Monthly Archives: September 2013

Personal genome, public health

Posted: September 19, 2013 at 7:41 am

Public release date: 18-Sep-2013 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Leah Ramsay lramsay@jhu.edu 202-642-9640 Johns Hopkins Medicine

The National Human Genome Research Institute has selected the Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics to establish a "Center of Excellence" to study the ethical, legal and social implications (ELSI) of genomic research. The Berman Institute will receive three years of funding to build on its multidisciplinary expertise in the ethics of human genomics and public health, bringing the fields together in the largely unexplored but crucial study of genomics as applied to infectious disease. The center will be known as GUIDE: Genomic Uses in Infectious Disease & Epidemics.

Pandemic scares in recent years, from SARS to influenza to MERS, necessitate this research, says Gail Geller, a co-principal investigator for GUIDE and faculty member at the Berman Institute. "Infectious diseases account for a significant proportion of illness and death worldwide, across all aspects of society," Geller notes. Recent research has suggested that a person's genes can play a significant role in the severity of viral infection, and even a predisposition to death from flu.

"It is important to begin to map out and address the ELSI issues involved in the use of genomic information for major public health areas like infectious disease, as the science in this area is moving quickly," says Jeffrey Kahn, co-principal investigator with Geller and deputy director at the Berman Institute.

As an exploratory Center for Excellence in ELSI Research (CEER), the GUIDE Center will bring together a multidisciplinary team of Hopkins' global leaders in diverse fields including genomics, immunology and infectious disease, bioethics, epidemiology, public health preparedness, education, and health policy, in keeping with the intention that CEERs create opportunities for trans-disciplinary research. This team will initially explore public health genomics in two case studies of human-to-human infectious disease: pandemic influenza and Hepatitis C.

The research team will examine how the genome affects a person's response to a flu vaccine as well as to the virus. "Although vaccinations are generally safe and highly effective interventions for disease prevention, understanding more about the genetics of an individual's response may help us design vaccines that maximize protective efficacy while minimizing the potential for adverse events," says Ruth Karron, a co-investigator in the CEER and director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Immunization Research. She says that in the future, genomic information could result in the production and use of vaccines with more refined understanding of effects on particular subpopulations, which will necessitate decisions about prioritization, privacy, opt-out policies and genotyping for flu-resistant first responders.

The project will also assess the ELSI issues arising from recent Hepatitis C studies, including research conducted by GUIDE co-investigators Chloe Thio and Priya Duggal, showing that individuals with a specific variation of the gene IFNl3 had five times better response to treatment and three times better chance of clearing the virus spontaneously, without treatment. These discoveries raise important questions about disclosure of genetic status as well as the use of expensive therapies in those individuals carrying the mutation. Currently Hepatitis C is found in virtually every region of the world, with an estimated 123 million people chronically infected.

"Hepatitis C is a timely and crucial case study in the necessity of clear ethical guidance for rapidly advancing public health genomics," says Geller. "Should individuals with the IFNl3 variation receive different treatments and priority? Should reporting the IFNl3 variation be mandatory?" Kahn adds that "These are among the questions the Berman Institute's CEER will address in our Hepatitis C case study, with the goal of producing an ethical framework that can apply more widely to genomics in the context of infectious disease."

At the conclusion of the three-year grant period, GUIDE will apply to transition from an exploratory to a specialized CEER, a designation that would come with an additional five years of funding from the National Human Genome Research Institute.

Read the original here:
Personal genome, public health

Posted in Genome | Comments Off on Personal genome, public health

Living with Eczema – Catherine’s First Year – – Video

Posted: at 7:41 am


Living with Eczema - Catherine #39;s First Year -
Our baby has been struggling with severe eczema since she was 2 months old. This video summarizes her first year milestones. Credits: Eternal Hope by Kevin M...

By: Tria Ca

Read the rest here:
Living with Eczema - Catherine's First Year - - Video

Posted in Eczema | Comments Off on Living with Eczema – Catherine’s First Year – – Video

Psoriasis Diet — What Foods you Should be Eating – Video

Posted: at 7:41 am


Psoriasis Diet — What Foods you Should be Eating
Click here: http://www.sniplink.info/RHAR56 for *much* more information.

By: Mitch Love

Go here to see the original:
Psoriasis Diet — What Foods you Should be Eating - Video

Posted in Psoriasis | Comments Off on Psoriasis Diet — What Foods you Should be Eating – Video

New Treatment For Psoriasis – Video

Posted: at 7:41 am


New Treatment For Psoriasis
Click here: http://www.sniplink.info/RHAR56 for *much* more information.

By: Mitch Love

Read more:
New Treatment For Psoriasis - Video

Posted in Psoriasis | Comments Off on New Treatment For Psoriasis – Video

Psoriasis therapeutics market driven by the increasing uptake of biologics

Posted: at 7:41 am

The psoriasis therapeutics market has been forecast to increase at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 4.06% through 2016, driven by the increasing uptake of biologics, and the increased focus on using combination therapies for treating psoriasis.

Psoriasis is an immune-mediated disease that affects the skin. It is typically a lifelong condition. There is currently no cure, but various treatments can help to control the symptoms.

Psoriasis occurs when the immune system mistakes a normal skin cell for a pathogen, and sends out faulty signals that cause overproduction of new skin cells.

