Iran sending field hospital and medicine to Lebanon – Tehran Times

TEHRAN Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said on Wednesday that Iran is sending field hospital and medicine to Lebanon after two huge explosions in Beirut on Tuesday afternoon.

Reiterated #Irans strong and steadfast solidarity with people of Lebanon in call with FM Wehbeh. Iran is sending field hospital & medicine to assist with disaster relief. Iran stands with Lebanon, Zarif tweeted.

A warehouse at the Beirut Port caught fire on Tuesday afternoon, triggering a huge explosion.

The Lebanese Red Cross said in a statement that over 100 people were killed and more than 4,000 were injured.

Reportedly, hospitals, already struggling with the country's coronavirus outbreak, have been overwhelmed by the large number of injured people. Several hospitals were damaged in the blast.

Right after the tragic event, Zarif wrote, "Our thoughts and prayers are with the great and resilient people of Lebanon."

Zarif added, "As always, Iran is fully prepared to render assistance in any way necessary."

Irans chief diplomat asked the Lebanese to stay strong in the face of the calamity.

"Stay strong, Lebanon," Zarif said.

NA/PA

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Iran sending field hospital and medicine to Lebanon - Tehran Times

Massive Growth in Artificial Intelligence in Precision Medicine Market Set to Witness Huge Growth by 2026 | Intel AI, IBM, GE Healthcare, Thermo…

Artificial Intelligence in Precision Medicine Market research is an intelligence report with meticulous efforts undertaken to study the right and valuable information. The data which has been looked upon is done considering both, the existing top players and the upcoming competitors. Business strategies of the key players and the new entering market industries are studied in detail. Well explained SWOT analysis, revenue share and contact information are shared in this report analysis.

Artificial Intelligence in Precision Medicine Market is growing at a High CAGR during the forecast period 2020-2026. The increasing interest of the individuals in this industry is that the major reason for the expansion of this market.

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Top Key Players Profiled in This Report:

Intel AI, IBM, GE Healthcare, Thermo Fisher Scientific, Qiagen, Berg Health, Medasense Biometrics

The key questions answered in this report:

Various factors are responsible for the markets growth trajectory, which are studied at length in the report. In addition, the report lists down the restraints that are posing threat to the global Artificial Intelligence in Precision Medicine market. It also gauges the bargaining power of suppliers and buyers, threat from new entrants and product substitute, and the degree of competition prevailing in the market. The influence of the latest government guidelines is also analyzed in detail in the report. It studies the Artificial Intelligence in Precision Medicine markets trajectory between forecast periods.

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Global Artificial Intelligence in Precision Medicine Market Research Report

Chapter 1 Artificial Intelligence in Precision Medicine Market Overview

Chapter 2 Global Economic Impact on Industry

Chapter 3 Global Market Competition by Manufacturers

Chapter 4 Global Production, Revenue (Value) by Region

Chapter 5 Global Supply (Production), Consumption, Export, Import by Regions

Chapter 6 Global Production, Revenue (Value), Price Trend by Type

Chapter 7 Global Market Analysis by Application

Chapter 8 Manufacturing Cost Analysis

Chapter 9 Industrial Chain, Sourcing Strategy and Downstream Buyers

Chapter 10 Marketing Strategy Analysis, Distributors/Traders

Chapter 11 Market Effect Factors Analysis

Chapter 12 Global Artificial Intelligence in Precision Medicine Market Forecast

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Massive Growth in Artificial Intelligence in Precision Medicine Market Set to Witness Huge Growth by 2026 | Intel AI, IBM, GE Healthcare, Thermo...

Calls to police down over long weekend – Medicine Hat News

By RYAN MCCRACKEN on August 5, 2020.

rmccracken@medicinehatnews.com

Medicine Hat Police Service responded to 254 calls for service over the August long weekend a notable drop from both last summer and last month.

MHPS Insp. Brent Secondiak says that number is 53 fewer than the previous Friday-to-Monday (307), and 99 fewer than July 17-20 (353), while 316 calls for service were received during August long weekend in 2019.

It was down this weekend, said Secondiak, adding the only notable event was the death of a 31-year-old man who was swept away by the current of the South Saskatchewan River when he reportedly attempted to swim across it near downtown. It was just relatively calm. I went through the calls and there was nothing out of the ordinary. We did have, of course, resources tied up on that tragic death in the river Generally, I think some people were camping or just staying at home. We didnt have anything astronomically crazy that went out of hand other than that death in the river.

Secondiak says the 254 calls were mostly comprised of mental health calls for services, complaints of intoxicated and suspicious persons, driving and vehicle complaints and bylaw complaints relating to noise.

It seemed rather standard for a weekend in the summer, he said.

Secondiak added there have still been no charges laid under provincial or federal COVID-19 legislation in Medicine Hat, a trend he hopes continues as the fall approaches.

Weve still had no charges which is outstanding. Generally, people are very compliant with us, they seem to be understanding about the rules that are in place and generally the community seems to be doing quite well, he said. We just want the community to continue this kind of behaviour going forward. Its always a little busier during the summer for us but it seems to be manageable at this point.

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Trump promotes doctor who claimed alien DNA is used in medicine and sex with tormented spirits causes reproductive issues – KTLA

President Donald Trump vigorously defended his administrations handling of the coronavirus on Tuesday, but it was a series of questions from CNNs Kaitlan Collins about Dr. Stella Immanuel, a little-known Houston-based physician featured in a video the President retweeted, that caused him to abruptly end his press briefing.

Mr. President, the woman that you said is a great doctor in that video that you retweeted last night said masks dont work and there is a cure for Covid-19, both of which health experts say is not true. Shes also made videos saying that doctors make medicine using DNA from aliens, and that theyre trying to create a vaccine to make you immune from becoming religious, Collins asked.

The CNN reporter went on to press Trump: Its misinformation.

I dont know which country she comes from, but she said that shes had tremendous success with hundreds of different patients, Trump said. And I thought her voice was an important voice, but I know nothing about her.

When Collins asked a follow-up question about Immanuels dismissal of wearing face masks which Trump himself advocated last week the President walked away from the podium, though on Wednesday he continued to say he was very impressed by Immanuel.

Although Trump has frequently spread false and misleading information over the course of the pandemic while downplaying advice issued by the governments top medical experts his decision to amplify Immanuel raises fresh questions about the administrations messaging and pandemic response. It also gives her ideas a significant platform and risks lending credibility to someone who has made a number of dangerous claims in the past.

On her website and in sermons posted on YouTube, Immanuel who practices medicine at Rehoboth Medical Center, a clinic in Houston, and is the founder of the Fire Power Ministries church has, among other things, claimed that sex with tormenting spirits is responsible for gynecological problems, miscarriages and impotence.

Many women suffer from astral sex regularly. Astral sex is the ability to project ones spirit man into the victims body and have intercourse with it, she once claimed in a sermon. Immanuel has not responded to CNNs efforts to contact her for comment.

The Daily Beast also said that Immanuel has suggested in previous sermons that alien DNA was used in medical treatments and that scientists are plotting to develop a vaccine to make it impossible to become religious. The Daily Beast reported on her remarks on Tuesday, and, according to Immanuel, did a great job summarizing our deliverance ministry and exposing incubus and succubus.

Immanuel received her medical degree from a university in Nigeria in 1990, according to the Texas Medical Board database. On her Facebook page, Immanuel says she was born in Cameroon and describes herself as Gods battle axe and weapon of war.

In the video, which was livestreamed by the right-wing media outlet Breitbart News and shared by Trump on Monday, Immanuel makes claims about coronavirus that run counter to multiple studies and advice from public health officials, including the Trump administrations own health experts. Breitbart did not respond to CNNs request for comment.

This virus has a cure, its called hydroxychloroquine, zinc, and Zithromax, Immanuel says, despite several high-quality studies that show the anti-malarial drug alone or in combination with others does not help Covid-19 patients.

