Monthly Archives: January 2020

Oakland University professor filling world’s largest gap in human genome map – The Oakland Press

Posted: January 22, 2020 at 6:44 pm

A visiting professor at Oakland University has spent the last six years mapping human genomes in Russia in an attempt to fill in the blanks for the worlds ninth most populous country.

Taras Oleksyk, assistant professor of biological sciences, and a team of international scientists launched the project with the goal of charting the genetic diversity of several populations in Russia. Their findings were recently published in the scientific journal Genomics.

As people have spread across the world over centuries, they have gained different genetic characteristics, either at random or due to adaptation to their local environments. These differences are crucial for understanding who people are and where they came from, Oleksyk said. Russia is a treasure trove of previously undescribed genetic variations. Mapping them will allow scientists to chart the vast genetic diversity of Russian populations and fill in the largest gap on the genetic map of humankind.

The DNA of 264 adults in six geographic areas has been so far mapped for the project, including Western Russia and the Yakutia region of Eastern Siberia.

We established the borders to show areas where people are more genetically similar to each other sort of like genetic countries, Oleksyk said. This shows that history and geography shape our genomes. Where we are from largely defines the genetic characteristics we carry. And that has important implications, particularly for genes that influence our health.

The study found correlations of higher risk for certain diseases to geographic proximity with neighboring regions. In Yakutia, the researchers found the population was at a higher risk for lactose intolerance and a slower response to blood thinners, matching with genome mapping results from east Asia.

The goal is to give doctors the ability to tailor medical treatments to their patients genetic profile, Oleksyk said. For example, making sure that patients dont have a genetic predisposition that prevents them from metabolizing certain drugs. We need genome maps in order to lay the groundwork for this type of personalized medicine.

The full study can be found at sciencedirect.com.

Reroot Pontiac, an environmental nonprofit focused on studying green infrastructure, is helping to collect donations for residents of Puerto Rico.

It's going to take more than shrimp pasta and a bottle of wine to solve southeast Michigan's regional transit woes.

The influenza B strain of the flu virus has arrived earlier than normal, according to experts.

A Milford Township man considered a fugitive for allegedly committing sexual assault and assault with intent to do great bodily harm fled auth

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Mutation Responsible for Tumors Are Discovered in Concealed Sequences in the Cancer Genome – Science Times

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(Photo : upload.wikimedia.org)

The search for a cancer cure has led researchers in the OICR, to stumble on a ground-breaking discovery. Previously unknown and undetected in the sequences of non-coding DNA, which can transform into cancer-causing agents in the host cell. Prior to this discovery, this was largely unknown until now.

An investigation into the mutagenic gene demonstrated new ways that it can multiply and advance cancer further. Since it was practically hidden, then specialists are pointing their crosshairs on where to begin. More data uncovered will give more clues on how to tame cancer, later on, better tests to detect it and devise better-targeted therapy for patients.

What made this study more conclusive than those before it, that only covered 2% of the gene for producing proteins needed inside the cell. Furthermore, it dug deeper into more mutation probabilities that weren't explored until this is study. Going further into unknown territory into the non-coding parts of the human genetic matrix. Trying to figure out what causes the genes to get tripped and activated. Which triggers the formation of cancer-causing mutation wholesale inside the host cell.

The lead of the study, Dr. Jri Reimanda, and investigator at OICRsaid that mutation caused by altered proteins are not common in large coding regions. It is this far proximity that does not make it suspect at all. Analyzing data based on these will be challenging to analyze too.

Armed with improved statistical tools and more complete genomic information makes it more accurate. Data that was collected from 1,800 patients is the base of the genomic data, that produced evidence of molecularly based ways that led to cancer, and worse tumors too.

Researchers had a go at 100,000 sections of each patient, now paying more attention to the unexplored non-coded location on the sequence to interact with. One location in the genome is determined to control and anti-tumor gene in cancerous cells. It was located as far as, 250,000 base pairs away from the gene located in the three-dimensional genome. To gain an idea of how it worked more, they did gene editing and experiments in host human cells. To test how potent cancer is in this non-coded location in the genetic sequencing.

Throughout the process of investigating the region involved, several conclusions about the non-coding region that is involved in the development of cancer cells. So far, with more specialized algorithms and data about cancer genomes will lead to analysis and cures. Just one of the findings that lead to a better cure for patients, or detecting it before it gets worse.

All the data gained from "Reimand's" study is free and for use by other scientists studying cancer. Everything from the statistical algorithms to overall methods is tried and tested for accuracy. Anyone has free access to add more to this relevant research.

It cannot be stressed enough that genes are grossly affected by non-coding gene sequences, with easy turning on or off. When a mutation happens, it will cause abnormal functions inside the cell to become cancerous. Another fellow, Helen Zhu a student and author as well, mentioned the method called "ActiveDriverWGS" zeroes in on cancer in the genome.

Finding the mutations that drive development to cancer is the key to track what causes it. Finding and digging up more about it should help in developing medicines to suppress it. This will give rise to better analyses and cures for patients that should be a good development for everyone.

