Pressure To Publish Leads To Shoddy Science And Bad Medicine … – NPR

Mick Wiggins/Ikon Images/Getty Images

Mick Wiggins/Ikon Images/Getty Images

A surprising medical finding caught the eye of NPR's veteran science correspondent Richard Harris in 2014. A scientist from the drug company Amgen had reviewed the results of 53 studies that were originally thought to be highly promising findings likely to lead to important new drugs. But when the Amgen scientist tried to replicate those promising results, in most cases he couldn't.

"He tried to reproduce them all," Harris tells Morning Edition host David Greene. "And of those 53, he found he could only reproduce six."

That was "a real eye-opener," says Harris, whose new book Rigor Mortis: How Sloppy Science Creates Worthless Cures, Crushes Hope, and Wastes Billions explores the ways even some talented scientists go wrong pushed by tight funding, competition and other constraints to move too quickly and sloppily to produce useful results.

"A lot of what everybody has reported about medical research in the last few years is actually wrong," Harris says. "It seemed right at the time but has not stood up to the test of time."

The impact of weak biomedical research can be especially devastating, Harris learned, as he talked to doctors and patients. And some prominent scientists he interviewed told him they agree that it's time to recognize the dysfunction in the system and fix it.

"If it's not operating at full steam ... and not doing everything right," Harris says, "it's worth pointing that out and saying, 'No. Think about this. Let's make it better.' "

The following has been edited for clarity.

On the ways unreliable research results affect patients

Tom Murphy was a healthy rugby player diagnosed with ALS in his 50s. .... With his doctor's help he signs up for an experimental treatment with a drug called dexpramipexole, or "Dex." At first, he's very hopeful, and it seems to be helping him, but they run the tests and figure out that it actually doesn't work. In fact none of the ALS drugs work. I focus on Tom Murphy because he's a victim of the system here of these failures.

What happened in the case of ALS was there were at least a dozen drugs that had been tried in a handful of small studies way too small of animals. And they all seemed to have some sort of promise some of them went into very large clinical trials. We spent tens of millions of dollars developing these drugs, and they all failed. There's a group in Cambridge, Mass. the ALS Therapy Development Institute that went back and reviewed all these studies and realized all the initial studies were wrong. They used very few mice. They weren't thinking enough about the different genetics of the mice. And a lot of other problems. ... This therapy institute came away thinking none of these drug candidates were really realistic.

On the ways the scientific enterprise in Charles Darwin's time was very different

Darwin was very interesting. It took him decades to come up with his theory of evolution and he was not in a hurry he was studying barnacles, he was studying birds, all sorts of things. He felt no pressure to publish until somebody came up with a similar idea, and he decided, 'Hmmm ... maybe I do want to be first. ..." But we're not in that world anymore. Things are very competitive, very fast-paced. So the competitive world of biomedicine is shaping this problem of evidence that can't be replicated a lot.

On why the delight that's long been an intrinsic part of science can disappear over time and why that's bad

I think a lot of people go into science out of a sense of wonder. But ... as time goes on, people feel the career pressures, and they realize it isn't just about exploring and having big ideas. They have to have research that helps them progress toward their first job, toward tenure, then the next grant, and so on. Those pressures are different from just, sort of, exploring and understanding fundamental biology.... And the less you're focusing on delight, the less maybe you're aiming at the truth and the more you are, inadvertently, often aiming at other goals career goals, financial goals and so on. This may give you a fruitful life as an individual, but may produce less value to us as a society.

On how the public should respond when they hear of a big biomedical advance

I think it is good to question it. Every time you hear something like this, just remember, it's all contingent here is one study, and it may not stand the test of time. I think that's healthy. ... When scientists read the scientific literature, they realize, "Oh, probably half of this is wrong." It's just, not knowing which half that's the vexing part.

On the risk that pointing out flaws in science will make people question its value

It's always uncomfortable to point out problems, but it's also essential. I mean, we are taxpayers we are citizens, and we support this enterprise and we expect to reap its rewards. If it's not operating at full steam ... and not doing everything right, it's worth pointing that out and saying, "No. Think about this. Let's make it better." Many prominent scientists agree with me and are concerned about this and are thinking hard about how to make things better, from the top of NIH on down. There are solutions, and I talk about them in my book.

On why the Trump administration's proposed cuts to NIH funding wouldn't make things better

It's a very appealing idea, obviously, to say, "Oh, well, let's just identify the waste and root it out." But that's not the way science works. ... If you cut the [$30 billion] budget of the National Institutes of Health, you're going to shrink that already very small pool of money even smaller, and you're going to increase the competitive pressures. You're going to increase all these perverse incentives that put us in this position to begin with. So I think that would actually be devastating to biomedical research.

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Pressure To Publish Leads To Shoddy Science And Bad Medicine ... - NPR

A New Health Affairs Series: The Practice of Medicine – Health Affairs (blog)

Bridget Verrette

April 7, 2017

The April 2017 issue ofHealth Affairsfeatures the first article in a new series on The Practice of Medicine.

The series will explore many facets of the practice environment and how that environment affects physicians and other clinicians. It will cover a broad range of topics, including how clinicians respondboth on a daily basis and in a strategic senseto regulatory requirements, payment policy, quality measurement, technology, and more. The articles will also explore how these factors affect care delivery.

This months debut Practice of Medicine article examines the amount of time physicians actually spend with patients compared to time spent on the various tasks associated with desktop medicine. The study, conducted by Ming Tai-Seale, Associate Director of the Palo Alto Medical Foundation Research Institute, and a group of co-authors, features some surprising findings.

Health Affairs welcomes submissions for The Practice of Medicine series on a rolling basis throughout 2017. Successful submissions will be timely and relevant to the current policy environment. The next paper in the series, scheduled for the journals May issue, will take a look at the potential impact of MACRA on the practice of medicine. Between journal articles, continue to check the Health Affairs Blog for related content, such as a recent post by a group of hospital CEOs that explains the phenomenon of physician burnout and offers solutions to reduce its burden.

This series is supported by The Physicians Foundation.

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A New Health Affairs Series: The Practice of Medicine - Health Affairs (blog)

Fake Denver plastic surgeon pleads guilty to assault, unauthorized … – The Denver Post

A 37-year-old surgical assistant who posed as a plastic surgeon, performing face-lifts, tummy tucks and other medical procedures with limited if any anesthesia, pleaded guilty to second-degree felony assault, criminal impersonation and unauthorized practice of a physician Friday.

Provided by Denver District Attorney's Office

Carlos Hernandez Fernandez claimed to be a licensed doctorsince at least January 2015, performing procedures at Hernandez Fernandez Clinic at 424 S. Federal Blvd., according to a statement from Denver District Attorney Beth McCann.

He was initially charged with 15 counts against four victims in August, according to the DAs office. But more victims came forward, bringing the total charges up to 126 counts with 37 victims. Under a plea deal, he pleaded guilty to onlyone count of assault, one count of impersonation and one count of unauthorized practice.

