H1N1 Infection — Part 1 – Video


H1N1 Infection -- Part 1
In Part 1 of his interview with Mayo Clinic Proceedings, Available at: tinyurl.com Dr. Greg Poland, Professor of Medicine and Infectious Diseases at Mayo Clinic and Director of the Mayo Vaccine Research Group, discusses the continued importance of being vaccinated given the prospect of future waves of H1N1 Infection. He also identifies the groups most at risk, discusses the effectiveness, safety, and availability of the vaccine, and weighs the benefits and risks of receiving the vaccine vs becoming infected with the virus.From:Mayo ProceedingsViews:0 0ratingsTime:14:04More inScience Technology

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Guo Teaser 2 – Video


Guo Teaser 2
Traditional Chinese Medicine doctor and Master Herbalist Guo will be seeing patients January 3rd at Encompass HealthCare Wound Medicine in West Bloomfield, MI. Call 248-624-9800 for details and reservations.From:encompasshealthcareViews:0 0ratingsTime:01:09More inScience Technology

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Guo Teaser 2 - Video

OneMedForum SF2012 Panels: Diagnostics and Personalized Medicine – Video


OneMedForum SF2012 Panels: Diagnostics and Personalized Medicine
Jennifer Lieb (Founding Partner of HealthFutures) moderates a panel on Diagnostics and Personalized Medicine, featuring Ann F. Hanham (Managing Director of Burrill and Co.), Yves Dubaquie, Ph.D. (Business Development and Licensing of Novartis Molecular Diagnostics) and Melinda Griffith (Senior Vice President of Product Acquisition and Licensing at Clarient).From:OneMedPlaceViews:1 0ratingsTime:38:31More inScience Technology

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OneMedForum SF2012 Panels: Diagnostics and Personalized Medicine - Video

IF YOU WANT A GOOD LAUGH WATCH… I WAS HIGH AS A KITE…LOL.. – Video


IF YOU WANT A GOOD LAUGH WATCH... I WAS HIGH AS A KITE...LOL..
I WATCHED THIS YESTERDAY AND HAD TO SHARE IT WITH YALL.... IT WAS TOO FUNNY. DADDY KEEP HITTING MY LEG TO WAKE ME UP....LOL... THIS WAS WAY TOO FUNNY! YALL KNOW I GET DROZZY AND TALK OUT MY HEAD OVER NYQUIL...SO THIS MEDICINE HAD ME GONE! LOL THANK YALL FOR SHARING THESE MOMENTS WITH ME... I SEND IT WITH LOVE...KIANNA AND CHUCKFrom:bigcouz52Views:44 0ratingsTime:03:27More inTravel Events

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IF YOU WANT A GOOD LAUGH WATCH... I WAS HIGH AS A KITE...LOL.. - Video

Teresa Przytycka, NIH – Computational Biology: From Genotype to Phenotype – Video


Teresa Przytycka, NIH - Computational Biology: From Genotype to Phenotype
At the National Institutes of Health, Dr. Teresa Przytycka answers complex biological questions using computational tools. For Dr. Przytycka #39;s full "Research in Action" story, visit the NIH Intramural Research Program website: http://www.irp.nih.gov Teresa M. Przytycka, Ph.D., is a Senior Investigator and Head of the Algorithmic Methods in Computational and Systems Biology Section in the Computational Biology Branch of the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) at the National Library of Medicine (NLM)From:IRPNIHViews:0 0ratingsTime:02:31More inScience Technology

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Reading – For Colored Boys at West Hollywood Library – Part 3 – Video


