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Archive for the ‘Preventative Medicine’ Category

Should Black America be worried about Coronavirus? – TheGrio

Thursday, March 12th, 2020

As the new coronavirus aka COVID-19 makes its way around the planet and the United States with global infections over 100,000 and current death toll upwards 3800, health officials and politicians statewide and worldwide are declaring emergency.

Even though the common flu kills globally up to over 600,000 people annually, the super contagious coronavirus with a relatively longer latency period is somehow outshining that fact, tapping into a global fear that comes with being a new pandemic.

Both in China and Italy, millions are being quarantined, stocks markets are dipping, oil prices are falling, SouthXSouthwest canceled. Cruise ships are being held at bay. And even Senator Ted Cruz is voluntarily quarantining himself after a one-minute contact with someone who tested positive to the virus. With this global backdrop, one must wonder if we are ready for all of this.

READ MORE: Waffle House employee tests positive for Coronavirus

Juliette Keyyem, former department of Homeland security official, in her essay, The U.S. Isnt Ready for the Whats About to Happen for The Atlantic, the sub-headline reads:

Even with robust government response to the novel coronavirus, many people will be in peril. And the United States in anything but prepared.

And on the other hand, a piece in the TheConversion.com offers Ten Reasons you ought not to panic.

Whether all of this proves to be a very sad historical catastrophe or a massive overreaction, this is nevertheless a serious moment and begs the question: are Black people ready and what can we do to maximize preparedness in a world where Black life and health collectively struggles against poverty, muted healthcare access, disproportionate pre-existing issues, and history of medical racism.

Black folks have a particular history with contagion and medical racism, since the days of slavey and colonialism when the white man exposed us to all sorts of new diseases. George Washington wore dentures made from the teeth of African people, and enslaved Black women were used as human guinea pigs in gynecological experiments.

Whats more, the Tuskegee experiment is a reminder of how Black men were once part of a government study, and the victims of a racist conspiracy that left them untreated and ill with Syphilis for years. That history continues to fuel suspicions of the medical profession within the Black community.

Over a century ago, long before the current coronavirus outbreak, there was another pandemic with present-day implications. The 1918 flu epidemic killed 675,000 Americans, and between 50 and 100 million people globally, more than the total number of casualties in World War I.

READ MORE: New York State prisoners to make hand sanitizers to combat coronavirus

One of those who succumbed to the flu that year in the most curious of ironies was the grandfather of Donald Trump. One of the reasons why the flu was so deadly and spread so widely is that in America and Europe, the news media and political leaders hid the truth.

Through censorship and pressure on public health officials to lie, the public was not informed of the dangers. Woodrow Wilson, the racist president of his day who contracted the flu himself, made no public statements about the pandemic, and even enacted a law making it a crime punishable by 20 years in prison to publish information that could hurt the war effort.

Meanwhile, 1918 was the height of segregation and racial violence, when Black people were politically disenfranchised and denied health services, as white supremacy maintained theories about their biological inferiority and compromised their health, safety, education and socioeconomic status. In response to these circumstances, the black community mobilized, created institutions and hospitals and took care of their own sick people.

Theres lots of reasons for distrust around medicine for black people, and the distrust of medicine is not monolithic. There are reasons why certain kinds of people are afraid of medicine, said Dr. Steven Thrasher, assistant professor atthe Northwestern University Medill School of Journalism, Media, Integrated Marketing and Communications told theGrio.

Some are legitimate, some are not. But we have a long history of being tested on against our will, and also at the same time of being disproportionately harmed by diseases and outbreaks, and so I think its important to take this stuff seriously.

Im not aware yet of racial breakdowns of how this is playing out nationally, but certainly in terms of my own research which is primarily about HIV and police violence and gun violence, these things always disproportionately impact us. So Im particularly worried, he added.

READ MORE: LeBron refuses to play if Coronavirus keeps fans barred from arenas

Today, faced with a president who lies to your face about the gravity of the coronavirus crisis, the Black community must be vigilant. There is no telling what Trump will do to exploit the pandemic to further his white supremacist policies, lest you forget the 70,000 migrant children already locked up in ICE detention centers, including Black children from Africa, the Caribbean and Latin America.

Understanding the context of American medical racism should inspire an awareness and diligent plan of action especially when confronting a potentially deadly infectious disease such as COVID-19.

First we must all do our part in minimizing the spread of this virus. According to the World Health Organization, the advice is: we should wash our hands frequently, maintain social distance, avoid touching your face, practice good respiratory hygiene, and if you have fever, cough and hard breathing seek medical attention.

Secondly, separate facts from fiction. Just because Black folks are not the face of the coronavirus, does not mean we have special protection. The low numbers here and in Africa might be more about Black folks conservative practice of traveling outside their country and general segregated domestic travel patterns in the U.S.

In fact, BBC reportsthat Africa has more than 30 cases including countries such as Egypt, Nigeria and South Africa.

The COVID-19 gravely affects seniors and people with pre-existing conditions, such as compromised immune system, hypertension, cardiovascular diseases and diabetes. As Bloomberg news reported, top Coronavirus doctors in Wuhan, China, say high Blood pressure is major death risk. Since hypertension affects African Americans in higher numbers we must pay attention.

Contracting and falling ill to the coronavirus cannot be the way you find out you have diabetes or heart disease. This is why having access to regular medical care to know your pre-existing conditions is a smart way to protect oneself and ones community from the harm and spread of infectious diseases like the coronavirus.

So areas in our community where medical care is especially lacking, like in prisons and the homeless population, we should be intelligently worried. Dr. Thrasher also points out that, homelessness is a huge driver of incarceration, and those are two ways where the coronavirus could affect Black people very badly.

When we think of world changing disasters, we think of big things, like hurricanes, tornadoes, earthquakes or maybe even some gigantic meteorite headed our way. But history has shown us repeatedly that it is the little things, the microscopic elements that we need to really worry about.

Whether it is the black plague, influenza, polio, HIV, infectious diseases are beyond scary, testing humans capacity and social politics for survival. And while natural disasters and pandemics may create some level of surface unity around a common enemy, it also promotes systemic privileges, and exposes the most vulnerable among us, when the stakes are at their highest.

Chances are great that COVID-19 will be contained and that a vaccine will be found and the biggest casualty here will be our fleeting fear of extinction. Chances are also great that this new coronavirus will expose the best and worst of what lurks in the cytoplasm of our humanity.

And whether the source of the pandemic is lab created or natural, medical racism and mistrust are real things, and so we must be prepared, nevertheless for now and for the future. The best way to do that going forward is to advocate for the best preventative care and healthcare system access, before the cough, before the chest pain, before the hospital visit and before the grave.

Opinion articles reflect the thoughts and opinions of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of theGrio and its staff.

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Implant that gives failing hearts a boost! – Infosurhoy

Thursday, March 12th, 2020

An electrical device the size of a watch could revolutionise the treatment of heart failure, a condition that affects nearly a million people in the UK.

The implant releases an electric current to help strengthen and even regenerate a weak or damaged heart muscle, and so improve its pumping action. This pushes more blood around the body, helping patients exercise more easily and enjoy a better quality of life.

Heart failure occurs when the muscle becomes weakened, typically as a result of heart disease, high blood pressure, irregular heart rhythms or the damage caused by a heart attack.

Symptoms include breathlessness, feeling permanently tired and having swollen ankles these worsen over time.

A recent study from Keele University showed that people who have heart failure have a higher risk of premature death than those with common types of cancer.

Treatment involves managing the symptoms there is currently no cure and ranges from drugs that widen blood vessels to improve blood flow, to surgery to bypass clogged arteries, and heart transplants.

Although transplants can be highly effective, there is a shortage of donor organs.

The new device may help those who dont respond to medication and could delay the need for a heart transplant, or avoid the need altogether.

It consists of a small implanted generator, which is attached to two electrodes.

One of the electrodes, in the form of a mesh patch, is attached to the outside of the heart muscle, while the other sits in the left ventricle, one of two large chambers towards the bottom of the heart that collect and expel blood.

The implant is inserted under general anaesthetic in a procedure that involves only two small incisions in the chest. It takes around an hour.

Research in animals has already shown that improving the strength of the hearts contractions can cause muscle cells to regenerate and work more effectively.

Developed by Germany-based Berlin Heals, the new device has been successfully used in humans for the first time in hospitals in Austria and Serbia. After three months, the first patient treated with the device is already showing signs of regeneration.

Dr Punit Ramrakha, a consultant cardiologist at Hammersmith Hospital, says the device may be another option for patients with advanced heart failure who havent responded to conventional therapy.

But he adds: The risks of the procedure which requires a general anaesthetic may well be outweighed by the clinical benefits, and we look forward to seeing the results of the clinical trials.

The idea is that the battery-powered device, which is about the size of a mobile phone, stimulates nerve fibres, leading to increased blood flow.

Doctors at the Chang Gung Memorial Hospital in Taiwan plan to test it.

The best time to take your medication. This week: Diuretics

Used to treat heart failure and high blood pressure, diuretics or water tablets increase the amount of salt and water that comes out of your body in your urine.

