Daily Archives: March 12, 2017

Retailers Turn to AI to Integrate Marketing Channels – Business News Daily

Posted: March 12, 2017 at 8:13 pm

Credit: Milles Studio/Shutterstock

Want to see better marketing results? You might want to jump on the artificial intelligence bandwagon.

A February 2017 study of 200 businesses showed that retailers plan on expanding their marketing, particularly social media and mobile marketing, and incorporating artificial intelligence to better personalize the customer's journey as well as analyze results.

The study was conducted by Sailthru, a cross-channel management platform company. When discussing what marketing channels best met marketing goals, 56 percent of businesses surveyed said their websites generate the most online revenue, with email marketing and mobile coming in next at 18 percent and 7 percent. Social media trailed at 4 percent.

Even so, email, social media and digital advertising nearly tied as the favored channels for acquiring new customers. For retention, email, followed by mobile, showed the most promise, retailers said. Thus, retailers intend to invest more in social media advertising, email automation and mobile marketing in 2017. [See Related Story: AI Comes to Work: How Artificial Intelligence Will Transform Business]

"Email is a tried-and-true digital marketing tactic. Revenue attributed directly to email varies between 30 to 50 percent for our retail clients," said Marielle Habbel, director of customer strategy and optimization for Sailthru, in a webinar discussing the results.

Habbel found it surprising that revenue generated by mobile was so low, considering how pervasive it is, and that social media, while very popular, did not show the return on investment that other channels produce. However, she said the one of the most sought-after innovations for 2017 is integrating social and mobile with email to create more powerful campaigns.

To do that, and to improve personalization of the customer's buying journey (another goal of companies), Habbel said businesses need to incorporate artificial intelligence programs.

"There's no way to bring the automation to life or bring the personalization to life without the AI," she said.

Most retailers (66 percent) already use AI in some way, with 37 percent using it for search and 33 percent using it to improve product recommendations for customers. Programmatic advertising and data analysis tied for third at 26 percent each.

Seventy-three percent of retailers felt ready for cross-channel campaigns. The rest said their companies faced roadblocks, including organizational or customer data silos that prevented smooth collaboration, and a lack of integrated technologies. In addition, more than a quarter felt their departments didn't understand how to create a cross-channel strategy to maximize resources.

Even with successful companies, one of the resource challenges for retailers is finding and retaining human talent. Habbel noted two issues: a high turnover of employees in marketing resulting in time spent training people on software, and a difficulty finding employees who are comfortable with both story and technology.

"There's a small (number) of people in the market that are able to combine those two skill sets," she said.

Marketing experts agree that "story," or content marketing that goes beyond advertising messages, is vital for successful online campaigns in email or social media.

Online marketing has shown itself successful: 81 percent of retailers met or exceeded their marketing goals in 2016, according to the survey. As companies look to the future, marketing will continue to grow, particularly for those who have already had a taste of success. Retailers will push their efforts into cross-platform integrations and personalization, particularly to incorporate artificial intelligence programs with people able to bring in the human element through content.

Karina Fabian is a full time writer and mother of four. By day, she writes reviews of business products and services for Top Ten Reviews and articles for Business News Daily. As a freelancer, she writes for Catholic educational sites and school calendars and teaches writing skills. She has 17 published novels of science fiction and fantasy. Learn more at http://fabianspace.com.

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4 Ways AI Is Changing Healthcare – insideBIGDATA

Posted: at 8:13 pm

Artificial intelligence is progressing rapidly. Advancements in deep learning have propelled the idea of an AI-powered world from a faraway fantasy to a fast-approaching reality. AI, whether it be in the form of personal assistants on our smartphones or data miners who predict our spending habits, is becoming more deeply integrated with our everyday lives. Whats more, were starting to see artificial intelligence make its way into larger applications.

Perhaps the most exciting applications are seen in nascent AI healthcare technologies. According to CB Insights, there are currently over 100 AI startups focused on healthcare, a sharp rise considering there were less than two dozen only a few years ago. These startups are innovating routine checkups, drug discovery and oncology research. Their technologies could assist in administering treatment to undeveloped nations and could improve existing systems in the developed world. AI and healthcare could quite possibly be a beautiful marriage, one with an enormously positive effect on society.

Here are the 4 ways AI is changing healthcare:

1. Diagnosis is becoming automated

Utilizing deep learning, the process by which machines learn and recognize complex patterns, startups are building AI systems that can more effectively analyze and diagnose illness. The Butterfly Network, a startup that secured over $100 million in funding in 2014, is working on improving ultrasound technology. Ultimately, they want their software to provide accurate diagnosis by using AI, the cloud and their 3D imaging technology.

Butterfly Network isnt the only one making strides in AI diagnosis. Another company, iCarbonX, is endeavoring to mine health data to create a big data platform that will help prevent and eliminate disease. Larger corporations are also taking an interest. IBM is backing Pathway Genomics, a company that takes small blood samples from high-risk patients in the hopes of providing early detection of cancer.

2. AI is making treatment available to more people

Microsoft is currently working on a project that aims to democratize cancer diagnosis. Their AI program analyzes cancer cells, a laborious task that previously made it an impossibility for doctors to treat a large number of cancer patients at once. Another one of their projects aims to take the guesswork out of radiological treatments, improving radiologists readings of patient data. Both technologies reduce the time doctors have to spend analyzing large amounts of data, making it possible for them to cater to more patients in less time.

