How to Choose Foods That Are Good for the Planet, Animals & You – The Beet

Sophie Egan understands that there is an astounding amount of confusion over what to eat. If you care about the planet, animals, human health and supporting companies that give back to their communities, you are a "conscious eater" and she has written the book for you. Her new book: How to Be a Conscious Eater: Making Food Choices for You, Others, and the Planet, helps guide you through the confusing aisles of the supermarket to hone in on the right choices to put your money where your heart is.

Using three criteriaIs it good for me? Is it good for others? Is it good for the planet?Sophie Egan helps readers make the right decisions based on research andinformation instead ofmarketing hype.

Author of the book: Devoured, How What We Eat Defines Us, Egan is an expert on foods impact on human and environmental health. Conscious Eaterdivides food into four categoriesstuff that comes from the ground, stuff that comes from animals, stuff that comes from factories, and stuff thats made in restaurants to help consumers decide what's important to them and how to put their consumer dollars to work backing those values.

SE: There's so much misinformation that there has been a loss of food literacy. People don't trust their instincts about what to eat. I wanted to empower people to make food choices they can feel good about. There'sinformation overload and misinformation.

So I made sure not to overwhelm the reader. The format offers breaks it down into these short and sweet bottom-line answers of what to eat.

SE: I found myself realizing:It's not enough to think is this good for you, but also is this good for the climate. So I wanted us to think about good for you and good for others, including other people and also the animals in the journey from farm to fork. And is it good for the planet?

SE: Right, So it helps to broaden the lenses and add an aperture. I wanted this book to broaden it so the mental checklist, People wonder: If I get this food, is it worth this? The way I look at it conscious eating is about getting clear on what your values are and shopping those. You first need to decide what you want to support with your grocerydollars.

SE: It provides a variety of tools including telling you a product's water footprint comparison, carbon footprint comparison, and of course these topics are complex, but you canmake consumers aware of the cost of their food. They can then ask themselves: "What are the things I care the most about?" If you care the most about carbon footprint or animal rights. Often they are in alignment. The carbon and water footprints: The worst for the planet and for animals is cow milk. But then when you go to buy plant-based milk, you also want to look for flavor and sourcing footprint, because of course almonds require a lot more water than oats.

SE: Plant forward and mostly plant-based foods can be more sustainable than strictly plant-based. But then human health is also a factor and plant-based is healthier. We can only hold so much complexity in our heads at once. If you eat mostly whole foods and mostly foods from the ground, that can check a lot of boxes. Across the board that may be best in all categories.

SE: These third-party certifications, like the certified "organic" label, a lot of time they are referees of the transparency game. They help tick through the checklist we would not be able to even know about.

SE: There are important stickers to know, that have real meaning that helps you align with your values. USDA Organic is arguably one of the most rigorous standards of how food is grown. It supports an eco system and farm workers health and supports

USDA Organic Inhibits synthetic peticides and growth hormones and antibiotics. From an environmental standpoint that is significant.

But a lot of them are not standardized. Something can say "natural" and mean little. But "organic" does ensure that it is chemical-free when harvested. But that doesn't mean they can't add preservatives and more chemicals after it's harvested. A processed food product with the label USDA Organic just means that 95 percent of the sources are organic.

But in terms of the organic label, there is still the halo effect. Organic chocolate frosting is still organic chocolate frosting. So for health, you're getting a load of added sugar.

SE: The label Fair Trade is also meaningful.Fair for Life or Fair Trade Certified.These are truly meaningful for farm workers and harvesters. It ensures that no discrimination or harassment is taking place, no forced labor or child labor either. This has become a shocking problem for Cocoa production. In Africa, South America, the Ivory Coast and other places. Those certainly are not the only place. Fair Trademeans that it's monitored.Part of theprice of that item gets fed into local funds for infrastructure and jobs where the product or ingredients originated.

Where these certifications differ from one another, is how far along the spectrum they ensure a liveable wage for workers, versus a fair wage or a minimum wage. Fair for Life is the strongest. Look for that on bananas, coffee, chocolate, since those are three common ones.

The Beet: Sometimes I look for the frog, from the Rainforest Alliance

SE: that is a good one, as is Bird-Friendly from the Smithsonian. This is specifically for coffee.It means that when coffee is grown in the tropics, it signals the homes of migratory birds are respected. And it ensures the coffee is grown in shade. So no trees needed to be cut down which takes away bird habitats. The less we disturb nature for farming the better.

Of all the crops grown worldwide, only about 1 percent are organic, which is shocking. For all the perceived consumer interest, "organic" only accounts for 1 percent of all growing.

There's a lot of different variables. It can take three years or more to transition to organic soil. But the other thing is that some farmers think the term organic does not even go far enough.

One term is Biodynamic from Demeter International Organization. They have certified "Biodynamic" which means at least 10 percent of the farmer's land is off-limits to growing, so it encourages biodiversity.

Another term to watch is "Regenerative." This is a big one. That's basically going to replace what we're doing now. Some people think we're going to skip straight to this "Regenerative" This is about soil and growing practicesand it's a way of growing that integrates with the surrounding ecosystemfor more biodiversity and more natural growing practices.

Biodynamic also promotes water conservation and treats wetlands grasslands and forests as part of the farm ecosystemso the farm is part of a larger ecosystem and natural landscape.

Farmers and ranchers have roles to play in being climate super heros. Improiving soil health and capturing carbon and creating best practices. This is something we need to encourage.

The "Regenerative" growing practice leaves the soil better than they found it. It depends on all the methods coming together to create a healthier earth. Some crops do this already. One that is really known for that is lentils. They are nitrogen fixers. Environmental super crops.

SE: It's not the case the shorter the distance, the better. The analysis includes the assessment of the total environmental footprint of a crop, and how people are treated in harvesting and packaging the food. Soall the methodstogether might be more important.

Transportation is just a fraction of the decision. Of course, farm to table is great. But there is nuance. Personally, when I am considering what to buy, my personal guidance is to better understand the methods andlook at transportation within that context.

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How to Choose Foods That Are Good for the Planet, Animals & You - The Beet

Local news ecosystem is taking root in Northeast Ohio – Crain’s Cleveland Business

They're being called "local news ecosystems," and one is building in Northeast Ohio.

It's what philanthropies, civic activists and entrepreneurial journalists across the country see as the sprouting of mostly young and fragile organizations that are trying to bring news and information, usually online, to overlooked neighborhoods and communities. Many share content to spread their stories further, with a focus on bolstering, if not directly competing, with the work of struggling traditional print and broadcast media.

Northeast Ohio has already spawned several news operations, including the Observer group of community newspapers serving Lakewood and several other Cuyahoga County communities, and The Devil Strip in Akron.

One of the latest, and maybe the most ambitious, is The Land, which just launched its website. As planned, The Land would "deliver in-depth stories that foster accountability, inform the community and inspire people to take action," according to the crowdfunding proposal prepared by founder and editor Lee Chilcote and publisher Tammie Wise, both formerly associated with Freshwater Cleveland, a for-profit digital magazine owned by Detroit-based Issue Media Group.

The Land plans to cover all of Cleveland's neighborhoods and the city's inner ring of suburbs, eventually building a staff of six reporters to cover government, development, environment, education, health care and civic engagement.

"There's been a tremendous amount of growth in the nonprofit news sector in recent years," Chilcote said. "The nonprofit model will allow us a lot of ability to serve the community, have some earned income but have memberships and grants to fulfill our mission."

Chilcote said he and Wise were motivated by what they see as a "news crisis" in Northeast Ohio as traditional news organizations, particularly The Plain Dealer, have made significant cuts in news coverage.

This is not a Northeast Ohio phenomenon. Across the country, the decline or demise of newspapers has created so-called "news deserts" in many communities. At the same time, foundations and other philanthropies are beginning to see that local news is critical to maintaining healthy communities, especially in lower-income parts of cities.

Last year, the Cleveland and Knight foundations commissioned a study, "Northeast Ohio's Local News and Information Ecosystem," by two North Carolina consultants that was aimed at civic leaders. One of its key conclusions: "Whatever your primary issue of concern, your second issue should be media." It argued that local news engages citizens, improves public decision-making and makes political and civic leaders accountable to their communities. It also makes contributions to public health and political participation.

When participants in six focus groups were asked to talk about issues they were facing and how they stayed informed, they were critical of the existing media landscape. Said one participant: "I can find out where the trash is, or (about) an event over here. But what's really, really happening policy-wise coming from city hall, coming from my school board and that sort of thing? People are not really getting good quality information."

The study also found that the number of news gatherers in Cleveland was down 61% between 2004 and 2019. In Akron, that figure was down 54%.

Michael Murphy, chief marketing officer of the Cleveland Foundation, said that funding parts of the ecosystem makes sense to his and other organizations in the community. In December, the Cleveland Foundation and the Akron Community Foundation, the Center for Community Solutions, the George Gund Foundation and the Knight Foundation announced more than $110,000 in journalism grants to address community information needs in Akron and Cleveland.

