Health care reform law will lead to rational care, not rationing

In this file photo taken May 14, 2012, Kathy Watson sits outside Shands Lake Shore Hospital, where she receives her cancer treatment and also picks up patients for her medical transport company, in Lake City, Fla. Watson voted Republican in 2008 and believes the government has no right telling Americans to get health insurance. Nonetheless, she says she'd be dead if it weren't for President Barack Obama's health care law.

Associated Press

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The Affordable Care Act remains in Republican crosshairs and very much in the news. In recent days, several patients have asked me what the law will mean for them. Many of the people I care for are incurably ill and need expensive medical care to stay alive. They've heard politicians say "Obamacare" will take away their choices, rob them of hope for living longer and cast their fate to "death panels" of faceless bureaucrats. Fortunately, none of this is true.

As a palliative care physician, I was relieved by the Supreme Court's ruling and hope Congress allows the law to stand. This is not a partisan reaction. Diseases know no politics. I'm relieved because this law may well unravel patterns of payment and practice that promote irrational care and make dying much harder than it has to be.

Today, most doctors are salaried employees and health care is a complex industry. Yet we still pay physicians for the quantity of procedures they perform rather than the quality of care and results they provide. Our system is specialist-centered rather than patient-centered. And anyone who has watched a loved one die badly will tell you that sometimes specialists do too much.

Our current structure for financing and delivering medical treatment developed in the decades after World War II, when doctors' offices were the engines of the health care system. Doctors were paid for services: an office visit, house call, setting a broken bone, performing an appendectomy or tonsillectomy. The busier doctors were, because of demand or reputation, the more money they made.

The state of end-of-life care in America is marked by too many treatments and too little attention to alleviating pain, clear communication between doctors and patients (or their families) and coordination among multiple specialists or treatment centers. In the quest to save lives, our health care system has become exclusively a disease-treatment system.

Medical miracles abound: antibiotics, sophisticated surgery, organ transplantation, artificial kidneys, mechanical ventilators, implantable defibrillators and pumps to assist failing hearts. But medical science has yet to make one person immortal although from the way the health care is paid for and delivered, you would think we had.

In the prevailing fee-for-service financing system, insurers, including Medicare and Medicaid, routinely reimburse hospitals and doctors for treatments regardless of whether they have been proved to be effective. All of this makes money for doctors, hospitals and pharmaceutical and medical device companies. But it makes no sense for dying people, only adding to their and their families' miseries.

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Health care reform law will lead to rational care, not rationing

Wapello clinic will shut down

WAPELLO - The University of Iowa Health Care clinic in Wapello is closing its doors after 14 years of service, UI Health Care officials announced Thursday.

Russell Quinton, a physicians assistant at the clinic, said the staff was notified Wednesday. The last day of services will be Aug. 31.

"Economic reality and other factors indicate that our direct involvement in providing primary care services in this community cannot continue," Rami Boutros, executive medical director for off-site clinics, said in a release. "At this point, we need to consolidate our medical resources in locations where they will be able to serve more people."

The clinic is located at 218 N. Second St. in Wapello.

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"Their dollars are getting short, and they had to consolidate. It makes business sense," Quinton said. "They want to focus more on the clinics closer to Iowa City."

Patient care at the site is provided by Quinton and additional staff.

Quinton, a receptionist and two nurses now are left looking for another job.

"(The University) is closing the clinic, but they are helping us find work," Quinton said. "They are trying to support the staff through all of this."

Finding work, Quinton said, is not his main concern.

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Wapello clinic will shut down

European Agency Recommends Gene Therapy Approval

redOrbit Staff & Wire Reports Your Universe Online

A European Union agency for the evaluation of medicinal products is recommending the approval of a gene therapy treatment for a rare disease, which would be the first time a treatment of this kind has received the regulatory go-ahead for use in the West, according to various reports published Friday.

A statement released by the European Medicines Agency (EMA) Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) officially recommended the authorization of Glybera (alipogene tiparvovec) for use throughout all EU member states. Glybera, which is manufactured by the Dutch firm uniQure, is used to treat lipoprotein lipase deficiency (LPLD), an extremely rare disorder that prevents people from digesting fat.

