Gene Therapy Drug For Hemophilia May Be Priced As High As $3 Million Per Patient : Shots – Health News – NPR

Biomarin Pharmaceutical, a California company that makes what could become the first gene therapy for hemophilia, says its drug's price tag might be $3 million per patient. Maciej Frolow/Getty Images hide caption

Biomarin Pharmaceutical, a California company that makes what could become the first gene therapy for hemophilia, says its drug's price tag might be $3 million per patient.

Jack Grehan, who was born with hemophilia, used to inject himself every couple of days with a protein he needs for his blood to clot. But not anymore.

"It's been absolutely brilliant and life-changing for me," says Grehan, 26, of Billinge in North West England. He received an experimental gene therapy in 2017 that, at least for now, has eliminated his need for regular injections. "I can just go about my day and not have to worry."

Based on experiences like Grehan's, the company that developed the therapy is seeking approval in Europe and the United States to start selling the first gene therapy for hemophilia. That's generating excitement among patients, patient advocates and doctors.

"Not to have to worry about hemophilia any longer I think it's essentially transformational for many patients," says Dr. John Pasi of the Royal London Hospital and the London School of Medicine and Dentistry. Pasi led the recently published study Grehan took part in.

Jack Grehan, of Billinge, U.K., in North West England, is one recipient of BioMarin's still experimental gene therapy to treat hemophilia. He says his quality of life has improved dramatically since getting an infusion of the drug three years ago. Jack Grehan hide caption

Others are more cautious.

"This is really exciting, but also raises a lot of questions," says Meg Bradbury, director of research at the Hemophilia Federation of America, a patient advocacy group.

One of the biggest questions is the possible cost. BioMarin Pharmaceutical Inc. of San Rafael, Calif., the company that developed the gene therapy, says the treatment could cost as much as $3 million per patient, which would make it the most expensive drug ever approved.

"It's just outrageous," says Peter Bach, who studies drug prices at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York.

Company officials defend the possible price, however. It currently costs hundreds of thousands of dollars a year to treat each hemophilia patient. The gene therapy would, researchers hope, be a one-time treatment that lasts a lifetime.

"The context is this gigantically expensive disease to treat," says Jeff Ajer, BioMarin's executive vice president and chief commercial officer. "It's likely that our gene therapy would save a lot of money millions, perhaps many millions."

Hemophilia is a relatively rare condition. Hemophilia A, the most common form of the disease, occurs in 1 of about every 5,000 boys. (Though girls can be born with hemophilia, too, that's much rarer.) People born with the condition are missing a crucial protein that their blood needs to clot. So doing things as simple as walking can cause dangerous bleeding in their joints that eventually can be crippling.

"It was quite difficult, because I was always getting these bleeds in the ankles," Grehan says. "So walking around was becoming more and more troublesome."

Grehan has a severe form of hemophilia A, which causes a deficiency in a clotting protein called factor VIII.

"It's the microbleeds that just sort of wear your down not even physically but mentally," Grehan says.

And Grehan knew that propensity to bleed could cause even more serious, possibly fatal, complications if the hemorrhage every happened in his brain or other parts of his body.

"Internally, there could have been a lot worse situations," Grehan says. "I consider myself quite lucky in that respect."

Before anything like that happened to Grehan, he learned that doctors were testing the gene therapy.

"When I first heard about the trial I thought it was unbelievable that we were in this situation that this even existed," Grehan says.

So he volunteered three years ago to let doctors infuse trillions of neutralized viruses that had been genetically engineered to carry the healthy gene he needed into his liver.

Within a couple of weeks, Grehan could stop injecting himself with the clotting protein that he had previously needed.

In fact, the treatment dramatically cut bleeding in all 13 of the patients who got the effective dose of gene therapy determined by the study Grehan was in.

"I think it's amazing data actually," Pasi says. "It's been the Holy Grail for years to be able to treat hemophilia with a gene therapy treatment. And maybe we're beginning to see that that wasn't a pipe dream that this is a realistic option."

It's the latest promising development for gene therapy, which has finally started producing effective treatments for a variety of diseases after decades of setbacks.

Several other experimental forms of gene therapy are also showing promise for hemophilia, including another type of the condition, known as hemophilia B.

So far, nearly 150 patients have been treated with BioMarin's gene therapy as part of a larger study, and the results continue to be encouraging, according to the company. Some patients having been followed for as long as four years.

"For a good fraction of these people, they don't have to even think about having hemophilia anymore," says Henry Fuchs, president of research and development at BioMarin.

The Food and Drug Administration has designated the treatment a "breakthrough" therapy and accepted the company's application to give the gene therapy priority status for evaluation, representatives of BioMarin say. That makes it the first gene therapy for hemophilia the agency has agreed to consider.

According to the company, the FDA has signaled it will make its decision by Aug. 21 about whether to approve the treatment for sale.

Longer studies will be need to determine if the treatment is, in fact, a one-time, therapy for lifelong effect, experts say.

"It seems to be working very well, but we are only at three years," says Dr. W. Keith Hoots, director of the division of blood diseases and resources at the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute. "We need to know for sure whether it will extend for their entire life. And only time will tell for that."

Nevertheless, Bach agrees the treatment appears very promising. Still, he questions the price tag, which would be just the latest in what appears to be an ongoing rise in the cost of the new wave of genetic therapies.

"The clinical breakthrough is prodigious. We should be thrilled by it," Bach says.

"But the greatest innovation by the pharmaceutical industry is not the biologic breakthroughs they're making," he says. "It's their ability to extract money from society that we could put into other things like better benefits in Medicare, lower out-of-pocket costs for poor people, dental coverage and things like that."

The prices of the drugs already used to treat hemophilia are inflated, Bach argues.

Bradbury, from the Hemophilia Federation of America, agrees cost is a concern.

"We need to make sure all those who are eligible would have access to it," Bradbury says.

Ajer says the company has already been negotiating with insurance companies and government programs to cover the costs.

"Our work is not done here, but my expectation is that most of the patients who need access to therapy would be able to get it, in not a terribly long time, through their insurance system," Ajer says.

As someone who has had to deal with hemophilia all his life, Grehan thinks the price is reasonable.

"I think $3 million for this is very cheap because it is life-changing," Grehan says. "And if you're going to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars a year over a lifetime, that seems worth it to me."

Continued here:

Gene Therapy Drug For Hemophilia May Be Priced As High As $3 Million Per Patient : Shots - Health News - NPR

Janssen/MeiraGTx sight loss gene therapy hits targets – PharmaTimes

Janssen has unveiled six-month data from an ongoing Phase I/II trial of its investigational gene therapy for the treatment of inherited retinal disease X-linked retinitis pigmentosa (XLRP).

The interim data show that low and intermediate doses of the investigational adeno-associated virus retinitis pigmentosa GTPase regulator (AAV-RPGR), jointly developed with MeiraGTx, were generally well-tolerated and indicated significant improvement in vision.

In patients with XLRP, the photoreceptors in the eye responsible for converting light into signals sent to the brain don't function as they should, leading to degeneration of the retina and legal blindness in adulthood.

The companies AAV-RPGR gene therapy is being investigated to treat the most common and severe forms of XLRP caused by mutations in the RPGR gene by preserving and improving vision and slowing retinal degeneration.

In the dose escalation phase of the trial, at six months, the low and intermediate dose cohorts demonstrated significant improvement from baseline in retinal sensitivity after treatment, evident when assessed with two perimetry approaches and three analysis metrics.

Currently, there are no approved treatments for this condition.

There is an urgent need to deliver a transformational therapy for people living with XLRP who experience progressive visual loss from childhood with eventual blindness in early adulthood, said Michel Michaelides, trial investigator, consultant ophthalmologist at Moorfields Eye Hospital and Professor of Ophthalmology at University College London.

We have learned valuable safety and efficacy information from this Phase I/II trial and look forward to applying those learnings in our next phase of study.

Continued here:

Janssen/MeiraGTx sight loss gene therapy hits targets - PharmaTimes

‘Missing link’: Bayer, Morningside help catapult a new kind of delivery tech to cell and gene therapy – Endpoints News

Robert Millman co-founded and led Semma Therapeutics as CEO while also a managing director of MPM Capital. By the time he left the stem cell therapy pioneer two years before it would be sold to Vertex he had left VC life behind.

Instead, he went around scouting new technologies, visiting with tech transfer offices and academics in the Boston/Cambridge area to find worthy ideas that could benefit from his IP expertise.

And he found quite a few.

One of them is Vesigen Therapeutics, which is launching with $28.5 million to turn a new class of extracellular vesicles into packaging and delivery tools for a variety of cargos mRNA, Cas9, base editors, PROTACs, you name it.

The barrier to being a drug company right now is not technology or targets, he told Endpoints News. Theres plenty of targets, theres plenty of technology, but theres no way of getting the two of those into a patient.

Vesigens platform stems from scientific co-founder and Harvard professor Quan Lus work on ARMMs, or arrestin domain-containing protein 1 [ARRDC1]-mediated microvesicles. As he wrote in Nature Communications in March 2018, ARMMs are distinct from exosomes, in that they lend themselves to more controlled production and cargos that can be recruited into the vesicle during the process of manufacturing rather than put together after the fact.

I dont understand really why a whole lot of venture firms didnt jump on it at the time, Millman said. I think its because most were focused on exosomes and just thought that this was another exosome company, and there was already Codiak and Evox.

But Lu showed in his paper delivery of function p53 protein to an p53 deficient animal and restoring p53 activity: To me it was revolutionary.

And compared to the current workhorses of genetic medicines such as viral vectors and lipid nanoparticles, ARMMs promise to package bigger and more varied payloads, get into more organs, and stay in circulation longer without triggering toxicity.

Faced with the Willy Wonka-like range of possibilities, Millman said the top order right now for his team of seven is to figure out a manufacturing setup that would load the cargos efficiently and be cleared by regulators.

In the three years that it will likely take to get to the cusp of the clinic, Vesigen is also collaborating with researchers to show how ARMMs can get into tissues that no one can go to with implications in ocular and neurological diseases as well as cancer.

The Series A, co-led by Leaps by Bayer and Morningside Ventures and joined by Linden Lake Ventures and Alexandria Venture Investments, should fund the company until 2025, when Millman expects to have built out the team to 30.

Its exactly the kind of projects that his group likes to invest in early, Leaps by Bayer head Jrgen Eckhardt said, especially as big believers in the cell and gene therapy space who see delivery as the missing link. For Vesigen, it also opens up opportunities to find partners within the pharma giants network down the road.

While Millman is keen not to lose focus, he also isnt hiding ambitions to make this the next big one.

I saw all of the problems Alnylam I was there for three years, we couldnt get delivery. I worked very early at Celera and established collaborations with Ionis and again delivery was limited. I was helping set up Verve Therapeutics and again delivery of Cas9 was a problem, he said. And here was an eloquent solution. I was just pleased to be at the right place at the right time.

See the article here:

'Missing link': Bayer, Morningside help catapult a new kind of delivery tech to cell and gene therapy - Endpoints News

Applied Genetic Tech to expand study of gene therapy for vision loss disorder – Seeking Alpha

Based on FDA feedback, Applied Genetic Technologies (NASDAQ:AGTC) has revised the development plan for its gene therapy for X-linked retinitis pigmentosa, an inherited disorder affecting the retina that leads to vision loss.