"As a coalition of funders, we are starting to see news and information as the critical part of any community infrastructure," Murphy said. "If you don't have a healthy news and information ecosystem, you can't have a community that's thriving. Citizens need to be informed."

The Cleveland Foundation, for example, has funded a project on food insecurity in Cleveland developed by Black Girl Media, a blog and podcast collective; Edible Cleveland, a print and online magazine; and WOVU, a community radio station created by Burten, Bell, Carr Development Inc., the nonprofit community development corporation serving Cleveland's Central and Kinsman neighborhoods.

It also is sponsoring a one-year pilot of a program through Neighborhood Connections, a Cleveland nonprofit that boosts Cleveland neighborhoods, to pay Greater Clevelanders to document official committee meetings of Cuyahoga County and City of Cleveland governments. The program, Documenters.org, was created in Chicago by City Bureau, a nonprofit civic journalism lab.

"Residents in Cleveland, especially, felt that they don't feel represented at editorial meetings, that there is not someone that looks like them who is making decisions. There is a strong, strong sense of distrust," Murphy said. "They feel that even when there are stories of hope in their neighborhood, the traditional media rely on antiquated B-roll, or antiquated images, to even tell a story of good news."

One of the oldest parts of the building Northeast Ohio news ecosystem is the Observer group, a loosely connected group of for-profit and nonprofit news organizations started more than a decade ago as print monthlies or biweeklies that are considered "hyperlocal" because they focus on a single community, or closely linked communities. They cover schools heavily but also housing, libraries and city councils. Seven Observers, each separately owned, cover communities from Westlake and Parma to Collinwood and Euclid.

Bob Rosenbaum, advertising director of the Heights Observer, which covers Cleveland Heights and University Heights, said the Observers started as print publications and continue to have a strong print presence because its revenue comes from local advertisers who don't need or can't afford to reach the kind of audience that larger media reach.

"We're now in our 11th year, and we've been making it on advertising revenue almost exclusively. Ninety percent of our revenue is advertising," he said. "We've largely had year-on-year growth until this year. This year, everything is blown to the wind."

Rosenbaum said his organization does attract some foundation funding for specific projects, and it is a member, along with some of the other Observers, of the Neighborhood & Community Media Association of Greater Cleveland. That association's website posts stories from its 14 members, including the Plain Press, which covers Cleveland's West Side neighborhoods, and the Real Deal Press, which covers "the interplay of race, class and power in the civic, business and cultural spaces of Northeast Ohio."

The Devil Strip, a 5-year-old online and print news co-op in Akron that believes media are a city's "chief storyteller," sees its role as being an advocate for the city.

"I think the way we fit into the local news ecosystem is filling gaps that we see," said editor Chris Horne. "We're looking at more narrative, long-term, slow journalism. Part of it is, we don't have the ability to do the daily stuff."

Those gaps include looking at local arts, music, entrepreneurship and community leadership, and celebrating the people who make Akron a unique place as well as exploring the challenges that hold it back.

Horne said Devil Strip is getting 30,000 unique visitors a month. Before the pandemic hit, much of Devil Strip's revenue came from advertising. But it also is in the middle of a two-year, $200,000 grant from the Knight Foundation, and it has won a $50,000 grant from the GAR Foundation.

News organizations like these are cropping up all over the country. The Institute for Nonprofit News, a Los Angeles organization that is a hub where members can share best practices, pool resources and collaborate on stories, has more than 250 members including The Devil Strip and Belt magazine in Northeast Ohio.

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Local news ecosystem is taking root in Northeast Ohio - Crain's Cleveland Business

Restoring mangroves in west Africa a challenge, but UNEP shows the way – Down To Earth Magazine

Mangrove ecosystem in western Indian Ocean, comprising 10 African countries, is rapidly depleting

The mangrove ecosystem in the Western Indian Ocean (WIO) comprising 10 African nations is rapidly getting depleted; some areas have reportedly lost asmuch as 88 per cent of the cover, according to the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP).

Conserving and restoring mangroves is essential and a nature-based solution is required to address adverse environmental, societal and climatic challenges in the region, according to the new UNEP guidelines on mangrove ecosystem restoration for the WIO region.

West Africa accounts for 31 per cent of the mangrove cover in the continent.

The threats

The UNEP status report stated that the ecosystem was under threat due to the increasing population, coastal development and poor governance.

Climate change poses a risk to the remaining mangrove areas, mainly through rising sea levels and increased sedimentation caused by precipitation and shoreline change. In fact, the future of mangroves is uncertain especially in the region, according to another report.

According to the Global Mangroves Alliance, 67 per cent of mangroves have been lost or degraded to date, and an additional one per cent being lost each year. Without mangroves, 39 per cent more people would face threat of floods annually and flood damage would increase by more than 16 per cent.

The guidelinescame a week after the high-level panel on ocean called for mangrove conservation and restoration. Every $1 invested in mangrove conservation and restoration generates a benefit of $3, estimated the panel.

Livelihoods of coastal communities depend on mangroves, and therefore, restoring mangroves could also contribute to building back better through green recovery after the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic ends, according to UNEP.

Mangroves also drive eco-tourism, create jobs; there is a need for an interaction between local communities and mangroves that is often ignored during formulation of mangrove restoration projects, the document pointed.

Mangroves are essential life support system for coastal communities in the WIO region, said James Kairo, chief scientist at the Kenya Marine and Fisheries Research Institute and lead author of the guidelines.

If degradation continues, communities will be without resources for shelter or fuel, food or a means to make a living, he added.

Restoring mangroves is possible but challenging

Restoring mangroves is possible but challenging, according to the UN show casing case studies on mangrove restoration projects from Kenya, United Republic of Tanzania, Mozambique, Madagascar, Mauritius and Seychelles.

Mangrove restoration can be used as a tool to return the lost forest in order to achieve the objectives of sustainable mangrove management, said the UN citing Kenyas experience.

Restoring mangroves is feasible as long as the questions of why, where, when, how and by whom are appropriately addressed, it added.

While analysing the challenges faced by the community-based mangrove restoration projects, the global UN organisation also enlisted the possible solutions:

Golden rules for identifying site for restoration

The UNEP document underlined the Golden Rules proposed by Enright and Wodehouse to be considered for restoration.

It stated that the degraded site should be accessible and devoid of strong waves. Planting should be restricted to vegetated areas where the forest has been degraded and lost.

Long-term monitoring

Lack of monitoring is one of the major reasons behind failures of most restoration projects, and hence, monitoring mangrove restoration projects is important, the UNEP said.

Rehabilitation of the degraded mangroves must be considered as a programme and not a short-term project, since the communities have to be engaged and empowered, it added.

UN recommended development of alternative income generating activities (IGAs) targeted at all mangrove users, including mangrove cutters.

Explore ecosystem services

At least$1.2 billion is the economic value of protection provided by coral reefs and mangroves in the WIO, according to WWF estimates.

Hence, ecotourism and payment for ecosystem services programmes should be explored, UN recommended, citing successful restoration of mangroves at Gazi bay, Kenya.

It is supposedly the worlds first conservation project that linked mangrove forests to the global carbon market. It was able to provide direct income to participating community from sale of carbon credits.

Most mangrove-restoration efforts have emphasized on planting as the primary tool for managing degraded areas, rather than first assessing causes for the degradation and then assessing the natural recovery opportunities, the UN noted.

But mangrove ecosystem is dynamic and the degraded mangrove areas may recover naturally. Natural recovery must be considered before initiating any mangrove planting activities, cautioned the UN document.

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Restoring mangroves in west Africa a challenge, but UNEP shows the way - Down To Earth Magazine

Zinnov Awards 2020 recognizes the Titans in Tech, individuals, and organizations who have become synonymous with excellence in the GCoE ecosystem – PR…

-Zinnov hosts its Annual Awards for the 11th consecutive year, recognizing exceptional individuals and organizations at the forefront of technology innovation ~

-The 2020 edition of the Awards celebrates distinguished leaders and teams who have gone beyond to become true agents of change in the wake of the ongoing pandemic ~

BANGALORE, India, July 31, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- Zinnov, a leading global management consulting firm, hosted the 11th edition of its marquee Awards today and released the names of the winners across all categories. Hosted virtually, this edition had individual winners and representatives from winning organizations acknowledging the Awards digitally.

Zinnov Awards 2020 is a testament to the grit, perseverance, and commitment of Global Centers of Excellence to rise above the uncertainties to emerge stronger and more resilient than ever. This year, the spotlight was on those remarkable individuals and organizations who faced adversity and emerged stronger for it, by building future-ready leadership, focusing on diversity, and driving innovation, even during these trying times. It equally emphasized the importance of recognizing not just the Goliaths of the technology ecosystem but the Davids too. It was an opportunity for smaller and emerging GCoEs to showcase their commitment to journey beyond resilience to become antifragile.