It had previously been rejected by the EMA on three occasions, but was approved at the behest of the European Commission, the Associated Press (AP) explained. Furthermore, the agency recommended approval under strict conditions, including requiring uniQure to create a registry in order to track patients using the experimental treatment, which had only been tested on 27 patients during previous clinical trials.

The recommendation requires final approval from the European Commission, but as Thomas H. Maugh II of the Los Angeles Times points out, the Commission generally follows the recommendations of the agency, and if it does so this time, the product could be available in all 27 members of the European Union by the end of the year.

If Glybera does indeed receive approval, it will become the first gene therapy to be made available outside a clinical trial in either Europe or the United States, Guardian reporter Ian Sample said. In 2004, a gene therapy designed to treat cancer was approved in China, but the prospect of this type of treatment becoming widely available outside of the Asian market has created excitements amongst experts.

This is a watershed moment. Gene therapy holds incredible promise for people, especially those with rare diseases, former FDA Director of Orphan Products Development Tim Cot, currently an independent consultant at the Keck Graduate Institute in California, told Sample. This is not an isolated example, this is the beginning of something. It paves the way for the approval of other treatments of this kind.

There are about 3,000 of these rare genetic diseases out there waiting for a cure and this is the first one to come through. If you ask me, gene therapy is the way were going to cure those 3,000 diseases, he added.

Essentially, gene therapy replaces problematic genes with healthy copies, and while the process can be easily explained, it has been far harder to master, Sample said. Several early forms of the treatment proved ineffective as they were unable to produce enough copies of the correct cell types, and some even created the incorrect types of genes, in some cases resulting in patient death.

LPLD, which affects approximately one or two out of every million individuals, occurs when a persons body lacks an enzyme that breaks down chylomicrons, or large fat-carrying molecules that enter the circulation following a meal. The deficiency of the lipoprotein causes the chylomicrons to accumulate, leading to whitening of the blood, the blocking of smaller blood vessels, and inflammation of the pancreas.

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European Agency Recommends Gene Therapy Approval

Freedom Post Shutout to End Losing Streak

July 20, 2012 - Frontier League (FL) Florence Freedom O'Fallon,MO - The Florence Freedom shutout the River City Rascals Friday night with a 7-0 win. With the victory, the Freedom improved to 29-27 on the season and ended their five game losing streak.

The Freedom jumped out to a 2-0 lead, thanks to a pair of solo homeruns by Eddie Rodriguez and Jim Jacquot. Rodriguez hit his 7th of the year in the 2nd inning while Jacquot launched his 5th long ball of the season in the 4th. Andres Caceres improved to 5-2, as the Freedom starter went 5.1 innings, yielding only 3 hits, while walking 5 and striking out 2.

The Freedom added to their lead in the 8th inning sending eight men to the plate as Esteban Meletiche scored from 3rd on a wild pitch, Peter Fatse hit a bases clearing three run triple, and Rodriguez added a SAC Fly. Victor Gomez led the Freedom offense going 3-3 at the plate. The Freedom got 3.2 scoreless innings out of the bullpen from Jose Velazquez, Brennan Flick, and Matt Kline.

The Freedom will go for the series win, as they wrap up their 9 game road Saturday night against the Rascals. Saturday's game can be heard with Steve Jarnicki starting at 7:50 pm on Real Talk 1160 and realtalk1160.com.

Discuss this story on the Frontier League message board... Digg this story Add to Del.icio.us

The opinions expressed in this release are those of the organization issuing it, and do not necessarily reflect the thoughts or opinions of OurSports Central or its staff.

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Freedom Post Shutout to End Losing Streak

Keeping the beaches safe and swimmable

In high unattractive boots with an extended pole and a sterile bottle, public health inspector students all over the city are testing Hamilton and Halton beaches.

Hamilton public health tests eight beaches and Halton Region tests seven. Out of those 15, only two are currently labelled as unsafe; Coronation Park West in Oakville and Bayfront Park beach in Hamilton.