Fernandez faces a prison sentence of up to six years with three years of parole, according to the DAs office. The term length will be determined at a sentencing scheduled for June 2. Fernandez must pay victims roughly $175,000 in restitution before or at the time of sentencing, according to the DAs office. If more victimsshow documentation, more restitution will be paid.

RJ Sangosti, The Denver Post

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Fake Denver plastic surgeon pleads guilty to assault, unauthorized ... - The Denver Post

‘Medicine is really about giving back’ – Post-Bulletin

Ahmed Mohamed was 6 years old when he and his family arrived in Rochester as part of the first wave of Somali immigrants in 1996. His knowledge of English at the time consisted of three words.

By the time he had reached medical school, Mohamed had become the pride of many in Rochester's Somali-American community. They began to call him doctor, despite his protestations at the time that he had yet to earn his degree.

Today, Mohamed is a doctor, a resident physician in Mayo Clinic's Department of Internal Medicine, one of a tiny handful of Somali-American doctors at the clinic. And to those who have witnessed his progress, it hasn't come as a great surprise.

Despite a starting point well back of his native-born peers, Mohamed doesn't convey a sense that he faced more challenges and struggles than any other person.

Yes, there was a language barrier at first, but by fourth grade, Mohamed had mastered English well enough to graduate from the district's English for Speakers of Other Languages program. Yes, belonging to a minority immigrant community in majority-white Rochester did lead to an occasional fight but only when it became necessary.

"Going back to first grade, I was very good studen,t and I never disrupted class," Mohamed said. "I rarely said anything. I was quiet in class up until I got into med school."

Yet his mild and his soft-spoken manner belie a relentless drive and sharp mind, teachers and mentors say.

"He was just a wonderful student," said retired Mayo High School history teacher Larry Fowler, who taught Mohamed in 10th grade. "He was just a really bright kid."

Mohamed credits his success to his parents, who instilled within him high expectations. Both preached education's power to achieve one's dreams. His dad, Abdullahi Hassan, was an agronomist in Mogadishu who spoke five languages before civil war forced the family to flee.

As a boy, he and his brothers were expected to have their homework finished before they could go out and play. Sometimes his mom, Khadija Naji, would insist on him reading a book before he could join his friends.

"I think they kept a pretty good leash on us," Mohamed said. "We never really wandered outside of within eyesight of the house."

Mohamed said the idea of becoming a doctor first began to impress itself on him in his teens. His first extended exposure to doctors came when he would accompany his grandmother on her doctor's visits. Blessed with a sharp memory, he was able to recall and relay everything the doctor said about his grandmother's care to his mom.

It was seeing the care that doctors provided and the clear benefits his grandmother received that created the impetus to become a doctor. That coupled with a discovery that he was fascinated with science and "learning about living things and how they work" drove him.

Mohamed said he was neither daunted nor particularly preoccupied with the fact that African-Americans are woefully under-represented in the medical field. While more black men have graduated college over the past few decades, the number of black men applying to medical school dropped from 1978 to 2014.

"I just wanted to pursue becoming a doctor on my own," he said. "I made a detailed plan for what i wanted to accomplish each year of college."

While a student at the University of Minnesota, Mohamed was introduced to Eddie Mairura, a Kenyan-born man who is now an orthopedic surgeon in Dallas. At the time that he started mentoring Mohamed, Mairura was a medical student at the U when Mohamed was working on his undergraduate degree.

Mairura's own experiences in medical school underscored the demographic challenges facing blacks. In his own medical class of 220 people at the U, there were only four black people. Mairura hoped to be a guide, opening the door wider for minority students.

"I think medicine is really about giving back. When people achieve success, they don't celebrate by themselves, they got there by standing on the shoulders of other people," Mairura said.

Mairura found Mohamed to be a person with no shortage of determination and motivation "100 percent committed" to becoming a doctor. Mairura set him up on job shadowing opportunities and recommended certain courses that he take. Mohamed picked his brain whenever he could.

"He was very very focused," Mairura said. "I've mentored a lot of people, but I think he's the only one that makes me look good. I laid out a road map for him and then stepped out of the way or (risked getting) run over."

Graduating from medical school at Michigan State University was an occasion for celebration. But it was also a bittersweet moment for Mohamed. His dad was hospitalized at Mayo Clinic suffering complications from leukemia.

Though weak and struggling to speak, his dad gave Mohamed a thumbs up when Mohamed told him about his job interview opportunities, including an offer at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, which was his top choice.

One of Mohamed's mentors who was also visiting the hospital at the time told Mohamed's dad, "you did it," acknowledging his influence as a role model in Mohamed's life. But his dad quietly raised his hand and pointed to Mohamed as if to say, "he deserves the credit." Mohamed's dad died a week later.

As a first-year resident, Mohamed divides his time between seeing patients as a primary care physician at the Baldwin Building and rotating through sub-specialties, such as cardiology and neurology.

Mohamed, 27, is cognizant of his responsibilities as a role model for his community. With his country still trying to rise from the ashes of a civil war and public perceptions often defined by media portrayals of Somali terrorists, he hopes to offer a counterbalance to those views.

In the same way that mentors have offered shoulders for him to stand on, so he hopes to do the same for others.

At Somali public gatherings, parents will approach Mohamed seeking advice for their college-bound children. They'll ask for his phone number, so he can talk to their kids.

"It does motivate me, because I want to see younger kids in the community achieve success, whether it's in medicine or something else," Mohamed said. "And the advice that I give younger kids in the community is, do something you enjoy doing."

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'Medicine is really about giving back' - Post-Bulletin

Board of Medicine revokes license of Virginia Beach chiropractor accused of sexual misconduct – Virginian-Pilot

RICHMOND

State health officials revoked the license of a Virginia Beach chiropractor Friday night after hearing more than two hours of testimony from patients who said he touched them in a sexually inappropriate manner, and even engaged in sex acts during treatment sessions.

The Virginia Board of Medicine voted unanimously to revoke the license of Jerry Hedrick, who has been accused by seven patients of acting inappropriately during treatment sessions. One of those patients also filed a sexual battery charge against him, which will go to trial in Virginia Beach in May.

The board spent less than 15 minutes in a closed-session deliberation before announcing the revocation, which is the strongest action it can take and is rarely used. The board had suspended his license in March, pending the formal hearing Friday.

One patient, described as Patient A in Board of Medicine records, testified Hedrick ran his hands across her buttocks, breasts and between her legs during her third chiropractic session with him. She was so appalled, she filed a sexual battery charge against him in Virginia Beach in October, two days after the treatment session.

A pretrial hearing is scheduled for April 24 and a trial for May 16 in that case, which Hedrick appealed after a December conviction in lower court.

Patient A testified Hedricks hands went underneath her underwear and his fingers touched her skin at the top of her buttocks. He also moved her head by grabbing a handful of her hair and pulling on it. He inappropriately massaged her chest area through her clothing, ran his hands across her breast and touched her vaginal area through her clothing.

