Daily Archives: February 7, 2022

Explore all things AI and Data at Digital Health Rewired 2022 – Digital Health

Posted: February 7, 2022 at 6:20 am

From monitoring the spread of Covid-19 to helping determine the priority list for the vaccine data and AI became vital tools during the pandemic and is one of the reasons why there is a dedicated stage to it at Digital Health Rewired 2022.

The AI and Data Stage will bring together data scientists and researchers, clinicians, and health IT professionals to explore how AI and data are transforming healthcare.

Highlights of the programme include Dr Nicola Byrne, the National Data Guardian for health and adult social care in England, who will be speaking on 15 March.

Dr Byrne will share her insights on ensuring future public trust in how data is held and used, as the Department of Health and Social Care brings forward an ambitious new data strategy.

With the use of data vital to the future of health and care the role and advice of the National Data Guardian is key in ensuring that citizens confidential information is safeguarded securely and used properly.

Other speakers include Ayub Bhayat, director of insight and data platform at NHS England and Improvement, Mathew Watt, senior programme manager for AI imaging at NHS Transformation Directorate, and I-Lin Hall, head of data and digital applications at North of England Commissioning Support (NECS).

GP IT provider EMIS is the confirmed sponsor of the AI and Data Stage. Alex Eavis, director of analytics, EMIS, said the potential for AI and data usage in healthcare is enormous.

Not only can we get a better systemic understanding of what is happening right now but we have the opportunity tocompletely transform care pathways, he added.

The better insight we have and the quicker we can get to that insight, the quicker we can improve thedetection of disease, develop new treatments and deliver care enabling rapid change and the ability to evidence the impact of that change.

The ethical use of AI and analytics will not only enable us to make informed changes to the way we deliver services, but it will allow us to shift from looking at what happened in the past to predicting what will happen in the future. It is the key to moving from reactive care to proactive and personalised interventions.

Taking place on March 15-16 at the Business Design Centre in London,Digital Health Rewired 2022is a conference and exhibition which brings together all parts of the digital health community to celebrate the best of digital, data and innovation in health and care.

Health and care professionals will be able to network, collaborate and learn in person during two days of educational conference sessions, exhibitions and meetings, all focused on sharing best practice and innovation.

All the conference sessions will be CPD accredited.

Also taking place will be thePitchfest competition, which returns for its fourth year. The competition will see another 16 digital health start-ups battle it out to the live final to win an NHS test bed site for their idea or solution.

You canregister hereto secure your place at Rewired 2022.

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Explore all things AI and Data at Digital Health Rewired 2022 - Digital Health

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Jordan Peterson: More Power To Joe Rogan And The Truckers – RealClearPolitics

Posted: at 6:20 am

-- Jordan Peterson talks with Dr. Julie Ponesse about the connection between massive protests by truckers in Ottawa and the massive protests by members of the news media against Joe Rogan.

"Your observation that the truckers and the Joe Rogans are serving as redemptive agents is a reflection of the brilliance of the idea of individual sovereignty as the basis for political stability," Peterson thought.

"Who should you consult? Not just the people with the ideas. The people who drive the trucks. Well, why? They're navigating the roads. They're delivering the goods, in a real sense. So they know things."

"They are the people. They have families. Their life is real, it is not abstracted to the point where the abstractions themselves become a problem," he said.

And I thought: Just winging it, eh? You try just winging it in front of 11 million people for five years and see if you're still standing, buddy? Do you think just winging it is so easy?

Well, first of all, why aren't you doing it if it is so damn easy?

And second, isn't it something that with all your resources, you can only garner one-tenth of the audience of one man who has like zero production expertise in a studio. He just puts it out online, and all he does is have honest conversations.

Insofar as he is capable of that. Joe stumbles and he knows and admits that. Sometimes he gets too buttoned-down on a given point. But fundamentally he's just trying to do what we're doing here.

...

Keep at it, guys. Every time you attack him, it is a million more subscribers for Joe. If they kick him off Spotify, he would have a new platform in two days with twice as many listeners.

