McMaster Lean Experience – Video


McMaster Lean Experience
Lean methodology has been successfully integrated into recent capital projects at McMaster Children #39;s Hospital including rebuilds of the paediatric intensive care unit and emergency department. We have also received funding from the Ontario Ministry of Children and Youth Services for a new, purpose-built facility to house our Autism Spectrum Disorders, Child and Youth Mental Health, Developmental Pediatrics and Rehabilitation Programs, and Prosthetics and Orthotics Service. Lean methodology is being used to change the way these programs delver services and to inform the design of this new facility. Fourteen cross functional and multidisciplinary teams have undergone training in LEAN methods and tools to support this initiative. The CAPHC webinar will tell the story of our LEAN journey to date. Presenters: Dr. Lennox Huang, Chair of the Department of Pediatrics at McMaster University and the Chief of Pediatrics at Hamilton Health Sciences and St. Joseph #39;s Healthcare Hamilton Dr. Huang is the Chair of the Department of Pediatrics at McMaster University and the Chief of Pediatrics at Hamilton Health Sciences and St. Joseph #39;s Healthcare Hamilton. Since 2006, he has served as Associate Chair (Clinical) in the Department of Pediatrics and Deputy Chief of Pediatrics. He has been the Medical Director of the Outreach and Pediatric High-Fidelity Simulation at McMaster Children #39;s Hospital since 2005. After receiving his medical degree from the University of Toronto, Dr. Huang ...

By: CAPHCTv

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McMaster Lean Experience - Video

JUICE RECIPE TO BOOST YOUR IMMUNE SYSTEM – Video


JUICE RECIPE TO BOOST YOUR IMMUNE SYSTEM
THANKS FOR VOTING DTM: http://www.bestofrawfoods.com CATCH THE BUS: http://www.rawlivingexpo.com LIFE CHANGING DVDs: regenerateyourlife.org DAN #39;S DONATION LINK: bit.ly INSIDERS CLUB: regenerateyourlife.org OFFICIAL FACEBOOK PAGE: facebook.com SOPHIA #39;S BLOG: sophiaexisting.blogspot.com EAT RAW FOOD HEALTH WEALTH HAPPINESS BEAUTY LONGEVITY DIGESTION CANCER HEALING ENVIRONMENT ORGANIC FRUITS VEGETABLES SUCCESS ABUNDANCE HEALTHY FOODS KIDS WEIGHT LOSS TISSUE REGENERATION HOPE DETOXIFICATION FASTING SPIRITUALITY SPIRITUAL ENLIGHTENMENT HERBS SELF MASTERY ENERGY SKIN HAIR EYES NAILS SEXY TRIM SIX PACK ABS JUST PLAIN AWESOMENESS VACCINES DOCTORS POISON MERCURY ADD ADHD "POPULATION CONTROL" AUTISM "NERVOUS SYSTEM DISORDERS" "AUTOIMMUNE DISORDERS" DISEASES "SUDDEN INFANT DEATH SYNDROME" EUGENICS INFERTILITY VIRUSES "VACCINE INDUCED DEATH"

By: liferegenerator

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JUICE RECIPE TO BOOST YOUR IMMUNE SYSTEM - Video

Results From St.Amant's 2012 Gift Wrap/Coat Check Station – Video


Results From St.Amant #39;s 2012 Gift Wrap/Coat Check Station
The St.Amant Foundation hosted the gift wrap and coat check station at St. Vital Centre from December 1 -- 24. This year an amazing $23000 was raised! Your donations will help fund electronic transfer lifts and specialized medical and music therapy equipment. A small difference in your holiday shopping will make a huge difference for those with developmental disabilities and autism, as well as their families. We look forward to seeing our volunteers and patrons again for our fourth year later in December 2013.