As per Ontario Ministry of the Environment regulations, beaches must be tested at least once a week. In Hamilton, Bayfront and Pier 4 are tested four times a week.

The harbour beaches are tested more often because of the large population of waterfowl and historically those beaches have had a high population of contaminants, such as Escherichia coli, or E. coli. For a beach to be safe there must be less than 100 E. coli bacterium per 100 mL of beach water.

E. coli can indicate other bacteria and viruses are present in the water, said Dr. Hamidah Meghani, an associate medical officer of health for the City of Hamilton. Beach water can contain germs such as bacteria, viruses and parasites which can cause diarrhea, fever and respiratory infections in swimmers.

Nicole Mathews, manager of healthy environments for the Halton Region, said that E. coli is a big problem in Oakville.

I dont know why they have more geese, said Mathews. They seem to be attracted there.

Goose droppings are one of the biggest issues to any beach but especially the bay beaches because they are sheltered from the wind and strong current.

The geese and the sewer water are the main reasons why a beach would be marked unsafe. When it rains, the waste droppings naturally run off into the water.

Its important to know that entering the water itself isnt the issue, but its swallowing the water, said Meghani. Taking in E. coli can cause diarrhea, fever, and respiratory issues but rarely death.

Continued here:

Keeping the beaches safe and swimmable

Bathing ban lifted at Clare beaches

irishtimes.com - Last Updated: Saturday, July 21, 2012, 14:53

A ban on swimming at three beaches in Co Clare has been lifted today after tests on water samples showed the amount of bacteria in the water had fallen.

The restrictions were implemented yesterday at the Kilkee, Lahinch and Spanish Point beaches amid concern over E-coli pollution in the sea, which was thought to have arisen because of abnormal weather conditions.

Clare County Council said this afternoon that preliminary results of water samples taken from the beaches yesterday had shown a dramatic reduction in the levels of bacteria in the water. This was due to improved weather, the council said.

On the advice of the HSE and following analysis of water samples, the council is delighted to be able to announce the lifting of all restrictions relating to bathing at Lahinch, Kilkee and Spanish Point, said the councils director of services Anne Haugh said.

Public notices indicating that swimming and surfing at the three locations are no longer prohibited are being erected this afternoon, while the Blue Flag at Lahinch and Kilkee beaches have been restored having been temporarily withdrawn on Friday.

The council said yesterday that the pollution was caused by water runoff from excessive and sustained rainfall over the past two months.

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Bathing ban lifted at Clare beaches

MSM tackles the need to explore… and gets it very right | Bad Astronomy

BABloggee Steven Avery on Twitter sent me a link to a story about astronomy done on MSNBC and its great. Seriously, its worth the 11:30 to watch it. They show not just what were doing, but why were doing it. Its rare for any mainstream medium to cover this well, but its extraordinary that they delve into the philosophy and sheer joy of exploration.

[You may need to refresh this page to get the video to load.]

Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Fantastic. The short segment after, with Brian Williams talking to Harry Smith is simply wonderful. Its uplifting to see two news people talking about how much they love this sort of thing. I wish we had more of this. I spend a lot of time shaking my head and gritting my teeth over science coverage in the news in this country, so something like this is a breath of fresh air so sweet its staggering.

Related Posts:

- Debating Space - Did a meteor plunge into the ocean near Perth? Im thinking no. - Wall Street Journal: neutrinos show climate change isnt real - Big Picture Science: climate change denial on Fox News - Homeopathy slammed by Australian TV news show

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MSM tackles the need to explore… and gets it very right | Bad Astronomy

Research and Markets: Nutrition and Vitamin Partnering 2007-2012

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/fnttfk/nutrition_and_vita) has announced the addition of the "Nutrition and Vitamin Partnering 2007-2012" company profile to their offering.

Nutrition & Vitamins Partnering 2007-2012 provides understanding and access to the nutrition & vitamins partnering deals and agreements entered into by the worlds leading healthcare companies.

