Why Doctors Should Start Prescribing Downward Dog

TIME Health medicine Why Doctors Should Start Prescribing Downward Dog Getty Images Complementary medicine is gaining traction with adults and kids alike

Americans are slowly but surely embracing complementary medicinealternative practices to go with standard treatmentaccording to new data from the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS).

Two new surveys show that while the overall use of complementary health approaches has remained relatively stable over the years at 34%, certain types are rapidly gaining popularity, especially yoga. Other common complementary practices are taking dietary supplements, doing tai chi and qi gong, meditating and getting chiropractic care.

More and more children are also doing yoga, the survey finds, and they typically use it for ailments like back or neck pain, nerve conditions and anxiety. Interestingly, the majority of children didnt just practice yoga for exercise, but for meditation and deep breathing. Other new research is showing that when kids practice mindfulness and meditation, they gain a range of health benefits from more self-control to higher math scores.

The low cost and the ability to practice in ones own home may contribute to yogas growing popularity, the authors write. Furthermore, public school systems are beginning to incorporate yoga into their fitness programs, which may accelerate use by children in the future.

Even though many complementary practices are ancient in other countries, its still relatively new in the United States. Medical institutions are increasingly willing to meet patients halfway with therapies that wont cause harm, as long as practices are safe and dont ignore the need for conventional medicine and pharmaceuticals when necessarily. In January 2014, the Cleveland Clinic opened a Chinese herbal therapy clinic, and experts at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota say the appetite for more integrative medicine in the hospital setting is growing. Acupuncture is a huge practice [here], says Dr. Brent Baur, director of the Mayo Clinic Complementary and Integrative Medicine Program. Right now our demand for acupuncture outstrips our ability to meet that demand probably three to one. We cant even come close to keeping up.

I think [interest] is being propelled by economics because our health care system is in such desperate trouble, says Dr. Andrew Weil, founder of the Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine and a pioneer of integrative medicine in the U.S. The great promise of integrative medicine is that it can lower costs while increasing outcomes. It does that by emphasizing lifestyle medicine and by bringing into the mainstream techniques that do not involve expensive technology.

In a World Health Organization survey of 129 countries, 80% recognize the use of acupuncture. The U.S. may be catching up; other research shows that about four in 10 U.S. adults and one in nine kids use some form of complementary and alternative medicine.

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Why Doctors Should Start Prescribing Downward Dog

Penn Medicine Completes 1,000th Non-Surgical Aortic Valve Replacement Procedure

PHILADELPHIA Penn Medicine physicians have completed their 1,000th transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) procedure, marking an important milestone in the health systems treatment of aortic stenosis, a narrowing of the hearts aortic valve. Penn Medicine physicians started performing the TAVR procedure in November 2007 at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania and in November 2009 at Penn Presbyterian Medical Center. The 1,000th TAVR was completed during the week of February 2, 2015.

This milestone reinforces our ongoing commitment to provide the most advanced treatment options to our patients, said Joseph E. Bavaria, MD, vice chief of Cardiovascular Surgery and co-director of the Transcatheter Valve Program at Penn Medicine. TAVR allows patients who arent candidates for traditional open-heart surgery to still benefit from valve replacement and the resulting improved quality of life.

The TAVR procedure uses a catheter inserted through a small incision in the groin or in the left side of the chest to place a new aortic valve where the patients native valve was, pushing the faulty valve aside. Today, Penn Medicine performs three to four TAVR procedures each week, providing improved quality of life for patients suffering from severe aortic stenosis symptoms like chest pain, shortness of breath, fainting and fatigue. Without treatment, more than half of severe aortic stenosis patients die within two years.

Penn Medicine was the first health system in the region to offer TAVR. Researchers at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania were among the leaders of early TAVR trials and remain on the cutting edge of TAVR technology, which allows a broader range of patients to undergo the procedure. TAVR was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in November 2011, following trials among patients who would not have been eligible for traditional open-heart surgery due to their age or other medical conditions.