Enrollment in the current 30-subject Phase 1/2 trial will be expanded. About 20 patients will be dosed, beginning in Q4, in two masked arms to collect additional functional data, including a mobility test added as a supplemental endpoint.

The agency indicated that a change in visual sensitivity of at least 7 decibels in at least 5 loci would be considered clinically meaningful. The company previously reported visual sensitivity as a mean over an entire treated area. Multiple participants in the Phase 1/2 study would meet the new criteria.

The planned Phase 2/3 trial will include two masked active arms in addition to a control arm. The primary endpoint will be visual sensitivity. Supplemental endpoints will include the mobility test. The study should launch in Q1 2021.

The company will provide additional information in its 10-K filing for fiscal 2020.

Shares up6%premarket on light volume.

See more here:

Applied Genetic Tech to expand study of gene therapy for vision loss disorder - Seeking Alpha

CNS Gene Therapy Market Forecasted To Surpass The Value Of US$ XX Mn/Bn By 2018 2028 – Bulletin Line

With reliable and impactful research methodologies, PMR provides critical information pertaining to the growth of the global CNS Gene Therapy market. Our team of analysts monitor the ongoing developments within the CNS Gene Therapy space and provide an unbiased assessment of the global CNS Gene Therapy market. The data included in the report are procured from reliable and trustworthy primary and secondary sources.

According to the findings of the report, the value of the global CNS Gene Therapy market in 2018 was ~US$ XX (Mn/Bn) and expected to attain a value of ~US$ XX (Mn/Bn) by the end of 2029. In addition, the report reveals that the global CNS Gene Therapy market is likely to grow at a CAGR of XX% during the forecast period (2019-2029).

Request Sample Report @ https://www.persistencemarketresearch.co/samples/27514

Some of the leading companies profiled in the market study include:

The CNS Gene Therapy market report provides an extensive analysis of the different product types including:

The presented market study includes a brief introduction of the CNS Gene Therapy market to enhance the reading experience of our users. Further, a thorough quantitative and qualitative analysis of each of these segments is provided in the report along with graphs, tables, and figures to support the data.

key players and product offerings

Request Report Methodology @ https://www.persistencemarketresearch.co/methodology/27514

Key information drawn from the CNS Gene Therapy market study

The market report aims to address the following queries:

For any queries get in touch with Industry Expert @ https://www.persistencemarketresearch.co/ask-an-expert/27514

Read the original post:

CNS Gene Therapy Market Forecasted To Surpass The Value Of US$ XX Mn/Bn By 2018 2028 - Bulletin Line

Prevail Therapeutics to Highlight Multiple Gene Therapy Programs for Neurodegenerative Diseases at the Virtual 2020 Alzheimer’s Association…

Preclinical Data Demonstrate Potential of Prevails AAV Gene Therapy Approach to Slow or Halt Progression in Multiple Neurodegenerative Diseases

Company Provides Overview of Planned Phase 1/2 PR006 PROCLAIM Clinical Trial for FTD-GRN Patients

Company to Host a Panel Discussion and Q&A Session on FTD-GRNwith Jonathan Rohrer, Ph.D., MRCP, an Expert in Frontotemporal Dementia (FTD) and its Genetic Causes

NEW YORK, July 22, 2020 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Prevail Therapeutics Inc. (Nasdaq: PRVL), a biotechnology company developing potentially disease-modifying AAV-based gene therapies for patients with neurodegenerative diseases, today announced three upcoming poster presentations at the Alzheimers Association International Conference (AAIC) 2020. These data underscore the robust preclinical evidence in support of Prevails AAV-based gene therapy approach, and highlight the Companys strategy to validate these data in the planned PROCLAIM clinical trial evaluating PR006 for the treatment of frontotemporal dementia patients with GRN mutations (FTD-GRN). The conference will be held virtually July 27-31, 2020.

Our novel gene therapy candidates have the potential to transform the treatment of patients with FTD-GRN and other devastating neurodegenerative diseases, said Asa Abeliovich, M.D., Ph.D., Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Prevail. An increased understanding of genetically defined forms of neurodegenerative diseases, including the role that GRN mutations can play in frontotemporal dementia, has opened exciting possibilities to stop or slow disease progression using a gene therapy approach.

PR001

Prevail will highlight preclinical data demonstrating the effect of PR001 treatment on key disease biomarkers and functional parameters. These data provide the basis for the Companys clinical trials for Type 2 neuronopathic Gaucher disease (nGD) patients and Parkinsons disease with GBA1 mutations (PD-GBA) patients.

Poster title: PR001 Gene Therapy Improved Phenotypes in Models of Parkinsons Disease with GBA1 MutationSession date and time: Monday, July 27, 12:00 a.m. - 11:59 p.m. CDT

PR006

Prevail will present the design of the PROCLAIM Phase 1/2 clinical trial for the treatment of FTD-GRN patients and preclinical data demonstrating the effect of PR006 treatment on progranulin expression, lysosomal dysfunction and inflammation in the CNS.

Poster title: Preclinical Development of PR006, a Gene Therapy for the Treatment of Frontotemporal Dementia with Progranulin Mutations Session date and time: Monday, July 27, 12:00 a.m. - 11:59 p.m. CDT

Poster title: Design of a Phase 1/2 Study of an AAV9-Based Gene Therapy for Fronto-Temporal Dementia Patients with Pathogenic GRN Mutations (PROCLAIM Trial)Session date and time: Wednesday, July 29, 12:00 a.m. - 11:59 p.m. CDT

FTD-GRN Panel Discussion and Q&A SessionIn addition to its presentations at AAIC, on Wednesday, July 29 at 2:30 p.m. EDT, management will be hosting a panel discussion and Q&A session on FTD-GRN by Jonathan Rohrer, Ph.D., MRCP, an expert in frontotemporal dementia (FTD) and its genetic causes. A live webcast of the event and replay following its conclusion will be available on the Events and Presentations section of the Company's website at https://ir.prevailtherapeutics.com/events.

About Prevail TherapeuticsPrevail is a gene therapy company leveraging breakthroughs in human genetics with the goal of developing and commercializing disease-modifying AAV-based gene therapies for patients with neurodegenerative diseases. The Company is developing PR001 for patients with Parkinsons disease with GBA1 mutations (PD-GBA) and neuronopathic Gaucher disease; PR006 for patients with frontotemporal dementia with GRN mutations (FTD-GRN); and PR004 for patients with certain synucleinopathies.

Prevail was founded by Dr. Asa Abeliovich in 2017, through a collaborative effort with The Silverstein Foundation for Parkinsons with GBA and OrbiMed, and is headquartered in New York, NY.

Forward-Looking Statements Related to PrevailStatements contained in this press release regarding matters that are not historical facts are forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, as amended. Examples of these forward-looking statements include statements concerning the potential for Prevails gene therapy candidates to transform the treatment of patients with, and slow or halt the progression of, FTD-GRN and other neurodegenerative diseases. Because such statements are subject to risks and uncertainties, actual results may differ materially from those expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. These risks and uncertainties include, among others: Prevails novel approach to gene therapy makes it difficult to predict the time, cost and potential success of product candidate development or regulatory approval; Prevails gene therapy programs may not meet safety and efficacy levels needed to support ongoing clinical development or regulatory approval; the regulatory landscape for gene therapy is rigorous, complex, uncertain and subject to change; the fact that gene therapies are novel, complex and difficult to manufacture; and risks relating to the impact on our business of the COVID-19 pandemic or similar public health crises. These and other risks are described more fully in Prevails filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), including the Risk Factors section of the Companys Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the period ended March 31, 2020, filed with the SEC on May 14, 2020, and its other documents subsequently filed with or furnished to the SEC. All forward-looking statements contained in this press release speak only as of the date on which they were made. Except to the extent required by law, Prevail undertakes no obligation to update such statements to reflect events that occur or circumstances that exist after the date on which they were made.

Media Contact:Mary CarmichaelTen Bridge Communications [emailprotected] 617-413-3543

Investor Contact:[emailprotected]

See the rest here:

Prevail Therapeutics to Highlight Multiple Gene Therapy Programs for Neurodegenerative Diseases at the Virtual 2020 Alzheimer's Association...

Sorrento Enters Into Letter Of Intent To Acquire SmartPharm And Develop Pipeline Of Gene-Encoded Therapeutic Antibodies, Starting With Neutralizing…

SAN DIEGO and BOSTON, July 24, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --Sorrento Therapeutics, Inc. (Nasdaq: SRNE, "Sorrento") and SmartPharm Therapeutics, Inc. ("SmartPharm") announced today the signing of a letter of intent for Sorrento to acquire SmartPharm, a gene-encoded therapeutics company developing non-viral DNA and RNA gene delivery platforms for COVID-19 and rare diseases, with broad potential for application in enhancing antibody-centric therapeutics, including against COVID-19. The transaction is expected to close in August 2020. Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.

Sorrento and SmartPharm previously announced a research and development collaboration to encode and express in vivo Sorrento's proprietary SARS-CoV-2 neutralizing monoclonal antibodies utilizing SmartPharm's Gene Mab plasmid nanoparticle platform.

Sorrento plans to accelerate the development of multiple candidates for in vivo gene-encoded expression of Sorrento's antibodies, starting with Sorrento's previously announced STI-1499, or COVI-GUARD, which is currently moving through preclinical and manufacturing requirements with an IND submission targeted for August 2020. The initial clinical trial for STI-1499 is expected to be in ICU patients to ensure safety and potentially allow a preliminary look at efficacy. In vitro results so far have demonstrated STI-1499's ability to completely neutralize SARS-CoV-2 infection at low doses, making STI-1499 Sorrento's lead candidate for potential cost-effective passive protection against COVID-19.

SmartPharm's Gene Mab platform delivers to muscles a novel low-immunogenic DNA plasmid encoded with a therapeutic antibody for long-lasting expression in vivo. If clinical trials are successful, a single administration of STI-1499dpi (DNA plasmid injection) could allow the recipient's own muscle cells to produce the antibody for a prolonged period of time after a single injection, potentially providing extended protection against COVID-19 for periods of time that might provide an alternative to vaccines. Manufacturing of DNA plasmids (in bacterial fermenters) can be done with Sorrento's in-house cGMP capabilities for a fraction of the cost associated with traditional antibody manufacturing.

"We are very encouraged by the preclinical data generated thus far by our STI-1499 neutralizing antibody against COVID-19," said Henry Ji, Ph.D., CEO of Sorrento Therapeutics. "We are excited about the prospect of leveraging SmartPharm's Gene Mab platform in combination with our G-MAB library to produce next-generation gene-encoded antibody candidates against a host of pathogens and cancer cell types. Being able to stimulate the body to produce in vivo our most potent antibodies at optimized manufacturing costs will offer an additional competitive advantage as Sorrento transitions from product development to full scale manufacturing and commercialization."

About SmartPharm Therapeutics

SmartPharm Therapeutics, Inc. is a privately held, development stage biopharmaceutical company focused on developing next-generation, non-viral gene therapies for the treatment of serious or rare diseases with the vision of creating "Biologics from Within." SmartPharm is currently developing a novel pipeline of non-viral, gene-encoded proteins for the treatment of conditions that require biologic therapy such enzyme replacement and tissue restoration. SmartPharm commenced operations in 2018 and is headquartered in Cambridge, MA, USA. For more information, please visit http://www.smartpharmtx.com.

