Low-cost CO sensor developed using nanoscale honeycomb structures – Phys.Org

July 14, 2017 Honeycomb type ZnO nanostructure. Credit: Indian Institute of Science

Researchers at the Indian Institute of Science (IISc) have developed a highly sensitive, low-cost nanosensor that can quickly detect minute changes in carbon monoxide (CO) levels, with potential applications in environmental pollution monitoring.

The team used a novel fabrication technique that leaves out lithography, a time-consuming and expensive process, to construct a honeycomb-like nanostructure made up of zinc oxide. The sensor was able to detect a difference in CO level as low as 500 parts per billion and selectively respond to CO even in the presence of other gases. The non-lithography technique also significantly cuts down the time and cost involved in making nanostructured gas sensors.

The study was carried out by Chandra Shekhar Prajapati, postdoctoral fellow, and Navakanta Bhat, Chair & Professor, Centre for Nano Science and Engineering (CeNSE), IISc, along with researchers at the KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden.

"The size of the sensor itself is less than 1 mm," says Bhat. "If you combine it with the rest of the signal processing electronics and a small display, it may not be more than a couple of cm. This can be integrated with a cell phone or a small device at every traffic signal which can transmit the data to your cell phone through Bluetooth."

Conventional micro-machined CO sensors have a flat layer of zinc oxide, a metal oxide semiconductor, through which current flows. When exposed to CO, the resistance of the layer changes, affecting the amount of current flowing through. How much the resistance changes can be mapped to how much CO there is.

Creating nanostructures on flat zinc oxide improves the sensitivity, as the area available for gas interaction increases. However, making these nanosensors using traditional lithographya time-consuming, multi-step process in which metal oxide templates are etched on a light-sensitive materialrequires sophisticated equipment.

Instead, the researchers used tiny beads of polystyrene that arrange themselves into a closely packed layer when spread on an oxidized silicon surface. When zinc oxide is added, it settles into the hexagonal gaps between the beads. When the beads are then "lifted off," what remains is a 3-D honeycomb of zinc oxide, with a much larger surface area available for gas interaction than a flat plate.

The technique could cost significantly less than lithography-based methods, the researchers say. "You can buy a packet of these micron-sized polystyrene beads on the market for Rs. 4000-5000, which can be used to create nanostructures on thousands of sensors. This results in significant cost reduction compared to traditional lithography-based techniques to form such honeycombs," says Prajapati. In addition, the process only takes a few minutes, while lithography-based multi-step methods can take a few hours, he adds.

For environmental applications, gas sensors need to be both highly sensitive (detect very low levels) and selective (detect a specific gas in the presence of other gases). The researchers developed sensors with varying honeycomb wall width, and found that the one with the smallest width (~100 nm) was able to detect a change of even 500 parts per billion in CO concentration. When tested with a mixture of gases, the sensor also showed a distinctly greater response for CO.

The polystyrene-based method can be used to develop similar honeycomb nanostructures for other metal oxides to detect other gases, the researchers say. "What we have is a generic platform. You can do the same nano-structuring for different metal oxide semiconductor sensors," says Bhat.

Bhat and his team have been working on developing miniature sensors for air quality monitoring for several years. They previously developed a hybrid sensor array to detect four different gases simultaneously.

Explore further: Improved fire detection with new ultra-sensitive, ultraviolet light sensor

More information: C.S. Prajapati et al, Honeycomb type ZnO nanostructures for sensitive and selective CO detection, Sensors and Actuators B: Chemical (2017). DOI: 10.1016/j.snb.2017.06.070

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Low-cost CO sensor developed using nanoscale honeycomb structures - Phys.Org

Nano’s journey – Hindu Business Line

This refers to the editorial Ta-ta Nano (July 13). Nano was hailed by the automobile industry as a small wonder when it hit Indian roads a decade ago. Through the adoption of reverse costing and deploying the best design talents, Tata Motors delivered the promise disproving the doomsayers and enthralling the motorists. There was a mad rush for the new avatar. But the initial euphoria for the vehicle lasted not long. The charm for the new champion slowly waned. Though Nano is a statement of Indias prowess in frugal engineering it is as well a story of wrong market reading and market positioning of a new product.

Philip Sabu

Mannuthy, Kerala

R Gopalakrishnan, the executive director of Tata Sons, once said although the Tatas were the first in the country to come out with the market offering of packaged coconut oil, it was Marico through Parachute that became synonymous with the product; all because of lack of innovation on the formers part. Innovation culture is what thats needed, he observed, rather than meeting targets.

Seen in this light, the phasing out of Nano is not surprising. Earlier it was the case of Ambassador. It is said that both Ambassador and Nissan started by borrowing the technology of the the same 1958 Morris Oxford model of UK. While Nissan through its unique strategy of kaizen (making small but continuous improvements) went ahead to become one of the worlds leading automobiles, our ambassador remained in a time warp.

How I wish India had innovated and produced a company like Tesla whose models offer a mileage of 300 miles! In spite of being blessed with abundant solar energy throughout the year, we couldnt harness and capitalise on this great resource and usher in a revolution in sustainable mobility with requisite infrastructure. We keep hearing of reports like ISROs indigenously developed high-power lithium-ion batteries for e-vehicles and the plan to share the same with automobile companies. Hope such innovations will not go the Ambassador or Nano way and translate into a reality and offer the world a great but competitive Made in India product that beats the likes of Tesla, Nissan, Baidu etc.

CV Krishna Manoj

Hyderabad

There cannot be any question around the intent of Ratan Tata behind launching the Nano, as he wanted to fulfil the aspirations of a two-wheeler owner who always dreamt of having a car. But other competitors also took note of this development and though they did not launch their cars in this price bracket, provided so many other features and even far more space in slightly higher price which car buyers did not mind paying it.

Bal Govind

Noida

GST over, work on MSP

GST has been implemented after extensive deliberations and the glitches are expected to be ironed out sooner than later. With the commitment of the Centre and PM Modi, the responsibility of doubling farmers income by 2022 needs attention now.

Concerted efforts must be made in the direction by bringing in Minimum Support Price for every crop grown, based on scientific and pragmatic methods in addition to the scope for reviewing the MSP periodically.

Rajiv N Magal

Jammanahalli, Karnataka

Wake up, government!

It is surprising to note that the retail inflation has touched a record low of 1.54 per cent and the factory output coming down to 1.7 per cent. Galloping inflation or, for that matter, deflation is not good for the economy. India is witnessing a glut in food crops and there is no mechanism or rather political will to safeguard the crops and create time utility for them. The products are sold at throwaway prices and farmers are in distress.

That factory growth has also slowed down indicates things are not at all good in the Indian economy. An economy should be in an equilibrium position wherein both producers and consumer optimise their profits / satisfaction. The pitiable part is that the government and the RBI are not doing anything about it. This is indeed a cause for serious concern.

S Ramakrishnasayee

Ranipet

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Send your letters by email to bleditor@thehindu.co.in or by post to Letters to the Editor, The Hindu Business Line, Kasturi Buildings, 859-860, Anna Salai, Chennai 600002.

(This article was published on July 13, 2017)

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The Association for Molecular Pathology to Recognize Andrew P. Feinberg, MD, MPH with 2017 Award for Excellence … – Newswise (press release)

Newswise BETHESDA, Md. July 14, 2017 The Association for Molecular Pathology (AMP), the premier global, non-profit organization serving molecular diagnostic professionals, today announced that Andrew P. Feinberg, MD, MPH, Director of the Center for Epigenetics and Bloomberg Distinguished Professor, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Whiting School of Engineering, and Bloomberg School of Public Health, has earned this years Award for Excellence in Molecular Diagnosticsfor his seminal scientific discoveries and countless contributions to the field of epigenetics. The award will be presented at theAMP 2017 Annual Meeting on November 16, 2017 in Salt Lake City, UT. Following the award presentation, Dr. Feinberg will deliver a special lecture on the epigenetic basis of common human disease.

