Penn Medicine Physician Offers Model for Teaching Residents Value-Based Care

VALUE Framework Urged for Medical and Surgical Residents

Newswise PHILADELPHIA Despite the national consensus on the need to improve the value of health care while reducing unnecessary spending, teaching hospitals often struggle to design curricula to train future physicians to deliver such care to their patients.

Working to fill this gap, Mitesh Patel, MD, MBA, a physician and Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholar at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, worked with colleagues to develop the VALUE framework for teaching-hospitals, academic medical centers, and residency programs. It can be used by physician trainees to assess whether a medical intervention will help patients while keeping costs down. The model is detailed in the September 2012 issue of the Journal of General Internal Medicine.

VALUE is an acronym for 1) validation and variability 2) affordability and access 3) long-term benefits and less side effects 4) utility and usability and 5) effectiveness and errors. In addition to discussing these components, Patel and his colleagues present more than 20 suggestions for ways that residency programs can incorporate them into their training programs.

Our model can be used to train young physicians to assess the benefits of medical interventions, with the goal of selecting those that generate high value and reduce unnecessary costs, says Patel. These include deciding what medical tests to order, selecting the most cost-effective medications to prescribe, and discussing with patients whether or not to have surgery.

As outlined in the VALUE framework, validation refers to the need for residents to evaluate whether a medical intervention has been borne out through evidence-based medicine from rigorous research trials or if it has been used despite weaker evidence. Variability addresses the need to determine if certain medications or treatments, which may be effective in a large group of patients, may be applicable to individual patients based on such characteristics as age, ethnicity, or medical conditions. One technique for teaching this component offered by Patel and his co-authors is to pick one patient a week under consideration for a medical intervention and discuss at least two published studies regarding the validation of potentially relevant medications or treatments and their applicability to the selected patient.

The other components in the VALUE framework, along with examples of how they could be taught to residents as part of their formal training, are included in a table accompanying the article.

At Penn Medicine, residents have access to the Center for Evidence-Based Practice (CEP), one of the only comparative effectiveness centers in the U.S. based in an academic health system, and other value-based clinical tools, including protocols and patient care pathways. The Office of Graduate Medical Education is also working with the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) to explore additional resources addressing many of the components outlined in the VALUE framework.

Training residents to practice medicine using concepts of value-based care is like learning a new language for both residents and their teachers, says Patel. The VALUE framework can bridge this gap and become a useful tool for improving the care of our patients.

Patels co-authors are Matthew M. Davis, MD, MAPP, and Monica L. Lypson, MD, MHPE, both from the University of Michigan Medical School.

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Companion Diagnostics and Personalized Medicine Market Report 2012: Twease.org

ALBANY, N.Y., Aug. 23, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Twease.org - New Report Added in Pharmaceuticals Reports Database Companion Diagnostics and Personalized Medicine Market Report 2012

This is the latest and most up-to-date Market Report from Select Biosciences addressing the companion diagnostics (CDx) and personalized medicine marketplace. Personalized medicine is a broad field with several stakeholders all of which must be aligned in order to capture the immense potential value in targeting therapeutics to the correct patient populationthe field of stratified medicine.

To Browse Full Toc Visit: http://www.twease.org/report/companion-diagnostics-and-personalized-medicine-market-report-2012.htm

Companion Diagnostics has been rapidly expanding over the past 3 years and in this market report we describe the current state of the marketplace from the following perspectives:

Related Reports:

Personalized Medicine Market MicroRNAs and Exosomes Market MicroRNA Market MicroRNA Research and Disease Associations Circulating Tumor Cells

This data-driven characterization of the Companion Diagnostics and Personalized Medicine field is a hands-on document that can be used for competitive benchmarking, business planning, and strategy developmentall the data that have been collected in this industry analysis are presented and they form the basis for the conclusions drawn throughout the market report presented in a format enabling "drag-and-drop" into business presentations/business plansthis Market Report is written and delivered to customers in PowerPoint format.