The virtual gathering included 1000+ leaders, technology practitioners, thought leaders, and the families of the winners who came out to celebrate the ecosystem in full strength. Zinnov Awards continues to be an acknowledged gold standard in recognizing the outstanding achievements and pivotal contributions of GCoEs in India, and this year too, saw an overwhelming response with 350+ nominations from 150+ companies across 8 award categories.

Award Categories and Winners

Category 1: Unlocking Centre Value:A company-wide award, this recognizes R&D Organizations across both Engineering and Enterprise IT centers that have rapidly evolved from being a pure play cost center to a value center.

Winners:

Category 2: Great Place to Innovate:This category is a company-wide award to recognize GCoEs that are focused on value creation from the India center and have made concerted efforts across five key areas Organization Charter, Culture, Internal Programs & Processes, External Linkages, and Innovation Metrics.

Winners:

Category 3: Business Continuity Readiness:This is an organization-wide award that assessed the BCP readiness of GCoEs in dealing with various disruptions and the specific role played by them in mitigating the impact of COVID-19.

Winners:

Category 4: Inclusion & Diversity:A company-wide award, this aims to recognize organizations that have established programs and are the gold standards for Inclusion and Diversity in India, across four major drivers of Inclusion, namely, People, People Processes, Operational Enablement, and Ecosystem Engagements.

Winners:

Category 5: Building a Culture of Intrapreneurial Leadership:This is an organization-wide award to recognize those GCoEs that are focused on creating a culture to develop and nurture intrapreneurial leaders from the India center and have made concerted efforts to drive a strong leadership philosophy with allied programs to identify and develop leaders to deliver key business outcomes.

Category 6: Building World Class Site Ops:An organization-wide award, this category recognizes GCoEs that have an impeccable site operations team that forms the backbone of any company.

Winners:

Category 7: Next Generation Women Leaders:An individual contributor award, this felicitates women leaders in technology GCoEs who have created large scale impact through their business, leadership, and/or technology expertise. This year, two sub-categories were created to recognize women leaders in Business/Technology and Corporate Functions.

Winners:

Category 8: Technical Role Model:This is an individual contributor award that recognizes those individuals who have been technology stalwarts and star contributors to the internal and external technology ecosystems. This year, two sub-categories were created to recognize technologists who have created a significant impact in Artificial Intelligence & Big Data Analytics (AI & BDA) and Intelligent Automation (IA).

Winners:

About Zinnov

Founded in 2002, Zinnov is a leading global management and strategy consulting firm, with presence in Santa Clara, Houston, Bangalore, Gurgaon, and Paris. Over the past 18 years, Zinnov has successfully consulted with over 250+ Fortune 500 enterprises and technology companies to develop actionable insights that help them create value across dimensions of both revenue and optimization. With core expertise in Product Engineering, Digital Transformation, Innovation, and Outsourcing Advisory, Zinnov assists clients by:

With their team of experienced consultants, subject matter experts, and research professionals, Zinnov serves clients from across multiple industry verticals including Enterprise Software, BFSI, Healthcare, Automotive, Retail, and Telecom in the US, Europe, Japan, and India.

For more information, visit http://zinnov.com.

Media Contact:Nitika GoelChief Marketing Officer, Zinnov[emailprotected]+91-98450 16255

Logo: https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/694742/Zinnov_Logo.jpg

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Zinnov Awards 2020 recognizes the Titans in Tech, individuals, and organizations who have become synonymous with excellence in the GCoE ecosystem - PR...

Ignore naysayers, the patent system is playing a vital role in the fight against covid-19 – IAM

Biotech and pharma patents have generated significant controversy in recent years, including in countries like the US and UK (see here and here). But the coronavirus pandemic has intensified worldwide scrutiny of life sciences innovators, their IP strategies and the patent system in general.

Many commentators (see here and here, for example) have expressed concerns that patents and other rights will impede research collaboration or will limit access to new covid-19 vaccines or treatments. These worries, if corroborated by events, could lead to a backlash against IP rights.

In recent months, national governments, international bodies and life sciences innovators have all been reacting to these concerns and seeking to adapt to new circumstances. Here are the four key things we have learned so far.

Compulsory licensing has historically been associated mainly with middle-income countries. However, given the seriousness of the current medical and economic crises, several high-income countries have raised the prospect of using legal mechanisms to circumvent IP rights covering coronavirus-related innovations.

While most countries have some form of compulsory licensing law in place, several have felt it necessary to take measures to sharpen these tools to overcome potential IP barriers to medical access. Canada, for example, passed Bill C-13 to allow its government to issue a licence without first negotiating with the rights holder and with greater flexibility over how the patentee is remunerated.

Germany also implemented legislation providing the Federal Ministry of Health with new powers to grant compulsory licences, while France has adopted sweeping measures allowing its Prime Minister to launch generic drugs prior to patent/SPC expiry and even to seize drugs from private companies.

None of this means that developed countries expect to have to use these provisions (although Israel has already made use of previously unused powers to grant a permit to import generic versions of AbbVies Kaletra) or that this readiness to circumvent IP rights will continue after the pandemic. But it shows that the US administrations view that patents are almost sacrosanct is not shared by other governments in high-income countries.

In the early stages of the pandemic, IP owners provoked public controversies by seeking or asserting exclusive rights to coronavirus-related innovations. Gilead, for example, applied for seven years orphan drug exclusivity for potential covid-19 treatment remdesivir.

But biotech and pharma rights holders came quickly to understand the need to depart from their usual IP strategies. Many have taken steps to promote wider and more affordable access to coronavirus-related innovations and to accelerate research efforts.

Gilead rescinded its request for regulatory exclusivity, promised to donate 1.5 million doses of the drug and subsequently entered into non-exclusive licences with five generic companies to increase the supply of remdesivir to 127 low-income countries. AbbVie announced it would not enforce its patents for covid-related uses of Kaletra, and Novartis, too, has committed to making any IP relating to the use of hydroxychloroquine available.

Oxford University has made its leading vaccine candidate available on the basis of non-exclusive IP licence for those wishing to sell it at-cost or at a small profit. Its partner AstraZeneca, which is striking deals to manufacture the vaccine for markets around the world, has pledged to make no profit. However, other vaccine innovators, like Pfizer and Moderna Therapeutics, have not ruled out making a profit.

Despite the above, hopes that life sciences innovators will voluntarily participate in initiatives, such as the WHO Covid-19 Technology Access Pool (C-TAP) or the Open COVID Pledge, aimed at promoting open-access licences to patents, data and other valuable IP are forlorn.

Research-based companies have advocated non-exclusive patent licensing, supported using the Medicines Patent Pool to license IP for use in lower-income countries and co-founded the WHO ACT-Accelerator for sharing covid-related scientific data.

But IFPMAs director general Thomas Cueni has said that: The pharmaceutical industry draws a line at an open-access platform to enforce worldwide open-licence agreements for covid-19 vaccines and treatments. That risks undermining a predictable IP system that underpins largescale R&D investment, he warned.

Innovators have rejected a one-size-fits-all model that assumes IP should be licensed the same way regardless of the nature of the product, the situation of the rights holder and whether the product is being sold into a wealthy or poor country. Companies wish to retain some control over the partners with which they collaborate and over the role IP will play in future innovations, Novartiss IP affairs chief Corey Salsberg told IAM recently.

Rights intended to confer monopolies risk obstructing access to medicines in certain circumstances. In a public health crisis of this magnitude it is reasonable for governments to ensure they have the ability to bypass patents if doing so is the only way to gain access to vital treatments. It is also imperative to consider how new forms of IP licensing or cooperation might better serve the interests of patients around the world (as HGFs Leena Contarino and Ellie Purnell do here).

But it is also important to challenge simplistic attacks on the IP-based innovation system (see here for a recent example), which overemphasise the significance of IP rights as a barrier to covid-19 treatment access and understate their contribution to the fight against the pandemic.

The most important problem we face is the lack of an approved covid-19 vaccine. But it is thanks in significant part to the incentives provided by IP rights that we have an innovation ecosystem capable of producing more than 160 experimental vaccines, 24 of which have already entered human trials. IP bolsters ongoing incentives for those involved in developing these candidates and can help delineate the partnerships needed as part of this effort.

Owners of leading inoculations and their partners are also currently investing significant sums of money in the manufacture of vaccine doses that might never be approved, partly because IP offers the prospect of recouping their costs. And it isnt obvious that an open-licensing approach would better enable the Oxford University/AstraZeneca vaccine, for example, to be produced at greater scale than the large number of bilateral agreements they have already entered.

Nevertheless, the benefits of IP are in a sense less visible than its downsides. Innovators should beware that if they are perceived to be charging too much for any coronavirus vaccine that comes on the market, steps may be taken to bypass their IP and perceptions of pharma patents in general will suffer.

