French islands under threat from rising sea levels

Sep. 17, 2013 By the year 2100, global warming will have caused sea levels to rise by 1 to 3 meters. This will strongly affect islands, their flora, fauna and inhabitants. A team of researchers from the Ecologie, systmatique et volution (CNRS/Universit Paris-Sud) laboratory studied the impact of rising sea levels on 1,269 French islands throughout the world. Their model shows that between 5% and 12% of these islands could be totally submerged in the future. On a worldwide scale, they predict that about 300 endemic island species are at risk of extinction, while the habitat of thousands of others will be drastically reduced.

This research has been published in the journals Global Ecology and Biogeography (August 2013) and Nature Conservation (September 2013).

The most recent predictions of global warming show that sea levels will rise by between 1 and 3 meters before the end of the century. In some scenarios involving a catastrophic breaking-up of Greenland ice, sea levels are expected to rise by 6 meters. Any such increase will have serious consequences for the populations, flora and fauna of the coastal strip.

The researchers at the Ecologie, systmatique et volution laboratory first concentrated on the effects rising sea levels would have on French islands. Throughout the world, 2,050 French islands of more than a hectare are likely to have animal and plant communities.

The scientists compared the terrain contours of 1,269 of these islands with sea level models, taking into account the fact that sea levels will not rise evenly over the Earth's surface because the sea is not flat: some areas of the ocean will rise higher than others. Results showed that, even if sea levels only rose by one meter, France would lose 6% of its islands (12% in the case of a 3-meter rise). French Polynesia and New Caledonia would be the worst affected: two thirds of the islands that would be submerged are in these archipelagos. There are French islands in all of the world's oceans, at all latitudes and with many different types of geology and ecology. Extrapolating their results to the 180,000 islands in the world, the scientists believe that the Earth could lose 10,000 to 20,000 islands before 2100.

The researchers went on to look at the biodiversity loss that could result from sea-level rise, notably in certain biodiversity hotspots such as the Mediterranean, the Philippines and New Caledonia. Twenty percent of the world's biodiversity is found on islands, including a very large proportion of endemic species.

The Philippines, Indonesia and the Caribbean are the most vulnerable areas: at least 300 endemic species, mostly plants, are seriously threatened by rising sea levels. Yet even this figure is a conservative estimate, as the researchers only considered species whose distribution areas would be totally submerged by 2100. They did not include the species that would lose 70%, 80% or even 90% of their natural range, nor additional factors such as lateral erosion or centennial tides, which can make large expanses of the coastal strip inhospitable for many species. Neither did they include natural disasters like cyclones.

This work shows how much of a threat rising sea levels pose to the biodiversity of island ecosystems, highlighting the necessity to take account of the consequences of this unstoppable process in designing policies for the conservation and protection of endangered species.

More:

French islands under threat from rising sea levels

Stem Cell Therapy Treatment for Spino Muscular Atrophy by Dr Alok Sharma, Mumbai, India – Video


Stem Cell Therapy Treatment for Spino Muscular Atrophy by Dr Alok Sharma, Mumbai, India
Improvement seen in just 5 day after Stem Cell Therapy Treatment for Spino Muscular Atrophy by Dr Alok Sharma, Mumbai, India. After Stem Cell Therapy 1. Stam...

By: Neurogen Brain and Spine Institute

See original here:
Stem Cell Therapy Treatment for Spino Muscular Atrophy by Dr Alok Sharma, Mumbai, India - Video

23andMe and Udacity Launch Introductory Human Genetics Course

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

23andMe, the leading personal genetics company, is working with Udacity, a Silicon Valley-based education start-up, to create a Massive Open Online Course (MOOC) on human genetics. Tales from the Genome will provide an accessible introduction to genetic concepts and technology for just about anyone. The course is designed to be particularly helpful for high school, college and medical students, as well as health care professionals and life-long learners. Course participants can choose to complete the entire course or just the individual lessons on the topics they find most interesting. Tales from the Genome also incorporates personal and engaging perspectives from people living with a variety of genetic traits, from color blindness to lactose intolerance.