At the conclusion of the session, he asked how it felt to be ravaged on your birthday.

She called a friend and said she thought her chiropractor had molested her.

Asked why she was testifying, Patient A said, He doesnt need to be doing this to people, period.

She said she found him through her companys health insurance program, and didnt want other women to experience the same thing.

Three other patients testified in person, and another by telephone.

The patients involved in the Board of Medicine case ranged in age from 21 to 48, and reported inappropriate sexual behavior dating back as far as 2004.

Hedrick sent the board a letter saying he would not appear at Saturdays hearing. In the past, he has declined comment to The Virginian-Pilot on the accusations. The patients names are not being used to protect their privacy.

A patient identified as Patient B said Hedrick straddled the table behind her and held his groin area against her buttocks during a 2013 session. She immediately got up, told him point-blank what he was doing was wrong and left. She also reported him to the insurance company who covered the treatment.

Not all the patients testified willingly.

One, described as Patient C, said she was testifying because she received a subpoena. Between August 2008 and April 2009, Hedrick kissed the woman, who was 31, massaged her upper-chest muscles while she was uncovered from the waist up and brushed his hand across her nipples.

He sent text messages to this patient suggesting oral orgasms. One text said: Do you like erotic stories? I sometimes like to write them. Pretty hot. Even working on a pirate-themed one.

Hedrick unzipped his pants and began rubbing his erect, exposed penis against her.

In one case, he seemed to acknowledge crossing professional boundaries: I apologize if I ever made you uncomfortable if so, I am truly sorry. I will remain professional if that is what you want.

He engaged in kissing, genital touching, oral sex and sexual intercourse with this patient at his office, sometimes after appointments.

I felt like I was living out his porn fantasies, the woman testified during the hearing.

The woman said she understands the doctor-patient boundaries of medical doctors,but was unclear about chiropractors. She said she and a few other patients involved in this case met Hedrick through a history re-enactment group called Blackbeards Crew.

I didnt want to get Dr. Hedrick in trouble, she testified. I felt just as responsible as he was.

One board member, Dr. Lori Conklin, asked whether she thought Hedrick had brought the trouble on himself by violating the doctor-patient relationship, and whether she was concerned about other women who might be treated the same way.

It was a shock to learn he was coming on to women with unwanted advances, Patient C testified.

Another patient testified by phone that Hedrick had used what was called trigger point treatment, in which he used his gloved hand to touch her pelvic area to treat pelvic floor dysfunction. She felt he eventually moved into movements that were meant to be sexually arousing rather than as treatment, and she quit seeing him.

Tracy Robinson, a lawyer with the Virginia Department of Health Professions who was presenting the case to the board, said Hedrick made a point of being a solo practitioner with no employees in order to prey on female patients for his sexual gratification. He also talked to patients about other patients he was treating, a violation of patient confidentiality.

Testimony indicated the Department of Health Professions had investigated Hedrick in the past, and that he denied acting inappropriately, and agreed to create an office setting with more people so he would not be treating patients as a lone practitioner. He also said he would give more verbal cues so that patients would not misinterpret his treatment.

But Robinson said he continued the same pattern of practicing in a solo atmosphere, to enable him to find new victims to exploit.

The board unanimously agreed with Robinsons recommendation of a revocation. Hedrick will not be able to reapply for a license for five years.

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Board of Medicine revokes license of Virginia Beach chiropractor accused of sexual misconduct - Virginian-Pilot

Marian medical school’s first graduates could fill primary-care dearth – Indianapolis Business Journal

Just two years ago, Marian University medical student Gregory Specht was seriously considering going into a highly specialized field, perhaps involving cancer treatment and research.

I was thinking radiation oncology, Specht said. That sounded really cool.

Then in his junior year, he did clinical rotations in family medicine, internal medicine and pediatrics, all considered primary care fields. He quickly decided he liked treating a wide span of patients and types of ailments, from asthma to heart disease, along with providing routine checkups and preventive counseling.

When it came time to apply for a residency program this year, he selected family practice at Franciscan Health Indianapolis. Last month, after a long process of tours and interviews, he learned the hospital had selected him.

The decision to focus on primary care in Indiana, shared by almost half of graduating students at Marians novice College of Osteopathic Medicine, could help address a severe shortage of primary care physicians in the state.

On a per-capita basis, Indiana ranks 38th in the number of primary care physicians, according to the Association of American Medical Colleges. Much of the shortage is hitting hardest in rural areas, where entire towns are without doctors.

Indiana will need 817 more primary care physicians by 2030, an increase of about 21 percent, says a recent study by consulting firm Tripp Umbach of Pittsburgh.

But Marian University, which will graduate its first class of osteopathic doctors next month, could help make a dent in the shortage.

Of the 129 Marian graduating seniors who entered the competitive matching program for residency slots around the country, 63 won residencies in primary care.

Just as encouraging, 38 percent of Marians graduates will do their residency training in Indiana. That is expected to help, because many residents stay in the states where they do their residencies.

Osteopathic schools, which teach structural and muscular manipulation as treatments along with surgery and drugs, are similar to but less common than traditional, or allopathic, medical schools such as the Indiana University School of Medicine. Allopathic schools tend to turn out more specialists; osteopathic schools graduate larger numbers of primary care physicians.

Marian has a mission of training doctors of osteopathy with a goal of keeping many of them in Indianamany in rural, underserved areas.

Health leaders here say they are encouraged by the results.

Weve been waiting for that graduating class from Marian for a while, knowing that most of the time, D.O.s do go into primary care, said Ann Alley, director of chronic disease, primary care and rural health for the Indiana State Department of Health. Indiana is experiencing a dearth of primary care providers, so were really happy about this.

Strong start

Overall, of Marians 131 graduating students who participated in the residency matching program, 129 were successful in getting residencies. That works out to a placement rate of 98.5 percentage, slightly higher than the national average of 94.0 percent.

My prediction was that the numbers wouldnt be as good as they were, said Dr. Donald Sefcik, dean of Marians osteopathic college. The surprise was, we did extremely well for a brand-new school.

For more than a century, IUs medical school was Indianas only one. Over the decades, it had grown into the nations largest medical school, annually turning out more than 300 physicians.

This year, 95.6 percent of its 321 seniors were matched to residency programs. Of those students, about 115 will attend residency programs in Indiana. The remaining two-thirds were accepted into residency positions in 40 states, including at Harvard, Johns Hopkins, Yale, the Mayo Clinic, Stanford and Duke.

About a decade ago, sensing the state could use a second medical school, Marian began exploring the idea of starting an osteopathic program. President Dan Elsener sold the vision to business and health leaders, and raised more than $100 million to get the program off the ground.

Four years ago, the school began accepting its initial class of 162 students. On May 2, the first graduates will receive their diplomas and start their careersmany of them in Indiana.

