Motors and Drives in Discrete Market 2026 In-Depth Analysis by Industry Size, Shares, Growth Rate, Applications, Demands, Consumption &…

In depth market research report on Global Motors and Drives in Discrete Market 2020 with Industry Analysis, Size, Competitors, Trends and Forecast 2026.

Market Research Port offers you a comprehensive market research report on the global Motors and Drives in Discrete market. This report contains in-depth information on all the key aspects of the global Motors and Drives in Discrete market. This report contains data such as facts & figures, market research, market analysis, competitive landscape, regional analysis, and future growth prospects. The report also contains qualitative and quantitative research which gives you a detailed analysis of the global Motors and Drives in Discrete market. The report has been compiled by experts who have researched and documented all the important aspects of global Motors and Drives in Discrete market. The report authors are experienced and highly qualified, so you can trust the data provided in this report.

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This market research report also has data of all the important players in the industry. From their market share in the industry, to their growth plans, important information has been compiled in the report to let you get an insightful look at the leading players operating in the industry and what their strategies are. The functioning of the leading companies in the (industry name) market has a huge impact on how the market behaves. Therefore, data on these companies can also help you understand and predict how the market behaves. The competitor analysis in the report will give you a complete breakdown of all the important information you need about these top market players.

Major Companies Covered:

ABB, Danfoss, Rockwell Automation, Siemens, WEG, Allied Motion Technologies, ARC Systems, Asmo, Emerson, Franklin Electric, Fuji Electric, GE, Huali, KEB, Nidec, Schneider Electric, SEW Eurodrive, TECO-Westinghouse, Toshiba, Yaskawa

In the global Motors and Drives in Discrete market report, there is solid in-depth data on various segments as well. These segments give a deeper look into the products, applications and what impact they are going to have on the market. The report also looks at new products and innovation that can be real game-changers.

The Report is Divided into The Following Segments:

Market Segmentation by Product Types:Motors, Drivers

Market Segmentation by Applications:Process industries, Discrete industries

Regions Mentioned in the Global Motors and Drives in Discrete Market:

The Middle East and Africa North America South America Europe Asia-Pacific Middle East Oceania Rest of the World

Following Questions are Answered in This Report:

What will be the size of the global Motors and Drives in Discrete market in 2025? What is the current CAGR of the global Motors and Drives in Discrete market? Which product is expected to show the highest market growth? Which application is projected to gain a lions share of the global Motors and Drives in Discrete market? Which region is foretold to create the most number of opportunities in the global Motors and Drives in Discrete market? Will there be any changes in market competition during the forecast period? Which are the top players currently operating in the global Motors and Drives in Discrete market? How will the market situation change in the coming years? What are the common business tactics adopted by players? What is the growth outlook of the global Motors and Drives in Discrete market?

The data of the market research report has been studied, compiled and corroborated by leading experts and established authors. The format followed in the report is in accordance with most international market research reports. However, if you have any specific requirements, you can get in touch with us, and we will modify the report accordingly.

Browse The Report: https://www.marketresearchport.com/reports/2015-2025-global-motors-and-drives-in-discrete-market-research-report-by-product-type-applications-key-playe/55905

Table of Content:Chapter 1 Market Overview1.1 Market Definition And Segment1.1.1 Product Definition1.1.2 Product Type1.1.3 End-Use1.1.4 Marketing Channel1.2 Major Regions1.2.1 Europe Market Size And GrowthFigure Europe Motors And Drives In Discrete Market Size And Growth Rate, 2015e-2020f (Million Usd)Figure Europe Motors And Drives In Discrete Market Forecast And Growth Rate, 2020e-2025f (Million Usd)1.2.2 America Market Size And GrowthFigure America Motors And Drives In Discrete Market Size And Growth Rate, 2015e-2020f (Million Usd)Figure America Motors And Drives In Discrete Market Forecast And Growth Rate, 2020e-2025f (Million Usd)1.2.3 Asia Market Size And GrowthFigure Asia Motors And Drives In Discrete Market Size And Growth Rate, 2015e-2020f (Million Usd)Figure Asiamotors And Drives In Discrete Market Forecast And Growth Rate, 2020e-2025f (Million Usd)1.2.4 Oceania Market Size And GrowthFigure Oceania Motors And Drives In Discrete Market Size And Growth Rate, 2015e-2020f (Million Usd)Figure Oceania Motors And Drives In Discrete Market Forecast And Growth Rate, 2020e-2025f (Million Usd)1.2.5 Africa Market Size And GrowthFigure Africa Motors And Drives In Discrete Market Size And Growth Rate, 2015e-2020f (Million Usd)Figure Africa Motors And Drives In Discrete Market Forecast And Growth Rate, 2020e-2025f (Million Usd)

Chapter 2 Global Market Segmentation2.1 Global Production OverviewTable Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Production Volume (Volume), Ex-Factory Price, Revenue (Million Usd) And Gross Margin (%) List, 2015-20202.2 Global Consumption OverviewTable Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Volume (Volume), Terminal Price And Consumption Value (Million Usd) List, 2015-20202.3 Global Production By TypeTable Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Revenue By Type, 2015-2020 (Million Usd)Figure Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Revenue Share By Type In 2020 (Million Usd)Table Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Production Volume By Type, 2015-2020 (Volume)Figure Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Production Volume Share By Type In 2020 (Volume)2.4 Global Consumption By End-UseTable Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Value By End-Use, 2015-2020 (Million Usd)Figure Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Value Share By End-Use In 2020 (Million Usd)Table Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Volume By End-Use, 2015-2020 (Volume)Figure Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Volume Share By End-Use In 2020 (Volume)2.5 Global Consumption By RegionTable Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Value By Region, 2015-2020 (Million Usd)Table Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Volume By Region, 2015-2020 (Volume)

Chapter 3 Europe Market Segmentation3.1 Europe Production OverviewTable Europe Motors And Drives In Discrete Production Volume (Volume), Ex-Factory Price, Revenue (Million Usd) And Gross Margin (%) List, 2015-20203.2 Europe Consumption OverviewTable Europe Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Volume (Volume), Terminal Price And Consumption Value (Million Usd) List, 2015-20203.3 Europe Production By TypeTable Europe Motors And Drives In Discrete Revenue By Type, 2015-2020 (Million Usd)Figure Europe Motors And Drives In Discrete Revenue Share By Type In 2020 (Million Usd)Table Europe Motors And Drives In Discrete Production Volume By Type, 2015-2020 (Volume)Figure Europe Motors And Drives In Discrete Production Volume Share By Type In 2020 (Volume)3.4 Europe Consumption By End-UseTable Europe Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Value By End-Use, 2015-2020 (Million Usd)Figure Europe Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Value Share By End-Use In 2020 (Million Usd)Table Europe Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Volume By End-Use, 2015-2020 (Volume)Figure Europe Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Volume Share By End-Use In 2020 (Volume)3.5 Europe Consumption By RegionTable Europe Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Value By Region, 2015-2020 (Million Usd)Table Europe Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Volume By Region, 2015-2020 (Volume)

Chapter 4 America Market Segmentation4.1 America Production OverviewTable America Motors And Drives In Discrete Production Volume (Volume), Ex-Factory Price, Revenue (Million Usd) And Gross Margin (%) List, 2015-20204.2 America Consumption OverviewTable America Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Volume (Volume), Terminal Price And Consumption Value (Million Usd) List, 2015-20204.3 America Production By TypeTable America Motors And Drives In Discrete Revenue By Type, 2015-2020 (Million Usd)Figure America Motors And Drives In Discrete Revenue Share By Type In 2020 (Million Usd)Table America Motors And Drives In Discrete Production Volume By Type, 2015-2020 (Volume)Figure America Motors And Drives In Discrete Production Volume Share By Type In 2020 (Volume)4.4 America Consumption By End-UseTable America Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Value By End-Use, 2015-2020 (Million Usd)Figure America Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Value Share By End-Use In 2020 (Million Usd)Table America Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Volume By End-Use, 2015-2020 (Volume)Figure America Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Volume Share By End-Use In 2020 (Volume)4.5 America Consumption By RegionTable America Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Value By Region, 2015-2020 (Million Usd)Table America Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Volume By Region, 2015-2020 (Volume)

Chapter 5 Asia Market Segmentation5.1 Asia Production OverviewTable Asia Motors And Drives In Discrete Production Volume (Volume), Ex-Factory Price, Revenue (Million Usd) And Gross Margin (%) List, 2015-20205.2 Asia Consumption OverviewTable Asia Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Volume (Volume), Terminal Price And Consumption Value (Million Usd) List, 2015-20205.3 Asia Production By TypeTable Asia Motors And Drives In Discrete Revenue By Type, 2015-2020 (Million Usd)Figure Asia Motors And Drives In Discrete Revenue Share By Type In 2020 (Million Usd)Table Asia Motors And Drives In Discrete Production Volume By Type, 2015-2020 (Volume)Figure Asia Motors And Drives In Discrete Production Volume Share By Type In 2020 (Volume)5.4 Asia Consumption By End-UseTable Asia Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Value By End-Use, 2015-2020 (Million Usd)Figure Asia Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Value Share By End-Use In 2020 (Million Usd)Table Asia Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Volume By End-Use, 2015-2020 (Volume)Figure Asia Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Volume Share By End-Use In 2020 (Volume)5.5 Asia Consumption By RegionTable Asia Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Value By Region, 2015-2020 (Million Usd)Table Asia Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Volume By Region, 2015-2020 (Volume)