By: StAmantMB

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Results From St.Amant's 2012 Gift Wrap/Coat Check Station - Video

Results From St.Amant’s 2012 Gift Wrap/Coat Check Station – Video


Results From St.Amant #39;s 2012 Gift Wrap/Coat Check Station
The St.Amant Foundation hosted the gift wrap and coat check station at St. Vital Centre from December 1 -- 24. This year an amazing $23000 was raised! Your donations will help fund electronic transfer lifts and specialized medical and music therapy equipment. A small difference in your holiday shopping will make a huge difference for those with developmental disabilities and autism, as well as their families. We look forward to seeing our volunteers and patrons again for our fourth year later in December 2013.

By: StAmantMB

Original post:
Results From St.Amant's 2012 Gift Wrap/Coat Check Station - Video

Tucson Chiropractor – Clear Change Health program – Video


Tucson Chiropractor - Clear Change Health program
Tompkins Family Chiropractic Marana and Northwest Tucson, Call 520.572.2596 http://www.dremiltompkins.com From back pain to sciatica, neck pain to headaches, ADHD to Autism, Dr. Tompkins creates an individualized health program to suit your specific needs. Come see why we were voted Best in the Northwest 3 years in a row.Whether you have back pain, headaches, sciatica or ADHD. Migraines, or just want to be healthier, Dr. Tompkins has a program that will work for you and your family. Call us at 520.572.2596 and we #39;ll be happy to help your family grow healthier.

By: Emil Tompkins

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Tucson Chiropractor - Clear Change Health program - Video

Will


Will his Autism Assistance Dog
Will has had Flynn, his autism assistance dog, for about 4 months now, and the changes in him are amazing. We can never thank the VERY special people involved enough for all they did with Flynn and our family.

By: aliharrison7

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Will

"The Story of Luke" gets standing ovation at Tallgrass Film Festival – Video


"The Story of Luke" gets standing ovation at Tallgrass Film Festival
thestoryofluke.com 2012, 95min, Comedy Starring Lou Taylor Pucci, Seth Green, Cary Elwes Kristin Bauer. "Sheltered his whole life, Luke, a young man with autism, is about to embark on a quest for a job and a girlfriend."

By: storyofluke

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"The Story of Luke" gets standing ovation at Tallgrass Film Festival - Video

“The Story of Luke” gets standing ovation at Tallgrass Film Festival – Video


"The Story of Luke" gets standing ovation at Tallgrass Film Festival
thestoryofluke.com 2012, 95min, Comedy Starring Lou Taylor Pucci, Seth Green, Cary Elwes Kristin Bauer. "Sheltered his whole life, Luke, a young man with autism, is about to embark on a quest for a job and a girlfriend."

By: storyofluke

Read the original post:
"The Story of Luke" gets standing ovation at Tallgrass Film Festival - Video

ICAD 2013 (Jan. 24-26, 2013, Bangkok, Thailand, Asia)

Cliquez pour écouter ce texte The ICAD 2013 intends to become the congress wherephysicians will be introduced to the latest techniques andknowledge in Anti-Aging and Aesthetic medicine, and attendhigh standard courses in the respective fields of thesespecialties. We have prepared a scientific program thatproposes the diversity of various disciplines with thescientific approach combining hot topics with timely reviewspresented by outstanding plenary speakers and offering thepoint of view from different continents. Moreover, thescientific program has been carefully designed to be highlyPRACTICAL and interactive. Most of presentations willeffectively correspond to an application in daily practice.A series of workshops on the latest developments in theirrespective fields will be waiting for your participation.This Congress is therefore not one to be missed. Come andbenefit from the wisdom and experience of internationallyreputed speakers.It will be an investment well spent and a once-in-a-lifetimelearning experience. So please do avail yourselves of thisstimulating and enjoyable opportunity.Source:
http://www.hon.ch/cgi-bin/confevent?aff2+CONF13778