Too much salt in the body can cause extra fluid to build up in the blood vessels, raising blood pressure. Diuretics lower blood pressure by flushing salt out of the body, taking unwanted extra fluid with it.

They also cause the walls of the blood vessels to relax and widen, making it easier for blood to flow and so reducing blood pressure.

The downside of the medication is more trips to the toilet.

Doctors advise the best time to take the pills is in the morning. The effects last for six hours. If you need a second dose, take it by mid-afternoon to avoid extra loo trips at night.

Altruist Anti-Redness and Pigmentation Cream has SPF50 in it and also works as a concealer, so its ideal for those with rosacea or other sensitive skin conditions (12.50, 50ml, amazon.co.uk).

How parenthood affects your health. This week: Weight gain

Having children is linked to a long-term increased risk of obesity in women.

A 2005 study of more than 2,000 women, published in the journal Preventative Medicine, found that for each child a woman has, her risk of obesity increases by 7 per cent.

After taking into account factors such as age, marital status and physical activity levels, researchers found that rates of obesity were significantly higher among women who had more children.

Our results suggest pregnant women, especially those with several children, are an important high-risk population for obesity in later life, they said.

The weight gain may be caused by insulin resistance, which is greater in women with more children, as pregnancy can alter glucose metabolism. Another cause could be stress.

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Cattle First: The Business of ranching on the Flying Diamond – Fence Post

Friday, March 6th, 2020

The Flying Diamond crew pictured on the steps of the headquarters in Kit Carson, Colo.Courtesy photo

Jean Johnson is integral to the leadership and labor on the Flying Diamond Ranch, as are the couples children and their families.Courtesy photo

While Charlie Johnson admits they didnt know what they were getting into, he said the transparency and story told in the Cattle First film were well worth the unfamiliar experiences.Screenshot

The Cattle First film offers a look at the Flying Diamond Ranch and how they prioritize cattle care.Courtesy photo

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The documentary Cattle First, featuring Colorados Johnson family of the Flying Diamond Ranch, and Dr. Lora Bledsoe, was produced by Boehringer Ingelheim with the intention of illustrating just that cattle are first.

The film offers a glimpse into the Flying Diamond Ranch, headquartered in Kit Carson, Colo., with operations on the Front Range and at high altitude in Westcliffe. The ranch in Kit Carson was founded in 1907 and Charlie, along with his three siblings, are the fifth generation. Largely a cow calf operation with about 1,200 mother cows, they do run about the same number of stocker cattle and market bred heifers.

The Johnsons were recommended by Kara Smith, the local representative, when BI was seeking family operations for the project.

Though the expectation is largely an unspoken one, Charlie and each of his three siblings left the ranch to earn an education and gain work experience off the ranch before returning, giving them a broader view of the business and of the world beyond the ranchs fences. Charlie attended the University of Denver where he studied finance and earned his MBA before working off the ranch for three or four years.

The ranching industry is always facing criticism from the outside world and we just wanted to tell our story, be transparent, and show what were doing, he said. We just wanted to show what we and the American rancher are all about. Were not unique this is what ranching looks like.

ALL HANDS ON DECK

Scott Johnson said the women involved in the operation add a tremendous amount of value through all of the skills they respectively bring to the table. Valuing women isnt new and Johnson said without them, they would be only half as good as they are.

Thats not just bullshit for us, Scott Johnson said. My grandmother was on the school board in the 50s and Mom (Polly Johnson), the one you saw in the film, won the Chicago Stock Show judging contest in the 50s. Our daughter, Jennifer, arguably is the hardest driving, sharp person weve been around, the CPA of the operation, Katie, was the number one accounting student at University of Denver and I dont know anyone who works harder than Katie.

Lauren, another daughter-in-law, earned her masters degree from Colorado State University and was a social media expert for over a decade with a host of recognizable clients before returning to the ranch. Katelyn, also a daughter-in-law, was an El Pomar Fellow, earned her MBA from DU and now also contributes her community development experience to the local community of Cheyenne County in addition to national and worldwide consulting services.

They might or might not bring lunch, the girls in our bunch, but as you can see in the video, a number of them rope and theyve all flanked calves and as far as management goes, we have a meritocracy, he said.

We all know agricultural operations where the women are second class citizens and dropped the food out to the field or the branding and took care of the house and kids but didnt have anything to do with the business but thats just not how our ranch has been operated, he said.

While it may be more readily recognized now, this attitude dates back to the 1920s when Scotts grandmother earned her degree from the University of Colorado and moved to Kit Carson as the home economics teacher and eventually married into the clan.

Thats been a huge benefit for our family, he said. Instead of excluding those minds, weve embraced that forever.

PARTNERS

One of the decisions that he said has been positive for the ranch and those involved on it has been the move to formal quarterly board meetings. Each person involved is placed according to their strengths to complete the day to day operations, but the board meetings ensure equal say for each person. Weekly phone calls between different areas of the operation build on monthly executive committee meetings upon quarterly board meetings. This move was made possible through the assistance and guidance of Scotts cousin, Kirk Samuelson, a retired CEO of the nations largest construction company. Defining roles, drawing the line between business and family, and moving forward within the board meeting model was all made possible under Samuelsons watchful eye.

We dont have any oil or wind towers, our deal is an ag operation and we have to make money in agriculture so theres a lot of pressure on us to do well, he said. Its not a hobby for us.

Another expert who is featured in the film and Johnson said makes important contributions to the operation, is large animal practitioner and neighbor, Dr. Lora Bledsoe. Preventative medicine and herd planning are two of the areas Bledsoe is most involved in, aside from emergency medicine and the care of sick cattle. Vaccination protocol specific to the operation, she said, is vitally important and a role an operations veterinarian can advise.

Bledsoe joined Charlie and Scott live on RFD-TV last week to discuss the ways cattle care is made a priority. The group was in Nashville when the tornado hit and while they all said it was chaotic, they were unhurt.

The film may be viewed at cattlefirstmovie.com.

Gabel is an assistant editor and reporter for The Fence Post. She can be reached at rgabel@thefencepost.com or (970) 768-0024.

The Flying Diamond crew pictured on the steps of the headquarters in Kit Carson, Colo.Courtesy photo

Jean Johnson is integral to the leadership and labor on the Flying Diamond Ranch, as are the couples children and their families.Courtesy photo

While Charlie Johnson admits they didnt know what they were getting into, he said the transparency and story told in the Cattle First film were well worth the unfamiliar experiences.Screenshot

The Cattle First film offers a look at the Flying Diamond Ranch and how they prioritize cattle care.Courtesy photo

Show CaptionsHide Captions

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Cattle First: The Business of ranching on the Flying Diamond - Fence Post

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Students studying to be health-care professionals on front lines of coronavirus outbreak – Inside Higher Ed

Friday, March 6th, 2020

A group of students studying and training in health-care disciplines at the Lake Washington Institute of Technology, a public institution in Kirkland, Wash., which has been hard hit by the coronavirus, has been self-quarantined at home for 14 days after possible exposure to the virus in health-care settings. Four students at Los Rios Community College District, in California, were directed by public health authorities to self-quarantine after being exposed to the virus in the course of their professional medical duties.

As the virus continues to spread to other parts of the country, public health officials and college administrators in allied health departments are urging special precautions for students studying for careers in the health professions and working along with or training under those on the front lines of the coronavirus outbreak.

After widespread news reports that 17 nursing students, one student studying to be a physical therapy assistant and four professors at the Lake Washington Institute might have been exposed to the virus -- the college said a group had visited a long-term nursing facility where seven residents have died of COVID-19, the illness caused by the new coronavirus) -- leaders in nursing education said its now more important than ever to emphasize preventative precautions and infection-control protocols in the classroom and in clinical settings.

From the very first course our nursing students take, which is usually health assessment, we reinforce preventive precautions so that they protect themselves from exposure, said Ann H. Cary, chair of the Board of Directors for the American Association of Colleges of Nursing and dean of the Marieb College of Health and Human Services at Florida Gulf Coast University. We are emphasizing that now more than ever that you cant have a lapse in the way that you approach patients. The hand-washing techniques are critically important not only in classes but especially when they go into the clinical areas. Were working with clinical partners in each of our areas to determine what are additional protocols that will be in place at those institutions and ensuring that our students are oriented toward the additional protocols.

Tener Goodwin Veenema, a professor of nursing and public health at Johns Hopkins University whose research focuses on disaster medicine and emergency preparedness, said one of the big challenges for nursing schools nationwide is that the trend toward accelerated, shorter-duration programs limits what gets taught in the curriculum.

There are a limited number of hours and topics that can be covered, she said. We have nursing students who are probably getting probably less than one hour, maybe an hour and a half in their entire curriculum on how you go about responding to a public health emergency. What we as nurse educators need to do is ensure that all nursing students have the knowledge, the skills and the abilities that they will need either on a clinical rotation or when they enter the workforce to keep themselves safe and to keep patient safe.