Chapter 6 Oceania Market Segmentation6.1 Oceania Production OverviewTable Oceania Motors And Drives In Discrete Production Volume (Volume), Ex-Factory Price, Revenue (Million Usd) And Gross Margin (%) List, 2015-20206.2 Oceania Consumption OverviewTable Oceania Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Volume (Volume), Terminal Price And Consumption Value (Million Usd) List, 2015-20206.3 Oceania Production By TypeTable Oceania Motors And Drives In Discrete Revenue By Type, 2015-2020 (Million Usd)Figure Oceania Motors And Drives In Discrete Revenue Share By Type In 2020 (Million Usd)Table Oceania Motors And Drives In Discrete Production Volume By Type, 2015-2020 (Volume)Figure Oceania Motors And Drives In Discrete Production Volume Share By Type In 2020 (Volume)6.4 Oceania Consumption By End-UseTable Oceania Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Value By End-Use, 2015-2020 (Million Usd)Figure Oceania Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Value Share By End-Use In 2020 (Million Usd)Table Oceania Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Volume By End-Use, 2015-2020 (Volume)Figure Oceania Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Volume Share By End-Use In 2020 (Volume)6.5 Oceania Consumption By RegionTable Oceania Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Value By Region, 2015-2020 (Million Usd)Table Oceania Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Volume By Region, 2015-2020 (Volume)

Chapter 7 Africa Market Segmentation7.1 Africa Production OverviewTable Africa Motors And Drives In Discrete Production Volume (Volume), Ex-Factory Price, Revenue (Million Usd) And Gross Margin (%) List, 2015-20207.2 Africa Consumption OverviewTable Africa Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Volume (Volume), Terminal Price And Consumption Value (Million Usd) List, 2015-20207.3 Africa Production By TypeTable Africa Motors And Drives In Discrete Revenue By Type, 2015-2020 (Million Usd)Figure Africa Motors And Drives In Discrete Revenue Share By Type In 2020 (Million Usd)Table Africa Motors And Drives In Discrete Production Volume By Type, 2015-2020 (Volume)Figure Africa Motors And Drives In Discrete Production Volume Share By Type In 2020 (Volume)7.4 Africa Consumption By End-UseTable Africa Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Value By End-Use, 2015-2020 (Million Usd)Figure Africa Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Value Share By End-Use In 2020 (Million Usd)Table Africa Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Volume By End-Use, 2015-2020 (Volume)Figure Africa Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Volume Share By End-Use In 2020 (Volume)7.5 Africa Consumption By RegionTable Africa Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Value By Region, 2015-2020 (Million Usd)Table Africa Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Volume By Region, 2015-2020 (Volume)

Chapter 8 Global Market Forecast8.1 Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Production ForecastFigure Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Revenue And Growth Rate Forecast 2020e-2025f (Million Usd)Figure Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Production Volume And Growth Rate Forecast 2020e-2025f (Volume)8.2 Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Forecast By TypeTable Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Revenue By Type, 2020e-2025f (Million Usd)Figure Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Revenue Share By Type In 2025 (Million Usd)Table Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Production Volume By Type, 2020e-2025f (Volume)Figure Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Production Volume Share By Type In 2025 (Volume)8.3 Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Forecast By End-Use (2020e-2025f)Table Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Value By End-Use, 2020e-2025f (Million Usd)Figure Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Value Share By End-Use In 2025 (Million Usd)Table Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Volume By End-Use, 2020e-2025f (Volume)8.4 Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Forecast By Region (2020e-2025f)Table Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Value By Region, 2020e-2025f (Million Usd)Figure Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Value Share By Region In 2025 (Million Usd)Table Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Volume By Region, 2020e-2025f (Volume)Figure Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Consumption Volume Share By Region In 2025 (Volume)

Chapter 9 Global Major Companies List9.1 Abb9.1.1 Abb ProfileTable Abb Overview List9.1.2 Abb Products & Services9.1.3 Abb Company Dynamics & News9.1.4 Abb Business Operation ConditionsTable Business Operation Of Abb (Sales Revenue, Sales Volume, Price, Cost, Gross Margin)9.2 Danfoss9.2.1 Danfoss ProfileTable Danfoss Overview List9.2.2 Danfoss Products & Services9.2.3 Danfoss Company Dynamics & News9.2.4 Danfoss Business Operation ConditionsTable Business Operation Of Danfoss (Sales Revenue, Sales Volume, Price, Cost, Gross Margin)9.3 Rockwell Automation9.3.1 Rockwell Automation ProfileTable Rockwell Automation Overview List9.3.2 Rockwell Automation Products & Services9.3.3 Rockwell Automation Company Dynamics & News9.3.4 Rockwell Automation Business Operation ConditionsTable Business Operation Of Rockwell Automation (Sales Revenue, Sales Volume, Price, Cost, Gross Margin)9.4 Siemens9.4.1 Siemens ProfileTable Siemens Overview List9.4.2 Siemens Products & Services9.4.3 Siemens Company Dynamics & News9.4.4 Siemens Business Operation ConditionsTable Business Operation Of Siemens (Sales Revenue, Sales Volume, Price, Cost, Gross Margin)9.5 Weg9.5.1 Weg ProfileTable Weg Overview List9.5.2 Weg Products & Services9.5.3 Weg Company Dynamics & News9.5.4 Weg Business Operation ConditionsTable Business Operation Of Weg (Sales Revenue, Sales Volume, Price, Cost, Gross Margin)9.6 Allied Motion Technologies9.6.1 Allied Motion Technologies ProfileTable Allied Motion Technologies Overview List9.6.2 Allied Motion Technologies Products & Services9.6.3 Allied Motion Technologies Company Dynamics & News9.6.4 Allied Motion Technologies Business Operation ConditionsTable Business Operation Of Allied Motion Technologies (Sales Revenue, Sales Volume, Price, Cost, Gross Margin)9.7 Arc Systems9.7.1 Arc Systems ProfileTable Arc Systems Overview List9.7.2 Arc Systems Products & Services9.7.3 Arc Systems Company Dynamics & News9.7.4 Arc Systems Business Operation ConditionsTable Business Operation Of Arc Systems (Sales Revenue, Sales Volume, Price, Cost, Gross Margin)9.8 Asmo9.8.1 Asmo ProfileTable Asmo Overview List9.8.2 Asmo Products & Services9.8.3 Asmo Company Dynamics & News9.8.4 Asmo Business Operation ConditionsTable Business Operation Of Asmo (Sales Revenue, Sales Volume, Price, Cost, Gross Margin)9.9 Emerson9.9.1 Emerson ProfileTable Emerson Overview List9.9.2 Emerson Products & Services9.9.3 Emerson Company Dynamics & News9.9.4 Emerson Business Operation ConditionsTable Business Operation Of Emerson (Sales Revenue, Sales Volume, Price, Cost, Gross Margin)9.10 Franklin Electric9.10.1 Franklin Electric ProfileTable Franklin Electric Overview List9.10.2 Franklin Electric Products & Services9.10.3 Franklin Electric Company Dynamics & News9.10.4 Franklin Electric Business Operation ConditionsTable Business Operation Of Franklin Electric (Sales Revenue, Sales Volume, Price, Cost, Gross Margin)9.11 Fuji Electric9.11.1 Fuji Electric ProfileTable Fuji Electric Overview List9.11.2 Fuji Electric Products & Services9.11.3 Fuji Electric Company Dynamics & News9.11.4 Fuji Electric Business Operation ConditionsTable Business Operation Of Fuji Electric (Sales Revenue, Sales Volume, Price, Cost, Gross Margin)9.12 Ge9.12.1 Ge ProfileTable Ge Overview List9.12.2 Ge Products & Services9.12.3 Ge Company Dynamics & News9.12.4 Ge Business Operation ConditionsTable Business Operation Of Ge (Sales Revenue, Cost, Gross Margin)9.13 Huali9.13.1 Huali ProfileTable Huali Overview List9.13.2 Huali Products & Services9.13.3 Huali Company Dynamics & News9.13.4 Huali Business Operation ConditionsTable Business Operation Of Huali (Sales Revenue, Sales Volume, Price, Cost, Gross Margin)9.14 Keb9.14.1 Keb ProfileTable Keb Overview List9.14.2 Keb Products & Services9.14.3 Keb Company Dynamics & News9.14.4 Keb Business Operation ConditionsTable Business Operation Of Keb (Sales Revenue, Cost, Gross Margin)9.15 Nidec9.15.1 Nidec ProfileTable Nidec Overview List9.15.2 Nidec Products & Services9.15.3 Nidec Company Dynamics & News9.15.4 Nidec Business Operation ConditionsTable Business Operation Of Nidec (Sales Revenue, Cost, Gross Margin)9.16 Schneider Electric9.16.1 Schneider Electric ProfileTable Schneider Electric Overview List9.16.2 Schneider Electric Products & Services9.16.3 Schneider Electric Company Dynamics & News9.16.4 Schneider Electric Business Operation ConditionsTable Business Operation Of Schneider Electric (Sales Revenue, Cost, Gross Margin)9.17 Sew Eurodrive9.17.1 Sew Eurodrive ProfileTable Sew Eurodrive Overview List9.17.2 Sew Eurodrive Products & Services9.17.3 Sew Eurodrive Company Dynamics & News9.17.4 Sew Eurodrive Business Operation ConditionsTable Business Operation Of Sew Eurodrive (Sales Revenue, Cost, Gross Margin)9.18 Teco-Westinghouse9.18.1 Teco-Westinghouse ProfileTable Teco-Westinghouse Overview List9.18.2 Teco-Westinghouse Products & Services9.18.3 Teco-Westinghouse Company Dynamics & News9.18.4 Teco-Westinghouse Business Operation ConditionsTable Business Operation Of Teco-Westinghouse (Sales Revenue, Cost, Gross Margin)9.19 Toshiba9.19.1 Toshiba ProfileTable Toshiba Overview List9.19.2 Toshiba Products & Services9.19.3 Toshiba Company Dynamics & News9.19.4 Toshiba Business Operation ConditionsTable Business Operation Of Toshiba (Sales Revenue, Cost, Gross Margin)9.20 Yaskawa9.20.1 Yaskawa ProfileTable Yaskawa Overview List9.20.2 Yaskawa Products & Services9.20.3 Yaskawa Company Dynamics & News9.20.4 Yaskawa Business Operation ConditionsTable Business Operation Of Yaskawa (Sales Revenue, Cost, Gross Margin)

Part 10 Market Competition10.1 Key Company Market ShareTable Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Sales Revenue 2015-2020e, By Companies, In Usd MillionTable Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Sales Revenue Share, 2015-2020e, By Companies, In UsdTable Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Sales Volume By Companies, 2015-2020e (Volume)Table Global Motors And Drives In Discrete Sales Volume Share By Companies, 2015-2020e (Volume)10.2 Regional Market ConcentrationFigure Europe Motors And Drives In Discrete Market Concentration Ratio In 2020eFigure America Motors And Drives In Discrete Market Concentration Ratio In 2020eFigure Asia Motors And Drives In Discrete Market Concentration Ratio In 2020eFigure Oceania Motors And Drives In Discrete Market Concentration Ratio In 2020eFigure Africa Motors And Drives In Discrete Market Concentration Ratio In 2020e

Part 11 Coronavirus Impact On Motors And Drives In Discrete Industry11.1 Impact On Industry Upstream11.2 Impact On Industry Downstream11.3 Impact On Industry Channels11.4 Impact On Industry Competition11.5 Impact On Industry Obtain Employment

Part 12 Motors And Drives In Discrete Industry Summary & Conclusion

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Motors and Drives in Discrete Market 2026 In-Depth Analysis by Industry Size, Shares, Growth Rate, Applications, Demands, Consumption &...