She goes on to say, I know people want to talk about a mask. Hello, you dont need masks, there is a cure.

The video featured Immanuel among a group of people wearing white lab coats who call themselves Americas Frontline Doctors staging a press conference, organized by the Tea Party Patriots, in front of the US Supreme Court in Washington, DC.

The video was removed from Facebook, YouTube and Twitter after amassing millions of views and thousands of shares.

While she has alleged that face masks are unnecessary, Immanuel appears to be wearing an N95 mask in a video shared on her clinics Facebook page and encourages visitors to the clinic seeking treatment to wear face coverings.

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Trump promotes doctor who claimed alien DNA is used in medicine and sex with tormented spirits causes reproductive issues - KTLA

Sharing information with public is important medicine in COVID-19 fight – Crain’s Cleveland Business

Hearing a need among community members for clear information about best practices to mitigate risks of COVID-19, University Hospitals in early May launched a toolkit to help businesses navigate returning to work.

First the system heard from leaders of essential services, then more and more businesses and community members asked for help understanding safety practices: masking, distancing, cleaning protocols and more. As the requests grew, UH wanted to get information to a broader audience than just those who had reached out.

"I think we quickly realized that this needed to be content that stood up so it was available to everyone in the community, not just the people we were able to work with one-on-one," said Dr. Joan Zoltanski, UH's chief experience officer who has been leading the system's Healthy Restart efforts.

In the past three months, the UH Healthy Restart Playbooks free online, up-to-date resources for employers and schools have been downloaded thousands of times.

Cleveland Clinic was hearing similar requests for information from the community and launched its own support system for businesses shortly after UH. The Clinic's AtWork program offers COVID-19 response resources, including webinars, industry-specific guides and a hotline for advice.

"The top three things that people are asking of us that we're working for and working with is interpretation, clarification and translation," said Dr. James Merlino, the Clinic's chief clinical transformation officer.

Though the health systems may have offered advice here and there, consulting at this scale is new for them. The science behind mitigating risk of spreading disease, of course, is not. Hospitals have been masking and cleaning for infectious disease and viruses long before COVID-19. Pivoting the expertise that they implement in their own facilities to community education made sense, Zoltanski said.

In the absence of a vaccine or antiviral medication, the Cuyahoga County Board of Health is working with five tenants of non-pharmaceutical interventions, said Kevin Brennan, communications officer for the board. These are handwashing, social distancing, mask wearing, cleaning and disinfecting of commonly touched surfaces and health screenings.

Because health systems and the board of health can reach different audiences, hospitals amplifying the messaging about such practices is helpful, he said. While the health systems have been able to provide some level of proactive, individualized guidance to businesses, the board's business response is complaint-driven education.

"I think we can't be everywhere we want to be; we can't be everything to everyone," Brennan said. "So we're glad that an authority such as a hospital would be willing to step up and fill that void. We feel like there's reliability in the fact that they have expertise given the composition of their staff members and their history, so I think we're pleased to see that."

Summa Health has proactively reached out to local businesses to offer resources, such as webinars and Q&A sessions. MetroHealth has worked on protocols with Cleveland Public Library, Destination Cleveland and area schools, but the system isn't making direct consulting with businesses a big part of their response. Rather, its work as an essential hospital has been more in health equity and access during this pandemic, like ensuring essential workers get tested and know how to protect themselves, said Dr. Brook Watts, MetroHealth's vice president and chief quality officer.

The Clinic is working with nearly 150 entities around the world to help them think about and implement best practices. Some of these have taken the form of a more public relationship. For instance, Clorox Co. and the Clinic announced in mid-July a partnership they would collaborate to develop a free online guide for employers to help them train personnel, select effective products and develop robust cleaning and disinfection processes.

Some of the Clinic's partnerships support individual businesses, while others help push information to the public more broadly, such as working with Jones Day to help with webinars for clients or collaborating with the Adventure Travel Trade Association a network of travel agencies around the world to develop free guidelines for travelers.

UH, whose outreach focuses on Northeast Ohio, has also worked with convener organizations, like chambers of commerce or groups of mayors, to give them more information, answer specific questions and help them best communicate that.

Although the Clinic doesn't yet have an answer, it's starting to look at what the free services and these new relationships might mean in the future. But for now, the focus is on the reality communities and businesses are facing for at least the near future: living with COVID-19.

UH's playbooks and all data published online are available for free. When businesses are looking for a deep dive or would like an expert to review their back-to-work plans with an infectious disease doctor or specialist, UH has charged a bit to cover costs. The system doesn't see it as a money-making operation but a mission-driven effort to slow the spread, Zoltanski said.

"Our infectious disease, our clinicians were very motivated to get behind this," she said. "As you can fully well imagine, they couldn't possibly be busier than they are right now, but when I said to them, 'Hey, we want to help businesses,' they showed up on Saturday mornings to work through content in the little time off they had because we said we want to help the community, and that was really the why of this for us."

The Clinic's "powerful brand" around the world is part of why organizations have reached out, Merlino said.

Leveraging that brand could help to combat some of the misinformation, and in some ways mistrust, among members of the public. Merlino said the Clinic is working alongside UH and MetroHealth on how to educate and reinforce the message.

"We're starting to have these conversations. We need to be able to do more, to really conquer that," he said.

Though some parts of pandemic response are political, Zoltanski said UH sticks to the medicine, the science and the trusted partnership it has developed with the community. Beyond sharing the best medically sound advice, it's important to also be transparent, honest and admit what remains unknown, she said.

Merlino recognizes that there may always be people who don't accept or follow the basic guidelines agreed upon by the scientific and medical communities, but it's important to continue reinforcing their importance.

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Sharing information with public is important medicine in COVID-19 fight - Crain's Cleveland Business

Penn Medicine hospitals ranked 15th best in the country by U.S. News – The Daily Pennsylvanian

The Daily Pennsylvanian is a student-run nonprofit.

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The Hospitals of the University of Pennsylvania and Penn Presbyterian Medical Center also ranked the No. 1 hospital in Pennsylvania and No. 1 in the Philadelphia Metro Area.

U.S. News & World Report ranked the Hospitals of the University of Pennsylvania and Penn Presbyterian Medical Center as the No. 15 best hospital in the United States.

The two Penn Medicine hospitals rank three spots higher in the 2020-21 Honor Roll released on June 28, in comparison to their placement last year.

The ranking marks the hospitals' 14th consecutive year on the U.S. News list, which is based on a variety of factors across 16 areas of specialty care, including patient survival rates and patient experience quality. The 20 hospitals with the highest evaluated rankings, as well as the greatest number of high performing procedure and condition ratings, are recognized on the Honor Roll.

HUP and Penn Presbyterian are ranked as the best hospitals in Pennsylvania and in the Philadelphia Metro Area, according to U.S. News.

In the 16 specialty rankings, HUP and Penn Presbyterian placed in the top 20 in nine of the categories. The Penn Medicine hospitals ranked No. 9 in Ear, Nose & Throat, No. 11 in Diabetes & Endocrinology, and No. 13 in Pulmonology & Lung Surgery.

Although it placed ahead of HUP and Penn Presbyterian hospitals in national and state rankings last year, the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Presbyterian Shadyside ranked No. 2 in Pennsylvania this year and did not place in this year's national rankings.

All four of Penn Medicines other hospitals Pennsylvania Hospital, Chester County Hospital, Lancaster General Health, and Princeton Health also ranked regionally and earned national honors in specialty care categories.