In the meantime, Indiana is gradually expanding the number of residency slots available in the state. Currently, Indiana hospitals offer about 1,400 residency positions, but thats not enough to keep up with the growing number of doctors graduating from medical schools in Indiana and in nearby states.

Between Marians osteopathic school and an enrollment expansion at the IU medical school, Indiana alone will see about an 80 percent increase in the number of graduating doctors this year.

For now, many have no choice but to look outside the state.

Hopefully, someday, all those who want to pursue their residencies in our state will be able to, said Bryan Mills, CEO of Community Health Network, which operates five area hospitals. Thats just not possible today.

Not enough slots

A big problem is the shortage of money to fund residency programs. The average residency slot costs a hospital $100,000 to $150,000 a year, which covers a residents salary and benefits, along with teaching expenses and overhead.

Nationally, Medicare reimburses most of the cost, $10 billion a year. The federal funding, however, has been capped since 1996, and Congress has shown little interest in increasing it.

Slowly, Indiana is creating a few more residency spots. In January, the Indiana Commission for Higher Education awarded $1.4 million in grants to fund nine new residency positions around the state, mostly in primary care. It is hoping to award future rounds of grants if the Legislature approves the funding.

Tim Putnam, president of Margaret Mary Health in Batesville, said training physicians to serve rural, medically underserved areas, is critical. He is president of a group called the Indiana Graduate Medical Education Group, which is working with the Legislature to try to win more support and funding.

Were producing some very high-quality physicians from our medical schools, Putnam said. It would be nice to keep them here.

Some of the medical students graduating from Marian agree.

Tess Edvardsen, a senior from Schererville, will begin a family practice residency at St. Joseph Health in Mishawaka, not far from where she did her undergraduate studies at the University of Notre Dame, and only about 90 minutes from where she grew up.

For me, the point of family medicine is really being part of the community, she said. I love where my family is from. Those are people I see myself taking care of.

Another Marian medical student, Trenton Schmale of Carmel, landed a family practice residency at Indiana University Healths Ball Memorial Hospital in Muncie. He said it was a natural decision to stay in Indiana, since both his family and his wifes family are here. Like many of Indianas medical students, he has already settled into the scenery, doing clinical rotations at five local hospitals.

And Specht, the Marian student who once considered radiation oncology, said he is energized by the thought of settling into a long career of primary care in Indiana. He is from the Broad Ripple area.

Ive been in Indiana my whole life, Specht said. Most of my connections are here. I dont have any reason to want to leave.

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Marian medical school's first graduates could fill primary-care dearth - Indianapolis Business Journal

Four-year medical school moves step closer – Bowling Green Daily News

The City-County Planning Commission of Warren County voted unanimously Thursday to recommend to the Bowling Green City Commission zoning changes and variances that pave the way for the citys first four-year medical school.

Med Center Health plans to build a two-story building at The Medical Center at Bowling Green campus to be used as medical office space and also for medical education. It also plans an 833-vehicle parking garage.

The five-story parking garage is planned to be built on the current site of the emergency medical services building. A two-story, 48,000-square-foot building would be adjacent to the parking garage, according to Jean Cherry, executive vice president at Med Center Health.

The demolition of the current emergency medical services building is slated for mid- to late April, Cherry said last week.

The EMS will be moved to a vacant building at 210 E. Third Ave. and the heliport will be relocated.

The closing of a 50-foot right of way along U.S. 31-W By-Pass would allow Med Center Health to consolidate that land with adjoining property. The right of way to be closed abuts property owned by Med Center Health.

Med Center Health will also build a pedestrian walkway connecting the newly constructed medical office space to the Riverside Professional Center.

The plan is to extend Second Street to where it connects with U.S. 31-W. Bowling Green Municipal Utilities is reserving a utility easement along the unnamed right of way, said Planning Commission Executive Director Ben Peterson on Thursday.

A medical school partnership between the University of Kentucky College of Medicine, The Medical Center and Western Kentucky University is intended to help alleviate a physician shortage in the region, allow WKU faculty access to medical research opportunities, demonstrate a community commitment to smart growth and help keep the areas best and brightest in Warren County. The medical degree will be conferred by UK, and a certain number of slots in the local program will be available first to WKU students.

The UK College of Medicine initiative which in eastern Kentucky also includes a similar partnership between St. Clair Regional Medical Center, Kings Daughters Medical Center and Morehead State University is scheduled to begin here in 2018 with 30 students.

In another matter, the planning commission recommended a plan by Legacy Built Homes LLC to build 35 multi-family units on about 2.36 acres on Shannon Drive, bounded by Trent Way and Delmar Court. There will be five two-story buildings, with seven units to a building.

Shannon Drive homeowner Judy Walker objected to the project.

There will be a bottleneck of traffic that will be unbelievable, Walker said. It will change the way that the neighborhood is.

Walker also said she was concerned about the possible declining value of her home of 40 years.

Ive looked at an empty lot for 40 years, she said.

Follow business reporter Charles A. Mason on Twitter @BGDNbusiness or visit bgdailynews.com.

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Four-year medical school moves step closer - Bowling Green Daily News

Medical school lessons go beyond anatomy and physiology – The Seattle Times

The path to becoming a practicing physician requires dedication and a significant investment of time and resources.

I have wanted to be a doctor since I was young, says George Novan M.D., an infectious diseases physician and Associate Dean for Graduate Medical Education at the Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine.

But even long-held aspirations come with surprises, and challenges. In his second year of medical school, Dr. Novan had an experience that surprised him, challenged his expectations, and taught him a lesson thats stayed with him throughout his career.

In my school, we had a course entitled Death and Dying, Dr. Novan says. As part of the course, each student was assigned a patient who was dying and had agreed to discuss what they were going through with a medical student.

I was expecting an elderly patient, and instead, I walked into the room and met a woman in her mid-30s. It was a shock and she saw that in my expression. As she saw my expression, she began to tell me her story. And as her fears, and her emotions came out, she taught me. I had been so focused on all the facts I needed to know in my basic medical science courses yet now I was talking to a young woman dying of her cancer. This courageous woman who took the time and effort to discuss her suffering with me taught me the full responsibility of being a physician.

The path to becoming a practicing physician requires dedication and a significant investment of time and resources. It demands a deep love for learning in general, and intellectual curiosity about medicine in particular. And, as Dr. Novan learned early on, while physicians are trained to treat and cure patients, they also must learn to provide quality comfort and care to patients and families when treatment is no longer working.

Learning in Washington communities

The foundational science phases of medical school provide a solid base and common understanding upon which future classwork and experiental learning will build. Coursework on anatomy, chemistry and math prepares students for the intellectual and emotional rigors to come, and builds a network of bonds as classmates and future colleagues begin to work together.

Intensive orientation courses assist students with assimilation into medical school. Clinical education is integrated into the foundational sciences curriculum, offering future physicians insights into how their coursework translates into real-life situations.

In August, Washington State Universitys Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine will debut its medical education program, which leads to a Doctor of Medicine (M.D.) degree. The program will welcome 60 students to its charter class.