Goodwin Veenema said nurses need knowledge and skills in infection-containment strategies, surveillance and detection of illness, protocols for quarantining and isolating patients, and how to select appropriate levels of protective gear and take it on and off without contamination.

Weve seen it with Ebola, and weve seen it with SARS [severe acute respiratory syndrome], where health-care professionals are disproportionately impacted by this virus because they are exposed to it more frequently and in all probability end up having a higher biological load, she said. There really is a lot for nurses to know because the nursing profession will be the front-line responders and will be receiving patients in the emergency department and screening patients and their families in private offices and community health centers.

Donna Meyer, chief executive officer for the Organization for Associate Degree Nursing, said via email that nursing students learn proper handwashing techniques, and other elements such as isolation techniques, the use of masks, gowns, gloves, and ventilation that prevent or slow the spread of infectious diseases from the moment they enter a nursing program of study. This is reinforced throughout a nursing program and techniques are applied in all clinical settings, such as hospitals, long-term care, and community settings.

Meyer added that nursing programs build their curricula around topics covered on the licensing exam.

Safety and infection control is a part of the licensing exam focusing on how the nurse protects clients and health care personnel from health and environmental hazards, she said. Nursing curriculums adapt and present any current issues as needed (such as Covid-19), following guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organization. Additionally, Nursing Deans/Directors collaborate with their local clinical partners to assess the current status of public health issues in the communities. Nursing students follow the best practices of the clinical setting they are in and are expected to learn and follow the protocol of the setting [where] they are practicing.

In addition to preparing students for the new challenges they may face in clinical settings, nursing program administrators are also thinking about what might happen if their students clinical education gets disrupted by the coronavirus -- if students are asked not to report to hospitals or other health-care settings as an infection-control measure. Cary, of the American Association of Colleges of Nursing, said programs are exploring the idea of having students practice their skills in simulation labs.

If thats not going to be enough, we have to think about how to focus concentrated learning experiences for students at another time, she said.

Cary also stressed that these concerns are similar to those of other medical and health-care programs. For example, she said, if a college has a clinical lab program, they have to take extraordinary precautions as well, as those students are actually conducting testing on clinical lab samples. Physical therapy, occupational therapy, even our health-care administrator students as they walk into clinical facilities -- everybody is responsible for implementing the protocols.

As for medical schools, John Prescott, the chief academic officer for the Association of American Medical Colleges, said the association "is working closely with our member medical schools and teaching hospitals who are actively preparing for and responding to the coronavirus and is gathering information on how they are involving learners in patient care."

"We know that medical schools have appropriate plans and policies already in place to safeguard the well-being of their students and communities, to ensure the continuity of their education and research missions, and are following guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention," Prescott said.

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Carl Kesselman Honored with IEEE Medal for Career Achievements in Computing – USC Viterbi School of Engineering

Friday, March 6th, 2020

Dr. Carl Kesselman, Deans Professor in the Daniel J. Epstein Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering, professor of Computer Science and Preventative Medicine at Keck School of Medicine and USC Information Sciences Institute Fellow.

Dr. Carl Kesselman, pioneer of grid computing, has been recognized with the 2020 Harry H. Goode Memorial Award from the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). Kesselman received the award with Dr. Ian T. Foster, Arthur Holly Compton Distinguished Service Professor of Computer Science at the University of Chicago and director of the Data Science and Learning Division at Argonne National Laboratory.

Kesselman is a Deans Professor in the USC Viterbi School of Engineering Daniel J. Epstein Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering and a professor of Computer Science and Preventative Medicine at Keck School of Medicine. He is a USC Information Sciences Institute Fellow, where he directs the Informatics Systems Research Division, and the Director of the Center of Excellence for Discovery Informatics in the Michelson Center for Convergent Biosciences. He will receive the bronze medal with Foster at the IEEEs annual awards dinner in McLean, Virginia, on May 27, 2020. The honor recognizes Kesselman and Fosters sustained contributions to high-performance computing and distributed systems at the highest level.

The IEEEs Goode Award is given to individuals for achievements in the information processing field, whether a single contribution of theory, design, or technique of outstanding significance, or the accumulation of important contributions throughout their career. Kesselman and Foster join a distinguished list of computer scientists and engineers including the creators of the first electronic digital computers, the Internet, and pioneers in integrated circuit design.

Kesselman said he was honored to be recognized by the IEEE.

Ive always been excited about our research and its contributions to other scientific results across many disciplines, he said. Im a second generation IEEE member and recognition for this work by my peers is incredibly gratifying.

Kesselman joined USC in 1997. The Globus software that he co-invented with Foster and Steve Tuecke is widely used in national and international cyberinfrastructure and science projects. His current research focuses on creating sociotechnical systems that leverage distributed and data-centered computing to accelerate discovery by collaborative teams solving societally important problems.

Kesselman is a Fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery and British Computing Society. His previous honors include the Lovelace Medal from the British Computing Society and an honorary doctorate from the University of Amsterdam.

Kesselman received his PhD in Computer Science from the University of California, Los Angeles, a Master of Science in Electrical Engineering from the University of Southern California, and a Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering from the State University of New York at Buffalo.

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Coronavirus: Everything you need to know – Home – WSFX

Friday, March 6th, 2020

As coronavirus continues to spread across the globe, here is everything you need to know about the deadly virus.

What is coronavirus?

Coronaviruses are a family of viruses named after their appearance, a crown, said Dr. Mark Rupp, an infectious disease expert at the University of Nebraska Medical Center.

How dangerous is coronavirus?

Most coronaviruses cause mild symptomsthat patients easily recover from.

What are the symptoms?

Many symptoms of COVID-19 and influenza overlap, heres how to spot the differences.

When did the outbreak start?

The World Health Organizations China office says it began receiving reports in late December of a mysterious virus behind a number of pneumonia cases in Wuhan, a city in eastern China with a population of roughly 11 million people.

How is coronavirus transmitted?

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), coronaviruses are common in camels, cattle, catsand bats. Person-to-person transmissions are thought to occur when an infected person coughs or sneezes, similar to how influenza and other respiratory pathogens spread.

How often are people hospitalized for it?

The risk of contracting coronavirus remains low for most Americans, U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Jerome Adams said.

How can you protect against getting it?

You can protect yourself from coronaviruses by following basic wellness practices.

How do I sanitize surfaces?

Keeping your home and surfaces clean using the correct disinfectants is crucial in preventing its spread.

How long can it survive on surfaces?

The novel coronavirus may be able to live on surfaces, namely metal, glass or plastic,for up to nine days if it resembles some of its other human coronavirus-causing cousins, that is.

Are you washing your hands correctly?

There are a few general rules to follow when it comes to washing your hands thoroughly, including for how long you should keep them under runningwater.

How do I make my own hand sanitizer?

If soap and water arent available, hand sanitizer is the next best option namely if it contains at least 60 percent alcohol, the CDCsays.

Do face masks help?

Surgical masks will not prevent your acquiring diseases, said Dr. William Schaffner, a professor of preventive medicine and infectious diseases at Vanderbilt University, and the medical director of the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases.

Who is most at risk?

Young people, senior citizensand those with immune deficiencies could have an acute reaction if exposed to the virus.

Does it affect pregnant women?

The health agency said that while risk to the American public remains low at this time, pregnant women should continue to engage in usual preventative actions to avoid infection, such as washing hands often and avoiding contact with people who are sick.

How do you care for a relative who has it?

Even if the patient does test positive, it can be considered safe to continue supporting them with some extra precautions.

How do you test for it?

Before being tested for thedeadly virus, patients must first answer a series of questions.

How do you treat it?

Fox News received an in-depth look at the new disease fromDr. Debra Chew, a former epidemic intelligence officer for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention(CDC) and an assistant professor of medicine at Rutgers New Jersey Medical School.

Is there a cure?

Health agencies recommend patients receive supportive care to relieve coronavirus symptoms.

Can you get it through packages?

Surgeon GeneralJerome Adams said, There is no evidence right now that the coronavirus can be spread through mail.

How do you travel during the outbreak?

As the coronavirus risk grows globally, being smart about planning travel will help you stay safe.

How does coronavirus compare to other outbreaks?

SARS and MERS came from animals, and this newest virus almost certainly did, too.

Is coronavirus Disease X?

The novel coronavirus has led one expert to say that it fits the criteria for Disease X,a designated placeholder on theWorld Health Organizations (WHO)list of illnesses that have potential to reach international epidemic levels.

Is coronavirus here to stay?

Dr. Robert Redfield, the director of theCDC, said the virus is probably with us beyond this season, beyond this year.

Coronavirus: What to know about the mysterious illness

Coronaviruses are a family of viruses named after their appearance, a crown, said Dr. Mark Rupp, an infectious disease expert at the University of Nebraska Medical Center.

There are many types and a few are known to infect humans. Some cause colds and respiratory illnesses, while others have evolved into illnesses such as Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) andMiddle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS).

SARS began in China and infected some 8,000 people during a 2002-2003 outbreak. Approximately 770 people died after it spread to other cities and countries.