Dr. Feinberg has dedicated his career to understanding the epigenetic basis of normal development and disease, including cancer, aging, and neuropsychiatric illness. His early work involved the discovery of altered DNA methylation in cancer, as well as common epigenetic variants in the population that may be responsible for a significant population-attributable risk of cancer. Over the last few years, he has pioneered the field of epigenomics, founding the first NIH-supported Epigenome Center in the country and developing many novel tools for molecular and statistical analysis. His current research examines the mechanisms of epigenetic modification, the epigenetic basis of cancer and neuropsychiatric disease including schizophrenia and autism, as well as the invention of new molecular, statistical, and epidemiological tools for genome-scale epigenetics. Dr. Feinbergs numerous honors include the MERIT Award of the National Cancer Institute, the NIH Directors Pioneer Award, and the Feodor Lynen Medal for pioneering the field of cancer epigenetics.

Over the course of his career, Dr. Feinberg has fundamentally transformed our understanding of epigenetics and the role it plays in many complex diseases, said Federico A. Monzon, MD, AMP President. He is a true trailblazer in the field and his work continues to influence and inspire the next generation of clinical molecular diagnostic professionals.

The AMP Award for Excellence in Molecular Diagnostics was created in 1998 to recognize lifetime, pioneering and special achievements by professionals in the fields of molecular biology, molecular pathology, pathology, genetics, microbiology, and basic medical sciences, especially as these achievements relate to molecular diagnostics and molecular medicine. Honorees work has provided the scientific rationale for, or led to the development of, novel technologies for molecular diagnostics, and has contributed significantly to disease and patient management through their research. Previous recipients of the award are recognized on the AMP website

For more information on the AMP 2017 Annual Meeting, please visit our meeting website

Register for the AMP 2017 Annual Meeting here.

ABOUT AMP

The Association for Molecular Pathology (AMP) was founded in 1995 to provide structure and leadership to the emerging field of molecular diagnostics. AMP's 2,300+ members practice in the various disciplines of molecular diagnostics, including bioinformatics, infectious diseases, inherited conditions and oncology. They include individuals from academic and community medical centers, government, and industry; including pathologist and doctoral scientist laboratory directors; basic and translational scientists; technologists; and trainees. Through the efforts of its Board of Directors, Committees, Working Groups, and members, AMP is the primary resource for expertise, education, and collaboration in one of the fastest growing fields in healthcare. AMP members influence policy and regulation on the national and international levels, ultimately serving to advance innovation in the field and protect patient access to high quality, appropriate testing. For more information, visitwww.amp.org. Follow AMP on Twitter:@AMPath.

MEDIA CONTACT:

Andrew Noble

anoble@amp.org

415-722-2129

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The Association for Molecular Pathology to Recognize Andrew P. Feinberg, MD, MPH with 2017 Award for Excellence ... - Newswise (press release)

Lynn Ge-Zerbe, MD, MPH, an Acclaimed Endocrinologist located in Meridian, Idaho – PR NewsChannel (press release)

Lynn Ge-Zerbe, MD, MPH, is a highly trained and qualified Endocrinologist with an extensive expertise in all facets of her work, especially in the treatment of diabetes and metabolism disorders. She is currently serving patients within Boise Thyroid Endocrinology in Meridian, Idaho, and is also affiliated with St. Lukes Regional Medical Center and the Saint Alphonsus Regional Medical Center.

Dr. Lynn Ge-Zerbe attended the Peking Union Medical College in Beijing, China, where she gained her Doctor of Medicine Degree in 1987. After moving to the United States she completed an internship at Howard University, followed by a residency at Lehigh Valley Hospital and then a fellowship at Vanderbilt University. Dr. Ge-Zerbe has also completed advanced postdoctoral training in Epidemiology and Molecular Medicine, and holds a Master of Public Health Degree.

Dr. Ge-Zerbe is dual board certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine, and she is a distinguished member of the American College of Physicians, the Endocrine Society, the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists, and the American Thyroid Association. She is internationally renowned as an expert in the treatment of conditions including diabetes, Graves disease, hyperthyroidism, and osteoporosis. Dr. Ge-Zerbe is the author of more than 18 medical papers, and says that her success has come because of the example set by her grandfather, who was also a doctor.

Learn more about Dr. Lynn Ge-Zerbe here:

https://www.findatopdoc.com/doctor/8133304-Lynn-Ge-Zerbe-Endocrinology-Diabetes-Meridian-Idaho-83642 and http://boisethyroid-endocrinology.com/ today.

About FindaTopDoc.com

FindaTopDoc.com is a hub for all things medicine, featuring detailed descriptions of medical professionals across all areas of expertise, and information on thousands of healthcare topics. Each month, millions of patients use FindaTopDoc to find a doctor nearby and instantly book an appointment online or create a review. FindaTopDoc.com features each doctors full professional biography highlighting their achievements, experience, patient reviews and areas of expertise. A leading provider of valuable health information that helps empower patient and doctor alike, FindaTopDoc enables readers to live a happier and healthier life. For more information about FindaTopDoc, visit http://www.findatopdoc.com

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Lynn Ge-Zerbe, MD, MPH, an Acclaimed Endocrinologist located in Meridian, Idaho - PR NewsChannel (press release)

TomTom Adventurer GPS Watch Designed With Hikers and Skiers in Mind – Tech.Co

In an expanding world of Android Smartwatches and the Apple Watch, there has been a recent shift in how athletes track and monitor their progress. Now, many GPS trackers are including extra bells and whistles that allow you to receive texts, use mini-apps, and otherwise become distracted from their ultimate goal; however, TomTom decided to kick it old school with their latest Adventurer watch while undercutting the competitors. From the basics such as running and cycling, to the off the beaten path of trail-running, hiking, and skiing, the TomTom Adventurer is designed to not just track your progress, but ensure you go where youre intending.

If you enjoy hiking such as myself, but cant find your way out of a paper bag, using TomToms GPX upload feature will solve your problem. Rather than a separate GPS designed for hiking, the Adventurer has one built, but you will need to plot your course in preparation.

This deviates from most other GPS watches that simply just track where you have gone or use the technology to report back progress, and for those that do include similar features, they typically cost another $200 on top of TomToms $350. The Adventurer also happens to look a bit better than those watches to boot.

While training for triathlons and in an attempt to not get lost on a metric century ride on the outskirts of Charleston, SC, I gave the TomTom Adventurer numerous tests and environments to work through over the course of a month.

Before we break down how the TomTom Adventurer did across triathlon training and the not so metric century ride, lets dig into whats in the box, what it tracks, and how it stands out.

For starters, the Adventurer tracks everything youd expect from a mid-tier fitness tracker and GPS watch, and then some.

For activities it will track: steps, active minutes, distance, heart rate, speed, altitude, 3D distance, pace, calories burned, even your sleep habits. As for specific activity types it will track: running, treadmill runs, trail runs, hiking, cycling, indoor cycling (requires a power meter), swimming, skiing, snowboarding, gym training, freestyle, and a stopwatch. Interestingly for its ability to upload GPX courses, youd think it would also include things such as kayaking or paddleboarding, but those are not available. Sensor wise, it includes an optical heart rate tracker, barometer, compass, GPS, and motion.

The standout feature here is the ability to upload your own GPX courses and trials. Unlike standard GPS and smartwatches, this will let you use something like Strava to plot a course anywhere in the world, find your entry point, and then it will help you navigate it. If you deviate from your course, the compass feature is accessible to find your way back. This is a super helpful feature for those who go off the beaten path, and is not something youll find in the Apple Watch, Android Wear, or basic GPS trackers.

As for what you get in the box, the TomTom Adventurer comes with an adjustable wristband, the tracker, two chargers, the bluetooth earbuds, and extra earbud tips.

Beyond the basics youll also get 3GB of built in storage for music. Using the desktop TomTom app, you can sync files from your computer that do not contain DRM. The process is relatively easy and you get general playback controls on the watch.

While we wont get too detailed with the earbuds, they actually sound surprisingly good. One of the chief complaints I usually have for earbuds is that there is some sort of governor on how loud they get, but these things will probably make you go deaf. With that said, the extra tips and accessories will make it a comfortable fit while youre off doing your thing, and you wont even need to bring your phone. Its sweat resistant too, so when I started dumping gallons of water on my head in the 110 Charleston humidity, they still stayed in.

Overall the features that are available with the TomTom Adventurer are topnotch, especially the ability to upload your own GPX based trail. Ill get into that a bit more during the cycling section. The only weird issue that I ran into while using the watch had to do with an sync error. If you set the clock to 12 hours and then sync it to a computer, it will kick back into 24 hour mode. Its a minor annoyance, but worth the mention.