Starting in their first year, medical students will learn in classrooms and labs, as well as hospitals and clinics. In many areas, local hospitals and clinics are understaffed, and the connection between them and the medical college can be a lifeline.

Dr. Radha Nandagopal is a member of the clinical faculty of the Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine. She also chairs the Colleges Admissions Committee.

We are looking for those students who are committed to the state of Washington, committed to the idea of rural and underserved medicine, Dr. Nandagopal says.

By the third and fourth years, medical students are gaining hands-on experience in hospitals and clinics near their campus locations. Students become part of professional teams in community clinics and hospitals. They build relationships with faculty, colleagues, mentors, patients, and communities. Small cohorts encourage team-based learning.

As part of their clinical education, students will learn clinical reasoning how to proceed step by step through a reasoning process to arrive at a diagnosis. By the time students enter their third year of clinical clerkships, students will be able to advance diagnostic ideas and participate in patient care based on the knowledge and experience they have been receiving since their first year, says Dr. Nandagopol.

Dr. Novan recalls the experience that made him feel like a doctor for the first time. In his fourth year of medical school, he was treating a patient suffering from cirrhosis. The patient needed to have fluid buildup siphoned from his abdominal cavity on a regular basis.

He had experienced the drainage so many times that the assumption always had been that the only thing needed was to remove the fluid and not order unnecessary tests, Dr. Novan says. But I had been taught well to be thorough in reviewing a patients medical records. I took my clinical rotations and of course, patient care very seriously as a fourth-year student.

I spent considerable time reading through his records. I was never able to find a time when that fluid had been sent to the microbiology lab for cultures. When I completed the procedure, I included ordering cultures for a variety of organisms. The cultures returned positive revealing that in addition to cirrhosis he had tuberculosis involving the lining of his abdominal cavity. This lead to needed new treatment.

The patient was immensely grateful. He started referring to me as his doctor his guru which made me feel both embarrassed and glad. On the last day of my rotation, I came into his room to say goodbye. In the room was his entire family. They each had a homemade vase, that they had created, in their hands. The patient shared how much my care had meant to him and the family gave me the vases that they had made in honor of the man they loved getting better and in appreciation for my care. That day I learned an invaluable lesson as a medical student.

Students at the Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine take the Art and Practice of Medicine that addresses not only what students know, but what they will do as a medical professional, including helping students build empathy for the patients they will serve.

By integrating clinical, simulation, and case-based learning experiences, the College prepares graduates to lead health care teams, says Dr. Ann Poznanski, pathologist and Associate Dean for Curriculum. They learn to coordinate resources in new ways to improve patient care and the health of their communities.

Many of the communities in which students at schools like the Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine will train are facing critical physician shortages. When the students education is complete, they will be ready to address the needs of these medically underserved communities.

Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine not only trains physicians to meet the needs of todays patients, but to anticipate changes in the delivery of health care that includes wellness, as well as treating diseases. It equips graduates to thrive in a rapidly evolving health care environment and gives them the technical, behavioral and leadership skills necessary to obtain exceptional results in the states most challenging healthcare environments.

We are building a service culture in the college that will result in extraordinary outcomes for our students, says Founding Dean John Tomkowiak. It will also yield tremendous results for our clinical partners and, ultimately, the patients and communities our graduates serve.

The Colleges learning, training, and clinical environments will inspire our students to be leaders in their communities and in the health care field, says Dr. Tomkowiak.

Washington State University has delivered advanced education for more than 125 years. Its new medical school leverages that experience to achieve new milestones in medical research, innovation, interprofessional education and patient-centered care. Find out more at medicine.wsu.edu.

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Medical school lessons go beyond anatomy and physiology - The Seattle Times

Medical school, Heart Association join for Walking Day – Albany Times Union

Photo: John Carl DAnnibale/Times Union

Walkers from Albany Medical Center and the American Heart Association stroll through the Park South neighborhood for National Walking Day on Wednesday, April 5, 2017, in Albany, NY. (John Carl DAnnibale/Times Union)

Walkers from Albany Medical Center and the American Heart Association stroll through the Park South neighborhood for National Walking Day on Wednesday, April 5, 2017, in Albany, NY. (John Carl

Walkers from Albany Medical Center and the American Heart Association stroll through the Park South neighborhood for National Walking Day on Wednesday, April 5, 2017, in Albany, NY. (John Carl DAnnibale/Times Union)

Walkers from Albany Medical Center and the American Heart Association stroll through the Park South neighborhood for National Walking Day on Wednesday, April 5, 2017, in Albany, NY. (John Carl

Walkers from Albany Medical Center and the American Heart Association stroll through the Park South neighborhood for National Walking Day on Wednesday, April 5, 2017, in Albany, NY. (John Carl DAnnibale/Times Union)

Walkers from Albany Medical Center and the American Heart Association stroll through the Park South neighborhood for National Walking Day on Wednesday, April 5, 2017, in Albany, NY. (John Carl

Walkers from Albany Medical Center and the American Heart Association stroll through the Park South neighborhood for National Walking Day on Wednesday, April 5, 2017, in Albany, NY. (John Carl DAnnibale/Times Union)

Walkers from Albany Medical Center and the American Heart Association stroll through the Park South neighborhood for National Walking Day on Wednesday, April 5, 2017, in Albany, NY. (John Carl

Medical school, Heart Association join for Walking Day

ALBANY -- Staff from Albany Medical Center and the American Heart Association joined on Wednesday, National Walking Day, for a stroll around the Park South neighborhood.

The American Heart Association encourages people to improve their heart health by increasing their physical activity. Resources for companies to use are available at heart.org/movemoretoolkit.

The group urges everyone to take a walk to help fight heart disease and stroke and to post pictures on social media with the hashtag #HealthyForGood.

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Medical school, Heart Association join for Walking Day - Albany Times Union

Listening to John Adams: The true conception of liberty is far larger than mean-spirited conservative ideology – Salon

The sad conditions we face at this moment in our political life as a nation summon a particularly high-spirited parable from a couple of red-blooded Americans whose minds often turned on the fate of human liberty. Its a parable that tests the proposition that one can find a liberal political conscience even in those illiberal, uncharitable, self-righteous politicians who masquerade as champions of the people.

In April 1817, precisely 200years ago, 81-year-old former president John Adams wrote a marvelously candid letter to his onetime rival and successor as president, Thomas Jefferson. Adams was still getting hammered in print by a fellow New Englander whom George Washington had hired as secretary of state and Adams had fired, three years into his presidency, for political disloyalty and warmongering. The embittered Timothy Pickering refused to give Adams credit for any accomplishment, either as a committed Revolutionary or as chief executive. Adams returned the favor when he renewed his attacks on Jeffersons legacy some years later.