Extensive Market Analyses Presented in this Report

Personalized Medicine and Companion Diagnostics: Market Segmentation and Quantitative Analysis

Personalized Medicine Industry Landscape: Selected Indications, Biomarkers and Therapeutics

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Companion Diagnostics and Personalized Medicine Market Report 2012: Twease.org

Brown med school relocation allows expansion

PROVIDENCE, R.I.Brown University says its medical school's relocation last year to a new facility near downtown Providence has allowed it to enroll its largest medical education class ever.

The university says the Warren Alpert Medical School's class of 2016 has a record 120 students, including 64 women and 56 men.

The medical school opened a new building in the so-called "Knowledge District" a year ago after a $45 million renovation project. University officials said then that the relocation would allow the program to expand from 100 students per class to 120 -- and eventually 150.

Students in the incoming class range in age from 20 to 32; a dozen have graduate degrees in other fields. The university says one is a Marine combat veteran and another has hosted TV cooking shows.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Brown med school relocation allows expansion

Liberty Bell restaurant to keep 28-foot-tall rooster

LIBERTY, Ind. A 28-foot-tall rooster sign is being allowed to stay up outside a restaurant in a small eastern Indiana town despite complaints that it violated zoning rules.

The Union County Board of Zoning Appeals voted Monday to approve an exception from building rules so that the Liberty Bell restaurant can keep its colorful wood-and-metal sign, WLWT-TV in Cincinnati reported (http://bit.ly/PKKe7Z ).

The county planning director said several people complained that the 16-foot-wide sign was closer to the street than allowed. But residents of the 2,000-person community near the state border with Ohio who showed up to the board meeting supported allowing it to remain.

The restaurants owner, Andy Pitcher, said customers often pose for photos under the sign, which he put up this spring to help draw attention during a street construction project. The debate over whether it should be allowed to remain has helped business, he said.

Weve sold thousands of pieces of chicken over the weekend up and above what we normally do, Pitcher said.

Mark Mayer, a carpenter who helped build the sign, said the rooster is securely moored and able to withstand thunderstorms.

Hes gone through one with 60 to 80 mile an hour winds so far, so hes not going anywhere, Mayer said.

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Liberty Bell restaurant to keep 28-foot-tall rooster

BG Capital Group Taps into Liberty Silver Corp. Amidst forecast of "silver rush"

PLANTATION, Fla., Aug. 28, 2012 /PRNewswire-iReach/ -- BG Capital Group, a venture capital and private equity firm with offices in South Florida, has announced an interest and investment in Liberty Silver Corp. (TSX: LSL, OTCBB:LBSV), an advanced stage junior silver mining company with potential resources of 120m silver equivalent ounces.

"We are confident that this newly discovered deposit located in the United States will yield a substantial supply of silver," said Bobby Genovese, CEO of BG Capital Group. "We anticipate a growing increase in the value of silver and prospect of this project given the limited supply in areas that can be safely mined."

The revival of this US supply source is good news for investors - and the national economy - as this project has the potential to not only provide a safe location to produce but it is also expected to create more jobs. Today, silver production comes primarily from other countries that face challenges including violence and localized uprisings that have put mining to halts.

Liberty currently oversees approximately 24 million inferred ounces of silver equivalent resources located 23 miles from the renowned Coeur Rochester silver mine, known as the "Trinity" project, with an opportunity to become a low-cost, large-scale operation given the existing open pit mine on the property that produced 5m silver ounces in the late 1980s.

Historical drilling and production data, recent surveys and drilling results, as well as BG Capital's independent research reveals the property has potential resources of approximately 120m silver equivalent ounces between the Trinity property and the adjacent Hi Ho silver property of which Liberty recently entered into a mineral rights agreement with.