Read: New tumor-driving mutations discovered in the under-explored regions of the cancer genome

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Mutation Responsible for Tumors Are Discovered in Concealed Sequences in the Cancer Genome - Science Times

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The Most Complete Brain Map Ever Is Here: A Fly’s ‘Connectome’ – WIRED

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When asked whats so special about Drosophila melanogaster, or the common fruit fly, Gerry Rubin quickly gets on a roll. Rubin has poked and prodded flies for decades, including as a leader of the effort to sequence their genome. So permit him to count their merits. Theyre expert navigators, for one, zipping around without crashing into walls. They have great memories too, he adds. Deprived of their senses, they can find their way around a roommuch as you, if you were suddenly blindfolded, could probably escape through whichever door you most recently entered.

Fruit flies are very skillful, he appraises. And all that skill, although contained in a brain the size of a poppy seed, involves some neural circuitry similar to our own, a product of our distant common ancestor. Thats why, as director of Janelia Research Campus, part of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, hes spent the last 12 years leading a team thats mapping out the fly brains physical wiring, down to the very last neuron.

Janelia researchers announced a major step in that quest on Wednesday, releasing a wiring diagram of the fly brain that contains 25,000 neurons and the 20 million connections between them. The so-called connectome corresponds to the flys hemibrain, a region thats about 250 micrometers acrossthe size of a dust mite, or the thickness of two strands of hair. Its about a third of the total fly brain, and contains many of the critical regions responsible for memory, navigation, and learning.

Rubin hopes wiring diagrams such as this one, showing neurons involved in navigation, will give researchers a better sense of how brain circuits work.

Researchers like Rubin believe a physical blueprint of the brain could become a foundational resource for neuroscientistsdoing for brain science what genome sequences have done for genetics. The argument is that to get anywhere with understanding brain circuits, you first need to know what the circuits are, and what kinds of cells they join. That physical schematic becomes a road map for all kinds of inquiries, Rubin says, anything from understanding the role of the brains wiring in psychiatric disorders to how our brains store memories.

Obviously, it would be nice to pursue those questions with a complete human connectome. But thats a long way off. Fully analyzing even the tiniest amount of brain matter requires an enormous amount of time and treasure.

Hence, the brain of the humble fruit fly, with one-millionth the number of neurons of our own. Drosophila is only the second adult animal to have its brain circuitry mapped at this level of detail, following the nematode C. elegans back in 1986. That task was far more modest. The entire nervous system spanned 302 neurons and 7,000 connectionssmall enough for researchers, with enough effort, to get the job done by physically shaving off layers of cells, printing off images taken with an electron microscope, and tracing them with colored pencils. The complexity of the fly brain is two orders of magnitude greaterthus the three-decade gap in getting it done.

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LifeOmic Partners with Indiana University-based Healthy Breast Tissue Bank to Advance Breast Cancer Research – P&T Community

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INDIANAPOLIS, Jan. 22, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --LifeOmic, the creator of the LIFE mobile apps and the Precision Health Cloud (PHC) platform in use at major medical and cancer centers, today announced a partnership with the Susan G. Komen Tissue Bank, a unique resource established by researchers at Indiana University Melvin and Bren Simon Cancer Center and Indiana University School of Medicine, to improve breast cancer research. The Komen Tissue Bank at the IU Simon Cancer Center will utilize the PHC for genomic, clinical and imaging data aggregation and analysis, as well as its health care compliant survey capabilities.

The Komen Tissue Bank is the only repository in the world for normal breast tissue and matched serum, plasma and DNA. The tissue bank advances breast cancer research by offering high quality, richly annotated tissue samples to scientists worldwide. Scientists who access the Komen Tissue Bank's Virtual Tissue Bank can query the medical history of donors, request tissue and download existing data. The current system does not support genomic data.

"We are passionate about sharing our research resources with scientists worldwide," said Jill Henry, chief operating officer of the Komen Tissue Bank at the IU Simon Cancer Center. "Using LifeOmic's PHC will expand the Virtual Tissue Bank'scapabilities to help fuel ongoing treatment and prevention discovery."

LifeOmic and the Komen Tissue Bank will work together to deploy the Virtual Tissue Bank onto the PHC's secure, reliable and scalable platform. The new platform enables researchers around the world to query an extended data model including whole-genome sequencing data. The use of analytics tools in the PHC allows researchers to overlay data reported from participants' clinical history with all other data available in the PHC, including genomic, clinical and imaging data.

"The Precision Health Cloud was created to break down silos that exist between current systems, to help advance precision health," said Dr. Don Brown, CEO and founder of LifeOmic. "We are thrilled to partner with the Komen Tissue Bank because of our shared goal to break down silos and help its mission to end breast cancer by enabling advanced research using PHC."

For more information on LifeOmic's PHC, visit: https://lifeomic.com/products/precision-health-cloud/.

About LifeOmic:

LifeOmic is the software company that leverages the cloud, machine learning and mobile devices to power precision health solutions for providers, researchers, health care IT, pharma and individuals. The company's cloud-based software securely aggregates, stores and analyzes patient data to accelerate the development and delivery of precision health treatments. LifeOmic's core competency is the Precision Health Cloud, a cloud-based repository of all patient data such as a basic profile, whole genome sequences, gene expression levels, lab results, medical images and more. The company's product lines also include security software platform JupiterOne and consumer-centric LIFE mobile apps.

Founded in 2016 and headquartered in Indianapolis, LifeOmic was created by serial entrepreneur Don Brown and boasts a team of highly experienced engineers, scientists and security specialists.

For more information, visit https://lifeomic.com.

