legal abortion for what they claim to be moral reasons?

Last month, the Los Angeles Times published yet another one of these well-worn stories in its profile of Christy Berghoef. The headline: As Supreme Court weighs abortion, Christians challenge what it means to be pro-life. Berghoef is a liberal white Christian who used to pray for abortions to end and now believes abortions should never be outlawed. According to the article, Berghoef is part of a new, if disconcerting, breed of Christians challenging the teachings of their elders.

The articles subtext paints the usual background picture of pro-life Christianity defined by rigid, moralistic, small-town whites being disrupted by the compassionate, newly enlightened Berghoef. Her enlightenment came in part, we learn, from her time away from her hometown of Holland, Mich., when she took a job in Washington, D.C., and saw homelessness and poverty on her walks to work.

But Berghoef didnt need to travel to my neck of the woods to expand her horizons. A few miles away from where she grew up in Michigan, my good friend Monica Sparks is a Kent County commissioner. Sparks is an African American, a Christian, and a Democrat who is the president of Democrats for Life of America.

As a black woman, I sincerely appreciate that DFLAs mission, to preserve life from womb to tomb, includes an understanding and focus on racial injustices and the needs of minority communities, she said, after accepting her new role with the organization, adding, One of our top priorities will be to educate our party on the racist implications of public funding of abortion. Abortion is ending the lives of black babies across the country at an alarming rate. To battle racism, we must end the high abortion rate, but we must also commit to fighting poverty, improving schools, and improving opportunities for all Americans.

Sparks and her twin sister were born to a drug-addicted mother and had a difficult childhood, during which they were placed in the foster care system and split up. A year later, they were adopted and reunited by members of the Church of God in Christ, Americas largest and fastest-growing African American denomination, with more than 6.5 million members nationwide.

In November 2019, the Church of God in Christ issued a formal proclamation, which states, among other things: Whereas abortion is the killing of the innocent, which is against Scripture (Exodus 20:13, Psalm 106:3538, 2 Kings 17:17, Deuteronomy 5:17, Revelation 22:15). Abortion is genocide. Abortion must end to protect the life of the unborn. The Church of God in Christ opposes elective abortions. This issue of personhood has haunted America since the Dred Scott, Plessy v. Ferguson and Roe v. Wade decisions. Just as slavery was overturned in America, Jim Crow was defeated and Nazi Germany was overthrown, it is our prayer that the heinous industry of abortion will become morally reprehensible worldwide.

The Church of God in Christ has an extremely strong presence in Michigan, home to its current presiding bishop. We can safely conclude that the denominations leadership has spent at least as much time as Christy Berghoef contemplating the theological and moral implications of abortion law. So why is yet another spiritual journey of a small-town white woman from being strongly pro-life to being pro-abortion so important for us to hear about?

It is a signal that far too many in the media frame the debate over abortion as limited to white conservatives and white liberals. Many pro-abortion advocates clearly believe that the views of white suburban women define the boundaries of the abortion issue in America. That just isnt so. Monica Sparksa black, Christian, pro-life Democrat born into challenging circumstancesdoes not fit those boundaries. The Church of God in Christ does not fit within those boundaries. The boundaries are false.

Black people are disproportionately affected by abortion and have very different perspectives that often do not fit neatly into the ideological Republican-Democrat binary. That is not to downplay the irreconcilable differences between those parties views. While we dont all agree on what to do politically and ideologically, we believe black voices and perspectives are sorely missing from a discussion that is controlled almost exclusively by mainstream media liberals. Including black Americans might help the entire country find a little more common ground.

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Pro-life, regardless of skin color | WORLD - WORLD News Group

Ben Franklin’s Radical Theory of Happiness – The Atlantic

How to Build a Life is a weekly column by Arthur Brooks, tackling questions of meaning and happiness. Click here to listen to his podcast series on all things happiness, How to Build a Happy Life.

Most of the happiness scholars I cite in this column are living and active, because the scientific study of human happiness, relying as it does on social psychology, behavioral economics, and neuroscience, is only a few decades old. But the philosophical premise behind this modern discipline goes back centuries. The topic was of particular interest to American Enlightenment thinkers of the late 18th century. Most famously, Thomas Jefferson declared the pursuit of happiness an unalienable right in the Declaration of Independence.

Jefferson later explained that the Declaration, including this odd claim to happiness, was simply an expression of the American mind. The American mind of one of Jeffersons fellow Founding Fathers was especially influential when it comes to the philosophy of happiness: that of Benjamin Franklin. This is according to the filmmaker Ken Burns, who also dubs him our nations first happiness professor. Burns has spent the past two years immersed in Franklins mind, to make a documentary on the man that is currently airing on PBS.

Franklin believed that everyone naturally seeks happiness. The desire of happiness in general is so natural to us, that all the world are in pursuit of it, he wrote in his memoir in a section titled On True Happiness. He dedicated his life to defining it for his peculiar American compatriots, and advising them on how they could work to get it. But like so many people who give advice for a living, it is not at all clear that he lived his own life in the happiest way. We can still learn a lot today by taking his counseland avoiding his errors.

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What did Franklin mean by happiness, I asked Burns? Pleasant feelings? Not even close: For Franklin, happiness meant lifelong learning in the marketplace of ideas, Burns told me. In other words, self-improvement.

This conception of happiness encompasses the great contradiction in American culture: individualistic in the focus on the self, yet communitarian in the reliance on a cooperative marketplace. Further, Franklin defines happiness as an endless journey, not a comforting destination. This journey could be an exciting adventure or a terrible curse, depending on your point of view.

Particularly radical was Franklins idea about who could pursue happiness in this way. In Europe at the time, mainly aristocratic men with means would have been able to pursue lifelong learning in a formal sense. Franklin rejected this. He believed that this pursuit was not the province of the upper classes, Burns told me, but rather for everyone, from the wealthy to the masses. Burns hastened to add that this idea was nowhere near expansive enough in Franklins timeFranklin himself had slaves in his household, and equal rights for women were still far offbut this philosophy set the unique American aspiration in motion.

Read: How America lost track of Ben Franklins definition of success

I believe America could benefit from recommitting to this foundational conception of happiness today. We need a society built around the belief that we can all learn and grow throughout our livesand the humility to recognize that none of us has perfect knowledge, that a good deal of learning is always yet to come. This requires a true marketplace of ideas where iron sharpens iron, not uncompromising patrols in business, academia, and social media on the lookout for wrong-think. And we must work joyfully to make these ideals available to all people, with no exceptions.

Franklin himself searched endlessly for the happiness he wrote about. For Burns, this is what set Franklin apart from the other Founders, literally as well as philosophically. He was the least static of them, a moving object his entire life, Burns said. The documentary depicts a peripatetic man seemingly incapable of contentment in his growing worldly success, always inventing, trying new things, and traveling the world. He was a lifelong learner, as he counseled others to be.

But in looking at his life, I had to wonder if he was searching for the right things in the right places to find happiness. Its true, you wont find an apple on a tree unless you look for itbut you also have to be looking at an apple tree. My work finds that happy people rely on four building blocks to boost their well-being: They engage in work that gives them a sense of accomplishment and that serves others, they practice some form of faith, they invest in friendships, and they spend time with family.

Read: The three equations for a happy life, even during a pandemic

In work, Franklin excelled. Burns depicts Franklin as a man completely devoted to his work and the public good. Diligence is the mother of good luck, and God gives all things to industry, Franklin wrote. Then plough deep while sluggards sleep, and you shall have corn to sell and to keep. Burns gives him an A+ in this pursuit.

As to his faith, Franklin wrote, Here is my creed That the most acceptable service we render to [God] is doing good to his other children. That the soul of man is immortal, and will be treated with justice in another life respecting its conduct in this. Yet, although Franklin called himself simply a thorough deist and claimed that he had read the entire Bible by the time he was 5 years old, there is little evidence he regularly spent much time in any spiritual practice. On this dimension, Burns gives him a B+.

Friendship was of great importance to Franklin, and he writes in detail about his Junto, or club of Philadelphia gentlemen who met regularly to share ideas and support one anothers projects. Despite this, Burns gives him a C in friendship. The reason is that Franklin seems to have often treated his friendships instrumentally, for mutual benefit in their work. True happiness requires real friends, not just deal friends.

Read: The best friends can do nothing for you

Finally, there was family, for which Burns gives Franklin an abysmal F. Seemingly a chronically unfaithful husband, he traveled in Europe without his wife for 15 of the last 17 years of his marriage, and didnt make it home for his wifes death, even though he knew it was imminent. He was estranged from his son William over their differences regarding American independence. Even when William sought reconciliation, Burns notes, his father largely rebuffed him. As with so many strivers, family life was never a priority for Franklin.

When Franklin died in 1790 in Philadelphia, at least 20,000 people turned out for his funeral. He had brought a great deal of happiness to the lives of others, through his service, writing, and philosophy. Whether he himself had achieved happiness is another matter. As with so many happiness professors and advice-givers, it is probably better to do what they say than to copy how they live.