Liberty Silver Corp is an advanced stage junior mining company focused on developing its flagship property - the Trinity Silver Project - comprised of 10,600 acres including 5,700 acres of fee land and 240 unpatented mining claims. The Trinity property, previously mined and operated by US Borax, produced 5 million ounces of silver from 1.1 million tons of ore from its open pit oxide resource from 1987 to 1989; mining ceased when sulfide mineralization was encountered in the bottom of the pit and metal prices were too low to support mining the sulfide resource.

The Trinity Silver Project is located 25 miles northwest of Lovelock, Nevada (Pershing County) and shares its geographical location with major gold and silver producers including one of the largest silver mines in the United States, the Coeur Rochester silver mine, which produced 125 million ounces of silver from 1986 to 2010 and has an estimated 120 million silver ounces in reserves. The Company holds the right to earn a 70% interest in the Trinity Project from Renaissance Gold (REN.TO).

BG Capital Group is a venture capital and private equity firm that offers more than 20 years of investor relations experience, in-depth marketing and financial management. For more information, visit http://www.bgcapitalgroup.com.

Media Contact: Stephanie Moore Profile Marketing & Public Relations, 5613061944, smoore@profilemarkpr.com

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BG Capital Group Taps into Liberty Silver Corp. Amidst forecast of "silver rush"

Parrott questions McVay’s Republicanism given strong Libertarian ties

Ellis Parrott has refused to debate Will McVay before their Republican Primary Sept. 11 because of McVays remaining, strong ties to the Libertarian Party.

Parrott sent an Aug. 15 letter to Kent County Republican Party Chairman Hans Reigle to explain why he declined an invitation to participate in a candidate debate to be held by the Kent County Young Republicans. In that letter, Parrott expressed concern that McVay had changed his party registration seven times between January 2010 and May 2012, including a switch from Libertarian to Republican on Jan. 11, 2010 and again on May 25.

He paid the fee as a candidate, Parrott told the Dover Post. That doesnt make him a legitimate candidate. I have no problem debating any legitimate candidate.

Parrott said he would debate McVay if he had run as a Libertarian candidate and his Democratic opponent had agreed to these terms.

The winner between Parrott and McVay will face the winner of the Democratic primary William McGlumphy and Andria Bennett.

The problem is, where do you draw the line if you allow a Libertarian to debate? Parrott said. You have two major parties in this state. Do you allow the other minor parties to debate as well? Nationally, there is the same question.

Ive never had an fear of debating anybody, he added. I was a judge for 25 years. So, I think Im quite capable of debating anyone.

McVay had announced his immediate resignation as vice chairman of the Libertarian Party of Delaware in a mass email sent back on Aug. 8. He called Parrotts reasoning for refusing to debate him a pretty convenient excuse.

If Im such a Libertarian, then I should be a pretty easy debate and he should basically shame me out of the race, McVay said.

Meanwhile, Reigle still questioned McVays allegiances in an Aug. 23 email. Namely, Reigle and Parrott had learned from the Delaware Department of Elections for Kent Couny that on Aug. 14 two Libertarians running against other Kent County Republicans had submitted election paperwork signed by McVay in his capacity as chairman of the Kent County Libertarian Party.

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2 islands off Conn. coast put up for sale

NEW HAVEN, Conn.A woman who amassed a collection of small islands off the Connecticut coast is selling two of them.

Christine Svenningsen, a widow of a party-goods magnate, is selling Belden Island for $3.95 million and Jepson Island for nearly $2 million, her real estate agents said. They are part of the Thimble Islands off Branford, which have attracted celebrities and the wealthy for generations.

"For anybody looking for privacy it's got great appeal yet it's very close to the mainland," said Clint Rodenberg, an agent at William Pitt Sotheby's in Madison, where listing agents Margaret Muir and Tony Nuzzo are handling the sale.

Svenningsen, an artist who has restored many of the properties, spent around $33 million to buy about 10 islands in Long Island Sound.