Nanomedicine Market Actual Strategies of Key Players to Overcome COVID 19 Pendamic | GE Healthcare, Johnson & Johnson, Mallinckrodt plc, Merck…

Nanomedicine Market Research Report provides a complete analytical study that provides all the details of key players such as company profile, product portfolio, capacity, price, cost and revenue during the forecast period from 2020 to 2026. A Nanomedicine market that includes Future Trends, Current Growth Factors, Meticulous Opinions, Facts, Historical Data and Statistically Supported And Industry-Validated Market Data.

Impact Analysis of COVID-19: The complete version of the Nanomedicine Market Report will include the impact of the COVID-19, and anticipated change on the future outlook of the industry, by taking into account the political, economic, social, regional and technological parameters.

Covid-19 Impact analysison Nanomedicine Market, get on mail athttps://www.worldwidemarketreports.com/sample/364243

This Nanomedicine market research provides a clear explanation of how this market will make a growth impression during the mentioned period. This study report scanned specific data for specific characteristics such as Type, Size, Application and End User. There are basic segments included in the segmentation analysis that are the result of SWOT analysis and PESTEL analysis.

GE Healthcare, Johnson & Johnson, Mallinckrodt plc, Merck & Co. Inc., Nanosphere Inc. are some of the major organizations dominating the global market.(Other Players Can be Added per Request)

Key players in the Nanomedicine market were identified through a second survey, and market share was determined through a first and second survey. All measurement sharing, splitting and analysis were solved using a secondary source and a validated primary source. The Nanomedicine market report starts with a basic overview of the Industry Life Cycle, Definitions, Classifications, Applications, and Industry Chain Structure. The combination of these two factors will help key players meet the market reach and help to understand offered characteristics and customer needs.

Get the Exclusive sample PDF of Nanomedicine Market with few listed Key Players 2020-https://www.worldwidemarketreports.com/sample/364243

The report also makes some important suggestions for the new Nanomedicine market project before evaluating its feasibility. Overall, this report covers Nanomedicine market Sales, Price, Sales, Gross Profit, Historical Growth and Future Prospects. It provides facts related to mergers, acquisitions, partnerships and joint venture activities prevalent in the market.

The Report Covers Segments Analysis also-

On the basis of Types, Nanomedicine Market is segmented into- Regenerative Medicine, In-vitro & In-vivo Diagnostics, Vaccines, Drug Delivery

On the Basis of Application, the Nanomedicine Market is segmented as- Clinical Cardiology, Urology, Genetics, Orthopedics, Ophthalmology

Complete knowledge of the Nanomedicine market is based on the latest industry news, opportunities and trends in the expected region. The Nanomedicine market research report provides clear insights into the influential factors expected to change the global market in the near future.

Remarkable Attributes of Nanomedicine Market Report:

Customization or Quriy on the Report, click athttps://www.worldwidemarketreports.com/quiry/364243

Contact Us:

Mr. ShahWorldwide Market ReportsSeattle, WA 98154,U.S.Email: [emailprotected]

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Nanomedicine Market Actual Strategies of Key Players to Overcome COVID 19 Pendamic | GE Healthcare, Johnson & Johnson, Mallinckrodt plc, Merck...

What happens when bacteria resist treatment? Trobix lands $3M to protect us from next ‘Super Bug’ – Geektime

Trobix Innovation Ltd. an Israeli-based biotechnology company developing therapies to remove the threat of antimicrobial resistance, announces the closing of a $3 million Series A funding led by its lead investor, Chartered Opus. The funding will be used to advance the company's antimicrobial resistance platform technology and to further the pre-clinical development of its lead product, TBX101, which aims to treat patients carrying gut antimicrobial-resistant bacteria, resulting in antibiotic sensitive gut microbiome.

"I am grateful to Chartered Opus for their confidence in our technology and their trust in our team", said Dr. Adi Elkeles, Founder & CEO of Trobix Bio, which was founded in 2018. "Antimicrobial-resistant threatens to undermine the achievements of modern medicine, and Trobix Bio is committed to developing products that can effectively tackle this imminent threat", he added.

Antimicrobial resistance is a big issue, especially following the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), microorganisms such as bacteria, fungi, viruses, and others develop a resistance once introduced to antimicrobial drugs like antibiotics. In light of the Coronavirus, effective treatments become a must, as they affect treatments that become ineffective, further allowing viruses to spread or diseases to take over.

Without a clear solution for the microbial resistance, the BioTech world continues to witness medical procedures such as organ transplants, cancer chemotherapy, diabetes management and major surgery (for example, cesarean sections or hip replacements) become very high risk. Which is not only scary on medical treatment level but also significantly increases healthcare costs, with prolonging hospital stay and more intensive care required. This is exactly where solutions like the one of Trobix Bio comes into play.

"The Covid-19 pandemic stresses the urgent need to tackle the global challenges of infectious diseases, and the global need for a solution to the threat of antimicrobial resistance was there from day one", says Eyal Agmoni, Chairman of Chartered Group. "Trobix Bio is set to revolutionize the landscape of phage-based nanomedicine by introducing its game-changing, precision particle disruptive technology. We are very happy with the progress made by the team and are glad to be part of this unique venture".

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What happens when bacteria resist treatment? Trobix lands $3M to protect us from next 'Super Bug' - Geektime

Topical nanoparticles interfering with the DNA-LL37 complex to alleviate psoriatic inflammation in mice and monkeys – Science Advances

Cell-free DNA (cfDNA) released from damaged or dead cells combines with LL37 and is converted into an immune response activator to exacerbate psoriasis. Here, we show that cationic nanoparticles (cNPs) efficiently compete for DNA from the DNA-LL37 immunocomplex and inhibit DNA-LL37-induced cell activation. Using phenotypical images, psoriasis area and severity index scoring, histology, and immunohistochemical analysis, we demonstrate that topical application of cNPs on psoriasiform skin of a mouse model relieves psoriatic symptoms. It is noteworthy that the results were confirmed in a cynomolgus monkey model. Moreover, topically administrated cNPs showed low in vivo toxicity because of their retention in skin. Mechanistic analyses of cytokine expression in the psoriatic site, cfDNA levels in circulation and inflamed skin, skin permeation, and biodistribution of cNPs also matched the therapeutic outcomes. Therefore, we present a previously unidentified strategy of nanomedicine to treat skin inflammatory diseases, which demonstrates great potential for clinical application.

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Topical nanoparticles interfering with the DNA-LL37 complex to alleviate psoriatic inflammation in mice and monkeys - Science Advances

Young, Marr & Associates Law Firm: How Can You Save Yourself From Insolvency and Bankruptcy in This Pandemic Crisis? – GlobeNewswire

PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 05, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Money is fragile, and when we are in possession of something fragile, we become worried. The finances are safe when nothing surprising happens, but when a sudden outbreak pandemic like corona knocks at the door, the financial graph takes a downward curve, sometimes leading to even bankruptcy. When you are unable to repay the debts to creditors, you opt for bankruptcy. The creditors often come up with a court order, and to seek relief from all the debts, you see bankruptcy as an optimal way. But stay in that thought for a moment and look for any options around to break through this financial calamity and create a debt-free future. Tete-a-Tete, with a law firm like Philadelphia Bankruptcy Lawyer, having professionalism, integrity, and complete legal knowledge, is the ultimate guide towards solvency, leading to a debt-free future.

COVID pandemic is extremely stressful, and along with that, if you are declared bankrupt, it adds to the straw that broke the camel's back. It snatches your mental peace and leaves you with certain physical ailments as well. A bankruptcy lawyer throws light on how badly you are affected because of such debts and what are the possibilities to overcome them! Recently several sectors were majorly hit due to the Corona crisis, aviation being one of them where airlines were going bankrupt, later they also opted to hire a bankruptcy lawyer. Timely botheration, action, and meeting a prudent attorney can save you from such adverse occurrences.

Bankruptcy can be complicated, varying from case to case, consider contacting or fixing an appointment. Sometimes we go blind with the advertisements, hoardings, word of mouth, or even no criteria at all. It's advisable to have a detailed conversation phonetically and shortlist some potential firms before finalizing them. Firms like Bucks County Bankruptcy Lawyer hold expertise in bankruptcy cases, know clientele need, updated with recent regulations, knowledgeable about chapters 7&13, confidant, credible and empathetic towards clientele's financial crisis.

Before declaring bankruptcy, law firms give a better understanding of how to resolve your case, turn the tables around, and give back your lost power.

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328 W Broad St Quakertown, PA 18951Email: support@ymalaw.comPhone - (215) 607-7478Website- https://www.youngmarrlaw.com/

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Young, Marr & Associates Law Firm: How Can You Save Yourself From Insolvency and Bankruptcy in This Pandemic Crisis? - GlobeNewswire

Hertz must offload almost 200,000 cars by the end of 2020 as part of its bankruptcy deal – Business Insider – Business Insider

As part of its bankruptcy proceedings, rental car giant Hertz will have to offload nearly 200,000 cars by the end of this year, according to a recent United States Securities and Exchange Commission filing.