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Penn Medicine hospitals ranked 15th best in the country by U.S. News - The Daily Pennsylvanian

Aesthetic Medicine Market revenue to cross USD 24 Bn by 2026: Global Market Insights, Inc. – GlobeNewswire

Selbyville, Delaware, Aug. 03, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) --

According to latest report Aesthetic Medicine Market by Type (Surgical Procedures, Non-surgical Procedures), Product (Facial Aesthetic {Injectables, Skin Rejuvenation}, Breast Aesthetics, Body Contouring Devices, Hair Removal Devices, Tattoo Removal Devices), Gender (Male, Female), End-use (Hospitals, Ambulatory Surgical Centers, Beauty Centers & Medical Spas, Dermatology Clinics, Home Settings), Regional Outlook, Price Trends, Competitive Market Share & Forecast 2026, by Global Market Insights, Inc., the market valuation of aesthetic medicine will reach $24.3 billion by 2026.

Increasing adoption of non-invasive procedure or minimally invasive surgeries will propel the aesthetic medicine market growth. The use of facial injectables including botulinum toxin is one of the key factors influencing the business expansion. For instance, American Family of Physician Journal stated that botulinum toxin injection used for the facial wrinkle treatment is performed most frequently in the U.S.

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Surgical procedures segment accounted for about 28% of the total aesthetic medicine market share. Surgical procedures such as nose reshaping and liposuction among others are most common aesthetic procedures. The demand for liposuction procedures has been increased due to rising concerns among individual regarding their appearance. Growing emphasis on weight loss surgeries and body contouring procedures will augment the market size.

Body contouring devices in the market held for 32.1% of revenue share in 2019 due to increasing obese population across the globe. Moreover, increasing number of aesthetic procedures such as liposuctions and other surgeries related to body extremities will further spur the segment growth.

Female segment valuation in the aesthetic medicine market was over USD 9.7 billion in 2019 owing to growing trends in female to appear young at their middle-age. Furthermore, aging signs can be reduced with facial injectables and botulinum toxin procedures.

Beauty centers & medical spas end-use segment is expected to show a reasonable growth of 11.6% through 2026 led by rising number of aesthetic surgeries performed across the world coupled with the technological advancements. Additionally, various benefits offered by these centers and spas such as de-stress technique and relaxation, among others will contribute to the market expansion.

Europe aesthetic medicine market is projected to grow at a significant pace during the forecast timeframe driven by aging demographics that will result in higher adoption of aesthetic devices. Accessibility of latest technologies and products and growing social awareness are one of the key factors influencing the Europe market demand. In addition to that, the number of non-surgical procedures in Germany has increased in last few years. Also, availability of plastic surgeons in European region will increase in aesthetic surgeries and supplement the market growth.

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A few notable companies operating in the market include Alma Lasers, Allergan, Johnson & Johnson, Galderma, Lumenis, Cynosure and Cutera. Industry players are focusing on various strategies such as novel product launches, acquisition, and business expansion to consolidate their market presence.

Table of Contents (ToC) of the report:

Chapter 3. Aesthetic Medicine Market Insights

3.1. Industry segmentation

3.2. Industry landscape, 2015 - 2026

3.3. Industry impact forces

3.3.1. Growth drivers

3.3.2. Industry pitfalls & challenges

3.4. Growth potential analysis

3.4.1. By type

3.4.2. By product

3.4.3. By gender

3.4.4. By end-use

3.5. COVID-19 impact analysis

3.6. Porters analysis

3.7. Competitive landscape

3.7.1. Strategy dashboard, 2019

3.8. PESTEL analysis

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About Global Market Insights, Inc.

Global Market Insights, Inc., headquartered in Delaware, U.S., is a global market research and consulting service provider, offering syndicated and custom research reports along with growth consulting services. Our business intelligence and industry research reports offer clients with penetrative insights and actionable market data specially designed and presented to aid strategic decision making. These exhaustive reports are designed via a proprietary research methodology and are available for key industries such as chemicals, advanced materials, technology, renewable energy, and biotechnology.

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Aesthetic Medicine Market revenue to cross USD 24 Bn by 2026: Global Market Insights, Inc. - GlobeNewswire

Michigan Medicine and three other medical centers receive $7 million for COVID-19 outpatient convalescent plasma therapy trial – University of…

A team of Michigan Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Medical University of South Carolina and Stanford Medicine researchers were recently awarded funds from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) in collaboration with the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA), part of the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), totaling more than $7 million to collaboratively study the role of convalescent plasma in mitigating symptoms of COVID-19 in patients with mild illness and preventing the progression of the disease from mild to severe.

Convalescent plasma is derived from blood donated by persons who have already had COVID-19 and have recovered. Convalescent plasma contains antibodies that can bind to the virus that causes COVID-19 and neutralize it. Currently, convalescent plasma can be given as a treatment for patients in the hospital with severe or life-threatening COVID-19, a process called passive immunization.

Conducted as part of the NHLBI Collaborating Network of Networks for Evaluating COVID-19 and Therapeutic Strategies (CONNECTS) initiative, the Clinical Trial of COVID-19 Convalescent Plasma of Outpatients (C3PO) aims to evaluate whether passive immunization can be a safe and efficacious therapy in preventing the progression from mild to severe or critical COVID-19 illness and to understand the immunologic impact of anti-SARS-CoV-2 antibodies on the disease after passive immunization.

This trial will focus on patients with mild COVID-19 who have a high risk of developing severe illness, and who stand to benefit most if this approach works as an early treatment, said Frederick Korley, M.D., Ph.D.,an associate professor of emergency medicine at the University of Michigan and one of the principal investigators on the C3PO study. This includes patients over age 50, those with heart disease, lung disease or diabetes and patients who are immunocompromised.

We think that convalescent plasma has the best chance of being effective if used when patients are just starting to show symptoms in order to decrease viral replication and the resulting severe inflammatory response that can be so damaging, said Simone Glynn, M.D.,M.P.H., chief of the NHLBIs Blood Epidemiology and Clinical Therapeutics branch. What we want to find out is whether this plasma is effective enough to keep these at-risk patients from progressing to a point where they need hospitalization.

According to the World Health Organization, more than 16 million people worldwide have been diagnosed with COVID-19, the respiratory illness caused by the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), and more than 650,000 have died from the disease.

C3PO will study 600 COVID-19 patients at 50 U.S. medical centers who present to the emergency department with mild illness.

This research will be funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) and the Biomedical Advance Research and Development Authority (BARDA) as a sub award under the NHLBI Other Transaction award 1OT2HL156812-01.

The study is being coordinated through theSIREN Emergency Clinical Trials Network, whose Clinical Coordinating Center is located in the Michigan Medicine Department of Emergency Medicine. Full information on the trial is available on the SIREN site.

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Michigan Medicine and three other medical centers receive $7 million for COVID-19 outpatient convalescent plasma therapy trial - University of...

Warrior M.D. Chat: Demystifying the Application Process – School of Medicine Wayne State University – The South End

Our Warrior M.D. Ambassadors take on answering questions on all things applications! With many moving elements this year, our ambassadors talk about the ever-important elements of the application process, including timing, personal statements, letters of recommendation, and also highlighting new processes this year.

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Wayne State University (WSU) is a public research university located in Detroit, Michigan.

Wayne State University, in alliance with Michigan State University and the University of Michigan, is part of Michigans University Research Corridor, responsible for $2.15 billion in research and development spending in fiscal year 2015. The URC is one of the nations top research clusters and the engine for innovation in Michigan and the Great Lakes region, increasing economic prosperity and connecting Michigan to the world.

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Tom Oldt: Practicing medicine in the age of COVID – The Ledger

Since completing his residency at the University of South Florida College of Medicine nearly a quarter century ago, Dr. Sam Korley has practiced medicine in Polk County.

Born in Ghana, raised in California, educated across America and kin to a number of other medical doctors, Sam Korley is an internal medicine physician and founding partner of the IMA Medical Group. He enjoys the rare distinction of having among his patients an unusually large number of other medical doctors a remarkable sign of the professional esteem in which he is held by his colleagues.