About The Komen Tissue Bank at the IU Simon Cancer Center:

The Susan G. Komen Tissue Bank, a resource established by researchers at Indiana University Melvin and Bren Simon Cancer Center and Indiana University School of Medicine in Indianapolis, is uniquely positioned to characterize the molecular and genetic basis of normal breast development and compare it to the different types of breast cancer. The bank was established expressly for the acquisition of normal tissues from volunteer donors with no clinical evidence of breast disease and/or malignancy, providing a resource to investigators around the globe. More than 6,000 women have donated breast tissue since 2007. In all, more than 12,000 women also have donated DNA and blood to the tissue bank.

For more information, visit https://komentissuebank.iu.edu/

Contact:

Katie GrantBAM Communications(858) 284-7768katieg@bamcommunications.biz

Michael SchugIndiana University Melvin and Bren Simon Cancer Center(317) 278-0953maschug@iu.edu

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Hackensack Meridian Health Center for Discovery and Innovation to Host Genomic Medicine Symposium – The Trentonian

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NUTLEY, N.J., Jan. 17, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --Genomic medicine's groundbreaking treatments, and its future promise, will be the focus of a full-day symposium at the Hackensack Meridian Health Center for Discovery and Innovation (CDI) on Wednesday, February 19.

This emerging discipline for tailoring active clinical care and disease prevention to individual patients will be the focus of presentations given by eight experts from medical centers in the U.S.A. and Canada.

"The Genomic Medicine Symposium convenes a diverse group of scientific experts who help serve as a vanguard for precision medicine," said David Perlin, Ph.D., chief scientific officer and vice president of the CDI. "At the Center for Discovery and Innovation, we are working to make genomics a central component of clinical care, and we are delighted to host our peers and partners from other institutions."

"The event is one-of-a-kind," said Benjamin Tycko, M.D., Ph.D., a member of the CDI working in this area, and one of the hosts. "We are bringing together great minds with the hope it will help inform our planning for genomic medicine within Hackensack Meridian Health and inspire further clinical and scientific breakthroughs."

Cancer treatments, neuropsychiatric and behavioral disorders, cardiometabolic conditions, autoimmune disease, infectious disease, and a wide array of pediatric conditions are areas where DNA-based strategies of this type are already employed, and new ones are being tested and refined continually.

The speakers come from diverse medical institutions and will talk about a variety of clinical disorders in which prevention, screening, and treatment can be informed through genomic and epigenomic data.

Among the speakers are: Daniel Auclair, Ph.D., the scientific vice president of the Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation; Joel Gelernter, M.D., Ph.D., Foundations Fund Professor of Psychiatry and Professor of Genetics and of Neuroscience and Director, Division of Human Genetics (Psychiatry) at Yale University; James Knowles, M.D., Ph.D., professor and chair of Cell Biology at SUNY Downstate Medical Center in Brooklyn; Tom Maniatis, Ph.D., the Isidore S. Edelman Professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics, director of the Columbia Precision Medicine Initiative, and the chief executive officer of the New York Genome Center; Bekim Sadikovic, Ph.D., associate professor and head of the Molecular Diagnostic Division of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at Western University in Ontario; Helio Pedro, M.D., the section chief of the Center for Genetic and Genomic Medicine at Hackensack University Medical Center; Kevin White, Ph.D., the chief scientific officer of Chicago-based TEMPUS Genetics; and Jean-Pierre Issa, M.D., Ph.D., chief executive officer of the Coriell Research Institute.

The event is complimentary, but registration is required. It will be held from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at the auditorium of the CDI, located at 111 Ideation Way, Nutley, N.J.

The event counts for continuing medical education (CME) credits, since Hackensack University Medical Center is accredited by the Medical Society of New Jersey to provide continuing medical education for physicians.

Hackensack University Medical Center additionally designates this live activity for a maximum of 7 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit TM. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.

For more information, visit https://www.hackensackmeridianhealth.org/CDIsymposium.

ABOUTHACKENSACKMERIDIAN HEALTH

Hackensack Meridian Health is a leading not-for-profit health care organization that is the largest, most comprehensive and truly integrated health care network in New Jersey, offering a complete range of medical services, innovative research and life-enhancing care.

Hackensack Meridian Health comprises 17 hospitals from Bergen to Ocean counties, which includes three academic medical centers Hackensack University Medical Center in Hackensack, Jersey Shore University Medical Center in Neptune, JFK Medical Center in Edison; two children's hospitals - Joseph M. Sanzari Children's Hospital in Hackensack, K. Hovnanian Children's Hospital in Neptune; nine community hospitals Bayshore Medical Center in Holmdel, Mountainside Medical Center in Montclair, Ocean Medical Center in Brick, Palisades Medical Center in North Bergen, Pascack Valley Medical Center in Westwood, Raritan Bay Medical Center in Old Bridge, Raritan Bay Medical Center in Perth Amboy, Riverview Medical Center in Red Bank, and Southern Ocean Medical Center in Manahawkin; a behavioral health hospital Carrier Clinic in Belle Mead; and two rehabilitation hospitals - JFK Johnson Rehabilitation Institute in Edison and Shore Rehabilitation Institute in Brick.