About Sorrento Therapeutics, Inc.

Sorrento is a clinical stage, antibody-centric, biopharmaceutical company developing new therapies to treat cancers. Sorrento's multimodal, multipronged approach to fighting cancer is made possible by its extensive immuno-oncology platforms, including key assets such as fully human antibodies ("G-MAB library"), clinical stage immuno-cellular therapies ("CAR-T", "DAR-T"), antibody-drug conjugates ("ADCs"), and clinical stage oncolytic virus ("Seprehvir", "Seprehvec"). Sorrento is also developing potential antiviral therapies and vaccines against coronaviruses, including COVIDTRAP, ACE-MAB, COVI-MAB, COVI-GUARD, COVI-SHIELD and T-VIVA-19.

Sorrento's commitment to life-enhancing therapies for patients is also demonstrated by our effort to advance a first-in-class (TRPV1 agonist) non-opioid pain management small molecule, resiniferatoxin ("RTX"), and ZTlido (lidocaine topical system) 1.8% for the treatment of post-herpetic neuralgia. RTX is completing a phase IB trial for intractable pain associated with cancer and a phase 1B trial in osteoarthritis patients. ZTlido was approved by the FDA on February 28, 2018.

For more information visit http://www.sorrentotherapeutics.com

Forward-Looking Statements

This press release and any statements made for and during any presentation or meeting contain forward-looking statements related toSorrento Therapeutics, Inc., under the safe harbor provisions of Section 21E of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those projected. Forward-looking statements include statements regarding the proposed acquisition of SmartPharm; the potential effects that the acquisition of SmartPharm may have on Sorrento's business and product candidate pipeline; the expected timing for the closing of the transaction; the initiation and completion of ongoing studies for COVID-19 using antibodies and gene-encoded antibodies, and data read-outs related thereto; the potency and potential blocking capabilities of STI-1499 and STI-1499dpi and their respective impact on SARS-CoV-2; the expected length of any antiviral protection provided by STI-1499 and STI-1499dpi; the potential administration and applications of STI-1499 and STI-1499dpi, alone or in combination; the timeline and status of preclinical testing for STI-1499 and STI-1499dpi; the expected timing of an IND submission for STI-1499; expectations regarding the initial clinical trial for STI-1499; the potential safety and efficacy of STI-1499 and STI-1499dpi; the therapeutic potential of STI-1499 and STI-1499dpi for SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19; the potential costs associated with manufacturing STI-1499dpi and other DNA plasmids; Sorrento's ability to produce antibody candidates against pathogens and cancer cells; Sorrento's ability to transition from product development to full scale manufacturing and commercialization; and Sorrento's potential position in the anti-viral immunity industry. Risks and uncertainties that could cause our actual results to differ materially and adversely from those expressed in our forward-looking statements, include, but are not limited to: risks related to Sorrento's technologies and prospects with newly acquired technologies, including the proposed acquisition of SmartPharm and the utilization of SmartPharm's Gene-Encoded Therapeutics (GET) platforms for the treatment and prevention of coronavirus infections and other pathogens and cancer cells; risks related to seeking regulatory approvals and conducting clinical trials; the clinical and commercial success of the treatment and prevention of coronavirus infections using monoclonal antibodies and gene-encoded antibodies; the viability and success of using monoclonal antibodies and gene-encoded antibodies for treatments in anti-viral therapeutic areas, including coronavirus; clinical development risks, including risks in the progress, timing, cost and results of clinical trials and product development programs; risk of difficulties or delays in obtaining regulatory approvals; risks that prior study and trial results may not be replicated in future studies and trials; risks that clinical study results may not meet any or all endpoints of a clinical study and that any data generated from such studies may not support a regulatory submission or approval; risks related to seeking regulatory approvals and conducting clinical trials; risks of manufacturing drug product; risks related to leveraging the expertise of its employees, subsidiaries, affiliates and partners to assist the company in the execution of its strategies; risks related to the global impact of COVID-19 and other risks that are described in Sorrento's most recent periodic reports filed with theSecurities and Exchange Commission, including Sorrento's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year endedDecember 31, 2019, and subsequent Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q filed with theSecurities and Exchange Commission, including the risk factors set forth in those filings. Investors are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date of this release and we undertake no obligation to update any forward-looking statement in this press release except as required by law.

Media and Investor Relations

Contact: Dani FrankEmail: [emailprotected]

Sorrento and the Sorrento logo are registered trademarks of Sorrento Therapeutics, Inc.G-MAB, COVI-GUARD, COVI-SHIELD, COVIDTRAP, T-VIVA-19, COVI-MAB, ACE-MAB, COVI-TRACK, Saving-Life and Improving-Life are trademarks of Sorrento Therapeutics, Inc.

ZTlido is a trademark owned by Scilex Pharmaceuticals Inc.All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. 2020 Sorrento Therapeutics, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

SOURCE Sorrento Therapeutics, Inc.

Home

Continue reading here:

Sorrento Enters Into Letter Of Intent To Acquire SmartPharm And Develop Pipeline Of Gene-Encoded Therapeutic Antibodies, Starting With Neutralizing...

If You Invested $100 in CRISPR Therapeutics’ IPO, This Is How Much Money You’d Have Now – Motley Fool

There are good investments and there are great investments. CRISPR Therapeutics (NASDAQ:CRSP) stock certainly qualifies as the latter.

This is a company that, four years after it went public, has only been profitable for one year, yet its future is so promising that its stock is trading for 540% more than it did in 2016.

What's the big deal about CRISPR Therapeutics? The biopharmaceutical company says it is using breakthrough gene-altering therapies to treat diseases such as sickle cell disease (SCD) and beta-thalassemia, both of which are inherited blood disorders that don't have a cure and require frequent blood transfusions. The company is also working on gene therapies to treat type 1 diabetes, muscular dystrophy, cystic fibrosis, multiple myeloma, and solid tumors in pancreatic cancer and lung cancer.

Image source: Getty Images.

CRISPR Therapeutics is actually named for the technology it uses: CRISPR stands for "clusters of regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats." The gene-editing technology uses Cas9 proteins to locate a sequenceof DNA within a cell and alter it.

Though CRISPR Therapeutics has yet to bring a product to market, some of its clinical trials have had amazing results. In June, the Swiss company announced that in a joint trial with Vertex Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:VRTX), five patients with beta-thalassemia and two patients with sickle cell disease were treated with gene therapy CTX001.

Two of the early beta-thalassemia patients are now transfusion independent 15 months afterward. The first SCD patient in the trial is transfusion independent and free of vaso-occlusive crises (VOCs), a painful condition when blood vessels are blocked by sickled red blood cells, seven months after his dose of CTX001.

Beta-thalassemia, which reduces the body's production of hemoglobin, is extremely rare. Sickle cell anemia is common among African Americans but also can affect Latinos and people of Indian, Asian, Mediterranean backgrounds. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services says 300,000 babies worldwide are born every year with the disease and 100,000 people in the United States are currently living with the disease.

While the results are quite promising, the study is still in its infancy. .

If you had invested $100 in CRISPR Therapeutics stock when it went public in 2016, how much would that be worth today?

By the end of the day on Oct. 19, 2016, the day CRISPR Therapeutics went public, the stock was trading at $14.09, you would have bought seven shares. Assuming you bought at that price, your original $98.63 investment would be worth $632.45 as of the close of trading Friday when the stock went for $90.35 per share. That's a gain of 541%.

CRISPR Therapeutics isn't the only biotech to use CRISPR-Cas9 technology. Others include Editas Medicine (NASDAQ:EDIT) and Intellia Therapeutics (NASDAQ:NTLA), both of which went public in 2016. Neither of those has done quite as well as CRISPR Therapeutics since its IPO.

Compared to a biotech ETF such as the iShares NASDAQ Biotechnology ETF (NASDAQ:IBB), CRISPR has shined. The ETF closed at $89.16 on the day of CRISPR's IPO. As of Friday's close, IBB was at $136.41. If you had invested $100 on Oct. 19, 2016, you would have a return of only 36%.

CRSP data by YCharts

Clinical-stage biotech stocks are inherently risky plays because there are so many hurdles these companies have to clear before they can make money. The therapies have to be approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and many therapies look promising only to fail in late-stage clinical trials.

CRISPR Therapeutics looks like a solid bet, though, both from a cash standpoint and in its strength of pipeline. The company has four candidates already in trials.It is already making money, though not a lot of it. Last year, CRISPR Therapeutics generated net income of $66.8 million, thanks to $289.5 million in collaboration revenue.

The other major question for clinical-stage biotechs is whether they have enough capital to pay for research and development until the therapies pay off. Last quarter, the company burned through $54 million in cash. However, CRISPR Therapeutics says it has more than $900 million left, so it can continue that burn rate for more than four years. The possibility that CRISPR Therapeutics' technology could actually cure diseases, not just treat them, easily makes this a risk worth taking.

Continued here:

If You Invested $100 in CRISPR Therapeutics' IPO, This Is How Much Money You'd Have Now - Motley Fool

After another tough quarter, healthcare companies pin hopes on brighter H2’20 – S&P Global

This article is an overview of the financial results of Johnson & Johnson, Novartis, Roche, Biogen and selected other healthcare companies who have reported their earnings since July 16.

Many of the top healthcare companies reporting second-quarter earnings over the past week have seen COVID-19 continue to impact revenues. But some are cautiously optimistic for the second half of the year, as they learn to better navigate the pandemic.

The biggest drug- and device-maker by market cap, Johnson & Johnson reported a 35.3% decline in its year-over-year earnings, driven in part by a 33.9% fall in medical device sales. CFO Joseph Wolk said on a July 16 earnings call that the company had previously expected to wait until the fourth quarter for a rebound in these sales, but the turnaround began earlier than expected resulting in the company raising its full-year guidance. While CEO Alex Gorsky expressed concern about a second wave of COVID-19, he pointed out that better-prepared hospitals mean the global impact is unlikely to reach levels seen in the spring.

Novartis CEO Vas NarasimhanSource: Novartis

Swiss pharmaceutical company Novartis AG reported relatively unchanged earnings year over year for the quarter, with the pandemic's effect felt most keenly on its ophthalmology and dermatology businesses, as well as therapies requiring hospital stays. This was partially offset by sales of heart disease drug Entresto, gene therapy Zolgensma and blockbuster psoriasis medicine Cosentyx.

The Basel, Switzerland-based company will not join the race to find a coronavirus vaccine, CEO Vas Narasimhan said on a July 21 earnings call. Instead, the company is focused on pivotal studies in more than 20 medicines, as well as researching inhibitors against both the current and future coronaviruses. In addition, Narasimhan expects strong uptake in Europe for nuclear therapy Lutathera and the drug's expansion in the U.S.

Roche Holding AG, another Swiss pharmaceutical giant and one of the world's biggest cancer drug manufacturers, reported a 6% decline in first-half earnings compared to the same period in 2019, with the pandemic and generic competition of its former blockbuster cancer therapies Herceptin, Avastin and MabThera/Rituxan having a combined impact on sales. However, the company expects the outlook to improve later in the year, with Roche's diagnostics unit's CEO Thomas Schinecker noting that an influx of orders for its coronavirus diagnostic tests from governments worldwide means that even after quadrupling production capacity, the company is still struggling to keep up with demand.