This is the third kind of novel coronavirus that were having experience with that can cause lower respiratory tract disease, Rupp said Tuesday.

In some rare cases, the virus can be transmitted from animals to humans but are typically transferred during contact between humans, according to the CDC.

How dangerous is coronavirus?

The coronavirus, or what is now known as COVID-19, began at an animal and seafood market in the city of Wuhan and has since spread to several other countries, including the United States. The illness is now said to be transferable between humans.

As news of the virus spread and death tolls began to spike, many have begun to questionhow dangerousthe new outbreak is. Coronaviruses, which get their name from their crown-like appearance, come in many types that cause illnesses in people and animals.

Most coronaviruses cause mild symptoms, such as the common cold that patients easily recover from. Other strains of the virus such asSevere Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) andMiddle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) can cause pneumonia and possibledeath.

SARS killed 770 of8,000 people infected in 2002-2003. MERS killed about three or four out of every 10 people infected, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said.

In an effort to curb the spread of the disease (human coronaviruses are passed through coughing and sneezing, close personal contact, touching objects with the virus on it and then touching the mouth, nose or eyes before washing your hands, according to the CDC), the city of Wuhan shut down all air and train traffic. On Jan. 30, The World Health Organization (WHO) declared the coronavirus outbreak a public health emergency just days after WHO officials announced they would hold off doing so.

The main reason for this declaration is not because of what is happening in China, but because of what is happening in other countries. Our greatest concern is the potential for the virus to spread to countries with weaker health systems, and which are ill-prepared to deal with it, WHO Director-GeneralTedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus saidat the time.

Meanwhile, CDC officialsmonitoring the outbreak maintain that the risk to the American public is low, despite the 15 confirmed cases of the virus that have occurred in the U.S. in recent weeks.

Recently, the CDC and Customs and Border Protection (CBP) expanded passenger screenings to include 20 U.S. airports, which take in 90 percent of all passengers from China, Vice PresidentPence said.

In recent weeks, Sen. Tom Cottonraised concerns about a Chinese cover-up of the virus as it spreads to various countries.In a letter to the Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar, Cottonurged Azar to vet information from China, given its history of cover-ups during the SARS outbreak. At the time, China didnt announce the disease to the public until five months after it began.

If you have reason to believe that U.S. officials are being provided with false or misleading information about the disease from Chinese government officials, I ask you to notify Congress immediately, Cotton wrote.

How coronavirus differs from flu: Symptoms to watch for

Officials are urging anyone who develops possible symptoms of the novel coronavirus to contact health care providers to inquire about next steps and possible testing, but with millions infected by the influenza virus in the U.S., many are wondering how to tell the difference between the two.

There is so much overlap in symptoms between flu and COVID-19 but a couple of hallmark differences do exist, Dr. Caesar Djavaherian, co-founder of Carbon Health, told Fox News. Influenza tends to cause much more body pain and the COVID-19 virus tends to feel much more like the common cold with fever, cough, runny nose and diarrhea. However, in a small portion of the population with either COVID-19 or influenza, symptoms progress to kidney failure and respiratory failure.

By the end of February, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimated that at least 32 million cases of the flu were reported in the U.S., resulting in 310,000 hospitalizations and 18,000 deaths. For the coronavirus, by March 3 the number of confirmed cases in the U.S. had reached 100, including several presumptive positive cases and 24 in repatriated Americans. At least nine COVID-19 patients have died.

But several health officials, including New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, have cautioned that healthy Americans who contract COVID-19 may not even know that they have it, and will heal without any treatment. Others say their experience will be similar to that of a common cold, but for those with underlying health conditions, the virus can be severe.

The differences arise in the very small portion of the population who are at risk because of their lung or heart conditions whose lungs can fill with fluid or go into kidney failure and unfortunately, eventually die, with COVID-19, Djavaherian said.

One of the most imperative ways to stop the spread, experts say, is to avoid contact with a sick person, and to practice your own good hygiene. Part of that includes staying home when youre sick and thoroughly washing hands.

If you are sick, monitor your symptoms daily, and when your common cold turns into a deep unrelenting cough and then shortness of breath, those are the signs that we worry about and the signs that require patients to get medical attention right away, Djavaherian said. They may be from pneumonia but in a very, very small group of patients, maybe a COVID-19 infection that has gone into the lungs.

Djavaherian said its imperative to call your health care provider ahead of time to share your symptoms and concerns so that they can prepare the appropriate tests and protect others from potential exposure.

I also recommend using telemedicine, where you can see a doctor via phone or video, to get your questions answered from the comfort and safety of your own home without putting others or yourself at risk, he said.

How did the coronavirus outbreak start?

The World Health Organizations China office says it began receiving reports in late December of a mysterious virus behind a number of pneumonia cases in Wuhan, a city in eastern China with a population of roughly 11 million people.

Researchers suspect the virus originated at a seafood market in Wuhan, where wild animals, including birds, rabbits, bats, and snakes are traded.

It was initially believed the virus came from snakes. But a research paper by a team of virologists at the Wuhan Institute for Virology suggests that the coronavirus more likely came from bats, which was also the source of the SARS outbreak.

Bats are known to carry multiple viruses without getting sick, according to the New York Times, which said they have caused human diseases in Africa, Malaysia, Bangladesh and Australia, and are thought to be the reservoir for Ebola.

Authorities shut down the market on January 1. But by then, the virus had spread beyond the market and was being transmitted between people.

On January 12, Chinese health officials shared a genetic sequence of the virus with other countries to better diagnose the strain in patients.

A committee of the WHO on Thursday declared the outbreak a global emergency. The U.N. health agency defines an international emergency as an extraordinary event that constitutes a risk to other countries and requires a coordinated international response.

Such a declaration usually brings greater money and resources but also compels governments to restrict travel and trade to affected countries. The announcement also imposes stricter requirements for disease reporting on countries.

How is coronavirus transmitted?

This virus has spread at unprecedented scale and speed, with cases passing between people in multiple countries across the world, said Dr. Jeremy Farrar, director of Britains Welcome Trust. It is also a start reminder of how vulnerable we are to epidemics of infectious diseases known and unknown.

The United States and South Korea confirmed its first cases of person-to-person spread of the virus.

Scientists say transmission of the virus is most likely between people with close contact, like families. But there have been reported instances of people who may have had less exposure to the virus in Japan and Germany.

The coronavirus has now infected more people in China than were sickened there during the 2002-2003 outbreak of SARS. Virologists believe it originated at a seafood market in the eastern Chinese town of Wuhan when someone or a group of people came into contact with wild animals being traded there.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), coronaviruses are common in camels, cattle, cats, and bats. Person-to-person transmissions are thought to occur when an infected person coughs or sneezes, similar to how influenza and other respiratory pathogens spread.

Other ways the virus may spread from an infected person to others is through touching or shaking hands, or if a person touchesa surface with the virus on it, then touches theirmouth, nose, or eyes before washing their hands, the CDC says.

But despite the WHOs declaration of emergency, the immediate heal risk to the general American public still remains relatively low.

Surgeon general say risk of coronavirus remains low, most people will not need hospitalization

The risk of contracting coronavirus remains low for most Americans, U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Jerome Adams reassured.

In an interview on Americas Newsroom with host Laura Ingle, Adams said that the administration wants the public to know the risk of infection and be prepared, but not to panic in the process.

What youre going to hear from the president is what youve heard from him all along: that the risk to the average American of coronavirus at this time remains low, he said. However, we are seeing pockets in this country of increased cases of coronavirus. And so, we want people to prepare.

Adams advised that Americans wash their hands frequently, cover a cough or sneeze, clean surfaces, and stay home if sick.

That said, Adams warned that wearing a mask was not just ineffective, it was potentially harmful and may increase the risk of getting the virus.

We know that masks are not effective for the general public in keeping them safe from coronavirus and may actually increase their risk of getting coronavirus or the flu because if you dont wear a mask properly you often will end up touching your face frequently and can increase your risk of exposure to a respiratory disease, he explained.

When you look at the people who are getting coronavirus, 80 percent of them are not needing to be hospitalized, Adams continued. Theyre having a mild illness like the cold or like a minor flu.

Of the 20 percent who go on to need hospitalization or more medical care, we know that the folks who are most at risk tend to be people who are elderly andpeople who have medical problems: heart disease, lung disease, cancer, andchemotherapy, he told Ingle.

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Yes, Stress Really Is Making You Sick – Newsweek

Friday, March 6th, 2020

In the mid-2000s, Dr. Nadine Burke Harris opened a children's medical clinic in the Bayview section of San Francisco, one of the city's poorest neighborhoods. She quickly began to suspect something was making many of her young patients sick.

She noticed the first clues in the unusually large population of kids referred to her clinic for symptoms associated with attention deficit hyperactivity disorderan inability to focus, impulsivity, extreme restlessness. Burke Harris was struck not just by the sheer number of ADHD referrals, but also by how many of the patients had additional health problems. One child arrived in her clinic with eczema and asthma and was in the 50th percentile of height for a 4-year-old. He was 7. There were kindergarteners with hair falling out, two children with extremely rare cases of autoimmune hepatitis, middle-school kids stricken with depression and an epidemic number of kids with behavioral problems and asthma.