Since completing his residency at the University of South Florida College of Medicine nearly a quarter century ago, Korley has practiced medicine in Polk County. His patients have ranged from the reasonably young to the exceptionally old at the time of his death, the most elderly of his patients was well into his 108th year. The gentleman in question attributed his longevity to four factors: good genes, a great marriage, a positive attitude and the ministrations of Dr. Korley.

Q. Where did you grow up and who were the major influences in your childhood?

A. The people that influenced my career and my life the most were my parents who were both business-minded, very hard-working people. And I had a number of family members who were physicians. In total at this point, there are nine doctors on both sides of the family. But there were two in particular, one in California and another in Canada, who were instrumental in shaping my thoughts about which direction I wanted to go.

Q. Why did you go into medicine?

A. Because of seeing people suffering and feeling the need to be a part of the solution that and a love of science. From a very young age, I was always interested in the sciences.

Q. You had a solo medical practice for a number of years. You left that to become a founding member of the IMA Medical Group, which has 60 doctors across Central Florida. Why the change, and is the era of the solo practitioner over for all practical purposes?

A. Youre seeing this across the country. Its become more and more difficult to remain as a solo practitioner. The dynamics as it relates to insurance and everything else has made it more difficult to survive as solo practitioners, and thats true even in the sub-specialty groups nowadays. There are a lot of clinicians who are getting together in smaller groups or joining large groups mostly because of economies of scale really, just being able to survive because solo practice has become simply too difficult from a business standpoint.

Q. Of the diseases you deal with on a daily basis, which are the most preventable and why have we seen such an explosion in some of these afflictions?

A. Diabetes is one that comes to mind, especially among younger individuals. Obesity, the lack of exercise, our youth spending more time sitting behind devices, nutrition that needs to improve across the board those are some of the things that we as a medical community can make some headway on in terms of modifying the way people think and lead their lives. It is a difficult, arduous task since it requires a multi-disciplinary approach in managing diabetics, and its clearly a difficult condition that seems to be growing. In my practice, Im also seeing greater instances of hypertension, which is manageable by reducing sodium intake, increasing exercise and taking medicines regularly.

Q. Do you think people have become less responsible or more resistant to doing what is necessary? What are the dynamics youre seeing?

A. Its a combination of both. People somehow need to be reminded to do the basics. We have to be upfront with certain patients to help them recognize what could happen if these various diseases that lead to difficult complications are not addressed fully.

Q. How has COVID-19 changed the way you and your colleagues practice medicine?

A. The fact still remains that in clinical medicine, the history and the physical account for 70% to 80% of the diagnosis. So being able to sit a patient down and get a complete history is important and providing a clear, full physical examination is equally important. A face-to-face examination is extremely important.

As we all know, COVID-19 is an unprecedented pandemic and it is an evolving problem. It has ushered into our practice style tele-health, which has a number of advantages and disadvantages as well. Sometimes there are technical problems in reaching patients they may not have the ability to interact on their computer or their phone. There are patients who are hard of hearing, and thats a problem. If you have to examine a patient, there are drawbacks to telemedicine because you may not be able to get a clear view of their problem in order to provide a proper and adequate response. In those cases, obviously, we make arrangements to bring them into the office.

Q. Some people politicians mostly seem intent on downplaying the severity of the virus including its effect on the bodies of those who become sick but recover. And yet there is accumulating evidence that recovery can be very lengthy and not always complete for many people who contract the virus. What is your experience with the prognosis of those patients who have the disease?

A. Theres quite a bit of variability and a lot of unknowns. Patients who are otherwise healthy who contract the disease generally do well. There are exceptions of course patients who are immune compromised or above the age of 65 will most of the time end up developing complications, which makes it challenging.

Q. Have you had patients who have died from COVID-19?

A. Yes, unfortunately.

Q. Washing hands, keeping social distance and wearing a mask those are the three simple precautions that most infectious disease experts say, in the absence of a vaccine, are the steps most likely to arrest the pandemic. Why do you think a significant number of our fellow Americans find observing these rituals to be so onerous?

A. There are those who are, unfortunately, irresponsible. There are also a few people who dont believe that theres anything "going on." Nowadays more cases are among people between the ages of 18 and 44. To a certain extent, these people are healthier and are perhaps feeling less vulnerable. But I think that dynamic is going to change soon as the numbers unfold and people recognize that perhaps we should take this more seriously.

Q. Should a vaccine be developed, it is important that a large percentage of the population avail themselves of it in order for it to be as effective as possible. And yet there is a significant anti-vaccine element in this country that is prepared to launch a misinformation campaign aimed at thwarting its widespread use. If people do not trust the medical profession and the science behind the immunization program, will we be worse off than we are now?

A. The answer is clearly "yes." COVID-19 is serious and ought to be taken seriously. One thing that most of us in clinical practice and obviously infectious disease experts are hoping for is the emergence of a vaccine that is both effective and safe, and that is the basis for all the trials that are taking place currently. So once a vaccine is available, we will encourage our patients to receive the vaccine. Those that choose not to will place themselves at risk, especially if theyre elderly and have chronic medical problems.

Q. What is the phenomenon behind the anti-vaccine movement?

A. Theres no scientific basis for it. Most of their ideas have been refuted and so its unclear. I think there are certain groups of individuals who feel that they want to have "complete control of their lives" and so they dont want any interference from the medical community in terms of what they put in their bodies. Its that simple and its really concerning.

Q. What would you say to someone who said, "I dont believe in vaccines" or "I think theyre harmful"?

A. I would ask them to take a close look at whats going on with this particular COVID-19 issue in terms of the demographics, in terms of this disease that has affected the entire world, and avail themselves of information regarding vaccine development and how these vaccines are used by the medical community. The better informed most people are, I believe, the greater likelihood that they will have a change of mind and a change of heart.

Q. You, sir, are an optimist.

A. Thank you. Education is very important. I would like to see people in our county begin to take more responsibility and educate themselves better and do what is right and helpful to protect our youth, our elderly and our very sick individuals. The thing that concerns me the most is what to expect later on in the year when flu season returns. Theres a big concern in the medical community about the possibility of co-infection with influenza and how were going to approach that. So the best we can do now is try to flatten the curve and to encourage our patients to take the flu shot when the time comes.

This is a situation that can be salvaged and its something we must get a better handle on. If you look at the Europeans, theyve done an excellent job as a whole with this and I really have difficulty understanding why were not doing it. What were asking people to do is very simple washing hands, keeping distance, wearing masks.

Thomas Oldt can be reached at tom@troldt.com.

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Operational Telecommunications For Tele-Medicine (PTT) And M-Health Consumption Market 2020 Research Report by Absolute Reports include Size, Growth,…

Global Telecommunications For Tele-Medicine (PTT) And M-Health Consumption Market 2020-2027

Global Telecommunications For Tele-Medicine (PTT) And M-Health Consumption Market Global Drivers, Restraints, Opportunities, Trends, and Forecasts up to 2027. Market Over viewing the present digitized world, 80% of the data generated is unstructured. Organizations are using Telecommunications For Tele-Medicine (PTT) And M-Health Consumption technology to unravel the meaning of such data to leverage business strategies and opportunities. A myriad of unstructured data is available online in the form of audio content, visual content and social footprints.

The segmental analysis focuses on revenue and forecast by Type and by Application in terms of revenue and forecast for the period 2016-2027.The Report scope furnishes with vital statistics about the current market status and manufacturers. It analyzes the in-depth business by considering different aspects, direction for companies, and strategy in the industry.

The latest Telecommunications For Tele-Medicine (PTT) And M-Health Consumption market report published by Reports and Markets offers a competency-based analysis and global market estimate, developed using evaluable methods, to provide a clear view of current and expected growth patterns. The report also contains International Group market analysis by geographic location across the globe as well as major markets.