"They're like little pieces of art. I get to put my brush to them," Svenningsen said in 2006.

She does not plan to sell the other islands she owns, Rodenberg said.

"She's looking for someone who will respect them and enjoy them as much as she does," Rodenberg said. "She's simplifying her life somewhat."

The houses are seasonal and rely on gas lights and solar power, Rodenberg said.

Jepson Island is a little over one-quarter of an acre and has a 1,100-square-foot house with a wraparound deck. Belden is slightly over an acre and has a 1912 colonial with about 2,100 square feet and clam beds.

Of the hundreds of Thimble Islands, about 25 are considered habitable. Tour boats have taken sightseers among the islands for generations, while treasure hunters have combed them for Captain Kidd's buried riches.

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2 islands off Conn. coast put up for sale

"Obamacare"? President Obama Suggests "Romney-Doesn't-Care" As a New Name

Aug 28, 2012 3:41pm

President Obama coined a new nickname for a potential action by a hypothetical President Romney today, playing off the Obamacare nickname for health care legislation that his administration initially used, then rejected as pejorative, then re-claimed.

To a a crowd of roughly six thousand at Iowa State University in Ames, Iowa, the president today said, Its up to you whether we go back to a health care system that let insurance companies decide who to cover and when. Governor Romney promised that sometime between taking the oath of office and going to the inaugural ball, hed sit right down, grab a pen and kick seven million young people off their parents plan by repealing health reform, the president said, referring to Romneys pledge in June to act to repeal Obamacare on his first day if elected President of the United States.

Thats what he says hes going to do, the president said. You know, maybe we should call his plan Romney-Doesnt-Care because I do care. I do care.

WATCH:

The president said this law is here to stay. Nows not the time to refight the battles of the last four years. Nows the time for us to go ahead and move forward. And Ill work with anybody who wants to make our health care system better, but Im not going to stand by and let folks talk about how we should go back to the days when ordinary folks who were working really hard suddenly find themselves losing their homes, losing their savings just because they get sick.

Pivoting to abortion rights, the president said Republicans can choose to refight the battles that were settled 10 years ago or 20 years ago or some time in the last century. You know, I think women should be trusted to make their own health care decisions.

-Jake Tapper and Mary Bruce

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"Obamacare"? President Obama Suggests "Romney-Doesn't-Care" As a New Name

Orange city freedom clears hurdle

28 August 2012 Last updated at 17:28 ET

A Lisburn council motion to grant the Orange Order the freedom of the city has cleared its first hurdle.

The council agreed on Tuesday to pass the DUP proposal to the committee stage, despite opposition from Sinn Fein and the Alliance Party.

It will go through equality screening, for assessment on whether it has the potential to impact differently and unfairly on various groups.

The motion was proposed by Paul Givan, a DUP councillor and assembly member.

Mr Givan said it had "nothing to do with getting the right to march in Lisburn".

"This is all about recognising an organisation which has over 600 halls in Northern Ireland, used extensively by the community," he said.

"In Lisburn in particular, the community get excellent value out of the Orange Order - they are part of our society and we want to recognise them."

Sinn Fein councillor Arthur Carson said the Orange Order had "a lot of reforming to do" before his party would back such a proposal.

"The anti-Catholic stance in terms of membership, the refusal to engage with residents groups over parades, expelling members who attend Catholic services - these are all big issues that the Orange Order need to take into consideration," he said.

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Island beaches remain open

Cameron County leaders will close the county beaches at 8 p.m. today because of conditions brought by Hurricane Isaac.

County Judge Carlos H. Cascos ordered the temporary closing of the beaches until further noticed.

This includes Beach Access No. 4, No. 5 and No. 6 on the northern of the Island and Isla Blanca Park on the southern end of the Island, and Boca Chica Beach.

He orderedthe closures due to the high tides and dangerous conditions brought on by Isaac.