Tales from the Genome covers the fundamental principles of inheritance, gene structure and expression, mutation and variation, development of simple and complex biological traits, human ancestry and evolution, and the acquisition and interpretation of personal genetic information. By the end of the course, students will have an enhanced understanding of both the science of genetics and the various ways genetics informs their personal health.

Genetics is so much more than what many students experience in a traditional classroom setting, said Dr. Matthew Cook, the main instructor for the course. It should really be about the stories our genomes can tell, all the biological secrets wound up and packaged into efficient information storage units called chromosomes.

Dr. Cook earned his Ph.D. at Duke University and completed training as a post-doctoral scholar at the University of California, San Francisco. Dr. Cook then joined the content development team at Udacity to share his passion for genetics with the world.

As individuals are becoming more actively involved in their health care and more physicians incorporate personalized medicine into their practice, genetic information is becoming a fundamental element of basic health care, said Dr. Uta Francke, senior medical director at 23andMe and co-instructor of Tales from the Genome. As a result, genetics education has never been more important, particularly for individuals seeking the best possible care for themselves and their families.

Dr. Francke is an emeritus professor of genetics and pediatrics at Stanford University, where she taught molecular and clinical genetics. Tales from the Genome is also co-instructed by 23andMe Senior Director of Research, Dr. Joanna Mountain. Dr. Mountain previously served as a faculty member at Stanford University in the anthropological sciences and genetics departments.

Tales from the Genome will be available to the public as of September 30, 2013 on Udacity.

About 23andMe

23andMe, Inc. is the leading personal genetics company dedicated to helping individuals understand their own genetic information through DNA analysis technologies and web-based interactive tools. The company's Personal Genome Service enables individuals to gain deeper insights into their ancestry and inherited traits. The vision for 23andMe is to personalize healthcare by making and supporting meaningful discoveries through genetic research. 23andMe, Inc., was founded in 2006, and the company is advised by a group of renowned experts in the fields of human genetics, bioinformatics and computer science. More information is available at http://www.23andMe.com.

Follow this link:

23andMe and Udacity Launch Introductory Human Genetics Course

American Legion Issues Report on VA Health Care for Women Veterans

WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

The American Legion has issued its report on the quality of health care for women veterans at 15 Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) medical centers across the country.

Key findings of the Legions report include the fact that many former women servicemembers do not identify themselves as veterans, many VA medical centers lack long-term health care plans for women veterans, and VA facilities often have no inpatient or residential mental health programs for women veterans.

We found one case in which a woman veteran in Colorado had to fly to Coatesville, Pa., just to receive her mental-health care, said Verna Jones, director of the Legions Veterans Affairs & Rehabilitation (VA & R) Division. Many women who have served in uniform may suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder, military sexual trauma or depression. VA will be treating many more women veterans in the future, and it needs to make access to mental-health services for women one of its top priorities.

The 2013 Task Force Report on Women Veterans Health Care, released to the public on Sept. 17, is based on site visits by the Legions System Worth Saving (SWS) Task Force to VA facilities in Buffalo, N.Y.; Augusta, Maine; Fargo, N.D.; Chicago; Tampa, Fla., Erie and Coatesville, Pa.; Dublin, Ga.; Salem, Va.; Las Vegas; Tuscaloosa, Ala.; San Antonio; Texas; Madison, Wis.; Spokane, Wash.; and St. Cloud, Minn.

During these visits, SWS task force members and American Legion field service representatives interviewed each facilitys leadership and staff on the delivery of health care for women veterans.

The reports objectives were to understand what perceptions and barriers prevent women veterans from enrolling in VA health care, determine what challenges women veterans face with their health care, and provide recommendations that VA can take to improve access to health care for women veterans.

Challenges and recommendations from the Legions report include:

Recommendation: VA should develop a customized women veterans health benefits track to assist in making them aware of benefits available to them.

Recommendation: VA should consider implementing baseline facility enrollment and unique women veterans seen as percentage goals in relation to the facilitys catchment area.

Go here to see the original:

American Legion Issues Report on VA Health Care for Women Veterans

Report: W.Va. lagging on health care for poor

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) -- West Virginia isn't doing a good job of delivering health care services for low-income residents, according to a private foundation's report released Wednesday.