3. Virtual follow-up care is alleviating the burden on nurses

Chronic pain afflicts millions. Their care requires numerous check-ups and check-ins. This requires an immense amount of work for both patients and nurses. Thankfully, companies like Sense.ly are employing artificial intelligence to lessen the hassle of outpatient treatment and care. Sense.ly has created a lifelike avatar with the ability to answer questions and assess symptoms. It also has the ability to track patient activity and adjust recommendations based on behavioral data, creating a more personalized prognosis. Systems like this reduce the hours clinicians have to work on a single case without neglecting the patients needs.

4. Its helping advance drug discovery

Big data analysis is being used to greatly reduce the time it takes researchers to find solutions to complex problems. twoXar is using predictive analysis to accelerate drug discovery like never before. And theyre not the only players. Atomwise, one of the first deep learning technologies developed to accelerate drug discovery, recently released its findings on new treatments for the Ebola virus.

Artificial intelligence in healthcare is truly amazing. It isnt limited to big business, either. Thanks to open-source projects like the python-based OpenCog, young companies have the ability to delve into the world of AI. These companies, big and small, are using AI to reshape healthcare. Their efforts to integrate AI into healthcare could greatly reduce cost and make quality, affordable healthcare available to a greater number of people.

Programmers, business leaders and healthcare providers are working to create even more powerful and precise AI systems. As they continue to revolutionize the healthcare industry, we can help shape AIs effect on our communities. Use this list as a jumping off point to get more educated about AI in healthcare and join the conversation about the rise of AI, and its effects on future doctors and patients.

Contributed by: Anthony Coggine is a HR professional turned business analyst. He hasspent more than 5 years as a recruitment consultant in a variety of industries, primarily focused on consumer technology and research.

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Artificial Intelligence Still Needs a Human Touch – Wall Street Journal (subscription)

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Wall Street Journal (subscription)
Artificial Intelligence Still Needs a Human Touch
Wall Street Journal (subscription)
Artificial intelligence has been flexing its creative muscles recently, making images, music, logos and other designs. In most cases, though, humans are still very much a part of the design process. When left to its own devices, AI software can create ...

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Is artificial intelligence our doom? – GuelphToday

Posted: at 8:13 pm

Artificial intelligence could enhance the decision-making capacities of human beings and make us much better than we are. Or, it could destroy the human race entirely. We could soon find out.

In an engrossing lecture Friday morning, political scientist and software developer Clifton van der Linden said the world may be on the brink of a super machine intelligence that has the full range of human intelligence, as well as autonomous decision-making. And that emerging reality has many of the great human minds worried about our future.

Van der Linden is the co-founder and CEO of Vox Pop Labs, a software company that developed Vote Compass, a civic engagement application that shows voters how their views align with those of candidates running for election. Over two million people have used it to gauge where they stand with candidates in recent federal and provincial election campaigns.

He was the keynote speaker at the inaugural University of Guelph Political Science and International Development Studies Departments' Graduate Conference, which had as it theme Politics in the Age of Artificial Intelligence.

The conference was held all day Friday at The Arboretum Centre, and attracted political science graduate students from across the province.

Van der Linden has his finger on the pulse of current AI development. It is a rapid, frenetic pulse that is changing so exponentially that few are able to fathom the implications or consequences of it for political systems and society in general. But they could be disastrous.

Technology, and especially AI technology, is evolving at an unprecedented rate, he said. Last year, Googles GO computer beat the worlds most dominant GO master. It was believed to be an impossibility. There are currently self-driving cars in Pittsburgh, and weapons that can target and strike without human intervention.

AI is emerging in the medical and legal fields, and some believe it could one day replace judges in courtrooms, delivering better trial decisions than fallible human judges. Some even envision a time when sex workers will be replaced by robots.

AI is changing the landscape in extraordinary ways, he said. Many see it as our biggest existential threat.

One area where artificial intelligence is exploding is in the world of Big Data. And one highly influential branch of that is in the gathering of personal information based on Facebook, Twitter and Google activity.

Information is formulated by machine algorithms into profiles for the purpose of strategically targeting so-called programmatic advertising campaigns. Our profiles are then auctioned off in milliseconds to advertisers using AI bidding technology.

We are all being tracked throughout the Internet, he said. Wherever we visit online, we leave evidence of our visit.

It is now believed that such technology was used during the recent American election that brought Donald Trump to power, whereby swing voters were specifically targeted for election advertisements based on their Facebook likes and other online activity, van de Linden said.

This type of microtargeting advertising could become a staple of future election campaigns, specifically targeting swing voters that are likely to go out and vote.

On the bright side, while human beings are believed to be incapable of perfectly rational choices, that is what intelligent machines do best. AI has great potential as a supplement to our decision-making processes, enabling us to optimize our preferences and make more effective choices.

It is difficult to know where AI technology is leading us, but it is clear that it is now being used to amass power and influence among the elite of society, van der Linden concluded.

Government policy based in a strong understanding of the implications of the technology, is necessary. Critical inquiry and robust research is a must.

Van der Linden ended his presentation with a call to action to those present to take on the mantle of investigation into AIs repercussions for the electoral system and democracy.

The conference explored a broad range of subjects throughout the day, includinginternational development, food security, and populist politics.