And indeed, that is precisely what Burns himself has tried to do: follow Franklins incredible wisdom, if not his personal habits. (Burns describes himself as, before all, a family man, which Franklin was obviously not.) When I asked Burns how studying Franklin has improved his life, he told me he tries more than ever to be his own person, to always look within for what is good for others and what gives him joyand then to do it. I suspect Franklin would approve wholeheartedly.

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Ben Franklin's Radical Theory of Happiness - The Atlantic

Kids space camp to launch in the RGV – KVEO-TV

BROWNSVILLE, Texas (ValleyCentral) School is almost out for summer, and the South Texas Astronomical Society is gearing up to provide its first summer space camp for students from K to 7th grade.

The organization is partnering with NASA for the camp which will be held at the Rocket Ranch Boca Chica.

Were doing a series of space camps. So, the first space camp would be in the summer of this year and the next one would be in the fall, said executive director of STARSociety, Victor De Los Santos.

Phil Donaus, the director of operations for STARSociety, said the organization is aimed at providing education and inspiration in astronomy, science, and the engineering fields.

Before it was allowing students to be inspired, to get excited, but now we are going to help them connect. Were going to help them reach out to NASA, help them reach out to community partners in STEM and space exploration, said Donaus.

This space camp comes after the organization won a NASA Community Anchor Award and a Generation Artemis Grant.

What were trying to do is create a pipeline to get kids interested in stem science and engineering, and space exploration but also give continue them opportunities to go into these fieldsafter they get interested, said De Los Santos.

Artemis is NASAs mission to return to the moon, which is a main component of the camp.

Students will be able to see what its like to get humanity back to the moon from both the rockets that are going to bring us there, the lunar gateway that is going to help us live in orbit around the moon, and then also the landers, said Donaus.

Students will also have the chance to build a model rocket, use telescopes, and see exclusive content from NASA.

The Artemis Summer Space Camp 2022 is scheduled for three days in June.

For more information, you can visit the STARSocietys Facebook page.

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Kids space camp to launch in the RGV - KVEO-TV

Why Elon Musk Is $30 Billion Poorer This Week – Forbes

Tesla CEO Elon Musk

Tesla shares are down 15% since last Friday, making it a bad week for the worlds richest person.

Tesla and SpaceX chief Elon Musk lost $15.7 billion of his net worth on Wednesday, as shares of his electric vehicle maker fell by 8%. The worlds richest person (worth an estimated $224.5 billion) is now $31.4 billion poorer than he was last Friday, according to Forbes estimates, as Teslas market capitalization has cratered by 15% this week far more than the 6% drop in the tech-heavy Nasdaq.

According to Wedbush analyst Dan Ives, Shanghai factory issues due to the zero Covid policy in China have been a major overhang on the stock in an already jittery tapereferring to the drop in tech stocks, which Ives describes as a massive risk off with Tesla front and center. With inflation surging and interest rates rising, investors appetite for assets considered to be relatively speculative is waning.

Speaking at the Financial Times Future of the Car Summit Tuesday, Musk did his best to alleviate investors concerns, citing encouraging conversations hes had with the Chinese government in recent days about the countrys latest round of lockdowns, though he did hint at the possibility of restricting new Tesla orders in the short-term.

Were actually probably going to limit that just stop taking orders for anything beyond a certain period of time, Musk said.

That must have been discouraging to hear for Tesla investors already concerned about the distraction posed by Musks $44 billion Twitter takeover. At the FT summit Tuesday, the Tesla chief insisted that he is confident we will be able to sell all the cars we can make. But according to Wedbushs Ives, Musk distraction issues remain at play as an overhang on the stock. By distraction, Ives means the ongoing process of purchasing Twitter.

While the Tesla CEO announced he has raised $7.1 billion from a group of A-List investors last Thursday to help fund his Twitter acquisition, he still hasnt explained where the remainder of the $27.3 billion equity commitment he made to Twitters board will come from. And the list of potential distractions for Musk, who already runs two companies, keeps getting longer.

According to an investor pitch deck leaked to the New York Times last Friday, Musks Twitter turnaround plans may be even more ambitious than Tesla investors imagined: he reportedly hopes to quadruple users and quintuple revenue by 2028, while cutting Twitters reliance on its main revenue source (advertising) in half. That sounds like a lot of work for Musk, who is expected to serve as Twitters interim CEO after the deal closes, according to a report by CNBC. Musk has also reportedly said that he plans to take Twitter public again in as few as three years, hinting at a time consuming IPO process lingering down the road.

And thats assuming the deal closes promptly. Twitter short-seller Hindenburg Research is betting that wont be the case, saying in a note released Monday that it sees a significant risk that the deal gets repriced lower due to the declining values of tech companies since Musk made his initial offer. In other words, Musk may have some bargaining left to do with Twitters board.

Musk could always just walk away from the deal, which keeps on getting more expensive. His stake in Tesla, worth $167 billion today, was worth $235.1 billion on April 13, the day before he announced his Twitter takeovermeaning Musk was more than $68 billion richer before he made his plans for the social media company public. For now, Musk remains the worlds richest person by a long shot, worth $78.3 billion more than runner-up Bernard Arnault of French luxury empire LVMH. But at some point, the Twitter deals $1 billion breakup fee may start to look like a bargain.

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Why Elon Musk Is $30 Billion Poorer This Week - Forbes

Elon Musk is zeroing on a new Asian production hub for his Teslas. It’s not India – Economic Times

From India to Indonesia, Elon Musk is scouting out sites to make more Teslas for global roads. With the world mired in supply chain chaos, access to materials matters most. Hes got it right.

After lobbying against Indias tight policies around manufacturing and prohibitive import duties, Musk is headed to meet Indonesias President Joko Widodo and visit several areas across the country, which is also the top producer of nickel, a key metal for batteries. Thats an astute bet for Tesla and Indonesia. And a missed opportunity for New Delhi.

To meet ambitious electric vehicle targets, Indonesia has drawn in several battery and car manufacturers in recent months with a variety of incentives. Government ministers say they hope to have investment across the supply chain.

Meanwhile, the worlds largest powerpack maker Contemporary Amperex Technology Co. is investing almost $6 billion in a battery project with state-backed PT Aneka Tambang Tbk and PT Industri Baterai Indonesia. Further up the value chain, Chinas Zhejiang Huayou Cobalt Co. and PT Vale Indonesia Tbk announced last month they would work together on the formers fifth nickel project in the country.

The move by companies across the EV supply chain into the Southeast Asias largest economy shows how important it is to be close to the source of raw materials that feed into manufacturing. If theres one thing the past year of logistical screw-ups and delays has shown the industry, its that proximity is key. Even if global supply and demand is balanced on paper, moving industrial goods around has become expensive, slow and cumbersome.

Tesla knows this well. It has created large manufacturing hubs in China and now Germany countries known for their prowess in industrial production and policies that will help sell its cars. After having trouble making EVs in the US, its market share has grown globally. Now the company is looking to secure materials and make its own batteries, while stopping short of buying mines and getting into a new business. Wherever Musk sees problems in the production process, he looks for a solution. Tesla is essentially creating discrete supply chains across the globe.

Automakers wouldnt have necessarily made their way to Indonesia. The country churns out around 1 million cars in a good year, and is dominated by Japanese producers smaller vehicles. The auto market pales in comparison to the likes of China and the US, and EVs make up a small portion. In addition, its geography doesnt make it an ideal place for electric vehicle charging stations and infrastructure connectivity, although the government aims to make the capital, Jakarta, and the tourist hub of Bali model centers for greener transport.

Potential sales generated in Indonesia wouldnt really move the needle for Tesla. Yet, the country is leveraging existing resources, an EV business-friendly policy and the right story to make it fertile ground for large-scale investment. The moment that happens, Indonesia will be able to boast about its battery manufacturing supply chain on the global scale a much vaunted accolade these days that even the US is vying for. Private investment into manufacturing batteries will only draw more attention.

Meanwhile, India continues to hem and haw around whether it will lift duties. Government officials there have made big, bold statements about their ambitions, talking up their desire to draw in Tesla. Earlier this month, Road Transport Minister Nitin Gadkari went as far as to say that Tesla would benefit from manufacturing in India. Yet customers who placed orders are still waiting and its unclear how Musks firm would get a leg up. Now, there are questions around whether Tesla will make its way into India at all, given all the roadblocks.

That probably is a good bet, too. Setting up manufacturing now, especially as companies struggle to procure parts for their products and deal with logistical issues and high shipping costs, is the one thing firms dont want to face. Progress toward EVs has been scattered and commitment isnt clear. Toyota Motor Corp., one of the worlds biggest automakers but a laggard in EVs globally, has pledged to invest $624 million to making EV-related components through its existing units in India, however its unclear who they will buy them. Even Indias dominant automakers

Indias vaccine king, Adar Poonawalla, also decided to weigh in earlier this month. He tweeted that putting capital into making cars in India would be the best investment Musk would ever make. Thats perhaps too optimistic.

EV and battery manufacturers are in high demand across the globe and it will take far more than bold words and political ambition that includes making existing resources available and coming up with a coherent policy that manufacturers can work with. Its bizzare, then, Prime Minister Narendra Modis government continues to hold back. Yes, there are a few domestic EV models however, the Indian auto market remains an aspirational one. That means wide-scale adoption will pick up pace where there are models that people want to buy like Teslas Model 3 or enough charging facilities that make it easy, as the evolution of the two-wheeler market showed.