My loving and beloved Friend, Pickering, has been pleased to inform the World that I have few Friends, the wry Adams told Jefferson. I wanted to whip the rogue till the blood come. But, he continued, his true friends cautioned him that nothing that such a Person could write would do me the least Injury. Ironic, perhaps, that Adams was entirely comfortable, in 1800, with the Alien and Sedition Acts legislation passed amid a counter-revolutionary fervor which severely restricted freedom of the press and resulted in the imprisonment of editors who criticized the president in print. Ironic, too, that Jefferson, as president, actively tried to impeach a Supreme Court justice, simply for criticizing him from the bench.

They were politicians, through and through, though theyd mellowed somewhat as the years passed. Adams went on to tell Jefferson how hed convinced himself that even one so mean-spirited as Pickering had to possess a conscience. Not that religion played any role, mind you. He didnt quite know where to turn, but he refused to give up hope. Adams could not despise mankind, he wanted Jefferson to know, because all men were created equal in their combined qualities of reason and ridiculousness.

There were moments when Adams was prepared to go public with the message that he classed religion with the ridiculous:I have been upon the point of breaking out, This would be the best of all possible Worlds, if there was not Religion in it.

But then, he reconsidered. If indelible marks of Conscience adhered even to the most egoistic of exalted political leaders, and he was convinced it did,then religion deserved some credit.

Adams went on to tell Jefferson that all the promises hed ever heard, earthly and heavenly alike, left him feeling naught but pitty for his fellow creatures. Whether in the political forum or the pulpit, Fears and Terrors appear to have produced an universal Credulity, he wrote.In Adams judgment, humans succumbed to their fears to such a degree that they repeatedly settled for tyrannical rulers who exacted obedience and bowed before a religious authority that preached posthumous punishment so as to control parishioners day-to-day behavior.

Jefferson, for his part, backed up Adams on both scores.

As for Pickering and the vengeful others who spoke ill of them, the sympathetic Virginian wrote quotably, Were such things to be answered, our lives would be wasted in the filth of fendings and provings, instead of being employed in promoting the happiness and prosperity of our fellow citizens. He also commiserated with Adams as another longtime critic of the miraculous in religion and the gullibility of those overburdened by their attachment to church dogma. And he agreed with Adams that moral precepts, innate in man, bolstered by the general principles laid down by religion, helped avert a human-produced hell.

The Adams-Jefferson correspondence, especially that of their later years, stands as a reminder of two decisive truths about Americas history as a nation: 1. The prevalence of character assassination as a feature of U.S. politics; and 2. The constancy of moral appeals to the happiness and prosperity of our fellow citizens (whether helped along by a nondenominational religious persuasion or not).

The parable of 1817 still retains its value in 2017, when it seems near impossible to justify whatever rationale self-identified conservatives in Congress use in proposing the abandonment of liberal-inspired programs that address the suffering of our citizens.

While blaming government for social ills, no matter what their true cause, conservatives somehow convince people who would do better in a more equitably based society that they should hate nothing so much as equalizing legislative measures. Moneyed power-brokers with their hooks into members of Congress keep rewarding themselves while deceptive crumbs are thrown to everyone else.These same people, hypocritically spouting religious morality at every campaign stop, acquiesce to an irreligious chief executive who makes deals at the expense of morality.

These are painful times. People are justly dispirited and confused. Graphs objectively displaying economic inequality are becoming ever more stretched and distended.In a modern republic, we all agree, the government does not abandon its duty to secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity, to borrow a phrase from the Constitutions Preamble.

But it does.

Conservatives in Congress and in too many state legislatures make sure it does. Their love for liberty and freedom is legend: Theres a Republican Liberty Caucus, a House Liberty Caucus, and the most recent of newsworthy incarnations, the House Freedom Caucus. All of the Liberty caucuses oppose social spending. Theres Liberty University, but the political endorsements of both its founder and current president suggest less of an appreciation for the blessings of liberty than for a strict social order. Obey. There was even a Liberty Party in the U.S. in the 1840s. Its platform was slavery abolition, which makes the party name quite literal and quite different from conservatives modern adaptation.

Conservatives in Congress exploit the fear of undocumented workers with undocumented rhetoric. They again rail ad nauseam about infiltration by foreigners except those pulling strings in Moscow who threaten public security and the national economy. Of course, immigrants make America strong. They always have. They succeed bigly. But if youre a conservative, you convince easily conned voters that immigration reform is amnesty, that it interferes with the promise of American liberty. When hysterical hatred of strangers ensues, you get, well, what we have now. The same goes for voter fraud. Conservatives make sure the longest lines are at minority community polling places to maximize liberty?

Barack Obama suffered more than John Adams ever did from the sensational statements of haters. And he let it go, which was very Christian. Republicans have railed ad nauseam in opposition to the Affordable Care Act, which they derisively call Obamacare. Now they only hope it implodes, as the cruel prophecy goes. All who refuse to take in the Republicans truth-mocking talking points understand that the goal of health care must be to cover as many people as possible and to put Big Insurances and Big Pharmas profits second after the health of citizens. The real-world result would be to extend both life and liberty to many more millions.

If the founders hallowed vocabulary actually matters, Republicans would not have played the hate and discredit game for all these years, while having no good ideas of their own.

The same truth-deniers in Congress who succeeded in convincing a conscience-damaged base that Obama was not really American, and a secret Muslim to boot, are always quick to tag progressive programs as socialist. They never actually define socialist otherwise, they would have to propose abolishing Medicare altogether, which would anger voters, which wouldnt allow them to retain their sinister clubs power over the popular mind. Yet hear ye, hear ye irony heaped upon irony when stalwart Republicans are shown pie charts of the wealth distribution in two unidentified countries and theyre asked which theyd prefer to live in, a whopping 90 percent choose Sweden, with all its socialism, over the United States. (And 94 percent of Democrats went the same way.)

You heard that right.Americans want a society where liberty equals fairmindedness. Where relative social equality is operational, not an empty boast. Yet last November, they succumbed to a vapid con man and voted in billionaire rule.

Americans say they love democracy because its the perfection of political liberty, but its not liberty when the conservative candidate shouts at voters that theyre persecuted by a federal government that cares more about illegals than about them. Reagans apocryphal welfare queen in her fancy limousine was just the beginning of this hijacking of votes through cruel deceptions. Reagan believed his own stories. This new 70-year-old, the limp entertainer, doesnt seem to know what to believe. Living moment to moment in a nightmare of his own creation, lacking apparent impulse control, he just seems to spew forth self-servingly, snicker and sneer. He orders others to pick up what he drops, as he moves on to the next moral outrage.

Voters were conned by promises and provocations, which were humorlessly prattled over the course of a year and delivered in pathetically simplistic form, la, Youll be so tired of winning What will the future say of us? What would a John Adams, a Thomas Jefferson, have made of the present phenomenon? (Were often asked.) That Americans are enjoying the liberty to be deceived?