The report provides an analysis of nutrition & vitamins partnering deals. The majority of deals are discovery or development stage whereby the licensee obtains a right or an option right to license the licensors nutrition & vitamins technology. These deals tend to be multicomponent, starting with collaborative R&D, and commercialization of outcomes.

Understanding the flexibility of a prospective partners negotiated deals terms provides critical insight into the negotiation process in terms of what you can expect to achieve during the negotiation of terms. Whilst many smaller companies will be seeking details of the payments clauses, the devil is in the detail in terms of how payments are triggered contract documents provide this insight where press releases do not.

This data driven report contains over 220 links to online copies of actual liver disease deals and contract documents as submitted to the Securities Exchange Commission by companies and their partners, where available. Contract documents provide the answers to numerous questions about a prospective partners flexibility on a wide range of important issues, many of which will have a significant impact on each party's ability to derive value from the deal.

In conclusion, this report provides everything a prospective dealmaker needs to know about partnering in the

research, development and commercialization of nutrition & vitamins technologies and products.

Report scope

Nutrition & Vitamins Partnering 2007-2012 is intended to provide the reader with an in-depth understanding and access to nutrition & vitamins trends and structure of deals entered into by leading companies worldwide.

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Research and Markets: Nutrition and Vitamin Partnering 2007-2012

Finding MRSA

In the Journal of Clinical Microbiology, researchers at University Hospital Heidelberg in Germany evaluate how well the new BD Max MRSA assay can detect low-prevalence methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus as compared to BD's GeneOhm MRSA achromopeptidase assay. The Max MRSA assay had a 93.9 percent sensitivity and a 99.2 percent specificity while the GeneOhm MRSA ACP assay 93.8 percent sensitivity and 98.3 specificity, though the researchers note that the differences were not statistically significant. Upon retesting, the Max MRSA test could resolve all samples while the GeneOhm MRSA ACP tests could not. In addition, the researchers point out that GeneOhm MRSA ACP assay took less time to deliver results, though it needed more hands-on time than the Max MRSA test did.

"This study shows that within a routine clinical setting in a population with low MRSA prevalence the fully automated BD Max MRSA assay and the established BD GeneOhm MRSA ACP assay have similar sensitivity and specificity characteristics," the researchers conclude. "The BD Max MRSA assay produced less unresolved results, had fewer false positive results and showed reduced handling requirements thereby facilitating use of this molecular assay."

Link:
Finding MRSA

Longevity Global Inc. Comes Up With Brand New Line Of Multi Utility WeldAll Series of Welders

(PRWEB) July 20, 2012

Longevity Global Inc. is the leading equipment brand of the nation, deals in welders, cutters and power generators. They work with high success ratio and complete customer satisfaction. Longevity Global Inc. has announced multi utility welders for sale with improved and innovative technology. Their welding equipment and other products are best in efficiency and comes with assured long service for various industrial clients. Longevity Global Inc. provides extensive collection of welders such as tig welders, mig welders and stick welders.

Mr. Simon Katz, president of Longevity Global Inc. took the dice to make an announcement. He stated, We feel great to introduce our WeldAll series combo welders in all the types of welders. These Multi-Purpose Welder machines are available with MOSFET and IGBT Inverter Technology. These welding equipment are portable and simple in use for all your welding jobs such as aluminum welding and cutting. Our innovative R&D department offers these machines with TIG, STICK, plasma cutter combinations from small sized machines ranging in weight from 40-70lbs and no bigger than the size of a standard microwave.

Longevity Global Inc. supply and manufactures economy welders such as aluminum welders, stick welders, and others. Their WeldAll Series combo welder can generally weld and cut all types of metals including aluminum, steel, bronze, copper, stainless steel, mild steel, etc. Their offered welders for sale are cost competitive in comparison to most of the leading market players and are very affordable for retail as well as industrial clients.