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Ignore naysayers, the patent system is playing a vital role in the fight against covid-19 - IAM

Summer Travels: How To Protect Your Hair In The Sun, Ocean And Pool – Forbes

Beautiful woman with blue eyes lies in a blue lagoon

Summer days are filled with sunshine, swimming and spending time by the ocean. Unfortunately, the excessive exposure to sun, salt water and chemicals can sometimes wreak havoc on our hair causing dryness or a change in color. I spoke toMark Ryan Salonowner and celebrity hair stylist Ryan Trygstad about how to protect your hair in the sun and ocean so that summer hair doesnt mean damaged hair.

What Impacts Hair Negatively

Chlorine

Chlorine is the worst for hair, says Trygstad. If your hair is dry or colored, chlorine attaches to it and alters it it can even make blonde hair turn green. Additionally, chlorine can give hair a dry or metallic feeling. Trygstads tip to prevent your hair from experiencing damage through chlorine? Always pre-wet your hair with bottled water, then the hair shaft is filled and wont absorb chlorine. If you cant pre-wet your hair,R&Co Sun Catcher Leave-In Conditionerwill help protect and soften, seal, and detangle your hair. If your hair sustains significant damage from chlorine during the summer, there are also crystal treatments to pull the chlorine out of your hair but this process can also be drying. When it comes to chlorine its better to prevent than to treat, so keep that in mind before you dip into the pool.

Interestingly, water can play a big role in how our hair looks and feels when we go to a new location. Trygstad told me about some interesting changes hes witnessed in his career blondes getting a more yellow tone in their hair in England or his sister in Michigan developing a more brassy and copper tone in her hair over time due to minerality levels in the water there. In Florida the mineral levels in water are so high that people often get aMalibu C Hard Water Remedybefore getting their hair colored so that the mineral content doesnt interfere with the subsequent color.

Sun

The sun can dry your hair out especially when exposed over days or weeks. A lot of people love the sunkissed look their hair gets especially when it goes naturally a few shades lighter, however in the process hair often loses moisture. There are two restorative products that Trygstad loves to repair summer hair. One isMilbons Plarmia Hair Serum Treatmentwhich features emollient oils and nurturing proteins to provide superior hydration to dull, stressed hair. This product is compatible with all types of hair and can help with everything from repair to growth. Ive had clients whove never been able to grow their hair and this does it for them, says Trygstad. Another favorite of his isUltimate Resetby Shu Uemura which is a nourishing mask containing Japanese sourced rice extract to promoting stronger, softer hair.

Hair Bands and Friction on Hair

Summer is also a time when people partake in sports like surfing, paddleboarding, and snorkeling, and those with longer locks often pull their hair into tight ponytails. Instead of using plastic or thin hairbands, Trygstad says people should opt forGoody screw elasticsorhair ring ties. You wont get a tension break with these hair ties, he says. Also, braids are often a gentler alternative to ponytails which can lead to nice hair texture later in the evening.

Trygstad also recommends gently combing wet hair with the addition of a detangler or leave-in conditioner and a wide comb. People wonder why their ponytail keeps getting thinner its because they are ripping their hair with a brush when its wet, says Trygstad.

With a little planning ahead, the right products and gentleness on your hair, you can prevent the damage that often comes with summer travel and go through the season with healthy, beautiful hair.

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Summer Travels: How To Protect Your Hair In The Sun, Ocean And Pool - Forbes

The art of pump reliability: seal solutions for longevity and easy installation – Utility Magazine

Installation and maintenance of pumps within the water and wastewater industry comes with many challenges. Seal fatigue and breakdown inevitably leads to pump downtime, and with it the related substantial costs of labour and maintenance. Thankfully, advances in technology have brought proven solutions that can dramatically reduce seal installation time, pump maintenance and the likelihood of asset failure.

While mechanical seals only represent a small proportion of the overall acquisition cost of a pump, their failure can amount to significant expenditure.

The key to reliability lies in maximising pump life, and this can be effectively achieved with two simple, yet highly effective, solutions.

The use of split seals and active throat bushing technology offers considerable improvement for overall equipment reliability.

Used together, they enhance the seal environment with minimal or no-flush water requirements and dramatically decrease the efforts (and costs) spent on pump maintenance.

Split seal technology

They perform the same role as standard mechanical seals and can be utilised in the same locations (on rotating equipment).

However, by far the greatest advantage offered is that there is no disassembly of the installed pump required to fit a split seal and no additional expertise is needed.

Other advantages include:

Chesterton is the leader in split seal technology with the largest installed base globally.

Active throat bushing technology

The environment around the seal has a direct impact on its lifespan and reliability, with the two biggest issues being contamination and heat.

The traditional approach is an external flush generally water with the hope that this provides cooling, prevents abrasives from degrading the seal and reduces the build-up of solids.

Despite such efforts, its common for seals to fail, mainly due to ineffective cooling and poor lubrication.

Active throat bushing is a cutting-edge technology that addresses both the heat and contaminant issues in one simple solution as follows:

The advantages of this technology are far-reaching:

For water and wastewater processing, the advantages of these dual technologies are nothing short of remarkable.

Both are proven and in use on a global scale, offering substantial savings on energy, running costs and asset maintenance. Such value-driven solutions are an essential element for the optimal operation of a plants critical assets.

Chesterton solutions for water and wastewater treatment operations have been implemented around the world with documented success and recognition.

This partner content is brought to you by Chesterton. Visit chestertonrotating.chesterton.com/en-us/IndustryApplications/Pages/WaterAndWasteWater.aspx to discover the Chesterton portfolio of products that effectively decrease sealing installation time and pump maintenance, ensuring asset productivity thats crucial in todays competitive market.

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The art of pump reliability: seal solutions for longevity and easy installation - Utility Magazine

Melanie Cox Named to Board of Revolve Group, Inc. – Apparel News

Melanie CoxPhoto: Revolve

Revolve Group, Inc., an influential e-tailer of fashions for young women, announced July 29 that Melanie Cox would join the board of directors of the Cerritos, Calif.based company.

Cox has served as chief executive officer of the retailer Wet Seal and has also worked at senior executive positions for Urban Outfitters, Gymboree and Scoop NYC. According to Michael Mente, Revolves co-founder and co-CEO, Cox also has a track record of advising private equity and corporate clients on retail business trends through her company, MBC Consulting.

Melanie is a proven leader with deep apparel-industry experience, Mente said. Her experience successfully guiding public and private companies in our industry is a great complement to our already strong board. I am excited to tap into Melanies breadth of industry knowledge and am confident that her contributions to our board will be invaluable in shaping Revolves future strategies for growth and unlocking shareholder value.

Cox replaces Jennifer Baxter Moser, managing director of the private-equity group TSG Consumer, who has served as a Revolve director since 2012.

Revolve was founded in 2003 by Mente and Mike Karanikolas, who continues to serve the company as a co-CEO.

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Melanie Cox Named to Board of Revolve Group, Inc. - Apparel News

Pipe leaks could be tied to March quake – Baker City Herald

The Idaho earthquake that rattled Baker City happened almost four months ago but one of its effects might have been percolating ever since.

Baker City Public Works crews have recently repaired two leaks in a main water pipeline buried beneath Carter Street.

Although the link is not definitive, its possible that shaking from the March 30 quake near Stanley, Idaho, weakened a joint in the 12-inch-diameter pipe and led to the leak that caused water to pool along the curb on the north side of Carter Street between Seventh and Eighth streets.

The site is near the pedestrian crossing of the Union Pacific Railroad tracks.

When we get an earthquake like that, movement of the earth, it moves those pipes just a little bit and sometimes it can kind of break a seal and water can find its way out, Fisk said on Monday. So it could have been that but were not sure.

The March 30 quake, which had a magnitude of 6.5, rattled windows and caused chandeliers to sway in Baker City, about 128 miles from the epicenter.

City crews have fixed three leaks on the Carter Street pipe since the earthquake, Fisk said.

We really havent had any others, its just been that area, he said. We had one on Estes Street (one street north of Carter) as well and its a 6-inch cast-iron line.

Although the timing of the leaks suggests the quake might have been responsible, the pipeline, which is several decades old, leaked occasionally before the temblor as well, said Michelle Owen, the citys public works director.

Owen said the city will look to replace the pipeline, possibly including the project in a future fiscal year.

It impacts a lot of people so we really have to determine the best way to replace it, she said.

The cast-iron pipe would be replaced with one made of ductile iron, a stronger material that the city uses in many such replacements.

Early last week city crews repaired a leaking valve along Carter Street.

But with water continuing to puddle on the surface, crews dug up the pipe and found the second leak. They repaired that on Friday morning.

The crew went out and dug up that pipe and was able to pound some packing back in to stop the leak, Fisk said. And they put whats called a bell clamp on that leak so its now sealed and not leaking.

Workers had to remove the concrete curb on the north side of Carter Street.

Fisk said the city plans to build a new curb there before winter.