I have asked our law enforcement authorities to ensure that no individuals or vehicles be allowed access to the beaches on the North end and Sound end of South Padre Island as well as Boca Chica Beach, Cascos said in a press release.

It is very important that the public pay attention to our warnings and stay our of harms way. We continue to monitor tidal conditions as Hurricane Isaac makes it way to the Louisiana coast, the county judge said.

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Island beaches remain open

Island beaches to close until further notice

Cameron County leaders will close the county beaches at 8 p.m. today because of conditions brought by Hurricane Isaac.

County Judge Carlos H. Cascos ordered the temporary closing of the beaches until further noticed.

This includes Beach Access No. 4, No. 5 and No. 6 on the northern of the Island and Isla Blanca Park on the southern end of the Island, and Boca Chica Beach.

He orderedthe closures due to the high tides and dangerous conditions brought on by Isaac.

I have asked our law enforcement authorities to ensure that no individuals or vehicles be allowed access to the beaches on the North end and Sound end of South Padre Island as well as Boca Chica Beach, Cascos said in a press release.

It is very important that the public pay attention to our warnings and stay our of harms way. We continue to monitor tidal conditions as Hurricane Isaac makes it way to the Louisiana coast, the county judge said.

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Island beaches to close until further notice

Wisconsin, Michigan beaches get $2.6 million to protect water quality

The federal government announced Tuesday a $2.6 million batch of grants to protect water quality at Great Lakes beaches in Wisconsin and Michigan.

It includes a $1 million grant to the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh to work to reconfigure eight state beaches to reduce bacteria levels. The beaches on the list include Grant Park in South Milwaukee as well as swimming areas in Marinette, Algoma, Manitowoc and Kenosha.

"These Great Lakes Restoration Initiative grants will improve water quality, allowing people to enjoy more days at Great Lakes beaches," Susan Hedman of the Environmental Protection Agency said in a news release. "The projects will make beaches safer, by eliminating harmful bacteria and other sources of contamination."

The funding comes from the Obama administration's ongoing Great Lakes Restoration Initiative, a federal program to protect and restore the health of the world's largest freshwater system.

2012, Journal Sentinel Inc. All rights reserved.

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Chippewa County Beaches Receive Grant Money to Improve Water Quality

Former Suttons Bay High School Graduate's Body Found in Montana After Two Year Search Former Suttons Bay High School Graduate's Body Found in Montana After Two Year Search

Updated: Tuesday, August 28 2012 12:47 PM EDT2012-08-28 16:47:22 GMT

Former Suttons Bay High School graduate's body found in Montana after a two year search. Noah Pippin went missing in 2010 when he decided to go hiking in Montana in the Bob Marshall Wilderness Area. Noah's

Former Suttons Bay High School graduate's body found in Montana after a two year search. Noah Pippin went missing in 2010 when he decided to go hiking in Montana in the Bob Marshall Wilderness Area. Noah's

Updated: Monday, August 27 2012 11:22 AM EDT2012-08-27 15:22:44 GMT

9&10 News is digging deeper into the case of a Clare man with HIV accused of having sex with others and not telling them about his infection. Last week, police arrested 25-year-old Philip Manners. He

9&10 News is digging deeper into the case of a Clare man with HIV accused of having sex with others and not telling them about his infection. Last week, police arrested 25-year-old Philip Manners. He

Updated: Monday, August 27 2012 7:21 PM EDT2012-08-27 23:21:26 GMT

Police want to get the word out in case there were any other partners involved with Philip Manners. Manners was arrested for potentially spreading the virus last week in the city of Clare. Police say

Police want to get the word out in case there were any other partners involved with Philip Manners. Manners was arrested for potentially spreading the virus last week in the city of Clare. Police say

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Chippewa County Beaches Receive Grant Money to Improve Water Quality

BAFact Math: The Sun is 12 *trillion* times brighter than the faintest star you can see | Bad Astronomy

[BAFacts are short, tweetable astronomy/space facts that I post every day. On some occasions, they wind up needing a bit of a mathematical explanation. The math is pretty easy, and it adds a lot of coolness, which I'm passing on to you! You're welcome.]