Its a huge advantage to patients that Penn Medicine has been in on the ground floor of the TAVR research and has done so many of these procedures, said Howard C. Herrmann, MD, director of Penn Medicines Interventional Cardiology Program and co-director of the Transcatheter Valve Program. Its also extremely rewarding as a physician to be able to help more of my patients, some with no other alternatives, live longer, better lives.

Before TAVR, patients who werent candidates for open-heart surgery would have to suffer from aortic stenosis symptoms with no hope of improvement, said Wilson Y. Szeto, MD, associate chief of cardiovascular surgery at Penn Presbyterian Medical Center and surgical director of transcatheter cardio-aortic therapies. But by giving these patients another option, theyre able to get back to their favorite activities, from playing with grandchildren to traveling the world.

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Penn Medicine is one of the world's leading academic medical centers, dedicated to the related missions of medical education, biomedical research, and excellence in patient care. Penn Medicine consists of theRaymond and Ruth Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania(founded in 1765 as the nation's first medical school) and theUniversity of Pennsylvania Health System, which together form a $4.3 billion enterprise.

The Perelman School of Medicine has been ranked among the top five medical schools in the United States for the past 17 years, according toU.S. News & World Report's survey of research-oriented medical schools. The School is consistently among the nation's top recipients of funding from the National Institutes of Health, with $392 million awarded in the 2013 fiscal year.

The University of Pennsylvania Health System's patient care facilities include: The Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania -- recognized as one of the nation's top "Honor Roll" hospitals byU.S. News & World Report; Penn Presbyterian Medical Center; Chester County Hospital; Penn Wissahickon Hospice; and Pennsylvania Hospital -- the nation's first hospital, founded in 1751. Additional affiliated inpatient care facilities and services throughout the Philadelphia region include Chestnut Hill Hospital and Good Shepherd Penn Partners, a partnership between Good Shepherd Rehabilitation Network and Penn Medicine.

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Penn Medicine Completes 1,000th Non-Surgical Aortic Valve Replacement Procedure

Regional Medical Campus of Penn State College of Medicine to Welcome New Dean

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Newswise Dr. Jeffrey G. Wong will join Penn State Hershey as associate dean for medical education at the University Park Regional Campus of Penn State College of Medicine on July 1. In this role, Wong will provide leadership and oversight for medical student and resident teaching activities in State College, including clinical rotations for medical students, innovations in the educational program, student assessments and faculty recruitment.

Wong joins Penn State from the Medical University of South Carolina, where he is Senior Associate Dean for Medical Education Emeritus and a professor of medicine. He received his M.D. from the University of Utah School of Medicine and completed his internship and residency in internal medicine at Duke University Medical Center. Following his residency, he served on faculty at Duke in the Division of General Internal Medicine, attaining the rank of assistant professor and serving as director of the Primary Care Residency Training Program and the Medical Outpatient Clinic for the medical residents.

In 1996, Wong was recruited to Washington University in St. Louis, where he was appointed associate professor of medicine and chief of medical education in the Division of General Medical Sciences. He also directed the Medical Residents' Clinics at Barnes-Jewish Hospital. In 1998, he was recruited to the Yale Primary Care Residency Program, where he served as the director of the Henry S. Chase Outpatient Center as well as other educational administrative roles in the Yale Residency Program. In 2004, he was recruited to the Medical University of South Carolina.

Wong is nationally active in the American Association of Medical Colleges and in the Society of General Internal Medicine. He has attained fellowship status in the American College of Physicians. Wong's interest is in general internal medicine, faculty development in clinical teaching skills, and medical education in general.

Wong succeeds Dr. Michael Flanagan, professor of family and community medicine at Penn State Hershey, vice chair of family and community medicine at the Regional Campus and medical director of the Penn State Hershey Medical Group Park Avenue, who has been serving as interim associate dean since last July.

Located on the campus of Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center in Hershey, Pa., Penn State College of Medicine boasts a portfolio of nearly $82 million in funded research. Projects range from the development of artificial organs and advanced diagnostics to groundbreaking cancer treatments and understanding the fundamental causes of disease. Enrolling its first students in 1967, the College of Medicine has more than 1,600 students and trainees in medicine, nursing, the health professions and biomedical research on its campus.