Reading - For Colored Boys at West Hollywood Library - Part 3
Victor Yates, Antonio Brown, Jonathan Kidd, and Jorge Ortiz read from the anthology "For Colored Boys" on December 8, 2012. The anthology, aimed at young adults, discusses suicide, sexuality, homophobia, religion, and coming out for queer people of color. Contributors to the work include: James Earl Hardy, award-winning writer of the B-Boy Blues Series, Emanuel Xavier, poet, whose third book was selected by the American Library Association as one of their Over The Rainbow books, David J. Malebranche, Associate Professor of Medicine at Emory University #39;s School of Medicine, Rod McCullom, writer/producer for ABC News and New York City #39;s ABC 7, Ron Simmons, field producer on Tongues Untied (1989), the controversial documentary film that aired on PBS, and Jessica Wild, star of Rupaul #39;s Drag Race Season Two and many others. The project came about as a response to the suicides of Carl Joseph Walker-Hoover, Jaheem Herrera, Raymond Chase, Joseph Jefferson and Tyler Clementi, the 18-year-old college student who jumped to his death in September 2010, whose death sparked the "It Gets Better" project.From:Victor YatesViews:0 0ratingsTime:16:30More inEntertainment

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Reading - For Colored Boys at West Hollywood Library - Part 3 - Video

Nutso – CIA [Corruption in America] Dir. by Javier Goin – Video


Nutso - CIA [Corruption in America] Dir. by Javier Goin
Nutso - #39;Behind These Bars #39; (EP) [Buy/Stream Links]: iTunes: bit.ly Amazon: amzn.to SoundCloud: bit.ly The hood #39;s number one music supplier, Nutso, breaks down the ills of the American drug trade for the Javier Goin directed visuals to "CIA," (prod. by Mr. Green), taken from his Behind These Bars EP, which dropped this past September. "America #39;s hooked on drugs dog, we live off of medicine, prescription tablets, cocaine and heroine/ searching for the high life, I #39;m an addict myself, a go getter, I stash my hundreds in the book shelf.." Directed by: Javier Goin Produced by: Mr. Green Epitaph: Dave House [WHW] + Diamond MediaFrom:NutsoPPMViews:7 0ratingsTime:03:14More inMusic

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Nutso - CIA [Corruption in America] Dir. by Javier Goin - Video

Thomson Reuters Spotlights the Impact of Personalized Medicine on Pharmaceutical R&D

New report details the potential advantages and challenges for the pharma industry as it implements strategies for personalized medicine

PHILADELPHIA, PA, December 13, 2012 - The IP & Science business of Thomson Reuters,the world`s leading source of intelligent information for businesses and professionals, today announced the publication of a new report that provides a comprehensive view of the potential effects of personalized medicine on drug research and development. Spotlight on Personalized Medicine, a Pharma Matters report based on insights and information from Thomson Reuters Cortellis for Competitive Intelligence and a selection of data from CMR International, details the current challenges posed by the paradigm of stratified medicine as well as its clinical, economic and societal value.

"An array of scientific and market factors have prompted the pharma industry to question the sustainability of the current R&D model, which targets large populations with chronic unmet medical needs," said Jon-Brett Harris, executive vice president at Thomson Reuters. "Despite the commercial success of these products, the one-size-fits-all focus has resulted in spiraling R&D costs, longer development timelines and narrow product portfolios. New options, specifically personalized medicine, appear to be an attractive and more sustainable solution. This new report offers a detailed look into the possible advantages and disadvantages of this potentially game-changing approach."

The report shows that a stratified paradigm could result in more efficient ways of conducting drug development, as well as address increased public awareness related to post-marketing withdrawals of popular drugs and debates concerning drug pricing and reimbursement. Further, the ability to better assess biological factors related to disease and therapy at the genetic level lends itself to the development of safer, more effective treatments for specific patient subgroups.

The slow pace of the industry to adopt a more stratified approach has been reinvigorated with high-profile drug launches and successes; however, numerous challenges still exist that could affect a large-scale integration of the personalized medicine paradigm into biopharmaceutical R&D. Analysis from Thomson Reuters Cortellis for Competitive Intelligence suggests a gap in connecting the dots between genetic variation, disease association, patient segments with those variations, clinical trial design and patient recruitment in the clinic.

Thomson Reuters Cortellis, the premier life sciences platform, is the most powerful tool of its kind for biopharmaceutical competitive intelligence, drug pipeline, and drug research and development information. CMR International, a Thomson Reuters business, is the world leader in global pharmaceutical R&D performance measurement. To learn more about Cortellis and CMR International, visit: http://ip-science.thomsonreuters.com/.