Cambridge, Mass.-based Biogen Inc. reported a 12% increase in second-quarter earnings, with rare disease therapy Spinraza remaining a key seller. The company announced plans to conduct a two-year phase 4 clinical study of the drug combined with Novartis' competitor therapy Zolgensma to treat infants and children with spinal muscular atrophy. GlobalData analysts said Biogen could maintain dominance in the market by demonstrating that Spinraza benefits patients who also receive the Novartis gene therapy.

Impact of reduced elective care

The reduction in elective surgeries, a key strategy to limit the initial spread of the coronavirus, took a heavier toll on healthcare equipment suppliers notably Intuitive Surgical Inc., which reported a $1.01 billion drop in revenue compared to 2019's second quarter. The surgical-robot maker's CFO, Marshall Mohr, said in a July 21 earnings call that "the recovery tail of surgery will be a long one, likely to last many quarters."

Similarly, Abbott Laboratories saw its second-quarter EPS drop 30.5% year over year, but its diabetes line remained resilient. President and CEO Robert Ford said he was "very bullish" about the opportunity for the Libre 2 blood sugar monitoring system approved in the U.S. in June and the Abbott Park, Ill.-based healthcare equipment company reissued its 2020 guidance of mid-single-digits growth.

The pause in elective procedures to slow the pandemic has impacted surgical equipment suppliers.Source: Pixel

HCA Healthcare Inc. blamed a continued drop in admissions and surgery volumes for a 12% decline in its revenue for the second quarter, but the healthcare services provider was already able to point to a rebound in May and June. The company brought in about $1.1 billion in second-quarter income although more than half came from economic relief funds.

CEO Samuel Hazen was hesitant to project into the second half of the year but said the company has gained "muscle memory" to deal with current and future COVID-19 outbreaks. RBC Capital Markets analysts expect HCA to weather the "significant challenges" of the pandemic, noting that "underlying demand in its markets remains strong, despite the likelihood for continued ebb and flow in patient census as reopenings progress and adjust to flare-ups."

Read the original here:

After another tough quarter, healthcare companies pin hopes on brighter H2'20 - S&P Global

Gene Therapy Market 2020-2026: Key Vendor Landscape By Regional Output, Demand By Countries And Future Growth|Bluebird Bio, Sangamo, Spark…

QY Research has Published Latest Trending Report on Global Gene Therapy Market

Los Angeles, United State, The report titledGlobal Gene Therapy Marketis one of the most comprehensive and important additions to QY Researchs archive of market research studies. It offers detailed research and analysis of key aspects of the global Gene Therapy market. The market analysts authoring this report have provided in-depth information on leading growth drivers, restraints, challenges, trends, and opportunities to offer a complete analysis of the global Gene Therapy market. Market participants can use the analysis on market dynamics to plan effective growth strategies and prepare for future challenges beforehand. Each trend of the global Gene Therapy market is carefully analyzed and researched about by the market analysts.

Request Sample Report and Full Report TOC:https://www.qyresearch.com/sample-form/form/1436547/global-gene-therapy-market

The Essential Content Covered in the GlobalGene Therapy Market Report:

* Top Key Company Profiles.* Main Business and Rival Information* SWOT Analysis and PESTEL Analysis* Production, Sales, Revenue, Price and Gross Margin* Market Share and Size

Global Gene Therapy Market is estimated to reach xxx million USD in 2020 and projected to grow at the CAGR of xx% during 2020-2026. According to the latest report added to the online repository of QY Research the Gene Therapy market has witnessed an unprecedented growth till 2020. The extrapolated future growth is expected to continue at higher rates by 2025.

Top Players of Gene Therapy Market are Studied: Bluebird Bio, Sangamo, Spark Therapeutics, Dimension Therapeutics, Avalanche Bio, Celladon, Vical Inc., Advantagene

The report provides a 6-year forecast (2020-2026) assessed based on how the Gene Therapy market is predicted to grow in major regions likeUSA, Europe, Japan, China, India, Southeast Asia, South America, South Africa, Others.

Segmentation by Type:Ex vivoIn Vivo

Segmentation by Application:CancerMonogenicInfectious diseaseCardiovascular diseaseOther

Reasons to Buy this Report:

Table of Contents

Table of Contents1 Report Overview

1.1 Study Scope

1.2 Key Market Segments

1.3 Players Covered: Ranking by Gene Therapy Revenue

1.4 Market Analysis by Type

1.4.1 Global Gene Therapy Market Size Growth Rate by Type: 2020 VS 2026

1.4.2 Ex vivo

1.4.3 In Vivo

1.5 Market by Application

1.5.1 Global Gene Therapy Market Share by Application: 2020 VS 2026

1.5.2 Cancer

1.5.3 Monogenic

1.5.4 Infectious disease

1.5.5 Cardiovascular disease

1.5.6 Other 1.6 Study Objectives 1.7 Years Considered2 Global Growth Trends by Regions

2.1 Gene Therapy Market Perspective (2015-2026)

2.2 Gene Therapy Growth Trends by Regions

2.2.1 Gene Therapy Market Size by Regions: 2015 VS 2020 VS 2026

2.2.2 Gene Therapy Historic Market Share by Regions (2015-2020)

2.2.3 Gene Therapy Forecasted Market Size by Regions (2021-2026) 2.3 Industry Trends and Growth Strategy 2.3.1 Market Top Trends 2.3.2 Market Drivers

2.3.3 Market Challenges

2.3.4 Porters Five Forces Analysis

2.3.5 Gene Therapy Market Growth Strategy

2.3.6 Primary Interviews with Key Gene Therapy Players (Opinion Leaders)3 Competition Landscape by Key Players

3.1 Global Top Gene Therapy Players by Market Size

3.1.1 Global Top Gene Therapy Players by Revenue (2015-2020)

3.1.2 Global Gene Therapy Revenue Market Share by Players (2015-2020)

3.1.3 Global Gene Therapy Market Share by Company Type (Tier 1, Tier 2 and Tier 3)

3.2 Global Gene Therapy Market Concentration Ratio

3.2.1 Global Gene Therapy Market Concentration Ratio (CR5 and HHI)

3.2.2 Global Top 10 and Top 5 Companies by Gene Therapy Revenue in 2019

3.3 Gene Therapy Key Players Head office and Area Served

3.4 Key Players Gene Therapy Product Solution and Service

3.5 Date of Enter into Gene Therapy Market

3.6 Mergers & Acquisitions, Expansion Plans4 Breakdown Data by Type (2015-2026)

4.1 Global Gene Therapy Historic Market Size by Type (2015-2020)

4.2 Global Gene Therapy Forecasted Market Size by Type (2021-2026)5 Gene Therapy Breakdown Data by Application (2015-2026)

5.1 Global Gene Therapy Market Size by Application (2015-2020)

5.2 Global Gene Therapy Forecasted Market Size by Application (2021-2026)6 North America

6.1 North America Gene Therapy Market Size (2015-2020)

6.2 Gene Therapy Key Players in North America (2019-2020)

6.3 North America Gene Therapy Market Size by Type (2015-2020)

6.4 North America Gene Therapy Market Size by Application (2015-2020)7 Europe

7.1 Europe Gene Therapy Market Size (2015-2020)

7.2 Gene Therapy Key Players in Europe (2019-2020)

7.3 Europe Gene Therapy Market Size by Type (2015-2020)

7.4 Europe Gene Therapy Market Size by Application (2015-2020)8 China

8.1 China Gene Therapy Market Size (2015-2020)

8.2 Gene Therapy Key Players in China (2019-2020)

8.3 China Gene Therapy Market Size by Type (2015-2020)

8.4 China Gene Therapy Market Size by Application (2015-2020)9 Japan

9.1 Japan Gene Therapy Market Size (2015-2020)

9.2 Gene Therapy Key Players in Japan (2019-2020)

9.3 Japan Gene Therapy Market Size by Type (2015-2020)

9.4 Japan Gene Therapy Market Size by Application (2015-2020)10 Southeast Asia

10.1 Southeast Asia Gene Therapy Market Size (2015-2020)

10.2 Gene Therapy Key Players in Southeast Asia (2019-2020)

10.3 Southeast Asia Gene Therapy Market Size by Type (2015-2020)

10.4 Southeast Asia Gene Therapy Market Size by Application (2015-2020)11 India

11.1 India Gene Therapy Market Size (2015-2020)

11.2 Gene Therapy Key Players in India (2019-2020)

11.3 India Gene Therapy Market Size by Type (2015-2020)

11.4 India Gene Therapy Market Size by Application (2015-2020)12 Central & South America

12.1 Central & South America Gene Therapy Market Size (2015-2020)

12.2 Gene Therapy Key Players in Central & South America (2019-2020)

12.3 Central & South America Gene Therapy Market Size by Type (2015-2020)

12.4 Central & South America Gene Therapy Market Size by Application (2015-2020)13Key Players Profiles

13.1 Bluebird Bio

13.1.1 Bluebird Bio Company Details

13.1.2 Bluebird Bio Business Overview and Its Total Revenue

13.1.3 Bluebird Bio Gene Therapy Introduction

13.1.4 Bluebird Bio Revenue in Gene Therapy Business (2015-2020))

13.1.5 Bluebird Bio Recent Development

13.2 Sangamo

13.2.1 Sangamo Company Details

13.2.2 Sangamo Business Overview and Its Total Revenue

13.2.3 Sangamo Gene Therapy Introduction

13.2.4 Sangamo Revenue in Gene Therapy Business (2015-2020)

13.2.5 Sangamo Recent Development

13.3 Spark Therapeutics

13.3.1 Spark Therapeutics Company Details

13.3.2 Spark Therapeutics Business Overview and Its Total Revenue

13.3.3 Spark Therapeutics Gene Therapy Introduction

13.3.4 Spark Therapeutics Revenue in Gene Therapy Business (2015-2020)

13.3.5 Spark Therapeutics Recent Development

13.4 Dimension Therapeutics

13.4.1 Dimension Therapeutics Company Details

Original post:

Gene Therapy Market 2020-2026: Key Vendor Landscape By Regional Output, Demand By Countries And Future Growth|Bluebird Bio, Sangamo, Spark...

Trance – Wikipedia

Trance is an abnormal state of wakefulness in which a person is not self-aware and is either altogether unresponsive to external stimuli (but nevertheless capable of pursuing and realizing an aim) or is selectively responsive in following the directions of the person (if any) who has induced the trance. Trance states may occur involuntarily and unbidden.

The term trance may be associated[by whom?] with hypnosis, meditation, magic, flow, and prayer. It may also be related to an earlier generic term, altered states of consciousness, which is no longer used in "consciousness-studies" discourse.

Trance in its modern meaning comes from an earlier meaning of "a dazed, half-conscious or insensible condition or state of fear", via the Old French transe "fear of evil", from the Latin transre "to cross", "pass over".[1]

Wier, in his 1995 book, Trance: from magic to technology, defines a simple trance (p.58) as a state of mind being caused by cognitive loops where a cognitive object (a thought, an image, a sound, an intentional action) repeats long enough to result in various sets of disabled cognitive functions. Wier represents all trances (which include sleep and watching television) as taking place on a dissociated trance plane where at least some cognitive functions such as volition are disabled; as is seen in what is typically termed a 'hypnotic trance'.[2] With this definition, meditation, hypnosis, addictions and charisma are seen as being trance states. In Wier's 2007 book, The Way of Trance, he elaborates on these forms, adds ecstasy as an additional form and discusses the ethical implications of his model, including magic and government use which he terms "trance abuse".