Hertz, which filed for bankruptcy in May, must "dispose of" at least 182,521 leased cars by December 31, 2020, the filing reads. This is part of a $650-million temporary deal the company made with a creditor group, reported The Wall Street Journal.

The deal requires Hertz to pay its asset-backed securities lenders $650 million of rent in equal installments per month from July to December. An unnamed person familiar with the deal told The Journal's Becky Yerak that this amounts to "about half of what Hertz is contractually obligated to pay."

They also said that "Hertz is also trying to arrange up to about $2 billion in financing to help it get through chapter 11."

The Journal reported that the settlement is tentative and still needs to be approved in court.

But, under it, Hertz will have to get rid of 182,521 leased cars, which will leave it with approximately 310,000 leased cars. Hertz will be allowed to retain $900 from each car it sells, according to The Journal. The rest of the money made from selling the cars will go toward repaying the lenders.

It's not clear how the cars will be sold perhaps they'll be available through Hertz's own car sales website but this could be good news for people shopping for a used car. Used car sales have rebounded well during the COVID-19 pandemic while new-car sales are lagging.

In May, before the bankruptcy announcement, Business Insider reported that the rental car giant put more than 20 Chevrolet Corvette Z06s up for sale at steeply discounted prices. They all sold within days.

If you're thinking Hertz offloading this many cars this fast might be a chance to get a good deal, you're in luck: You can check out a guide on how to do it here.

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Hertz must offload almost 200,000 cars by the end of 2020 as part of its bankruptcy deal - Business Insider - Business Insider

Next COVID casualty: Cities hit hard by the pandemic face bankruptcy – The Conversation US

U.S. cities are fast running out of cash.

The pandemic will reduce local government revenues by an estimated US$11.6 billion in 2020. With COVID-19 requiring residents to stay home and stores to shutter, the bulk of this reduction comes from a slump in local sales taxes. Declines will continue into 2021.

State revenues are heading in the same direction, so many U.S. cities will need to rely on help from the federal government. Aid to cities may be part of the next pandemic aid package now being discussed by members of the House and Senate. But so far, the Republicans bill leaves out any new funding for state and local governments, while the Democrats bill includes $1 trillion for it.

And if federal assistance arrives, it will not fix every citys budget.

The pandemic has hit budgets so hard that even cities in relatively good financial health including those with rainy day funds to help them through an emergency will face significant changes to staffing and services.

For cities in the poorest shape, the pandemic could mean bankruptcy.

Bankruptcy is a legal process where people, companies and governments who cannot pay their debts seek to reduce them.

Which debts get paid during a bankruptcy are important decisions. They involve how comfortable a city employees retirement might be, the level of health insurance for pensioners and workers, the extent of labor protections for employees and the future cost of borrowing for a city.

City bankruptcy was created by Congress after the Great Depression, in response to 4,770 different units of city government going belly up. Twenty-seven states now allow their cities to file for bankruptcy.

Those states that do not allow city bankruptcy Georgia and Iowa explicitly prohibit filing, with the other 21 states having no specific allowance or prohibition manage the problem of city indebtedness in various ways, ranging from strict budget oversight to the disbanding of heavily indebted cities. Since 1938, city bankruptcy has been used around 700 times.

A citys bankruptcy differs from corporate bankruptcy in that it does not allow for the liquidation of assets. For cities, bankruptcy is used to reduce debts, not sell off things - such as public roads and buildings - to pay off debts. The bankruptcy judges role is to determine whether the proposed reduction is fair to all people the city owes money to, which may include workers, pensioners, bankers, suppliers and investors.

But bankruptcies can look different in different cities.

We are scholars who research changes in how cities go about budgeting. Our work has showed that the city bankruptcies that followed the Great Recession of 2007 and 2008 were not uniform.

If you were in a big city, your government owed money to lots of people. The converse was true in small cities. As the number of participants in a bankruptcy increases, the task of deciding how much different creditors should get repaid becomes more complicated.

Westfall Township, Pennsylvania, home to about 2,000 people, declared bankruptcy in 2009 after losing a lawsuit to New Jersey real estate developers David and Barbara Katz. Courts ruled that the city owed the Katzes $20.8 million after improperly denying them permission to develop projects in the township.

With annual revenues of just $1 million, Westfall had few options but to file for bankruptcy.

Resolving Westfalls bankruptcy meant reaching a new agreement with the Katzes. The bankruptcy court approved a $6 million settlement with the developers and gave Westfall 20 years to pay. The city would also raise property taxes and delay the repayment of other debts. By 2014, Westfalls budget had recovered enough for Pennsylvania to remove it from its list of distressed cities.

Bankruptcy proceedings were more complicated in Vallejo, California, which is on the northern end of San Francisco Bay. Vallejo, population 120,000, had a 2008-2009 budget of $79.6 million. In 2008, the city lost around one-quarter of its revenues as local sales taxes and real estate development fees collapsed. Vallejo suddenly found itself unable to pay all of its bills.

The City Council voted unanimously to file for bankruptcy.

In its bankruptcy filing, the city estimated it had between 1,000 and 5,000 creditors. The most contentious part of the bankruptcy concerned the citys obligations to its own unionized employees. Vallejo argued that its bankruptcy should include the option of reducing employee wages and benefits, and changing working conditions, if necessary, without union consent.

The judge agreed and, in doing so, expanded what types of debt could be reduced in bankruptcy. This was, and remains, controversial. Although unions have pushed back, later bankruptcies have confirmed the courts decision.

Vallejo ultimately chose not to impose new employment contracts on most of its employees.

That decision helped Vallejo avoid costly legal battles but the citys main expenditures, wages and pensions, remained largely unaltered. The city emerged out of bankruptcy solvent but struggling. Filing for bankruptcy ended up costing Vallejo over $20 million in court and legal fees.

Vallejos bankruptcy foreshadowed an even more complex one in Detroit, where revenue decline and failed Wall Street bets left the city unable to balance its budget.

Detroit listed 100,000 creditors in its 2013 bankruptcy filing, totaling $18.5 billion in debts. Like Vallejo, Detroit would have to decide which creditors to stiff, effectively asking them to pay for the citys budget failures.

The eventual settlement would reduce Detroits debts by $7 billion, mostly by slashing the amount of borrowed money the city would have to repay to banks and investors.

[You need to understand the coronavirus pandemic, and we can help. Read The Conversations newsletter.]

But no creditor would walk away unscathed. Wages, pensions and health care for city employees were all cut. The city also entered into a complex Grand Bargain brokered by local philanthropists with the state of Michigan and pension holders that helped settle the citys largest debt, which was to pensioners, while keeping in the city its one major asset, the Detroit Institute of Arts collection.

The administrative and legal costs of the Detroit bankruptcy came in at around $100 million.

The bigger the city, the more complicated and expensive the bankruptcy. More creditors means more lawyers making competing claims on the citys dwindling revenues.

It also makes the process of picking winners and losers more complex and something that can involve testing the limits of bankruptcy law. When these limits expand, just what going bust means can change dramatically. Things that once seemed untouchable, like pensions, can become vulnerable in bankruptcy courts.

With many budgets in tatters, the prospect of growing numbers of city bankruptcies looms. Distressed cities will have to figure out what the process means for them.

It is rarely possible to predict what any city will decide. With any part of a citys operations - including salaries, pensions, road repairs, borrowing, park maintenance, policing, libraries - potentially fair game, everyone involved faces great uncertainty. There is no single, predictable path through city bankruptcy.

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Next COVID casualty: Cities hit hard by the pandemic face bankruptcy - The Conversation US

Tailored Brands files for bankruptcy, to close River Ranch Jos. A. Bank store – The Advocate

The Jos. A. Bank men's clothing store in River Ranch will close as part of parent company Tailored Brands' Chapter 11 bankruptcy plans to close 500 stores.

The company which also owns the Men's Wearhouse chain, filed on Sunday and plans to eliminate 20% of its corporate positions by the end of the second quarter. It had about 19,300 employees and 1,274 stores as of Feb. 1, according to aUSA Today report.

The store at 1900 Kaliste Saloom Road Suite 200 has been removed from its website. It's the only Louisiana store the company plans to close, reports indicate.

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The Acadiana Mall store has reopened its 5,818-square-foot space Men's Wearhouse store near Macy's since the coronavirus shutdown, mall manager Nikki Nugier said.

Louisiana will remain under Phase 2 of its reopening plan for another 21 days, Gov. John Bel Edwards announced Tuesday.

Gulf Island Fabrication said it is delaying the closing of its Jennings shipyard until the fourth quarter because social distancing measures a

The Jos. A. Bank men's clothing store in River Ranch will close as part of parent company Tailored Brands' Chapter 11 bankruptcy plans to clos

Debbie Spallino is chief financial officer with Bank of Commerce and Trust. She and her husband, Shane, own Cajun Claws Seafood Boilers in Dus

Parish, Well serial number, well name, permit date, field name, operator, location

Cali Comeaux has been named marketing and communications manager at Downtown Lafayette Unlimited, a private, nonprofit that works with the Dow

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Tailored Brands files for bankruptcy, to close River Ranch Jos. A. Bank store - The Advocate

Libertarians say they’re ready to take on major party candidates – HOI ABC

PEORIA (WEEK) - This might be the year independent political parties find more support now that several of them are on the November ballot.

A federal court ruling from northern Illinois, issued back in April, reduced the number of signatures needed.

Locally, five Libertarians are ready to compete against major party candidates. They're also arguing in a Peoria courtroom this week, hoping to get nine Libertarians cleared for the November 3 balloting.

"Our people are strong candidates, and they're going to be taking on people that have created the mess that we're sitting in here today," said Donny Henry, Chairman of the Libertarian Party of Greater Peoria.

"So, I'm very proud of what we've put together and I cannot wait to see this through. I think when the dust settles, we will be on the ballot and we will have candidates that will make this city and this county proud," Henry said.