Much like China made Tesla a global company, Indonesia could do the same for its battery supply chain. All while making manufacturing more affordable and eventually, electric vehicles, too. Its a means to an end and a smart one at that.

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Elon Musk is zeroing on a new Asian production hub for his Teslas. It's not India - Economic Times

Elon Musk expected to serve as temporary Twitter CEO after deal closes – CNBC

Elon Musk is expected to serve as a temporary CEO of Twitter for a few months after he completes his $44 billion takeover of the social media company, sources told CNBC's David Faber.

An SEC filing on Thursday revealed Musk secured approximately $7.14 billion in equity commitments from friends and other investors to buy Twitter. Faber said Musk handpicked the investors. Commitments range from $1 billion from Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison to $5 million from Honeycomb Asset Management, which invested in SpaceX. Faber added that Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey may back it, and Musk is talking to him about the possibility of contributing shares immediately or before the closing of the merger.

Twitter CEO Parag Agrawal has only led the company for a few months, after assuming the helm from Dorsey last November. Until now, there hadn't been much discussion about whether Musk's takeover of the company would lead to a leadership shake-up. Last month, Reuters reported Musk had lined up a new CEO for Twitter, citing a source familiar with the matter.

Agrawal told employees during a companywide town hall meeting last month that the future of Twitter is uncertain under Musk, according to a separate Reuters report.

"Once the deal closes, we don't know which direction the platform will go," Agrawal reportedly said when asked whether the company may allow former U.S. President Donald Trump to return to the platform when Musk takes over. Trump was permanently suspended from Twitter last year.

Musk's acquisition of Twitter comes at a key time for the company. Agrawal has said he would focus on growing Twitter's daily active user base and bringing new products to customers. In the company's latest earnings report, Twitter said it hit 229 million monetizable daily active users, a 15.9% increase from the same period last year.

Musk, who is the CEO of Tesla and SpaceX, has recently led presentations in front of investors, where he gave financial projections based on his analysis of Twitter, according to sources familiar with the situation who spoke with Faber.

Musk told investors that he felt Twitter's earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization margin was too low and the company has "too many engineers not doing enough," Faber said, citing sources familiar. Musk also pledged to make the company a "magnet for talent," Faber added.

Shares of Twitter rose 2.8% on Thursday. Tesla's stock slid more than 8% amid a broader market selloff.

Representatives from Twitter declined to comment.

WATCH: Elon Musk's challenge will be fixing Twitter, not buying it, says Wedbush's Dan Ives

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Elon Musk expected to serve as temporary Twitter CEO after deal closes - CNBC

Elon Musk says he would allow Donald Trump back on Twitter – CBS News

Elon Musk said on Tuesday that he would allow former President Donald Trump back on Twitter if the Tesla CEO follows through with his plan to buy the social media company. Trump was permanently banned from the social media site three days after the January 6 attack on the Capitol because of "the risk of further incitement of violence."

In an exclusive interview with theFinancial Times at the Future of the Car conference on Tuesday, Musk was asked about Trump's potential return to Twitter. After answering with commentary about when permanent bans should be applied, Musk said that he "would reverse the permanent ban" against Trump, adding, "I don't own Twitter yet so this is not a thing that will definitely happen."

Musk noted that Trump has since resorted to using the platformTruth Social, which was created by Trump Media & Technology Group. Following Musk's acquisition of Twitter, Trump said that he would still not consider going back to the platform, even if his account is reinstated.

Instead, he told Fox News last month that the number of users on Truth Social is growing and that the platform is "much better than being on Twitter."

"The bottom line is, no, I am not going back to Twitter," he said.

But Trump using a different platform, Musk said, is "worse than having a single forum where everyone can debate."

"I think that was a mistake because it alienated a large part of the country and did not ultimately result in Donald Trump not having a voice," Musk said. "...Banning Trump from Twitter didn't end Trump's voice. It will amplify it among the right, and that is why it's morally wrong and flat out stupid."

Trump was banned following last year's deadly assault on the U.S. Capitol. Prior to the attack, he had regularly touted conspiracy theories and false claims of voter fraud, both of which contributed to the January 6 attack, during which a throng of his supporters attempted to overturn the 2020 presidential election.

"After close review of recent Tweets from the @realDonaldTrump account and the context around them we have permanently suspended the account due to the risk of further incitement of violence," Twitter said in a statement at the time.

When asked if he stands by his statements even considering Twitter's original reasoning for banning the then-president, Musk said that "bad" tweets should simply be deleted or made invisible. A "temporary suspension" would also be appropriate, he said.

"Perma-bans just fundamentally undermine trust in Twitter as a town square where everyone can voice their opinion," he said. "I think it was a morally bad decision, to be clear, and foolishly extreme."

Musk said that he believes permanent bans should be "extremely rare" and reserved for "bots, or spam/scam accounts." However, that doesn't mean people will be able to say whatever they want, he said.

Anyone who posts something illegal or "destructive to the world" should face a "time out," temporary suspension or have their tweet made invisible, Musk said.

Musk reached a deal at the end of April to buy Twitter for $44 billion, saying after the deal was announced that he plans to ensure that the platform is dedicated to free speech.

"Free speech is the bedrock of a functioning democracy, and Twitter is the digital town square where matters vital to the future of humanity are debated," he said in a statement.

The deal with Twitter could close this year.

Li Cohen is a social media producer and trending reporter for CBS News, focusing on social justice issues.

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Elon Musk says he would allow Donald Trump back on Twitter - CBS News

Elon Musk’s Crash Course: everything we know – What To Watch

Producer and director Emma Schwartz is shining a light on the richest man in the world and his company in Elon Musks Crash Course. However, we dont mean Twitter (if you havent heard, the billionaire now owns the social media platform), but instead Tesla, the luxury electric car brand.

Elon Musks Crash Course is the latest documentary in The New York Times Presents film series. Previous projects Framing Britney Spears and Controlling Britney Spears were not only informative but were topics of many conversations on social media. It will be interesting to see if this new documentary will gain such buzz on Twitter given the new owner.

Heres everything we know about Elon Musks Crash Course.

Elon Musks Crash Course premieres on Friday, May 20, at 10 pm ET/PT on both FX and Hulu.

There currently isnt an official word as to when the film will be released in the UK. However, it looks like the BBC has its own Elon Musk project in the works.

For a while now, there have been discussions about just the Autopilot technology's safety in Teslas. At the end of 2021, Tesla reported, "one crash for every 4.31 million miles driven in which drivers were using Autopilot technology." However, as The New York Times alleges in the documentary, over the years, the Autopilot feature has played a role in a number of accidents and deaths that the car company hasnt publicly acknowledged. Furthermore, the film explores whether or not there was an active attempt to cover up the truth.

The New York Times press page for Elon Musks Crash Course describes the premise of the documentary as the following:

"Elon Musk, the worlds richest person, has claimed since 2015 that, for Tesla, technology for self-driving cars is essentially a 'solved problem' and made outlandish claims about Autopilot capabilities. But a New York Times investigation reveals the quixotic nature of Musks pursuit of self-driving technology and the tragic results.

"Drawing on first-hand accounts, the film traces how Autopilot has been a factor in several deaths and dozens of other accidents that Tesla has not publicly acknowledged. It details pressure Elon Musk put on government officials to quash investigations and features inside stories from several former Tesla employees, who speak out against Musk for promoting a self-driving program that they believe was perilous.

"Elon Musk made his name and fortune taking bold risks and betting on the impossible, but the story of his pursuit of self-driving has put Musk on a crash course with both the business realities and technologys limits. Yet, even after years of unfulfilled promises, Elon Musk continues to double down on his Full Self Driving service, once again, with questionable results."

An official trailer for Elon Musks Crash Course has not yet been released. However, as one becomes available, well be sure to provide that video clip.

Serving as producer and director of Elon Musks Crash Course is Emma Schwartz. Schwartz may not be a well-known name for many, but her investigative work on PBS Frontline has been critically-acclaimed. Her documentary short, Brewed in Palestine, won the David L. Wolper Student Documentary Award.

Elon Musks Crash Course is set to premiere simultaneously on both FX and Hulu. With that said, FX is not only a channel on traditional cable/satellite television, but it is also a part of live streaming platforms such as FuboTV, Hulu with Live TV, Sling TV and YouTube TV.

Today's best FuboTV, Hulu + Live TV, Sling TV, YouTube TV, Hulu and Disney+ deals

Those that rather watch the documentary on Hulu can do so with a subscription.

No word yet when the documentary will become available in the UK.

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Elon Musk's Crash Course: everything we know - What To Watch

Elon Musk denies claim by Truth Social boss that Trump encouraged him to buy Twitter – CNBC

Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla, speaks to media representatives at the Tesla Gigafactory construction site In Grnheide near Berlin, September 3, 2020.