There are a number of different therapeutic options for psoriasis. Typically topical agents are used for mild disease, phototherapy for moderate disease, and systemic agents for severe disease.

In recent years the enhanced understanding of the molecular basis underlying psoriasis has led to the introduction of biological drugs, providing a new effective treatment option for this disease. Biologics aim key steps in the pathogenesis of psoriasis and can be categorised into three main categories: TNF alpha inhibitors, T cell inhibitors, and IL-12/IL-23 inhibitors.

Biologics are manufactured proteins that interrupt the immune process involved in psoriasis. Unlike generalised immunosuppressant therapies such as methotrexate, biologics focus on specific aspects of the immune function leading to psoriasis.

These drugs (interleukin antagonists) are relatively new, and their long-term impact on immune function is unknown, but they have proven effective in treating psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis.

When the disease is more severe, topic therapy products such as cream can be used in combination with oral medications or light therapy. For instance, Anthralin is sometimes used in combination with UV light. Light therapy is also used sometimes in combination with medications.

Furhtermore, in Goeckerman therapy UVB treatment and coal tar treatment are used together as it is more effective than single therapy.

Key players currently dominating the psoriasis therapeutics market include Amgen Inc., Pfizer Inc., Janssen Biotech Inc., and Abbvie Inc.

Read this article:
Psoriasis therapeutics market driven by the increasing uptake of biologics

Posted in Psoriasis | Comments Off on Psoriasis therapeutics market driven by the increasing uptake of biologics

"Bleep Ops 2" – HILARIOUS Black Ops 2 Censorship (Girl Voice, and Fake Fights!) #4 – Video

Posted: at 7:40 am


"Bleep Ops 2" - HILARIOUS Black Ops 2 Censorship (Girl Voice, and Fake Fights!) #4
"Bleep Ops 2" - HILARIOUS Black Ops 2 Censorship (Girl Voice, and Fake Fights!) - If you enjoyed this video please don #39;t forget to hit that like button, subs...

By: GameMinds

Excerpt from:
"Bleep Ops 2" - HILARIOUS Black Ops 2 Censorship (Girl Voice, and Fake Fights!) #4 - Video

Posted in Censorship | Comments Off on "Bleep Ops 2" – HILARIOUS Black Ops 2 Censorship (Girl Voice, and Fake Fights!) #4 – Video

Internet Religious Censorship: Pakistani public suffers consequences of country’s YouTube ban – Video

Posted: at 7:40 am


Internet Religious Censorship: Pakistani public suffers consequences of country #39;s YouTube ban
Many of Pakistan #39;s companies, educators and students say they have been negatively impacted by the YouTube ban that was imposed almost a year ago to block vi...

By: JewishNewsOne

See the original post here:
Internet Religious Censorship: Pakistani public suffers consequences of country's YouTube ban - Video

Posted in Censorship | Comments Off on Internet Religious Censorship: Pakistani public suffers consequences of country’s YouTube ban – Video

Herberger Censorship Will Have Long-Term Impact

Posted: at 7:40 am

It's canceled.

Mike Ford

The Sodomite by Mike Ford

Ronnie Ray Mendez's Maria

That's what a box office clerk told artist Ronnie Ray Mendez on Friday, August 30, when he arrived at Herberger Theater Center to pick up promotional postcards for the exhibition "Prime Example," a group show curated by local gallery owner (and longtime New Times contributor) Robrt Pela and scheduled to open less than a week later, on September 5.

"An e-mail would've been nice," Mendez says.

Later that Friday, Herberger did send out an e-mail to its subscribers. The e-mail reiterated that "Prime Example" was canceled. Instead of the new exhibit featuring works from Mendez, Mike Ford, Suzanne Falk, and Geoffrey Gersten, "Show and Tell," curated by Phoenix artist Peter Bugg, would continue through early October.

The e-mail offered no further explanation, and the arts community cried foul.

"Welcome to Phoenix, where censorship is okay," Pela wrote on the show's Facebook event page. "And where corporate gallery owners apparently don't care that artists have spent months creating art for an upcoming exhibit."

Although it took a few days for all the details to come out, it's clear that "Prime Example" was canceled because Herberger objected to the content of some of the artwork Pela had chosen. Herberger officials have denied in multiple statements that this was an act of censorship, offering three different explanations as to why the show, which was on the books for two years, was abruptly called off.

Read more here:
Herberger Censorship Will Have Long-Term Impact

Posted in Censorship | Comments Off on Herberger Censorship Will Have Long-Term Impact

Ron Paul Smokes Bernanke – Video

Posted: at 7:40 am


Ron Paul Smokes Bernanke

By: Boobys Biggy

Read the original post:
Ron Paul Smokes Bernanke - Video

Posted in Ron Paul | Comments Off on Ron Paul Smokes Bernanke – Video

Crysis III EP2 – Post Human – Video

Posted: at 7:40 am


Crysis III EP2 - Post Human
Boas pessoal! Cá está o segundo episódio da nossa série de Crysis 3, desta vez com a primeira missão do jogo! Somos Prophet, soldado Nanosuit em busca da ver...

By: QuickXGamer

See the original post:
Crysis III EP2 - Post Human - Video

Posted in Post Human | Comments Off on Crysis III EP2 – Post Human – Video