Longevity Global Inc. is providing its dedicated service since 2001. It is growing at a phenomenal pace with high customer satisfaction, innovative products and efficient industrial production. It works in different parts of world with distributors in Canada, Mexico, Brazil, Australia, United Kingdom, and multiple other countries. Longevity Welding serve globally with manufacturing facilities with its logistic companies to effectively distribute products in a punctual and effective manner. To know more visit http://www.longevity-inc.com

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Longevity Global Inc. Comes Up With Brand New Line Of Multi Utility WeldAll Series of Welders

Biology Leaves Gay Men Highly Vulnerable to HIV: Study

By Randy Dotinga HealthDay Reporter

FRIDAY, July 20 (HealthDay News) -- New research pinpoints a major reason why gay and bisexual men remain so vulnerable to the AIDS epidemic: When it comes to the transmission of HIV, a man who has unprotected anal intercourse is at especially high risk.

In fact, if that kind of intercourse was only as risky as vaginal intercourse, researchers report, HIV cases among gay and bisexual men would shrink dramatically. It would go down even more, they added, if their rates of casual sex declined.

The reality, however, is much different. "Everywhere we looked, HIV is expanding both in high- and low-income countries among men who have sex with men," said study author Dr. Chris Beyrer, director of the Johns Hopkins Fogarty AIDS International Training and Research Program.

The experts were quick to note that, worldwide, it is heterosexual men and women who are by far the majority of those who are infected with HIV. Still, more than 30 years into the AIDS epidemic, gay and bisexual men remain especially vulnerable to infection despite a heavy emphasis on condoms and HIV testing; these men make up the bulk of HIV cases in the United States and other Western countries.

According to UNAIDS, HIV is more common among gay and bisexual men than adults in general in all areas of the world, even Africa. In North America, an estimated 15 percent of gay and bisexual men are infected with HIV; the rate is the highest, 25 percent, in the Caribbean.

Previous research has shown that being on the receiving end of anal intercourse is equally risky whether you're a man or a woman. The risk was estimated at 1.4 percent per sex act with an infected person -- about 18 times more risky than male-to-female vaginal intercourse.

The study authors estimate that if receptive anal intercourse were only as risky as vaginal intercourse, HIV cases would fall by 80 percent to 98 percent among gay and bisexual men over five years. They also estimate that cases would fall by 29 percent to 51 percent if more gay and bisexual men had sex in long-term relationships instead of casual encounters.

The findings appear in the July 20 issue of The Lancet, along with several other studies that examine the prevalence of HIV -- the virus that causes AIDS -- in gay and bisexual men and offer suggestions about prevention.

Two studies examined the higher risk of HIV infection among black men.

Originally posted here:
Biology Leaves Gay Men Highly Vulnerable to HIV: Study

Happy Feet: Plastic Surgery for Best Foot Forward

Foot Plastic Surgery Is All the Rage, but Is It Safe?

July 20, 2012 (New York City) -- Are toes really the new nose?

Media reports of an uptick in toe and foot plastic surgery suggest that there is nothing that we won't do to put our best feet forward (and of course, sport sexy, strappy, and often pricey shoes). This includes getting our toes shortened, liposuctioned, or removed altogether.

Liposuction may help slim toes so they fit in pointy stiletto toe boxes, and some women opt to shorten a toe or remove one altogether so that they are less snug in the toe box.

Others still are signing up for laser treatments to zap away foot fungus and/or permanently remove hair on their toes and feet. There is also a surge in what are being called "Loub jobs," a plastic surgery procedure that allows women to wear their pricey Christian Louboutin shoes without pain.

"Foot beautification is definitely a trend," says Wendy Lewis. She is a New York City-based beauty consultant and author of several books, including Plastic Makes Perfect. "Many of these foot concerns are directly related to the shoes we wear."

Not everyone is on board. The American Orthopaedic Foot and Ankle Society is against cosmetic foot surgery of any kind. According to the group, foot complications, including permanent nerve damage, infection, bleeding, scarring, and chronic pain when walking, may occur. According to this group, "Cosmetic foot surgery should not be considered in any circumstances."