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Art By Artificial Intelligence: AI Expands Into Artistic Realm – Wall Street Journal (blog) (subscription)

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3/12/2017 8:00AM Recommended for you Legal Eagles Love 'My Cousin Vinny' 3/12/2017 1:05PM Breast Cancer: 'Cold Capping' to Prevent Hair Loss 3/10/2017 2:45PM Ferrari's New 812 Superfast 3/8/2017 9:34AM Healthcares Toughest Age Bracket 3/10/2017 7:00AM Which Lightbulb Should You Buy? Think in Lumens 3/10/2017 5:24PM Tot Throws Tantrum in Front of the Queen of England 3/10/2017 4:20PM Wikileaks Vault 7: What's in the CIA Hacking Toolbox? 3/10/2017 5:19PM Depeche Mode's Dave Gahan Discusses New Album and Tour 3/11/2017 7:00AM What Adam and Eve Teach Us About Love 3/10/2017 5:11PM What Can 'Star Trek' Teach Us About Our Work Life? 3/10/2017 3:45PM What Funding Cuts for the Arts Buys the Military 3/10/2017 12:40PM Legal Eagles Love 'My Cousin Vinny' 3/12/2017 1:05PM

"My Cousin Vinny" has been a favorite of real-life members of the legal profession since it debuted 25 years ago. Photo: 20th Century Fox/Everett Collection

Breast cancer patients worried about hair loss have new hope thanks to technology known as "cold capping." Dr. Elizabeth Comen, medical oncologist at New York's Memorial Sloan Kettering, discusses its efficacy along with other advancements such as egg freezing and immunotherapy with WSJ's Tanya Rivero. Photo: iStock

With more than 300 feet of waterfront space, this house is the perfect port for any boat owner.

WSJ's Paul Vigna and Nick Timiraos analyze the February employment report, representing the first full month of the Trump administration. They discuss whether the upbeat payrolls and hourly wages figures are likely to give the Federal Reserve the green light to carry out several interest rate increases this year. Photo: iStock

Researchers at Ohio State University say they've found a way to use food waste as an alternative to some of the carbon black in tires. Photo: OSU/Tell Collective

Uber Technologies says it will stop using technological tools such as "Greyball" to evade government officials seeking to identify and block the service's drivers. WSJ's Lee Hawkins explains. Photo: Associated Press

Clashes erupted between police and supporters of South Korea's impeached leader Park Geun-hye after the country's Constitutional Court ruled to eject her from office. At least two people have died in the protests, police said. Photo: Reuters

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Can Artificial Intelligence (AI) Improve the Customer Experience? – Customer Think

Posted: at 8:13 pm

Artificial Intelligence (AI) is hot. One breathless press release predicted that by 2025, 95% of all customer interactions will be powered by AI.

AI is not new. Its not just about bots for self-service. Or self-driving cars. In general usage it means the usage of advanced analytics more than process automation based on rules. Can include the processing of natural language (e.g. Alexa, Siri, Watson), decision making using complex algorithms, and machine learning where the algorithms get better over time.

Heres one definition from AlanTuring.net:

Artificial Intelligence (AI) is usually defined as the science of making computers do things that require intelligence when done by humans. AI has had some success in limited, or simplified, domains. However, the five decades since the inception of AI have brought only very slow progress, and early optimism concerning the attainment of human-level intelligence has given way to an appreciation of the profound difficulty of the problem.

And another from Wikipedia:

Artificial intelligence (AI) is intelligence exhibited by machines. In computer science, the field of AI research defines itself as the study of intelligent agents: any device that perceives its environment and takes actions that maximize its chance of success at some goal. Colloquially, the term artificial intelligence is applied when a machine mimics cognitive functions that humans associate with other human minds, such as learning and problem solving (known as Machine Learning).

IBM has been pushing Watson (of Jeopardy fame), Salesforce.com launched Einstein last year, and my inbox is full of press releases and briefing requests this year from vendors big and small, all touting AI.

My question is: Can AI improve the Customer Experience? Please answer yes or no and explain in the comments below. Examples appreciated!

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Top U.S. hospitals promote unproven medicine with a side of … – PBS – PBS NewsHour

Posted: at 8:11 pm

Hospitals affiliated with Yale, Duke, Johns Hopkins, and other top medical research centers also aggressively promote alternative therapies with little or no scientific backing. Illustration by Molly Ferguson for STAT

Theyre among the nations premier medical centers, at the leading edge of scientific research.

Yet hospitals affiliated with Yale, Duke, Johns Hopkins, and other top medical research centers also aggressively promote alternative therapies with little or no scientific backing. They offer energy healing to help treat multiple sclerosis, acupuncture for infertility, and homeopathic bee venom for fibromyalgia. A public forum hosted by the University of Floridas hospital even promises to explain how herbal therapy can reverse Alzheimers. (It cant.)

This embrace of alternative medicine has been building for years. But a STAT examination of 15 academic research centers across the U.S. underscores just how deeply these therapies have become embedded in prestigious hospitals and medical schools.

Some hospitals have built luxurious, spa-like wellness centers to draw patients for spiritual healing, homeopathy, and more. And theyre promoting such treatments for a wide array of conditions, including depression, heart disease, cancer, and chronic pain. Duke even markets a pediatric program that suggests on its website that alternative medicine, including detoxification programs and botanical medicines, can help children with conditions ranging from autism to asthma to ADHD.

Weve become witch doctors, said Dr. Steven Novella, a professor of neurology at the Yale School of Medicine and a longtime critic of alternative medicine.

STATs examination found a booming market for such therapies: The clinic at the University of California, San Francisco, is growing so fast, its bursting out of its space.

CHART: See which alternative therapies are on offer at 15 top academic hospitals

[If a hospital is] offering treatment thats based on fantasy, it undermines the credibility of the institution.