The Commonwealth Fund report ranked West Virginia tied with Nevada for 41st among the states and the District of Columbia.

The New York and Washington, D.C.-based organization that supports independent research on health policy looked at 30 different indicators in four categories.

While West Virginia ranked 20th in providing appropriate preventive care screenings and treatment for low-income residents, it ranked 28th in health-care access and affordability, 46th in potentially avoidable hospital use and 50th in promoting healthy lifestyles.

The report, titled "Health Care in the Two Americas," found big gaps between the lowest- and highest-performing states. For instance, low-income adults in West Virginia are far more likely to lose six or more teeth to decay or disease compared to Connecticut, Hawaii and Utah.

The report also ranked West Virginia at the bottom for the number of hospital admissions and return trips and potentially avoidable emergency room visits among Medicare patients.

"We found repeated evidence that we are often two Americas, divided by income and geography when it comes to opportunities to lead long and healthy lives," said Cathy Schoen, a Commonwealth Fund senior vice president and the report's lead author. "These are more than numbers. We are talking about people's lives, health, and well-being."

Nine of the bottom 10 states were in the South.

The report used the most current data available, generally from 2010-2011. The goal is to prompt state policymakers and health care leaders to use the data to target resources for improvements for low-income residents.

West Virginia is already taking steps to do that.

Read the original:

Report: W.Va. lagging on health care for poor

Health care seen wanting, but access better

How to improve health care for low-income Americans? Supporters of the Affordable Care Act say the key is expanding access to health insurance.

But in New York, that situation appears flipped, according to a report to be released Wednesday by The Commonwealth Fund.

Low-income New Yorkers fare better than residents of most other states at getting affordable medical services. But their illnesses are not always prevented or treated as effectively as other Americans, and they are more likely than most to end up in the hospital when such a trip could be avoided.

That's according to "Health Care in the Two Americas," a report examining low-income people's experience getting health care in 50 states and the District of Columbia.

New York ranked 17th on measures intended to show how well the state's health care system serves low-income families. About 40 percent of New Yorkers were considered low-income, defined as earning 200 percent of the federal poverty level $22,980 a year for an individual and $47,100 a year for a family.

The state was listed among the best performers in making health care accessible and affordable to low-income residents. It also scored well on measures indicating residents lead long, healthy lives, including relatively low rates of obesity and premature deaths.

But it landed among the lower half of states on measures of prevention, treatment and avoidable hospital admissions.

The reasons lie mostly in problems downstate, said Cathy Schoen, the report's lead author.

Asthma-related hospitalizations among children from low-income communities in New York were eight times higher than in Oregon, the state with the lowest rate. New York City health officials are working to remove asthma triggers from deteriorating homes, Schoen said.

The state's health system, especially downstate, is fragmented, with lots of specialty care and insufficient coordination, Schoen said. That accounts for high rates of readmission to the hospital for the same condition, among other things.

Original post:

Health care seen wanting, but access better

Coventry Health Care of Illinois and UnityPoint Health – Methodist Collaborate to Form High-Performance Network

PEORIA, Ill.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Coventry Health Care of Illinois, Inc. and UnityPoint Health Methodist are pleased to announce a new high-performance network in Peoria, IL.

The new product, Carelink from Coventry: A UnityPoint Health Methodist Partnership, is effective September 1, 2013. The goal of this collaboration is to improve quality of care and lower overall health care costs in the Peoria community. The partnership demonstrates a commitment to deliver more value to the patient, no matter what his or her health care needs may be.

Methodist is pleased to partner with Coventry to provide a high level of coordinated care to our community, said Methodist President and CEO Debbie Simon. Our partnership offers a seamless experience of holistic care to our patients. While we improve the quality of care, we can also reduce our patients out-of-pocket costs and enhance their entire health care experience.

Jered Wilson, Coventrys Vice President of Network Development, said, Were excited to partner with Methodist and offer a new and improved path to healthy living. This approach provides aligned, performance-based incentives between Methodist, its physicians and Coventry. Our combined goal is to keep our community that we live in, and serve in, healthy.