Like any GPS watch, running with the TomTom Adventurer is as simple as using the directional pad to select outdoor run, letting the GPS connect up (which is quite fast), and youre on your way. You can also select more advance options such as training goals, heart rate zones, and a few others. In addition to training, you can set a specific playlist and trial if you have one uploaded.

As youre running youll typically see three sets of data, but by pressing on the down button you can toggle through them. Things like pace, overall time, speed, distance, and heart rate zone are available. Once youre done, press and hold the left button and itll pause your activity, and then you hold it again to complete it. Oddly enough to find past activities that were tracked you have to go back into the run option, then press up. From there you can scroll through by date.

To track your runs youre going to get the best of three worlds. First, the TomTom app is wonderful, but on top of that it integrates with Runtastic and Strava. Although you do have to manually tell the app and watch to sync or to connect it with your computer, their integration with both of these work better than the Apple Watch (swimming in particular).

As far as comfort goes, the watch itself is lightweight and doesnt feel bulky, and this is coming from a guy with relatively small wrists. Most GPS watches look like giant dishes, and this has just the right about of screen to easily see while running.

Just like the running tracker, TomTom Adventurers cycling portion allows you to track the same attributes, as well as cadence if you have the sensor on your bike. For cyclists, speed alone isnt that important, but its being able to keep a consistent speed paired with hitting your target heart rate. When in cycling mode youll be able to toggle over to the right and it will highlight your current heart rate and map it to a five point scale (easy sprint) to show you how hard youre working. Other than that it works just as well as the running component, and the GPS was mapped against both the Apple Watch and iPhone 7 Plus with similar results.

The standout feature on the TomTom Adventurer is tied to the GPX Upload. If you just want to do basic triathlon training and plan on staying on the road, TomTom Spark will do the trick. However, if you are keen on getting yourself lost on purpose, building out a trail is as easy as pulling up Strava, creating a map, exporting it, and then uploading it through TomToms desktop app. Fortunately due to where I live, winging your path is not advised when cycling, and they dont call Charleston the worst city for cyclists for a reason. My face and head can attest to why you should always plot a course for long distance rides, which is exactly why I used the watch to plot out a metric century ride (slightly over 60 miles).

Even while on the bike it was easy to follow the general direction youll need to track against, but you wont get things like a 3D view or even the road. Its an incredibly simple system, but that also keeps you from getting distracted. Go too far off course? Itll just as easily help you track back to where you left off. This was a particularly helpful feature when a kind southern individual in a giant truck laid their horn down as they got behind me, causing me to ride off the road and blow out a tube. Bless his heart. Charleston riding issues aside, the GPX upload feature worked wonderfully, and will be very handy when its time for hiking during the Spring and Fall.

Unlike running or cycling, swimming has a bit more limited features for tracking. Due to the watches heart rate tracker (which does work on a very sweaty arm), it simply doesnt work underwater. For the most part you need a special heart rate monitor for swimming anyways, although sometimes the Apple Watch does pull it. After putting in the size of the pool, TomTom Adventurer will track your speed, duration, swolf, lengths of the pool, spl, and calories burned. When compared to the Apple Watch using their built in activity tracker, TomTom was actually more accurate. Usually the Apple Watch over reports distance.

Overall the three primary activities I tested the TomTom Adventurer with worked wonderfully. While I dont want to assume it works just as well for skiing and snowboarding, Id take a wild guess that it does.

We all know it, fitness watches are usually just outright ugly. They are bulky, filled with weird shapes, and scream that they are sporty. While the TomTom Adventurer is no Apple Watch, it is a simple and clean cut design. Now you wont be wearing this with a suit, but at the same time its something that can easily be worn through most of your regular day. Its also comfortable enough where you can wear it from the time you wake up all the way until the time you wake up again.

Unlike most other GPS watches, the TomTom Adventurer requires you to pop the tracker out of the band to be charged. It uses a proprietary charging doohickey that either connects to your computer or a USB wall outlet. Its a bit odd at first, but I ran into no issues with it.

Overall the design of the watch makes it appealing, but it being lightweight and comfortable is the selling point. The only issue I found with the design is that for the backlight to kick in, you have to cover over the display with the palm of your hand. You can also set it in night mode while in an activity, but the hand covering part was a bit odd.

Should you buy the TomTom Adventurer GPS watch? If youre looking for a no-frills tracker that will not only track your runs, swims, skiing, trail-running, hiking, cycling and more, but also guide you through trails, absolutely. While the price may seem a bit higher than one may expect for what I dare say is now considered a dumb GPS watch (like dumb phone, but not dumb), the competing offerings are nearly twice as much and dont come with a bluetooth headset. TomToms GPX upload feature really makes this a standout device from its Spark series, and will add a nice little safety net for those who like to travel off paved roads. We give the TomTom Adventurer a 4.5 out of 5 due to its price point, accuracy, but a bit of a miss on the UI such as getting a post-activity recap.

Price: $289 ($350 on their site)

Where to buy: Amazon, TomTom

Read more Gear and Gadget guides and reviews at TechCo

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TomTom Adventurer GPS Watch Designed With Hikers and Skiers in Mind - Tech.Co

Glitch Creates Unintentional Extra Ending In Sci-Fi Steam Game – Kotaku Australia

Event 0 is a science fiction game that came out last year. Since release, players have discovered four different endings to the game which is strange, because according to the designer, it only has three.

The emotional core of Event 0 rests between the player and an AI called Kaizen-85. Throughout the game, players get to know Kaizen by interacting at terminals and typing out questions, learning more and more about the game's story. At the end of the game, players must decide whether or not to upload their consciousness to a computer. There's only supposed to be three endings:

However, players found that if you treat Kaizen nice, don't upload your consciousness but also save an experimental engine that he wanted to destroy, Kaizen will begrudgingly turn the ship to Earth. Game designer Emmanuel Corno learned about this ending only after looking at the game's Wikipedia page and was surprised.

The fourth ending shouldn't exist, according to Corno, but is the result of an unknown glitch in the game. Kaizen is supposed to always turn down the player if they disobey him and destroy the engines, but something within the game's code is faulty, creating an extra ending with a bit more nuance.

"This is crazy," Corno told Kotaku. "Kaizen isn't supposed to let anyone get back with the Singularity Drive to Earth. This is how we coded the AI. I have absolutely no idea how this happens."

Although the ending is the result of a glitch, it accidentally adds additional nuance to the player relationship with Kaizen and creates more consequences for their interactions. The AI planned by the developers to never forgive the player's betrayal can actually do just that. The glitch generated discussion when the game released, with fans talking about what endings were the best. Many players were surprised by the ending since it goes against one of Kaizen's main motivations.

"It sounds bizarre," one player said. "Kaizen has been hellbent on destroying that damn drive."

"I've never seen that happen ever," another said. "He keeps on insisting that you destroy the drive."

The ending is real and you can watch it here. Even if it isn't what was intended, there are currently no plans to get rid of the glitch.

"Now, I don't want to fix it. I love the idea that we made a game with an ending so secret we didn't know it by ourselves," Corno said. "Even if it contradicts some golden rules of Kaizen, it also make it more human. People can change their mind. So does Kaizen."

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Scott Ludlam, co-deputy leader of the Federal Greens and perhaps the strongest advocate for the video game industry in Australia, has resigned from his party and the Federal Parliament effective immediately.

"I think we'd do better with a healer," I suggested to my Overwatch team earlier this week. We were in the spawn room defending the Temple of Anubis and, without a healer, we would quickly forfeit the objective. Not even the slightest pause passed before a teammate told me that, instead, "What we need is another man."

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Glitch Creates Unintentional Extra Ending In Sci-Fi Steam Game - Kotaku Australia

Wolves in Austria: Nathan Judah and Tim Spiers’ Day 5 diary – expressandstar.com

It was raining cats and dogs in the mountains, I could barely make out the local cafe that has looked after us so well during this trip.

One thing that was still functional was the crazy robotic lawnmower in the neighbours garden.

This piece of technology has to be seen to be believed, but the couple who we've been spying on throughout the week have worked the little man into the ground.

Every day that poor thing is up and down the lawn, there's no blades of grass left! And the wife was even on her hands an knees yesterday using scissors to even things out!

Is this normal behaviour?!