Just in the past year, the teaching hospital connected to the University of Florida began offering cancer patients consultations in homeopathy and traditional Chinese herbal medicine. Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia launched an institute whose offerings include intravenous vitamin and mineral therapies. And the University of Arizona, a pioneer in the field, received a $1 million gift to boost practitioner training in natural and spiritual healing techniques.

Even as they count on these programs to bring in patients and revenue, several hospitals were reluctant to talk to STAT about why theyre lending their distinguished names to unproven therapies.

Duke Health declined repeated requests for interviews about its rapidly growing integrative medicine center, which charges patients $1,800 a year just for a basic membership, with acupuncture and other treatments billed separately.

MedStar Georgetown quietly edited its website, citing changes to its clinical offerings, after a reporter asked why it listed the energy healing practice of reiki as a therapy for blood cancer. Cleveland Clinic struggled to find anyone on its staff to defend the hospitals energy medicine program, ultimately issuing a statement that its responding to the needs of our patients and patient demand.

And the director of an alternative medicine program at another prestigious hospital declined to speak on the record out of fear, he said, that his remarks would be construed as fake news and stir a backlash.

The rise of alternative therapies has sparked tension in some hospitals, with doctors openly accusing their peers of peddling snake oil and undermining the credibility of their institutions.

By promoting such therapies, Novella said, physicians are forfeiting any claim that we had to being a science-based profession.

As for patients? Theyre being snookered, he said.

Online promotions with little room for nuance

The counterargument: Modern medicine clearly cant cure everyone. It fails a great many patients. So why not encourage them to try an ancient Indian remedy or a spiritual healing technique thats unlikely to cause harm and may provide some relief, if only from the placebo effect?

Yes, as scientists, we want to be rigid. But me, as a physician, I want to find whats best for a patient. Who am I to say thats hogwash? said Dr. Linda Lee.

A gastroenterologist, Lee runs the Johns Hopkins Integrative Medicine and Digestive Center, which offers acupuncture, massage therapy, and reiki a therapy that the centers website describes as laying on hands to transmit Universal Life Energy to the patient.

Yes, as scientists, we want to be rigid. But me, as a physician, I want to find whats best for a patient. Who am I to say thats hogwash?

Lee and others who promote alternative therapies are careful to say that they can supplement but cant replace conventional treatments. And they make a point of coordinating care with other doctors so that, for instance, patients dont get prescribed herbal supplements that might interact badly with their chemotherapy.

Here at UF, we do not have alternative medicine. We do not have complementary medicine. We have integrative medicine, said Dr. Irene Estores, medical director of the integrative medicine program at the University of Florida Shands Hospital in Gainesville, Fla.

But while those cautions may come through in the clinic, the hospitals also promote alternative medicine online often, without any nuance.

READ MORE: Alternative therapies go to med school

Dukes Integrative Medicine store, for instance, sells Po Chai Pills that are touted on the hospitals website as a cure for everything from belching to hangovers to headaches. The site explains that taking a pill harmonizes the stomach, stems counterflow ascent of stomach qi, dispels damp, dispels pathogenic factors, subdues yang, relieves pain. None of that makes sense in modern biomedical terms.

Thomas Jefferson University Hospitals website touts homeopathic bee venom as useful to relieve symptoms for arthritis, nerve pain, and other conditions. The site does tell patients that the biological mechanism for the treatment is unexplained but asserts that studies have been published in medical journals showing homeopathic medicines may provide clinical benefit.

Asked about the therapy, Dr. Daniel Monti, who directs the integrative health center, acknowledged that the data is largely anecdotal, and said the hospital offers the treatment only rarely, when there are few other options. But those caveats dont come through on the website.

Novella gets alarmed when he sees top-tier hospitals backing therapies with scant evidence behind them. Patients only want [alternative medicine] because theyre being told they should want it. They see a prestigious hospital is offering it, so they think its legitimate, said Novella.

The perpetuation of these practices is a victory of marketing over truth, said Steven Salzberg, a biomedical engineer at Johns Hopkins who lectures in the medical school. If a hospital is offering treatment thats based on fantasy, it undermines the credibility of the institution.

READ MORE: Essentially witchcraft: A former naturopath takes on her colleagues

The debate burst into the public view earlier this year when the medical director of the Cleveland Clinics Wellness Institute which markets a variety of alternative therapies published an article raising discredited theories linking vaccines to autism.

Cleveland Clinics chief executive, Dr. Toby Cosgrove, disavowed the article. And the clinic told STAT last week that it will take down its online wellness store and stop selling homeopathy kits.

But Cosgrove has stood up for the general principle of offering alternative treatments.

The old way of combating chronic disease hasnt worked, Cosgrove wrote in a column posted on the hospitals website. We have heard from our patients that they want more than conventional medicine can offer.

Illustration by Molly Ferguson for STAT

A booming market for natural therapies

Theres no question that patients want alternative medicine. Its a $37 billion-a-year business.

The typical American adult spent about $800 out of pocket in 2012 on dietary supplements and visits to alternative providers, such as naturopaths and acupuncturists, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Hospitals have taken note. A national consortium to promote integrative health now counts more than 70 academic centers and health systems as members, up from eight in 1999. Each year, four or five new programs join, said Dr. Leslie Mendoza Temple, the chair of the consortiums policy working group.