Burke Harris noticed something else unusual about these children. Whenever she asked their parents or caregivers to tell her about conditions at home, she almost invariably uncovered a major life disruption or trauma. One child had been sexually abused by a tenant, she recalls. Another had witnessed an attempted murder. Many children came from homes struggling with the incarceration or death of a parent, or reported acrimonious divorces. Some caregivers denied there were any problems at all, but had arrived at the appointment high on drugs.

Although none of her mentors at medical school back in the early 2000s had suggested that stress could cause seemingly unrelated physical illnesses, what she was seeing in the clinic was so consistentand would eventually so alarm herit sent her scrambling for answers.

"If I were a doctor, and I was seeing incredibly high rates of autism, I'd be doing research on autism," she says. "Or if I saw incredibly high rates of certain types of cancer, I'd be doing that research. What I was seeing was incredibly, incredibly high rates of kids who were experiencing adversity and then having really significant health outcomes, whether it was difficulty learning, or asthma, or weird autoimmune diseases. I was seeing that the rates were highest in my kids who were experiencing adversity. And that drove me to the latest scientific literature."

What Burke Harris found there would eventually thrust her to the forefront of a growing movement that aims to transform the way the medical profession handles childhood adversity. Childhood stress can be as toxic and detrimental to the development of the brain and body as eating lead paint chips off the wall or drinking it in the waterand should be screened for and dealt with in similar ways, in Burke Harris' view. As California's first Surgeon General, a newly created position, she is focusing on getting lawmakers and the public to act.

Earlier this year, thanks in part to her advocacy, California allocated more than $105 million to promote screening for "Adverse Childhood Experiences" (ACEs)10 family stressors, first identified in the late 1990s, that can elicit a "toxic stress response," a biological cascade driven by the stress hormone cortisol that is linked to a wide range of health problems later in life.

In recent years, epidemiologists, neuroscientists and molecular biologists have produced evidence that early childhood experiences, if sufficiently traumatic, can flip biological switches that can profoundly affect the architecture of the developing brain and long-term physical and emotional health. These "epigenetic" changesmolecular-level processes that turn genes on and offnot only make some people more likely to self-medicate using nicotine, drugs or alcohol and render them more susceptible to suicide and mental illness later in life. They can impair immune system function and predispose us to deadly diseases including heart diseases, cancer, dementia and many others, decades later. Not only does childhood stress harm the children themselves, but the effects may also be passed down to future generations.

A groundswell of support has arisen in the world of public health in favor of treating childhood adversity as a public health crisis that requires interventiona crisis that seems to run in families and repeat itself in trans-generational cycles. At last count, at least 25 states and the District of Columbia had passed statutes or resolutions that refer to Adverse Childhood Experiences. Since 2011, more than 60 state statutes aimed at ACEs or intervening to mitigate their effects have been enacted into law, according ACEs Connection, a website devoted to tracking the phenomenon and providing resources. California's effort is among the most aggressive. The state has set aside $50 million for next year to train doctors to provide screening, and $45 million to begin reimbursing doctors in the state's MediCal program for doing so ($29 for each screening). If it proves effective, other states may soon follow.

"The social determinants of health are to the 21st century, what infectious disease was to the 20th century," says Burke Harris. She rose to national prominence after writing a 2018 book on the subject, embarking on a national book tour and recording a TED Talk that has been viewed more than 6 million times. She was tapped for her new post by Governor Gavin Newsom in January 2019.

The research is so fresh that many clinicians are still debating the best way to tackle the problem, most significantly whether the science is mature and the interventions effective enough to implement universal screening. And the details of California's approach to screening are controversial in the world of public health. (The epidemiologist who developed a key questionnaire being used as a screening tool says it was never intended to be used to evaluate individuals.) But there is broad consensus, at least, about one thing. For all the buzz in public health and policy circles about "ACEs," few people have heard the term before. The first task, many people on the front lines of health education agree, will be to change that so that caregivers themselves can learn about the vicious cycle of childhood adversity, and get the help they need to break it.

The Science of Toxic StressThe research on ACE stems from a seminal 17,000-person epidemiological study published in 1998. The first clue came years earlier, however, with the plight of an obese, 29-year-old woman from San Diego named Patty.

Over the course of a 52-week trial of a weight-loss diet, Patty dropped from 408 lbs. all the way down to 132. Then, over a single three-week period, she abruptly gained 37 pounds of it backa feat that her doctors didn't even know was scientifically possible.

Patty's dramatic weight swings got the attention of Vincent Felitti, the head of the preventative medicine program at the massive managed care consortium Kaiser Permanente, and the man who had designed the obesity study. Felitti had been astounded at the rapid pace with which the study subjects lost weight. "In the early days of the obesity study, I remember thinking 'wow, we've got this problem licked,'" Felitti recalls. "This is going to be a world-famous department!"

Then, for reasons nobody could explain, patients began dropping out of the program in droves. Felitti found it particularly alarming because the ones leaving the fastest seemed to be the ones losing the most weight. When Felitti heard about Patty, he arranged a chat. Patty claimed she was just as mystified by her massive weight gain as he was; she assured him she was still vigilantly sticking to the diet. But then she offered up a suggestive clue: Every night when she went to bed, she told Felitti, the kitchen was clean. Yet when she woke up, there were boxes and cans open and dirty dishes in the sink. Patty lived alone and had a history of sleepwalking. Was it possible, she wondered, that she was "sleep eating?"

When Felitti asked her if anything unusual had happened in her life around the time the dirty pots and pans began to appear, one event came to mind. An older, married man at work had told her she looked great and suggested they have an affair. After further questioning, Felitti learned Patty had first started gaining weight at age 10, around the time her grandfather began sexually molesting her.

Felitti came to believe that for Patty, obesity was an adaptive mechanism: she overate as a defense against predatory men. Felitti began asking other relapsing study participants if they had a history of sexual abuse. He was shocked by their answers. Eventually, more than 50 percent of his 300 patients would admit to such a history.

"Initially I thought, 'Oh, no, I must be doing something wrong. With numbers like this, people would know if this were true. Somebody would have told me in medical school,'" he recalls.

Felitti started bringing patients together in groups to talk about their secrets, their fears and the challenges they facedand their weight loss began to stick. Within a couple years, the program was so successful that Felitti was receiving regular invitations to speak about his program to medical audiences. Whenever he brought up sexual abuse and its apparent link to obesity, however, audience members would "storm explosively" out of the room or stand up to argue with him, he says. Nobody, it seemed, wanted to hear what he had to say.

At least one person was intrigued by his findings. Robert Anda, a researcher at U.S. Centers for Disease Control (CDC), had been studying chronic diseases and the counterintuitive links between depression, hope and heart attacks. He knew firsthand what it was like to deal with colleagues who considered his work flaky. Anda and Felitti got to talking. They realized there was only one way that both of them would be able to overcome the skepticism they were encountering: they needed to do a rigorous study. At Anda's urging, Felitti agreed not just to recruit a larger sample but to expand its scope to examine the link between a wide array of common childhood stressors and health later in life.

This became the ground-breaking "ACE Study," a 17,000-person retrospective project aimed at examining the relationship between childhood exposure to emotional, physical and sexual abuse and household dysfunction, and risky behaviors and disease in adulthood. Starting in 1998, and continuing with follow-ups well into the 2000s, Felitti and Anda's team published a series of counterintuitive papers that upended much of what we thought we knew about the mind-body connection.

To gather the data, Felitti persuaded Kaiser Permanente-affiliated doctors to recruit patients in Southern California undergoing routine physical exams. The patients were asked to complete confidential surveys detailing both their current health status and behaviors, and the types of adversity they've endured: physical, emotional and sexual abuse, neglect, domestic violence, parental incarceration, separation or divorce, family mental illness, the early death of a parent, alcoholism and drug abuse. To analyze the data, the researchers added up the number of ACEs, calculated an "ACE score," then correlated those scores with high-risk behaviors and diseases to see if they could find any patterns.

The first shocker was just how common these ACEs were. More than half of those participating had at least one, a quarter had two or more and roughly 6 percent reported four or more. This was not just a problem of the poor. Childhood emotional adversity cut across all racial, ethnic and economic lines. Even more surprising was the impact of these stressors later in life. When the researchers ran their analysis, they discovered a direct, dose-dependent link between the number of ACEs and behavioral issues like alcoholism, smoking and promiscuitythose who had experienced four or more categories of childhood exposure had a four- to 12-fold increased risk of alcoholism, drug abuse, depression and suicide attempts.

The results went beyond these common trauma-related health risks. The study also linked childhood trauma to a host of seemingly unrelated physical problems, including ischemic heart disease, cancer, chronic lung disease, skeletal fractures and liver disease.