TS: I don't really think you're one to talk. You're a man in his 30s who wears Where's Wally? pyjamas. Every. Single. Night.

The podcast was the main task about town today! It's been a few weeks in the making... you may have noticed some new artwork thanks to a man we've paid handsomely.

It's a fresh revamp and will now exclusively be about Wolves and Wolves-only this season...so make sure you set your notifications as I think we'll have plenty to talk about over the next few weeks.

As we got in the car to grab a quick coffee, Spiers wasn't too happy with my request to drive up to the door to pick me up...nobody wants to get wet do they?! Plus I had heels on!

TS: It was literally 20 yards away. Mind you it was a good job you weren't trying to drive that far, you'd still be trying to reverse it now.

Daily vid was next on the cards. Pretty easy location shoot today as we filmed from our very own balcony due to weather issues.

My attire was slightly grim reaper, but others on Twitter saw it as another photoshop opportunity. Magnificent effort from @Mr94Official here.

Lots to say though...we always end up running over our predicted time, but no bloopers on this occasion so all was well.

That was until we tried to upload it onto YouTube. All video editing has been done at the team hotel from a video point of view. Despite the more than useful wifi in our kitchen, it appears uploading to film is a non starter.

Four hours later (for an eight minute video), we finally had got the damn thing on the website.

There was even a rainbow outside celebrating the occasion.

Our aim was to have some down time in Innsbruck on the night as we've been recluses for the last five days.

But Bodvarsson, Iorfa and a ground/kick-off change for Saturday's game delayed plans somewhat.

Still with most of the work done or near to completion, we were not to be defeated.

What went on next are events that are not, will not and have never been endorsed by the Express and Star.

TS: (Hic) I love you man

Love you more

TS: jfdkfnidgngnodgphjpgjhopgohxfjo#

Those are just random letters, go and drink some water

See you all tonight for the game.

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Wolves in Austria: Nathan Judah and Tim Spiers' Day 5 diary - expressandstar.com

Facebook lets you make GIFs using its built-in camera – here’s how – Pocket-lint.com

Facebook's mobile app offers a new feature: GIF-making.

As discovered by The Next Web, the social network has quietly updated the app's camera with the option to make a short GIF, which you can then share in a Facebook Story or on your profile. There are even ways to edit the GIF with frames and filters. Keep in mind Facebook only recently started embracing GIFs, as it allowsusers to send them in messages and post them in comments.

Anyway, here's everything you need to know about the new GIF-making feature, including how it works.

To make your own GIF, open the Facebook app and tap on the camera button at the top. Or, open the Facebook app and swipe from lefton the news feed. Either way, you will see these tabs at the top of the next screen: Normal and GIF. Normal lets you take photos and record normal videos, while GIF lets you record a three-second clip.

You'll want to select the GIF option, obviously, at the top of the camera screen in order to record your GIF. Once you record a three-second GIF, you will see additional editing tools, including frames, emoji, text, and effects. After you're done customising the GIF, you can then save the final creation to your phone's camera roll, upload it to your Facebook Story, or post it to your profile.

You can even set the GIF as your profile picture. To turn a static profile picture into a GIF, click Edit in the bottom right corner of your existing profile picture and tap Select Profile Video. This will open your camera roll and your list of videos. Select your GIF, maybe trim it, and tap Save.

You can only share GIFs on Facebook. They save as videos and can't be sent to other platforms through Facebook.

The GIF-making feature is slowly rolling out now, so you may not see the option just yet. It's also unclear when or if everyone will get access to it, as Facebook hasn't officially announced the feature.

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Studio Session: Mura Masa Calls on ASAP Rocky and Desiigner for New Self-Titled Album – XXLMAG.COM

Yoni Lappin

A leap of faith can change your whole life. For producer Mura Masa, it was moving from his small town in Guernsey, British Isles to London in order to make his music dreams a reality. The modest 21-year-old, born Alex Crossan, started uploading beats to SoundCloud when he was 18 and distanced himself from the crowd, literally and figuratively, by moving to the U.K. city in 2015, and dropping an EP,Someday Somewhere.

Mura is known for meshing together afrobeat, dancehall and deep house to create breathy party anthems. When I started to upload to SoundCloud and kind of gain a following and in the internet age, its really easy to put stuff out there and get feedback from other people, Mura tells XXL. I appreciate that.

Now, the English export is slowly making his presence known in the hip-hop space on and offline. In the past year, Mura has convinced A$AP Rocky to jump on the remix to his breakout track Love$ick, spontaneously linked with Desiigner for All Around the World and assisted on Stormzys debut album,Gang Signs & Prayer. Taking his stateside crossover to new heights, Mura performed for his biggest U.S. crowd yet during Weekend 1 of 2017 Coachellaand Rocky even showed love with a surprise performance during the set.

Mura is using this momentum to drop his self-titled debut album out nowviaApple Music.Before he released the LP via Downtown/Interscope Records and his own label, Anchor Point, the upstart chopped it up with XXL about getting hooked on hip-hop thanks to Lil Jon, working with Rocky and more.

XXL: What did you listen to growing up?

Mura Masa: Growing up, I listened to a lot of pop and rock. My dad was in a rock band in the 80s in Glasgow, Scotland. So it started from there. My mom also got me into like Jane Mitchell and lots of different things. I distinctly remember I started listening to hip-hop when I heard that Lil Jon and the Eastside Boyz, that Get Low tune. I kind of started to listen to rap after that.

For producing, I kind of got into J Dilla very early on and yeah, so I grew up listening to lots of types of music really. When it came to music, my dad, he listened to everything from like, punk and heavy metal to funk and jazz. His influence on me was just keeping an open mind, I guessnot being opposed to experiment and kind of mix different types of music.

You say you got hooked on rap thanks to Lil Jon. What stood out to you about Lil Jons Get Low?

First of all, the beat is just like, absolutely slaps. Up until then Id never really heard anything like that before. Im from a really remote place called Guernsey. Its like a tiny island. So hearing that type of music for the first time, just how explicit it was and how sexual it was, that was a real eye-opener.

What inspired you to start producing music of your own?

I guess I was playing in a lot of punk bands and rock bands as a kid, stuff like that. But then when I started to produce I started listening to things like Hudson Mohawke and a lot of G.O.O.D. Music producers like Mike Dean. It really interested me of who producers kind of fill that role of playing every instrument themselves. Im a big fan of Prince as well because hes like a one-man band. It was just that interest in having control over all elements of the music.

What instruments do you play?

I play a bit of everything. I dont play anything particularly amazingly but I play a little bit of guitar and drums, keyboard, bass guitar and just a lot of traditional instruments. I guess coming from that background it was quite interesting to mix that with more electronic sounds.

What drew you to working with A$AP Rocky for the Love$ick remix?

Well, I first heard about Rocky when he dropped Live.Love.ASAP. I just remember that video of him walking out the corner store and being like, I be that pretty motherfucka, and all that. I was just a big fan of him from early on. So when it came to finding a rapper to work with on this debut album, I really wanted it to be someone I was a big fan of and who I believed in. And Rocky spends a lot of time in London and kind of calls it his second home.

He was in town for a film premiere I think and he had heard the original version of Love$ick and he got it contact with me and told me he really enjoyed it. So we met up at Abbey Road Studios, which is you know [laughs] where the Beatles did all that stuff. So that was pretty crazy itself. And we just met up this past September or [October] and just talked about lots of things like fashionTame Impala. We just shot the shit basically and got chatting for a while. And while we were doing that, he was just freestyling over the instrumental and I kind of took that away and made it what it is on the record.

Rocky has been spotted a lot in the studio lately. Did you get to work on anything more besides Love$ick? Did you work on anything for his new album or maybe Cozy Tapes?

Yeah, we hung out in London a lot. I think hes just kind of getting ideas together at the moment and deciding what hes going to do next. We definitely worked on some other stuff but you know how it goes. Im sure hes got hundreds of songs on the go but theres definitely an ongoing relationship there.

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And then how did you get Desiigner on All Around the World?

That was a bit of a weird one actually. Id had that beat laying around for like a year and I didnt actually know that Desiigner had gotten a hold of it. So one day, I was in L.A. and I actually was working in the Interscope Studios across from Kendrick [Lamar] while he was working on DAMN. [Laughs] Kendrick actually came across and said, Hey. That was cool.