Cheryl Burgess, MD, is an assistant clinical professor of dermatology at Georgetown University and George Washington University in Washington, D.C. Her foray into the world of foot plastic surgery involved treating people with HIV. These individuals tend to lose fat in their faces and other parts of their body due to the cocktail of medications they must take.

Word got out, and soon Burgess was injecting fat or other fillers such as Sculptra into the feet of women who wanted to wear Christian Louboutin shoes.This treatment has been dubbed a "Loub job."

According to Burgess, another popular foot fix is Botox injections to treat hammer toes. With hammertoes, there is a bend in the middle joint. She also uses Botox to curb excessive and often smelly sweating of the feet. It is already approved to treat excessive underarm sweating.

Originally posted here:
Happy Feet: Plastic Surgery for Best Foot Forward

"Phantom Creep Theatre: Lon Chaney Shall Not Die," Tonight at The Coney Island Museum

At the Coney Island Museum in Brooklyn, the Phantom Creep Theater pays tribute to classic horror with its version of the spook show, a macabre entertainment popular in the early 20th century that weds Grand Guignol tradition with modern sideshow showmanship. Hosted by M.C.’s in the vein of late-night television horror hosts like Ghoulardi and Dr. Creep, the shows feature B movies, live music, old-hat magic and a total blackout in which a monster or phantom tears through the theater.
--"No Rest for the Wicked, Undead or Ghoulish," New York Times.
July 12, 2012

Tonight, at the Coney Island Museum, I hope to see you for "Phantom Creep Theatre: Lon Chaney Shall Not Die!",  an ode to the 1950s spook show organized in part by friend and Midnight Archive creator Ronni Thomas. The night's series of performances, screenings and hijinx will be dedicated to the memory and work of Lon Chaney Sr., patron saint of classic horror, and will feature a live theatrical recreation of the lost 1929 film "Thunder,"which included "insidious carnies, murderous dwarves, [and] ravenous gorillas on the loose" and reputedly killed "the man of a 1,000 faces." In fine spook show tradition, there will also be an attempt to make contact with the ghost of Mr. Chaney, a chance to meet the "Hypno Corpse," varied film screenings, live music, and many thrills and screams, all for only 10 dollars.

Full details follow; hope very much to see you there!

PHANTOM CREEP THEATRE: Lon Chaney Shall Not Die!
Location: The Coney Island Museum
Date: TONIGHT Saturday, July 21
Time: Doors 8:00, Event 8:30 PM
Admission: $10
Free Popcorn!

Set your faces to stun for THE UNHOLY THREE (1930), screened from a 16mm film print! This film includes insidious carnies, murderous dwarves, ravenous gorillas on the loose, Lon Chaney, Sr.'s only speaking role, and much, much more!

Experience a one time live theatrical recreation of the (lost) film that killed Lon Chaney, Sr.... THUNDER! No one has seen this gut wrenching, edge of your seat, golden era rail road drama, in over 80 years!! You can't see it anywhere, but the Phantom Creep Theatre stage!

These presentations and more are part of an entire evening celebrating the man of a 1,000 faces, the man who ceased to exist between pictures, the broken hearted clown who was born on April Fool's Day - Lon Chaney, Sr.!

Will you bear witness to COUNT MOLOCH and EK, as they attempt to make contact with the ghost of Lon Chaney, Sr., live on the Coney Island Museum stage?!?!

Entities known, and unknown, may leave the stage and roam the room in the dark. Will you be ripped from your seat, or frozen with fear to it?

"That's all there is to life: A little laugh, a little tear." - Lon Chaney, Sr.

Plus, the HYPNO CORPSE will shock and amaze you!

LIVE performances, FILM (not digital!) projections, LIVE music! ...ONLY ten bones?! YES! 

The team that ran the original Silver Scream Spook Show at Coney Island, reunite for the first time ever on the stage that started it all! NYC's 8mm Movie Matinee, along with Atlanta GA's Silver Scream Spook Show, and the internet's own Midnight Archive web series, are throwing a gala summer-long series!