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Regional Medical Campus of Penn State College of Medicine to Welcome New Dean

Witness Project: Livia Gyarmathy, Hungary (Full Interview) – Video


Witness Project: Livia Gyarmathy, Hungary (Full Interview)
Growing up under constant fear and suspicion in communist Hungary, Livia Gyarmathy was ordered by the state to become a chemist, despite wanting to go to medical school. She eventually became...

By: Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation

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Witness Project: Livia Gyarmathy, Hungary (Full Interview) - Video

WSU med school bills advance – Wed, 11 Feb 2015 PST

OLYMPIA Washington State University is two steps closer to starting its own medical school inSpokane.

Legislative committees in each chamber agreed overwhelmingly Tuesday that a state law restricting medical education to the University of Washington should be changed. But both indicated tough decisions lie ahead on paying for a new school. The bills would give WSU the authority to offer medical education at the Spokane campus but dont set aside money to doit.

The Senate Higher Education Committee unanimously sent the medical school authorization bill to the full Senate after rejecting on a party-line vote an amendment

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OLYMPIA Washington State University is two steps closer to starting its own medical school inSpokane.

Legislative committees in each chamber agreed overwhelmingly Tuesday that a state law restricting medical education to the University of Washington should be changed. But both indicated tough decisions lie ahead on paying for a new school. The bills would give WSU the authority to offer medical education at the Spokane campus but dont set aside money to doit.

The Senate Higher Education Committee unanimously sent the medical school authorization bill to the full Senate after rejecting on a party-line vote an amendment that tried to sort out a funding dispute between the two universities over the WWAMI medical school training they shared in Spokane until lastfall.

Funding questions will be decided later by the budget writers, Republicanssaid.

Ways and Means is the proper venue for those discussions to be held, Sen. Mike Baumgartner, R-Spokane, said. I do believe it will be workedout.

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WSU med school bills advance - Wed, 11 Feb 2015 PST

WSU medical school in Spokane gets big boost in Legislature

Washington State University would be able to launch a medical school in Spokane under legislation passed Tuesday in Olympia by the Senate and House Higher Education Committees.

State Sen. Michael Baumgartner, R-Spokane: Wants medical school in Spokane.

The legislation rescinds a restriction, imposed 98 years ago, that the University of Washington would have the only public medical school in the Evergreen State.

We have a severe shortage of doctors in rural and under-served communities, particularly in Eastern Washington. Spokane has the existing facilities and Washington State is ready to go today on opening a new school at minimal cost, said state Rep. Marcus Riccelli, D-Spokane, a sponsor of the legislation.

Washington State must still get money to launch its new med school. It is asking $2.5 million to begin the accreditation process.

The legislation would allow WSU to expand an existing medical training facility at its Spokane branch campus into a separately accredited medical school.

It passed unanimously in the Senate Higher Education Committee. My colleagues recognize the increasing need for more doctors in this state and the need to expand our medical education in order to meet that need, said state Sen. Michael Baumgartner, R-Spokane, the legislations chief Senate sponsor.

Despite pushback from some at the UW Medical School, the legislation appears to have a strong tailwind in Olympia. It has 65 cosponsors in the 98-member House, and 17 cosponsors among 49 state senators.

Arguing to repeal the 1917 restriction, sponsors have made the point that states smaller than Washington have more medical schools.

The House Higher Education Committee cleared the bill by a 12-1 vote. State Rep. Gerry Pollett, D-Seattle, tried to amend the legislation to allow for a one-year study of the states medical needs. He lost on a voice vote.

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WSU medical school in Spokane gets big boost in Legislature

Two panels approve WSU med school bills – Tue, 10 Feb 2015 PST

OLYMPIA Bills that would allow Washington State University to start a medical school in Spokane cleared committees in both houses of the Legislature today with a unanimous vote in the Senate and a 12-1 vote in the House.

Before passing the bill, the Senate Higher Education Committee rejected on a party line vote a provision that called for the University of Washington to receive money for it says it is owed for medical school operations in Spokane that was channeled through WSU.