Joe has gotten to the point where, as long as he continues to be careful, and he is, I don't think he can be canceled. In fact, I think all the attempts to cancel him only redound to his credit and increase the rapidity with which he is destroying the entire legacy media.

...

The only real rationale for opposing free speech, apart from ignorance... is the conclusion that you've already figured it all out. Or you're trying to hide something. Those two things go hand in hand quite frequently.

It is very often that people who are trying to hide something justify themselves with a kind of totalitarian certainty about their beliefs. They double down on them to hide their own moral iniquities.

You have to believe that people like Rogan shouldn't be allowed to just have a discussion with whoever they want and wing it --and you think that people you think you already know. If your life is perfect and you're already living in the Kingdom of God, more power to you. Maybe you're right and you can shut down discourse because the heavenly heights have already been scaled, but I haven't met anyone like that yet.

Most people I know think with not too much thought that there are some things they still have to learn and there are some ways their lives could be improved. How are we going to approach that?

If you want to find out how you're wrong, you should talk to people who don't agree with you. Maybe 90% of what they say is not worth attending to, could be, probably the same goes for you, but 10% might be just what saves you in the next crisis.

This is one of the things I loved about being a clinician. I talked to lots of people who were different from me. Like seriously different from me. And if I wasn't learning something from them it was because I wasn't conducting the discourse properly. They taught me invaluable things.

...

You want to differentiate and assess your own beliefs. Why?

Your beliefs aren't a set of facts at your disposal. Your beliefs are tools that you use to navigate the world. And the more finely tuned those tools -- like, I have a shed at home with all sorts of power tools in it. One of the things I learned from renovating houses is that if the job is difficult, you don't have the right tool. And you can go down to Home Depot which has like 50,000 square feet of tools, which is phenomenal. And you can find a little gadget that someone spent half their lifetime devising and it makes that job easy. That's ideas. Ideas are tools. They're not facts.

DR. JULIE PONESSE: And you have to sharpen them. And take care of them. And keep them from getting rusty. And put them away with the right way. Your metaphor is beautiful.

So talking about both the trucker situation and the Joe Rogan situation. It seems in many respects like intellectuals, or elites, have gotten us into this mess. And it is the truckers and the Joe Rogans of the world who are getting us out of it, arguably. What does this say about education, academics, civil discourse, and democracy, moving forward?

JORDAN PETERSON: Well, it says that the highest and the lowest always have to be united. And what that means in some sense is that ---

Well, I learned that in part from watching Wagner's Die Meistersinger (The Master Singer), the opera. The libretto elaborates on that theme in an absolutely stellar manner. In his opera, it details out the actions of guilds of men. And each guild is made out of domain experts. One of the heroes is a cobbler, an expert shoemaker... and if you're a good enough cobbler, you get to sing. And if you're a good enough singer, you get to elect a Master Singer.

It is a lovely structured sequence of metaphors. And so one of the things Wagner did so well in that opera was to point out that true expertise means the differentiation of abstract knowledge all the way down to the point of behavioral implementation. This is one thing I really like about being trained as a behavioral psychologist. I'm very interested in psychoanalytic theory, but it is very abstract. Existential psychology is very abstract, the meaning of life stuff.

Like, yeah, but where does the rubber hit the road? Well, the truckers know that! They really know that because they are down there moving goods to people. They're doing the actual work in the most fine-grade manner. They might have a problem with higher-order articulation. And it is up to their leaders --

DR. JULIE PONESSE: I'm not so sure about that! I challenge every Canadian to get themselves there to have a conversation with all of these truckers. They'd be very surprised.

JORDAN PETERSON: I'm not so sure either. They don't have trouble with enunciating blunt truths.

But you were pointing to problems among the intellectuals. The intellectual chattering class is criticizing the truckers. There's a divorce between the intellectualized ethical framework and the practical reality that working-class people represent.

Your observation that the truckers and the Joe Rogans are serving as redemptive agents is a reflection of the brilliance of the idea of individual sovereignty as the basis for political stability.