In most cases, insurers wont cover alternative therapies theres simply not enough evidence that they actually work so patients pay out of pocket: $85 for acupuncture, $100 for reiki, $38 for pills made from thyme and oregano oils that promise to harmonize digestive and respiratory function.

READ MORE: Homeopathic remedies harmed hundreds of babies, families say, as FDA investigated for years

To be sure, not all such integrative medicine clinics are big profit centers. Many are funded by philanthropists, and some hospitals say their programs operate at a loss but are nonetheless essential to woo patients in a highly competitive marketplace. If they failed to offer natural therapies, some hospital executives fear they would lose a chance to attract patients who need more lucrative care, such as orthopedic surgeries or cancer treatments.

The integrative medicine center at Thomas Jefferson, for instance, is part of an enterprise strategy for growth and development, Monti said.

The people running the hospitals are doctors, but they also have MBAs. They talk of patients as customers. Customers have demands. Your job is to sell them what they want, said Arthur Caplan, a bioethicist at New York Universitys medical school. Too often, he said, the attitude is, Were damn well going to do it if the guys down the street are doing it.

Weve become witch doctors [forfeiting] any claim that we had to be a science-based profession.

While most hospitals declined to give specific revenue figures, STAT found indications of rapid growth.

Were literally bursting. We have to convert office space to clinic exam rooms, said Shelley Adler, who runs the Osher Center for Integrative Medicine at the University of California, San Francisco. It offers a wide range of services, including Chinese herbal medicine, massage therapy, and Ayurveda, an ancient healing system from India based on the belief that health results from a balance between the mind, body, and spirit.

The center is on pace to get more than 10,300 patient visits this fiscal year, up 37 percent from 2012. Its expanding its clinical staff by a third.

Duke Universitys integrative medicine clinic, a stunning space with arching wood ceilings and an indoor garden, has seen strong growth: Total visits jumped 50 percent in 2015, to more than 14,000, Dr. Adam Perlman, the executive director, told IntegrativePractitioner.com. (He declined to talk to STAT.)

The centers membership count also jumped, up 25 percent to 885, Perlman said. If all members paid the list price, that would bring in more than $1 million a year just for primary care.

READ MORE: A supplement maker tried to silence this Harvard doctor and put academic freedom on trial

At the University of Pittsburghs Center for Integrative Medicine, meanwhile, our volume pretty much has increased steadily, even when weve had recessions and financial downturns, said Dr. Ronald Glick, the medical director. The center now treats about 8,000 patients a year.

Many hospitals have also expanded into more general wellness offerings, with classes in healthy cooking, tai chi, meditation, and art therapy. UCSF offers a $375 class on cultivating emotional balance (and a free class on laughter yoga). Mayo Clinic sells a $2,900 signature experience, which includes consultations with a wellness coach.

And the Benson-Henry Institute for Mind Body Medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital offers specialized stress management services to help patients deal with conditions including cancer, infertility, and menopause. John Henry, the owner of STAT, has contributed funding to the Benson-Henry Institute.

Wellness programs which are designed to ease stress and encourage healthy behaviors are seen by many clinicians and hospitals as key to slowing Americas epidemic of chronic disease. They dont tend to draw sharp criticism, except for their cost.

Its the alternative therapies promoted as a way to treat disease that raise eyebrows.

Illustration by Molly Ferguson for STAT

Energy healing takes root

Despite their deep wells of medical expertise, many top hospitals are offering to help treat serious medical problems with reiki a practice based on the belief that lightly touching patients can unleash a cosmic energy flow that will heal them naturally.

STAT found that it is widely used by academic medical centers, including Johns Hopkins, Yale, the University of Pennsylvania, and Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital, part of Partners HealthCare in Boston.

So, wheres the evidence supporting it?

There is none, according to a division of the National Institutes of Health that funds research into alternative medicines. It says the practice has not been shown to be useful for any health-related purpose and adds that there is no scientific evidence that the natural healing energy its based on even exists.

Asked about the Cleveland Clinics promotion of reiki, Dr. Richard Lang, the recently named interim director of the clinics Wellness Institute, said he hadnt had a chance to think about it. I dont know that I could give you a plus or minus on that, he said. Lang served as a vice chair of the wellness institute for nearly a decade before taking the top post.

[Hospital executives] talk of patients as customers. Customers have demands. Your job is to sell them what they want.

Pressed for a more substantive answer, the clinic sent a statement saying it offers energy medicine as a complementary therapy, not as a replacement solution. But its website only briefly alludes to a patients broader care team in describing a full range of emotional and physical issues that can be treated with energy therapies, including autoimmune diseases, migraines, hormonal imbalances, and cancer treatment support and recovery.

Academic medical centers often boast that theyre more rigorous in evaluating alternative therapies and weeding out scams than a for-profit wellness center might be.

The important thing about practicing in an academic center is that we must hold ourselves to certain standards, said Estores, the medical director at the University of Floridas integrative medicine clinic.

At the University of Pittsburgh, Glick echoed that sentiment: Were an academic institution [so] were offering services that have greater evidence basis [and] scientific explanation.

READ MORE: Should researchers study bunk science? Among respected scientists, a debate ensues

But that evidence isnt always rigorous.

The University of Florida, for instance, is using Facebook to advertise a herbal medicine workshop for providers and the public that promises to answer questions including, How can we stabilize or reverse Alzheimers disease?