Click here to view Spotlight on Personalized Medicine.

Thomson Reuters Thomson Reuters is the world`s leading source of intelligent information for businesses and professionals.We combine industry expertise with innovative technology to deliver critical information to leading decision makers in the financial and risk, legal, tax and accounting, intellectual property and science and media markets, powered by the world`s most trusted news organization.With headquarters in New York and major operations in London and Eagan, Minnesota, Thomson Reuters employs approximately 60,000 people and operates in over 100 countries. For more information, go to http://www.thomsonreuters.com.

CONTACT Jen Breen Thomson Reuters Jennifer.breen@thomsonreuters.com +1 215 823 1791

Abbey Anderson Thomson Reuters Abbey.anderson@thomsonreuters.com + 1 215 823 1894

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Research and Markets: Molecular Medicine. Edition No. 4

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/xhrqtk/molecular) has announced the addition of Elsevier Science and Technology's new book "Molecular Medicine. Edition No. 4" to their offering.

Molecular Medicine is the application of genetic or DNA-based knowledge to the modern practice of medicine. Molecular Medicine, 4e, provides contemporary insights into how the genetic revolution is influencing medical thinking and practice. The new edition includes recent changes in personalized medicine, new growth in omics and direct-to-consumer DNA testing, while focusing on advances in the Human Genomeproject and implications of the advances in clinical medicine. Graduate students, researchers, clinicians and allied health professionals will appreciate the background history and clinical application of up-to-date molecular advances.

Key Features

- Extensively revised to incorporate the results of the Human Genome Project, it provides the latest developmentsin molecular medicine

- The only book in Molecular Medicine to reach its fourth edition

- Identifies current practice as well as future developments

- Presents extensive tables, well presented figures and resources for further understanding

Topics Covered:

Dedication and Acknowledgements

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Research and Markets: Molecular Medicine. Edition No. 4

The Alliance for Regenerative Medicine forms Tissue Engineering and Biomaterials Committee

WASHINGTON, Dec. 13, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- The Alliance for Regenerative Medicine (ARM) today announced the formation of a Tissue Engineering and Biomaterials Committee (TEBC). The TEBC has been established to assemble the companies, academic institutions, and organizations within the Alliance for Regenerative Medicine that develop and commercialize tissue engineered and biomaterial based technologies. The primary purpose of the TEBC is to develop a better understanding of the key barriers to translation and scale up of regenerative medicine technologies including challenges in efficient product design, pilot and scale up manufacturing, regulation, and reimbursement. In addition the TEBC will focus on building public awareness of this new field of medicine and an appreciation for its potential to transform healthcare.

Members of the TEBC will include private and public sector representatives involved in the field of tissue engineering. Tissue engineered technologies are being developed as clinical therapeutics to improve biological functions primarily through the repair, restoration, or total replacement of tissue or organ and are also being developed and commercialized as 3D tissue models and micro-organs to provide better research tools for drug discovery and clinical diagnostics. The TEBC group will include experts from interdisciplinary technologies that utilize cells, biomaterials, growth factors, small molecules, scaffolds, and other therapeutic agents to affect tissue growth or regeneration. The Committee will be led by Sarah Haecker PhD, a member of ARM's senior staff. Sarah has more than 20 years of experience in the industry and for the last seven years has specialized in working with companies in the tissue engineering sector.

"We will work to identify and capitalize on opportunities that accelerate product development and commercialization of these innovative regenerative medicine technologies," said Sarah Haecker. "The primary purpose of the TEBC is to determine the unique requirements which will, ultimately, advance and broaden the use of clinical tissue engineered paradigms world-wide."

"To successfully design, develop, and commercialize complex tissue engineered products, it is critical to bring together the leading experts in a multitude of disciplines and technology areas," said Robert Palay, co-chair of the TEBC and Chief Executive Officer of Cellular Dynamics International, Inc. "I am excited to be working with this group which is strategically designed and uniquely qualified to best move the wide range of tissue engineered products forward."