The Adams persuasion commands us to believe that even the most conservative members of the GOP possess enough of a conscience to accept some of the facts when the facts show how many good Americans are getting hurt by their policies. The language of deception look the other way so you dont see how were exploiting you should be embarrassing at some point to all but the most shamelessly dissimulating of corporation-protecting, so-called conservatives. (Dont hold your breath for Ted Cruz.) After all, in private, theyre always telling Democratic colleagues what they can never say in public without revealing the con and losing it all.

To the end of his days, Tim Pickering never wavered. He was simply a nasty guy. Todays Republicans dont seem to be big on apologizing either. With a moral compass like weve seen since Reagan, its no surprise that theyd oppose the Republican idea of health care as soon as Obama touched it whence it suddenly acquired its scary socialist tendencies.

Can caring people do something to stop this? We can think of one way: Seize back the narrative. Wherever its spoken or written, reclaim libertyas it ought to be understood: an expansive, not restrictive, quality of life; a privilege shared by the great majority of citizens, with respect for minimum-wage laborers, for underpaid, under-provisioned public school teachers in our poorer communities; and respect for patriotic immigrants.

Make it plain that the GOP is not at all in the business of expanding liberty, that theyre strictly in the business of making policies that allow their donors to hoard money. They keep wages down as union membership declines, income inequality rises. They ignore inequality of opportunity in public education. They ignore all that would help to rebuild the middle class. They trash the environment. They defraud voters when they gerrymander districts so as to win a majority of congressional seats with a minority of popular votes.

Liberty is meant to be spread, not hoarded. Its the governments responsibility to make liberty available to those ordinarily deprived of it, not to destroy individualism, but to protect it. It was Franklin Roosevelt who said that.

Bernie Sanders has noted that more than half of all new income generated in this country goes to the top 1 percent. You have got to think about the morality of that, he said, pointing out that justice is denied amid a proliferation of millionaires and billionaires, while at the same time America has the highest rate of childhood poverty of any major country on Earth. How can we? I want you to go into your hearts, how can we talk about morality, about justice, when we turn our backs on the children of our country?

Sandersmade those bold, searing remarks at did you guess Liberty University.

The happiness and prosperity of our citizens demands an apology from antisocial conservative politicians. Which wont arrive until they become comfortably retired ex-GOP congressmen who continue to rest easy with a cushy government healthcare plan that our less privileged taxpaying citizens lack access to. Thats when conscience finally kicks in. George W. Bush paints portraits of soldiers now. Maybe thats what old John Adams meant when he credited wrongheaded politicians with the capacity to recover a social conscience.

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Listening to John Adams: The true conception of liberty is far larger than mean-spirited conservative ideology - Salon

BIIF volleyball: Ka’u outlasts Christian Liberty in five-setter – Hawaii Tribune Herald

BIIF volleyball: Ka'u outlasts Christian Liberty in five-setter
Hawaii Tribune Herald
Play volleyball in the Canefire fieldhouse gym, and there's a good chance the school with 44 high school students could take you down or at the very least put up a good fight. Ka'u outlasted Christian Liberty 27-25, 17-25, 20-25, 25-19, 15-13 in a BIIF ...

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BIIF volleyball: Ka'u outlasts Christian Liberty in five-setter - Hawaii Tribune Herald

Liberty Media Loses Malaysian Grand Prix One Year Early – Forbes


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Liberty Media Loses Malaysian Grand Prix One Year Early
Forbes
Formula One auto racing has lost the Malaysian Grand Prix from its 2018 calendar, one year before its contract was due to expire and just weeks after American investor Liberty Media took the wheel of the series. It is the first major development since ...

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Liberty Media Loses Malaysian Grand Prix One Year Early - Forbes

GOP Calls on Trump to Honor Promise to Defend Religious Liberty … – Townhall

|

Posted: Apr 07, 2017 9:09 PM

In February President Trump made a promise to people of faith across the fruited plain.

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

My administration will do everything in its power to defend and protect religious liberty in our land, the president said at the National Prayer Breakfast.

When he campaigned for the White House he stated that the first priority of my administration will be to preserve and protect our religiously liberty.

The First Amendment guarantees our right to practice our faith as we see fitall the time, always, wherever, he went on to say.

It was partly because of that promise that Trump garnered the support of evangelical Christians. I wrote about this very promise in my book,The Deplorables Guide to Making America Great Again.

And now House Republicans are calling on President Trump to fulfill the promise he made to Christians on the campaign trail.

I have exclusively obtained a letter signed by more than 52 House Republicans urging the president to sign an executive order on religious liberty.

We look forward to coordinating with your administration on these efforts so that critical religious liberty and conscience protections may finally be restored to millions of Americans who have been harmed and left unprotected for far too many years, the letter states.

The executive order would ensure that Americans are not coerced to buy abortion coverage under Obamacare exchange plans not to mention other and other health coverage that violates a persons faith and conscience.

A handful of Republican senators also crafted a letter to the president on April 3 warning that religious groups on college campuses are being banned, threatened or forced to change their bylaws.

The free exercise of religion rings hollow if individuals do not have the ability to live out their faith without fear of repercussion from the government, the senators wrote.

The federal government has pushed organizations like the Little Sisters of the Poor to change their health care plan to offer services that violate the Little Sisters deeply held religious beliefs, the senators rightly point out.

Lawmakers also fear that Christians might face persecution as a result of the Supreme Courts decision to redefine marriage.

They referenced comments made by then Solicitor General Donald Verrilli during oral arguments in Obergefell v. Hodges.

Verrilli stated that nonprofit tax status of religious colleges could be jeopardized should they live out their traditional beliefs about marriage, the letter read.

I commend these Republican lawmakers for having the courage to write the letters to President Trump.

And now I call on President Trump to deliver on his campaign promise. Catholics and Evangelicals need protection from the militant secularists.

Do the right thing, Mr. President.

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GOP Calls on Trump to Honor Promise to Defend Religious Liberty ... - Townhall

‘Duck Dynasty’ family speaks at Liberty’s convocation – WSET

by Catherine Doss & Chris Hoffman

The Robertson family at LU (WSET)

LYNCHBURG, Va. (WSET) - The Robertson family of "Duck Dynasty" spoke at Liberty University's convocation Friday morning.

The family talked about their relationship with God, their family values, and how their hit show got started.

The family owns and operates Duck Commander, an outdoor great supplier specializing in duck calls.

Part of the series finale was filmed on the university's campus, and featured John Luke and Mary Kate Robertson, who are now sophomores.

Thousands packed the Vines Center at Liberty University to hear the family Friday morning.

"The fact that I was just able to see my childhood heroes up on the stage, it's really incredible," freshman student Peter Christofides said.

We ran into another fan, junior Chase Orlandini, who was dressed in head-to-toe camouflage with a fake beard to look like a Robertson.

"I wasn't doing this just to get attention," he said with a smile. "I just wanted to show them how much of a fan I am."

Aside from the laughter, there was a serious message for students, and it was patience.

"When I went to college, I was a P.E. major," Willie Robertson said. "I thought I was going to be a pastor perhaps, and I had no idea the road that we would take."