Asked about the evidence for that statement, Susan Marynowski, the herbalist presenting the workshop, cited several papers and a book chapter that she said showed herbs, in conjunction with lifestyle adjustments, could reverse Alzheimers-associated memory loss. However, at least two papers were small collections of case studies published in a journal with a reputation for less-than-rigorous review. (Marynowski said she knew the studies size and design limited the strength of their conclusions, but that she was not aware of the journals reputation.)

At Pittsburgh, the integrative medical center does take care to note on its website that alternative therapies generally have not been subjected to the same level of research as standard medical approaches.

But the site then goes on to promote dozens of treatments for everything from ADHD to whiplash, saying they have appeared to be beneficial in this and other complementary medicine clinics. (Glick noted that the body of research had grown since he wrote the caveat on the website in 2003.)

Illustration by Molly Ferguson for STAT

Its not black and white

Perhaps the most prevalent alternative treatment STAT found on offer is acupuncture. Its promoted for more than a dozen conditions, including high blood pressure, sinus problems, infertility, migraines, and digestive irregularities.

A 3,000-year-old Chinese therapy, acupuncture is based on the belief that by stimulating certain points on the body, most often with needles, practitioners can unlock a natural healing energy that flows through the bodys meridians. Research suggests it helps with certain pain conditions and might help prevent migraine headaches but it also suggests that the placebo effect may play an important role.

Its value in treating other conditions is uncertain, according to the NIHs center on integrative medicine.

READ MORE: Vitamin IVs promise to erase jet lag and clear your mind. Wheres the evidence?

Several major insurers, including Aetna, Anthem, and regional Blue Cross Blue Shield affiliates, cover acupuncture as a treatment for chronic pain and nausea. But the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services wont pay for acupuncture, dismissing the scientific evidence as insufficient.

Still, its important for physicians to keep an open mind, said Lang, the interim director of the Cleveland Clinic Wellness Institute.

He said, for example, that he used to avoid referring patients for acupuncture, until he saw the benefit it provided to some of them. I have seen it work in some chronic pain situations, said Lang. It can be very helpful. If it doesnt work, I dont know that youve lost anything. If it does, you do get to a better place.

If it doesnt work, I dont know that youve lost anything. If it does, you do get to a better place.

And while the evidence of its efficacy is not ironclad, neither is the evidence for various pharmaceutical therapies that are routinely provided by hospitals and covered by insurance. Some of those solutions, such as opioids to treat pain, have resulted in addiction and harm to patients.

Advocates of alternative medicine say its difficult to test some alternative therapies through rigorous clinical trials, primarily because treatment techniques vary from patient to patient. (The federal government does, however, spend roughly $120 million a year to fund research through the NIH National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health.)

They note, too, that traditional doctors sometimes stray from proven treatments, for instance when they prescribe medicines off-label for conditions the drugs have not been approved to treat.

We do use things that arent necessarily 100 percent evidence-based, but I would argue thats also true within all of medicine, said Dr. Jill Schneiderhan, co-director of the University of Michigans integrative family medicine program. I feel like its not black and white.

This article is reproduced with permission from STAT. It was first published on March 7, 2017. Find the original story here.

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Top U.S. hospitals promote unproven medicine with a side of ... - PBS - PBS NewsHour

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Know your supplements unregistered brands flood markets – DAWN.com

Posted: at 8:10 pm

It has become a trend that instead of eating fruits, vegetables and meat, a large number of people prefer food supplements without realiasing their side effects.

Most of the food supplements available in the market are not only unregistered but also contain steroids that can damage body organs such as brain, kidneys, liver etc.

Steroids were developed for the treatment of different diseases, especially among elderly people.

Some steroids also behave like male sex hormones and doctors prescribe them for treating problems such as late puberty as well as a significant muscle loss in cancer and Aids patients. But theyre often used illegally by athletes, sportsmen and bodybuilders.

Besides, a large number of people who have nothing to do with sports also use the food supplements, vitamins, minerals etc.

Media coordinator for the Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences (Pims) Dr Waseem Khawaja told Dawn that most people believed that they should have food supplements and vitamins to remain healthy.

People use food supplements and other medicines containing steroids without realising their side effects.

They gain weight temporarily but because of the use of steroids their body organs stop working. I have seen patients who used steroids and later their kidneys, liver and even brain stopped working. They remained on ventilators till their death, Dr Waseem said.

He said people should eat normal diet as normal people did not require any food supplement or vitamins.

There is a lack of awareness due to which parents approach doctors with the complaint that their children do not eat sufficient food. They insist that multivitamins and food supplements should be suggested for their children.

He said a majority of steroids were sold under the name of alternative medicines but people used them without realising their side effects.

The food supplements and vitamins are sold for thousands of rupees. People can get the same amount of vitamins and minerals from fruits and meat without spending a huge amount of money.

He also said people should understand that food supplements are given to those elderly patients who cannot digest or eat normal food.

A normal person never requires food supplements, he said.

An official of the Ministry of National Health services (NHS) said because of the unavailability of rules and regulations the sale of alternative medicines could not be regulated.

Last year, Secretary Health Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Mohammad Abid Majeed wrote a letter to Secretary Ministry of National Health Services (NHS) Ayub Sheikh raising the issue of unregistered medicines being sold in the market.

He claimed that from January to June 2016 as many as 534 nutrition/alternative medicines were analysed by the provincial drug laboratories.

It was found that there were ingredients which become a reason for severe damages to health.

Mr Majeed requested that rules should be formulated to address the issue.

However, the NHS ministry official said even allopathic medicines were sold in the name of herbal products but at very high rates due to which a number of companies had stopped manufacturing allopathic medicines and shifted to alternative medicines.