Our new sample is updated which correspond in new report showing impact of COVID-19 on Industry

The key manufacturers covered in this report are@ Medtronic, Cisco, GlobalMed, Huawei, Apple, Bosch, Honeywell, Teladoc, GE, Philips, and Biotronik

The report provides a calculated assessment of the Telecommunications For Tele-Medicine (PTT) And M-Health Consumption market data analyzed. It explains different opportunities for different industries, suppliers, organizations, and associations that offer different products and services, for example, by giving specific guidance on how to expand in the competition for reliable consumer services. The report provides detailed information on major market competitors and emerging companies with significant market share based on high-quality demand, revenue, sales, product manufacturers, and service providers.

ForBetter Understanding, Download Sample PDF Copy of Telecommunications For Tele-Medicine (PTT) And M-Health Consumption Market Research Report @

Based on the demand and methods currently used by major market players, the market report provides detailed and succinct evaluations as well as predictions of structured future market growth rates. For better analysis, the report divides the market into different segments of the global market based on various parameters, including product or service quality, applications, and methods. The Telecommunications For Tele-Medicine (PTT) And M-Health Consumption market report provides comprehensive statistics on changes in product types, innovation, and progress that may be caused by inconsequential variations in the product profile. Trends such as mergers and acquisitions play a critical role in the business operation and expansion as every region holds its own exclusivity in terms of production conditions, potential consumers, geographic benefits for resource procurement, and others.

Market Dynamics

Different parameters are used to identify either the growth of the Telecommunications For Tele-Medicine (PTT) And M-Health Consumption market globally or the decline of the market. These different factors are comprehensively analyzed and solutions, as well as ways to increase the market share, are presented in the report. The market growth rate based on the volume of units sold and the value of each product manufactured is identified and is presented in detail. The market share occupied by each of the different products is analyzed for the base period that comprises the year 2016to the year 2027and the forecast period.

The report offers in-depth assessment of the growth and other aspects of the Telecommunications For Tele-Medicine (PTT) And M-Health Consumption market in important countries (regions), including:

North America

Europe

Asia Pacific Counter

Middle East & Africa

Latin America

America Country (United States, Canada)

South America

Asia Country (China, Japan, India, Korea)

Europe Country (Germany, UK, France, Italy)

Other Country (Middle East, Africa, GCC)

Research Methodology

The data that has been collected is from a multitude of different services that include both primary and secondary sources. The data also includes a list of the different factors that affect the Telecommunications For Tele-Medicine (PTT) And M-Health Consumption market either positively or negatively. The data has been subjected to a SWOT analysis that can be used to accurately predict the various parameters that are used to measure a companys growth. The strengths along with various weaknesses faced by a company are included in the report along with a comprehensive analysis of the different threats and opportunities that can be exploited.

Overview

The report published on the global Telecommunications For Tele-Medicine (PTT) And M-Health Consumption market is a comprehensive analysis of a variety of factors that are prevalent in the Telecommunications For Tele-Medicine (PTT) And M-Health Consumption market. An industrial overview of the global market is provided along with the market growth hoped to be achieved with the products that are sold. Major companies who occupy a large market share and the different products sold by them in the global market are identified and are mentioned in the report. The current market share occupied by the global Telecommunications For Tele-Medicine (PTT) And M-Health Consumption market from the year 2016 to the year 2027 has been presented.

Latest industry news

There are plenty of distinguished vendors in the global Telecommunications For Tele-Medicine (PTT) And M-Health Consumption market. The analysis in this report highlights the different strategies employed by each of these vendors in order to capture as much market share as they possibly can. The analysis in this report also details their unique product portfolios as well as the different strategies they use to expand their reach in the global market.

Report Answers Following Questions:

What are the factors driving the growth of the market?

What factors are inhibiting market growth?

What are the future opportunities in the market?

Which are the most dynamic companies and what are their recent developments within the Telecommunications For Tele-Medicine (PTT) And M-Health Consumption Market?

What key developments can be expected in the coming years?

What are the key trends observed in the market?

TABLE OF CONTENT

1 Report Overview

2 Global Growth Trends

3 Market Share by Key Players

4 Breakdown Data by Type and Application

5 United States

6 Europe

7 China

8 Japan

9 Southeast Asia

10 India

11 Central & South America

12 International Players Profiles

13 Market Forecast 2020-2027

14 Analysts Viewpoints/Conclusions

15 Appendix

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Market research is the new buzzword in the market, which helps in understanding the market potential of any product in the market. This helps in understanding the market players and the growth forecast of the products and so the company. This is where market research companies come into the picture. Reports And Markets is not just another company in this domain but is a part of a veteran group called Algoro Research Consultants Pvt. Ltd. It offers premium progressive statistical surveying, market research reports, analysis & forecast data for a wide range of sectors both for the government and private agencies all across the world.

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US News & World Report: Michigan Medicine ranked No. 11 in the US and best in Michigan – University of Michigan Health System News

Michigan Medicines adult hospitals were ranked best in Michigan and 11th in the nation by U.S. News & World Report Best Hospitals rankings for 2020-21. This distinguished honor reflects excellence in patient care.

Michigan Medicine, the academic medical center of the University of Michigan, also had five medical specialties ranked in the nations top 10 and was ranked No. 1 in the state of Michigan.

The organization was also given the USNWR Honor Roll distinction, marking it as one of 20 U.S. hospitals that deliver the highest quality of care across a variety of specialties, procedures and conditions.

At Michigan Medicine, our commitment is to our patients, first and foremost, said Marschall Runge, M.D., Ph.D., executive vice president for medical affairs at the University of Michigan, chief executive officer of Michigan Medicine and dean of the U-M Medical School. This honor is a testament to the hard work and dedication of our incredible team of health care providers.

"Consistently ranking among the nations top hospitals is something that reflects not only on our quality and safety but also on the commitment of our physicians, nurses and other team members to providing the best care, said David Spahlinger, M.D., president of the University of Michigan Health System and executive vice dean for clinical affairs of the U-M Medical School.

Five Michigan Medicine specialty areas rank in the top 10 in the country:

Michigan Medicine also received national rankings in:

Michigan Medicine also was recognized as high performing in Rehabilitation and Rheumatology.

Our national ranking is truly an honor, said Jeffrey Desmond, M.D., chief medical officer of Michigan Medicine. Im so proud of our collaborative teams, all across the board, for their dedication to providing the highest quality of care to all of our valued patients.

The U.S. News & World Report Best Hospitals methodologies in most areas of care are based on a combination of reputation surveys and objective measures such as risk-adjusted survival and readmission rates, volume, patient experience, patient safety and quality of nursing, among other care-related indicators.

In June, Michigan Medicine also received USNWR recognition for C.S. Mott Childrens Hospital, which was the only childrens hospital in Michigan nationally ranked in all 10 pediatric specialties evaluated in the 2020-2021 Best Childrens Hospitals rankings. The institution was recognized among the nations best in cardiology and heart surgery, nephrology, orthopedics, neurology and neurosurgery, gastroenterology and GI surgery, cancer, neonatology, pulmonology, urology and diabetes and endocrinology.

To learn more about other U-M clinical care honors, visit https://www.uofmhealth.org/about-umhs/honors-awards.

For detailed data about the safety and quality of care at U-M, far beyond what is available from rating agencies, visit http://www.uofmhealth.org/quality-safety.

About Michigan Medicine: At Michigan Medicine, we advance health to serve Michigan and the world. We pursue excellence every day in our three hospitals, 125 clinics and home care operations that handle more than 2.3 million outpatient visits a year, as well as educate the next generation of physicians, health professionals and scientists in our U-M Medical School.

Michigan Medicine includes the top ranked U-M Medical School and the University of Michigan Health System, which includes the C.S. Mott Childrens Hospital, Von Voigtlander Womens Hospital, University Hospital, the Frankel Cardiovascular Center and the Rogel Cancer Center. Michigan Medicines adult hospitals were ranked no. 11 in the nation by U.S. News and World Report in 2020-21 and C.S. Mott Childrens Hospital was the only childrens hospital in Michigan nationally ranked in all 10 pediatric specialties analyzed by U.S. News and World Report for 2020-21. The U-M Medical School is one of the nation's biomedical research powerhouses, with total research funding of more than $500 million.