Additionally, the network has more than 500 patient care locations throughout the state which include ambulatory care centers, surgery centers, home health services, long-term care and assisted living communities, ambulance services, lifesaving air medical transportation, fitness and wellness centers, rehabilitation centers, urgent care centers and physician practice locations. Hackensack Meridian Health has more than 34,100 team members, and 6,500 physicians and is a distinguished leader in health care philanthropy, committed to the health and well-being of the communities it serves.

The network's notable distinctions include having four hospitals among the top 10 in New Jersey by U.S. News and World Report. Other honors include consistently achieving Magnet recognition for nursing excellence from the American Nurses Credentialing Center and being named to Becker's Healthcare's "150 Top Places to Work in Healthcare/2019" list.

The Hackensack Meridian School of Medicine at Seton Hall University, the first private medical school in New Jersey in more than 50 years, welcomed its first class of students in 2018 to its On3 campus in Nutley and Clifton. Additionally, the network partnered with Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center to find more cures for cancer faster while ensuring that patients have access to the highest quality, most individualized cancer care when and where they need it.

Hackensack Meridian Health is a member of AllSpire Health Partners, an interstate consortium of leading health systems, to focus on the sharing of best practices in clinical care and achieving efficiencies.

For additional information, please visit http://www.HackensackMeridianHealth.org.

About the Center for Discovery and Innovation:

The Center for Discovery and Innovation, a newly established member of Hackensack Meridian Health, seeks to translate current innovations in science to improve clinical outcomes for patients with cancer, infectious diseases and other life-threatening and disabling conditions. The CDI, housed in a fully renovated state-of-the-art facility, offers world-class researchers a support infrastructure and culture of discovery that promotes science innovation and rapid translation to the clinic.

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Why Universities Need to Come to Grips With Their Past Racist Teachings – The National Interest Online

Posted: January 21, 2020 at 12:45 pm

For the first time, a Canadian university the University of Guelph is reconciling with its history of teaching eugenics. Few universities in Canada have looked closely at their historical involvement in oppressive research, teaching and practice. Fewer still have made their archives accessible.

Through the first half of the 1900s, the eugenics movement had close ties to post-secondary institutions. For example, leaders at the University of Alberta also engaged in the eugenics movement and at the Alberta Eugenics Board. Two of the three founding colleges of the University of Guelph the Macdonald Institute and the Ontario Agricultural College officially taught eugenics between 1914 and 1948.

Once, eugenics spread the deeply damaging idea that it is possible, and even desirable, to improve the human race through selective breeding. It ultimately spawned policies aimed at eradicating those deemed unfit through institutional confinement, restrictive marriage, immigration laws and sterilization. Eugenics was considered a science from the early 1900s until the 1930s, when its scientific reputation began to decline and shift.

Exhibiting eugenics

Canadian universities have restricted access to those archives that implicate their institutions in profiting from oppressive ideas and practices. Kathryn Harvey, the schools head archivist, made the University of Guelph archive available to us.

Using the archives, we developed a co-created, multimedia and multi-sensory exhibition at the Guelph Civic Museum called Into the Light: Eugenics and Education in Southern Ontario, which began in September 2019 and runs until March 2020. It is the first of its kind to bring to light the difficult history of Canadian university involvement in teaching eugenics.

Into the Light is co-created by Mona Stonefish (our project Elder), Peter Park, Dolleen Tisawiiashii Manning, Evadne Kelly, Seika Boye and Sky Stonefish, with key supports from Carla Rice (ReVision Centre), Dawn Owen (Guelph Civic Museum) and Sue Hutton (Respecting Rights, a project at ARCH Disability Law Centre). It brings together Indigenous and disabled people who carry personal histories of forced confinement and sterilization.

The exhibition embraces disability and decolonizing curatorial practices that disrupt and unsettle. By presenting artistic, sensory and material expressions of memory through different formats, it speaks the hard truths of colonialism as Ho-Chunk scholar Amy Lonetree writes. By showing more than 30 years of eugenics course documents (1914-48) from the Macdonald Institute and Ontario Agricultural College, it is thus a rare opportunity to consider how eugenics was taught and practised in Ontario.

Teaching eugenics

In Into the Light, the eugenics course documents are accompanied by multiple perspectives. Take, for example, one of the course slides, entitled Eugenical Classification of the Human Stock that was initially displayed at the Second International Eugenics Congress in 1921.

The chart shows the connection between eugenics and British colonialism. In it, Cecil Rhodes is classified as a superior person of genius. In 1921, Rhodes was celebrated for his forceful British colonial and white supremacist agenda. Today, Rhodes is recognized as an early architect of apartheid, a policy that involved the systematic dehumanization of South Africas Black population from 1948 to 1994.

Also shown on the chart are the eugenic traits of those whom eugenicists deemed to be unfit, including people classified as feeble-minded, poor, criminal and epileptic. In the process of claiming the land and its peoples, Canadian colonial administrators, officers, physicians, educators and scientists framed First Peoples as impaired and mentally unfit in order to justify their actions. As decolonizing scholar Karen Stote writes in An Act of Genocide, this was a precursor to unethical sterilization and forced institutionalization.

The effects of colonialism and eugenics are seen in two large stacks of food sacks. The sacks reveal the forced domestic and agricultural labour imposed on those who were placed, sometimes violently, in Ontario residential institutions.

The sacks are accompanied by the smell of rotting potato to evoke the feeling of being denied comfort and nutrition.