He said cod liver oil was given to children, women and elderly people as it was good for the bones.

However, the bottle of cod liver oil, which used to be available for Rs150, has disappeared from the market and the same oil is now being sold for Rs1,200 under the name of herbal oil.

A bottle of surbex T (vitamin) is available for Rs50 in the market but the same medicine is also being sold for Rs1,500 in the name of an alternative drug.

Allopathic medicines are reliable as they are made under licensing and in a controlled environment but no one knows where and how herbal medicines and food supplements are prepared and if they contain steroids.

He said even a number of skin whitening creams can be hazardous.

A number of times we have received complaints that skin whitening creams are using mercury which can cause cancer.

However, whenever it is decided to take action against the manufacturers the latter say they have nothing to do with the creams and it should be treated as cosmetics. I believe that any commodity which makes clinical claims should be treated as a drug, he said.

Chief Executive Officer of Drug Regulatory Authority of Pakistan (Drap) Dr Mohammad Aslam said the use of steroids in food supplements was a very sensitive issue and Drap was working on it.

Our teams time to time test the products. We received complaints about skin whitening creams after which 15 products were checked but all of them were found free of mercury, he said.

Dr Aslam said there was a lack of awareness due to which people used food supplements.

They should eat natural food instead of having medicines. Even eating a fruit is much better and safer than drinking a fruit juice, he said.

In reply to a question about the use of steroids by bodybuilders, Dr Aslam said they used steroids to strengthen their mussels.

The human body has 60pc water but some bodybuilders use medicines to reduce their weight by dehydration to participate in the competition of a category of their choice, he said.

Published in Dawn, March 12th, 2017

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Re-defining hyperlocalism – Leinster Express

Posted: at 8:09 pm

By Killenard based award winning Garden Designer Brian Burke.

So, what do you know about hyperlocalism? Not much, if anything. Well in that case you are in the same boat as I was in up until last Saturday.

Last Saturday night at about quarter past nine when most fully functioning adults are out in pursuit of some form of real world alcohol related cultural enrichment, I was at home opening a tweet from a Garden Design magazine which I imagined was just about to open the door for me to the realm of hyperlocalism.

Narnia, as I thought, for the adult organic enthusiast.

Right so what is it? Well, therein lies the source of much confusion and ensuing hilarity.

Because I assumed from the context, a tweet from a Garden Design magazine, and without reading the follow up link that what we were dealing with here was a recently concocted term to cover all those zeitgeisty organic matters such as local sourcing of materials, concern over the provenance of food items, avoidance of the carbon production associated with movement of goods a long way.

All those ultra-cool, eco things.

But never one to be accused of being negligent when it comes to fact checking I jumped over to dictionary.com to get the definitive low down.

Except you wont find any definition on dictionary.com thats even close to my interpretation.

Thats how new it is, says I to myself. The paint isnt even dry on the hoarding surrounding the kingdom of hyperlocalism, on the electric fence sectioning off the hyperlocalist from the remainder of humanity.

But no, its there all right. Hyperlocalism is covered as follows: Hyperlocal connotes information oriented around a well-defined community with its primary focus directed toward the concerns of the population in that community.

The term can be used as a noun in isolation or as a modifier of some other term (e.g. news).

But it could easily have been my definition.

It could easily have been something like: Early twenty first century movement concerned with countering globalisation and homogenisation. Its pure zeitgeist; it combines hype with local and coins a brand-new way of describing something which was already perfectly adequately described.

So, I was torn. There it was; an immovable definition for one thing which I knew in my heart should have been something completely different.

The thing was snowballing and it was starting to occupy this unique niche as being a very now sounding term that should exist for an entirely different purpose to that for which it does exist.

It was becoming very confusing. A misappropriated, misallocated, misdirected label.

So, what I am proposing is nothing less than a complete and utter redeployment of the term hyperlocalism. Because this news related definition is only nonsense.

Hyperlocalism beautifully describes where we are at. We need this phrase to do more for us, to work harder, to live up to its billing. We need to wrest control of this word back from where it has errantly been squandered all this time.

You know the way you buy your spuds from the local farmer and if someone forced you to describe such activity the best any of us would come up with would probably be a word such as loyalty. Well, under the new regime we are obliged to call that hyperlocalism.

Getting your limestone paving from Liscannor rather than Karachi; hyperlocalism. Buying larch from managed midlands forests rather than imported eastern European softwood; hyperlocalism. Keeping a few chickens; hyperlocalism.

Being lucky enough to be close enough to cycle to work or school; hyperlocalism. Not buying a house in Roscommon when you work in Bray; hyperlocalism. Saving in your credit union; hyperlocalism. Eschewing Amazon to order a book through your local bookstore; hyperlocalism. Or better still, hyperlocalism with an edge; using Amazon to do your research and then ordering it through your local bookstore.

Im hyper. Im local. Its not rocket science.

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A flower show offers some calm amid the storm – Washington Post

Posted: at 8:09 pm

This may be a first: The venerable Philadelphia Flower Show, which seeks to anticipate spring through floral sleight of hand, is this week coinciding with the real thing.

Americas largest and oldest flower show is a week or two later than normal this year while nature has declared the actual spring well underway, evidenced by the arrival of the Japanese cherry blossoms.

But this March hasnt been a gentle shift from winter into spring, more like a bloody tussle between the seasons, with high temperatures edging 80 degrees one day and plunging to the low 20s another. The prospect of a pesky snowstorm is the latest twist. The precocious blossoms are the collateral damage in this battle royal, along with our own notions of what constitutes spring, and when.