It's like, well who should you consult? Not just the people with the ideas. The people who drive the trucks.

Well, why? They're navigating the roads. They're delivering the goods, in a real sense. So they know things.

DR. JULIE PONESSE: They're talking to the people.

JORDAN PETERSON: You bet. They are the people. They have families. Their life is real, it is not abstracted to the point where the abstractions themselves become a problem.

...

You saw the same thing with the Yellow Jackets in France. Corrupt energy policies started to make energy too expensive for ordinary people "because we have to save the planet." Well, how about not on our backs there, guys?

We're going to see a lot more of that, I suspect. Especially if the elite-types with their Utopian schemes keep walling themselves up from the people they hypothetically represent.

This is why the U.K. voted for Brexit -- the common people thought, "Nope, [the E.U.] is too abstract. Too much of a Tower of Babel. The leaders have gotten too far away from the people they represent."

And I think they made the right decision, so, more power to Rogan and the truckers.

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AFC and NFC quarterbacks combine for six interceptions in first half of Pro Bowl – Yahoo Singapore News

Posted: at 6:20 am

Justin Herbert did something no other QB was able to do during the first half of Sundays Pro Bowl: He failed to throw an interception.

The NFC and AFC teams combined to throw six interceptions in a high-scoring first half that saw all six QBs get significant playing time. Russell Wilson threw two interceptions in eight pass attempts for the NFC while Kyler Murray and Kirk Cousins each had a pick. On the AFC side, Patrick Mahomes and Mac Jones each threw an interception among their 12 combined attempts while Herbert was 5-of-6 passing for 77 yards and two touchdowns.

We also shouldn't forget Buffalo Bills WR Stefon Diggs. He completed a pass for 15 yards and didn't get intercepted. Here's to you, Stefon.

Murray got the turnover party started on the first drive of the game with a pick-six to Indianapolis Colts linebacker Darius Leonard. The NFC got a pick-six later in the half from Antoine Winfield as he intercepted Mahomes on fourth down and then returned the ball to the end zone.

Both pick-sixes were, uh, easy returns in a half that ended with the AFC up 28-21. Thats because Sundays game had the physicality of a flag football game in the exhibition showcase. Many tackles were blown dead before players came close to touching the ground; simply grabbing an opponent was good enough for a tackle. At one point, the Browns Nick Chubb was called down simply because his undershirt was grabbed by a defender as he tried to run up field.

While the product on the field didnt resemble anything like the NFL fans are used to seeing, it was also understandable. No one needs to get injured in the Pro Bowl. But that lack of contact clearly didnt prevent any turnovers. Just ask those five quarterbacks.

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - FEBRUARY 06: Teammates Antoine Winfield Jr. #31, Mike Evans #13 and Vita Vea #50 of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers react in the first half of the game against the AFC during the 2022 NFL Pro Bowl at Allegiant Stadium on February 06, 2022 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

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AFC and NFC quarterbacks combine for six interceptions in first half of Pro Bowl - Yahoo Singapore News

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Pete Delkus Is North Texas’ Bearer of Bad Weather News – Dallas Observer

Posted: at 6:20 am

Every year around this time, the parent company of Five-Hour Energy probably notices a blip in their stock price because of WFAA weatherman Pete Delkus.

That's when he stocks up on the stuff in preparation for his annual marathon of weather broadcasts for the (hopefully) single snow storm Dallas-Fort Worth gets in the winter.

"I just stay awake the whole time," Delkus says from Channel 8's newly built newsroom. "Ten or 15 years ago, in the room we'd have some sofas and stuff, and I'd lay down at 3 in the morning for 30 minutes. When I walked into the weather center, I was groggy and oh gosh, there's gonna be a tornado warning and it took me a minute to snap out of that fog."

Delkus says the bulk of the work of his marathon snow storm coverage starts long before the snow starts falling. Sometimes, people get unfair. They take to Facebook and Twitter to vent their frustration with the storm and Delkus just happens to be in their line of fire.