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US News & World Report: Michigan Medicine ranked No. 11 in the US and best in Michigan - University of Michigan Health System News

Viral disease expert joins Texas Tech School of Veterinary Medicine – KLBK | KAMC | EverythingLubbock.com

LUBBOCK, Texas (NEWS RELEASE) The following is a news release from the Texas Tech University:

Diagnosing, treating and, where possible, preventing infections in animals is not only crucial for animal health, but because some human viruses originate from animal reservoirs, understanding and preventing infections in animals can help protect human health as well.

Theres no better example of that in todays society than in the worldwide coronavirus pandemic. The SARS-CoV-2 virus, or COVID-19, is believed to have originated from bats or other unknown animals in southern China and was transmitted to a human, who, in turn, infected other people, resulting in more than 13 million diagnosed cases around the world and more than 575,000 deaths. The need for an effective vaccine has been widely reported. Building effective vaccines for COVID-19 or other diseases of animals and people required many different and innovative scientists.

Ebenezer Tumban has spent the last 13 years researching viruses and their transmission methods, and now brings his expertise to the faculty of the newTexas Tech University School of Veterinary Medicine in Amarilloas an associate professor of molecular virology and vaccinology. He will begin his duties on Aug. 1.

I am so excited to be joining Texas Tech School of Veterinary Medicine, Tumban said, There has never been a better time than now to be part of the veterinary school. We are in the midst of a viral pandemic that may have originated from bats or unknown animal reservoirs and thus, there is a need to identify, study and control emerging infectious agents, which can affect the lives of animals including humans. I am happy to be joining a program which has a faculty body with a diverse background in biomedical sciences to help with this effort.

Since 2014, Tumban has served on the faculty of the Department of Biological Sciences at Michigan Technological University, and since 2019 has served as graduate program director. At Michigan Tech, he taught medical virology and mycology in the Clinical Laboratory Science Program as well as general microbiology and cancer biology. His research involved developing vaccines against the human papillomaviruses, Zika virus and Chikungunya virus. From 2016 to 2019 he also served as a visiting adjunct associate professor at the University of New Mexico School of Medicine in Albuquerque.

He also was responsible for helping set up a SARS-CoV-2 testing laboratory at Michigan Tech as well as testing of clinical samples for the virus.

Prior to his time at Michigan Tech, Tumban performed the same vaccine-related research at the New Mexico from 2010 to 2014. This research resulted in a patent that has been licensed to Agilvax Biotech in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

Tumban spent two years as a postdoctoral fellow in research and development at CTK Biotech in San Diego, California where he researched antigens used to develop immunodiagnostic kids against Dengue Fever.

While virology is foundational for veterinary medicine, the current pandemic speaks to the importance and value to our society of the transformative work that Dr. Tumban undertakes, saidGuy Loneragan, dean of the School of Veterinary Medicine. More broadly, we are always in need of better vaccines for control of diseases in our livestock and in our pets, and for humans, too. Dr. Tumban brings that innovative spirit that will make the school a center of vaccine discovery. He is also a great teacher. Dr. Tumban is great asset for the school, our region and the state.

Tumban earned his bachelors degree in biochemistry from the University of Buea in Cameroon before coming to the U.S. He received his masters degree in biology from New Mexico Highlands University before earning his doctorate in molecular biology from New Mexico State University.

While at New Mexico State, Tumban researched why flaviviruses, a genus of viruses that includes West Nile, Dengue, tick-borne encephalitis, yellow fever and Zika, have different modes of transmission.

Tumban is a member of the International Papillomavirus society and a past member of the American Society for Virology and the American Society for Microbiology. He also served as a board member at-large from 2015 to 2018 for the Michigan branch of the American Society for Microbiology.

Dr. Tumban has a truly well-rounded background, working in microbiology, immunology, virology, parasitology and cancer biology, saidJohn Dascanio, senior associate dean for academic and student affairs. His focus has been in vaccine development, a very important area for addressing emerging infectious diseases. He has mentored many undergraduate and graduate students, sharing his love for discovery. His work will dovetail very well with other faculty and with the programs goals of serving rural and regional Texas and beyond.

Tumban becomes the 23rd faculty member for the School of Veterinary Medicine. Additional faculty members will be added over the summer and fall.

Thanks to the generosity of Amarillo and communities across Texas, and the commitment of legislators from around the state, the Texas Tech University School of Veterinary Medicine in Amarillo, established in 2018, is working to enroll its first class in the fall of 2021, pending approval by the American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA) Council on Education.

The School of Veterinary Medicine will recruit and select students with a passion to serve in rural and regional communities. Its curriculum is focused on the competencies and skills necessary for success in practices that support these communities. Texas Techs innovative and cost-efficient model partners with the wider community of veterinary practices across the state to provide clinical, real-world experiential learning.

(News release from Texas Tech University)

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Viral disease expert joins Texas Tech School of Veterinary Medicine - KLBK | KAMC | EverythingLubbock.com

Crews locate remains of 31-year-old male swept away into river – Medicine Hat News

By Ryan McCracken on August 2, 2020.

Medicine Hat Fire Service and South East Alberta Search and Rescue have located the remains of a 31-year-old male who was reportedly swept away into the South Saskatchewan River Saturday.

A release from Medicine Hat Police Service says the remains were located by the fire service at around 11:15 a.m. Sunday morning. The search began Saturday shortly after 5:30 p.m. when emergency services were called to the river in the area of Finlay Bridge, but the man was not recovered by darkness. The search then resumed early Sunday morning.

The release adds that foul play, alcohol and drugs are not believed to be factors in the incident, however MHPS has commenced an investigation into the circumstances surrounding the death of the individual.

This is a normal function of the police and their duties as investigators on behalf of the Office of the Medical Examiner, reads the release. The Medicine Hat Police Service Victim Assistance Unit is supporting the family with ongoing support during the grief process.

Fire, police, South East Alberta Search and Rescue and HALO Air Ambulance all contributed to the search and recovery.

MHPS will not be releasing the name of the deceased.

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Siddha system of medicine to be offered for COVID-19 treatment in Puducherry – The New Indian Express

By Express News Service

PUDUCHERRY:Puducherry Chief Minister V Narayanasamysaid that the administration isplanning to introduce the Siddha system of medicine treatment for COVID-19 patients by opening a separate hospital for it .

He said that it is beingsuccessfully offeredin Tamilnadu and several patients have got cured of the infection. A team of siddha doctorswould be sent to Chennai to learn the treatment modality and soon it will be introduced in ahospital for Siddha treatment.

Thosewho prefer to take treatment under Siddha system of medicine could opt for it, he said.

Pointing out that 200 new COVID-19 cases were reported in Puducherry today, the chief minister said that it is because Puducherry is doing more tests. Puducherry, Karaikal and Yanam regions of the UT were affected much. Mahe regionis Covid free.

The administration is taking all steps to provide adequate treatment to the affected persons, he said and added that as per the views of medical experts there could be six thousand positive cases here by the end of this month.

Even then, only 600 to 700 of themwould require hospitalization intensive care and treatmentwhich will be provided at the Covid hospitals of IGMCRI and JIPMER.

The others would be taken care at Covid care centres and at their individual homes.

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Siddha system of medicine to be offered for COVID-19 treatment in Puducherry - The New Indian Express

The function of the thymus and its impact on modern medicine – Science

How the thymus shaped immunology

The function of the thymus was discovered by Jacques Miller in 1961 and laid a foundation for immunology and modern medicine. Until that time, researchers mistakenly believed the thymus merely represented a remnant of defunct lymph tissue, something of an immune cell graveyard. In a Review, Miller recounts the seminal experiments and conceptual thinking that led to uncovering the critical function of the thymus and provides insights that can be learned from those early days. How knowledge of thymus function subsequently spawned the field of T cell biology and the impact it has had on immune cell interactions, vaccination, cancer immunotherapy, and the microbiome are also discussed.