What made the study so shocking was that the data suggested that even those who didn't drink, use drugs or act out in risky ways still had a far higher rate of developing ischemic heart disease, cancer, chronic lung disease, skeletal fractures and liver disease. Unexpectedly, the researchers had discovered that childhood adversity seemed to be an independent risk factor for some of the leading causes of death decades later.

"We found a strong graded relationship between the breadth of exposure to abuse or household dysfunction during childhood and multiple risk factors for several of the leading causes of death in adults," the authors wrote.

The study dropped like a bomb in the world of public health. But the scientific work was just beginning. In the years since, scores of researchers have begun to dig into the biological mechanisms in play. And with emerging brain scanning technologies and advances in molecular biology, an explanation for the ACE study has begun to emerge. Some clinicians and scientists have begun to turn these findings into concrete interventions and treatments they hope can be used to reverse or at least attenuate the impact.

Much of the research has focused on how ACEs affect the functioning of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, a biological system that plays a key role in the mind-body connection. The HPA axis controls our reactions to stress and is crucial in regulating an array of important body processes including immune function, energy storage and expenditureeven our experience of emotions and mood. It does so by adjusting the release of key hormones, most notably cortisol, the release of which is increased by stress or low blood sugar levels.

Cortisol has many functions. On a daily basis, it regulates the level of energy we have as the day progresses: we generally experience our highest levels of cortisol, and energy, upon waking up. These levels gradually diminish throughout the day, reaching very low levels just prior to bedtime.

Cortisol also serves a role in the body's energy allocation during times of crisis. When all is calm, the body builds muscle or bone and socks away excess calories for future consumption as fat, performs cellular regeneration and keeps its immune system strong to fight infection. In the case of a child, the body fuels normal mental and physical development.

In an emergency, however, all these processes get put on hold. The HPA axis floods the bloodstream with adrenaline and cortisol, which signals the body to kick into overdrive immediately. Blood sugar levels spike and the heart pumps harder to provide a fast boost in fuel. If an 11-foot-tall grizzly bear is lumbering in your direction and licking his chops, the additional burst of energy helps you run screaming through the woods or wrestle the critter to the ground and plunge a Bowie knife into its heart.

However, when the emergency goes on for a long timeperhaps over an entire childhood of abusethe resulting high levels of cortisol take a big and lasting toll.

Almost as soon as the ACE study was published, dysregulated cortisol levels seemed a likely culprit to explain the study's startling implications. Was it possible that the chronic stressors identified by Felitti and Anda led to elevated cortisol levels in children? And could those elevated levels account for seemingly unrelated diseases and the range of additional problems that researchers were beginning to link to ACEs?

In the decade after the 1998 ACE study, researchers began seeking out children in Romanian orphanages and measuring cortisol levels, in the hopes of verifying this hypothesis. When researchers began to compare their levels to that of children who had not faced adversity, they found substantial differences. But the results were difficult to interpret.

"There was growing evidence that there was an impact, but the studies were contradictory," says Jackie Bruce, a research scientist at the Oregon Social Learning Center, an NIH-funded research center in Eugene that studies child development. "Sometimes people were finding kids with early adversity had low cortisol and sometimes they were finding they had high cortisol."

In 2009, Bruce and her colleagues demonstrated a possible explanation for the discrepancies. Since morning cortisol levels play such an important role in getting well-functioning individuals ready for the day, they sought out a group of 117 maltreated 3- to 6-year-old children transitioning into new foster care placements in the United States. The researchers then trained the children's caregivers to collect saliva samples before breakfast. For comparison, they recruited a control group of 60 low-income children living with their biological parents who had no previous record of abuse or maltreatment.

Children who had experienced more severe emotional, physical and sexual maltreatment did indeed have abnormally high morning cortisol levels. But scientists also found that children who experienced more severe neglect had abnormally low morning cortisol levels. Different types of adversity, in other words, had different impacts on the HPA system. But whether the adversity took the form of an absence of stimulation or the presence of negative, threatening stimulation, the effect was bad for normal development.

"Low cortisol levels, particularly in the morning, had been linked to externalizing disordersthings like delinquency and alcohol usewhereas high cortisol levels have been linked to more anxiety and depression," and post-traumatic stress disorder, Bruce says.

Even so, Bruce and her colleagues noted that within both groups, "some kids are doing really well, some kids are not doing well." This suggested other factors were also involved. And in recent years, much of the research has focused on understanding the complex interaction between external stressors, genetics and interpersonal interventions.

One of the most important findings to emerge recently is that the experience of childhood adversity, by itself, does not appear to be enough to lead to toxic stress. Genetic predispositions play a role. But even among those predisposed, the effects can be blunted by what researchers call emotional "buffering"a response from a loving, supportive caregiver that comforts the child, restores a sense of safety and allows cortisol levels to fall back down to normal. Some research suggests that this buffering works in part because a good hugor even soft reassuring words from a caregivercan cause the body to release the hormone oxytocin, sometimes referred to as the "cuddle" or "love" hormone.

One of the reasons the ACE study was so effective at highlighting the potential long-term health effects that early childhood adversity can have on health, says Burke Harris, was the nature of the stressors measured. The stressors took place within the context of a family situation that often reflected the failure of a caregiver to intervene as a needed protector.

"The items that are on the ACE screening have this amazing combination of being high stress and also simultaneously taking out the buffering protected mechanisms," Burke Harris says. "If you're being regularly abused, often it's partially because your parents are not intervening."

This hypothesis is supported by experiments in rodents. Back in the 1950s, the psychiatrist Seymour Levine demonstrated that baby rats taken away from their mothers for 15 minutes each day grew up to be less nervous and produce less cortisol than their counterparts. The reason, he suggested, was due to affection from their distressed parent in the form of extra licking and grooming. Studies in the 1990s confirmed that the extra affection and comfort offered by the affectionate parents seemed to have flipped biological "epigenetic" switches that caused their offspring to internalize the sense of safety that had been provided and replicate it biochemically as adults.

Scientists have since documented many biochemical mechanisms by which emotional buffering can help inoculate children exposed to adversity to long-term consequences, and how chronic overactivation of the HPA axis can interfere with developmentor, as one widely cited scientific paper put it, can have an impact akin to "changing the course of a rocket at the moment of takeoff." Neglected and abused Romanian orphans were shown to have smaller brains as a population than those placed in loving foster homes, suggesting a lack of stimulation interfered with normal neuronal growth. Adversity and stress without adequate buffering can turn on genes that flood the system with enzymes that prime the body to respond to further stress by making it easier to produce adrenaline and reactivate the fight-or-flight response quickly, which can make it harder for children with toxic stress to control their emotions.

Toxic stress can also have powerful influences on the developing immune system. Too much cortisol suppresses immunity and increases the chance of infection, while too little cortisol can cause an inflammatory immune response to persist long after it is needed. That can act directly on the brain to produce "sickness behavior," characterized by a lack of appetite, fatigue, social withdrawal, depressed mood, irritability and poor cognitive functioning, according to a 2013 review paper aimed at bringing pediatricians up to speed on the emerging science. As adults, children maltreated during childhood are more likely to have elevated inflammatory markers and a greater inflammatory response to stress, the researchers reported. Chronic elevations in cortisol have also been linked to hypertension, insulin resistance, obesity, type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.

In recent years, Fellitti and Anda's original 1998 paper has been cited more than 10,000 times in further studies. And as awareness in the public health community has risen, so too has the amount of data available to work with, and the vast body of research documenting the far-reaching consequences of ACEs. Last fall, the CDC analyzed data from 25 states collected between 2015 and 2017, and more than 144,000 adults (a sample 8.5 times larger than the original 1998 study). The authors noted that ACEs are associated with at least five of the top 10 leading causes of death; that preventing ACEs could potentially reduce chronic diseases, risky health behaviors and socioeconomic challenges later in life and have a positive impact on education and employment levels. Reducing ACEs could prevent 21 million cases of depression; 1.9 million cases of heart disease; and 2.5 million cases of obesity, the authors said.

Hundreds of new studies are published every year. In just the last month, studies have come out analyzing the "mediating role of ACEs in attempted suicides among adolescents in military families," the impact of ACEs on aging and on "deviant and altruistic behavior during emerging adulthood."

How to Save the KidsWhile these findings help explain the link to chronic diseases, Harris Burke and other public health officials believe they also provide the basis for some of the most promising interventions in the clinic today. Not surprisingly given her background, Burke Harris looks to pediatric caregivers and other doctors to lead the effort to detect and treat patients suffering from toxic stress. To help them do it, late last year, California released a clinical "algorithm": basically a chart spelling out how doctors should proceed once they compiled a patient's ACE score.

Patients are found to be high-risk for negative health outcomes if the doctor, using a questionnaire, can identify four or more of the adverse childhood experiences or some combination of psychological, social or physical conditions found in studies to be associated with toxic stress. For children, that's obesity, failure-to-thrive syndrome and asthma, but also other indicators such as drug or alcohol use prior to the age of 14, high-school absenteeism and other social problems. For adults, the list includes suicide attempts, memory impairment, hepatitis, cancer and other conditions found to be higher in populations with high ACE scores.