Henry expects even greater ballot access going forward, after this election cycle, in which Libertarian Chad Grimm expects to face Democratic incumbent State Rep. Jehan Gordon-Booth in the 92nd District. Fellow Libertarian Ken Allison and Democrat Karla Bailey-Smith are trying to unseat incumbent GOP Rep. Keith Sommer in the 88th District.

"I'm all for more parties," said Henry.

"I think the two party system both nationally and in Illinois has caused a lot of conflict of us versus them."

Read more from the original source:

Libertarians say they're ready to take on major party candidates - HOI ABC

Primary election results: Hotly contested local Sheriff’s race and more – Nevada Herald

Flanked by plexiglass partitions and wearing masks, (from left) Rodney Beard, Myra Bond, Carol Shotts, and Sue Rich greet voters at the Osage Prairie YMCA Tuesday. Sanitation methods were in place to help combat the spread of COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019). Voting booths were being sanitized with Lysol between voters and hand sanitizer was available as well.

Photo by Sarah Haney | Daily Mail Editor

With voter turnout at 40 percent, Vernon County residents went to the polls Tuesday to cast their votes in the primary election. There were a total of 5,015 ballots cast 4,323 Republican (86.2 percent); 675 Democratic (13.46 percent); eight Libertarian (.16 percent); one Constitution (.02 percent); and eight nonpartisan (.16 percent).

The county's results are as follow:

County Sheriff

(Republican)

Jason Mosher 2,216 votes (51.74 percent)

David "Tiny" Johnson 2,067 votes (48.26 percent)

Northern Commissioner

(Republican)

Cindy Thompson 945 votes (53.09 percent)

Jason Claspill 835 votes (46.91 percent)

Northern Commissioner

(Democratic)

Neal F. Gerster 268 votes (100 percent)

Southern Commissioner

(Republican)

Everett L. Wolfe 1,488 votes (62.94 percent)

Jim Melton 876 votes (37.06 percent)

County Assessor

(Republican)

Lena Kleeman 3,771 votes (100 percent)

County Collector/Treasurer

(Republican)

Brent Banes 3,907 votes (100 percent)

County Public Administrator

(Republican)

Kelsey Westerhold 2,201 votes (53.4 percent)

Brett Dawn 1,058 votes (25.67 percent)

Beverly Beaty 863 votes (20.94 percent)

County Coroner

(Democratic)

David Ferry 645 votes (100 percent)

State-wide offices

Governor

(Republican)

Mike Parson 3,064 votes (74.03 percent)

Saundra McDowell 530 votes (12.81 percent)

James W. (Jim) Neely 337 votes (8.14 percent)

Governor

(Democratic)

Nicole Galloway 509 votes (78.07 percent)

Eric Morrison 63 votes (9.66 percent)

Jimmie Matthews 39 votes (5.98 percent)

Antoin Johnson 27 votes (4.14 percent)

Robin John Daniel Van Quaethem 14 votes (2.15 percent)

Governor

(Libertarian)

Rik Combs eight votes (100 percent)

Lieutenant Governor

(Republican)

Mike Kehoe 1,914 votes (51.8 percent)

Mike Carter 1,158 votes (31.34 percent)

Aaron T. Wisdom 375 votes (10.15 percent)

Arnie C. AC Dienoff 248 votes (6.71 percent)

Lieutenant Governor

(Democratic)

Alissia Canady 485 votes (75.9 percent)

Gregory A. Upchurch 154 votes (24.10 percent)

Lieutenant Governor

(Libertarian)

Bill Slantz seven votes (100 percent)

State Secretary of State

(Republican)

John R. (Jay) Ashcroft 3,898 votes (100 percent)

State Secretary of State

(Democratic)

Yinka Faleti 614 votes (100 percent)

State Secretary of State

(Libertarian)

Carl Herman Freese eight votes (100 percent)

State Treasurer

(Republican)

Scott Fitzpatrick 3,798 votes (100 percent)

State Treasurer

(Democratic)

Vicki Lorenz Englund 619 votes (100 percent)

State Treasurer

(Libertarian)

Nicholas (Nick) Kasoff eight votes (100 percent)

Attorney General

(Republican)

Eric Schmitt 3,762 votes (100 percent)

Attorney General

(Democratic)

Rich Finneran 384 votes (62.64 percent)

Elad Gross 229 votes (37.36 percent)

Attorney General

(Libertarian)

Kevin C. Babcock eight votes (100 percent)

United States Representative

(Republican)

Vicky Hartzler 2,936 votes (70.66 percent)

Neal Gist 1,219 votes (29.34 percent)

United States Representative

(Democratic)

Lindsey Simmons 615 votes (100 percent)

United States Representative

(Libertarian)

Robert E. Smith six votes (85.71 percent)

Continue reading here:

Primary election results: Hotly contested local Sheriff's race and more - Nevada Herald

Aug. 4 election nears – Moberly Monitor Index

Randolph County voters will cast their ballots in Tuesdays primary election, which will feature candidates running for county positions, such as sheriff, commissioner and coroner, as well state and federal positions and a proposed ballot initiative to expand Medicaid in Missouri.

Among the local elections, the races for sheriff and western district county commissioner are the most contested. Sample primary ballots are now available through the Randolph County Clerks Office.

Sheriff candidates Aaron Wilson and Chris Wertz, Randolph County Sheriffs office employees, and Will Barger, a Randolph County resident and Vandalia police officer, are vying for the Republican nomination for the November election. Michael Hopper will appear alone the Democratic primary ballot for the sheriff race.

Incumbent John Hobbs, Huntsville Mayor Frank Miller and Artis Sumpter are competing for the Republican nomination for the western district commission seat. John Tracy and Steve Barnes will each appear alone on the Republican and Democratic primary ballots, respectively, for the eastern district commission seat.

Randolph County Coroner candidates Sid Conklin and Charlie Peel will compete for the Republican nomination in Tuesdays primary. Kevin Stone, Republican candidate for Randolph County assessor, and Mary Colley, Republican candidate for Randolph County public administrator, will each appear alone on the ballot in their respective races.

Raleigh Ritter, Mike Parson, James Neely and Saundra McDowell will appear on the Republican primary ballot as candidates for governor. Nichole Galloway, Jimmie Matthews, Antoin Johson, Eric Morrison and Robin Van Quaethem will appear on the Democratic ballot for governor race. Rik Combs and Jerome Bauer will appear as candidates for the Libertarian and Green parties, respectively.

Arnie Dienoff, Mike Kehoe, Aaron Wisdom and Mike Carter will appear on the Republican ballot as candidates for lieutenant governor. Democratic candidates Gregory Upchurch and Alissa Canady will vie for their partys lieutenant governor nomination. Bill Slantz and Kelley Dragoo will appear alone on ballots for the Libertarian and Green parties, respectively.

Two candidates, Neal Gist and incumbent Vicky Hartzler, will compete for the U.S. representative for District 4 Republican nomination. Lindsey Simmons will appear alone on the Democratic ballot for the same seat. Two Libertarian candidates, Robert Smith and Steven Koonse, will vie for their partys nomination as well.

Each party will only have one candidate listed for secretary of state. The candidates are: Republican John Ashcroft, Democrat Tinka Faleti, Libertarian Carl Freese, Green Party candidate Paul Lehmann and Constitution Party candidate Paul Venable.

Incumbent Eric Schmitt will appear alone on the Republican ballot for the attorney general race. Two Democratic candidates, Rich Finneran and Elad Gross, will compete for the partys nomination for the attorney general seat.

Republican Scott Fitzpatrick, Democrat Vicki Englund, Libertarian Nicholas Kasoff and Green Party candidate Joseph Civettini will appear as candidates for state treasurer on ballots for their respective parties.

Republican Ed Lewis and Democrat Terrence Fiala will appear on their partys respective ballots for state representative District 6.

Republican Cheri Toalson-Reisch and Democrat Jacque Sample will appear on their respective ballots for state representative District 44

Republican Chuck Basye and Democrat Adrian Plank will appar on their respective ballots for state representative District 47.

Two Republican candidates, Don Baragary and Tim Taylor, will compete for their partys nomination for state representative District 48. William Betteridge will appear alone on the Democratic ballot for District 48.

A non-partisan ballot initiative will also appear on all primary voters ballots Tuesday. State constitutional amendment 2 is a proposed ballot initiative for the November general election.

The initiative proposes that the state adopt Medicaid Expansion for Missourians between 19 and 64 years old with an income level at or below 133% of the federal poverty level, as set forth in the Affordable Care Act. If approved, the amendment would prohibit the state from placing additional burdens on Medicaid eligibility and enrollment standards. It would also require state agencies to take all necessary actions to maximize federal financial participation in funding medical assistance through Medicaid expansion.

State government entities are estimated to have one-time costs of approximately $6.4 million and an unknown annual net fiscal impact by 2026 ranging from increased costs of at least $200 million to savings of $1 billion.

Voters will have a yes or no choice for the proposed ballot initiative.

ecliburn@moberlymonitor.com

Continued here:

Aug. 4 election nears - Moberly Monitor Index

Trump, Ernst have slight leads in poll of Iowa voters – The Audubon County Advocate Journal

DES MOINES In Iowa, Republican President Donald Trump and Sen. Joni Ernst are leading, but their races for re-election are within the margin of error in a new poll of registered voters.

Both the presidential and U.S. Senate race are essentially up for grabs, Monmouth University found in a live poll of 401 registered voters July 30 to Aug. 3.

In the presidential race, Trump is leading Democratic former Vice President Joe Biden, 48 percent to 45 percent, with 3 percent supporting Libertarian Jo Jorgensen and 3 percent undecided. The polls margin of error is 4.9 percent plus or minus.

Iowa looks to be more competitive than four years ago, said Patrick Murray, director of the independent Monmouth University Polling Institute in New Jersey. There is a lot of parity between Trump and Biden in both the strength of their support and the preferences of key demographic groups.

Trump won Iowa by 9 percentage points in 2016.

Although Trump leads statewide, Biden has the edge in 13 swing counties, including Linn, where the 2016 vote margin between Trump and Democrat Hillary Clinton was less than 10 percent. Biden has a 52 percent to 45 percent lead in those counties, which Clinton carried by a combined 1 percentage point margin.