"Tissue engineering has tremendous potential to treat patients suffering from the loss of tissues and organs," said Jennifer H. Elisseeff, co-chair of the TEBC and Professor, Wilmer Eye Institute and Department of Biomedical Engineering, Johns Hopkins University. "We have the ability to establish the critical early and robust communication between the product designers and clinicians to support the successful path through commercialization of these complex products."

"Through the work of the TEBC, we hope to bring tissue engineered therapeutics to patients worldwide more quickly," said Michael Abecassis, MD, co-chair of the TEBC and Founding Director, Northwestern University Comprehensive Transplant Center. "We intend to develop a better understanding amongst key stakeholders as to the requirements to develop a more predictable regulatory pathway and a rational reimbursement framework for tissue engineered and biomaterial based products."

Members of the Tissue Engineering and Biomaterials Committee:

Cellular Dynamics, Circle Biologics, Harvard Bioscience, Histogenics, InVivo Therapeutics, ISTO, JDRF, Johns Hopkins University, McGowan Institute for Regenerative Medicine, MiMedx, Nanofiber Solutions, Northwestern University Comprehensive Transplant Center, Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine, New York Stem Cell Institute, Organogenesis, Organovo, Pfizer, Sanofi Genzyme, Shire Regenerative Medicine, Tengion, Texas Heart Institute, Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine

The Alliance for Regenerative Medicine (ARM) is a Washington, DC-based non-profit organization that promotes legislative, regulatory, reimbursement, and financing initiatives necessary to facilitate access to life-giving advances in regenerative medicine. ARM also works to increase public understanding of the field and its potential to transform human healthcare, and provides services to support the growth of its member companies and organizations. Prior to the formation of ARM, there was no advocacy organization operating in Washington, DC to specifically represent the interests of regenerative medicine companies, research institutions, investors, and patient groups supporting more rapid adoption of technologies in our field. To learn more about ARM or to become a member, visit http://www.alliancerm.org.

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The Alliance for Regenerative Medicine forms Tissue Engineering and Biomaterials Committee

iNtfwasa graduation, Day 2, Swaziland – Video


iNtfwasa graduation, Day 2, Swaziland
Day 2 of the ceremony where a "Sangoma" (sometimes called "witchdoctor") qualifies in Swaziland after her training, called "iNtfwasa". Early in the morning of day 2 the "ematfwasa" or candidates go to the river with the bones of the goat whose blood they had drunk and whose gall bladder was fastened in their hair. They are chased around the compound by a man with a stick as a symbol of the hardship they have had to endure during their training. The candidates perform again their divination skills, while the drums beat out the rhythm associated with the"emadloti" ancestral spirits. The drum rhythm changes to that of the "emaNdzawe", believed to be spirits of the "Ndau" people, native to Mozambique, whose cattle had been stolen by a group of Swazis centuries ago; the Ndau had been killed by those Swazis too and their spirits have to be placated. The candidates wear red cloths, symbolising the blood of the "emaNdzawe" or Ndau. They walk to the river where the candidates have "umutsi", medicine rubbed in a cut made in their tongue (to ensure they always speak the truth); chickens are decapitated, the candidates have to drink a little of the blood and they are then immersed in the river: three times pushed under, like a baptism. They "die" as a normal human being, to be revived later in the village. All candidates are covered with a white cloth and loaded into a truck to be returned to the village. After the "dead" ematfwasa (candidates Sangoma) have been brought back to the ...From:luitzenkViews:1 0ratingsTime:09:31More inTravel Events

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iNtfwasa graduation, Day 2, Swaziland - Video