Julian Sthle | picture alliance via Getty Images

Elon Musk on Friday flatly denied a claim by the head of ex-President Donald Trump's new social media company that Trump had encouraged Musk's bid to buy Twitter.

"This is false," Musk tweeted in reply to a New York Post article about that claim by Trump Media & Technology Group CEO Devin Nunes.

"I've had no communication, directly or indirectly, with Trump, who has publicly stated that he will be exclusively on Truth Social," wrote Musk, head of Tesla and SpaceX.

Nunes, during a televised appearance Wednesday on Fox Business, said that Trump's social media app, Truth Social, was "all for" Musk's move to buy Twitter and take it private with a $44 billion offer a somewhat eyebrow-raising claim since Twitter is a competitor to Truth Social.

"President Trump, basically before Elon Musk bought it, actually said to go and buy it because you know the goal of our company is really to build a community where people are in a family friendly, safe environment," said Nunes, a former Republican congressman from California, during the appearance.

Twitter banned Trump, who had been an obsessive user of the platform, in January 2021 for what the company said was the "risk of further incitement of violence."

The ban followed the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot by a mob of Trump supporters who disrupted the certification of President Joe Biden's election.

Trump announced plans to launch Truth Social as a competitor to Twitter last fall, and said his social media company would become publicly traded through a deal with the so-called blank-check company Digital World Acquisition.

On April 25, Twitter accepted Musk's offer to buy the company, which is contingent on approval from shareholders and regulators.

Read more of CNBC's politics coverage:

Nunes, during his interview on Fox Business, suggested that Trump's purported urging of Musk to buy Twitter dovetailed with the mission of Truth Social.

"That's why we encouraged Elon Musk to buy it, because someone has to continue to take on these tech tyrants," Nunes said. "Donald Trump wanted to make sure that the American people got their voice back and that the internet was open and that's what we are doing."

"And so people like Elon Musk doing what he's doing, you know we're definitely in favor of it," Nunes said.

In late April, Trump told CNBC's Joe Kernen that he would not return to Twitter even if Musk took over and reversed the ban on him.

"No, I won't be going back on Twitter," said Trump, who had nearly 90 million followers on the platform before the ban.

"I will be on Truth Social within the week. It's on schedule. We have a lot of people signed up," he said.

"I like Elon Musk. I like him a lot. He's an excellent individual. We did a lot for Twitter when I was in the White House. I was disappointed by the way I was treated by Twitter. I won't be going back on Twitter," Trump said.

Statistics show that Trump, who as president had averaged upward of eight tweets per day in the last half of 2017 and the first half of 2018, steadily increased that average in the following years. He ended up with an average of 34 tweets per day in his last half year in office, before being banned.

On Truth Social, Trump as of Friday had posted a so-called Truth or "ReTruthed" another user's post less than 30 times combined over the past two months. Nearly all of those posts had been made in the past week.

Correction: Devin Nunes is CEO of Trump Media & Technology Group. An earlier version misstated the company name.

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Elon Musk denies claim by Truth Social boss that Trump encouraged him to buy Twitter - CNBC

Former Twitter vice president on Donald Trump, Elon Musk, and billionaires’ whims controlling social media – Sky News

Having huge social media platforms controlled at the "whim of billionaires" is "wholly undemocratic", a former vice president of Twitter has told Sky News.

Bruce Daisley spent eight years working for the US tech giant between 2012 and 2020, and was speaking after Elon Musk agreed a $44bn (35.6bn) deal to buy it.

He said: "Billionaires' whims controlling media is something we've always been subject to and something we've witnessed in press and broadcast.

"But now it's coming to social platforms and the danger is it feels wholly undemocratic.

"In a democratic society the opportunity to have oversight over these incredibly powerful tools is probably something of a right.

"One of the challenges is we are allowing, and almost deferring the control of what we read and what we see - broadly to the winner of who has got the biggest pile of cash."

His comments come as Mr Musk announced he would reverse the platform's "foolish" ban on Donald Trump if his acquisition goes through.

The former US president was sanctioned "in the midst of the 6 January insurrection after repeated warnings, and final warnings", Mr Daisley said.

"He was posting things saying he thought the people invading the Capitol were loyal to him and just effectively probably drove the leadership of the organisation (Twitter) to the point where they had no choice.

"And so most people on 7 January would have said the ban was justified and most media accepted that. But I guess we've all got short memories.

"Ultimately it shouldn't be one person's decision if he comes back."

Read more:Elon Musk's plans for his new 'toy' sound like nonsense - but don't underestimate himInternet troll, 'dangerously deluded' billionaire or rogue entrepreneur: The many faces of Elon Musk

Asked how social media platforms could be made more accountable, Mr Daisley suggested greater transparency and awareness of their rules and regulations.

He said: "Quite often technology companies shroud themselves in secrecy. They try and say their algorithm is complicated and sophisticated and so the consequence of that is they avoid too much scrutiny.

"If people knew the amount of employees working on responding to issues or if people know the amount of people working to keep toxic tweets away from them - if they knew how small those teams were then they would have an opinion on it.

"Every platform from Facebook to YouTube to Twitter should have to publish the amount of people they've got working, responding to customer enquiries, reports of abuse.

Follow the Daily podcast onApple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify,Spreaker

"We often see these things only when they intrude into the news. A Premier League footballer is subjected to racist abuse. The first thing we say is 'how did this happen?'

"Well, if we knew it happened because there is a small team, the size of the number of Uber passengers in a car - and they're dealing with it in Hungary - if we knew all those things were the components then we would see it was obvious why it happened."

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Former Twitter vice president on Donald Trump, Elon Musk, and billionaires' whims controlling social media - Sky News

Elon Musk Says This Is The ‘Most Amazing Thing’ He Knows – Benzinga – Benzinga

Tesla, Inc. TSLA CEO Elon Muskis often seen sharing his thoughts and viewpoints on Twitter Inc. TWTR a platform he has agreed to take private.

Musk on Wednesday said on Twitter that "awareness awakening" is the most amazing thing he knows. He was replying to a question asked by a widely followed Twitter handle, named @gunsnrosesgirl3. As usual, Musk's legion of followers approved of the reply, as is evident from the over 26,000 likes the tweet garnered at press time.

Author's View:Musk may have referred to his attempts at arriving at the right perception of thingsbringing himself or, widely, the global populationup to speed on knowledge relevant to humankind.

From a modest beginning, the Tesla CEO has raised a big business empire for himself even while pursuing the less-trodden path of building a sustainable future for humans. All of his Tesla electric car venture, SpaceX space transportation company, Starlink internet service, and Boring companyhave the stated goals of improving the quality of life for people from different walks of life. Muskis also harboring the vision of inhabiting Mars with humans.

Related Link: Elon Musk Thinks This Energy Source Will Be World's Preferred Choice

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Elon Musk Says This Is The 'Most Amazing Thing' He Knows - Benzinga - Benzinga

Newsworthy from the School of Medicine, Week of May 6 – May 12 | Newsroom – UNC Health and UNC School of Medicine

The below clickable headlines link directly to outside media outlets, which featured UNC School of Medicine faculty during the past week, starting Friday May 6, 2022.

In North Carolina, UNC Horizons Reimagines Addiction Treatment for Parents Dr. Hendre Jones (The Pew Charitable Trusts)

In Test Tubes, RNA Molecules Evolve Into a Tiny Ecosystem Charlie Carter (Quanta Magazine)

Astellas to Present 12-Week Data from Pivotal Phase 3 SKYLIGHT 1 Trial of Fezolinetant in Oral Session at the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists Annual Meeting Dr. Genevieve Neal-Perry (One News Page [Press Releases Only)

Unraveling the Link Between Multiple Sclerosis and Migraine Dr. Ana Felix (Everyday Health)

Low demand seen for COVID treatment despite surge in NC cases Dr. David Wohl (CBS17)

It Was Hard Enough to Get Treatment for Eating Disorders. Then Private Equity Took Over. Dr. Cynthia Bulik (Mother Jones)

COVID-19 metrics increase in NC; what to know about treatment and boosters Dr. David Wohl (WTVD)

COVID-19 metrics increase in NC; what to know about treatment and boosters Dr. David Wohl (MSN)

It is a developing crisis: Doctors see increase in long-haul COVID-19 cases Dr. John Baratta (WTVD)

Like you are carrying around extra weight on your body: UNC treats 1,000th COVID long hauler Dr. John Baratta (WRAL)

US Docs at Double the Risk of Postpartum Depression Dr. Alison Stuebe (Medscape)

Pregnant mother undergoes laser surgery to save her twins Dr. William Goodnight, Dr. Courtney Stephenson (WRAL)

Radiation technique reduces symptomatic esophagitis in patients with advanced lung cancer Ashley A. Weiner, Joel E. Tepper (Healio)

Where are the 22 Leapfrog straight-A hospitals? UNC Rex (Beckers Hospital Review)

North Carolina ranks No. 1 in US for hospital safety Alan Wolf (WRAL)

Study: Most NC hospitals earned As for patient safety. One got an F. What grade did yours get? Alan Wolf (CBS17)

More serious than people might think: Durham moms concerned about baby formula shortages Dr. Katherine Jordan (WTVD)

Gene therapy could treat Pitt-Hopkins syndrome, proof-of-concept study suggests Dr. Ben Philpot (EurekAlert!)