Doctors are encouraged to educate all patients about ACEs and toxic stress regardless of their ACE scores. For patients found to be at intermediate or high risk, additional steps are recommended. The first step in the case of children is to make sure parents or caregivers understand the links ACEs can have to adverse health outcomes. That way, they can be on the lookout for new conditions and take action to prevent them.

Key to this educational process is making sure caregivers understand the protective role buffering can play in countering the corrosive effects of stress. Buffering includes nurturing caregiving, but it can include simple steps like focusing on maintaining proper sleep, exercise and nutrition. Mindfulness training, mental health services and an emphasis on developing healthy relationships are other interventions that Burke Harris says can help combat the stress response.

The specifics will vary on a case-by-case basis, and will rely on the judgment and creativity of the doctor to help adult caregivers design a plan to protect the childand to help both those caregivers and high-risk adults receive social support services and interventions when necessary. In the months ahead, the protocols and interventions will be further refined and expanded. "Most of our interventions are essentially reducing stress hormones, and ultimately changing our environment," says Burke Harris. "But some of the things that I think are really exciting are on the horizon."

In recent years researchers have begun to explore whether the "love drug," oxytocina hormone released when a parent hugs a child might form the basis for potent pharmaceutical interventions. For now, however, "we're on the scientific frontier," she says.

The relatively young state of the science and the fuzziness and subjective nature of the tools California plans to use to evaluate the threat have alarmed some public-health experts. They worry that the state is moving too fast, before more is known about the science of toxic stress. Robert Anda, for one, is uncomfortable with the use of screening tools that rely on an ACE score. He worries it might be misused in the doctor's office because it doesn't measure caregiver buffering or genetic predispositions that might prove protective. The questionnaire he and Felitti developed for the original study was always meant to be a blunt instrumentsuited for a survey of a huge population of patients. The problem with applying it to individual patients, he says, is that it doesn't take into account the severity of the stressor. Who's to say, for instance, that someone with an ACE score of one who was beaten by a caregiver every day of their life is less prone to disease than someone with an ACE score of four who experienced these stressors only intermittently? On a population level, surveying thousands, the outliers would cancel each other out. But on the individual level they could be misleading.

It's a concern echoed by others. "I think the concept behind ACE screening, if it's about sensitizing all of us to the importance of looking for that part of the population that's experiencing adversity, I'd say that's good," says Jack Shonkoff, a professor of child health and development who directs the Center on the Developing Child at Harvard University. "But if it's used as an individual diagnostic test or indicator child by child, I would say that's potentially dangerous in terms of inappropriate labeling or inappropriate alarm. We need to make sure that people don't misuse this information so that parents don't feel like they've just been given some kind of deterministic diagnosis. Because it's not that. It's also dangerous to totally give a clean bill of health for a kid who may be showing symptoms of stress."

Burke Harris notes that she has been using ACE scores as part of her clinical care for more than a decade. When used correctly, it is only one part of a larger screening process. And she points out that despite the early phase of the field, the stakes are too high to wait any longer. "This is extremely urgent," she says. "It's a public health crisis. We have enough research now to act. And once we have enough research to act, not acting becomes an unconscionable path."

In the years ahead, more precise methods of detection will likely be available. Harvard's Shonkoff recently completed a large, nationwide feasibility study aimed at developing and rolling out a saliva test which could be used to screen for biomarkers that indicate a toxic stress response in both children and adults. The test, developed as part of a six-year, $13 million grant, measures the level of inflammatory cytokines present in the spit sample. Shonkoff and his colleagues are in the process of taking the next step, which involves gathering enough data to develop benchmarks that indicate normal and abnormal levels for stress markers by age, sex, race and ethnicity.

Even the cautious agree a little education will go a long way. "The most important fundamental prevention idea is that people who are caring for children, who are parenting children, need to understand that childhood adversities are likely leading to issues in their own lives," Shonkoff says. "And if they don't find a way to do things differently with support, they will be embedding that same biology back in their children."

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Keith Gerein: Social disorder better solved with housing investments than discrediting consumption sites – Edmonton Journal

Friday, March 6th, 2020

Leaving aside the troubling political agenda at play in the provincial governments review of supervised consumption sites, there were still a few themes that emerged from the report warranting further thought.

In particular, the review focused on a pattern of social disorder in areas around the sites provocative words like chaos, feces, and debris figured prominently in the governments presentation along with a need for better pathways to get people into treatment.

Those are fair concerns.

But instead of sensationalizing the extent of the issues and trying to have us believe the sites are largely to blame, Id respectfully suggest that any such problems have a deeper connection to a separate and more profound concern: alack of permanent, supportive housing.

In Edmonton, the construction of 900 units over the next six years is a need verging on the desperate, and one of city councils top priorities.

In fact, the initiative has been ready to move for some time, with the federal government poised to contribute and non-profit partners lined up to build.

All thats missing is a sense of urgency from the province, whose contributions would have a farbigger impact and far less controversy than shuttering consumption sites. Instead, it has delayed funding for any new projects while it conducts another of its countless reviews.

For those unclear what this sort of housing entails, it caters to low-income residents who have challenges beyond the financial.

In many cases, such clients have experienced chronic homelessness along with issues ranging from addiction struggles and mental illness to domestic violence and other complex trauma. Some have cognitive and physical impairment. A substantial percentage are Indigenous.

Generally speaking, permanent supportive homes are offered at rents affordable to those who depend on AISH payments (about $800 monthly), and provide a variety of services depending on need. Often there are 24-7 on-site managers to respond to issues and check in on residents, but sites can also have full-time nurses and elders, counselling, home care and meal services.

Fortunately, Edmonton is blessed with community agencies that are very good at providing this kind of housing.

One is the Right at Home Housing Society, which operates 500 units of various types around the city for around 1,200 Edmontonians.

Unfortunately, wait times for a home operated by the society now average between three and four years, an awfully long delay for vulnerable people.

The organization has been developing new properties, but further progress is largely dependent on further grants. As an example, the society is ready to begin a project for 100 people in the citys northeast that would fill a need for large family accommodation, but it cant proceed anytime soon without provincial help.

To be clear, permanent supportive housing is not the silver bullet solution to ending all homelessness and addiction.

However, there is strong evidence that a safe place to live prompts a chain reaction of positive effects. Stability allows residents to focus on their treatment, make healthier choices, become less vulnerable to crime and abuse, become better parents and make more positive contributions to society, including employment schooling and volunteering.

This, in turn, has positive results for government, some of which can be measured.

For instance, a study of Ambrose Place, a permanent supportive housing facility north of Downtown, reported a big reduction in inpatient and emergency department costs per resident, per year, and that resident interactions with the police decreased by nearly half.

Other studies have found similar savings, while less-quantifiable advantages, such as reduced need to apprehend children from their parents and less social disorder in front of businesses, are also important to note.

In effect, this is a form of preventative medicine.

The citys plan calls for a $241-million investment over six years, in which Edmonton would contribute about $37 million to acquire 20-30 sites, the federal government would provide $80 million and the province $124 million.

The province would also be called upon for about $24 million in operating funds annually once all 900 units are constructed, but the savings in health and justice costs alone would more than pay for that.

Though details are thin, the review thats holding up new announcements seems to be focused on ways in which the government can reduce its responsibility, possibly through more private sector involvement.

If the province can find a way to make that work with the same outcomes, so be it, though Im skeptical thats feasible.

But regardless of where the review goes, the province owes it to at-risk Albertans to move with haste and listen to municipalities like Edmonton, where patience is wearing thin.

They dont seem interested in doing anything other than lecturing people on how these problems should be solved, says Coun. Michael Walters.

Such comments are borne of frustration and again demonstrate how the relationship breakdown between the provincial and municipal governments plays out not just in budget balance sheets, but in consequences that hurt vulnerable people.

Instead of exploiting social disorder as a political tool to discredit supervised consumption sites (which serve a necessary, though limited purpose), the province would be far better served with a big investment in housing that will actually make a difference on Edmontons streets.

kgerein@postmedia.com

twitter.com/keithgerein

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How AI May Prevent The Next Coronavirus Outbreak – Forbes

Friday, March 6th, 2020

AI can be used for the early detection of virus outbreaks that might result in a pandemic. (Photo by ... [+] Emanuele Cremaschi/Getty Images)

AI detected the coronavirus long before the worlds population really knew what it was. On December 31st, a Toronto-based startup called BlueDot identified the outbreak in Wuhan, several hours after the first cases were diagnosed by local authorities. The BlueDot team confirmed the info its system had relayed and informed their clients that very day, nearly a week before Chinese and international health organisations made official announcements.

Thanks to the speed and scale of AI, BlueDot was able to get a head start over everyone else. If nothing else, this reveals that AI will be key in forestalling the next coronavirus-like outbreak.

BlueDot isn't the only startup harnessing AI and machine learning to combat the spread of contagious viruses. One Israel-based medtech company, Nanox, has developed a mobile digital X-ray system that uses AI cloud-based software to diagnose infections and help prevent epidemic outbreaks. Dubbed the Nanox System, it incorporates a vast image database, radiologist matching, diagnostic reviews and annotations, and also assistive artificial intelligence systems, which combine all of the above to arrive at an early diagnosis.