The eugenics course suppressed independent thinking and experiential knowledges. But Into The Light centres once-marginalized survivor experiences and encourages viewers to think critically.

This article by Evadne Kelly and Carla Rice first appeared in 2019 in The Conversation via Creative Commons License.

Image: Reuters.

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Forced sterilization victim in Japan urges gov’t to admit responsibility during appeal – The Mainichi

Posted: at 12:45 pm

A member of the plaintiffs' side holds a piece of paper with messages of support written on it, in Sendai's Aoba Ward, on Jan. 20, 2020. (Mainichi/Daisuke Wada)

SENDAI -- One of two women who effectively lost a damages suit in May 2019 against the Japanese government over its forced sterilization under the now-defunct eugenic protection law, opposed the lower court decision in her first appeal hearing on Jan. 20, saying she "didn't know about the law, or that Japan was conducting illegal acts, even at the time."

The woman in her 70s from Miyagi Prefecture filed her lawsuit seeking 38.5 million yen in compensation with the Sendai District Court in May 2018 under the alias "Junko Iizuka," after another woman in her 60s from the same northeast Japan prefecture filed a similar suit. The cases were later merged.

The lower court rejected both claims on May 28 last year, stopping short of recognizing the government's responsibility based on factors including the statute of limitations for illegal practices, which stipulates the right to demand compensation ends 20 years after an illegal act.

Iizuka said she "has been feeling down" since the ruling. She was divorced for not being able to have a child, and the sorrow triggered mental health conditions, such as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and depression. For Iizuka, who has repeatedly thought of killing herself due to the treatment, it's baffling why the government is not held accountable.

On May 31, the plaintiffs filed an appeal with the Sendai High Court. In response to the district court ruling, the legal team tried to bring up the statute of limitations as a point of contention by arguing, "The victims' right to seek compensation has not ended." Meanwhile, the government demanded the appeal be dismissed.

In the Jan. 20 hearing, the plaintiffs' side stressed the fact that "the victims could not objectively recognize the illegality of the sterilization surgery," as it was legitimate at the time, and the government had approved of deceiving people into receiving the surgery.

They also argued that the period of limitations for demanding compensation should commence from Feb. 16, 2017 -- when the Japan Federation of Bar Associations described the eugenics law as unconstitutional -- which, according to the plaintiffs, "is the first time the illegality of the damages became apparent." The government, however, said the period should start from the day the women underwent surgeries.

Furthermore, the plaintiffs' side showed examples of Supreme Court decisions and stressed that even if the period was counted from the day the women underwent surgeries, restrictions should apply to the statute of limitations in a case where an illegal act goes remarkably against justice and fairness. But the government insisted that the restrictions "only apply if the offender's act makes it objectively impossible for the victim to exercise their rights," and do not apply in this case.

Due to her unfortunate background, Iizuka was forced by a local welfare commissioner to enter Komatsushima Gakuen, a facility for children with intellectual disabilities in the prefectural capital of Sendai. After graduation, she was taken to a clinic by a person commissioned to provide vocational and other guidance to help people with intellectual disabilities integrate themselves into society. Iizuka, 16 at the time, was then anesthetized and received sterilization surgery without knowing.

She only came to realize that the surgery was carried out under the eugenic protection law (1948-1996) after reading a letter she received in 1997 from her father. Until that point, Iizuka had felt resentment against the local welfare commissioner and the person commissioned to provide vocational and other training to her, but decided to sue the government after coming to know that the surgery was part of a national policy.

"Because the government refuses to acknowledge its responsibility, I continue to feel resentment, and my symptoms are getting worse," Iizuka complained. She says she continues to feel pain in her lower abdomen as a side effect of the surgery. She added, "I hope for the government to properly acknowledge its responsibility in court."

(Japanese original by Hiroshi Endo, Sendai Bureau)

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Supplements: Are they worth your buck? – Arizona Daily Wildcat

Posted: at 12:44 pm

A stroll through the health aisle at the local supermarket will have ones eyes glance upon a variety of different supplements marketed as if they were a necessity to live a healthy and fulfilling life. But how much do we really need these supplements, and are they worth the money were paying for them?

In 2019 alone, the vitamin and supplement industry in the U.S. have made about $32 billion from sales of different supplements. These products include vitamins, minerals, herbs, botanicals, sports nutrition, meal supplements and specialty products.

All supplements sold in the U.S. are under the regulation of the Food and Drug Administration. Under the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act of 1994, the FDA is responsible for taking action against any adulterated or misbranded dietary supplement product after it reaches the market. How many of the supplements in stores are really necessary?

I dont usually eat enough fruits and vegetables on a regular basis, so I take a multivitamin in order to get those vitamins and minerals that Im missing out on, said Matthew Gillies, a junior aerospace engineering student. Its a quick way to get those necessary vitamins in your diet that I would be getting if I were to eat more fruits and vegetables. A doctor recommended it more when I was younger, and so Ive kept up with it. Ive been taking one since I was about 6 years old.

Multivitamins are the most common type of supplements taken in the world. The majority of multivitamins contain different types of vitamin B, vitamin C, vitamin K and an assortment of different minerals, including zinc, calcium and magnesium.

Vitamins can be categorized into two different groups - water-soluble and fat-soluble vitamins. Vitamins A, D, E and K are the fat-soluble vitamins, meaning any excess amounts of these four vitamins are absorbed into the body through fatty tissue. The other vitamins are water-soluble, so any excess amounts of these vitamins will simply be excreted from the body through urine.