We are in a surge: COVID cases are undercounted, but up. Should we be worried? Dr. David Wohl (News & Observer)

7 ways to be a more effective, happier parent Dr. Edward Pickens (WRAL)

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Newsworthy from the School of Medicine, Week of May 6 - May 12 | Newsroom - UNC Health and UNC School of Medicine

Medical Students Learn How to Apply Arts and Humanities to Medicine – News Center – Feinberg News Center

Since 1989, Feinberg has offered arts and humanities seminars as an integral component of its MD curriculum, allowing students to approach the world of medicine and healthcare from different perspectives and with new skills.

Today, every medical student at Feinberg takes two seminars during their medical school career one in the winter quarter of their first year and one in the fall quarter their second year.

Humanities seminars introduce students to the methods and insights that humanities disciplines provide for more accurate understanding and effective practice of clinical medicine, said Catherine Belling, PhD, associate professor ofMedical Education and curriculum leader for humanities and ethics. Now, more than ever, doctors need to understand how culture, history, language and imagination all matter for framing and providing ethical healthcare.

Catherine Belling, PhD, associate professor of Medical Education and curriculum leader for humanities and ethics.

The seminars focus on a wide range of topics, such as drawing, sculpture and creative writing, and incorporate a clinical medicine component. The seminars are led by Northwestern and community experts from different humanities and arts fields, often taught in collaboration with Feinberg faculty members.

A new seminar offered this past fall to second-year medical students was taught by Ashish Premkumar, MD, assistant professor ofObstetrics and GynecologyandMedical Social Sciences.

Premkumars course, called Troubling the Fetus: Reconsidering the Relationship between Biomedical Practice and the State, connects current debates within the U.S. legal, political, and biomedical spheres on reproductive health to published medical anthropology, science, technology and legal studies.

This type of course is critical for any medical trainee at this current time in American history, where reproductive justice is front and center within mainstream media and curtailments to accessing abortion are only growing, Premkumar said. By cultivating students to question the logics inherent in how biomedicine and the state work together, oftentimes at the detriment of individual well-being in lieu of loftier goals like pronatalism, we can help to create the next generation of physician advocates.

Ricardo Rosenkranz, MD, 93 GME, clinical assistant professor of Pediatrics in the Division of Community Based Primary Care, has been teaching his Magic, Medicine and Meaning seminar to both first- and second-year medical students at Feinberg for more than 10 years.

Magdy Milad, MD, MS, the Albert B. Gerbie, MD, Professor of Obstetrics, instructs the Playing Doctor seminar, where first-year medical students use medical improv to improve their communication and teamwork skills.

During his seminar, medical students work with world-class magicians to explore the role of belief, empowerment and meaning in the world of magic performance. Rosenkranz, who himself is a world-renowned illusionist,encourages students to learn how magic performance can apply to modern medical practice with the goal of improving their understanding of the doctor-patient relationship.

Rosenkranz also produces the Rosenkranz Mysteries, a series of live magic and illusion performances, and is an owner of The Rhapsody Theater, a new live entertainment venue in Chicagos Rogers Park neighborhood that is catered around magic performances.

First-year medical students who enroll in the Playing Doctor seminar have the opportunity to use improvisational theater techniques to improve their communication and teamwork skills by performing medical improv, which was originally created by Katie Watson, JD, associate professor ofMedical Education,Medical Social SciencesandObstetrics and Gynecology.

The seminar is currently taught by Magdy Milad, MD, MS, the Albert B. Gerbie, MD, Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology, who has been performing improv across Chicago since 2016.

For me, improv has affected nearly every aspect of my life: it has improved my family life, clinical experiences, scholarly activity and relationships. Im a better listener and communicator, better able to read body language, assess status and be able to respond in the moment, Milad said.

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Medical Students Learn How to Apply Arts and Humanities to Medicine - News Center - Feinberg News Center

MDMA as medicine: Stemming the tide of veteran suicides in Western North Carolina – Smoky Mountain News

In the cold dark streets with tears streaming down his face, he sought them out, but he was really in search of something more solace from the post-traumatic stress disorder hed acquired while serving in a combat zone in the United States Army.

Until recently PTSD wasnt well understood. Until very recently it wasnt taken seriously. There werent many options for people like Lubecky, who had been home from Iraq for less than 60 days.

When Lubecky finally found the bells of Sacred Heart, the century-old neo-gothic cathedral was so full that he was turned away.

He lingered near the North Carolina Veterans Monument for a time, staring up at the solitary white obelisk of Mt. Airy granite topped by a dark bronze Lady Liberty hoisting a tobacco leaf high above her head.

He was trying to figure out the best way to kill himself.

Something from his training popped into his thoughts, so Lubecky hopped in his car and drove to the Womack Army Medical Center at Fort Bragg.

He told them he wanted to take his own life.

They gave him six Xanax and said not to take them all at once or he would succeed.

Instead Lubecky drove home, downed a fifth of vodka, put a Beretta to his temple and pulled the trigger.

More than 15 years later, an estimated 22 American veterans still commit suicide each day as thousands more are left searching for something Jonathan Lubecky couldnt find on that Christmas Eve.

Stigma associated with seeking mental health assistance and a general lack of education about PTSD both contribute to the death toll, as do palliative treatments that dont nearly help all of the people all of the time.

That may soon change, and Western North Carolina is at the tip of the spear thanks to a promising new treatment that involves an overlooked psychedelic compound called MDMA.

Jonathan Lubecky, seen here outside the White House in 2019, continues to advocate for increased access to psychedelics like MDMA for PTSD patients. Donated photo

Miraculously, Jonathan Lubecky didnt die on Christmas Eve in 2006. A manufacturers defect in the cartridge prevented the round from leaving the barrel.

You still get a bang, Lubecky said. And I did it in front of a mirror. I thought I was dead. And I was like, This is what dead is?

Born in Ohio, Lubecky reported to Marine Corps Recruit Depot, Parris Island nine days after graduating high school in 1995 and served as a C-130 loadmaster until he left the Marines in 1999. He returned after the Sept. 11 terror attacks, and was sworn into the North Carolina National Guard three days after the initial invasion of Iraq in 2003.

Iraqs Balad Air Base, where Lubecky was stationed in 2005 and 2006, was the target of thousands upon thousands of mortar attacks. Each and every day, Lubecky said, the dry desert air rained steel. Sirens blared. Soldiers scrambled. Defensive weapons roared as explosions peppered the base, leaving the distinct smell of cordite wafting over them all.

Theres also one specific incident Lubecky doesnt want to talk about.

Then, as he prepared to return home in late 2006, his life rapidly became a country music song.

His wife took their dog, sold his motorcycle and moved in with another man, leaving him only an empty house in Sanford, not far from Fort Bragg.

Occasionally you could hear helicopters flying overhead or impacts from artillery. When I started hearing those and they werent there, he said, I realized I was starting to have a problem. Things devolved rapidly from there.

Thats what led Lubecky, weeks later, to that lonely Christmas Eve at the bar and the church and the monument and the hospital and his face in the mirror with a gun against his head.

It was his first suicide attempt, and hed try four more times over the next eight years, all the while still searching.

They had me on I think a total of 42 pills a day for mental health and chronic pain and stuff like that, said Lubecky of his experience with the VA. And then on Nov. 4, 2013, I slit my wrists, which was my final suicide attempt.

The history of ineffective treatments for PTSD parallels the history of PTSD itself. First described by the ancient Greeks, PTSD has been known for millennia by different names shell shock, war nerves, combat neurosis, soldiers heart.

Its not limited to combat veterans or veterans in general and can affect anyone whos been through acute or chronic trauma, be it emotional, physical or sexual.

Roughly 12 million Americans are walking around with PTSD in any given year, according to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs .

Civilians experience comparatively less trauma than members of the armed forces. Studies from the VA suggest that 15% of Vietnam veterans, 12% of Gulf War veterans and somewhere from 11-20% of veterans from operations Iraqi Freedom and Enduring Freedom have PTSD.

In 2019, about 17 civilians per 100,000 committed suicide, while the rate for veterans was closer to 27.

Jonathan Lubecky may have continued on his path to becoming one of them, but after his last unsuccessful suicide attempt, someone at the Charleston VA slid a folded up note across the table, told him not to tell anyone about it and not to open it until he got home.

Published data suggest that MDMA has value as a post-traumatic stress disorder treatment. Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies infographic

In his Waynesville office, the bearded, bespectacled Dr. Raymond Turpin sits behind a modest desk piled with papers, folders and a webcam. The place screams calm, with soothing natural light streaming through the partially drawn window shades, casting sepia hues over the rich wood trim.

Strewn about the high-ceilinged room are several chairs and couches where patients of the Pearl Psychedelic Institute come to discuss their trauma with Turpin.

A Georgia native, Turpin was an advertising major at the University of Georgia in the mid-1980s until he had his first encounter with psilocybin, the active ingredient in hallucinogenic mushrooms. The experience led him to change his major to psychology and earn a masters degree at West Georgia College, and then a PhD at the California Institute of Integral Studies. He moved to Waynesville in 2001.