Todays BAFact: The Sun is 12 trillion times brighter than the faintest star you can see with your naked eye.

In yesterdays BAFact, I showed how the Sun is about 400,000 times brighter than the full Moon and I showed my math. Thats an amazing brightness difference, but while I was writing it I had to wonder: how much brighter is the Sun than the faintest star you can see?

The faintest stars visible to the naked eye have a magnitude of about 6. This depends on lots of stuff, like how dark the sky is, how good your eyesight is, and so on. Some people with excellent vision can see stars down to magnitude 7, and there are reports of a few extraordinary people who can see even fainter. But on a dark night, the average person can just barely see 6th magnitude stars.

Lets use that number then. All we have to do is plug that into the equation I gave yesterday (and remembering that the Sun has a magnitude of -26.7):

Brightness ratio = 2.512(6 (-26.7)) = 2.51232.7 = 12 trillion

Yegads! Thats 12,000,000,000,000 times brighter!

Now, to be fair, thats not really the brightness range your eyes can detect. You cant look right at the Sun easily or comfortably; its simply too bright. So the range of brightness your eye can see is probably smaller.

We can put a lower limit on it easily enough using the Moon. The Moon is the second brightest object in the sky, and we know we can look at that easily enough, so lets do that math (the Moons magnitude is -12.7 when its full):

Brightness ratio = 2.512(6 (-12.7)) = 2.51218.7 = 30 million

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BAFact Math: The Sun is 12 *trillion* times brighter than the faintest star you can see | Bad Astronomy

International Astronomical Union's Office of Astronomy for Development Makes Landmark AGreements

The International Astronomical Union's (IAU) Office of Astronomy for Development (OAD) programme is announcing a number of exciting new partnerships that will assist with the IAU's decadal strategic plan, aimed at realising the societal benefits of astronomy. These landmark decisions involve establishing two new coordinating centres that use astronomy as a tool for development in the East and South East Asian regions, as well as launching an array of exciting programmes and events with different institutions across the world.

The first of these pioneering agreements, concerning a coordinating centre to be established in the East Asian region (in China), was signed on Tuesday 21 August 2012 by a consortium of institutes: the Kavli Institute for Astronomy and Astrophysics (KIAA, Peking University), Beijing Planetarium and Yunnan Astronomical Observatory. The consortium is supported in their efforts by various important partners including the National Astronomical Observatories of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (NAOC), the East Asian Core Observatories Association (EACOA), and Pyongyang Astronomical Observatory (PAO).

The centre will cover two important functions: a regional node, which will coordinate astronomy for development activities in countries within the general geographical region of East Asia, and a Language Expertise Centre, which will deal with all aspects relating to (mainly) Chinese language and culture.

A second regional node will be established in the South East Asian region (in Thailand) and coordinated by the National Astronomical Research Institute of Thailand (NARIT).

These agreements are the first of their kind to be signed anywhere in the world. They follow the IAU's Announcement of Opportunity that went out in January 2012, and which has attracted 31 letters of intent and 15 full proposals (received from every populated continent) to establish coordinating nodes.

In addition to these exciting announcements, the OAD, in partnership with The Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics (ICTP) has launched a call for proposals for a number of global activities aimed at using astronomy to stimulate high quality education and research at university level. One of these activities is the Associate Scientists programme, where scientists and lecturers from developing regions, who are interested in using astronomy to develop university-level education in their home countries, will be provided with the means to travel to the ICTP in Italy and stay for a period of up to six weeks per year. Individual travel grants, funds for meetings and workshops as well as regional schools for young scientists are also included in this programme.