A spook show collaboration of colossal proportions in Coney Island! Ghosts materialize before your eyes! Monsters summoned from beyond! Strange creatures reach out at you through the darkness!

Including, but not limited to:

Golden era monster movies presented from 16mm film prints!

Live morbid magicians conjuring spirits that may run out into the audience to shake and shock you to your very core!

Each month is a DIFFERENT theme with NEW films, NEW gags, and NEW live hijinks! Collect ALL the memories and experiences!

You can find out more, and get tickets, by clicking here; tickets can also be purchased at the door. You can read the entire New York Times article about the event by clicking here.

Source:
http://morbidanatomy.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default?alt=rss

Catholics need help experiencing interactive prayer, magazine says

By Cindy Wooden Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- The church must offer people -- especially the young -- a spirituality that responds to their computer-driven desire for interactive experiences, said an influential Jesuit magazine.

The Italian magazine, La Civilta Cattolica, said the church does not have to invent a new spirituality for a new generation. It just has to recognize that because of intensive computer and social network use people have changed, so the church must change the way it offers its spiritual treasures.

The key, the magazine said, is to help people take the step from superficial interaction -- "surfing the net" and clicking on link after link -- to contemplation.

First, people must recognize the need "to safeguard spaces that allow interiorization to develop." That means a bit of silence and being out of arm's reach of the computer or smartphone, the magazine said.

But the church also must offer Catholics ideas of what to do with that quiet time, and the magazine started with something its Jesuit staff knows something about: the Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius, the founder of the Jesuits whose feast is July 31.

The exercises, it said, offer a systematic formula for helping someone take the already-interactive experience of reading to a new level.

For example, its suggestion for contemplating the birth of Jesus begins by asking the reader to "see with the imagination the road from Nazareth to Bethlehem, considering the length and breadth of it, whether it is a flat road or goes through valleys or over hills; and similarly to look at the place of the Nativity, to see how big or small it is, how low or high, and what is in it."

The reader is asked to look around the cave or grotto and see who is there and then to imagine himself or herself in the scene as well, watching, listening and helping, if possible.

In the exercises, the magazine said, the person praying imagines being in the biblical scene, shares the emotions of those present and tries to relive the mystery, "interacting with the personalities and the environment."

See the article here:

Catholics need help experiencing interactive prayer, magazine says

Fishing for spirituality

Rania Khallaf visits Alexandria to trace anything related to spirituality in our hasty material life

When I first heard about this "Spirituality Workshop" I was completely confused, but having been invited to attend the event by its convener, the established caricaturist Hassan Fedawy -- who is known for his crazy and unexpected ideas -- I grew more and more enthusiastic to learn about it.

Spirituality is a term that yields many interpretations; it could refer to our relationship to God and religion, or to music that has a Sufi beat, or for some others it might refer to witchcraft or astrology.

However, what would you make of combining art and spirituality together? It could be a highly refined product.

Spirituality (rawhanyat in Arabic) is the name of a weekly workshop convened and supervised by Fedawy, a creative caricaturist and associate professor at the Faculty of Fine Arts in Alexandria.

Dozens of young people from all walks of life attend the workshop on a weekly basis. Sufi music by legendary musicians such as the famous Nubian singer Hamza Alaa Eddin, widely known internationally, or Sufi chanter Ahmed Barin, give a special contour to the creative atmosphere. The workshop also invites famous literary figures to join and enrich the experience -- one good recent special guest was the Nubian novelist Hagag Odoul, who resides in Alexandria.

During the three-hour workshop, which takes place in the historical Saint Mark's Cathedral on Nabi Danial Street, participants are given a unique opportunity to dig deep inside themselves and come up with something unique that reveals their inner spirit.

There are papers and pencils ready for an outpouring of what is going on inside the creative self. And occasionally, this unique spiritual experience is artistically interrupted by small discussions between Fedawy, the master, and his students.

Are we talking about a healing session here? Most probably, yes. The place itself is already infused with a kind of spirituality thanks to its great history and architecture, and position among other churches in Egypt.