Deuterium and Lifespan in Flies

Every few years research on the effects of deuterium on life span in lower animals surfaces, by way of exposing them to heavy water, D2O rather than H2O. The presence of deuterium rather than hydrogen results in an uptake of deuterium atoms into biological molecules, subtly and slightly changing their behavior. Too much of that and you fall over dead - the mechanisms of life do not have a high tolerance for such tinkering, and heavy water is effectively toxic. At lower levels, however, species such as flies and nematodes live longer as a result of exposure to deuterium. A few articles and papers were published back in 2007-2009, which together give a fair grounding as to where the science stands:

Dr Shchepinov's theory is based on deuterium, a naturally-occurring isotope, or form of hydrogen, that strengthens the bonds in between and around the body's cells, making them less vulnerable to attack. He found that water enriched with deuterium, which is twice as heavy as normal hydrogen, extends the lifespan of worms by 10 per cent. And fruitflies fed the 'water of life' lived up to 30 per cent longer.

There is some skepticism and debate amongst various parties regarding the mechanisms by which deuterium uptake extends life span, but it's clear that exposure to heavy water at lower levels does in fact extend life in flies, worms, and so forth. Not too many people are working on this, so there is a lot of room for speculation and a lack of hard evidence that can rule out possibilities such as increased resistance to oxidative damage in important proteins. Given the evidence backing the membrane pacemaker theory of longevity, this is an attractive idea - there is plenty of support for the hypothesis that differences in the proteins that make up cell membranes are responsible for large differences in life span between various otherwise similar species. But robust evidence for the much smaller difference of a little extra deuterium substituted for hydrogen atoms - as opposed to completely different proteins - is lacking.

On this topic, I see that a new paper has arrived in the prepublication queue at Rejuvenation Research. It adds more data to the current thin stack on deuterium and fly life span:

Brief Early-Life Non-specific Incoporation of Deuterium Extends Mean Lifespan in Drosophila melanogaster Without Affecting Fecundity

We have investigated the effects of brief, non-specific deuteration of Drosophila melanogaster by including varying percentages of 2H (D) in the H2O used in the food mix consumed during initial development. Up to 22.5% D2O in H2O was administered, with the result that a low percentage of D2O in the water increased mean lifespan, while the highest percentage used (22.5%) reduced lifespan. After the one-time treatment period, adult flies were maintained ad libitum with food of normal isotopic distribution.

At low deuterium levels, where lifespan extension was observed, there was no observed change in fecundity. Dead flies were assayed for deuterium incorporation ... Isoleucine and leucine residues showed a small, linear dose-dependent incorporation of deuterium at non-exchangeable sites. Although high levels of D2O itself are toxic for other reasons, higher levels of deuterium incorporation, which can be achieved without toxicity by strategies that avoid direct use of D2O, are clearly worth exploring.

Hormesis is a possible (and disappointingly ordinary) explanation for this sort of result. Given the range of ways to make flies, worms, and rodents live longer by exposing them to adversity in early life, this almost seems like the first place to be looking. Perhaps lesser degrees of heavy water exposure, entirely separately from any deuterium uptake into proteins, have a hormetic effect, causing enough damage and disarray to spur repair mechanisms into greater efforts and leading to a net gain in life expectancy.

Well, either way, we shall hear more in future years. As the researchers point out above, you can conduct similar studies without the need for heavy water, and those should produce a more useful set of data.

Source:
http://www.fightaging.org/archives/2013/01/deuterium-and-lifespan-in-flies.php

Endurance Training Associated With Longer Telomeres

Exercise correlates with all sorts of better measures of health, but there is some debate and conflicting evidence on whether more is better past the point of moderate regular exercise. This ties in to questions of causation - to what degree are endurance athletes drawn to their activities because they are already more robust than their peers, for example?

Telomeres are the molecular caps on chromosomes. They shorten with each successive cell division and are thus linked to aging. The shortening rate also varies among people. Shorter telomeres have been linked to increased disease risk as well as shortening of lifespan.