So, anyway, the same day that that was happening, we got an email from Desiigners people saying, Desiigners in the booth, hes tracking something now. And we asked, Whats he writing to? We have no idea what youre talking about. And then they sent us All Around the World. He hadnt done any verses on it yet it was just the choruses and those Desiigner ad-libs.

So I had to kind of coax some verses out of him, but I just really like Desiigner. I think that like a lot of people try to shit on him because hes so young and hes kind of just doing his own thing but hes just like a really amazing character. Thats what I like about [the song.] Its something a bit different from him and something a bit different from me. Its good how we met in the middle.

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A lot of your beats are a mash-up of house, trap, future bounce. What is it about that intrigues you about trap and hip-hop?

I think the energy of it. Its so easy to nod your head to a hip-hop beat or its easy to dance to a trap beat because its ingrained in popular culture now. The culture of hip-hop and the legacy of these artists is just like a deep appreciation. Obviously learning about how deep the culture goes, I find that interesting.

Who are some of your favorite rappers right now?

Some of my favorites right now, I really like Playboi Carti. I think once he comes out of his shell a bit more, I think hell kind of blow up in a nice way. I really like XXXTentacion. I really enjoy how hes bringing punk into rap a bit more. Same with Lil Uzi Vert.

Who are some other producers youre influenced by right now?

Mike Dean, Hudson Mohawke because hes from Glasgow and hes signed to G.O.O.D. Music. Hes worked on a lot of Kanyes stuff. Rick Rubin as well. Ive always looked up tho Rick Rubin. I love his approach and attitude to creating music.

What was your favorite studio session in putting the whole album together?

I think the session with Rocky was an amazing one. I think just freestyling with him on the spot and freestyling off the top of his head. You never know what youre going to get with rappers. Whether theyre more methodical and write it all down or whether theyll make it up as they go.

What do you want fans, especially hip-hop fans, to learn about you with this debut album?

I guess its interesting for people who come from more of a hip-hop background to hear a couple of different sounds that maybe they werent expecting. Theres a lot of different types of tracks on the album, kind of like a musical collage. Im curious to see from people that will be the reaction of people who learned about me through hip-hop, what they make of it.

Who else are you working with this year on the hip-hop side?

Im not sure if I can disclose that. Deals have to be made and that sort of thing. Theres definitely more stuff from me. Im really looking up to people from James Blake at the moment for his work with Vince Staples and Jay-Z and Kendrick and stuff like that. Hes kind of the proof that English producers can really make an impact on the sound of American hip-hop.

Who else do you want to work with that you havent yet?

I dont know. I like to keep it quite open. I think that you should be able to collaborate with another as long as the musics good and youre a fan of them. I will say Vince Staples is doing some amazing stuff with the kind of U.K. influence hes bringing in. So yeah, Vince Staples would be a good one. I havent had the opportunity to [work with Vince] but hopefully we get connected at some point.

What else do you have planned for the rest of the year after the album drops?

Were doing a pop-up shop with exclusive merch weve done with designers and stuff. Lots of new music. Ive got a record label that Ill be releasing music under called Anchor Point Records. And I think I want to drop another beat tape soon. Hopefully before the end of the year.

See 133 Rapper-Launched Record Labels From the Past and Present

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Studio Session: Mura Masa Calls on ASAP Rocky and Desiigner for New Self-Titled Album - XXLMAG.COM

WHO keen to work with Malaysia to promote exercise medicine: Expert – The Sun Daily

KUALA LUMPUR: The World Health Organisation (WHO) is keen to work with Malaysia to promote exercise medicine which has the potential to treat and prevent four Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs), says an expert in exercise medicine.

Dr Lee Chee Pheng said WHO's interest in exercise medicine raised the possibility of Malaysia taking the lead in formulating a new policy on its impact.

He said the therapy had the potential to be an alternative remedy to conventional medicine in preventing hypertension diabetes, obesity, and dyslipidemia through the prescription of the right kind of therapy.

"Everyone knows the importance of exercises, but if the dosages are not enough, there will be no physiological changes.

"Thus, this exercise medicine therapy has proven to produce many positive changes to the human body if executed in the right manner," he told Bernama.

Dr Lee, who is also Asia College of Exercise and Sports Medicine chief executive officer, led a five-member delegation to WHO's headquarters on July 5 to deliberate on exercise medicine and other issues of mutual interest.

He said Malaysia should take a serious view on the impact of exercise medicine as the country's mortality rate from NCDs was still escalating.

"Despite the advancement of medical technologies, the mortality rate has not been contained over the past 15 years," he said.

On another note, Dr Lee said he had discussed with WHO about various health concerns in Malaysia including the closure of several fitness centres which had affected the daily exercise routine of many.

He also sought support from WHO on the inaugural World Conference on Exercise Medicine to be held in Langkawi from Nov 19-21.

"WHO has agreed to send Dr Temo Waganivalu, coordinator for WHO's Department for the Prevention of Non-Communicable Diseases, to deliver a paper entitled Global NCD Target: To Reduce Physical Inactivity," he said. Bernama

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MASK to receive violence prevention grant from U. of C. Medicine – Hyde Park Herald

Mothers Against Senseless Killings founder Tamar Manasseh talks about the senseless violence in the city during a school supply drive on the corner of 51st Street and Lake Park Avenue last August. Spencer Bibbs

By TONIA HILL Staff Writer

Mothers Against Senseless Killings (MASK), an Englewood based organization is one of seven organizations that were recently awarded capacity building grants from University of Chicago (U. of C.) Medicine.

Tamar Manasseh, president and founder of MASK, an organization that seeks to prevent and disrupt violence in targeted communities by promoting good health and addressing safety issues, said she is grateful for the support from U. of C. Medicine.

The grants are to provide immediate support to community-based prevention, intervention, and recovery efforts on the south side.

Violent incidents in our community are more prevalent during summer months, Brenda Battle, vice president of Urban Health Initiative and chief diversity and inclusion officer for the University of Chicago Medicine, said in a written statement. As a community partner, it is imperative that we work with local grassroots organizations to identify and activate solutions that will help keep children and adults safe.

U. of C. Medicines Community Advisory Council and its Trauma Care and Violence Prevention programs came together to identify ways for U. of C. Medicine to respond to increasing violence at the end of the school year and the start of summer.

The concept that was developed out of those working sessions were rapid cycle grants to assist grassroots organizations that have violence prevention programs.

Community-based organizations were encouraged to apply for the grants in early May.

MASK headquarters is located on the 7500 block of South Stewart Avenue and the organization has a branch in Hyde Park. Manasseh said the organization would use the funds to support programs that are currently in place.

We feed about a hundred people a day every single day, Manasseh said. We are building a playground putting in turf, sod, and concrete to make the neighborhood a bit safer and to create a safe space for the entire community not just for the children.

Construction of the playground is underway, Manasseh said she wants the playground to be a place where everybody in the community can come together and talk and meet each other.

Additionally, MASK will use the grant money toward summer camps that they will begin in the coming weeks.

While Manasseh said she has seen a decline in shootings in the one-mile radius surrounding their hub of operation in Englewood since the organization formed three years ago, she believes there is still more work to be done.

She said she has been able to convince many kids in the area to stop shooting in the neighborhood.

I cant seem to get them jobs, so they still end up in jail for other crimes, Manasseh said. I cant pay their rent, buy their clothes, or feed their children. When people turn their lives around there are so few opportunities for them. I havent been able to find them the jobs or the field training that they may need.

The Hyde Park branch of MASK began boosting its presence in the area last year, Manasseh said members from Hyde Park regularly come to Englewood to volunteer.

Last year, members organized a massive school supply drive.

Hyde Park has a large school supply drive, Manasseh said. They collect a lot of school supplies and school uniforms in Hyde Park, and then we distribute them.

This year, Hyde Park MASK members will do the same. School supplies will be given to those in need at MASKs end of summer block party that will be held during Labor Day weekend this year.

MASK is also working in the Lawndale neighborhood in Chicago as well as Evansville, Ind., Memphis, Tenn., and Staten Island, N.Y.

Other grant recipients for the award include Breaking Bread, Crushers Club, Gary Comer Youth Center, Global Girls, Inc., Kids Off the Block, Inc., and Woodlawn East Community and Neighbors.