An old photo of a Zoli's sign expressing their rage at the weatherman seems to be making the rounds this year and even caught Delkus's attention on Facebook. There are many misconceptions about Delkus' job, aside from the fact that he only reports and does not actually control the weather.

"In the TV business, people think you only work when you're on TV," he says. "Like athletes, people only see when you play the game. The reality is all the hard work happens before the game begins."

For Delkus, the payoff is when he gets to interrupt regular programming and step in front of the weather map.

"Being on TV is the fun part," Delkus says. "You're getting paid to talk." Of course, things are considerably different with this year's storm. Last year, the air temperature in Dallas dropped to as low as 1 degree Fahrenheit and the cold lasted for five days, according to weather data from NASA.

Things can get a little heavy when the weather outlook gets more dangerous. Last year's winter weather storm led to an alarming number of power outages across the state as the electric grid failed under the record-breaking temperatures.

"That's when we have a responsibility," Delkus says. "Like that public servant, we're here to help people be safe, protect their families and stuff. That's a responsibility that none of us take too lightly but we certainly embrace and understand the heaviness of it if you will."

Even without a healthy amount of sleep, Delkus says he relishes the opportunity to inform his shivering viewers who make him a local trending topic on Twitter every year.

"That's good job security," Delkus says with a laugh. "That's what you hope for. You never set out to do that but it is a fun part of the job when you know you have people that trust you and rely on you for information. That's important to me but it's also nice to put a smile on someone's face."

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Lina Khil, Greg Abbott: The top 10 headlines in San Antonio this week – San Antonio Current

Posted: at 6:20 am

click to enlarge

Following a tip, Khil's family, volunteers and law enforcement searched Cross Mountain Park in Fredericksburg earlier this week. However, the child wasn't located.

Our other most-read stories include Gov. Greg Abbott backpedaling on his claim the "lights will stay on" ahead of this week's freezing winter weather. His verbal acrobatics came just before30,000 San Antonians lost power in outages across the city Thursday. Also moving the meters was a review of Tool's blowout show at the AT&T Center this week.

Read on for these and more of the week's top 10 stories.

10. The reasons for Texas' population boom are more complex than politicians would have you believe

9. Texas elected officials and activists kick off weed decriminalization drive in San Marcos

8. 'Don't Houston My San Antonio': the majority of outsiders buying houses here are from Texas

7. San Antonio scores lackluster rating in annual ranking of world airports

6. In damning report, Texas Guard members call Gov. Greg Abbott's border deployment a disaster

5. Doctors' group asks feds to block San Antonio from giving COVID-relief funds to Texas Biomed

4. During Tool's show at San Antonio's AT&T Center, its songs took on new meaning

3. After guaranteeing the 'lights will stay on,' Texas Gov. Greg Abbott backpedals at press conference

2. Bad Takes: The 7 dumbest things Jordan Peterson said on Joe Rogan's podcast

1. Search for missing San Antonio girl Lina Khil shifted to Hill Country town of Fredericksburg

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Fosters urgently needed to help puppies and their mothers avoid euthanasia – KENS5.com

Posted: at 6:19 am

San Antonio Pets Alive! shared information on the dogs, who desperately need a warm place to stay outside of the shelter.

SAN ANTONIO Several litters of puppies and their mothers are at risk of being euthanized if they can't find fosters by Monday, San Antonio Pets Alive! said.

The kennels are a loud and dangerous environment for the young puppies, who are all at risk of being exposed to contagious diseases. Fostering is free, and San Antonio Pets Alive will provide food, crates, and other supplies. If you can give these pups a warm place to stay, please email foster@sanantoniopetsalive.org by noon Monday.

"Chocolate is the momma to 11 pups," the organization said in an email. "They're still very young."

"Hazel is the momma to 8 pups," they said. "They are around 5 weeks old. She's very sweet and active. She kept jumping on staff for pets and attention!"

"Sunkist and her 8 puppies are looking for a quiet home! The kennel is very stressful for her and her babies," they said. "She takes treats gently from your hand. She is a little protective of her pups and likes to bark at you when you talk to her!"