The majority of physicians recommend fixing ones diet before falling back on supplements to fix a lack of necessary vitamins and minerals. For example, a well-balanced diet including the necessary amounts of certain vitamins and minerals completely eradicates the need for purchasing any supplements.

The majority of healthy patients who eat a balanced diet do not need to take a multivitamin, and thus the majority of patients who take one do not need to do so, said Dr. Kevin Moynahan, an internist at Banner University Medical Center Tucson. For the majority of healthy individuals who eat a balanced diet, a daily multivitamin is not needed. Before deciding to take a daily multivitamin, people should talk to their physician or healthcare provider about their current diet and medical conditions.

What makes taking supplements so attractive to the majority of people? The convenience of just taking a pill once or twice daily to fulfill their health needs can appeal to many. However, some people dont think this form of diet intervention is really necessary to live a healthy life.

I just never needed to use them, said Faiz Rafique, a senior computer science student. The food I eat has plenty enough nutrition for me, so I have never needed extra vitamins to make me feel better.

Vitamins can be necessary for some people who are unable to get the majority of necessary vitamins and minerals from their diet. For example, a lack of access to proper nutrition can make taking a multivitamin very important.

Examples of conditions or situations in which a multivitamin should be considered include alcoholism, poor-quality diets that do not contain fruits and vegetables, patients who have had a gastric bypass procedure, malabsorption and consuming a vegan diet, said Moynahan. Patients with osteopenia or osteoporosis may benefit from calcium supplementations (if their diet contains less than 1200 mg of calcium) and vitamin D supplementation.

The decision to take supplements is an important decision for ones health. Speak to a health care provider before deciding to take this form of intervention into your daily life.

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Legislation Introduced to Allow CBD in Dietary Supplements – AgNet West

Posted: at 12:44 pm

Products containing cannabidiol (CBD) are proving difficult to regulate. A new bill seeks to provide regulatory clarity for allowing CBD in dietary supplements. House Agriculture Committee Chairman Collin Peterson recently introduced legislation to have the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) allow for CBD to be marketed as a dietary supplement as well as a food additive.

The last two Farm Bills were landmark successes for hemp,but we are still very early in this process, and growers need regulatorycertainty, Peterson saidin a press release. This bill will allow FDA to regulate CBD that comesfrom hemp as a dietary supplement, providing a pathway forward for hemp-derivedproducts. It would also identify barriers to success for hemp farmers,informing growers and policy makers of the challenges facing this newindustry.

Initial cosponsors of the bipartisan bill include Representatives Thomas Massie, James Comer, and Chellie Pingree. The legislation seeks to amend the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act with respect to the regulation of hemp-derived cannabidiol and hemp-derived cannabidiol containing substances. The bill would also charge the U.S. Department of Agriculture to conduct a study of the regulatory and market barriers for farmers involved in the production of hemp.

There is already a significant number of products that contain CBD in the marketplace. The FDA has been slowly cracking down on the practice, sending 15 warning letters to companies marketing CBD products last month. The legislative push to allow CBD in dietary supplements comes as welcome news to farmers who were quick to begin producing hemp after the legalization of the commercial crop under the 2018 Farm Bill. Many hemp producers were excited for the potential of the crop, created in part by demand for CBD oil. The proposed bill has been referred to both the Committee on Agriculture and the Committee on Energy and Commerce.

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United States: 2019: The Dietary Supplements And Cosmetics Year In Review – Mondaq News Alerts

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Federal and state legislatures aimed to bring more scrutiny tocosmetics in 2019 by considering measures that would regulateingredients, limit research methods and grant additional authorityto regulatory agencies.

At the federal level, lawmakers have considered the Safe Cosmetics and Personal Care Products Act of2019 and the Cosmetic Safety Enhancement Act of 2019, whichwould give the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) moreauthority to recall personal care products. The House Subcommitteeon Health, part of the Committee on Energy and Commerce, held a hearing on December 4, 2019, that focused onthe reasoning behind the proposed bills. "The proposedbipartisan bill currently under consideration in Congress wouldreform the U.S. approach to cosmetics regulation, potentially insignificant ways," Shook Partner LaurieHenrytold Corporate Disputes for the magazine's October-December 2019issue.

Other federal efforts included the November introduction of theNatural Cosmetics Act, which aims to definethe term "natural" as applied to cosmetics. Rep. FrankPallone sent a letter in June urging FDA to provide updated information oninspections of imported cosmetics after he learned that the agencyhad not conducted "any foreign cosmetics inspections in FiscalYear (FY) 2019 and does not intend to conduct any inspections in FY2020." The Children's Product Warning Label Act of2019 was introduced in March following headlines about the identification of asbestos in talc-basedchildren's cosmetics, although the bill has not progressedbeyond introduction.

A bipartisan federal bill to ban animal testing for cosmetics,the Humane Cosmetics Act of 2019, was introduced,coinciding with state legislatures banning the sale of cosmeticsproduced with animal testing; Illinois and Nevada joined California in passing such bans,which take effect January 1, 2020.