Continued here:

Pipe leaks could be tied to March quake - Baker City Herald

Blood on Their Hands | Letters to the Editor – The Chief-Leader

To the Editor:With the massive increase in shootings and senseless murders of innocent bystanders, some stick out.

Brandon Hendricks 17 years old, a basketball star who just graduated high school and was going to attend St. John's University, was killed June 29. Anthony Robinson on July 5 was holding his 6-year-old daughter's hand walking down the street when he was gunned down. I don't want to try to imagine the kind of nightmares she will have for the rest of her life.

Shatavia Wells on July 7 was shot 8 times for asking someone to stop throwing firecrackers around children and died July 17. Davell Gardner, 1 year old, was fatally shot in the stomach while sitting in a stroller July 12.

What is so painfully sad is that in between theses dates, many others, some children, were shot and killed. And Cuomo and de Blasio still allow this lawlessness to run rampant.

Amid all this loss of life, on July 16 de Blasio holds a press conference with a BLM sign replacing the city seal, and this clown of a Mayor states, "We have fewer people in our jails than any time since WW ll, and we are safer for it, and better for it."

The truth is, the numbers are low because of the failed bail-reform bill, which has given criminals an unlimited get-out-of-jail-free card.

He wants to send advocates out to handle small problems instead of the NYPD. Eric Adams, former NYPD Captain and current Brooklyn Borough President, supports that idea. But now he wants the Anti-Crime Unit back, especially after Shatavia Wells followed his instructions June 21 that communities should stop calling 311/911 for fireworks complaints, but rather "talk to the young people or the people on your block who are using fireworks and warn them of the dangers."

President Trump has promised to send Federal agents to several problem cities, including New York. Cuomo his brain cells kicking in, calls Trump and tells him we have it handled. So Cuomo and de Blasio both grow a pair and kick the protesters out of City Hall Park. Yetsee how long they have allowed the death and destruction to continue.

What I want to know is, why are people not protesting in front of Gracie Mansion and de Blasio's Brooklyn house, why are they not protesting in front of the Governor's Mansion? City and state officials have blood on their hands, and not just for the senseless shootings. They sat back and watched the rioters and looters destroy black and white businesses. They have violated their oath of office to serve and protect and provide safety and security.

All the victims of these turnstile criminals deserve justice. Children, and women and mensome senior citizenshave lost their rights, and in many cases their lives. This cannot stand. They should not be considered acceptable losses in a war.

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Blood on Their Hands | Letters to the Editor - The Chief-Leader

Using the EU taxonomy as a guide to sustainable recovery – Investors’ Corner BNP Paribas

Many of the hardest-hit sectors, including oil & gas, cars and aviation, have business models that were already under pressure before the crisis from rapidly changing market dynamics and ever-tighter climate regulations. The generous recovery packages on offer, together with the particular circumstances of the crisis, provide them with the opportunity to make bold and ambitious changes that might otherwise have been challenging to implement.

How companies respond to the stimulus, and how they adjust their strategies, will determine their future profitability and long-term competitiveness.

In the EU, the conditions attached to the stimulus will be a defining factor. Policymakers can implement recovery packages that may either act as a catalyst for change, setting these companies on the right transition pathway, or lock in their unsustainable business models and waste taxpayers money.

The European Commission has proposed that the sustainable taxonomy the official EU classification of economic activities and the conditions under which economic activities can be considered sustainable guides investment in Europes recovery to ensure alignment with the EUs long-term ambitions.[1]

We believe governments need to emphasise support that helps companies become sustainable from an economic, social, and environmental perspective. Priority should be given to setting companies on the right transition path.

Any firm in a carbon-intensive sector that receives a bespoke or large taxpayer bailout should develop a detailed strategy to achieve carbon neutrality by 2050 at the latest. Transition plans should include short, medium, and long-term targets, and a social impact programme that addresses potential socially adverse impacts on employees, for example, by retraining employees.

The taxonomy could and should guide companies, investors, project promoters and other stakeholders, including policymakers, in the transition to a low-carbon, resilient and resource-efficient economy. Its uniqueness lies in the fact that it is consistent with EU environmental goals[2], including intermediate targets and a procurement plan for Europe to achieve carbon neutrality by 2050.

It is important to differentiate between improving the environmental performance of existing assets and ensuring that all future facilities make the maximum effort to be aligned with the low-carbon transition.

The taxonomy is well suited to guiding new investments, so it should inform companies decisions on future investments. These should be directed towards contributing substantially to climate change mitigation (compatible with achieving carbon neutrality by 2050), while avoiding significant harm to other objectives such as biodiversity or clean water. Oil & gas companies, for example, should prioritise investment in renewables or green hydrogen and reduce exposure to assets that risk being stranded.

Recovery investment, grants and spending should not create greater hurdles to the achievement of EU environmental goals or violate social standards. The taxonomy provides the EU with criteria to ensure all investments cause no significant harm (Do No Significant Harm criteria within the taxonomy) in the environment and society (social standards embedded in the taxonomy).

To claim alignment with the taxonomy, economic activities need to substantially contribute to one of the six environmental objectives and not significantly harm any other

In parallel, there is growing pressure to strengthen the governance of companies in the area of sustainability (included in the EU Action Plan on Sustainable Finance). The recently agreed recovery stimulus plan should reinforce this trend: this time around, public support from the EU and in many (but not all) other regions will and should come with green strings attached.

In return for support, companies should also strengthen their governance structures in these ways:

Towards a sustainable recovery

Since recovery packages can serve as a catalyst for change, we believe companies should present and commit to transition paths in line with the EU taxonomy as well as strengthen their governance structures in return for support.

In Europe, the taxonomy could form the basis of green transition plans, in combination with the governance and strategy principles of the TCFD[3], as expressed in the disclosure recommendations of the European Commissions Technical Expert Group on sustainable finance.

This is a great opportunity to enshrine long-termism in companies modus operandi and to emphasise the importance of ensuring returns to long-term shareholders, while at the very least causing no adverse impacts to other stakeholders.

Also read Crisis and resilience Navigating a sustainable recovery

Any views expressed here are those of the author as of the date of publication, are based on available information, and are subject to change without notice. Individual portfolio management teams may hold different views and may take different investment decisions for different clients. This document does not constitute investment advice.

The value of investments and the income they generate may go down as well as up and it is possible that investors will not recover their initial outlay. Past performance is no guarantee for future returns.

Investing in emerging markets, or specialised or restricted sectors is likely to be subject to a higher-than-average volatility due to a high degree of concentration, greater uncertainty because less information is available, there is less liquidity or due to greater sensitivity to changes in market conditions (social, political and economic conditions).

Some emerging markets offer less security than the majority of international developed markets. For this reason, services for portfolio transactions, liquidation and conservation on behalf of funds invested in emerging markets may carry greater risk.

[1] The EU taxonomy is a tool to help investors, companies, issuers and project promoters navigate the transition to a low-carbon, resilient and resource-efficient economy, for further information see https://ec.europa.eu/info/sites/info/files/business_economy_euro/banking_and_finance/documents/200309-sustainable-finance-teg-final-report-taxonomy_en.pdf

[2] The EU has developed a strategy, with specific targets, for each of the six EU environmental objectives - the attenuation of climate change, adaptation to climate change, the sustainable utilisation and protection of water and marine resources, the prevention and reduction of pollution, and the transition towards a circular economy, biodiversity and recycling.

[3] More on the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures

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Using the EU taxonomy as a guide to sustainable recovery - Investors' Corner BNP Paribas

Indigenous communities need to be partners in Canadas COVID-19 recovery plan – The Globe and Mail

Joseph Quesnel is an adviser on the National Task Force for Real Jobs, Real Recovery. He is an Indigenous policy and governance researcher.

Its easy to forget that at the beginning of the year, Canada was right in the middle of another crisis triggered by a series of protests over a natural gas pipeline being built through northern B.C. The issue of Indigenous reconciliation was front and centre in our national consciousness.

Then, of course, the COVID-19 pandemic hit, damaging our national economy in a way that we had never experienced before. For a natural-resource powerhouse like Canada, this had a measurable impact on our economic performance in the early part of the year. In 2019, natural-resource industries contributed $236-billion, representing 11.3 per cent of the Canadian economy, according to Natural Resources Canada. About 1.7 million Canadians were employed by the sector.

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Now, in this downturn, the manufacturing sector and natural resource extraction have become connected. A significant part of manufacturing is derived from natural resources.

For most Indigenous communities, reserve lands and traditional territories are located on or near resource projects. For example, the energy and mining sectors are some of the main private-sector employers of Indigenous peoples. Many of these resource-based jobs are high-paying jobs that make a big difference in Indigenous communities and provide meaningful steps toward tangible independence. In most cases, resource projects are a direct pathway to First Nation prosperity and wealth. And the vitality of the natural resource sector is intimately connected to the Indigenous communities that service it.