All along, Ive been interested in psychedelics as medicines and being used for mental health treatment, Turpin said.

Psychedelics are a class of compounds that trigger dramatically altered states of consciousness. Natural psychedelics like peyote and psilocybin have been known to humans for thousands of years and were sometimes utilized in religious or spiritual ceremonies.

Recreational users also consumed them for the pleasant physical and emotional effects they can produce, alongside auditory and visual hallucinations.

More than a century ago, the pharmaceutical industry began to study these compounds and isolate or synthesize new ones, hoping to find some commercial use for the relatively potent substances.

Swiss chemist Albert Hoffman first synthesized LSD in 1938 but experienced the psychedelic effects firsthand on April 19, 1943 now called Bicycle Day , because of Hoffmans interesting ride home from work. Bicycle Day is also recognized as the dawn of the modern psychedelic age.

Wayne State University professor Dr. Calvin Stevens invented ketamine in the early 1960s, which ended up being a go-to surgical anesthetic on the battlefields of Vietnam. Now, its an FDA-approved nasal spray that treats depression.

MDMA, discovered by Dr. Anton Kllisch of Merck Pharmaceuticals in 1912, sat on a shelf until a Dow chemist named Dr. Alexander Shulgin rediscovered it in 1976, and began testing it on himself.

Through ever-increasing dosages, Shulgin eventually experienced the psychoactive effects of MDMA and suggested to his friend, Oakland psychologist Leo Zeff , that it might be good for psychotherapy.

Dr. Raymond Turpin sees hope in a new treatment for PTSD. Jeffrey Delannoy photo

At one time, Turpin said, there were around 4,000 mental health professionals legally using MDMA in their psychotherapy practices.

But MDMA had also been adopted by the early-1980s underground party culture, where it was used recreationally as a supplement to the loud music, colorful flashing lights and gyrating revelers.

Users reported feelings of euphoria, increased energy, sensory elevation and tactile stimulation that earned MDMA the moniker of ecstasy, or simply, X. More recently, its been called Molly.

Blowback ensued, and by 1988, MDMA was classified as a Schedule I narcotic by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency, along with heroin, LSD, marijuana, methaqualone (quaaludes) and peyote. Schedule I substances are defined as drugs with no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse.

In the mid-1990s, Dr. Charles Grob of UCLA received FDA permission to conduct the first phase-one study on the physiological and psychological effects of MDMA in healthy volunteers.

Other than a temporary elevation in heart rate and blood pressure, and maybe body temperature, people could tolerate it well and there werent any adverse effects, Turpin said. That opened the door to phase two, which was where they actually started to look at it for PTSD. And there was a lot of evidence from the legal period there during those 10 years in the late 1970s/early 1980s that it might be very effective with people who had traumatic histories.

In 2017, Turpin returned to the California Institute of Integral Studies for a certificate program in psychedelic studies and research, where he met Dr. Michael Mithoefer and his wife Annie , a registered nurse. Mithoefer conducted one of the seminal phase two studies testing MDMAs suitability for treating PTSD.

The results were really pretty strong, said Turpin. These were folks that had severe chronic PTSD for an average of 17 or 18 years. One year after the protocol, 67% of the people that had entered the study with PTSD no longer qualified for [a diagnosis of] PTSD.

When Lubecky got home, unfolded the note and read it, it simply said, Google MDMA PTSD.

Once he did, he learned that the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies was conducting a phase two clinical trial, run by the Mithoefers. Founded in 1986, MAPS is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit focusing on the development of cultural, legal and medical shifts in the careful use of psychedelics for mental and spiritual healing.

Interestingly enough, I returned from Iraq on Nov. 22, 2006, and I took my first dose of MDMA on Nov. 22, 2014, Lubecky said. So, on Nov. 22 of this year, I will have been healed of PTSD as long as I had it.

But its not as simple as just taking a single pill and walking away feeling better.

Theres a strict screening process meant to weed out people who could experience an adverse reaction from MDMAs known side effects elevated blood pressure and heart rate. Then, there are three 90-minute prep sessions where therapists get to know the patient and answer questions about the treatment.

Next comes the dosing session, during which two therapists administer the drug via a pill and sit with the patient for between six and eight hours. Sometimes the patient will don eyeshades, or headphones, and listen to calming instrumental music. Other times, theyll talk with therapists as they go through the experience.

It kind of felt like I was in a tight wetsuit in a hot tub, Lubecky said. Its like doing therapy while being hugged by everyone in the world who loves you in a bathtub full of puppies licking your face.

The patient will go on to spend the night and then participate in an integration session following breakfast the next morning, trying to make sense of what was happening during the dosing session.

Typically, three dosing sessions followed by integration sessions will take place over the course of four to six months. After that, no further MDMA use by the patient is anticipated.

Whats actually happening during those dosing sessions is the untangling of complicated processes in the brain that have become dysfunctional due to trauma.

When somebody is undergoing an overwhelming psychological emotional experience, certain higher functions of the brain shut down, and the brain reverts to more primitive processing, Turpin said. The information thats coming in from the traumatic memory the things people are seeing, what theyre hearing, what theyre smelling they dont go through proper processing channels, like a normal memory would. It basically gets stuck in the brain in an improper area where it just sits there. And thats why people have intrusive memories, nightmares, flashbacks. Its all this highly charged, fragmented information.

That information tends to pop up randomly, or when external sensations trigger a re-experiencing of the traumatic event.

Its just kind of living in a state of fear, said Turpin. There could be a car backfiring. They could smell somebodys cologne that reminds them of the smell of the person that raped them. It tends to really throw the body into a state of shock almost.

Such episodes can leave those suffering from PTSD with hypervigilance, but they can also result in the desire for physical seclusion and mental isolation with or without the use of alcohol or other illicit drugs.

The only two FDA-approved drugs for the treatment of PTSD, Paxil and Zoloft, are antidepressants and dont really treat the underlying cause of PTSD. Theyre often prescribed in conjunction with other drugs to combat the effects of PTSD, like sleeplessness and nightmares.

A 2009 study pegged their effectiveness at between 20-30%, although Turpin said its maybe 50% at best.

What weve done for years in treatment is try to give people drugs that have tried to basically throw a blanket on those symptoms and to mitigate those symptoms so that people can go out and function, Turpin said. Unfortunately, we havent done a very good job with those drugs.

What MDMA does, according to Turpin, is shut down the amygdalae the fire alarm of the brain that triggers the normal fight-or-flight response to trauma. That allows the trauma to be processed by the prefrontal cortex, the way it should have happened in the first place.

The positive results from Mithoefers phase two trial, in which Lubecky was a participant, led to the third phase of trials conducted by MAPS .

I think theyre expected to probably do phase three through this year and then wrap it up and turn in hopefully a new drug application to the FDA early next year, Turpin said. The hope is that itll be approved, but theres a special program that the FDA has, called expanded access or compassionate use.

The FDA has approved 10 sites nationwide for the compassionate use program, effectively clearing the way for 50 people to receive the MDMA treatment. Four sites are expected to be up and running soon, but Turpins Waynesville practice has a bit of a head start on the other three.

Mithoefer was my mentor for that [certificate] program, and they were moving to Asheville, Turpin said. Thats how the conversation got started about maybe getting an expanded access site in Asheville, and since I was over here in Waynesville, I was kind of interested to see if we could pull it off in Waynesville, too.

Currently, two patients are in the screening process and on track for treatment later this year, which would make Waynesville the first expanded access site in the world for the compassionate use of MDMA to treat PTSD.

Ill be honest, Lubecky said. I didnt think this was going to work. Thats entirely why I volunteered. Im like, Im going to die any day, I might as well try this. And then it was a miracle.

Marine Michael Ferguson (left) rides out of Fallujah after 28 days of near-constant firefights. Donated photo

Lubecky hasnt taken MDMA since his initial doses in 2016 and continues to advocate for the treatment he thinks saved his life, which is good news for other veterans like Waynesville resident Michael Ferguson, who hasnt yet had the opportunity to go through the MDMA treatment process.

Ferguson joined the Marine Corps just before the terror attacks of Sept. 11, and became part of a FAST company Fleet Anti-terrorism Security Team.

After the invasion of Iraq, he spent 28 days fighting in the Battle of Fallujah.

Fallujah was kind of, firefight, break. Firefight, break. Youd hear morning prayer about 5 a.m. and youd know everybody was getting up and pretty soon they were going to come find where you are today. At times I remember being on rooftops and looking out over the city and it looked like the entire city was on fire, Ferguson said. Its hard for me to explain it or put it into words and grasp it. Its still odd to me that thats what I did.

Ferguson said he had trouble adjusting when he returned home and was fired from his first nine jobs for his quarrelsome behavior. He still sees snipers lurking in open windows and improvised explosive devices on the sides of Western North Carolinas roads.

Finally, a Vietnam veteran recognized Fergusons symptoms and encouraged him to visit the VA. From 2006 until he was formally diagnosed with PTSD in 2014, he went through several different therapy programs and was on 11 different medications.