An additional agreement with the Inter-University Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysics (IUCAA, based in Pune, India) will provide training for potential leaders in the development of astronomy education at university, school and public levels, as well as facilitate visits from skilled experts. A separate agreement with the University of Central Lancashire will award 12 scholarships for their distance learning astronomy programme to African students. These scholarships will target individuals who have demonstrated a potential to lead astronomy activities in their home countries and are in need of a professional qualification in the field.

These announcements are an important step towards cultivating the field of astronomy in developing regions and allowing them to benefit from it as a tool for development.

Anyone interested in submitting a proposal for any of the OAD programmes, including earlier initiatives (not mentioned in this release) relating to universities and research, children and schools and the public are invited to visit http://www.astro4dev.org.

Contacts

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International Astronomical Union's Office of Astronomy for Development Makes Landmark AGreements

What's For Lunch? Meet the New School Menus

Schools across the country are cooking up new recipes to meet updated federal nutrition guidelines that go into effect this fall. The new regulations, created by the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act of 2010, require schools to serve students fruits and vegetables every day and only fat-free or low-fat milk. They must also serve more whole grains, slash their use of salt, saturated fat, and trans fat, and limit calories according to the age of children. So, for kids in kindergarten through fifth grade, calorie limits for breakfast and lunch are set at 500 and 650, respectively. For high schoolers, those numbers increase to 600 and 850.

Some 32 million kids eat school meals, and many are already getting a taste of the healthier fare being dished out at schools. Lots of schools have gotten a head start on raising nutrition standards, as a result of grassroots efforts to boost children's health. In fact, more than 4,000 schools have already been certified by the USDA's HealthierUS School Challenge, a voluntary program that rewards exemplary programs in fitness and nutrition.

Among the myriad efforts under way, Miami-Dade County Public Schools, for example, is working with local chefs to craft healthy meals sold in school vending machines. And in Vermont, the Burlington School District is seeing how kids feel about spaghetti squash in place of their pasta, says Diane Pratt-Heavner, media relations director for the School Nutrition Association. Plenty more examples can be found through the association's website: http://www.traytalk.org and on the U.S. Department of Agriculture's website, which also provides sample menus.

[See Food Fight: School Lunch, a 'Battlefield'.]

Below, a snapshot of innovative dishes being served in schools around the country, according to the School Nutrition Association. All meet the new federal guidelines:

1. Knox County Schools, Tenn.

Pizza made with a whole-grain crust and reduced-sodium sauce using sweet potato pure

Spinach Maria (a local dish) or steamed broccoli

Locally grown melon slices

2. Shawnee Public Schools, Okla.

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What's For Lunch? Meet the New School Menus

Herbalife Strengthens Nutrition Advisory Board

LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Herbalife Ltd. (HLF) welcomes experts from Ireland and Colombia to its Nutrition Advisory Board.

The Nutrition Advisory Board is comprised of leading experts from around the world in the fields of nutrition and health who inform, educate and train Herbalife independent distributors on the principles of nutrition, physical activity and healthy lifestyle. The board is chaired by David Heber, M.D., Ph.D., director of the Center for Human Nutrition at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA).

Jaime Orrego Gaviria, M.D. is an expert in neonatology medicine in Colombia. He has been in private practice since 1982 and is currently Director of the NICU at Fundacin Clnica del Valle del Lili, Cali-Colombia. Gaviria received his medical degree from the Universidad de Antioquia, Medelln, and has a post-graduate degree in pediatrics and a specialism in neonatology. He holds several memberships of professional and honorary societies, such as The Colombian Society of Pediatrics and Neonatology. Gaviria lectures extensively and has been published on a variety of topics concerning pediatrics, perinatology and neonatology.