Science, this issue p. eaba2429

Until the 1960s, the thymus had long remained an enigmatic organ with no known function or was considered to be just a graveyard for dying lymphocytes. By contrast, the circulating small lymphocytes found in blood and lymph had been shown in the late 1950s to be long-lived cells able to initiate an immune response when appropriately stimulated by antigen. However, although the thymus was known to be populated with lymphocytes, immunologists had not attributed any immune function to the organ. There were many reasons for this. For example, the cytological hallmarks of an immune response, such as the presence of plasma cells and germinal centers, were not seen in the thymus of healthy animals even after extensive immunization. Thymus lymphocytes, unlike lymphocytes from blood and lymphoid tissues, were unable to mount an immune response on transfer to immunocompromised recipients. Furthermore, thymectomy, which had always been performed in adult animals, was not associated with any immune defects.

In 1961, thymectomy was performed in mice during the immediate neonatal period and revealed the critically important function of the thymus in enabling the development of the immune system. Neonatally thymectomized (NTx) mice were highly susceptible to intercurrent infections, deficient in lymphocytes, unable to reject foreign skin grafts or produce antibody to some (though not all) antigens, and prone to developing certain tumors. There was no major immune defect after adult thymectomy unless the lymphoid tissues had been damaged by total body irradiation. Implanting thymus tissue into NTx mice or irradiated adult thymectomized mice restored immune function. When the thymus graft was taken from a foreign strain, the thymectomized recipients were found to be specifically tolerant of the histocompatibility antigens of the donor. This implied that the thymus was responsible not only for the normal development of immune functions but also for imposing tolerance to the bodys own tissues.

The thymus was shown to seed the lymphoid system with T lymphocytes that migrated to certain discrete areas of the lymphoid tissues and recirculated from the blood through lymphoid tissues, lymph, and back to the bloodstream. T cells exiting the thymus were found to be responsible for killing infected cells and for rejecting foreign tissue grafts. Therefore, T cells could soon be subdivided into subsets based on function, cell surface markers, and secreted products or interleukins. Thymus lymphoid stem cells were subsequently identified, and the epithelial and dendritic cells in the thymus were shown to greatly influence T cell development. They were able to educate T cells to recognize a great diversity of peptide antigens bound to the bodys own markers, major histocompatibility complex molecules, but purged any T cells that strongly reacted against the bodys own self-components. The use of irradiated adult thymectomized mice showed that T cells were not the precursors of antibody-forming cells but were essential to help, through some type of collaboration, other lymphocytes originating in bone marrow (B cells) to respond to antigen by producing antibody.

The discovery of thymus function and of T and B cell collaboration was a major immunological milestone because it not only opened up the field of immune cell interactions but also changed the course of immunology and medicine. It promoted the need for all immune phenomena, for example, memory, tolerance, autoimmunity, and immunodeficiency, as well as inflammatory and immunopathological disease conditions, to be reassessed in terms of the role played by the two distinct sets of lymphocytes and their subsets. We now know that T cells are involved in the entire spectrum of tissue physiology and pathology and even in situations not considered to be bona fide immunological conditions, such as tissue repair, dysbiosis, eclampsia, senescence, and cancer.

Hemopoietic stem cells originating in the yolk sac, fetal liver, or bone marrow migrate through the blood to the thymus, where they differentiate into T lymphocytes. Others differentiate within the bone marrow in mammals, or the bursa of Fabricius in birds, to produce B cells. Mature T and B cells circulate in the blood and lymph and colonize the T and B cell compartments of the lymphoid tissues.

The lymphoid system is intimately involved in immunological processes. The small lymphocyte that circulates through blood into lymphoid tissues, then through the lymph and back to the blood through the thoracic duct, is able to initiate immune responses after appropriate stimulation by antigen. However, the lymphocytes found in the thymus are deficient in this ability despite the fact that the thymus plays a central role in lymphocyte production and in ensuring the normal development of immunological faculty. During embryogenesis, lymphocytes are present in the thymus before they can be identified in the circulation and in other lymphoid tissues. They become educated in the thymus to recognize a great diversity of peptide antigens bound to the bodys own marker antigen, the major histocompatibility complex, but they are purged if they strongly react against their own self-components. Lymphocytes differentiate to become various T cell subsets and then exit through the bloodstream to populate certain areas of the lymphoid system as peripheral T lymphocytes with distinct markers and immune functions.

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The function of the thymus and its impact on modern medicine - Science

Hot New Medicine: This 1,000-Year-Old Mixture of Garlic, Onion, Wine, and Cow Bile – Popular Mechanics

Scientists are studying a millennium-old medicinal recipe they say might be able to kill some antibiotic-resistant bacterial structures: onions, garlic, a splash of wine, and some cow bile. The ingredients sound like a house vinaigrette until you get to, well, the cow bile.

Researchers have known the mixture can kill Staphylococcus aureus, the bacterium responsible for most of what we call Staph infections. Now, a new paper shows it can also, figuratively, cut through stubborn and difficult-to-treat biofilm infections.

You love weird science. We love weird science. Let's get weird together.

Buckle up for something gross. A biofilm infection is one where the bacteria have grown into a mucuslike matrix of carbohydrate (a tough day for the writers at Encyclopedia Britannica) that sticks to the infected wound or area. Biofilms opposite term is planktonic, an individual organisma word formed from the sea creatures that, in turn, is from the Greek for to wander or drift. And a biofilm is greatergrosser, stickier, more dangerous, and more insidiousthan the sum of its planktonic parts.

Public domain

That makes it all the more exciting that Balds eyesalve, named because of its source in the medieval medical text Balds Leechbook, has been able to penetrate the film. Biofilms are much harder to treat due to reduced penetration of antibiotics through the extracellular matrix and the enhanced tolerance of biofilm-grown cells to many in-use antibiotics, the researchers explain:

None of the ingredients works alone, but in mixture, they're effective. Removing the wine, for example, reduced the effectiveness a lot despite wines relatively low levels of the antimicrobial agents scientists believe make this mixture effective. And only by exhaustively testing the mixture can scientists begin to design a clinical deployment for patients.

It could be that the conventional process for developing drugs may miss key aspects of those herbal remedies which could be effective against biofilms, the researchers speculate. Conventional drug development calls for the isolation of single active compounds, whereas historical medicine usually calls for combinations of whole plants (and other natural materials).

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The scientists used a total of 75 different mixtures, which they made the traditional way.

Since theres a translation disagreement from the original old language of the Leechbook, they made some dual batches using both onion and leek.

Heres the key motivator for this particular experiment: Scientists already knew the salve mixture showed results with killing many kinds of dangerous bacteria, but they didnt know how those results scaled up to a more ingrained, established biofilm infection situation. And what they found is that the mixture worked on many of the bacteria in biofilm form, but not all.

Our work highlights the need to explore not only single compounds but also mixtures of natural products for treating biofilm infections and underlines the importance of working with biofilm models when exploring natural products for the anti-biofilm pipeline, the scientists explain.

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Hot New Medicine: This 1,000-Year-Old Mixture of Garlic, Onion, Wine, and Cow Bile - Popular Mechanics

St. Mary’s Wound Care and Hyperbaric Medicine recognized with national awards – Enid News & Eagle

St. Marys Regional Medical Center physicians, leaders, staff and clinicians gathered recently to celebrate the Center of Distinction award and the Robert A. Warriner III, MD, Clinical Excellence award, which were presented to the St. Marys Wound Care and Hyperbaric Medicine team by Healogics, a nationwide provider of advanced wound care services.