I never really found one that even came close to working. Most of what I was given at the time had a side effect of suicidal ideation, he said. Thats the last thing that a person in my position needs is more encouragement towards that.

Ferguson stopped taking medications for PTSD several years ago. He said he still contemplates self-harm but continues to fight it, in hopes that one day soon hell find the solace that Lubecky found perhaps in the research and treatment Turpin and MAPS are currently conducting. When you deal with death that much at such a young age, once somethings on the table, its hard to remove it off the table, he said. Even today I definitely dont have an intent or a will [to commit suicide] but its still something I think about. Its always going to be on the table. The process is just keeping it on the table and not putting it into action. And every day that we do that, we win.

If you or someone you know is contemplating self-harm, call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 800.273.8255. The work of MAPS and the Pearl Psychedelic Institute, both of which are nonprofits, is primarily funded through donations. To learn more or to help, visit pearlpsychedelicinstitute.org/donate.

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MDMA as medicine: Stemming the tide of veteran suicides in Western North Carolina - Smoky Mountain News

The Molecular Machinery That Delivers Metabolites to Mitochondria – Yale School of Medicine

When we eat and then digest a meal, the nutrients and other useful components in the food are broken downor metabolizedand ultimately make their way to cells throughout the body. Each cell has its own power plant, called the mitochondria, which produces energy for the cells various processes as well as other tasks that help keep a cell healthy. By the time metabolites reach the cell, they are completely broken down and segregated from one another, so that each can play a role in specific functions that the mitochondria perform.

The process goes far beyond fueling power generation in the cell, according to Hongying Shen, PhD, assistant professor of cellular & molecular physiology at Yale School of Medicine and a member of Yales Systems Biology Institute. Mitochondria also house many other biochemical processes that are critical for cellular and organismal physiology, and that require trafficking in and out of all kinds of metabolites, including nucleotides, amino acids for protein, and lipids, she says.

In a study published May 5 in Nature Communications, Shen and her lab have identified the molecular machinery through which many of the metabolites reach inside the mitochondria.

They focus on the human SLC25 carrier family, the largest protein family responsible for metabolite translocation across the mitochondrial membrane. Each of the 53 transporters has a distinct assignment. They are structurally, sequence-wise, very similar to each other, says Shen, but they have this amazing specificity. One is dedicated to a certain type of nutrients, the other dedicated to other metabolites or nutrients. So there seems to be a very tight regulation in terms of specificity to recognize metabolites being transported.

This new knowledge may open the door to potential regulation of what enters the cell, with the goal of preventing or mitigating disease.

We are particularly interested in human diseases affecting the brain that include psychiatric disorders and neurodegenerative disorders, Shen explains. In fact, there have been de novo mutations in the gene SLC25A39 that have been implicated in autism. And also, A39 has been recently implicated in Parkinsons disease where oxidative stress was proposed as a pathological mechanism. In addition, according to Shen, the antioxidant metabolite glutathione, whose delivery route her lab also identified, may be of great interest to scientists studying cancer.

One day in the future, it is conceivable that biomarkers could associate conditions such as neurodegeneration with the metabolic processes that Shens lab is studying. That, she says, could lead to new treatments for disease. Then we can perhaps change our metabolism by diet and by nutrition and all kinds of methods to intervene with that. If we were able to discover these processes and identify the metabolites, can we use dietary intervention to slow the disease onset or disease progression? There's a long way to go [before we might accomplish that], but it's something.

The new study appears to lay a sound foundation for future work. Shen is encouraged that a different research team, working independently and from a different direction, recently produced similar conclusions about the mitochondrial glutathione transporter.

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The Molecular Machinery That Delivers Metabolites to Mitochondria - Yale School of Medicine

On the front lines of advocating for academic medicine – AAMC

Vast inequities in health care. Millions of uninsured patients. The need to protect crucial funding for biomedical research. A growing physician shortage and bureaucratic obstacles to effective care. Maternal mortality, racism in medicine, and mounting public distrust of scientific sources.

All this and more drives the agenda of policy advocates who work to ensure that medical schools and teaching hospitals across the United States can provide patients with the best possible care.

Karen Fisher, JD, AAMC chief public policy officer, has been working on such efforts for decades. From legislative battles over the Affordable Care Act (ACA) to advocating for hospitals during the COVID-19 pandemic, she has influenced dozens of major policy matters. At the end of June, she is retiring from the AAMC.

Fisher first joined the association as assistant vice president in 1997 and spearheaded policy and regulatory efforts related to the special missions of teaching hospitals, including federal funding for graduate medical education.

In 2011, she left to serve as senior health counsel to the U.S. Senate Committee on Finance, where she was pivotal in enacting major Medicare reform the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 (MACRA) that repealed a damaging Medicare physician payment formula known as the sustainable growth rate and emphasized physician payments based on high-quality care.

In 2016, Fisher returned to the AAMC to run its Office of Government Relations. Since then, she has set advocacy priorities, navigated difficult political waters, and educated lawmakers about the pressing issues affecting some 250,000 U.S. medical trainees, 400 teaching hospitals, 155 medical schools, and the millions of patients that rely on them.

AAMCNews sat down with Fisher to discuss key legislative successes during her tenure and the work that lies ahead to promote the health of all.

First, getting our teaching hospitals, patients, and communities through the pandemic is crucial. We need Congress to pass a supplemental COVID-19 funding bill, for example, to help fund additional vaccines and treatments. And we need legislation to ensure that the nation is prepared for the next pandemic. We have seen what happens when you have chronic underfunding for public health, for things like testing, identifying variants of a virus, and distributing vaccines, and we dont want that to happen again.

Theres also ensuring that policy advances made during the pandemic continue permanently, such as changes to telehealth requirements. Previously, there were many obstacles to telehealth, including that it could only take place in rural areas. Loosened restrictions during the pandemic meant providers could help many more patients, and some AAMC members increased their telehealth services by as much as 200%.

The third issue is addressing the physician workforce shortage. Medicare is the primary public source of funding to offset the costs of medical residents training, and we need Congress to continue to lift caps on that support. This is crucial because the AAMC is predicting a shortfall of as many as 124,000 physicians by 2034.

Fourth, we need to ensure that policymakers understand the importance of providing increased growth in funding for the National Institutes of Health [NIH] so medical schools and teaching hospitals can continue crucial biomedical research.

Finally, we need to address issues of health equity and health care workforce diversity, so we can better work to improve the health of all. We need to advocate for data that identify social factors like housing and food insecurity that contribute to illness. And we want federal policies like the one that recently expanded Medicaids coverage of postpartum care to help address this countrys disparities in maternal mortality.

Pretty much every medical advancement that weve had in this country started with NIH funding. The infrastructure for the mRNA COVID-19 vaccine was possible thanks in part to funding from the NIH over a decade ago. Researchers have revolutionized cancer care and created better treatments for diseases like diabetes and devised new techniques in organ and stem cell transplants, all thanks to NIH funding.

Weve now had seven years of sustainable, robust growth in NIH funding. Before that, we had many years of flat funding. So were still barely at spending capabilities that we had 20 years ago, and we need to continue that trajectory. President Biden has indicated that kind of support with his Cancer Moonshot initiative, but we think theres also a lot more wonderful research that could be funded.

In a lot of ways, the pandemic simply highlighted existing issues.

Weve long known about health inequities, and COVID-19 highlighted them. We knew about the physician shortage, and the pandemic made that clearer. The pandemic highlighted the role of NIH funding since we were able to produce a vaccine in nine months because of prior funding. And we knew about provider burnout before the pandemic and that public health departments and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention havent had enough funding, and that we needed expanded health care coverage. The pandemic just brought those issues to the fore.

As for our ability to advocate and talk to policymakers, Zoom was a big help. Congressional policymakers were working around the clock, so we were working around the clock. During COVID, three major pieces of legislation came out within a month that provided critical waivers and funding that enabled our teaching hospitals and physicians to provide needed care to COVID-19 patients.

We have a whole decision tree, and it has many questions. Do we have expertise to contribute? How important is the issue to health care systems and our patients and communities? What kind of role makes sense for us?

We also ask ourselves if we can join others who are advocating in similar ways. Were big believers in coalitions. We convene a number of coalitions, including the Ad Hoc Group for Medical Research, which includes over 300 members committed to advancing funding for the NIH.

We also ask if this is the right time to address an issue. We care a lot about DACA [Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals], for example, and often raise it with policymakers, but we also know immigration is not on the Congressional radar right now, so we monitor it and are ready to throw our weight behind it when the time is right.

Overall, we need to prioritize, but we also do need to recognize that academic medicine is involved in clinical care, research, education, and community issues. That means we have a responsibility to be active around a broad variety of health-related issues.

An easy way to get involved is through AAMC Action. Its a grassroots advocacy group with 200,000 trainees, researchers, faculty, and physicians on call to address issues quickly. It gives you an avenue to connect with your legislators. It gives you information on issues and even model emails you can send to your legislator. Our member institutions also all have offices of government relations, so thats another place to start.

Im a strong believer that our issues are bipartisan.