In addition, California updated its laws to require safety data sheetsfor cosmetic products, while New York banned 1,4-Dioxane, which can be found incosmetics and other personal care products.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration promised an increasedfocus on dietary supplements in a February 2019 press announcement from then-CommissionerScott Gottlieb. "[T]oday we are announcing a new plan forpolicy advancements with the goal of implementing one of the mostsignificant modernizations of dietary supplement regulation andoversight in more than 25 years," the announcement stated. FDApromised additional efforts in "communicating to the public assoon as possible when there is a concern about a dietary supplementon the market, ensuring that our regulatory framework is flexibleenough to adequately evaluate product safety while also promotinginnovation, continuing to work closely with our industry partners,developing new enforcement strategies and continuing to engage in apublic dialogue to get valuable feedback from dietary supplementstakeholders." The announcement accompanied the posting of 12warning letters and 5 online advisory letters sent to companiesthat the agency asserted were "illegally selling more than 58products, many that are sold as dietary supplements, which areunapproved new drugs and/or misbranded drugs that claim to prevent,treat or cure Alzheimers disease and a number of otherserious diseases and health conditions." In April, FDA unveiled its Dietary Supplement Ingredient Advisory List, atool intended to alert the public when the agency "identifiesingredients that do not appear to be lawfully marketed in dietarysupplements."

As part of Shook's 60 Seconds of Legal Science video series,Houston Managing Partner Jennise Stubbsnoted FDA's role inreviewing dietary supplements. "As dietary supplementpopularity increases and the number of companies manufacturingthese supplements grows, FDA is reviewing the regulatory frameworkfor these products to ensure its processes and procedures ofoversight are flexible enough to evaluate product safety but alsopromote scientific innovation," she explains.

FDA continued issuing warning letters to companies with productionfacilities the agency deemed to be not up to Current GoodManufacturing Practices, including Hi-Tech Pharmaceuticals, SomaLabs Inc., Nutra Solutions USA and Goldstar Distribution, as well as companiesthat allegedly claimed benefits about their products that wouldamount to the products being unapproved new drugs. A large portionof 2019 warning letters in this category were sent to manufacturersof cannabidiol (CBD) products; in addition, FDA sent severalletters to manufacturers of products containing dimethylhexamine(DMHA), including eight manufacturers that appeared in an April posting of warning letters.

The U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has frequently targeteddietary supplement and cosmetics companies for enforcement actions,arguing that companies engage in marketing tactics the agency foundto be misleading or harmful. These actions continued apace in 2019,with challenges focused on unsubstantiated claims,"risk-free" trial offers and undisclosed marketingpartnerships.

FTC settled a number of cases with supplement producers anddistributors, including the makers of Synovia, which was allegedly marketed as atreatment for arthritis. The marketing included a testimonial inwhich the endorser purportedly "gave away his walker"after using Synovia. An aloe supplement maker was alleged to havemisleadingly marketed its products as "effective treatmentsfor a range of conditions affecting seniors, including chronicpain, ulcerative colitis, diabetes, and acid reflux." Under asettlement agreement, the makers will pay $537,000 of an $18.7million judgment. Unsubstantiated claims about cognitive improvements also drew a complaintfrom FTC; 12 corporate defendants settled with the agency afterthey allegedly claimed the products had been shown in "over2,000 clinical trials" to improve focus by "up to121%."

The agency also filed an action against a company that marketed itsbath and beauty products as organic and vegan despite containingnon-organic ingredients that appear "only in lists that areburied among other text on product labels and websites." Someof the company's products also contained honey and lactose,which are not vegan ingredients. In addition, FTC mailed checks to consumers confused bynegative-option marketing for "risk-free" trials of skincare products and sued a supplement company that allegedly ranan illegal pyramid scheme.

FTC continued to focus on supplement and cosmetics companiespartnering with influencers or other non-traditional brandrepresentatives who fail to disclose their paid relationships. InNovember, FTC released "Disclosures 101 for Social MediaInfluencers," a guide aiming to clarify the measures thatsocial media posters must pursue to ensure their audiencesunderstand that a post is an advertisement. The agency also lookedfor misleading reviews and testimonials shown online by seeminglyimpartial users of personal care products. In February, FTC announced "its first case challenging amarketers use of fake paid reviews on an independent retailwebsite," which it brought against the distributor of aGarcinia cambogia supplement. FTC also settled with skin carecompany Sunday Riley following allegations that thecompany's executives directed employees to leave highlypositive reviews on Sephora's website to ensure thecompany's products retained high star ratings.

The National Advertising Division (NAD), which reviewschallenges to marketing claims brought by competitors or advocacyorganizations, considered several dietary supplement and cosmeticsadvertising complaints in 2019, including a complaint brought bythe Council for Responsible Nutrition. The group challenged themarketing for Plavinol, a dietary supplement purported toaid in treating metabolic syndrome, and NAD found that the researchstudy cited by Nexus Formulas LLC lacked credibility "becauseit was unclear who authored it."

The ad board also faced resistance following some of itsdeterminations, including from Guthy-Renker. NAD told the company thatmarketing for its Crepe Erase "antiaging body caresystem" featured misleading numbers on the percentage of userswho saw improvements after using the product and that thetestimonials from a doctor and Dorothy Hamill were misleading. Thecelebrity endorsement did not reflect the evidence in the recordabout the product's efficacy, NAD found, and the doctor'stestimonial implying the product was better than its competitorswas misleading because the doctor did not review competingproducts' efficacy. Guthy-Renker told NAD it intended to appealon several grounds.