The rapid cycle grants are part of U. of C. Medicines ongoing effort to assist community organizations with evidence-based violence prevention programs.

t.hill@hpherald.com

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MASK to receive violence prevention grant from U. of C. Medicine - Hyde Park Herald

Nebraska Medicine is first health system in Omaha area to launch its … – Omaha World-Herald

Consumers in this Internet age are accustomed to going online to check recommendations and ratings for all kinds of goods and services, often on third-party websites. Doctors and hospitals are no exception, with a variety of sites such as Healthgrades.com and RateMDs.com offering ratings and reviews of health care facilities and providers.

This week Nebraska Medicine became the first health system in the Omaha metropolitan area to launch its own star-based online rating system for the physicians in its clinics, based on surveys of past and current patients. The rating system, found under the Find a Doctor section of NebraskaMed.com/Doctors, also includes comments from patients.

Chad Brough, the health systems chief experience officer, said patients indicate that they value ratings and comments from other patients.

For most people, health care is still a very word-of-mouth experience, he said. Weve attempted to take that phenomenon and put it online so people can make informed choices.

University of Utah Health pioneered the strategy, he said, first posting star ratings and comments in 2012. Bryan Health in Lincoln began posting star ratings for its provider groups in August and added patient comments earlier this month. Nebraska Medicine officials estimated that about 40 organizations across the country now are posting ratings.

If people are looking for a doctor, its important for them to hear what current patients think, said Deb Boehle, a Bryan Health spokeswoman.

Officials with several other Omaha health systems said they have discussed or are exploring the possibility of adding online ratings, but none has established a timeline. Most already offer a Find a Doctor section on their websites that includes basic information about doctors and other providers.

Matt Hazen, division director of service excellence for CHI Health Clinic, said all practices of a certain size are required by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to conduct patient satisfaction surveys, and most organizations already are doing it as a matter of course.

CHI Health has been posting such scores internally for nearly four years, he said. Making them available publicly probably will await an upgrade in information technology capabilities.

Nebraska Medicine and Bryan Health officials said providing their own ratings and reviews ensures that patients are seeing reviews by their doctors actual patients.

Dr. Sarah Richards, Nebraska Medicines medical director of patient experience, said patients often have no way to know whether ratings or reviews on third-party sites were posted by people who actually saw the doctor. Some ratings may be based on only a handful of reviews. As a provider, you want accurate information out there, she said.

About 270 Nebraska Medicine physicians, physician assistants and nurse practitioners currently have received the minimum of 30 reviews required for their ratings to be posted. Eventually they should have them for about 350 providers. All averaged between four and five stars on the five-star scale.

Doris Peter, director of Consumer Reports Health Ratings Center, agreed that third-party sites ratings are flawed by their lack of validation. Those provided by health systems, she said, will become more valuable if they add more information, including cost and quality measures.

But Brough said offering provider ratings is an important first step. He anticipates that the health system eventually will post additional cost and quality metrics online. Consumers, who are taking a greater role in health care decision-making, increasingly are seeking such information.

The star ratings are based on 10 questions focused specifically on the care provider. Among other things they ask patients to rate the degree to which the provider talked with the patient using words the patient could understand and the patients confidence in the care provider. They post the average star ratings for each of the 10 questions plus an overall average. The questions dont address the outcome of the visit; say, whether a condition was improved through care.

The team met with doctors and other providers before the launch, explaining that making the ratings public gives them an opportunity to take ownership of their online reputations. They even asked providers to pull out their cellphones and Google themselves to see what ratings already were out there.

Dr. Sean Langenfeld, a colon and rectal surgeon with Nebraska Medicine, gives talks on social media to physicians around the country. What were saying is This is the future, he said. Patients are going to find their information online, so we need to provide them with good information.

Langenfeld said it can be difficult for doctors to respond to or correct negative ratings or comments on third-party websites. He got some on one third-party site about four years ago, from what appeared to be an angry patient. But the comments werent characteristic of how he practices, and he questioned whether they came from one of his patients. When he contacted the website operator to see how they validated reviews, he was told that hed have to subpoena the information.

The health systems surveys, on the other hand, can serve as a kind of report card, Langenfeld said.

Richards said comments are reviewed internally and will be edited or removed if they contain information that could identify patients in violation of privacy regulations. Doctors can contact the team if they have concerns. Comments also can be removed if they dont pertain to the provider in question.

But Chaise Camp, executive director of patient experience, said they wont pull negative opinions, of which there have been few so far. When one occurs, that validates all the great comments they get, he said.

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Nebraska Medicine is first health system in Omaha area to launch its ... - Omaha World-Herald

Chuck Norris powers up role of alternative medicine – WND.com

Dr. Keith D. Lindor is executive vice provost and ean of the College of Health Solutions at Arizona State University. He is an international authority on liver disease, current president of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases, and a former editor-in-chief of the preeminent journal Hepatology. He is also the former dean of Mayo Clinic School of Medicine. Dr. Lindor is but one of an impressive list of prominent doctors who have long shared a positive view of the benefits of alternative medicine and therapies.

Dr. Lindors views were shaped early in his career, working alongside a Native American medicine man at a reservation clinic. I had been trained to aggressively treat patients with drugs that often only made them even more ill, he told David E. Freeman in 2011. But he could often do much better with just a press of his hand.

In his new role with Arizona States College of Health Solutions, Dr. Lindor emphasizes a holistic approach to treatment in preparing the next generation of health professionals for entry into a quickly evolving health care system.

The notion that alternative medicine is a legitimate response to mainstream shortcomings is a message that has long been spreading. In recent years, integrative medical-research clinics were springing up all around the country, at least 42 of them at major academic medical institutions including Harvard, Yale, Duke, the University of California at San Francisco, as well as the Mayo Clinic. According to Newsmax, a national consortium to promote integrative health now counts more than 70 academic centers and health systems as members. There were eight in 1999.

Whether called complementary, alternative, or integrative treatment, an estimated 42 percent of all hospitals in the U.S. now offer nonconventional medical services. The Osher Center for Integrative Medicine at the University of California, San Francisco is on pace to get more than 10,300 patient visits this fiscal year and is expanding its clinical staff by a third. Duke Universitys integrative medicine clinic saw its total visits jump 50 percent in 2015 and the number continues to climb. Its estimated as many as 38 percent of all adult Americans are using some form of alternative therapy.

While the medical community seems grow more open to alternative medicines possibilities, the rise of alternative therapies has sparked tension. Many doctors and administrators hold fast to the view that alternative medicine is, at best, a dubious business that is undermining the credibility of medical institutions and science-based medicine.

Why all this institutional interest in alternative medicine? Money is certainly a part of it. Its a $37 billion-a-year business. Why wouldnt the medical establishment want a part of that? But what doctors really need to focus on is why patients want such care? In large part, its because mainstream medicine is failing them. This is especially true of people such as my wife, those who come into the system with a hard-to-pin-down ailment. Many doctors today dont seem to do well with things they dont understand, and how they handle being at a loss for a clear prognosis or treatment plan can make a patients situation even worse. Whats needed is to not lose focus on whats best for a patient. This is where alternative medicine, with its adherence to a healing model of patient care, can make a difference.

Why not encourage a patient to try an ancient remedy or a spiritual healing technique if its unlikely to cause them harm and may provide some relief? At this point of treatment, relieving patient stress needs to be a goal. Stress can make existing problems worse.

Once youre sick, stress can make it harder to recover and create a higher risk for a bad outcome. In this situation, whos to say that traditional Chinese medicine, which like many alternative approaches, focuses on patients feelings and attitudes, stress reduction and encouraging the patient to believe in self-healing is not of value?

In David H. Freedmans 2011 comprehensive report on alternative medicine for the Atlantic Monthly, nearly every physician he spoke with agreed the current system makes it nearly impossible for most doctors to have the sort of relationship with patients that would best promote health. Relationships where there is an actual conversation; where doctors can maybe follow the clues patients give them about what they feel might help them.

As he notes in the article, if an alternative practitioner is also a medical doctor, or works in conjunction with one, its hard to see whats being risked.

If it doesnt work, I dont know that youve lost anything. If it does, you do get to a better place, Dr. Richard Lang of the Cleveland Clinic Wellness Institute recently explained to STAT News.