Everybody cares about having a sufficient and high-quality physician workforce. Everybody wants research to help identify cures and advances to reduce disease and suffering. Everyone wants to ensure that when patients have complex health problems, there are places to care for them.

Sometimes, how legislators want to go about achieving those goals is different. But weve had open doors with both Democratic and Republican offices and good discussions with both. Each party has its own priorities. So sometimes we have to find a way to fit somewhere in their priority list, or we have to work harder to make the issues we care about get on their list.

Looking back, what do you consider some of the greatest policy accomplishments during your tenure?

Im definitely pleased that we did not lose significant health care coverage during attempts to defeat or diminish the ACA. By the way, the AAMC wasnt necessarily defending the ACA we were defending coverage. If Republicans had developed a policy that was better, we would have supported it.

Im also glad that the federal payments that our members receive have been protected. Teaching hospitals often treat very complex patients as well as many uninsured patients, and they train future providers. It takes a lot of resources to do that, and its essential that the federal government offset some of those costs.

Im proud that after decades, we broke through the freeze on Medicare-funded [medical] residency slots. In December 2021, Congress approved an additional 1,000 Medicare-funded residency slots that will go to train physicians in underfunded and under-resourced areas. These were the first new residency slots approved since 1997.

Im proud of our work on immigration issues and health equity, recognizing that there is much more to do, and of our current work to emphasize the importance of mental health issues in this country and our efforts to support physician well-being.

Im proud that we were able to learn from our members how much theyve been doing during COVID-19 and that we let policymakers know about that work and what our members needed to support it.

The first thing is that the Medicare program is expected to go insolvent in 2026. That means that there will not be enough money to pay Medicares bills. We need to look at how to constrain spending growth while continuing to ensure high-quality care. I worry about how we will do that. Do we need to look at alternative payment models, for example?

I also think we need to focus on protecting research funding. Theres been a lot of attention placed on science during COVID-19. Its crucial that we educate the public and policymakers about the importance of science. We in academic medicine spend so much time doing this important work that we sometimes fail to remind people about the value of doing it.

Well, part of my job is to be worried all the time. The job is stressful because issues emerge suddenly and change quickly, and we often dont have control over the outcomes of our efforts. But this also makes the job challenging and exciting and fun to get up and do every day. And I am surrounded by talented colleagues both in the AAMCs Office of Government Relations and the rest of the association, and that makes my job a lot easier.

I must say that it has been an absolute honor to work on behalf of academic medicine and its patients.

I truly believe teaching hospitals and medical schools are the backbone of the American health care system. I appreciate that they treat everyone who comes through the door, and I respect the passion of people who work in academic medical centers. In fact, I always say that our best advocacy is the work that academic medical centers and their staff do every single day.

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On the front lines of advocating for academic medicine - AAMC

Future Physicians at Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine and New Jersey Communities to Benefit from $1 Million Gift to School’s Human Dimension…

A $1 million gift to the Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine from Roger and Carin Ehrenberg will support the schools Human Dimension program, which benefits both medical students and New Jersey communities. A three-year course, the Human Dimension program provides service-learning experiences and an integrated curriculum for medical students in which they come to understand the many Determinants of Health, including personal, economic and environmental determinants that greatly impact health.

"The Human Dimension program is foundational to the Hackensack Meridian School of Medicines innovative curriculum," said Robert C. Garrett, CEO of Hackensack Meridian Health. "We are grateful for this generous gift which will help us continue to reinvent medical education to create a physician workforce that will thrive in a new state of health care that focuses as much on prevention as curing illness."

Since its start in 2018, 335 students in the Human Dimension program have cared for 257 families in nine communities across five counties, and have taken on 35 community health projects. The programs 35 faculty members have been integral in the success of the program and in leading another key aspect of it: the Professional Identity Formation curriculum. This training includes reflection, narrative medicine, resilience-building, mindfulness and other skills and activities to support student development as resilient, empathic professionals able to meet the needs of their patients.

"By matching our future physicians to individuals and families from underserved areas, and through interactions over the entire core curriculum, they become involved in all aspects of a familys life to understand drivers of health outcomes, provide education and navigate community resources, said Jeffrey Boscamp, M.D., interim dean of Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine.

The schools commitment to improving community health has garnered much recognition, including the American Hospital Associations NOVA award. The Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine was one of just five institutions to be recognized.

"Carin and I have long believed that medical care needs to take into account the whole individual, not merely reported symptoms, says Roger Ehrenberg. "This means understanding where and how someone lives, what stressors exist and why, and other physical and psychological forces that drive their behaviors.

"Traditional medical training has given short shrift to context, which often has profound impacts on a patient's physical and emotional well-being, added Ehrenberg. "This is a problem we wanted to address both with respect to training subsequent generations of medical professionals to take these factors into account, but also to develop empathy and perspective by incorporating these kinds of challenges and communities into their medical training and curriculum.

The gift provided by the Ehrenbergs will cover nearly all annual costs to implement the Human Dimension program for one year, including core faculty and team member positions, a mix of full- and part-time, and include clinical faculty teachers, curriculum development, associate dean supervision and support and operations costs such as interpreter services and community events. Additionally, it will help to establish the Health Services Research Institute. Health Services Research is core to assessing the impact of the Human Dimension program on students and the communities and populations they are caring for. It will focus on the organization, delivery and outcomes of health care in a broad manner and addresses a wide array of areas, including social determinants of health, health outcomes of programs and policies, variations in care, disease specific health care outcomes and costs, diversity, equality and outcomes, payment systems and population and geographic care delivery.

"We are so thankful to Roger and Carin for their compassion and generosity, says Joyce P. Hendricks, president and chief development officer, Hackensack Meridian Health Foundation. "The COVID-19 pandemic shone a spotlight on the undeniable health care disparities we face as a nation, and programs, like the Human Dimension program, are just one of the ways in which we can truly make headway in establishing equal health care for all."

To learn more about how you can make a gift in support of Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine, please contact Joseph Burt, executive director, at 551-358-8269, joseph.burt@hmhn.org or by donating here. To learn more about, or to support Hackensack Meridian Health Foundation, please email giving@hmhn.org.

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Future Physicians at Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine and New Jersey Communities to Benefit from $1 Million Gift to School's Human Dimension...

$83 Bn Regenerative Medicine Markets – Global Opportunity Analysis and Industry Forecast, 2021-2022 & 2030 – ResearchAndMarkets.com – Business…

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The "Regenerative Medicine Market by Product Type, Material, Application and End user (Hospitals, Ambulatory Surgical Centers, and Others: Global Opportunity Analysis and Industry Forecast, 2021-2030" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

The regenerative medicine market size was valued at $10,107.32 million in 2020, and is estimated to reach $83,196.72 million by 2030, growing at a CAGR of 23.4% from 2021 to 2030.

Regenerative medicine is a process of replacing human cells, tissues or organs to restore or establish normal function. It is field that brings together experts in biology, chemistry, genetics and medicine. This is a promising field which working to restore structure and function of damaged tissues and organs.

It includes cell therapy involves the use of cellular materials such as stem cells, autologous cells, xenogeneic cells, and others, for the therapeutic treatment of patients. Cell therapy is used to replace damaged cells, deliver therapies to target tissues/organs, stimulate self-healing, and various other applications in regenerative medicine.

The major factors boosting the regenerative medicine market growth include technological advancements in tissue and organ regeneration, increase in prevalence of chronic diseases and trauma emergencies, prominent potential of nanotechnology, and emergence of stem cell technology.

In addition, increase in incidence of degenerative diseases and shortage of organs for transplantation are expected to boost the growth of the market. The prominent potential of regenerative medicine to replace, repair, and regenerate damaged tissues and organs has fueled the market growth. In addition, technological advancements in regenerative medicine production and advancement in the stem cell therapy procedures propel the growth of the market.

Rise in prevalence of musculoskeletal diseases and increase in dermatological treatments propel the growth of the market. Moreover, utilization of nanomaterial's in wound care, drug delivery, and immunomodulation has opened growth avenues for the regenerative medicine market.

However, stringent regulations, operational inefficiency, and high cost of regenerative medicine treatment are key factors that hinder the market growth. Furthermore, advancements in stem cell technology and increase in R&D activities in the emerging economies are expected to fuel the market growth during the forecast period. Developed nations have adopted technological advancements in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine sectors, which help in the expansion of the global market.

Moreover, rise in development of pharmaceutical and medical device industries and improvement in healthcare spending are anticipated to drive the growth of the regenerative medicine market. In addition, increase in demand for regenerative medicine led to development of innovative technologies in the healthcare sector, thereby propelling growth of the market.

Moreover, initiatives taken by governments for development of advanced stem cell therapies and development of the healthcare sector for manufacturing of regenerative medicine are the key factors that boost growth of the market. Furthermore, surge in geriatric population, who are more vulnerable to chronic disease, propels the market growth.

KEY MARKET PLAYERS

KEY MARKET SEGMENTS

By Product Type

By Material

By Application

By End User

By Region

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/qek5u

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$83 Bn Regenerative Medicine Markets - Global Opportunity Analysis and Industry Forecast, 2021-2022 & 2030 - ResearchAndMarkets.com - Business...