Dumb Ways to Die (Cover) – Real Life Parody! – Video


Dumb Ways to Die (Cover) - Real Life Parody!
TheCrowdedCorner Facebook: http://www.facebook.com Video by Aaron Huang Actors: Kiffin Chu, Aaron Huang, Elly Chao Vocals - Kiffin Chu, Elly Chao Guitar keyboard: Ryan Sun Mixed by Ryan Sun, Aaron Huang This is our interpretation of the viral hit "Dumb Ways to Die" (www.youtube.com hope you guys enjoy it! Set fire to your hair Poke a stick at a grizzly bear Eat medicine that #39;s out of date Use your private parts as piranha bait Dumb ways to die, so many dumb ways to die, dumb ways to di-ii-ie, so many dumb ways to die Get your toast out with a fork Do your own electrical work Teach yourself how to fly Eat a two week old unrefrigerated pie Dumb ways to die, so many dumb ways to die, dumb ways to di-ii-ie, so many dumb ways to die Invite a psycho-killer inside Scratch a drug dealer #39;s brand new ride Take your helmet off in outer space Use your clothes dryer as a hiding place Dumb ways to die, so many dumb ways to die, dumb ways to di-ii-ie, so many dumb ways to die Keep a rattlesnake as pet Sell both your kidneys on the internet Eat a tube of superglue "I wonder what #39;s this red button do?" Dumb ways to die, so many dumb ways to die, dumb ways to di-ii-ie, so many dumb ways to die Dress up like a moose during hunting season Disturb a nest of wasps for no good reason Stand on the edge of a train station platform Drive around the boom gates at a level crossing Run across the tracks between the platforms They may not rhyme but they #39;re quite possibly Dumbest ways to die Dumbest ways to ...From:TheCrowded CornerViews:19 1ratingsTime:03:14More inMusic

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Dumb Ways to Die (Cover) - Real Life Parody! - Video

LAUGHTER IS YOUR BIRTHRIGHT – Video


LAUGHTER IS YOUR BIRTHRIGHT
Laughter is your birthright, a natural part of life that is innate and inborn. Infants begin smiling during the first weeks of life and laugh out loud within months of being born. Even if you did not grow up in a household where laughter was a common sound, you can learn to laugh at any stage of life. Laughter reduces pain, increases job performance, connects people emotionally, and improves the flow of oxygen to the heart and brain triggers healthy physical changes in the body. Humor and laughter strengthen your immune system, boost your energy, diminish pain, and protect you from the damaging effects of stress. Best of all, this priceless medicine is fun, free, and easy to use. LAUGHTER it #39;s said, is the best medicine. It improves your job performance, especially if your work depends on creativity and solving complex problems. Its role in intimate relationships is vastly underestimated and it really is the glue of good marriages. It synchronizes the brains of speaker and listener so that they are emotionally attuned. When laughter is shared, it binds people together and increases happiness and intimacy. Laughter also triggers healthy physical changes in the body. Humor and laughter strengthen your immune system, boost your energy, diminish pain, and protect you from the damaging effects of stress. Best of all, this priceless medicine is fun, free, and easy to use. Laughter establishes or restores a positive emotional climate and a sense of connection between two people ...From:Mamu BorahViews:0 0ratingsTime:00:53More inEducation

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LAUGHTER IS YOUR BIRTHRIGHT - Video

Interview with Gundula – Video


Interview with Gundula
http://www.lightdoctor.net Learn to let go of stress or worry. Access your inner resources, combine modern biology with ancient healing wisdom and connecting to the energies of The Earth. Learn simple exercises, based on ancient Chinese healing techniques, from Dr Susan Jamieson, a A Scottish medical doctor who has based based in the East for 25 years. Kidney The kidneys are in our lower back its essential for purification of our blood 200 quarts or 180 litres of fluid pass through them per day to be purified, now above the kidneys are the adrenal glands the adrenals means in Latin #39;super renal above the kidneys #39; . The adrenal glands of course responsible for our stress response fight-or-flight they produce adrenal cortisol the function of which is to bunch up muscles so we can run fast and make us breath fast and circulate blood round the body. Chronic stress is exhausting and patients always say to me #39;I #39;m just tired all the time, I wake up exhausted, I #39;m so stressed #39; we use a lot of energy in that stress response the physiological response of the muscle and the blood but also emotional energy. And in Chinese medicine the kidneys not only associated with fertility and longevity but very much with energy, now the stress response is basically one of fear and we all experience stress and anxiety. About our job prospects the economic climate or having no control in our lives, it #39;s the fear response. I #39;m going to teach you exercises to help you eliminate this response from your ...From:Light DoctorViews:1 0ratingsTime:07:46More inPeople Blogs

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Interview with Gundula - Video