Chronic endurance training is at least modestly linked with long lifespan, though there are some controversies about whether it may increase the risk of some heart diseases. In the current study researchers sought to determine if chronic endurance training is associated with telomere length in older aged individuals. To perform the trial they measured the length of telomeres in four groups of individuals: young people and older people who did or did non engage in chronic endurance training. For the endurance training the researchers chose participation in a 58 km cross country ski competition.

They found that indeed the older people who were chronic endurance trainers had significantly longer telomeres than moderately active older controls. There was no difference in telomere length in the younger subjects whether they did endurance training or not. There was also an association in older people between VO2 max and telomere length.

Link: http://extremelongevity.net/2013/01/10/chronic-endurance-training-linked-to-longer-telomeres-in-older-adults/

Source:
http://www.fightaging.org/archives/2013/01/endurance-training-associated-with-longer-telomeres.php

Unpublished Reader's Digest Interview on Aging and Longevity

Over at In Search of Enlightenment you'll find an unpublished interview where the questions somewhat illustrate the point that most people don't look much beyond trivial matters when it comes to aging and longevity. Biotechnology like SENS and similar research projects are given no thought at all in most quarters, and even amongst advocates many favor the snail's pace path of trying to slow aging rather than working to repair its root causes to reverse it. This all means that there is much yet to accomplish in advocacy and education.

The field of research known as biogerontology, which studies the biology of aging, is a truly fascinating, though often misunderstood, area of scientific research. In 2011 the genome of the naked-mole rat was sequenced. This rodent is only the size of a mouse, and one might wonder what the significance of sequencing its genome could possibly be. But the naked-mole rate is the longest living rodent, it has a maximum lifespan exceeding 30 years and an exceptional resistance to cancer. Understanding the biology of this species could help unlock the mystery of healthy aging. A variety of experiments on fruit flies, mice and other species have demonstrated that the rate of aging can be manipulated, either by calorie restriction or by activating particular genes. Such research could eventually lead to the development of a drug that safely mimics the effects of caloric restriction (which delays the onset of disease) or actives the "longevity genes" that help protect against the diseases of late life.

The lion's share of funding for medical research is spent on disease research, such as research on cancer, heart disease or Alzheimer's disease. This approach, which I call "negative biology", assumes that the most important question to answer is "what causes disease?". Unfortunately this is a severely limited approach, especially for older populations. Even if you cured all 200+ forms of cancer (and we have not yet eliminated even just one cancer despite investing enormous sums of money for decades now), one of the other diseases of aging would quickly replace cancer as the leading cause of death because most people in late life are vulnerable to multiple diseases. So "positive biology" takes a different intellectual starting point. It assumes that the puzzles of exemplar health are just as important to understand as the development of disease. How can some (very rare) humans live over a century of disease-free life? Understanding these exemplar examples of health might prove to be more significant than trying to understand, treat and cure every specific disease of late life.

Link: http://colinfarrelly.blogspot.com/2012/12/readers-digest-interview-on-aging-and.html

Source:
http://www.fightaging.org/archives/2013/01/unpublished-readers-digest-interview-on-aging-and-longevity.php

Unpublished Reader’s Digest Interview on Aging and Longevity

Over at In Search of Enlightenment you'll find an unpublished interview where the questions somewhat illustrate the point that most people don't look much beyond trivial matters when it comes to aging and longevity. Biotechnology like SENS and similar research projects are given no thought at all in most quarters, and even amongst advocates many favor the snail's pace path of trying to slow aging rather than working to repair its root causes to reverse it. This all means that there is much yet to accomplish in advocacy and education.

The field of research known as biogerontology, which studies the biology of aging, is a truly fascinating, though often misunderstood, area of scientific research. In 2011 the genome of the naked-mole rat was sequenced. This rodent is only the size of a mouse, and one might wonder what the significance of sequencing its genome could possibly be. But the naked-mole rate is the longest living rodent, it has a maximum lifespan exceeding 30 years and an exceptional resistance to cancer. Understanding the biology of this species could help unlock the mystery of healthy aging. A variety of experiments on fruit flies, mice and other species have demonstrated that the rate of aging can be manipulated, either by calorie restriction or by activating particular genes. Such research could eventually lead to the development of a drug that safely mimics the effects of caloric restriction (which delays the onset of disease) or actives the "longevity genes" that help protect against the diseases of late life.