John Horgan in Rational Mysticism (2003) explores the neurological mechanisms and psychological implications of trances and other mystical manifestations. Horgan incorporates literature and case-studies from a number of disciplines in this work: chemistry, physics, psychology, radiology and theology.

The following are some examples of trance states:

Trance conditions include all the different states of mind, emotions, moods and daydreams that human beings experience. All activities which engage a human involve the filtering of information coming into sense modalities, and this influences brain functioning and consciousness. Therefore, trance may be understood as a way for the mind to change the way it filters information in order to provide more efficient use of the mind's resources.

Trance states may also be accessed or induced by various modalities and may be a way of accessing the unconscious mind for the purposes of relaxation, healing, intuition and inspiration. There is an extensive documented history of trance as evidenced by the case-studies of anthropologists and ethnologists and associated and derivative disciplines. Hence trance may be perceived as endemic to the human condition and a Human Universal. Principles of trance are being explored and documented as are methods of trance induction. Benefits of trance states are being explored by medical and scientific inquiry. Many traditions and rituals employ trance. Trance also has a function in religion and mystical experience.

Castillo (1995) states that: "Trance phenomena result from the behavior of intense focusing of attention, which is the key psychological mechanism of trance induction. Adaptive responses, including institutionalized forms of trance, are 'tuned' into neural networks in the brain and depend to a large extent on the characteristics of culture. Culture-specific organizations exist in the structure of individual neurons and in the organizational formation of neural networks."[3]

Hoffman (1998: p.9) states that: "Trance is still conventionally defined as a state of reduced consciousness, or a somnolent state. However, the more recent anthropological definition, linking it to 'altered states of consciousness' (Charles Tart), is becoming increasingly accepted."[4]

Hoffman (1998, p.9) asserts that: "...the trance state should be discussed in the plural, because there is more than one altered state of consciousness significantly different from everyday consciousness."[4]

According to Hoffman (1998: p.10), pilgrims visited the Temple of Epidaurus, an asclepeion, in Greece for healing sleep. Seekers of healing would make pilgrimage and be received by a priest who would welcome and bless them. This temple housed an ancient religious ritual promoting dreams in the seeker that endeavored to promote healing and the solutions to problems, as did the oracles. This temple was built in honor of Asclepios, the Greek god of medicine. The Greek treatment was referred to as incubation, and focused on prayers to Asclepios for healing. The asclepion at Epidaurus is both extensive and well-preserved, and is traditionally regarded as the birthplace of Asclepius. (For a comparable modern tool see Dreamwork.)

The Oracle at Delphi was also famous for trances in the ancient Greek world; priestesses there would make predictions about the future in exchange for gold.[5]

Stories of the saints in the Middle Ages, myths, parables, fairy tales, oral lore and storytelling from different cultures are themselves potentially inducers of trance. Often literary devices such as repetition are employed which is evident in many forms of trance induction. Milton Erickson used stories to induce trance as do many NLP practitioners.

From at least the 16th century it was held that march music may induce soldiers marching in unison into trance states where according to apologists, they bond together as a unit engendered by the rigors of training, the ties of comradeship and the chain of command. This had the effect of making the soldiers become automated, an effect which was widely evident in the 16th, 17th and 18th century due to the increasing prevalence of firearms employed in warcraft. Military instruments, especially the snare drum and other drums were used to entone a monotonous ostinato at the pace of march and heartbeat. High-pitched fifes, flutes and bagpipes were used for their "piercing" effect to play the melody. This would assist the morale and solidarity of soldiers as they marched to battle.

Joseph Jordania recently proposed a term battle trance for this mental state, when combatants do not feel fear and pain, and when they lose their individual identity and acquire a collective identity.[6]

The Norse Berserkers induced a trance-like state before battle, called Berserkergang. It is said to have given the warriors superhuman strength and made them impervious to pain during battle. This form of trance could have been induced partly due to ingestion of hallucinogenic mushrooms.

As the mystical experience of mystics generally entails direct connection, communication and communion with Deity, Godhead and/or god; trance and cognate experience are endemic. (see Yoga, Sufism, Shaman, Umbanda, Crazy Horse, etc.)

As shown by Jonathan Garb,[7] trance techniques also played a role in Lurianic Kabbalah, the mystical life of the circle of Moshe Hayyim Luzzatto and Hasidism.

Many Christian mystics are documented as having experiences that may be considered as cognate with trance, such as: Hildegard of Bingen, John of the Cross, Meister Eckhart, Saint Theresa (as seen in the Bernini sculpture) and Francis of Assisi.

Taves (1999) charts the synonymic language of trance in the American Christian traditions: power or presence or indwelling of God, or Christ, or the Spirit, or spirits. Typical expressions include "the indwelling of the Spirit" (Jonathan Edwards), "the witness of the Spirit" (John Wesley), "the power of God" (early American Methodists), being "filled with the Spirit of the Lord" (early Adventists; see charismatic Adventism), "communing with spirits" (Spiritualists), "the Christ within" (New Thought), "streams of holy fire and power" (Methodist holiness), "a religion of the Spirit and Power" (the Emmanuel Movement), and "the baptism of the Holy Spirit" (early Pentecostals). (Taves, 1999: 3)

Taves (1999) well-referenced book on trance charts the experience of Anglo-American Protestants and those who left the Protestant movement beginning with the transatlantic awakening in the early 18th century and ending with the rise of the psychology of religion and the birth of Pentecostalism in the early 20th century. This book focuses on a class of seemingly involuntary acts alternately explained in religious and secular terminology. These involuntary experiences include uncontrolled bodily movements (fits, bodily exercises, falling as dead, catalepsy, convulsions); spontaneous vocalizations (crying out, shouting, speaking in tongues); unusual sensory experiences (trances, visions, voices, clairvoyance, out-of-body experiences); and alterations of consciousness and/or memory (dreams, somnium, somnambulism, mesmeric trance, mediumistic trance, hypnosis, possession, alternating personality) (Taves, 1999: 3).

Trance-like states are often interpreted as religious ecstasy or visions and can be deliberately induced using a variety of techniques, including prayer, religious rituals, meditation, pranayama (breathwork or breathing exercises), physical exercise, sexual intercourse, music, dancing, sweating (e.g. sweat lodge), fasting, thirsting, and the consumption of psychotropic drugs such as cannabis. Sensory modality is the channel or conduit for the induction of the trance. Sometimes an ecstatic experience takes place in occasion of contact with something or somebody perceived as extremely beautiful or holy. It may also happen without any known reason. The particular technique that an individual uses to induce ecstasy is usually one that is associated with that individual's particular religious and cultural traditions. As a result, an ecstatic experience is usually interpreted within the context of a particular individual's religious and cultural traditions. These interpretations often include statements about contact with supernatural or spiritual beings, about receiving new information as a revelation, also religion-related explanations of subsequent change of values, attitudes and behavior (e.g. in case of religious conversion).

Benevolent, neutral and malevolent trances may be induced (intentionally, spontaneously and/or accidentally) by different methods:

Charles Tart provides a useful working definition of auditory driving. It is the induction of trance through the sense of hearing. Auditory driving works through a process known as entrainment.[citation needed]

The usage of repetitive rhythms to induce trance states is an ancient phenomenon. Throughout the world, shamanistic practitioners have been employing this method for millennia. Anthropologists and other researchers have documented the similarity of shamanistic auditory driving rituals among different cultures.

Said simply, entrainment is the synchronization of different rhythmic cycles. Breathing and heart rate have been shown to be affected by auditory stimulus, along with brainwave activity. The ability of rhythmic sound to affect human brainwave activity, especially theta brainwaves, is the essence of auditory driving, and is the cause of the altered states of consciousness that it can induce.[citation needed]

Nowack and Feltman have recently published an article entitled "Eliciting the Photic Driving Response" which states that the EEG photic driving response is a sensitive neurophysiological measure which has been employed to assess chemical and drug effects, forms of epilepsy, neurological status of Alzheimer's patients, and physiological arousal. Photic driving also impacts upon the psychological climate of a person by producing increased visual imagery and decreased physiological and subjective arousal. In this research by Nowack and Feltman, all participants reported increased visual imagery during photic driving, as measured by their responses to an imagery questionnaire.

Dennis Wier (https://web.archive.org/web/20060915232957/http://www.trance.edu/papers/theory.htm Accessed: 6 December 2006) states that over two millennia ago Ptolemy and Apuleius found that differing rates of flickering lights affected states of awareness and sometimes induced epilepsy. Wier also asserts that it was discovered in the late 1920s that when light was shined on closed eyelids it resulted in an echoing production of brainwave frequencies. Wier also opined that in 1965 Grey employed a stroboscope to project rhythmic light flashes into the eyes at a rate of 1025Hz (cycles per second). Grey discovered that this stimulated similar brainwave activity.

Research by Thomas Budzynski, Oestrander et al., in the use of brain machines suggest that photic driving via the suprachiasmatic nucleus and direct electrical stimulation and driving via other mechanisms and modalities, may entrain processes of the brain facilitating rapid and enhanced learning, produce deep relaxation, euphoria, an increase in creativity, problem solving propensity and may be associated with enhanced concentration and accelerated learning. The theta range and the border area between alpha and theta has generated considerable research interest.

Charles Tart provides a useful working definition of kinesthetic driving. It is the induction of trance through the sense of touch, feeling or emotions. Kinesthetic driving works through a process known as entrainment.

The rituals practiced by some athletes in preparing for contests are dismissed as superstition, but this is a device of sport psychologists to help them to attain an ecstasy-like state. Joseph Campbell had a peak experience whilst running. Roger Bannister on breaking the four-minute mile (Cameron, 1993: 185): "No longer conscious of my movement, I discovered a new unity with nature. I had found a new source of power and beauty, a source I never dreamt existed." Roger Bannister later became a distinguished neurologist.

Mechanisms and disciplines that include kinesthetic driving may include: dancing, walking meditation, yoga and asana, mudra, juggling, poi (juggling), etc.

Sufism (the mystical branch of Islam) has theoretical and metaphoric texts regarding ecstasy as a state of connection with Allah. Sufi practice rituals (dhikr, sema) use body movement and music to achieve the state.

Divination is a cultural universal which anthropologists have observed as being present in many religions and cultures in all ages up to the present day (see sibyl).[citation needed] Divination may be defined as a mechanism for fortune-telling by ascertaining information by interpretation of omens or an alleged supernatural agency. Divination often entails ritual, and is often facilitated by trance.

In Tibet, oracles have played, and continue to play, an important part in religion and government. The word oracle is used by Tibetans to refer to the spirit, deity or entity that enters those men and women who act as media between the natural and the spiritual realms. The media are, therefore, known as kuten, which literally means, "the physical basis".

The Dalai Lama, who lives in exile in northern India, still consults an oracle known as the Nechung Oracle, which is considered the official state oracle of the government of Tibet. He gives a complete description of the process of trance and possession in his book Freedom in Exile.[13]

Convergent disciplines of neuroanthropology, ethnomusicology, electroencephalography (EEG), neurotheology and cognitive neuroscience, amongst others, are conducting research into the trance induction of altered states of consciousness resulting from neuron entrainment with the driving of sensory modalities, for example polyharmonics, multiphonics, and percussive polyrhythms through the channel of the auditory and kinesthetic modality.