After a delicious lunch at the Greek Club, which overlooks the sea and the Qait Bey Fort I asked my friend Fedawy what triggered the idea in his mind, and why now?

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Fishing for spirituality

Japan successfully launches its freighter to space station

An unmanned Japanese rocket carrying more than five tons of space station hardware, scientific gear and crew supplies vaulted away from its scenic seaside launch stand in southern Japan Friday (U.S. time) and set off on weeklong flight to the International Space Station.

Trailing a plume of fire and a billowing cloud of exhaust, the 186-foot-tall H-2B smoothly climbed skyward through rainy weather and quickly disappeared into a deck of low clouds, arcing out over the Pacific Ocean on a southeasterly trajectory tilted 51.6 degrees to the equator.

Flight controllers said the strap-on boosters burned out and fell away in pairs as planned about two minutes after liftoff, followed four minutes later by the first stage. The second stage then ignited and continued the push to orbit.

There were no apparent problems and 15 minutes after liftoff from launch pad No. 2 at the Tanegashima Space Center, the HTV-3 cargo ship, nicknamed Kounotori, or "white stork," was released into its planned preliminary orbit with a low point, or perigee, of about 124 miles and an apogee, or high point, of around 186 miles.

"The flight of the HTV-3 went true and as expected," said Josh Byerly, NASA's mission control commentator in Houston. "Everything now set up for the arrival of the HTV-3 coming up next week."

If all goes well, the 17.5-ton spacecraft will carry out a series of carefully orchestrated rocket firings to catch up with the space station next Friday, pulling to within about 30 feet and then stationkeeping while astronaut Joseph Acaba, operating the station's robot arm, locks onto a grapple fixture.

Japanese flight engineer Akihiko Hoshide then plans to take over, moving the HTV-3 spacecraft to the Earth-facing port of the station's forward Harmony module where it will be locked into place with a common berthing mechanism. Hatches will be opened the next day.

Developed by the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, or JAXA, as a contribution to the space station program, the HTV is 32 feet long and 14.4 feet wide. It is designed to carry both pressurized and unpressurized cargo, including equipment too big to pass through the space station's hatches.

For it's third flight, the HTV is loaded with 3.9 tons of pressurized cargo, including an aquatic habitat, five small "CubeSats" and a satellite launcher, a catalytic reactor for the station's water processing system and a water pump. Also on board: Japanese food, beverages and crew clothing.

The high-tech aquarium can be used to house small fish for up to 90 days.

More here:

Japan successfully launches its freighter to space station

Inside Japan's Huge Space Truck (Infographic)

Japan's Kounotori space cargo ships are one of several vital robotic supply ships that ferry fresh food and equipment to the International Space Station.

Built for the for the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), Kounotori spacecraft (the name means "White Stork" in Japanese) are unmanned cargo ships that deliver tons of supplies, including fresh food, and equipment to the International Space Station. The cylindrical spacecraft launch on Japan's expendable H-2B rocket from the country's Tanegashima Space Center.

Japan's H-2 Transfer Vehicles, a gold cylinder about 33 feet (10 meters) long and 14 feet (4.4 m) wide are disposable vehicles that deliver cargo to the space station inside a pressurized module, which astronauts can access, and in an unpressurized section accessible by the station's robotic arm. The freighters are part of a growing suite of internationally built unmanned cargo spaceships that help supply the International Space Station.

At mission's end, the cargo ship is intentionally destroyed by burning up Earth's atmosphere. JAXA launched the first HTV cargo ship in 2009. A second followed in 2011, with a third scheduled to fly in July 2012.

There are several other robotic cargo ships that deliver supplies to the space station. In addition to Japan's HTV, Russia's Progress space capsules and the European Space Agency's Automated Transfer Vehicles also serve the station.

In the United States, NASA is relying on two companies to develop unmanned space freighters: California-based SpaceX and Orbital Sciences, Corp., of Virginia. The first official SpaceX delivery to the station is slated for later this year.

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Source SPACE.com: All about our solar system, outer space and exploration

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Inside Japan's Huge Space Truck (Infographic)