While you can argue that the evidence of alternative medicines effectiveness is far from absolute, neither is the evidence for various pharmaceutical therapies that are routinely provided by doctors and hospitals. The list of much-hyped and often heavily prescribed drugs that have failed to combat complex diseases seems to grow daily, some with well-documented risks of horrific side effects. Some of the solutions, such as opioids to treat pain, have contributed to an addiction problem that has reached epidemic proportions.

The biggest problem with alternate medicine in an institutional setting is the costs. Insurance coverage has been slow to catch up with current medical practices that incorporate alternative approaches. Not all integrative medicine clinics are designed as big profit centers. Many are funded by philanthropists and some hospitals say they operate their alternative programs at a loss. The Mayo Clinic, for example, a medical center renowned for the excellence of its medical care, is known for its relatively low cost of care.

It also needs to be stressed that there is a lot of quackery out there under the guise of alternative medicine. Selecting an alternative medical provider and treatment should be done with care and trusted referrals.

Write to Chuck Norris with your questions about health and fitness. Follow Chuck Norris through his official social media sites, on Twitter @chucknorris and Facebooks Official Chuck Norris Page. He blogs at ChuckNorrisNews.blogspot.com.

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AI can speed up precision medicine, New York Genome Center-IBM … – Healthcare IT News

The potential for artificial intelligence in precision medicine is big, according to conclusions of a new study by the New York Genome Center and IBM.

The results, published in the July 11 issue of Neurology Genetics, a journal of the American Academy of Neurology, showed that researchers at the New York Genome Center, Rockefeller University and other institutions along with IBM verified the potential of IBM Watson for Genomics to analyze complex genomic data from state-of-the-art DNA sequencing of whole genomes.

[Also:IBM Watson, Illumina partner to deliver precision oncology on a large scale]

This study documents the strong potential of Watson for Genomics to help clinicians scale precision oncology more broadly, Vanessa Michelini, Watson for Genomics Innovation Leader for IBM Watson Health, said in a statement. Clinical and research leaders in cancer genomics are making tremendous progress towards bringing precision medicine to cancer patients, but genomic data interpretation is a significant obstacle, and thats where Watson can help.

The proof of concept study compared multiple techniques used to analyze genomic data from a glioblastoma patients tumor cells and normal healthy cells, putting to work a beta version of Watson for Genomics technology to help interpret whole genome sequencing data for one patient.

[Also:IBM Watson, FDA align to boost public health with blockchain]

Watson provided a report of potential clinically actionable insights within 10 minutes, compared to 160 hours of human analysis and curation typically required to reach similar conclusions, according to researchers.

The study also showed that whole-genome sequencing, or WGS, identified more clinically actionable mutations than the current standard of examining a limited subset of genes, known as a targeted panel. WGS requires significantly more manual analysis, so combining this method with artificial intelligence could help doctors identify potential therapies for more patients in less time, researchers concluded.

This informatics challenge is often a critical bottleneck when dealing with deadly cancers such as glioblastoma, with a median survival of less than 15 months following diagnosis, researchers noted.

Twitter: @Bernie_HITN Email the writer: bernie.monegain@himssmedia.com

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AI can speed up precision medicine, New York Genome Center-IBM ... - Healthcare IT News

New Utah medical school opens in Ivins, doubling state’s ability to … – Salt Lake Tribune

The Rocky Vista students, of which half are from Utah, will begin their four-year medical education later this month at the 32-acres Ivins campus.

Their two-story, 104,000 square-foot school building includes two, 200-seat lecture halls, 36 study rooms, a simulation center, standardized patient rooms and a 9,000 square-foot library. The campus also has two student housing buildings.

Utah health officials hope the new medical school will alleviate a physician shortage now plaguing the state. And though concerns about for-profit medical education persist in the industry, experts who have worked with students from Rocky Vista's first location opened in 2008 in Parker, Colo., said the concerns are unfounded.

"We really measure the student, not the school that they came from," said Shane Robinson, administrative director of graduate medical education at Idaho's Bingham Memorial Hospital. Students must obtain the same certifications "whether the school is for-profit or not, [so] you're comparing apples to apples, and the folks that join us are right on par, if not a hair better, than the national average."

More options The U. has been training medical students for over 100 years, but Rocky Vista officials felt Utah needed more medical training opportunities to meet the state's needs.

There is a lack of health care access in Utah, particularly in rural and southern portions of the state, said Tom Told, dean and chief academic officer of Rocky Vista University College of Osteopathic Medicine.

With 207.5 physicians per 100,000 population, the Beehive State ranks 43rd in the nation, according to 2015 Association of American Medical Colleges data.

Top-notch medical students are graduating from the U., but experts say there simply aren't enough. This is particularly problematic because research shows that individuals tend to stay in the state where they are trained.

"As our state's population continues to grow, the need for physicians continues to grow [with it]," Gov. Gary Herbert said Friday via video message. "And starting today, more Utah students will be able to stay in their home state while pursuing their medical education."

Told, who completed his undergraduate studies at Brigham Young University, said Friday he was not accepted into the U.'s medical school and was forced to leave the state in the 1970s to study.

He did not return to practice medicine in Utah after graduating medical school. "Where students train makes a big difference," Told said.

It became clear that this was still a problem, Told said, when he joined Rocky Vista in 2009, and realized how many Utah students came to study at the Colorado campus, the first for-profit medical school to open in the country.

So officials began to formulate a plan to bring a school to those students, one focused on osteopathic medicine, which promotes the body's own ability to heal.

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New Utah medical school opens in Ivins, doubling state's ability to ... - Salt Lake Tribune

Kaiser Permanente names 13 to new medical school board … – Healthcare Dive

Dive Brief:

Kaiser already operates a School of Allied Health Sciences in Richmond, California. The medical school could provide a steady infusion of new physicians for Kaiser trained in the concepts of population health management and cost efficiencies.

It should be noted the board contains individuals with resumes boasting companies such as PayPal, 23andMeand Microsoft Research. It denotes that the healthcare industry is changing and that students will need to be prepared for a tech-friendly environment. Whether it's digital health focusing on life sciences or digital payments or consumer electronics, the rapidly changing tech world is set to influence the healthcare industry.

The industry has already seen some change in this regard. Digital intake tools and utilizing technology to maximize patient throughput has helped some providers make financial gains. But, for the most part, there are still many wrinkles to be ironed out in the new healthcare environment. Kaiser's medical board picks, albeit implicitly, acknowledges the need for educating and understanding this new frontier.

Appointees to the medical school board are:

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Kaiser Permanente names 13 to new medical school board ... - Healthcare Dive

Silverstone talks had stalled before Liberty takeover – ESPN

SILVERSTONE -- British Racing Drivers' Association (BRDC) president Derek Warwick says it is wrong to blame Liberty Media for Silverstone's current stand-off with Formula One as negotiations also came to a "dead end" in the Bernie Ecclestone era.

Earlier this week the BRDC, owners of the Silverstone circuit, announced the triggering of the break clause in its contract, meaning it can walk away from its current deal after the 2019 event. The circuit hopes to continue negotiations with new F1 owners Liberty in the hope of settling on a more financially agreeable deal to the one it signed with Ecclestone in 2009.

That contract has a controversial promoters fee, which includes an annual five percent escalator. Silverstone claimed it lost over 4 million to put on the 2016 event despite a sellout crowd. Warwick thinks it is important to note the original negotiations had stalled before the arrival of new owners this year.

When asked whether Silverstone was closer to reaching a settlement when Ecclestone was in charge, Warwick told Talksport: "No.... Bernie -- before Liberty -- knew that we were struggling financially. That came to a dead end as well, and now with Liberty we still can't seem to bridge that gap. We understand that Liberty can't just open their books up and cut the sanction fee, we know that's not possible because they'll have 19 or 20 other grands prix breathing down their necks straight away.

"But can I remind everybody that every grand prix that Bernie has put together over the last 20 or 30 years or whatever have all had their own individual sanction fee, ratchet, bonuses, sponsorship, TV rights, etc. So we're not all the same, we haven't been the same and therefore we shouldn't be treated the same.

"The fact that all - as far as I am aware - other grand prix countries have some kind of support from benefactors, sovereign wealth funds, local communes - i.e. Monaco - and governments. We don't have that luxury, so it has to stack up as a commercial venture and it doesn't."

Despite regular sell-out crowds, Silverstone claims to lose money every time it hosts the British Grand Prix. Warwick says this is partly down to the fact circuits see limited returns from the various financial outlets.