The flower show offers shelter from this psychological storm as the hundreds of thousands of flowers unfurl gently until Sunday in designed gardens and floral displays in the artificial environment of the Pennsylvania Convention Center in downtown Philly.

The calm spectacle is tempered even more by the 2017 shows homage to the Netherlands, whose phlegmatic citizens have a singular ability to feel passionately about plants without showing it. They are also particularly skilled at raising and selling them. Ton Akkerman, the agricultural attache in Washington, points out that 77percent of the global bulb trade comes from Holland. For cut flowers, its 44percent, he said. And we are 10times smaller than California.

And so the expected 250,000 visitors to the show will wander through gardens of tulips coaxed into bloom. Some 30,000 alone feature in a central display that replicates one of those high-arched brick bridges over Amsterdams canals. And at a preshow gala Friday, Akkermans ministry presented the city with its own tulip variety, an alluring blood red, fringed bloom unveiled as Philly Belle.

But since the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society, the shows organizers, last themed the show around Holland a generation ago, the plant world in the Netherlands has moved way beyond just the iconic tulip and the bulb trade.

The country is at the heart of a landscape design movement called the Dutch Wave, with landscapes of lots of grasses and perennials and, yes, bulbs, woven together in gardens of naturalism and sustainability.

Bart Hoes, one of the marquee landscape designers at the show, offered his take on a small urban garden, incorporating flowering perennials with vegetables, and a pergola designed to capture rainwater for garden irrigation. Next to a little greenhouse, he positioned a black bike. The greenhouse speaks to cold Hollands need for hothouse cultivation, the bicycle to its pedal-friendly flat terrain. We have to save the Earth somehow. It all helps, said Hoes, who is from a country with 17million people and 23million bicycles. (And almost 25,000 acres of commercial greenhouses.) The sustainability kick seems to extend to the Dutch themselves: Hoes is trim, rosy-cheeked and a youthful 59.

At another exhibit nearby, his compatriot Nico Wissing is supine in a cradle that forms part of a broad ribbon of woven willow branches that wanders and spirals over much of his exhibit, Reconnection. Two arms of this sculpture emerge from a basketweave bench. The other arm of wicker floats across the display to a woven birds nest about six feet across. Its cushions invite one to stay a while and perhaps lay an egg.

Give yourself somewhere to be in your garden, he said. Thats my take-home message, come and learn how to divide up space.

Wissing is another trim 50-something Dutchman immersed in the contemporary zeitgeist of ecological landscape architecture. He works on large-scale projects back home, including office parks and hospitals, but in his Philly show garden he has created a playful woodland of moss and snowdrops, and of yellow lupines blooming in the shadow of Japanese snowbell trees.

The wicker sculpture was made by a Dutch artisan named Piet-Hein Spieringhs and took almost two weeks to fabricate, Wissing said. It suggests a strand of DNA, he said, and then mentions that he started working in a nursery when he was 8 and that people who know me say I have green DNA.

He also designed a giant structure called the Ecodome, a 30-foot-high geodesic sphere made of metal arches and fabric and set up nearby to showcase Hollands green industry.

All the flowering plants for the show were forced into bloom in greenhouses in the greater Philadelphia area. Many had to be stored in coolers to arrest growth as February turned unseasonably warm.

The central exhibit incorporates traditional Dutch references Deflt tile under the bridge arch, an inverted field of abstract tulips mirroring the real fields of tulips, and windmill sails reconfigured as illuminated sets. The horticultural societys Sam Lemheney, who worked with Wissing for almost two years to create the display, said the Dutch have a long history of working with rather than against nature. This is the country, after all, where renewable wind power was used to drain and reclaim the land centuries ago. When you think of the windmill, it was very ahead of its time, he said.

No one at the show has a better perspective on the contemporary Dutch embrace of ecological horticulture than Carrie Preston, 40, who grew up in the New Jersey coastal town of Fair Haven but has spent the past 18 years in Holland as a plant-driven landscape designer. I went there because theyre renowned for horticulture. Holland, as far as the nursery industry is concerned, is second to none, she said.

Her exhibit, with 20,000 diminutive bulbs of anemones and species tulips, replicates the type of gardens around old brick manor houses in northern Holland, where bulbs have naturalized and spread through the years. The garden is framed on two sides by an arbor fashioned from chain-link fencing, as a synthesis of Dutch formality and American utility.

She said the Dutch have a different take on naturalism than other Western garden makers because so much of the landscape is more cultural than purely wild. In creating a naturalistic garden theyll add a modern element to it, theyre comfortable with that, she said.

But enough of this serious stuff, because back in the Ecodome a winsome fellow named Jens Baan from a nursery called Koppert Cress is offering samples of novel greens developed for adventurous chefs in trendy restaurants.

From an array of clamshell containers, he takes the leaf of one plant and folds it around the fleshy stalks of another, named Salty Fingers. This is what we call the vegetarian oyster, he said. The flavor is authentic.

Baan, who is 34 and from Haarlem, is wearing orange pants and a white blazer decorated with embroidered plants. We move on to a magenta orchid flower that tastes like a sweet endive. He takes long tweezers and presents part of a yellow flower that he calls Szechuan Button.

He waits until a visitor tries it before describing its effect: Its like putting a nine-volt battery next to your tongue, but it builds up so much saliva it cleanses your palate. The recipient, shocked and salivating, is left speechless.

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