As Canada moves from pandemic crisis response toward recovery, the innovative natural-resource economy must play a central role. And as a result, Canada will need First Nations as full participants and partners in the natural resource-based recovery.

Recently, the national Task Force for Real Jobs, Real Recovery launched to draw up a blueprint for Canadas economic recovery as the country emerges from the COVID-19 crisis. The task force is being convened by Resource Works, a non-partisan, not-for-profit organization committed to the development of Canadas resources in a manner that is inclusive of Indigenous peoples and maintains a clean and healthy environment. Indigenous economic development is central to the work of the task force.

For most Indigenous communities, the sense of frustration comes from economic exclusion. The biggest challenge for Canada is to ensure that First Nations are full partners in the economic recovery, and that we do not simply return to the previous mode of conflict over resource development. As Indigenous business leader Blaine Favel once said: Reconciliation means that Indigenous people should not be the poorest people in lands that belong to us.

The answer to exclusion and resentment is becoming included and empowered. At present, the problem is Indigenous communities and governments lack financial tools that other Canadians take for granted. As Ottawa considers the mechanics of its economic recovery, it must remove barriers to the economic participation of Indigenous communities in the resource economy by providing support for Indigenous communities to become active beneficiaries and partners in the development of large-scale infrastructure.

At present, Indigenous communities under the Indian Act cannot use their greatest asset reserve lands to secure capital or build equity; you cannot place a lien on something that, under law, you do not own. Barring significant movement on the land question, Ottawa and Indigenous communities must work around this obstacle by providing financial tools to enable First Nations communities to lift themselves out of poverty.

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To start, Ottawa can lend Indigenous governments its sovereign government guarantee to secure lending, just as the federal government currently backs Indigenous housing through ministerial guarantees that protect on-reserve mortgages. With such secure loans, Indigenous communities can better invest in major infrastructure projects, including pipelines, and these communities can become equity partners, as well as significant decision makers on environmental protection. And while Canadas credit rating recently suffered a downgrade, it remains infinitely better than that of any current Indigenous government.

New Zealands Indigenous Maori communities despite a history of colonial land dispossession chose to invest money from treaty settlements and placed tribal lands back under Maori ownership and raised billions of dollars in assets. Likewise, Canada must open trusts that are held on behalf of First Nations and use those trusts as well as land claims and specific claims settlement monies toward investing and becoming equity partners in major infrastructure projects.

In the end, if Indigenous communities are equity partners in these projects, they will be invested in project successes, ensuring a pathway toward shared prosperity. Rather than being passive observers, First Nations should be engaged as full partners in the post-pandemic recovery. That would be good news for all involved.

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Indigenous communities need to be partners in Canadas COVID-19 recovery plan - The Globe and Mail

Post-COVID Banking: Now is the Time to Make the Enterprise-Wide Risk Assessment Process Match the Rapidly Evolving Risk Environment – JD Supra

Financial institutions have long suffered from the twin problems of high transaction-monitoring alert volumes and incomplete or low-quality data. Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, these challenges posed a constant risk to institutions by threatening to overwhelm compliance staff and making it difficult to implement an enterprise-wide risk-based approach. The challenges brought on by the pandemic have only further exacerbated these problems by changing workplace dynamics, customer behavior, and the threat situation. Now is the time for financial institutions to make the enterprise-wide risk assessment process more dynamic so that it can match the rapidly evolving risk environment.

Financial Institutions and COVID-19: The New Normal

Changes to the global economy brought on by the pandemic have caused many companies around the globeincluding financial institutionsto alter the ways they work as well as the way they interface with customers and others. Further complicating these changes for financial institutions is their regulatory compliance burden, which has not changed. Financial compliance departments are thus facing a multitude of new challenges:

What do these challenges demonstrate to financial entities? It is no longer sufficient to examine enterprise-level risks once a year during the annual anti-money laundering (AML) and sanctions risk assessment processfinancial institutions need more than a static snapshot of their exposure at a single moment in time. Current risk assessment processes are too often onerous and resource intensive while failing to equip financial institutions with the information they need to employ a risk-based approach that adapts to the evolving nature of these risks.

Shifts in customer behaviors and emerging COVID-19-related threats are triggering a high volume of false-positive transaction-monitoring alerts based on rules meant to identify deviations from expected behavior that may be suspicious. This further strains already stretched compliance teams and amplifies challenges related to the lack of complete and reliable data needed to fully understand expected customer behaviors and risk factors. As a result, pressure continues to build on the compliance controls in place to mitigate risk as traditional, static, rules-based transaction-monitoring systems are unable to adapt to the dynamic risk environment.

It is very easy for financial institutions to go into crisis management mode as they attempt to triage the increasing risks and alerts. However, even during a crisis like the current pandemic, its important not lose sight of how vital it is to take a holistic approach to enterprise-wide risk management to achieve a sustainable and efficient compliance program in the long term. If the current situation has vividly illustrated anything, it is that risks facing financial institutions are not static. Like the weather, risks change constantly in response to external elements such as customer behavior, geopolitical instability, technology, and pandemics, and internal factors such as resources and systems.

Changing How Risk Is Understood and Managed

Financial institutions should seek flexible and innovative approaches to understanding and managing risk. For entities that want to reexamine their approach, a good first step is to review the current risk assessment, as well as the data behind the assessment, and ask:

Ultimately, the long-term goal of any global financial institution should be to have a dynamic and sustainable risk assessment process that provides a real-time or near-real-time view of its changing risk and control environment. Such a system helps an institution identify and rapidly adapt to emerging risks and determine if controls are weakening under strain while creating a continuous feedback loop that strengthens processes and controls.

The Rewards of Change: A Dynamic Risk Assessment Process

Ensuring that financial institutions can confidently and efficiently harness the data already within their systems and map them to identified risk indicators is critical to achieving this more dynamic view of risk in a sustainable way because it presents opportunities for automation and efficiency. Transaction-monitoring systems and controls are one important piece of the data puzzle because they are a key source of data for assessing both risk exposure and the efficacy of controls. To clearly see the full picture, however, financial institutions must also ensure the completeness, accuracy, and accessibility of data in other areas such as customer due diligence files and core banking and payment platforms.

Even in this time of crisis during which financial institutions are facing economic headwinds and struggling to keep up with a rising tide of false-positive alerts, it remains critical for financial institutions to invest in this long-term vision. An integrated approach to risk assessment and data management is critical to moving toward a more sustainable and effective enterprise-wide risk management program. Financial institutions should seize this moment, leverage the existing momentum of changes to processes and procedures, and take the opportunity to enhance the risk and control assessment process and address data challenges. An investment now will pay dividends in risk management and quality data in the future.

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Post-COVID Banking: Now is the Time to Make the Enterprise-Wide Risk Assessment Process Match the Rapidly Evolving Risk Environment - JD Supra

How Provident Fund is taxed: All you need to know – The Financial Express

Provident Fund (PF) is a retirement-cum-savings scheme introduced by the Central Government considering the long term/retirement needs of the population. India is designed as a welfare state. However, owing to resource constraints, schemes like PF, ESI, CGHS, etc. have been designed to make the working population contribute consistently for their needs and contingencies both during and post employment. Contributions to provident funds are made on a monthly / periodic based on the nature of these funds.

These contributions form part of the Public Account of India (NSSF) and are deployed through acquisition of Central and State Government securities. Till date, PF contributions are considered to be the highest tax-free investments which also have a deduction in the year of investment.

To give a perspective:

The contributions to these provident fund accounts are eligible for accretions or interest and are available for withdrawal after a minimum lock-in period. Tax exemptions and deductions are available on both the interest and contributions subject to limits specific therein. For the purposes of Income Tax, provident funds are categorized into:

a. Recognised Provident Fund (RPF) recognized by the Commissioner of Income Taxb. Unrecognised Provident Fund (URPF) not recognized by the Commissioner of Income Taxc. Statutory Provident Fund (SPF) established under the Provident Fund Act, 1925. This is mainly for government employees, universities, educational institutions, etc.d. Public Provident Fund (PPF) established under Public Provident Fund Act, 1968

Tax benefits applicable to each of the above funds are as follows:

COVID Package: As part of the Economic Stimulus Package by the Ministry of Finance amid COVID-19, the following measures impacting the employees were announced:

# Workers registered with EPFO were given an option to take non-refundable advance of their own money in PF Account for any contingency expenditure. The limit for such withdrawal would be 75% of amount standing to their credit in the account or 3 months of wages. [As per April, 2020 report of the Ministry of Labor and Employment, EPFO offices across the country have settled 8,44,947 COVID-19 claims till 30.04.20 disbursing an amount of Rs.2662.41 crores to claimants]

# Further, SPF contribution of both employer and employee was reduced to 10% each from existing 12%, for all establishments covered by EPFO, for the months of June, July and August, 2020

Apart from unrecognized provident funds, all other funds are eligible for significant tax benefits, which is why provident fund contributions are one of the most popular forms of retirement savings.