In Johnson, Polk and Story, which Clinton carried by 17 points, Biden has a 62 percent to 31 percent lead in the Monmouth poll.

Trump has a 59 percent to 34 percent lead in counties he won by a combined 30 points four years ago.

Trump has a 51 percent to 41 percent advantage among white voters without college degrees. Biden leads among white voters with college degrees, 48 percent to 46 percent.

The race remains tight when different likely voter models are applied.

A model based on a higher turnout than 2016 puts the race at 48 percent Trump and 46 percent Biden.

A model reflecting lower voter turnout produces a similar 47 percent Trump and 47 percent Biden result.

Republicans (36 percent) are somewhat more likely than Democrats (28 percent) to feel very optimistic about the 2020 presidential election. But a larger number of Democrats (46 percent) than Republicans (34 percent) say they are more enthusiastic about voting this year compared to past elections.

One of the reasons Biden may do nominally better in a lower turnout scenario is that his voters are slightly more motivated, Murray said. Its not a statistically significant difference, though, and this race is currently up for grabs, no matter how you slice it.

Both Biden and Trump are upside down in favorability ratings.

While 45 percent have a favorable opinion of Trump, 50 percent have an unfavorable opinion. Bidens rating is 43 percent favorable against 49 percent unfavorable.

In the Senate race, unlike previous polls, Ernst, who is seeking re-election to a second term, is leading her Democratic challenger, Theresa Greenfield, by the same margin 48 percent to 45 percent.

Libertarian Rick Stewart gets support from 2 percent; independent Suzanne Herzog, 1 percent; and undecided, 3 percent.

When likely voters are asked, the race gets tighter, with Ernst leading 48 percent to 47 percent, according to Monmouth.

Previous polls over the spring and summer have shown a tight Senate race. The polls produced margins similar to Monmouths, but with Greenfield holding a lead within the margin of error.

Ernst won a competitive open seat contest six years ago. Greenfield is giving the incumbent a run for her money to hold onto it, Murray said.

According to FiveThirtyEight.coms rating of pollsters, the Monmouth poll earned an A-plus with a slight Democratic bias.

The poll also found 40 percent of Iowa voters say it is very likely they will vote by mail rather than in person in the Nov. 3 election. Another 1 percent are somewhat likely to do this, 12 percent are not too likely, and 30 percent are not at all likely.

In many Iowa counties, active voters will receive an absentee ballot application for the 2020 general election. Just 20 percent reported they had regularly voted by mail in past elections.

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Trump, Ernst have slight leads in poll of Iowa voters - The Audubon County Advocate Journal

Donald Trump, Joni Ernst have slight leads in poll of Iowa voters – The Gazette

In Iowa, Republican President Donald Trump and Republican Sen. Joni Ernst are leading, but their races for re-election are within the margin of error in a new poll of registered voters.

Both the presidential and U.S. Senate race are essentially up for grabs, Monmouth University found in a live poll of 401 registered voters July 30 to Aug. 3.

In the presidential race, Trump is leading Democratic former Vice President Joe Biden, 48 percent to 45 percent, with 3 percent supporting Libertarian Jo Jorgensen and 3 percent undecided. The polls margin of error is 4.9 percent plus or minus.

Iowa looks to be more competitive than four years ago, said Patrick Murray, director of the independent Monmouth University Polling Institute in New Jersey. There is a lot of parity between Trump and Biden in both the strength of their support and the preferences of key demographic groups.

Trump won Iowa by 9 percentage points in 2016.

Although Trump leads statewide, Biden has the edge in 13 swing counties, including Linn, where the 2016 vote margin between Trump and Democrat Hillary Clinton was less than 10 percent. Biden has a 52 percent to 45 percent lead in those counties, which Clinton carried by a combined 1 percentage point margin.

In Johnson, Polk and Story, which Clinton carried by 17 points, Biden has a 62 percent to 31 percent lead in the Monmouth poll.

Trump has a 59 percent to 34 percent lead in counties he won by a combined 30 points four years ago.

Trump has a 51 percent to 41 percent advantage among white voters without college degrees. Biden leads among white voters with college degrees, 48 percent to 46 percent.

The race remains tight when different likely voter models are applied.

A model based on a higher turnout than 2016 puts the race at 48 percent Trump and 46 percent Biden.

A model reflecting lower voter turnout produces a similar 47 percent Trump and 47 percent Biden result.

Republicans (36 percent) are somewhat more likely than Democrats (28 percent) to feel very optimistic about the 2020 presidential election. But a larger number of Democrats (46 percent) than Republicans (34 percent) say they are more enthusiastic about voting this year compared to past elections.

One of the reasons Biden may do nominally better in a lower turnout scenario is that his voters are slightly more motivated, Murray said. Its not a statistically significant difference, though, and this race is currently up for grabs, no matter how you slice it.

Both Biden and Trump are upside down in favorability ratings.

While 45 percent have a favorable opinion of Trump, 50 percent have an unfavorable opinion. Bidens rating is 43 percent favorable against 49 percent unfavorable.

In the Senate race, unlike previous polls, Ernst, who is seeking re-election to a second term, is leading her Democratic challenger, Theresa Greenfield, by the same margin 48 percent to 45 percent.

Libertarian Rick Stewart gets support from 2 percent; independent Suzanne Herzog, 1 percent; and undecided, 3 percent.

When likely voters are asked, the race gets tighter, with Ernst leading 48 percent to 47 percent, according to Monmouth.

Previous polls over the spring and summer have shown a tight Senate race. The polls produced margins similar to Monmouths, but with Greenfield holding a lead within the margin of error.

Ernst won a competitive open seat contest six years ago. Greenfield is giving the incumbent a run for her money to hold onto it, Murray said.

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According to FiveThirtyEight.coms rating of pollsters, the Monmouth poll earned an A-plus with a slight Democratic bias.

The poll also found 40 percent of Iowa voters say it is very likely they will vote by mail rather than in person in the Nov. 3 election. Another 1 percent are somewhat likely to do this, 12 percent are not too likely, and 30 percent are not at all likely.

In many Iowa counties, active voters will receive an absentee ballot application for the 2020 general election. Just 20 percent reported they had regularly voted by mail in past elections.

Comments: (319) 398-8375; james.lynch@thegazette.com

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Donald Trump, Joni Ernst have slight leads in poll of Iowa voters - The Gazette

Democrats Heck, Liias advance in race for Washington lieutenant governor – KING5.com

The seat is open after incumbent Cyrus Habib decided to join the clergy.

Democrats Denny Heck and Marko Liias will advance to the general election for the Lieutenant Governor seat, which is being vacated by Cyrus Habib.

As of Wednesday afternoon., Heck had received 28% of the vote and Liias received 17%. Republican Ann Davison Sattler was in third place with 12% of the vote.

The two candidates with the most votes will advance to the November general election, regardless of party.

Nearly a dozen candidates lined up to take Habib's seat, after the Democrat announced earlier this year that he would vacate it.

Habib, an up-and-coming politician who had served in the state Legislature and served one term as lieutenant governor, said he was shifting gears and planned to join the clergy.

The higher-profile candidates for the seat include:

The complete list of candidates as they appear on the ballot, and to their information in the state voters' guide, follows:

Read more:

Democrats Heck, Liias advance in race for Washington lieutenant governor - KING5.com

These O.C. parents have a message for Gov. Newsom, teachers unions: Open up the schools – OCRegister

A pro-charter school group brought some 75 parents, teachers and a couple of Orange County Board of Education members together Tuesday evening to rally for the reopening of schools that were closed because of coronavirus concerns.

Parents, they said, should be making the choice of whether their children learn on campus or online.

Open up the schools, the crowd briefly chanted.

Jeff Barke, right, leads a rally outside the Santa Ana Educators Association office in Santa Ana on Tuesday, August 4, 2020. The rally calling for the reopening of schools was organized by the California Policy Centers Parent Union. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)

Cecilia Iglesias, left, and Orange County Board of Education member Mari Barke, right, join others outside the Santa Ana Educators Association office during a reopen the schools rally in Santa Ana on Tuesday, August 4, 2020. The rally was organized by the California Policy Centers Parent Union, a pro-charter school group. Iglesias, a former Santa Ana councilwoman and school board member, works for the center and organized the meeting with Barkes help. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)

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Rhonda Furin, center, joins others during a reopen the schools rally outside the Santa Ana Educators Association in Santa Ana on Tuesday, August 4, 2020. The rally was organized by a group called Parent Union. Its a pro-charter school group under the libertarian California Policy Center. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)

A man holds up a sign during a reopen the schools rally outside the Santa Ana Educators Association office in Santa Ana on Tuesday, August 4, 2020. The rally was organized by aParent Union. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)

About 75 protesters gathered outside the Santa Ana Educators Association office for a reopen the schools rally in Santa Ana on Tuesday, August 4, 2020. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)

Cecilia Iglesias protests outside the Santa Ana Educators Association office during a reopen the schools rally in Santa Ana on Tuesday, August 4, 2020. Iglesias, a former Santa Ana councilwoman and former School Board member, organized the rally as the head of the Parent Union, a pro-charter school group under the libertarian California Policy Center. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)

Jeff Barke, a physician who advocates for the reopening of schools without social distancing or face masks, leads a reopen the schools rally outside the Santa Ana Educators Association office in Santa Ana on Tuesday, August 4, 2020. The rally was organized by the California Police Centers Parent Union group, a pro-charter group that said parents should have the choice of whether their children can return to campus for in-person learning or continue with online education. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)

Protestors gather outside the Santa Ana Educators Association for a reopen the schools rally in Santa Ana on Tuesday, August 4, 2020. The rally was organized by the California Policy Centers Parent Union. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)

Jeff Barke, right, leads a rally outside the Santa Ana Educators Association office in Santa Ana on Tuesday, August 4, 2020. The rally calling for the reopening of schools was organized by the California Policy Centers Parent Union. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)

Flanked by American flags and punctuated with religious references and prayer, the rally was organized by the Orange County-based California Policy Centers Parent Union, which pointedly chose to host its event in front of the offices of the Santa Ana teachers union.