Republicans said the bill was about giving WSU the authority to offer medical education as one of its

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OLYMPIA Bills that would allow Washington State University to start a medical school in Spokane cleared committees in both houses of the Legislature today with a unanimous vote in the Senate and a 12-1 vote in the House.

Before passing the bill, the Senate Higher Education Committee rejected on a party line vote a provision that called for the University of Washington to receive money for it says it is owed for medical school operations in Spokane that was channeled through WSU.

Republicans said the bill was about giving WSU the authority to offer medical education as one of its majors, and funding questions should be decided by the budget committee.

Ways and Means is the proper venue for those discussions to be held, Sen. Mike Baumgartner, R-Spokane, said. I do believe it will be worked out.

The House committee rejected a proposal that would have delayed the authorization for a year while a study was conducted on the need for expanded medical services and the best way to fill it. Another amendment that would have required WSU to prove it would teach students standard practices on reproductive health and end-of-life issues was withdrawn.

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UCF trustees consider tuition hike for medical school

University of Central Florida trustees are considering whether to raise medical students' tuition and fees by nearly 5 percent for the 2015-16 year.

The board's committee discussion Wednesday on the issue comes the same week as Gov. Rick Scott's announcement that one of his top priorities this year is to prevent universities from increasing tuition at medical and law schools and other graduate programs.

"We have to keep higher education affordable for our students and while we have made considerable steps to curb the rising cost of undergraduate tuition it must be a priority to hold the line on graduate school tuition this year," Scott said in a statement.

Under Scott's proposal, public universities would be banned from raising tuitions for graduate and professional programs beyond the rate that is set as of July 1.

But UCF officials argued they are responsible stewards of taxpayer money for the medical school, a growing program still in its infancy and among the cheapest medical programs in the state even if the new fees were approved. The estimated $800,000 in increased revenue would pay for hiring four or five new faculty members.

"I understand the pressures on keeping tuition lower. It's a noble ambition," President John Hitt told the trustees committee meeting. "I don't want us to get to the point where we can't hire the faculty we need to do a first-rate job of educating students."

This academic year, Florida residents pay $29,680 in tuition and fees while non-residents are charged $56,554 to attend the Lake Nona medical campus. Under the new proposal, residents' total increase would jump to $31,066 while non-residents would pay $59,283. The overall increase would come from a $31.86 hike in the cost per credit hour as well as a rise in other student fees.

The proposal was disheartening, although "understandable," said Arnaldo Perez, a UCF sophomore who leads a student group for aspiring doctors.

"It just makes your career even tougher. You'll have to worry about paying your debt off on top of life," said Perez, 19, of Puerto Rico, who hopes to be a pediatrician and attend the UCF medical school in 2017.

But he said hiring more faculty seemed like a necessary cost for the growing school and, he acknowledged, "Medical school is not free."

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IU School of Medicine Opens Web Portal to Encourage Industry-Academic Collaboration

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Newswise INDIANAPOLIS -- The Indiana University School of Medicine has launched an initiative and accompanying web site to encourage more collaboration between private industry and researchers at the medical school.

Creation of the Industry Collaboration Portal is one of the school's programs to move research discoveries out of the laboratory and develop them into new products that will benefit patient care and improve health, said Jaipal Singh, Ph.D., director of the portal.

"Many of the discoveries we make at the university are not getting out into use in society. Collaborations with industry will help commercialize them," Dr. Singh said.

The need for such a program also reflects changes in the research environments in both academia and in private industry, Dr. Singh said. On the academic side funding from the National Institutes of Health, which is has been the primary source of money for university biomedical research, is declining. That trend has research institutions broadening their search for funds.

Private industry, meanwhile, has been changing its research model over the past decade as costs rise and patents expire, said Dr. Singh. As a result businesses are more interested in collaboration and are looking to academic scientists for discoveries that could translate to new therapies.

"So we're not turning our back on basic science research, but we're providing opportunities for our scientists to take the next steps toward commercialization and translational research," he said.