Carel le Roux, MBChB, MSc, MRCP, FRCPath, PhD is an expert in metabolic medicine and is currently a Professor of Experimental Pathology, University College, Dublin, Ireland. Professor le Roux received his medical degree from the University of Pretoria, South Africa and his PhD in 2005 from Imperial College London. He is a member of a number of learned societies, such as the Association for the Study of Obesity and the Nutrition Society. He has been published extensively and currently holds a number of editorial roles for journals in his field, including Metabolic Journal Watch, Clinical Obesity, and Surgery for Obesity and Related Diseases. He has also represented South Africa in athletics at the World Indoor Championships and the Commonwealth Games.

About Herbalife Ltd.

Herbalife Ltd. (HLF) is a global nutrition company that sells weight-management, nutrition, and personal care products intended to support a healthy lifestyle. Herbalife products are sold in more than 80 countries to and through a network of independent distributors. The company supports the Herbalife Family Foundation and its Casa Herbalife program to help bring good nutrition to children. Herbalife's website contains information about Herbalife, including financial and other information for investors at http://ir.Herbalife.com. The company encourages investors to visit its website from time to time, as information is updated and new information is posted.

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Antibiotic residues in sausage meat may promote pathogen survival

Public release date: 28-Aug-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Jim Sliwa jsliwa@asmusa.org 202-942-9297 American Society for Microbiology

Antibiotic residues in uncured pepperoni or salami meat are potent enough to weaken helpful bacteria that processors add to acidify the sausage to make it safe for consumption, according to a study to be published in mBio, the online open-access journal of the American Society for Microbiology, on August 28.

Sausage manufacturers commonly inoculate sausage meat with lactic-acid-producing bacteria in an effort to control the fermentation process so that the final product is acidic enough to kill pathogens that might have existed in the raw meat. By killing the bacteria that produce lactic acid, antibiotic residues can allow pathogenic bacteria to proliferate.

Researchers at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark, and University College Cork, Ireland, found that antibiotic concentrations within limits set by US and European Union (EU) regulators are high enough to slow fermentation, the process that acidifies the sausages and helps destroy foodborne pathogens like Salmonella or E. coli.

"At low concentrations and at regulatory levels set by authorities, we could see that the lactic acid bacteria are more susceptible to the antibiotics than the pathogens are," says Hanne Ingmer, of the University of Copenhagen, a researcher on the study. "So basically, we can have a situation where residual antibiotics in the meat can prevent or reduce fermentation by the lactic acid bacteria, but these concentrations do not effect survival or even multiplication of pathogens."

Antibiotics used as growth promoters or to treat disease in livestock can eventually end up in meat, and regulators in the US and EU have set limits on the concentrations of antibiotics in meat for consumption by humans. Ingmer and her colleagues set out to determine whether antibiotics falling within statutory limits might interfere with the process of fermentation in products like pepperoni, salami, or chorizo - sausages that are fermented using lactic- acid-producing bacteria in a curing process many cultures have employed for hundreds of years. She says fermented sausages occasionally cause serious bacterial infections, but it's never been understood why that might be.

In small-scale experiments in the lab, Ingmer and her colleagues added the antibiotics oxytetracycline or erythromycin to meat inoculated with lactic-acid-producing bacteria and pathogens Escherichia coli O157:H7 and Salmonella enterica. They followed the progress of the fermentation and tracked the survival of the pathogens. Ingmer says several different starter cultures of lactic-acid-producing bacteria were sensitive to these antibiotics and hence did not acidify the sausage meat effectively - results that could explain why people sometimes get sick from eating fermented sausage.

Ingmer says the results show antibiotics can potentially have a paradoxical effect that would increase the risk of foodborne illness: antibiotic residues reduce the effectiveness of bacteria that should make the sausages safe but don't affect the bacteria that can cause illness.

Although the results raise an alarm for the manufacture of processed meats, Ingmer stresses that it is important to conduct similar tests in manufacturing facilities. "The majority of sausages are manufactured at a commercial scale. It has to be addressed whether this is a problem in a real life facility," Ingmer says.

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Antibiotic residues in sausage meat may promote pathogen survival