This resonated with students in attendance.

"I got some goals I want to set for myself," Christofides said. "I know they are not going to happen right away."

Junior Austin Case said, "It's a huge thing for me because I'm about to graduate in a year, and [to] really know that no matter where I'm going to be, the Lord is going to prosper me."

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'Duck Dynasty' family speaks at Liberty's convocation - WSET

Relative: Family expected to recover after Liberty Bridge wreck – Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

The young family badly hurt in a Liberty Bridge crash this week is recuperating under intensive care, buoyed by a deluge of support, a relative said Friday.

Brandon and Maureen White Ciampaglia of Brookline were driving home with their infant son, Liam, when the three-car wreck happened Tuesday afternoon. They had just left West Penn Hospital in Bloomfield after she gave birth four days earlier, said her brother-in-lawDante A. Ciampaglia, 35, of New York.

They are all three expected to recover, go home and then begin the long, long process of healing and getting better, Mr. Ciampaglia said.

He said the couple were awake and talking Friday, when they saw each other for the first time since the collision. Both are at UPMC Mercy. A date for their return home had not been set.

Its tough because theyre both in pain. But them being together you could tell that was a huge relief to both of them, Mr. Ciampaglia said. He said Liam, a strong, strong little man, is making progress at Childrens Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC.

Pittsburgh police were still investigating Friday the crash and its cause, public safety spokeswoman Sonya Toler said. They have said another motorist drove a sport utility vehicle in the wrong lane near the Downtown end of the bridge.

That driver was upgraded to good condition Tuesday at UPMC Presbyterian, according to police. They have not released his name. A third driver declined medical attention after the crash. Authorities closed the bridge over the Monongahela River for more than three hours after the crash.

Since then, to support the Ciampaglia family, donors have given more than $28,000 to an online fundraising effort backed by the National Association of EMS Educators. The campaign at http://www.gofundme.com/brandons-campaignwill help this family get back on their feet when they rebuild their lives together, said Joann Freel, executive director at the association.

The outpouring of prayers and donations has really touched us, Mrs. Freel said.

Brandon Ciampaglia, 34, is communications coordinator at the Mount Lebanon-based association while his wife, 33, is the customer service coordinator at Pittsburgh CLO. Their relatives have been at Mercy and Childrens hospitals pretty much nonstop, Dante A. Ciampaglia said.

He said the fundraiser contributions will help the family navigate the coming months. Their expenses will include medical care and a new car, Mr. Ciampaglia said.

They also will need assistance once they get home, he said.

We all appreciate the thoughts and prayers and well wishes and kind words and everything that were getting from everywhere, Mr. Ciampaglia said.Its really been overwhelming, in the best possible way, to see the outpouring of love for this family and these three people.

Adam Smeltz: 412-263-2625, asmeltz@post-gazette.com, @asmeltz.

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Relative: Family expected to recover after Liberty Bridge wreck - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Liberty AD hiring expected next week – The Gazette: Eastern Iowa Breaking News and Headlines

Apr 6, 2017 at 4:00 pm | Print View

NORTH LIBERTY Imagine building a high school staff from scratch.

The administration. The teachers. The cooks and custodians.

And the coaches.

Its kind of like putting together a fantasy team, said Scott Kibby, principal at Iowa City Liberty.

Only, this is reality.

Liberty is less than five months from its grand opening, the beginning of the 2017-18 school year.

The staff is beginning to come together. Kibby has completed 47 hires, on the way to somewhere in the 60s.

To be honest, I thought it would be smoother and easier, Kibby said. Its been challenging, trying to get all the pieces to fit.

Were focusing on our teaching staff first. I think our priorities are correct.

There has been no shortage of quality candidates. For the assistant-principal spot, for example, there were 121 applicants, a pool that will be trimmed to five finalists.

Kibby announced his first varsity coaching hire March 25. Jeff Kelley has been selected as the softball coach for the summer of 2018.

Monday is interview day for the five finalists for the athletics-director position, and Kibby said he expects to announce a hire by Wednesday. He also said that the head volleyball coach will be (announced) soon.

Liberty will not fill a varsity football squad until fall of 2018, and Kibby said filling that position will wait for another year or so.

Only next years freshmen and sophomores that live inside the Liberty boundaries must attend the new school. Juniors and seniors have the option to attend Liberty or Iowa City West.

Kibby estimates 30 seniors, 90 juniors, 275 sophomores and 275 freshmen at Liberty in the fall.

That would mean an enrollment of 395 in grades 10-12 in 2017-18, which would make Liberty the 75th largest school in the state according to the states BEDS Documents, and place the Lightning in Class 3A for most boys sports, 4A for most girls sports.

Assuming continued class sizes at 275, Libertys BEDS enrollment would grow to 640 in 2018-19, 825 in 2019-20.

Liberty will compete as an independent in its first year, then along with Western Dubuque will join the Mississippi Valley Conference in 2018-19.

l Comments: (319) 368-8857; jeff.linder@thegazette.com

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Liberty AD hiring expected next week - The Gazette: Eastern Iowa Breaking News and Headlines

Walter Williams: ‘If Liberty Dies in America, It Will Be Dead for All … – CNSNews.com

Walter Williams: 'If Liberty Dies in America, It Will Be Dead for All ...
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We Americans bear an awesome burden to preserve liberty, says economist and George Mason University Professor Walter Williams, and if liberty dies in ...

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Walter Williams: 'If Liberty Dies in America, It Will Be Dead for All ... - CNSNews.com

Passenger from Carnival Liberty cruise ship missing – WPTV.com

Fire Weather Warningissued April 8 at 3:31PM EDT expiring April 8 at 8:00PM EDT in effect for: Brevard, Indian River, Martin, Okeechobee, Saint Lucie, Volusia

Fire Weather Warningissued April 8 at 12:29PM EDT expiring April 8 at 8:00PM EDT in effect for: Broward, Miami-Dade, Monroe, Palm Beach

Fire Weather Warningissued April 7 at 8:11PM EDT expiring April 8 at 8:00PM EDT in effect for: Brevard, Indian River, Martin, Saint Lucie, Volusia

Fire Weather Warningissued April 7 at 8:11PM EDT expiring April 8 at 8:00PM EDT in effect for: Lake, Okeechobee, Orange, Osceola, Seminole, Volusia

Fire Weather Warningissued April 7 at 2:28PM EDT expiring April 8 at 8:00PM EDT in effect for: Lake, Okeechobee, Orange, Osceola, Seminole, Volusia

Fire Weather Warningissued April 7 at 2:28PM EDT expiring April 8 at 8:00PM EDT in effect for: Lake, Okeechobee, Orange, Osceola, Seminole, Volusia

Fire Weather Watchissued April 7 at 2:28PM EDT expiring April 8 at 8:00PM EDT in effect for: Lake, Okeechobee, Orange, Osceola, Seminole, Volusia

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Passenger from Carnival Liberty cruise ship missing - WPTV.com