"We can only sell so many seats, there are only so many fans that will come to the British Grand Prix. We outsell every grand prix around the world. We probably get more average ticket price than anywhere around the world. But of course they've always got this sponge sat in the background that will fund whatever the difference is.

"But as far as the British Grand Prix is concerned, we can't sell sponsorship, we can't have TV money, we can't have any merchandise rights -- Formula One takes all of that. The only thing we can sell is grand prix tickets and a little bit of hospitality. If those figures don't add up to more than what the sanctioning fee is and the ratchet, you don't need to be a mathematician to say that it just does not work. If we're losing an average of 3million or 4million a year, we're not making that up, they're facts."

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Silverstone talks had stalled before Liberty takeover - ESPN

ABC News: Christians who defend religious liberty are ‘hate group’ – Fox News

Alliance Defending Freedom is demanding a retraction and apology from ABC News after reporters smeared one of the nations most respected religious liberty law firms as a hate group.

Click here for a free subscription to Todds newsletter: a must-read for Conservatives!

ABC News reporters Pete Madden and Erin Galloway wrote a scathing report on a speech Attorney General Jeff Sessions delivered behind closed doors at the Summit on Religious Liberty at the Ritz-Carlton in Dana Point, California.

Jeff Sessions addresses anti-LGBT hate group, but DOJ wont release his remarks, read the explosive headline.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions delivered a speech to an alleged hate group at an event closed to reporters on Tuesday night, but the Department of Justice is refusing to reveal what he said, read the lead paragraph of the Madden-Galloway hit piece.

To continue reading at ToddStarnes.com click here.

Todd Starnes is host of Fox News & Commentary. His latest book is The Deplorables Guide to Making America Great Again. Follow him on Twitter @ToddStarnes and find him on Facebook.

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ABC News: Christians who defend religious liberty are 'hate group' - Fox News

Liberty police question claim that child’s arms were duct taped – WFMJ

LIBERTY TWP, Ohio -

Liberty police are questioning an alleged burglary that happened on Euclid Boulevard around 1 a.m. on Friday.

An alleged victim, who called 911, told operators at least three people broke into the home carrying guns and flashlights.

Another caller said the intruders claimed to be police serving a warrant.

The victims allege they were forced to the ground and a child's arms were duct taped.

When officers arrived on the scene, they found bullet holes and spent shell casings.

According to police, the victims did not state there were shots fired until after officers located the evidence.

While police were on scene, a man who identified himself as Kevin Cylar arrived. According to officials, Cylar would not allow the victims to go with policeto be interviewed or issue statements.

An additional officer went to the home but was unable to get consistent witness statements.

The victims were unable to say if the burglars left on foot or in a vehicle.

All of the victims refused medical attention.

Liberty Police Chief Rich Tisone says the circumstances surrounding the case are highly suspicious.

21 News spoke to the only adult who was in the home during the alleged incident. She says each victim gave a statement to police at the scene and they may have varied because each person was in a different part of the home. She says all five victims are upset police aren't taking the matter seriously.

Chief Tisone says the department would still like to speak with the juvenile victims.

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Liberty police question claim that child's arms were duct taped - WFMJ

The fountain of liberty – Richmond County Daily Journal

This Fountain of Liberty that I write of has been filled with the fluid of freedom many, many times only to be depleted again and again. This fluid is the blood of our nation that has been called upon over and over in our nations past history. This blood is not of one people but of many people. It is the blood of every nation of this world that we live in. This liberty is not for one people, it is for all people. It is from people that have given everything for but one thing that being freedom.

This beacon of freedom that we call America is a glowing light in a world that over the centuries has seen the light of freedom almost crushed out of existence but not by choice and only at the hands of men gone mad with the quest to push their will upon others.

America was a dream that many have fought for and died for. When America dreams, those dreams are contagious. For it is at those times that the power of freedom and liberty are felt all over the world. Still again, there are those who would wish for Americas dream to change to Americas nightmare, to be nothing more than a nightmare. A nightmare of lost hope and lost freedom. It is only by the hand of God that we have been allowed to flourish and make the world, as a whole, a safer place to live.

That still does not mean that there are not opponents to this thought of freedom for the worlds people, as a whole. Freedom is not just for Americans and those who wish to be called American it is truly a universal need and desire.

The dreams and birth of our nation, along with our independence, came forth out of the nightmare of domination by a government that wished to claim and hold power over a people that could not and would not be dictated to any longer. In our first breath as a nation of freedom-seeking people, we knew that day of true freedom was only to come with the blood ,sweat and tears of a people who were willing to give all and they did.

The cost of that liberty and freedom came at a cost that, at times, the people had to second-guess themselves. At those times the thoughts of What have we done to ourselves? had to have come into the minds of the people, and I know it did. Its only human nature, then and now. With all the soul searching of the people, they knew of only one direction that they could go and that was forward.

The Fountain of Liberty would spill its precious fluid upon our ground, in our cities of old and on the farms of the countryside. It would flow from all, the young and the old. No one would be spared from the pain of freedoms quest. Still, even when all hope was lost, there would be those who would step up to replenish the Blood of Liberty.

Take the time to just think of what type of man that it took to walk away from his farm and family to go and defend the idea of your freedom. Not only your freedom, but that of others who could not defend themselves. I write not about the professional soldier, but of the militiaman. A man with little-to-no true training, but still a man with an idea that was burning as hot as the sun in his heart and the men who stood with and died with him in some cases. But again, they knew with all of their hearts it was the right and only thing that could be done to secure freedom for a new nation of people. Only after years of bloodshed did this freedom come to the people. This blood letting of peaks and valleys would go on from 1763 until 1783. It was in 1775 when it would be called the Revolutionary War. Our colonies and the ground that they sat upon would be soaked in the blood of those who chose freedom over British rule.

This militiaman a man not born of this country, in some cases had beliefs that he was willing to die for, and thousands did so. That is one of the points that I started with. Men from all walks of life and different countries have died for that simple idea of freedom that is universal to all people. Independence was won from those who fought with unbelievable brutality on a civilian population. In less than three decades we would see the Fountain of Liberty called on again, with the request for fresh blood to pay for freedom. Even with the thoughts of 20 years of past war with Great Britain still fresh in the minds of our new nation, the blood would be paid forward.

The cost had been at too high of a price that was paid for freedom for our new nation to roll over and take it. That being Great Britains quest for re-conquest of its former colonies. This sacrifice of life would go on from 1812 until 1815. Yet the blood was given and given freely. Can you not see what it is to be an American? It is not just a name that some of this country think is a disgrace. That name means freedom and liberty from those who would push their will of oppression on our nation.

To be called an American is one of the highest honors that could ever be placed upon an individual. That is not to say that there is no honor in other nationalities, for that would be a false statement. It all comes back to knowing that America is made up of all the world. That is one of the reasons that so many people do want to come to America: so they, too, can be called an American and live in peace and freedom. That, as I see it, is all the reason that you need to come here. To live as a peaceful, freedom-loving American.

I also know that there are those of our own, born Americans, who have no idea of the price that was paid by their ancestors of this great nation for their freedom. This goes for all of our nationalities. Our past must never be forgotten, the good and bad. The past is part of us as a whole. Every nation has had its share of shame, this is a given. If we all know this, then why can we not strive to not let it happen again? Its not that hard to help someone. In some cases, it might cost more in the long run not to help one another. Understanding is at the forefront of being a human being. When understanding is lost, then we are lost as a civilization. We, as civilized people, cannot let the few that wish ill will upon us to flourish.

It still goes back to our past and the high cost of being called America to let anyone or any country let us forget. I can not say it enough: teach our young the past. Teach them to be a proud people. Teach them about the proud people who gave them the dream of freedom. Let not the Blood of Liberty have been lost for nothing but lies told about our past. Let the truth be told, painful or not, for it is what we are based on .

The saying Alls fair in love and war is, at best, confusing and, at worst, untrue. Clearly theres plenty unfair about both states, and just because someone feels a lot of passion about their act of creation or destruction, that does not make it right. For good or bad, the Fountain of Liberty must never be drained of freedoms blood.

Robert Lee is a concerned citizen and U.S. Marine veteran who owns and operates Rockingham Guns and Ammo. His column appears here each Saturday.

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The fountain of liberty - Richmond County Daily Journal