"These six puppers are about four weeks old and eating wet food. They CANNOT have paws on the ground right now. They will need to go in groups of two or three."

"Being a pet foster family has rewards beyond the essential value of helping a pet in need find a new home," SAPA! says on their foster page. "For some, it is a chance to have an animal companion without a lifetime commitment, or to try new companions for an existing pet. For others, it is the special challenge of helping an animal recover from an illness or injury, the trauma of losing a beloved owner or home, or to decompress."

For more information, click here.

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100,000 dogs and cats facing euthanasia as people return adopted pets to animal shelters – Q13 FOX (Seattle)

Posted: at 6:19 am

Animal shelters getting overcrowded during pandemic

As folks return to work after spending months working from home, more pets are being sent to animal shelters.

LOS ANGELES - They're our best friends. They know when we're sad and are always loyal and happy to see us.

Now, these adorable fur babies need our help more than ever.

"Were facing a crisis in Americas animal shelters because there are 100,000 more cats and dogs sitting in Americas shelters right now compared to the same time last year," said Holly Sizemore, the chief mission officer with Best Friends Animal Society.

The reason more pets are going into animal shelters and not as many coming out. On top of that, shelters are suffering staffing shortages and adoptions are down.

"Now everybody is thankfully back to work and sort of back to real life and I think a lot of people realize they cant handle the commitment of having a pet. So a lot of animals are going back to the shelters unfortunately, and were there to pick them up and help get them a different home," said Lesley Brog, the chief animal lover and founder of Wags and Walks.

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Best Friends Animal Society says last year, U.S. shelters euthanized nearly 350,000 dogs and cats, simply because they didnt have a safe place to call home.

Volunteers are now urging people to step up and save a life.

"Two cats are being killed for every dog in Americas shelters. So our pitty friends and our kitty friends need all the support they can get," Sizemore said.

For more information on Best Friends Animal Society, click here. To learn more about Wags and Walks, click here.

Tune in toFOX 11Los Angelesfor the latest Southern California news.

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100,000 dogs and cats facing euthanasia as people return adopted pets to animal shelters - Q13 FOX (Seattle)

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`End of life choice act`: 28 assisted deaths in first three months of new law – WION

Posted: at 6:19 am

In the first three months after it became legal, at least 28 New Zealanders have been assisted in dying.

After two-thirds of Kiwis (65.1%) voted it through in the 2020 referendum, the End of Life Choice Act went into effect on November 7, allowing qualified terminally ill New Zealanders to choose to end their lives.

In the three months since assisted dying became legal, there have been more than two dozen assisted deaths, according to Ministry of Health data as of January 31.

Because the data is updated every week, it's possible that more people have been helped to die since that figure was released.

Also read | 'Assisted dying' comes into force in New Zealand

A person (over the age of 18) must have a terminal illness that will end their life within six months to be eligible for assisted dying under the Act.

They must be experiencing significant and ongoing physical decline, as well as unbearable suffering that cannot be alleviated in a way that they find acceptable.

So far, the registrar has not received any objections from the End of Life Review Committee, which investigates every death.

Also Read:After euthanasia and marijuana, New Zealand targets smoking

The public had lodged "a very limited number of complaints," according to the Registrar, but the ministry stated it couldn't disclose any additional information at this time.

It may also be unable to provide information on the fatalities, such as age, medical problems, or ethnicity.

Patients must be evaluated by two doctors, with a third opinion from a psychiatrist required if the doctors have any reservations about the patient's competency.

Also Read:Portuguese parliament approves euthanasia law

According to the Ministry, none of the 56 people who had two assessments needed a third.

In New Zealand, 130 medical practitioners have signed up to participate in assisted dying.

(With inputs from agencies)

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American Humane Gives the Gift of Love – American Humane – American Humane

Posted: at 6:19 am

Rescue

Savannah Young / February 3, 2022

Valentines Day is approaching, and while many use the holiday to celebrate love with their human counterparts, we celebrate by giving the gift of love to animals in need, who dont have a family of their own.