Neuroanthropology and cognitive neuroscience are conducting research into the trance induction of altered states of consciousness (possibly engendering higher consciousness) resulting from neuron firing entrainment with these polyharmonics and multiphonics. Related research has been conducted into neural entraining with percussive polyrhythms. The timbre of traditional singing bowls and their polyrhythms and multiphonics are considered meditative and calming, and the harmony inducing effects of this tool to potentially alter consciousness are being explored by scientists, medical professionals and therapists.

Scientific advancement and new technologies such as computerized EEG, positron emission tomography, regional cerebral blood flow, and nuclear magnetic resonance imaging, are providing measurable tools to assist in understanding trance phenomena.

There are four principal brainwave states that range from high-amplitude, low-frequency delta to low-amplitude, high-frequency beta. These states range from deep dreamless sleep to a state of high arousal. These four brainwave states are common throughout humans. All levels of brainwaves exist in everyone at all times, even though one is foregrounded depending on the activity level. When a person is in an aroused state and exhibiting a beta brainwave pattern, their brain also exhibits a component of alpha, theta and delta, even though only a trace may be present.[14]

The University of Philadelphia study on some Christians at the Freedom Valley Worship Center in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, revealed that glossolalia-speaking (vocalizing or praying in unrecognizable form of language which is seen in members of certain Christian sects) activates areas of the brain out of voluntary control. In addition, the frontal lobe of the brain, which monitors speech, significantly diminished in activity as the study participants spoke glossolalia.[15] Dr. Andrew B. Newberg, in analysis of his earlier studies as opposed to the MRI scans of the test subjects, stated that Buddhist monks in meditation[16] and Franciscan nuns in prayer[17] exhibited increased activity in the frontal lobe, and subsequently their behaviors, very much under voluntary control. The investigation found this particular beyond-body-control characteristic only in tongue-speakers (also see xenoglossia).

Go here to read the rest:

Trance - Wikipedia

Discover: ‘You’re getting sleepy’ the amazing science of hypnosis – Sudbury.com

Trance states can be fun when youre on stage, but they can also have profound effects in relieving pain and changing behaviour

When you hear the word hypnosis, you may be immediately reminded of that stage show you saw, and the man that had a great time clucking like a chicken on command. Perhaps you think of being out of your own mind, unable to control your body, and something you never want to experience.

But the thing is, you probably already have. Ever fallen into a trance watching the snow come at the windshield? So engrossed in a book or movie that you forget the world youre in, felt the relaxation of a flickering flame, or even, the calm meditation of the Zamboni making its rounds?

And you know everybody watches the Zamboni you cant take your eyes off it.

All of these times, you have been in whats really, at its base level, a trance. It is this state whether it is an altered state of consciousness or simply a relaxed one (this is still up for debate) that allows the power of suggestion to work to its true potential. And in the right hands, that could mean that changing your perception of the world while in this state.

Hypnotherapy, the practice of accessing the subconscious mind in order to change behaviour, has been around for some time more than 200 years really. And though it began as a pseudoscience, without much in the way of standard practice and some outlandish theories to say the least hows the idea of disease called animal magnetism featuring an internal liquid magnetic force it has now been shown not only to have an effect on the subconscious mind, but a measureable one.

A landmark study in 1999 by Pierre Rainville from the University of Montreal tested pain response in conjunction with hypnotism. In the study, hypnotized participants briefly placed their left hand in water one heated to a painful 116 degrees Fahrenheit (46 degrees Celsius) and the other left at room temperature. Some participants were instructed that as they put their hand in the water they may feel some pain, but not a bothersome amount. For instance, if the usual pain register would be a ten, then they might only feel it as a five.

The participants had neurological scans while the test was happening, and there were remarkable results. Those who put their hand in the 116-degree water but were told the pain would be less showed less activity in their brains. Specifically, less activity in the anterior cingulate cortex, associated with pain processing.

A more recent Stanford university study in 2016 found changes in the brains functions as well. Dr. David Spiegel, professor and associate chair of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Stanford, and his colleagues screened 545 healthy participants and found 36 people who consistently scored high on tests of hypnotisability (your ability to follow orders and pay careful attention), as well as 21 control subjects who scored on the extreme low end of the scales.

Using Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) to measure brain activity, each person was scanned: while resting, while recalling a memory, and during two hypnosis sessions.

What they found and what they found only in the patients who scored highest on the hypnotisability test, and only while they were in one of the two hypnosis sessions was three distinct changes.

First, they saw a decrease in activity in the dorsal anterior cingulate, part of the brains salience network, which detects behaviorally relevant stimuli and co-ordinates the brain's neural resources in response to these stimuli.

Then, an increase in connections between two other areas of the brain the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and the insula. Spiegel describes this as a brain-body connection that helps the brain process and control whats going on in the body.

Finally, Spiegels team also observed reduced connections between the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and the default mode network, which includes the medial prefrontal and the posterior cingulate cortex.

This decrease in functional connectivity could potentially be the disconnect between someones actions and their awareness of their actions.

When it comes to weight loss with hypnotherapy, small scale studies are showing it could be a more effective long-term weight loss tool, and highly complementary to other behavioural changes. Other small studies seeking to show if hypnosis can help with smoking, treat a drug addiction, or even self-hypnosis in order to avoid relapse have found it is a very viable therapy.

One of the most fascinating aspects though, is hypnotherapys potential within healthcare.

There is beginning research into hypnotherapy as a complement in treating Pediatric Crohns Disease.

As well, Montreal Childrens Hospital Interventional Radiology department took part in a pilot project to better understand medical hypnosis. More than 120 children and teens have now undergone medical hypnotism, and the results are astounding.

Patients who were hypnotized prior to procedures rated their discomfort at an average 1.4 out of 10 for pain those without rated it a 5.4. The use of medical hypnotherapy is now resulting in the use of less or no sedation for procedures that previously depended on the time, cost and risk of anesthesia. As well, as children are known to be medical wigglers, the hypnotic state is allowing the medical professionals to better and more easily perform the required medical procedures.

Imagine making the life of a child in pain better, without needing to do more than to teach them to relax.

But if youre a skeptic, you might still wonder about the placebo effect. Well, youre not wrong. The thing is, the placebo effect can be quite healing.

In her book, Cure: A Journey Into the Science of Mind Over Body, journalist and author Jo Marchant details the placebo effect, and the fact that the brain is still responding in the desired capacity. For instance, she notes that a placebo painkiller can actually trigger the release of the same pain-relieving endorphins that pain medication would. Or patients with Parkinsons disease can take a placebo pill and still feel the same release of dopamine that they would if they took their actual medication.

That is, of course, unless the patient knows its a placebo. That is one of the stickier issues when it comes to studying the effects of hypnosis. In order to accurately capture it, the study participant cant know its happening. And that can make for an ethical dilemma.

Using the method as treatment however, requires you in the drivers seat, says Gilles Brideau, Sudbury-based registered psychotherapist and practitioner of hypnotherapy since 2002.

What hypnosis is really like, he says, is like we're driving in a car, and I have a map. While he can gently advise you that your turn is coming up because his map says so you can still drive right past. Its this choice, this free will, which will help your experience with the process as well.

According to Brideau, the success of hypnotherapy comes from your brains inability to distinguish what is happening now, and what you are imagining is happening.

Im sure youve had a dream, says Brideau, a very vivid dream in which you were being chased. If you wake up and you do a carotid (pulse) check, your heart would be racing. But what were you doing? Laying down, resting. We get a physiological response to an action that wasnt taking place, because your brain perceived it to be real.

Its this power to bring the brain into a moment that hasnt happened yet that allows for help during medical procedures, hypnobirthing, even upcoming medical procedures that are causing anxiety for the prospective patient.

The session would begin with some questions, mostly geared to your desired outcomes. Then, some helpful tool of distraction. A pair of glasses that flash small lights in your eyes at a quicker pace before slowing, as well as a noise-canceling headphones that only allow the chosen musical cues and the voice of Brideau to enter. My clients laugh and say youre in my head.

Its then that Brideau uses not only his training as a psychotherapist to determine his plan of action, but also his background in cognitive behavioral therapy, and other modalities. While its easy to get someone into a trance, the rest takes a skillful hand.

Then, its a matter of practice makes perfect. If you are terrified of airplanes, your time spent taxiing should not be the moment where you try to deal with the fear for the first time. With hypnotherapy, you could begin your journey 10-20 times before setting foot in the airport, simply by practicing with a hypnotherapist to help to access a calm state, and listening to their hypnotic suggestions.

Suggestions are made based on the desired outcome of the client, says Brideau, but if it is not their true desire, it wont work, says Brideau.

So if I get a wife who would really like her husband to quit smoking, but he doesnt want to, its not going to work, he said.

The outcome is discussed in detail in advance of any sessions, and very often scripted according to protocols from other eminent sources. There is one for Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) that Brideau often employs, as well as also working with the clients to refocus on positive outcomes. Its not I want to be 150 pounds, says Brideau. Its about what is going to happen, will you be able to stop eating and feel full sooner, will you be able to choose foods that are better for your health.

And while there are no regulatory bodies governing hypnotherapy, the training in other areas will tell you when you have found someone you can trust. Hypnotherapy should be but one tool of an educated professional.

But if youre still worried about being made to bark like a dog, know that hypnosis cannot make you do anything youre not open to. When you see someone acting like a fool onstage, know that they are having a great time, because that was their desired outcome.

You go to a stage show to have fun, says Brideau. A lot of times, because I've done a stage show, it's kind of like I can't believe I'm doing this but I don't really care. Because you're aware the whole time. In that moment, I want to live, I want to have a good time, I want to enjoy myself right now.

So whether you are interested in hypnobirthing, help for a medical procedures, easing fears or anxieties, trouble with relaxation, smoking, and weight loss even animal noises then a hypnosis session could be of interest to you. While there are no large-scale, long-term studies at the moment, there is the beginning of fascinating research into the field, and a new understanding of the brain.

Jenny Lamothe is a freelance writer, proof-reader and editor in Greater Sudbury. Contact her through her website, JennyLamothe.com.

See the original post here:

Discover: 'You're getting sleepy' the amazing science of hypnosis - Sudbury.com

Prince Harry was first to drop L-bomb, left ‘in a trance’ after first date with Meghan Markle, new book claims – Newshub

The Duke of Sussex was reportedly left "in a trance" after his first date with the former Suits actress, and while the couple didn't kiss that night, they were "immediately obsessed" with each other, according to the new book Finding Freedom.

The biography by royal commentators Omid Scobie and Carolyn Durand says Harry sipped a beer while Meghan drank a martini at their first rendezvous, after which she told her friends 'this could have legs'.

The pair allegedly met again the very next night at the same venue - Dean Street Townhouse in Soho, London. Three months later, Harry was said to be the first to drop the L-bomb to Meghan, who immediately said it back.

The authors of Finding Freedom claim to have spoken to more than 100 sources, including 'close friends of Harry and Meghan' as well as royal aides and palace staff. The book promises that every piece of information included has come from at least two sources.

Read more here:

Prince Harry was first to drop L-bomb, left 'in a trance' after first date with Meghan Markle, new book claims - Newshub

Blackpool nurse is a hit as guest DJ on Dave Pearce Delirium show as a thank you to key workers – Blackpool Gazette

Nurse Chris Gorse who played a DJ guest set for Dave Pearce Trance Anthems

Father-of-two Chris, who turned 50 last month, was surprised by wife Janet with the chance to play the guest DJ mix on Pearces Delirium slot after writing to him and telling him of Chriss dream.