Methodist has an employed physician network of over 150 and an active medical staff of nearly 600 that provides coordinated clinic, hospital and home-based care for patients in Central Illinois. In 2012, Methodist delivered more than 1,748 babies, admitted 17,285 patients and had more than 56,545 emergency visits.

High-performance network model drives focus on more coordinated care

A high-performance network collaboration consists of a group of health care providers who assume responsibility for the quality and cost of care for a group of patients.

Coventry works with health care organizations throughout the state to develop products and services that support value-driven, patient-centered care. For more information on this specific high-performance network, please visit http://www.chcillinois.com > Health Care Solutions > Our Products > Carelink from Coventry.

About UnityPoint Health Methodist

See the original post:

Coventry Health Care of Illinois and UnityPoint Health - Methodist Collaborate to Form High-Performance Network

Feds predict health care spending to rise 6.1% next year

Washington The nations health care spending will jump by 6.1 percent next year as the big coverage expansion in President Barack Obamas overhaul kicks in, government experts predicted Wednesday.

Thats more than 2 percentage points higher than the growth rate forecast for this year, and compares with a growth rate that has hovered under 4 percent, historically low, for the past four years.

Much of the increase projected for next year is attributed to the new health care program, which is expected to provide insurance coverage to millions of currently uninsured Americans beginning Jan. 1.

Without it, the estimated growth would be 4.5 percent, according to the report Wednesday from Medicares Office of the Actuary. The findings were published online by the journal Health Affairs.

Other factors driving up spending include an improving economy and the aging of the nations population.

Over the longer term, the health care overhaul would only be a modest contributor to spending increases, the report said. From 2012 to 2022, the new law is projected to add about 0.1 percent to average annual health spending growth.

In all, Obamas plan will add $621 billion to health care spending over that 10-year period, while expanding coverage to some 30 million uninsured people, experts said.

Some 11 million people are expected to gain health insurance coverage in 2014, mostly through new state insurance markets the law sets up or through expanded eligibility for Medicaid, the federal-state insurance program for low-income people.

Medicaid enrollment alone is expected to increase by 8.7 million people next year.

Many of the newly insured are expected to be younger and healthier. Theyre expected to devote a larger share of their health care spending to prescription drugs and physician and clinical services and a smaller share to hospital spending.

Continued here:

Feds predict health care spending to rise 6.1% next year

Health care reforms drive opportunity for real estate investors

Originally Published: September 18, 2013 12:05 PMModified: September 18, 2013 2:42 PM

As health care reforms continue to change how the industry operates, many health systems are also taking a fresh look at how they manage their facilities.

During that re-evaluation, health systems are increasingly asking the question: Do we need to tie up our capital in buildings and infrastructure, or can it be put to better use in other areas of our operations?

The answer, at least as evidenced by recent activity in West Michigan, is that systems seem to be opting for sale-leaseback agreements rather than remaining property owners and they're finding willing investors interested in doing deals.

The health care market "is aggressive right now," said Anthony Pecchio, vice president of health care services for Christman Co. Most health systems these days are more concerned with consolidating, merging or buying other health systems, Pecchio said.

Health care organizations need to achieve a certain scale to operate efficiently in today's health care environment. At the same time, many are looking for capital to reinvest in their caregiving operations and see divesting of their real estate, particularly medical office buildings, as a way to put money in the bank. Being a property owner or their own landlord is not core to their patient-centered missions.

The trend has created an opportunity for third-party developers to develop facilities and lease them out or to take existing noncore facilities, such as medical office buildings and outpatient facilities, off health systems' hands, Pecchio said.

In particular, New York City-based American Realty Capital Healthcare Trust Inc., a real estate investment trust formed to invest primarily in high-quality medical office buildings and health care-related facilities, has been active in West Michigan over the past year.

The REIT, which floated a $1.5 billion initial public offering in 2011 to invest in health care infrastructure, continues to add properties to its portfolio in the sector, the most recent of which in Michigan was the Spectrum Health West Pavilion.

The building, built and owned by Christman, is a two-story, 52,000-square-foot structure designed as a prototype for Spectrum that's set up in the manner of a hub-and-spoke-inspired services delivery environment, said Joe Hooker, development services manager for the contractor.

See the article here:

Health care reforms drive opportunity for real estate investors