"Creating the Industry Collaboration Portal is a critical part of our efforts to encourage a more entrepreneurial environment at the school that will benefit both our investigators and society," said Mervin C. Yoder, M.D., associate dean for entrepreneurial research and Richard and Pauline Klingler Professor of Pediatrics.

With the web site -- https://icp.medicine.iu.edu/ -- along with personal outreach, the Industry Collaboration Portal will link industry scientists with their academic counterparts working on similar questions. The web site includes access to a database of school of medicine scientists with expertise in translational research: the process of moving discoveries from the lab to the patient bedside.

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IU School of Medicine Opens Web Portal to Encourage Industry-Academic Collaboration

Liberty snaps 12-game skid, beats Campbell 73-60

Updated FEB 10, 2015 10:46p ET

LYNCHBURG, Va. (AP) David Andoh had 16 points and seven rebounds, and Theo Johnson added 15 and eight to help Liberty snap a 12-game losing streak by beating Campbell 73-60 on Tuesday night.

Ryan Kemrite added 14 points on 5-of-8 shooting. Kemrite tied a career-high, which he set Friday, with four 3-pointers.

Kyre' Hamer's 3-pointer about a minute into the second half gave Campbell (9-17, 3-10 Big South) its biggest lead of the game, 40-32, but Johnson hit a 3 and Kemrite added three more during a 14-0 run which gave Liberty the lead for good.

Campbell, at one point in the second half, went 11 minutes between field goals while Liberty (7-19, 1-12) made 12 of 18 (66.7 percent) second-half field goals.

The Flames made 8 of 12 overall from 3-point range.

Hamer led Campbell with 16 points and seven rebounds. Reco McCarter added 13 points, six rebounds and five assists.

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Liberty snaps 12-game skid, beats Campbell 73-60

First in series of new tenant announcements named for Liberty Center

LIBERTY TWP.

The first new tenant announcements of 2015 at Liberty Center were made Tuesday, as the mega $350 million retail, residential and office complex now under construction prepares to open in October.

Gourmet burger restaurant Flip Side and The Funny Bone Comedy Club and Restaurant were named by the projects developer Steiner + Associates as the latest tenants to join the lineup for Liberty Center, one of the biggest developments in Butler County history.

We hope to bring as many first-to-market retailers as we can, but there are also some very well-known brand names not in Butler and Warren counties yet that we hope to bring as well, said Anne Mastin, executive vice president of retail real estate for Steiner.

The first phase of Liberty Center opening this fall consists of about 1.1 million-square-feet of space being built in Liberty Twp. at the intersection of Liberty Way, Ohio 129 and Interstate 75. Three anchor tenants Dillards department store, dinner-and-movie theater CineBistro and Dicks Sporting Goods have been announced along with AC Hotels by Marriott for opening at the site. Previously announced restaurants include Brio Tuscan Grille, Cheesecake Factory, Kona Grill and Pie & Pints.

A series of new tenant announcements are expected to be made this year ahead of Liberty Centers opening. According to Liberty Twp. trustees, the number of new business openings will about double the townships business base.

Without naming any more specific tenants, anxious shoppers can expect to hear in the coming months about junior fashion retailers, and contemporary fashion retailers for young professional generations to be signed, Mastin said.

Flip Side, a chef-driven burger, shake and craft beer concept using exclusively Ohio raised, grass-fed beef, will open its first southwestern Ohio location at Liberty Center, she added.

Theres so much competition in that category, so we wanted to make sure we have the right burger user for Liberty Center, she said.

The Funny Bone Comedy Club and Restaurant offers stand-up comedy in a showroom along with a complete menu of food and drinks, according to Steiner.

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First in series of new tenant announcements named for Liberty Center

A Short Introduction to Libertarianism: The Libertarian Mind with David Boaz – Video


A Short Introduction to Libertarianism: The Libertarian Mind with David Boaz
Libertarianismthe philosophy of personal and economic freedomhas deep roots in Western civilization and in American history, and it #39;s growing stronger. Two long wars, chronic deficits,...

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A Short Introduction to Libertarianism: The Libertarian Mind with David Boaz - Video