The amateur DJ from Cleveleys said Janet was stunned to receive a response from the former Radio 1 DJ inviting Chris to record a set, as a thank you for his work during the Covid crisis.

He said:Janet handed me a letter the day of my birthday with this opportunity and I couldnt believe it. To play in the club alongside someone of Daves calibre has always been an ambition, to have the chance to do it even online was just unreal.

He is a genuinely lovely bloke who really champions NHS causes and a couple of months back supported Blue Skies so it was really touching.

I then had to get the decorators in to sort the room quick as I had cleared it out of all my decks and needed to set it back up!

Chris played a 25 minute set of some of his most meaningful and favourite trance anthems and then sent the track list to Pearce for approval. The set can now be listened to on his official Dave Pearce Facebook page.

Chris, grandad to Archie and Alfie, even recorded a voiceover with a special shout-out to his team at the Royal Lancaster Infirmary where he works.

He added: On the night it was a real family, team effort as my daughters Clair and Cody set up laptops so we could respond to everyone tuning in from all over the world - it was great to see people enjoy it.

DJ Dave Pearces Trance Anthems show streams every Sunday via his official Facebook page http://www.facebook.com/DavePearceOfficialPart-time amateur DJ Chris Gorse was given the guest DJ slot by Pearce as a thank you to Keyworkers through the Covid 19 crisis.

Chris who has been playing his decks for 21 years said: It is my passion and a way for me to just switch off from it all - I can close my eyes and transport myself anywhere in the world.

It was a fantastic experience to put my own imprint on a guest set and work with a DJ who really flies the flag for trance music.

See the rest here:

Blackpool nurse is a hit as guest DJ on Dave Pearce Delirium show as a thank you to key workers - Blackpool Gazette

Ray Fisher has revealed his one request for the Justice League Snyder Cut – Flickering Myth

Cyborg actor Ray Fisher has revealed his one request for Zack Snyders Justice League.

Ray Fisher, who plays Cyborg in the DCEU, has been very vocal about his excitement for Zack Snyders Justice League, hoping that it will right many of the wrongs of Joss Whedons theatrical version.

One thing that he wants fixed more than anything, however, is a mention in the credits for someone who was left out from the theatrical release. Taking to Twitter, Fisher said:

Despite my asking on multiple occasions, my barber (Wayne Nembhard) was not credited in any capacity for his work on the theatrical version of Justice League.

Wayne worked with us for the ENTIRE principle photography process (8 months) and the majority of the reshoots.

SEE ALSO: Zack Snyder on Justice Leagues position in the DC Multiverse and his take on Superman

Wayne took whatever time was asked of him away from his successful businessa unisex barber salon called Extreme Cutz in St. Albans, UKto work with us.

Too my knowledge, he was the only Black man to ever grace the hair and makeup trailer.

It broke my heart (as I know it did Waynes) to watch the credits roll and not see his name appear in any way.

When Zack told me about the Snyder Cut being released, I only had one request: that Wayne be given credit for his work.

Zack was shocked that Wayne wasnt credited in the theatrical version and assured me that Wayne would absolutely be given credit in Zack Snyders Justice League.

Despite my asking on multiple occasions, my barber (Wayne Nembhard) was not credited in any capacity for his work on the theatrical version of Justice League.

Wayne worked with us for the ENTIRE principle photography process (8 months) and the majority of the reshoots.(1/4) https://t.co/WC178DXvan

Ray Fisher (@ray8fisher) July 21, 2020

While this isnt a change any of us fans would notice, it certainly sounds like a good cause Fisher is pushing for. So keep an eye out for Wayne Nembhard when those credits start to roll.

InJustice League, fueled by his restored faith in humanity and inspired by Supermans selfless act, Bruce Wayne enlists the help of his newfound ally, Diana Prince, to face an even greater enemy. Together, Batman and Wonder Woman work quickly to find and recruit a team of metahumans to stand against this newly awakened threat. But despite the formation of this unprecedented league of heroesBatman, Wonder Woman, Aquaman, Cyborg and The Flashit may already be too late to save the planet from an assault of catastrophic proportions.

Justice Leagueis directed by Zack Snyder and features Henry Cavill as Superman, Ben Affleck as Batman, Gal Gadot as Wonder Woman, Ray Fisher as Cyborg, Jason Momoa as Aquaman, Ezra Miller as The Flash, Amy Adams as Lois Lane, Jeremy Irons as Alfred Pennyworth, Diane Lane as Martha Kent, Jesse Eisenberg as Lex Luthor, Connie Nielsen as Queen Hippolyta and Robin Wright as General Antiope, J.K. Simmons as Commissioner Gordon, Amber Heard as Mera, Ciaran Hinds as Steppenwolf and Ray Porter as Darkseid.

Follow this link:

Ray Fisher has revealed his one request for the Justice League Snyder Cut - Flickering Myth

Doom Patrol Is a Refreshing Ally For the Queer Community, and We Love It – POPSUGAR

If you squealed with joy during Joe's emphatic, heart-aching monologue in The Old Guard, Doom Patrol should be next on your watchlist. Originally debuted by DC Universe last year, the outlandish superhero series was renewed by HBO Max for its second season, becoming another addition to the new streamer's slate of originals.

First and foremost, Doom Patrol is amazing and more people should be talking about it. With leading roles filled by the smoldering Matt Bomer, '90s icon Brendan Fraser, Orange is the New Black's Diane Guerrero, and former James Bond himself, Timothy Dalton, the cast is already reason enough to watch. If the reputation behind the names isn't a big enough draw, the show gives audiences something critics of superhero films have long been asking for: queer representation.

As an oddball mixture of the enthralling, morose stakes indicative of the superhero genre coupled with wildly camp characters and story elements, Doom Patrol is an irreverent, genre-blending original. Moaning sex ghosts, a hero whose flex-activated telekinesis can send a shock wave of orgasms, and a rollerskating time villain it's all on the table. Danny The Street, is however, the most peculiar and perfect of them all.

Danny the Street is a living gender-queer street with the power to teleport themselves and their residents to any location in the world (possibly universe). They communicate through street signs, napkins, neon signs, and anything else they can create lettering on. First introduced in "Doom Patrol #35" in 1990 by writer Grant Morrison, Danny was originally a cross-dressing transperson (referred to in the comics as a "transvestite") who offered himself as a safe haven people who either weren't accepted by or didn't feel at home in society.

The term "transvestite" alone is problematic and dated, but the show creators sought to maintain Danny's queerness in the series adaptation, resulting in their much-needed evolution to non-binary. Season one's episode eight, "Danny Patrol," is their first introduction on the series, and follows heroes Cyborg (Joivan Wade) and Larry Trainor (voiced by Matt Bomer) in their fight to protect Danny and Danny's residents, cutely referred to as Danizens, from the evil Bureau of Normalcy.

Throughout the episode, Danny and fabulous transgender woman Maura Lee Karupt reiterate the importance of celebrating, and most importantly respecting, people's differences. Danny and Maura Lee's teachings really hit home for Larry, who struggles to find pride in his homosexuality. Embellished with a drag show ending, Pride.com called the episode "the queerest episode of television in 2019." In respect to his role, Matt Bomer told Digital Spy, "Larry is one of the most three-dimensional, fully [realized] gay characters I've ever played. As much as it's a fun superhero show, Doom Patrol is really about the human condition."

In a literal sense, Doom Patrol's queer characters bring the queer representation desperately craved in superhero franchises, but that isn't where the representation ends. Like all superhero stories, the heroics aren't the real focus of the project. Sure, we all loved seeing Iron Man take on Thanos in his super suit, but it was his development from arrogant, self-absorbed rich kid to self-sacrificing mentor that kept us emotionally attached.

Through the vehicle a superhero adventure, Doom Patrol ultimately tells the story of outsiders laboring to find joy in the differences that cast them out from society's acceptance. Narrated in a modernized camp style reminiscent of Joel Schumacher's 1997 flop-turned-cult-hit Batman & Robin, the series uses queer characters to investigate a trial in life that is inherently relatable to the queer experience.

See the article here:

Doom Patrol Is a Refreshing Ally For the Queer Community, and We Love It - POPSUGAR

‘Since I arrived, we would be fourth’ – Mourinho pleased with Spurs’ progress towards Europa League spot – Goal.com

Tottenham ended the season on a high after sealing a sixth-place finish, having sat in 14th at the time of Mauricio Pochettino's departure

Jose Mourinho hailed Tottenham's push to seal a spot in the Europa League as the Portuguese manager made sure to point out how much the club has improved since he took over.

Spurs locked up a sixth-place finish with a point on Sunday, as Mourinho's side finished the Premier League season with a 1-1 draw against Crystal Palace.

Despite ending the season with a draw, Tottenham did enough to climb all the way to sixth place and seal an automatic spot in the Europa League.

Article continues below

When Mourinho took over following Mauricio Pochettino's dismissal, Spurs sat in 14th place, having earned just 14 points from as many matches in the Premier League.

Harry Kane scored the opening goal for Spurs just 13 minutes on, but a Jeffrey Schlupp goal early in the second half was enough for the two sides to split the points.

And, although Mourinho admitted the performance wasn't quite what the club hoped for, Sunday's result did seal a positive end to what was an overall disappointing campaign.

Under the Portuguese boss, the club completed quite the turnaround, with Mourinho pleased with the progress made so far even if there was a long way to go.

The season was crazy, since they played the Champions League final it has been up and down and really hard," Mourinho told Sky Sports.

"We, in this group of matches managed to get results and to perform. Not today, it was not the best. But in this period we played well, get results and be solid to put ourselves in the position to get in the Europa League

"From a personal point of view I'm happy because since I arrived we would be fourth which is good with all the problems we had."

Now, with European football secured, Mourinho can look ahead towards continuing to make his mark on the Spurs squad.

The club faces several departures, with Jan Vertonghen and Michel Vorm set to leave, but Mourinho says that he expects to improve the squad this summer.

"When all the players are available we showed in this last period where we belong," he said at his post-match news conference.

"After lockdown we finished third or fourth in the table. That is where we belong. I want to have my team, my players, not a medical room full of players, a pitch full of players.

"We want to keep our very good players and after that improve the squad. Are we going to buy 10 players. No? Are we going to pay 100 million ($125m) for a player? No.

"But let's see. The market is very strange. I don't know if we will start working pre-season with any new players or something that is going to go through the whole period.

"We are going to keep the structure of the team because we have absolutely no interest in selling our best players.

"I enjoy working with [chief scout] Steve Hitchen and we are very connected with [Daniel] Levy and the board.

"We're going to do what is possible and hopefully next season we can give the fans a very good season."

See more here:

'Since I arrived, we would be fourth' - Mourinho pleased with Spurs' progress towards Europa League spot - Goal.com

Mercy Quaye: Achieving police accountability and the cost of progress – CT Insider

Change aint easy. Especially when policing is involved.

After sitting for nearly 24 straight hours in a special session last Thursday into Friday, two state representatives, Jesse MacLachlan, R-35, and Quentin Phipps, D-100, used the same word to describe their feeling immediately following the ordeal: Raw.