Mr Mohan Prasad, a retired employee of Doordarshan, claims, Even though we did not have our employer contributing, the fact that I personally contributed year on year to avail maximum tax benefit ensured that I retired with a handsome corpus. India has always been a savings economy. However, the Gross Domestic Savings to GDP has been consistently falling and is currently at 30% (36% in 2007-08) which is significantly lower than China @ 44% but comparatively higher than developed economies like UK @ 16.2% and USA @ 17.9% (world bank). Confidence comes not from always being right but from not fearing to be wrong- provident fund contributions and investments have always been considered as the fail-safe for the Indian working class and continues to be the bed rock of our fragile social security system.

(By Divakar Vijayasarathy, Founder and Managing Partner, DVS Advisors LLP)

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How Provident Fund is taxed: All you need to know - The Financial Express

Latest Innovative Report on Cryonics Technology Market 2020 | Trends, Growth Demand, Opportunities & Forecast To 2026 | Alcor Life Extension…

Cryonics Technology Market research is an intelligence report with meticulous efforts undertaken to study the right and valuable information. The data which has been looked upon is done considering both, the existing top players and the upcoming competitors. Business strategies of the key players and the new entering market industries are studied in detail. Well explained SWOT analysis, revenue share and contact information are shared in this report analysis.

Cryonics Technology Market is growing at a High CAGR during the forecast period 2020-2026. The increasing interest of the individuals in this industry is that the major reason for the expansion of this market.

Get the PDF Sample Copy of This Report:

https://www.a2zmarketresearch.com/sample?reportId=8260

Note In order to provide more accurate market forecast, all our reports will be updated before delivery by considering the impact of COVID-19.

Top Key Players Profiled in This Report:

Alcor Life Extension Foundation, Biocision, Cellulis, Cesca Therapeutics, Cryologics, Cryonics Asia Ltd., Cryonics Institute, Cryotherm, GE Healthcare, Humai, Kriorus, Oregon Cryonics, Osiris, Panasonic Biomedical, Praxair Technology, Sigma-Aldrich, Southern Cryonics, Thermo Fisher Scientific, VWR

The key questions answered in this report:

Various factors are responsible for the markets growth trajectory, which are studied at length in the report. In addition, the report lists down the restraints that are posing threat to the global Cryonics Technology market. It also gauges the bargaining power of suppliers and buyers, threat from new entrants and product substitute, and the degree of competition prevailing in the market. The influence of the latest government guidelines is also analyzed in detail in the report. It studies the Cryonics Technology markets trajectory between forecast periods.

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Reasons for buying this report:

Table of Contents:

Global Cryonics Technology Market Research Report

Chapter 1 Cryonics Technology Market Overview

Chapter 2 Global Economic Impact on Industry

Chapter 3 Global Market Competition by Manufacturers

Chapter 4 Global Production, Revenue (Value) by Region

Chapter 5 Global Supply (Production), Consumption, Export, Import by Regions

Chapter 6 Global Production, Revenue (Value), Price Trend by Type

Chapter 7 Global Market Analysis by Application

Chapter 8 Manufacturing Cost Analysis

Chapter 9 Industrial Chain, Sourcing Strategy and Downstream Buyers

Chapter 10 Marketing Strategy Analysis, Distributors/Traders

Chapter 11 Market Effect Factors Analysis

Chapter 12 Global Cryonics Technology Market Forecast

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Latest Innovative Report on Cryonics Technology Market 2020 | Trends, Growth Demand, Opportunities & Forecast To 2026 | Alcor Life Extension...

TOM PURCELL: Laughter really is the best medicine – The Albany Herald

I missed it again. So did the rest of America.

July 1s unofficial International Joke Day came and went without fanfare.

Thats regrettable because we could all use a good belly laugh right now which gave me an idea.

The other day, after hearing more doom-and-gloom news while driving, I said to the Apple CarPlay app on my trucks stereo, Hey, Siri, tell me a joke.

Siri, Apples voice-activated digital assistant, replied, My cat ate a ball of yarn. She gave birth to mittens.

Thats an awfully corny joke but I laughed so hard, I accidentally steered my truck onto some roadside gravel.

When you laugh like that, its impossible to be angry or to dwell on whatever personal or business challenge may hang over your head

A belly laugh is an antidote to the self-seriousness thats one of the greatest afflictions of modern times. And with a pandemic killing thousands and crippling the economy, plus protests and social unrest, we need belly laughs more than ever. One psychologist suggests practicing laughing with a friend because utter seriousness can drive us to despair.

Social media give everyone a platform to share thoughts, which is good. But some self-serious people get awfully huffy with others who disagree with or challenge their thinking. Theyre so serious and so certain that those who disagree with them are wrong, even evil, that they demonize their detractors.

They dont try to converse, debate or understand differing viewpoints. OK, boomer and OK, Karen memes offer cases in point.

Humor and laughter, wonderfully infectious, keep us from falling into the trap of self-seriousness, promoting goodwill, thoughtfulness and civility. Humor is an elixir, a tonic that is good for mind and spirt, says an executive coach.

Laughters power is incredible and that power lasts.

One of my favorite family stories dates to the early 1950s. Freddy, my dads uncle on his mothers side a real character had a neighbor who was among the first in their area to buy a VW Beetle. Behind the neighbors endless boasting about his Beetles terrific gas mileage was conceit essentially, Im smarter than you, which is why Im getting way better gas mileage than you.

Freddy began sneaking next door at night to fill the VWs gas tank. As he did so, his neighbors boasts grew louder and more tiresome the guy was ready to call the Guinness World Records people, as his VW clearly was getting more miles per gallon than any other Beetle on Earth.

After a month, Freddy continued sneaking next door. But now he siphoned gas from the Beetles tank to the point where the neighbor thought his VW was getting worse gas mileage than any other Beetle on Earth.

Were still laughing at the braggart neighbor who suddenly stopped bragging.

Theres more evidence of the power of laughter. More than 60 years ago, my mother first heard this joke, which she vividly remembers, and still laughs at:

A lady whod been grocery shopping was walking to her car when she tripped and dropped a paper bag and two eggs fell out of the carton and broke onto the pavement. She was so upset that she started crying. A drunk walked up, surveyed the situation, and told her, Dont worry, lady. It wouldnt have lived anyway. Its eyes are too far apart.

We all need to laugh more. It really is the best medicine for our current ails.

Now, more than ever, the world needs trustworthy reportingbut good journalism isnt free.Please support us by subscribing or making a contribution today.

Tom Purcell is a Pittsburgh Tribune-Review humor columnist. Send comments to Tom at Tom@TomPurcell.com.

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TOM PURCELL: Laughter really is the best medicine - The Albany Herald

The politicization of medicine during the coronavirus pandemic – WKYC.com

American is split on the nation's response to Covid-19, but is that anything new?

CLEVELAND COVID-19 and the nations response to it, like seemingly everything else today, has divided the nation.

Whether its masks, hydroxychloroquine, businesses closing down or opening up, or even the severity of the coronavirus, everything about this pandemic has been polarizing.

People believe, in general, whats comfortable for them to believe and convenient for them to believe, Joseph White, a professor of political science and public policy at Case Western Reserve University, told 3News.

White says the politicization of healthcare and medicine is not something new. He cites President Woodrow Wilson neglecting to address the 1918 flu pandemic due to potential effects on the World War I effort, as well as President Ronald Reagan overlooking the AIDS epidemic. However, he says this time is a little different.

Whats unique here is the divisions are far more neatly along partisan lines and identified with party membership, he explained.

The countrys divide on the virus and the responses to it have been felt by the medical community.

Its just not a political issue, Dr. Amy Ray, the Medical Director for infection prevention at MetroHealth, said. For me, its frustrating to watch it be treated as such.

Ray says she understands the different reactions, but its been challenging to deal with.

Everyone is analyzing the data in their own way, she said.

So how did we get here? White says its been happening for years. We went from a nation in disagreement, to a nation divided, ultimately becoming a nation living in two separate realities.

Some of that is from the difference in media sources, he said. Some of that is from what people call the big sort, where more and more democrats live near democrats and republicans live near republicans. Theres disagreements about facts and disagreements about expertise to a point where people simply live in different realities.

While the fractured America will continue to disagree over public policy, Ray and White both hold hope that eventually the nation will get behind one common goal: Defeating this virus.

The virus doesnt care about politics and it certainly doesnt care about elections, Ray said. We, as humans, have to get through this together no matter which political party we belong to or not.

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The politicization of medicine during the coronavirus pandemic - WKYC.com

Fauci Would Have Thought Twice About Career in Medicine Had He Known It Meant Someday Talking to Jim Jordan – The New Yorker

WASHINGTON (The Borowitz Report)Dr. Anthony Fauci said on Friday that he would have thought twice about pursuing a career in medicine had he known that it would lead to his talking someday to Representative Jim Jordan.