Thats why were here, said Jeff Barke, an Orange County physician who regularly advocates for reopening schools without face masks or social distancing but mentioned neither safety precaution during the rally. Instead, he and others focused attention on teacher unions, which have advocated for resuming school online for now.

Were here to let them know were sick and tired of the schools being closed. Its not based on science. Its not based on statistics. Its not based on facts. Its based on union power, said Barke, co-founder and board chairman of a new conservative-leaning charter school, Orange County Classical Academy.

Barbara Pearson, president of the Santa Ana teachers union the Santa Ana Educators Association called the protest another desperate grab for attention in their struggle to stay relevant.

It has nothing to do with the reopening of schools or the students of Santa Ana. Governor Newsom made the decision to close schools, not the unions. Our priority is the safety of staff and students, Pearson wrote in an e-mail Tuesday night.

On July 17, Newsom ordered that all public and private schools in counties seeing a spike in coronavirus cases could not reopen for in-person learning in the new academic year. That affected all of Orange Countys schools, except for those elementary schools that are applying for a waiver. (State officials unveiled the waiver application process Monday night; its likely to impact mostly private and parochial schools.)

During the rally Tuesday, a few teachers spoke about the detrimental effects of online learning on students, especially those who need special services. Students have regressed academically since schools shut down mid-March due to the coronavirus pandemic, they noted. And many who are in vulnerable situations, some speakers said, have been made even more vulnerable, exposing them to abuse and even suicide, because they dont have their safe haven school to turn to.

Mari Barke, an elected member of the Orange County Board of Education and Jeff Barkes wife, told the crowd, to keep fighting to reopen schools.

Parents are in the best position to make decisions for their children, Mari Barke said.

Last week, her board voted to file a lawsuit against Newsom to force a reopening of schools. Fellow Trustee Ken Williams also addressed the crowd, invoking God and talking about the fight for the children.

The rally was organized by Cecilia Iglesias, a former Santa Ana councilwoman and former School Board member who works for the California Policy Center, a libertarian think tank that focuses on issues like pension reform and charter schools. The Center runs four chapters of the Parent Union in Southern California. Iglesias said she hopes to hold similar rallies in other counties.

Our call is a call to action, to let parents choose, Iglesias said prior to the rally. Were suggesting: open up the schools, following safety guidelines, and give parents the choice.

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These O.C. parents have a message for Gov. Newsom, teachers unions: Open up the schools - OCRegister

Health care execs have made millions during COVID, more scrutiny needed: Critics – ABC News

Lawmakers and legal experts are calling on the Security and Exchange Commission to investigate the trading activity of a number of health care executives, some of whom have already made millions of dollars in stock trades during the period that their companies were working as part of a mad dash for coronavirus cures and treatments.

"I think the SEC needs to be on full alert at this moment," said Sen. Chris Van Hollen, a Maryland Democrat, in an interview with ABC News. "It's important as we move quickly to develop a vaccine we make sure the public's interests are protected. That's their job. They're supposed to be the watchdog for the public interest here."

There have been indications the SEC is stepping up examination of potential insider trading in connection with the stock of a number of health care companies that have been engaged in the race for COVID-19 treatments -- many of whom have received lucrative government contracts to help address the public health crisis.

Earlier this week, the Wall Street Journal reported that the SEC had launched a probe into Eastman Kodak's handling of a $765 million loan agreement with the federal government to develop drugs in its domestic factories. The newspaper cited sources familiar with the matter. The SEC declined to comment when reached by ABC News, and a Kodak spokesman said the iconic photography company has "not been contacted yet by the SEC." The spokesman said he could not confirm whether there was an investigation underway, but said that "the company intends to fully cooperate with any potential inquiries."

And on Wednesday, the Democrat-led House Financial Services Committee announced an investigation into the Kodak loan, requesting documents pertaining to negotiations from the government agency that brokered the deal. In a press release announcing the probe, committee members characterized Kodak as "a company with little experience producing prescription drugs or their components."

Jacob Frenkel, a former senior counsel in the SEC's division of enforcement who now works in private practice representing corporate clients, including on SEC issues, told ABC News any public company mentioning coronavirus and the word "solution" in the same phrase -- when timed with a spike in its stock -- "is likely to trigger a SEC enforcement investigation into possible insider trading and stock manipulation."

A sign marks the headquarters of Moderna, an American biotechnology company that is developing a vaccine against COVID-19, in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on May 18, 2020.

A sign marks the headquarters of Moderna, an American biotechnology company that is developing a vaccine against COVID-19, in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on May 18, 2020.

"They recognize that any mention of a COVID-19 solution is a potential market moving statement," Frenkel said.

Frenkel has been tracking the SEC's activity in policing companies trumpeting products or treatments related to coronavirus and said it's been unprecedented. He said the agency has used civil enforcement authority dozens of times to suspend trading in securities of companies making suspect or questionable disclosures about vaccines, protective devices, testing, mitigation and technology.

He said regulators are following a simple formula: "COVID + announcement + trading + price spike = SEC investigation."

Moderna Therapeutics, the drug company that has become a domestic leading contender in the race for a vaccine, has also attracted unwanted attention for its executive trading. The company's stock shares rose as much as 21% in April after the company announced a deal with the federal government that would pay as much as $483 million for the development of a vaccine.

Executive trading activity ahead of Moderna announcements about the promise of its vaccine candidate drew scrutiny, even as the company explained that its executives who had traded had followed SEC guidelines by filing documents laying out a schedule of stock sales in advance -- to avoid any potential suspicion that they were trading based on inside information.

Van Hollen, a member of the Senate Banking Committee, said that long before the pandemic, he harbored concerns that executives had found ways around the safeguards -- for instance, the risk someone could file a schedule of pre-arranged stock sales with the SEC, and then time market-moving public announcements to push up the stock price just ahead of a sale. Van Hollen has legislation pending that he says would add safeguards to make sure the advanced filings delivered the kind of protection that was always intended.

"The government is doing the right thing to develop a vaccine as soon as possible and the amount of money flowing into this is appropriate. These are important investments," Van Hollen said. "But whenever you see that kind of money flowing rapidly into something like a vaccine, it's important to prevent fraud."

On Monday, Moderna held an investor call in which it sought to emphasize the public service of its vaccine work, as opposed to the potential financial gain, but also noted that the firm had "received approximately $400 million of customer deposits for potential supply" of its vaccine.

"We have a responsibility to do everything we can to develop a safe and effective vaccine. We have invested in manufacturing at risk ahead of approval to ensure supply if our COVID-19 vaccine candidate is approved," said Moderna CEO Stephane Bancel. "We are working with governments around the world, and overseas to ensure the vaccine is accessible regardless of ability to pay. And it will be responsible on price, well below value during the pandemic."

In a statement to ABC News, Moderna explained that its executive stock sales are regulated by a program that "tends to execute either on the basis of an advance schedule of regular timed sales" as part of an effort to avoid insider trading.

Reports of a possible SEC probe involving Kodak surfaced Tuesday, one day after Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., penned a letter to SEC Chairman Jay Clayton calling for an investigation into "potential incidents of insider trading prior to the July 28, 2020, public announcement" of the loan to Kodak.

"There were several instances of unusual trading activity prior to the announcement of this deal, raising questions about whether one or more individuals may have engaged in insider trading or in the unauthorized disclosure of material, nonpublic information regarding the forthcoming loan awarded under the Defense Production Act," Warren wrote.

"This is just the latest example of unusual trading activity involving a major Trump administration decision," she added.

Indeed, trading volume in Kodak stock rose sharply the day before the government announced its massive loan to the company. The investigation reportedly includes scrutiny of the pre-announcement stock activity, according to the Wall Street Journal.

The newspaper reported last week that Kodak's communications team mistakenly omitted an embargo on an advanced press release about the loan agreement to a local reporter, who then tweeted about the prospective deal. The external Kodak spokesperson told ABC News, "the company's internal communications team did not intend for the news to be published by the outlet in question."

Kevin Simpson, the founder of a Florida investment advisory firm, Capital Wealth Planning, LLC, said there is not a more important time for the SEC to be policing corporate executives than during this type of national crisis.

"Whenever there is a crisis, there is an opportunity for people to take advantage," Simpson said. "When you see these types of activities, it raises the question, are we really dealing with a fair and level playing field?"

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Health care execs have made millions during COVID, more scrutiny needed: Critics - ABC News

Over 25 million Americans at risk of losing health care as coronavirus pandemic rages: "It’s been real hard for me" – CBS News

An estimated 5.4 million American workers lost their health insurance from February through May, one study finds. Nonprofit Kaiser Family Foundation estimates that about 27 million in total are at risk of losing coverage during the coronavirus pandemic, and could be left struggling with COVID-19 or other illnesses along with a lack of income that can make paying medical bills nearly impossible.

"We're seeing an unprecedented loss in jobs, and what's going to come along with that, is unfortunately the loss of health insurance as well," Kaiser Executive Vice President Larry Levitt told CBS News' Michelle Miller.

He said the loss of health insurance is "particularly risky" during a pandemic, when people are at a heightened risk of "getting infected and potentially severely ill."

"People who don't have health insurance hesitate to seek medical attention, worrying about the big medical bills they may face," Levitt said.

Those losses mean Americans with preexisting conditions, like Georgia resident Rodney Watts, are left without coverage or work when they need it the most.

"I'm a type-two diabetic, you know, and it's been real hard for me," Watts said. "Some days you want to go to the doctor and see what else is wrong with you, but you can't."

Watts was working as an overnight supervisor at Atlanta's Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport. When the pandemic hit, he lost his job and his health insurance along with it.

"It was bad, it was real bad," he said.

Watts' insulin costs him roughly $400, which he has been paying for with the $600 federal weekly jobless benefit that recently expired without a contingency plan in place. Congress is still deadlocked over an extension.