House Bill 6004: An Act Concerning Police Accountability attracted hundreds of testimonies from across the state and resulted in an eight-hour discussion early Friday morning. The bill ultimately passed the House with an 86-58 vote. But the tied vote on the amendment to strike the qualified immunity portion of the bill is far more interesting to me.

That tie, in part, was due to hearts that changed after the killing of George Floyd.

After that incident, I got a call from Representative MacLachlan from the shoreline and he asked how he could help, Phipps said on a phone call with me just a couple of hours after the vote. Having bonded over their Christian faith in the past, Phipps said he welcomed the call; its just that At the time I didnt think much of it, but he made the right vote today and Ill never forget that kind of bravery.

MacLachlan was the only Republican vote against the amendment to repeal qualified immunity. And after spending the last several weeks working diligently to understand the issues, his vote Thursday stood in sharp contrast from his previous votes on police accountability. The reason for that, he said, was he wanted to get it right.

On a call Friday morning after the vote, MacLachlan sounded heavy, weighted by the events of the previous night. Through a solemn conversation, he walked me through his commitment to understanding the issues, especially issues from communities of which hes not a part.

For him, making a well-informed decision meant reaching out for guidance.

After (voting against the previous police accountability bill) he asked himself why, Sen. Gary Winfield, D-10, said. I think what he realized was that he was operating as a part of a unit. And even though he was hearing the arguments from people with lived experiences and knew it made sense, he still voted against it. This time, he sat with the (Black and Puerto Rican Caucus) and came to hear from them.

MacLachlan said his path to understanding the issues starting with emailing the BPRCs aide to set up a meeting. That meeting quickly resulted in a Zoom call. There he sat, he listened, he empathized and the only commitment he made was to continue to do so.

He maintains that it wasnt perfect, but it was the right thing to do.

I strongly believe that every single member of the state legislature is doing what they believe is right, he said in an emailed statement. Enhancing the safety, security, and freedoms of all Connecticut residents is my top priority. After careful consideration, I believe that the bill we voted on today effectively bolsters both public safety and accountability.

While MacLachlan was the only Republican vote against the amendment, the weight of that vote only mattered because of the 15 Democratic votes in favor of it. To Winfield, that split is a clear indication that the issue didnt fall neatly on party lines.

I think those are cultural, racial, experiential lines, he said. They say all politics are local politics, but I think all politics are identity politics, because wherever I go Im a Black man, and that has everything to do with my experience.

When he brings forth or votes on a bill, Winfield said he tries to remember that his actions as a legislator arent for him.

I dont have time to luxuriate in the victory because I still have to fix the problems with housing, incarceration and education access, he said. If youre really doing this work you dont get a break. My work has always been about the people I represent. If its ever about me and no one else, then Im not doing the right work.

This time, his and the work of several Black legislators during discussion on the bill meant offering their traumatic policing stories up in a prostration-like demonstration to prove imperative for the bill.

I do it hoping that my pain is enough for you to recognize that Im human like you are knowing that its often not, he said. As much as I dont want to do it, given that we need to win, I know I need to.

As it stands, the bill includes much of the original language rolling back qualified immunity and allows civil lawsuits to move forward against police officers in state court. This key piece, coupled with a number of the other police accountability measures Winfield has proposed and championed, will go a long way toward addressing concerns from evidently over-policed Black and brown communities.

Its important because when the system fails us and it always does we need the power to say, Im going to court, he said.

Opponents of the bill have contested the removal of qualified immunity, asserting that is isnt a fair measure and will punish officers when they inadvertently commit a crime. But when civilians inadvertently commit crimes, arent they held accountable? People in uniforms, with weapons and the power to apprehend people when they so please, should be held to the same standard if not higher.

Getting this bill over the finish line in the House required emotional sacrifices and potentially political ones, as well. After posting a Facebook status detailing the reason he voted for the bill and against the amendment, MacLachlans post was rushed with comments that people will pull their support of him in the next election and joked about leveraging qualified immunity to sue him for his support of the bill.

He maintains that it wasnt perfect, but it was the right thing to do.

Certainly there were parts in the bill that needed to be reworked or else really good police officers would have (been) hurt, he said. And we incorporated a number of the changes that would be needed to protect officers from an onslaught of lawsuits because we dont want officers to be driven from their post. But it still gives communities an avenue to protect themselves. The bill was about keeping all the members of all our community safe.

We dont often celebrate people for a change of heart or doing something just. But for me its important to give people an example of what doing the right thing can look like, particularly when doing the right means going against a political machine and an entire party or profession.

MacLachlan and Rep. Anthony Nolan, D-39, who is a New London police officer, are both likely to see an incredible backlash in response to their votes in favor of the bill, which is slated for a vote before the Senate this week. That, Winfield said, is the cost of progress.

Just because something is the right thing to do doesnt mean its as easy as we think it is.

Mercy Quaye is a social change communications consultant and a New Haven native. Her column appears Mondays. Contact her at @Mercy_WriteNow and SubtextWithMercy@gmail.com.

See the original post:

Mercy Quaye: Achieving police accountability and the cost of progress - CT Insider

Report: NBA Making Progress on Plan for 8 Teams Not Included in Orlando Restart – Bleacher Report

Rick Bowmer/Associated Press

The NBA has reportedly "progressed" in discussions about the potential for group workouts and scrimmages involving the eight teams that didn't qualify for the resumption of the 2019-20 season at the Disney World complex in Orlando, Florida.

Rick Bonnell of the Charlotte Observer reported Friday the current proposal under discussion calls for a week of practices at a team's home facility followed by two weeks of workouts and possibly some scrimmages in hub cities, but the plan still needs final approval from the league and Players Association.

The Atlanta Hawks, Charlotte Hornets, Chicago Bulls, Cleveland Cavaliers, Detroit Pistons, Golden State Warriors, Minnesota Timberwolves and New York Knicks didn't qualify for the shortened eight-game finish to the regular season in Orlando.

In turn, those organizations are facing the potential of nearly nine months without competitive basketball with the 2020-21 campaign not scheduled to start until Dec. 1. The current season was halted March 11.

NBPA executive director Michele Roberts raised concerns about whether the league could provide an equally safe environment for those teams as the ones competing for a championship in Orlando.

"I know there are some players, particularly young players, that seem concerned they're not getting enough [opportunities]. I think our teams are incredibly smart and creative and can come up with ways to get their guys engaged, if not now, before the season starts," Robertstold reportersin June. "But I am very concerned and frankly...in terms of play that doesn't have the same guarantees of safety and health that we've provided for the teams in Orlando."

There are also questions about whether veterans would take part in the scrimmages or if it would become more of an informal Summer League setting with mostly young players.

"I probably won't play if it gets approved," an unnamed Cavs player toldChris Fedorof Cleveland.com in early July. "Doubt many vets will."

Hornets head coach James Borrego told Bonnell he believes the eight teams currently sitting on the sidelines will be at a significant competitive disadvantage heading toward next season if no plan is approved.

"We need the door flung open, so we can get after this thing," Borrego said.

A final decision could be announced as early as next week, per Bonnell.

Scrimmages have already started to take place in Orlando with the regular season set to resume Thursday.

Here is the original post:

Report: NBA Making Progress on Plan for 8 Teams Not Included in Orlando Restart - Bleacher Report

Heres How Corporate Leaders Can Make Meaningful Progress On Diversity And Inclusion – Forbes

Business leaders can take the initiative on promoting diversity and justice.

When the tragic murder of George Floyd set off protests against racism and injustice across the world, many leaders in business came forward to declare they stood by the African-American community and would work towards eliminating bias and discrimination within their own organizations. Many publicly stated Diversity and Inclusion (D&I) initiatives would become embedded within their organizational cultures to remedy what is a glaring lack of diversity in the upper echelons of the corporate universe. Across every industry, companies can do better. And the same goes for professional associations.

As the CEO of IMA (Institute of Management Accountants), my focus is on the finance and accounting profession, and how D&I can be promoted among the finance and accounting professionals who are the talent pipelines of organizations. Our membership comprises those currently holding senior leadership positions as well as those poised to succeed them. IMA has built D&I not only into its own organizational structure but into its overall mission in a holistic, all-encompassing way. We have made great strides, including having more than 50% female representation on our board for the first time in our long history.

I want to focus here not on IMAs own activities, but on what we have learned about best practices with regard to promoting D&I within organizations. The lessons we have drawn can help equip companies especially their accounting and finance leaders with the tools they need to successfully recruit and retain diverse talent. This is increasingly important in an environment where failing to do so is effectively leaving valuable skills and perspectives on the table, in addition to inviting reputational damage.

At IMA we recently published a synopsis of these best practices and how to implement them within organizations. It is called the Diversity and Inclusion Toolkit, which can serve as a guide for any employee or executive who wants to jumpstart a D&I initiative within their own organization. I want to emphasize this guide was conceived and developed before the protests. By proactively addressing D&I, IMAs organizational culture made talking about D&I issues safe for employees and constructive for the organization as a whole. Subsequent events have only reinforced the need for D&I initiatives to be a part of business operating models.

The challenge of D&I is straightforward: despite public commitments and in most cases earnest belief, there is still a lack of diversity at the top and feelings of frustration on the lack of progress by rank and file employees. By building an inclusive culture, leaders can ensure under-represented groups stay with organizations and can rise to senior leadership positions. In the IMA D&I Toolkit, we outline five key approaches that we used to measurably increase diversity at IMA, ones which can be replicated by other organizations:

1.Lead from the top. CEOs, board members, D&I committee heads and other senior leaders need to set the tone on D&I and lead by example. They need to be both frank about shortcomings and optimistic about setting and reaching goals, or else staff (and the wider public) will fail to take any commitments seriously. The same goes for transforming individual departments; for the finance function, the tone must be set by the CFO.

2.Create accountability. This means assigning a person to oversee D&I initiatives, one who will be held directly accountable for progress. If D&I is left to a committee or a junior-level executive, accountability will fall by the wayside.

3.Quantify D&I. Its crucial that each organization clarify and measure what goals are involved in making progress on D&I, including employee statistics and whatever other initiatives are launched. This is an area where finance and accounting professionals, under the leadership of the CFO, can play a key role.

4.Communicate initiatives, goals and successes. D&I should be a regular part of all organizational communications, whether is in annual reports, employee communications or marketing materials. This goes beyond optics. The goal is to communicate to stakeholders the importance of D&I and the need for everyone to participate in reaching milestones.

5.Build a diverse leadership pipeline. When it comes to both recruitment and internal promotions, ensuring diverse representation at the top of the corporate ladder should be paramount. Even as overall workforces necessarily become more diverse due to changing demographics, there remains a stubborn racial gap in leadership roles. Overcoming that gap will allow alternate perspectives to be factored into C-Suite decision-making.

Ultimately, organizations can and should use these guidelines to advance along what we call the D&I Continuum, from being merely compliant with legal requirements to fully incorporating D&I into business strategy, practice and mission.

As the leader of a global professional organization, I am especially concerned with adoption of these guidelines by accounting and finance departments and by CFOs in particular, who will play a unique role in transforming our profession to fully embody the principles of D&I. That said, leaders of all types must think about where they are falling short and how they can forge a new future. When it comes to diversity, injustice and lack of opportunity, there will be no excuses for inaction and all leaders must be able to point to concrete policies, goals and benchmarks for change.

Read more from the original source:

Heres How Corporate Leaders Can Make Meaningful Progress On Diversity And Inclusion - Forbes