The lion's share of funding for medical research is spent on disease research, such as research on cancer, heart disease or Alzheimer's disease. This approach, which I call "negative biology", assumes that the most important question to answer is "what causes disease?". Unfortunately this is a severely limited approach, especially for older populations. Even if you cured all 200+ forms of cancer (and we have not yet eliminated even just one cancer despite investing enormous sums of money for decades now), one of the other diseases of aging would quickly replace cancer as the leading cause of death because most people in late life are vulnerable to multiple diseases. So "positive biology" takes a different intellectual starting point. It assumes that the puzzles of exemplar health are just as important to understand as the development of disease. How can some (very rare) humans live over a century of disease-free life? Understanding these exemplar examples of health might prove to be more significant than trying to understand, treat and cure every specific disease of late life.

Link: http://colinfarrelly.blogspot.com/2012/12/readers-digest-interview-on-aging-and.html

Source:
http://www.fightaging.org/archives/2013/01/unpublished-readers-digest-interview-on-aging-and-longevity.php

Cells Derived From Embryonic Stem Cells Rebuild an Artery

Regenerative medicine is not an all or nothing field of research. There are many useful waypoints on the road to being able to grow perfectly formed organs, blood vessels, muscle, and other tissues to order and from a patient's own cells. The partial results and half-way houses include a range of potential therapies and technologies that will be a great improvement over the present clinical state of the art.

Roadmaps in this sort of research tend to look like this:

  • Gain knowledge of the underlying mechanisms: cell signaling, stem cell life cycles, and so forth.
  • Use this new knowledge to better understand the workings of existing therapies, and perhaps optimize them a little.
  • Produce new tools for diagnosis and testing procedures based on what is now known.
  • Develop a helpful therapy that meets some fraction of the end goal: healing damage in an organ rather than growing a new organ; growing cells to populate a bioartificial system that carries out some of an organ's function, for use in dialysis for example; and so forth.
  • Build poor versions of the end goal and find uses for them. The ability to grow small masses of tissue that can carry out some of the functions of a liver or a kidney may be very helpful as implants for those suffering organ failure, for example.
  • Finally, the end goal: organs grown from a patient's cells that are good enough for transplant.

Below is an example of one type of waypoint in tissue engineering that is presently under widespread development: the use of cell transplants to spur regeneration and regrowth that would otherwise not have happened. This is a logical application of some of the knowledge gained regarding organ formation and growth; which cells are important, how they work together, and how they signal one another.

Stem cells found to heal damaged artery in lab study

[Scientists] have for the first time demonstrated that baboon embryonic stem cells can be programmed to completely restore a severely damaged artery. These early results show promise for eventually developing stem cell therapies to restore human tissues or organs damaged by age or disease.

Researchers completely removed the cells that line the inside surface from a segment of artery, and then put cells that had been derived from embryonic stem cells inside the artery. They then connected both ends of the arterial segment to plastic tubing inside a device called a bioreactor which is designed to grow cells and tissues. The scientists then pumped fluid through the artery under pressure as if blood were flowing through it. The outside of the artery was bathed in another fluid to sustain the cells located there.

Three days later, the complex structure of the inner surface was beginning to regenerate, and by 14 days, the inside of the artery had been perfectly restored to its complex natural state. It went from a non-functional tube to a complex fully functional artery. "Just think of what this kind of treatment would mean to a patient who had just suffered a heart attack as a consequence of a damaged coronary artery. And this is the real potential of stem cell regenerative medicine - that is, a treatment with stem cells that regenerates a damaged or destroyed tissue or organ."

Source:
http://www.fightaging.org/archives/2013/01/cells-derived-from-embryonic-stem-cells-rebuild-an-artery.php