Speaking to reporters after his congressional testimony, Fauci said that, during his appearance in the hearing room, he had been revisiting the series of life choices that had resulted in his being forced to hear Jordan speak.

I could have done so many other things with my life, the esteemed virologist said. I could have been a firefighter. I was actually a pretty good dancer back in the day. I could have given that a shot.

Reflecting on those roads not taken, Fauci added, Had I chosen any of those fields, you can bet your bottom dollar I wouldnt have spent today having to listen to Jim Jordan. Those are minutes Ill never get back.

Fauci clarified that he was very grateful for his career as an an epidemiologist but added, Lets not kid ourselves. If I were a professional dancer, theres about a zero-per-cent chance I would ever be in the same room as Jim Jordan. Oh, wellit is what it is.

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Fauci Would Have Thought Twice About Career in Medicine Had He Known It Meant Someday Talking to Jim Jordan - The New Yorker

Just the Right Medicine – Daily North Shore

Mitchell Hill

Loud noises rattle Mitchell Hill more than most. At 24-years-old, the Wilmette native endured 42 (and counting) MRI tests to ensure that a brain tumor, discovered when he was 2-years-old, has not returned.

As anyone whos had an MRI knows, the experience is jarringstuffed into a tube, unable to move, nothing to distract your mind from the noise.

The majority of Hills MRIs were done at Ann & Robert H. Lurie Childrens Hospital of Chicago Outpatient Center in Lincoln Park. The MRI room had sterile white walls and a looming massive MRI machine that rattled nerves as it stopped and started.

The tests were a very traumatic part of my childhood, Hill recalls.

Hill thought about how this process could be improved not only for himself but for others. He knew several members of Lurie Childrens staff and began to ask them questions.

Northbrook outpatient room PHOTOGRAPHY BY ROBIN SUBAR

In 2017, he met with a member of the Lurie Childrens Foundation team. They embraced his idea of a more child-friendly MRI room but at the time were unable to take on the project.

So I wrote that one off and thought, okay, its a good idea, but its not going to happen, Hill says.

Fast forward to Lurie Childrens work with Chicago artist Steve Musgrave at its new Surgical Center in Northbrook. Graphic illustrator Musgraves large-scale murals and digital designs have positively impacted childrens experiences at the main hospital.

Lurie Childrens Foundation called Hill and expressed an interest in using similar murals around the MRI machines at its Lincoln Park Outpatient Center. The Foundation gave Hill a dollar figure he needed in order to fund the installationand he was on it.

Lisa Mulvaney, Arts in Medicine Coordinator at Lurie Childrens, likens the installation process to being a conductor. She coordinates with artists, clinical teams, and vendors who fabricate and print the designs.

Its challenging to design illustrations around an MRI machine, Mulvaney says. The goal was to transform the entire feel of the room, and most importantly, the childs first impression.

The idea of transforming spaces and making the hospital feel less clinical and more child-friendly is something that has been part of Lurie Childrens mission from day one, explains Mulvaney.

As Lurie Childrens plans blossomed, so did Hills fundraising efforts. He turned to family and friends for the initial funds and managed to raise the dollars necessary for the Lincoln Park installation. He thought that was the end of it.

Check signing for art installation

Then Hill got another call from Lurie Childrens. They were inspired by the projects impact on patients and families and were beginning a renovation of their MRI suites at the main hospital. The rooms were bigger and so were the fundraising goals$10,000 per room. At the end of the project, there would be 4 MRI rooms.

I told them yes and then got off the phone, Hill recalls. I thought, this just went from a reasonable project to a project five times that amount. How am I going to pull this off?

He realized it would be better to partner with a corporate donor. At the time he worked for Revolution Brewing in Chicago.

If I was going to reach out to Chicago corporations, I might as well start with my employer, Hill says.

So he pitched Revolution Brewings CFO Doug Veliky. Velikys son was struggling with medical issues at the time and he was acquainted with the sterility of MRI rooms. In Veliky, Hill found someone who understood his mission. Veliky became a huge advocate and fundraised 76 percent of the projects goal.

As of now, Hill says he and Veliky have helped transform five MRI rooms at Lurie Childrens.

For 25 of my 40 tests, I had to be sedated because I was so anxious, Hill says. And coming off the anesthesia, as my mom will attest, was pretty extreme.

We want the designs to appeal to kids of all ages, Mulvaney elaborates. Theres also walking the fine line of making the designs friendly and engaging, but not overstimulating for kids who may have sensory issues, she explains.

This past September, Hills journey came full circle when he needed an MRI at the Outpatient Center in Lincoln Park, the first location that he helped transform.

Theres a big window that leads to a room full of doctors controlling the machine youre about to go intoalmost as if youre the subject of an experiment, he notes. With a fox decal, you cant see the doctors in the other room, which I thought was quite pleasing.

It appears that Hill has out-foxed some of the MRI room anxiety.

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Just the Right Medicine - Daily North Shore

Precision Medicine Identifies Key Recurring Mutation in Head and Neck Cancers – UC San Diego Health

Head and neck cancer is one of the leading causes of cancer-related deaths worldwide, and squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCC) account for the majority of these cases. In a new study, based on preclinical research and published July 29, 2020 in Molecular Cancer Therapeutics, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research, researchers at University of California San Diego School of Medicine and Moores Cancer Center report that an investigational drug candidate called tipifarnib showed promise in treating HNSCC tumors with mutations in the HRAS gene.

The findings shed new light on the HRAS gene, a member of the RAS family of genes that produce proteins that regulate a variety of cellular processes, including growth, movement and differentiation. In 4 to 8 percent of HNSCC tumors, the HRAS gene is mutated.

J. Silvio Gutkind, PhD, Distinguished Professor of Pharmacology and associate director of basic science at UC San Diego Moores Cancer Center.

This preclinical research has the potential to extend to the entire HNSCC patient community, whose overall survival rates are limited in recurrent or metastatic disease, and existing therapeutic options that are far from optimal, with response rates of roughly 10 to 20 percent, said senior co-author J. Silvio Gutkind, PhD, Distinguished Professor of Pharmacology and associate director of basic science at UC San Diego Moores Cancer Center.

These preclinical findings support the idea that HRAS represents a druggable oncogene in HNSCC through tipifarnibs inhibition of a key enzyme. It is a precision therapeutic option for HNSCCs harboring HRAS mutations.

Tipifarnib is a selective inhibitor of farnesyltransferase, an enzyme that plays a critical role in anchoring some RAS family proteins to cellular membranes. Unlike KRAS and NRAS gene mutations, HRAS is dependent on farnesyltransferase activity for function, offering a way to indirectly target an oncogenic RAS isoform using a well-characterized drug with extensive clinical experience.

In the study, UC San Diego researchers found that cell line- and patient-derived HNSCC models harboring HRAS mutations were highly sensitive to tipifarnib, which the authors said has demonstrated encouraging preliminary clinical activity in patients with relapsed or refractory HRAS-mutant HNSCC to date.

Currently, Kura Oncology, a San Diego-based biopharmaceutical company, is conducting a nationwide clinical trial to assess the safety and efficacy of tipifarnib in head and neck cancer with HRAS mutations. Employees of Kura are co-authors of the new paper. UC San Diego is not part of the trial.

Treatment with tipifarnib, wrote study authors, had a multifaceted effect on the biology of HRAS-mutant HNSCC tumors, reducing oncogenic signaling and proliferation, while increasing apoptosis (cell death), blocking angiogenesis (development of new blood vessels in tumors) and driving squamous differentiation of tumors.

Head and neck cancer accounts for approximately 650,000 cases and 330,000 deaths annually worldwide. In the United States, approximately 4 percent of all cancers are head and neck, with an estimated 65,630 persons diagnosed each year, two-thirds of them men and 14,500 deaths, according to Cancer.Net.

Co-authors of the study include: Mara Gilardi, Zhiyong Wang, Marco Proietto, Anastasia Chilla, Yusuke Goto, Alfredo A. Molinolo, and Napoleone Ferrara, all at UC San Diego; Juan Luis Calleja-Valera, Sanford Research; Marco Vanoni, University Milano-Biocacca; Matthew R. Janes, Kumquat Biosciences, Inc.; Zbigniew Mikulski, La Jolla Institute for Immunology; and Antonio Gualberto, Kura Oncology, Inc.

Funding for this research came, in part, from the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research (grant 1R01DE026870), the National Institutes of Health (grant S10OD021831) and the Italian Foundation for Cancer Research.

Disclosures: Matthew Janes is an employee and stockholder of Kumquat Biosciences. Antonio Gualberto and Francis Burrows are employees and stockholders of Kura Oncology. J. Silvo Gutkind is a member of the advisory boards of Oncoceutics, Domain Therapeutics and Vividion. Ferrara is co-founder of Theia Therapeutics, serves on the Board of Directors and has equity.

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Precision Medicine Identifies Key Recurring Mutation in Head and Neck Cancers - UC San Diego Health