Wink Naturals received multiple complaints about its products,which include sleep supplements, anxiety-relief supplements and cough-syrup supplements. The challengeslargely focused on Wink's marketing towards children, includingsuch statements as, "I get asked A LOT if we make an anxietyproduct for kidsWE DO" and "Helps to improve yourchilds school performance: A good night sleep can lead tomore energy, focus, concentration, information retention, andcreative problem solving. NAD determined the latter phrasingcould be slightly modified into separate sentences to highlight thebenefits of sleep and the relationship between the product andsleep, but the board recommended a number of changes to Wink'smarketing throughout all three products' advertisingcampaigns.

Following the passage of the 2018 Farm Bill, which legalized thecultivation of hemp, cannabidiol (CBD) became the star ingredientof 2019, suspended by itself in oil or featured in supplements,beverages and food. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)struggled to keep up with the hype; while CBD stayed in legallimbo, U.S. lawmakers and other public officials urged the agency to take action and create alegal framework for a burgeoning industry capitalizing on thepopularity of CBD and its purported calming and healing effects.Several companies went too far in their marketing claims, however,according to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's andFederal Trade Commission's warning letters focused on the claimed benefits of theproduct. One letter noted that the company sold CBD oil asa dietary supplement; "however, it cannot be a dietarysupplement because it does not meet the definition of a dietarysupplement," the letter advised. "FDA has concluded basedon available evidence that CBD products are excluded from thedietary supplement definition." In November, FDA issued a consumer update clarifying that the agency"is concerned that people may mistakenly believe that tryingCBD cant hurt'" while studies haveidentified possible effects on the liver, male reproductive healthand drug interactions.

Shook's Cannabis Lawpractice, led by Partners Katie Gates Calderonand Greg Wu,helped companies navigate the regulatory minefields of CBD andother cannabis-derived products. Shook also released a white paper,"Wild West or New Frontier? Global Cannabis MarketSpurs Legal Spend Across All Sectors," drawing on feedbackfrom in-house counsel in, among other sectors, health and wellnesscompanies.

Between beachfront jurisdictions banning chemicals that blockultraviolet light and scientific inquiries into the safety ofsunscreen found in the bloodstream, questions about the use ofsunscreen entered the mainstream in 2019. After Hawaii bannedoxybenzone- and octinoxate-containing sunscreens based on theirpurported effects on coral reefs in 2018, additional jurisdictionsfollowed suit, including Key West and the U.S. Virgin Islands. While Outside asked if sunscreen is "the newmargarine," focusing on the importance of vitamin D andsunscreen's role in preventing the skin from making its ownform, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) set forth anupdated proposal for sunscreen regulations, includinga proposal to raise the maximum proposed labeled SPF to 60+ from50+, and reported that the agency was unable to deem 12 sunscreenactive ingredients as safe and effective due to a lack of research.A study published in May made headlines by imparting that sunscreen activeingredients can be absorbed into the bloodstream, but FDA emphasized to the public that absorptiondoes not mean the ingredients are unsafe and encouraged thecontinued use of sunscreen. The Personal Care Products Council proposed a work plan to provide safety datafor eight of FDA's questioned ingredients. Although the 2014Sunscreen Innovation Act set a deadline of November 26, 2019, for a finalrule on sunscreen, FDA's proposed monograph remains in draftform.

While some 2019 putative class actions focused on undeclared allergens or missing federal disclaimers, many plaintiffstargeted products that allegedly could not live up to the promisesmade in the marketing. Protein and muscle-building supplements werefrequently challenged, including for the omission of an essential amino acid resultingin an "incomplete protein." BPI Sports and Iovate Health Sciences USA, for example,allegedly sold protein dietary supplements that negatively affectedprotein synthesis, according to putative class plaintiffs.

"Natural" personal care products were also hit withlawsuits alleging they contained synthetic ingredients, includingTarte Cosmetics, Shikai hair and body care products and Thayer's Natural Remedies deodorants,wipes and dry-mouth sprays. Another lawsuit echoed a warning fromthe U.S. Food and Drug Administration about dimethylhexamine(DMHA), arguing that Hi-Tech Pharmaceuticals reformulated itssupplements with DMHA after federal regulations forbade the use ofa similar stimulant the company reportedly said would have the sameeffects as DMHA.

Plaintiffs also targeted skin care products for failing todeliver on promised anti-aging results, such as a putative classaction arguing L'Oral Revitalift is marketed asable to lift and firm skin or repair wrinkles without qualifyingthe benefits as helping "the appearance" of thosetargeted lines. Putative class actions also challenged whether biotin could benefit hair and skin, whether raspberry ketones could help consumers loseweight and whether a supplement can lower cholesterol.

A plaintiff asserted that a hair styling product could not feasibly bemarketed as "no flake" if it contained an ingredient witha "natural tendency to produce flaking," while anotherplaintiff argued that Vitamin Shoppe sells a daily supplementcontaining enough arsenic to harm daily users. S-adenosylmethionine (SAM-e) supplements werealso targeted, and one lawsuit alleged that Nature Medic Fucoidan products could causecancer cells to "self-destruct" and prevent cancer fromspreading in the body.

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United States: 2019: The Dietary Supplements And Cosmetics Year In Review - Mondaq News Alerts

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