"It's been a struggle," Watts said. "We've been managing, but you know, when that 600 goes away, I don't know."

The Kaiser Family Foundation estimates that four out of five Americans who, like Watts, lost their employer health insurance, are eligible for help through the Affordable Care Act or Medicaid, but many do not know about it.

Larry Levitt said he was concerned that the lack of health insurance could have a negative impact on the fight against the coronavirus as well.

"We need people who have symptoms, who feel they may be sick, to get into care and get tested so they can avoid infecting others," he said.

In Rodney Watts' case, the loss of one job and one person's health benefits puts an entire family at risk.

"When this interview is over, I'm not going to sit around. I got to go find work, I got to get my health coverage," Watts said. "Because I got a lot of people depends on me. I got a wife, I got grandkids. I got kids. I got a lot of people and I can't fail them. I can't fail them."

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Over 25 million Americans at risk of losing health care as coronavirus pandemic rages: "It's been real hard for me" - CBS News

New study ranks Minnesota No. 2 in the nation for health care – KIMT 3

ROCHESTER, Minn. - A new study is ranking Minnesota as one of the top spots in the nation for health care.

Wallethub has ranked Minnesota #2 in the nation for health care in 2020.

Factors where the state ranked highly include the lowest average monthly insurance premiums, lowest stroke and heart disease rates and highest physician medicare-acceptance rate.

Olmsted County Public Health says as healthcare systems have faced the COVID-19 pandemic this years collaborative efforts within our community that provide affordable, quality health care have taken center stage.

Director Graham Briggs said, "It's really given us an example to demonstrate how this collaborative effort can really impact health outcomes and, in this case, prevent more serious situations from arising that we're unfortunately seeing in other places in the nation associated with COVID."

The state that beat out Minnesota for the top spot is MassachusettsIf you want to view the full study click here.

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New study ranks Minnesota No. 2 in the nation for health care - KIMT 3

FDA Guidance for Health Care Professionals When Prescribing Treatment for Opioid Use Disorder – Pharmacy Times

FDA Guidance for Health Care Professionals When Prescribing Treatment for Opioid Use Disorder

In the statement, the FDA noted that it is important for health care professionals to routinely discuss the availability of naloxone with all patients when prescribing or renewing an opioid analgesic or medicine to treat OUD. Additionally, it may also be important to consider prescribing naloxone to patients who have been prescribed medicine to treat OUD previously or patients who may be at an increased risk of opioid overdose.

Although patients already receiving medicines to treat OUD may have a lower risk of opioid overdose than those not receiving such treatment, there remains the risk of relapse, which has the potential of resulting in an overdose.

Additionally, the FDA explained that prescribing naloxone may also be necessary if a patient lives with anyone who is at risk of accidental ingestion or overdose, which includes children and other close contacts.

Patients and caregivers may also need to receive education on how to recognize a potential overdose and how to subsequently administer naloxone successfully in such cases. Some states provide this information online via training videos that describe the signs of overdose and the appropriate administration of naloxone.

However, it may still be necessary to provide patients with general information in order to ensure they understand the signs and symptoms of an overdose, as well as the appropriate steps to take when administering naloxone, according to the FDA.

States also provide specific guidelines regarding the dispensing and prescribing requirements for naloxone, making it helpful for health care professionals to consult their individual states information for further guidance regarding whether patients in fact need a prescription to obtain naloxone.

The FDA made note that under all circumstances, it is important to let a patient know that if they believe an overdose is occurring, it is necessary to call 911 or get emergency medical support immediately, even if naloxone is administered. Naloxones effects are temporary, meaning that the individual it was administered to may still need medical support following its administration.

Upon the prescription of naloxone, the FDA recommends that health care professionals let patients know to inform all family and friends that they have naloxone, where it is stored, and how to properly use it in the event of an overdose. Additionally, its important to keep it in a place that is easily accessible to family and friends.

It is also helpful to encourage patients and caregivers to read the educational materials and instructions for use that come with naloxone before an opioid emergency happens so that they are aware.

With an estimated 1.7 million Americans experiencing a substance use disorder involving prescription pain relievers in 2018, all patients being prescribed opioids for use in the outpatient setting would benefit from a conversation with their health care professional about the availability of naloxone.

REFERENCEFederal Drug Administration. FDA recommends health care professionals discuss naloxone with all patients when prescribing opioid pain relievers or medicines to treat opioid use disorder. FDA PDF. Published July 23, 2020. Accessed August 4, 2020.

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FDA Guidance for Health Care Professionals When Prescribing Treatment for Opioid Use Disorder - Pharmacy Times

Florida, Kentucky, and Tennessee Healthcare Facilities Stepping Up Commitment to Control Coronavirus Spread and Reduce Healthcare-Associated…

Hospitals, Nursing Homes, and Nursing/Rehabilitation facilities throughout the Southeast are stepping up their commitment to decrease the spread of Human Coronavirus and other deadly pathogens by incorporating the multi- patented PathO3Gen Solutions UVZone shoe sanitizing stations. AdventHealth, Clear Choice Health Care, Norton Healthcare, Agape Nursing & Rehabilitation Center, Cornerstone Village, Christian Care Centers of Memphis, Christian Care Center of Kuttawa, and Sweetwater Nursing and Rehabilitation have implemented the cutting-edge technology in their fight to control coronavirus spread and reduce Healthcare-Associated Infections (HAIs).

About UVZone

AdventHealthConnerton (FL) has incorporated eight (8) shoe sanitizing stations and is seeing dramatically reduced infection rates. AdventHealth Connerton VP and COO Debi Martoccio explains the benefits they have seen:"We have updated our HAI rate graphs andthe reduction that we've seen since Feb 2019 (PathO3Gen Solutions UVZone shoe disinfection technology implementation date) is 53% through March 2020.We have always had a lower than expected HAI rate at our facility. However, since the inception of the PathO3Gen Solutions UVZone shoe disinfection technology and other infection control measures, we have reduced our HAI rate by 53%."

Clear Choice Health Care, LLC(Melbourne, FL) was the first in Florida to create a COVID-ONLY facility, Dolphin Pointe Health Center, a first of its kind transitional facility in Jacksonville, FL. Clear Choice manages eleven (11) Skilled Nursing and Assisted Living facilities in Florida, all of which have implemented the UVZone shoe sanitizing stations. Geoff Fraser, Partner, Clear Choice Health Care, LLCsays,"We at Clear Choice Health Care believe so strongly in the PathO3Gen Solutions Ozone+UVC disinfection technology that I recommended all eleven (11) of the facilities we manage implement the UVZone to ensure that each facility was doing all they could to provide a visible sign of safety and maintain cleaner environments. Being the first in Florida to create an All-Covid facility (Dolphin Pointe Health Care), I was excited to find this new technology to help stop the spread of pathogens, including coronavirus."

Louisville-based Be U.V. Well, LLC, a distributor of the PathO3Gen UVZone shoe sanitizing station, supplied units to the Tennessee and Kentucky region. Vice President, Ed Marcellino says, "Be U.V. Well prides ourselves on representing new and innovative technology. Bringing PathO3Gen Solutions UVZone shoe sanitizing stations to the Southeast region, when and where we are really needing it, is very satisfying for me. Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, our company was convinced the UVZone has applications in healthcare but also food, manufacturing, hospitality, and nursing homes. The plug and play installation is a great feature, allowing facilities to easily put these units anywhere they are needed."

Ten (10) additionalfacilities including Agape Nursing & Rehabilitation Center (Tennessee), Cornerstone Village (Tennessee), Christian Care Centers of Memphis (Tennessee), Christian Care Center of Kuttawa (Kentucky), and Sweetwater Nursing and Rehabilitation (Tennessee) have acquired the UVZone shoe sanitizing stations."It's been great to be able to show the community our commitment to safety by incorporating the PathO3Gen Solutions UVZone Shoe Sanitizing Station.It's so simple to use and takes only a few seconds to increase our safety protocols." -- Bartlee Norton, Administrator, Sweetwater Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, Sweetwater, TN.

Norton Healthcare (Louisville, KY) installed twenty-five (25) UVZone shoe sanitizing stations at six (6) locations throughout Louisville as part of their ongoing effort to increase safety protocols. Norton Healthcare has started using the UVZone shoe sanitizers at entryways because soles carry pathogens that could spread throughout the hospital. These sanitizers deliver a dose of ozone and higher-frequency ultraviolet light to kill 99.999% of infection-causing germs in seconds."I would feel comfortable having a member of my family as a patient at Norton Healthcare due in large part to the increased awareness of cleanliness practices,"said Justin Thornsberry, R.N., director of quality and clinical effectiveness for Norton Audubon Hospital."We use all available technology to keep the environment safer for patients and employees."

From Scott Beal, COO, PathO3Gen Solutions:"The goal of PathO3GenSolutions is to prevent infections and save lives by creating cleaner and safer environments. There is nothing more rewarding for us than seeing our UVZone shoe disinfection technology on the ground, when and where it really matters the most."

About UVZoneThe UVZone shoe disinfection technology is the first and only UL Certified, proactive disinfection equipment using an exclusive and multi-patented combination of Ozone (O3) + UVC. The patented technology is proven to be 110x more effective against deadly pathogens, and over 24x more effective at eliminating Human Coronavirus, than UVC alone. It eliminates up to 99.999% of the deadliest pathogens, including bacteria and fungi,and leaves zero (0) Human Coronavirus residue on footwear. The UVZone shoe sanitizing station is easy to use with any footwear or shoe cover and plugs into a standard outlet.

About PathO3Gen SolutionsPathO3Gen Solutions sole mission is to prevent infections and save lives by creating cleaner and safer environments. The privately held Florida-based company holds multiple patents on their technology and equipment. The UVZone shoe sanitizing station is UL Certified and manufactured by an IS0 9001 facility in the U.S.A. http://www.patho3gen.com

SOURCE PathO3Gen Solutions

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Florida, Kentucky, and Tennessee Healthcare Facilities Stepping Up Commitment to Control Coronavirus Spread and Reduce Healthcare-Associated...