The St. Marys Center achieved outstanding clinical outcomes for 12 consecutive months including patient satisfaction higher than 92% and a minimum wound healing rate of at least 92% within 28 median days to heal, according to a press release. There were 601 centers eligible for the Center of Distinction award and 367 achieved the honor.

The Clinical Excellence Award was awarded as a result of scoring in the top 10% of eligible Healogics Wound Care Centers.

Millions of people are affected by chronic wounds, said Wound Care and Hyperbaric Medicine Medical Director Cindy Rogers, MD. The program at St. Marys offers effective treatments for complex and non-healing wounds caused by diabetes, vascular disease, injuries or other health conditions that have not healed in a reasonable amount of time. These awards recognize the impressive outcomes and high patient satisfaction that is the focus of our patient-centered program and I am very proud of our wound care team.

St. Marys Wound Care and Hyperbaric Medicine program is a member of the Healogics network of more than 600 Wound Care Centers, and provides access to benchmarking data and proven experience treating approximately 2.5 million chronic wounds, according to the press release.

Treatments at the Center include negative pressure wound therapy, total contact casting, bio-engineered tissues, biosynthetic dressings and growth factor therapies. The Center also offers hyperbaric oxygen therapy, which works by surrounding the patient with 100% oxygen to help progress the healing of the wound.

We celebrate the dedicated efforts of our Wound Care team, said Krista Roberts, St. Marys Regional Medical Centers chief executive officer. Year after year, our team members have demonstrated their commitment to providing exceptional wound care services with a collaborative and compassionate approach. The result is positive outcomes for our patients and an improved quality of life.

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St. Mary's Wound Care and Hyperbaric Medicine recognized with national awards - Enid News & Eagle

Tom Purcell: Laughter really is still the best medicine – The Tribune – Ironton Tribune

I missed it again. So did the rest of America.

July 1s unofficial International Joke Day came and went without fanfare.

Thats regrettable, because we could all use a good belly laugh right now which gave me an idea.

The other day, after hearing more doom-and-gloom news while driving, I said to the Apple CarPlay app on my trucks stereo, Hey, Siri, tell me a joke.

Siri, Apples voice-activated digital assistant, replied, My cat ate a ball of yarn. She gave birth to mittens.

Thats an awfully corny joke but I laughed so hard, I accidentally steered my truck onto some roadside gravel.

When you laugh like that, its impossible to be angry or to dwell on whatever personal or business challenge may hang over your head

A belly laugh is an antidote to the self-seriousness thats one of the greatest afflictions of modern times. And with a pandemic killing thousands and crippling the economy, plus protests and social unrest, we need belly laughs more than ever. One psychologist suggests practicing laughing with a friend because utter seriousness can drive us to despair.

Social media gives everyone a platform to share thoughts, which is good. But some self-serious people get awfully huffy with others who disagree with or challenge their thinking. Theyre so serious and so certain that those who disagree with them are wrong, even evil, that they demonize their detractors.

They dont try to converse, debate or understand differing viewpoints. OK, boomer and OK, Karen memes offer cases in point.

Humor and laughter, wonderfully infectious, keep us from falling into the trap of self-seriousness, promoting goodwill, thoughtfulness and civility. Humor is an elixir, a tonic that is good for mind and spirt, says an executive coach.Laughters power is incredible and that power lasts.

One of my favorite family stories dates to the early 1950s. Freddy, my dads uncle on his mothers side a real character had a neighbor who was among the first in their area to buy a VW Beetle. Behind the neighbors endless boasting about his Beetles terrific gas mileage was conceit essentially, Im smarter than you, which is why Im getting way better gas mileage than you!

Freddy began sneaking next door at night to fill the VWs gas tank. As he did so, his neighbors boasts grew louder and more tiresome the guy was ready to call the Guinness World Records people, as his VW clearly was getting more miles per gallon than any other Beetle on Earth.

After a month, Freddy continued sneaking next door. But now he siphoned gas from the Beetles tank to the point where the neighbor thought his VW was getting worse gas mileage than any other Beetle on Earth.

Were still laughing at the braggart neighbor who suddenly stopped bragging.

Theres more evidence of the power of laughter. More than 60 years ago, my mother first heard this joke, which she vividly remembers, and still laughs at:

A lady whod been grocery shopping was walking to her car when she tripped and dropped a paper bag and two eggs fell out of the carton and broke onto the pavement. She was so upset that she started crying. A drunk walked up, surveyed the situation, and told her, Dont worry, lady. It wouldnt have lived anyway. Its eyes are too far apart.

We all need to laugh more. It really is the best medicine for our current ails.

Tom Purcell is a Pittsburgh Tribune-Review humor columnist and is syndicated by Cagle Cartoons. Email Tom at Purcell@caglecartoons.com.

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Tom Purcell: Laughter really is still the best medicine - The Tribune - Ironton Tribune

TOM PURCELL: Laughter really is the best medicine – The Albany Herald

I missed it again. So did the rest of America.

July 1s unofficial International Joke Day came and went without fanfare.

Thats regrettable because we could all use a good belly laugh right now which gave me an idea.

The other day, after hearing more doom-and-gloom news while driving, I said to the Apple CarPlay app on my trucks stereo, Hey, Siri, tell me a joke.

Siri, Apples voice-activated digital assistant, replied, My cat ate a ball of yarn. She gave birth to mittens.

Thats an awfully corny joke but I laughed so hard, I accidentally steered my truck onto some roadside gravel.

When you laugh like that, its impossible to be angry or to dwell on whatever personal or business challenge may hang over your head

A belly laugh is an antidote to the self-seriousness thats one of the greatest afflictions of modern times. And with a pandemic killing thousands and crippling the economy, plus protests and social unrest, we need belly laughs more than ever. One psychologist suggests practicing laughing with a friend because utter seriousness can drive us to despair.

Social media give everyone a platform to share thoughts, which is good. But some self-serious people get awfully huffy with others who disagree with or challenge their thinking. Theyre so serious and so certain that those who disagree with them are wrong, even evil, that they demonize their detractors.

They dont try to converse, debate or understand differing viewpoints. OK, boomer and OK, Karen memes offer cases in point.

Humor and laughter, wonderfully infectious, keep us from falling into the trap of self-seriousness, promoting goodwill, thoughtfulness and civility. Humor is an elixir, a tonic that is good for mind and spirt, says an executive coach.

Laughters power is incredible and that power lasts.

One of my favorite family stories dates to the early 1950s. Freddy, my dads uncle on his mothers side a real character had a neighbor who was among the first in their area to buy a VW Beetle. Behind the neighbors endless boasting about his Beetles terrific gas mileage was conceit essentially, Im smarter than you, which is why Im getting way better gas mileage than you.

Freddy began sneaking next door at night to fill the VWs gas tank. As he did so, his neighbors boasts grew louder and more tiresome the guy was ready to call the Guinness World Records people, as his VW clearly was getting more miles per gallon than any other Beetle on Earth.

After a month, Freddy continued sneaking next door. But now he siphoned gas from the Beetles tank to the point where the neighbor thought his VW was getting worse gas mileage than any other Beetle on Earth.

Were still laughing at the braggart neighbor who suddenly stopped bragging.

Theres more evidence of the power of laughter. More than 60 years ago, my mother first heard this joke, which she vividly remembers, and still laughs at:

A lady whod been grocery shopping was walking to her car when she tripped and dropped a paper bag and two eggs fell out of the carton and broke onto the pavement. She was so upset that she started crying. A drunk walked up, surveyed the situation, and told her, Dont worry, lady. It wouldnt have lived anyway. Its eyes are too far apart.

We all need to laugh more. It really is the best medicine for our current ails.

Now, more than ever, the world needs trustworthy reportingbut good journalism isnt free.Please support us by subscribing or making a contribution today.

Tom Purcell is a Pittsburgh Tribune-Review humor columnist. Send comments to Tom at Tom@TomPurcell.com.

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TOM PURCELL: Laughter really is the best medicine - The Albany Herald