We were honored to donate veterinary supplies to Oklahoma Humane Society, a non-profit in Oklahoma that works to eliminate euthanasia in the community and find every pet the home they deserve. OK Humane operates a Spay + Neuter Clinic in southeast Oklahoma City, as well as a Neonate Nursery for animals who were orphaned from their mothers as infants, among other programs. The Zoetis products we provided to OK Humane will be used to provide critical care for both cats and dogs in the shelter, and in the community.

We also recently provided a grant to BC SPCA in Vancouver to support their crucial efforts to help pet guardians and their animals impacted by the devastating floods in British Columbia. The flooding displaced thousands of people and caused widespread destruction to the region. BC SPCA cared for animals affected by the floods, provided free emergency boarding for animals throughout the Interior, the Lower Mainland and Vancouver Island, and provided free crates, pet food, leashes, collars and other needed supplies.

The grant was given through our Feed the Hungry COVID-19 fund, which continues to feed and care for animals as the pandemic rages on.

As we kick off the month of February, we are giving the healing gift of love to animals in need, paving the way to help them live happy and healthy lives. To support our efforts, provide a gift at http://www.AmericanHumane.org/Donate.

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Barred owl gets new lease on life following months of rehabilitation – 5newsonline.com

Posted: at 6:19 am

Northsong Wild Bird Rehabilitation released a barred owl in front of nearly one hundred people at the Botanic Garden of the Ozarks Saturday.

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. On October 4th, 2021 a family discovered a small owl that appeared to be in distress. Later that day, the owl was taken into care by the Northsong Wild Bird Rehabilitation where it was discovered the barred owl had a broken leg and severe trauma to the right side of its head.

He wasnt supposed to be here. We were not supposed to release him, said Madison Kennedy the Medical and Outreach Coordinator for Northsong Wild Bird Rehabilitation.

Initial tests showed the owls right eye was completely blind due to the trauma. After surgery to place pins in the broken leg, tests showed the owl was also showing blindness in its left eye. For birds of prey, blindness typically leads to euthanasia or long-term care in specialized facilities. Nearly two weeks after surgery veterinarians discovered the owls left eye began to regenerate sight.

As time went on, the owl continued to rehabilitate and grow stronger. Saturday, 128 days after the owl was brought to Northsong Wild Bird Rehabilitation, the barred owl was released back into the wild at the Botanic Garden of the Ozarks in front of nearly 100 people. Due to the anatomy of owls, sight in one eye is not detrimental to their ability to thrive in the wild on their own.

After months of care, the release was bittersweet for Kennedy who even helped bottle-feed the owl after it first arrived at the center. I did just love him, but at the end of the day, the goal is to get these birds released and back into the wild where they belong, said Kennedy.

Before releasing Little Guy, the nickname Kennedy gave to the barred owl, Kennedy spoke to the crowd about the journey to recovery. Kennedy also spoke about the centers success rate for rehabilitation and release. In six months of operation, the center is a little over halfway to the national average of a 40% success rate, and Saturday brings them one step closer.

For one mother at the release, she believes seeing this will be a memory that sticks with her two young daughters for a long time.

I just know its something thats going to stick with them, especially because they love owls so much anyway. I think it will be a lasting memory that they have, said Leslie Massey.

Little Guy was successfully released in front of the crowd. Before taking refuge in a nearby wooded area, Little Guy perched on top of the pergola where the event took place. With a glance back at his caretakers, it felt as if Little Guy gave a moment of appreciation for his new lease on life back in the wild where he belongs.

Northsong Wild Bird Rehabilitation is a 501c3 non-profit. They are currently looking for volunteers and donations as they look to expand their operations and care for injured birds. If you would like more information on ways to get involved or to help, click here. You can also visit their social media pages at @nwbrehab on Instagram or on Facebook.

On Thursday, Feb. 10 from 6-8 p.m. Northsong Wild Bird Rehabilitation will be hosting a Valentines Day event for the birds and are looking forward to seeing the community there for support.

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