Nanox is currently building on this technology to develop a new standing X-ray machine that will supply tomographic images of the lungs. The company plans to market the machine so that it can be installed in public places, such as airports, train stations, seaports, or anywhere else where large groups of people rub shoulders.

Given that the new system, as well as the existing Nanox System, are lower cost mobile imaging devices, it's unsurprising to hear that Nanox has attracted investment from funds looking to capitalise on AI's potential for thwarting epidemics. This month, the company announced a $26 million strategic investment, led by Foxconn. It also signed an agreement this week to supply 1,000 of its Nanox Systems to medical imaging services across Australia, New Zealand and Norway. Coronavirus be warned.

Its CEO and co-founder, Ran Poliakine, believes that such deals are a testament to how the future of epidemic prevention lies with AI-based diagnostic tools. "Nanox has achieved a technological breakthrough by digitizing traditional X-rays, and now we are ready to take a giant leap forward in making it possible to provide one scan per person, per year, for preventative measures," he tells me.

Importantly, the key feature of AI in terms of preventing epidemics is its speed and scale. As Poliakine says, "AI can detect conditions instantly which makes it a great source of power when trying to prevent epidemics. If we talk about 1,000 systems scanning 60 people a day on average, this translates to 60,000 scans that need to be processed daily by the professional teams."

Poliakine also argues that no human force available today that can support this volume with the necessary speed and efficiency. Time and again, this is a point made by other individuals and companies working in this burgeoning sector.

"When it comes to detecting outbreaks, machines can be trained to process vast amounts of data in the same way that a human expert would," explains Dr Kamran Khan, the founder and CEO of BlueDot, as well as a professor at the University of Toronto. "But a machine can do this around the clock, tirelessly, and with incredible speed, making the process vastly more scalable, timely, and efficient. This complements human intelligence to interpret the data, assess its relevance, and consider how best to apply it with decision-making."

Basically, AI is set to become a giant firewall against infectious diseases and pandemics. And it won't only be because of AI-assisted screening and diagnostic techniques. Because as Sergey Young, a longevity expert and founder of the Longevity Vision Fund, tells me, artificial intelligence will also be pivotal in identifying potential vaccines and treatments against the next coronavirus, as well as COVID-19 itself.

"AI has the capacity to quickly search enormous databases for an existing drug that can fight coronavirus or develop a new one in literally months," he says. "For example, Longevity Vision Funds portfolio company Insilico Medicine, which specializes in AI in the area of drug discovery and development, used its AI-based system to identify thousands of new molecules that could serve as potential medications for coronavirus in just four days. The speed and scalability of AI is essential to fast-tracking drug trials and the development of vaccines."

This kind of treatment-discovery will prove vitally important in the future. And in conjunction with screening, it suggests that artificial intelligence will become one of the primary ingredients in ensuring that another coronavirus won't have an outsized impact on the global economy. Already, the COVID-19 coronavirus is likely to cut global GDP growth by $1.1 trillion this year, in addition to having already wiped around $5 trillion off the value of global stock markets. Clearly, avoiding such financial destruction in the future would be more than welcome, and artificial intelligence will prove indispensable in this respect. Especially as the scale of potential pandemics increases with an increasingly populated and globalised world.

Sergey Young also explains that AI could play a substantial role in the area of impact management and treatment, at least if we accept their increasing encroachment into society. He notes that, in China, robots are being used in hospitals to alleviate the stresses currently being piled on medical staff, while ambulances in the city of Hangzhou are assisted by navigational AI to help them reach patients faster. Robots have even been dispatched to a public plaza in Guangzhou in order to warn passersby who aren't wearing face-masks. Even more dystopian, China is also allegedly using drones to ensure residents are staying at home and reducing the risk of the coronavirus spreading further.

Even if we don't reach that strange point in human history where AI and robots police our behaviour during possible health crises, artificial intelligence will still become massively important in detecting outbreaks before they spread and in identifying possible treatments. Companies such as BlueDot, Nanox, and Insilico Medicine will prove increasingly essential in warding off future coronavirus-style pandemics, and with it they'll provide one very strong example of AI being a force for good.

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The attack of the worried well: Is the coronavirus the next pandemic? – Arizona Daily Wildcat

Friday, March 6th, 2020

Its another Monday morning.

You sluggishly get out of bed and get ready for a day of classes and work. But this time, you cant shake off a runny nose, bad cough and flu-like symptoms. Were you one of the few people to have been infected with the novel coronavirus?

Chances are slim.

As of Feb. 22, there have been about 310,000 hospitalizations and 18,000 deaths in the U.S. because of the flu, according to the Center for Disease Control (CDC). In comparison, the coronavirus has caused six deaths, all in the state of Washington, as of March 1, according to The Washington Post.

The coronavirus is similar to the influenza viruses in that they are comprised of single strands of RNA, or ribonucleic acid. This virus has a very high capability of mutation and adaptation, which creates trouble in terms of treatment purposes.

There is a huge amount of misdirected angst because [the virus] is new and it came from another part of the world. We encountered a similar situation in 2014 with the West Africa Ebola virus, said Dr. Sean Elliott, an infectious disease physician affiliated with the University of Arizona College of Medicine - Tucson and the Department of Pediatrics.

Like most other viruses, the coronavirus transmits itself through respiratory secretions. Similar to preventing the flu and other viruses, washing hands and proper sneezing etiquette is the best mechanism for prevention. In an effort to remain healthy, individuals who have not been infected oftentimes resort to wearing loop masks in the community setting.

The relative transfer of bacteria using three different greetings handshakes, high-fives and fist bumps.

Source: The fist bump: A more hygienic alternative to the handshake from the American Journal of Infection Control

There is no reason to do it ... In the healthcare setting, where one does use masks like that, we need to protect resources, Elliott said. It makes no sense to use them in the general community.

Recently in Tucson, the number of individuals who have read about the virus and present themselves to healthcare providers has increased. Oftentimes, after reading about COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019), patients can trick themselves into believing they are infected with it.

Its fear of the unknown, Elliot said. People sometimes are susceptible to being scared by the most recent bully-man out there and it happens to be COVID-19 today.

Interestingly enough, the low fatality rate around 2.3% of COVID-19 makes it all the more susceptible to the hype it has received. Because it kills a very small minority of the people it infects, the virus is more easily transmitted and thus talked about more often. Patients are often not aware that they have been infected with the virus.

Were going to see more cases, but a huge majority of those are going to be mild, and theyll only be detected because people who are worried will come in to get tested, Elliott said. I think we will not see any higher amount of death rates than the other parts of the world are experiencing and potentially far fewer because we have access to very advanced health care and support.

Despite the mass paranoia about the coronavirus, the influenza virus presents itself as more of an issue to people due a to greater fatality rate.

If one is going to compare risks, we should get this amped up about the flu every single season, Elliott said. The mortality rate [of the coronavirus] is going to be low because the infection itself is not a severe disease.

Even with the current hype around the virus, medical students have learned to respond to this the same as any other infection: learn how to treat and respond to general pandemics without being bogged down by the specifics of any one virus, since a new year could bring an entirely novel virus.

Students who are in clinical environments are learning about COVID-19 and its clinical manifestations. However, since next year could bring a completely different virus, it is more important for students to learn about pandemics and how to respond to them, said Dr. Kevin Moynahan, M.D., a professor of medicine and deputy dean for education at the UA College of Medicine Tucson, in an email. This is already part of the curriculum.

Given the extremely low fatality rate combined with the fact that the United States is the world leader in healthcare and medical treatment, the coronavirus presents itself with very little reason to keep yourself up worrying at night. Preventative techniques most notably washing your hands used against any other virus will come in handy and is undoubtedly the best way to remain healthy.

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Concordia University: A next-generation approach to health education and research – Study International News

Friday, March 6th, 2020

All over the world, people are startled by the growing fatalities that the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) has caused.

First reported in December 2019 in the Chinese city of Wuhan, the deadly virus has made its way from China to at least 15 countries such as Italy, Malaysia and the US.

Because of this widespread transmission, countries are on high alert for more potential fatalities and issuing preventative measures for protection, thus highlighting the importance of preventive health.

To tackle global health challenges like these, Concordia University in Montreal, Canada believes that the world needs creative and interdisciplinary approaches to health education and research.

The university is currently putting in place a Health Institute to continue to advance health technologies, diagnostic tools, wearable devices and biometric textiles by merging the knowledge of more than 150 Concordia faculty members across several faculties.

By viewing health challenges from all angles, the universitys Health Institute is envisioned to create imaginative new research, teaching and outreach programmes that others are not positioned to offer.

As Concordia President, Graham Carr says, Increasingly, society needs health research outside the traditional framework of medical faculties research that answers how Canadians can stay healthy and reduce their dependence on an overburdened healthcare system.

Concordias Health Institute will be helping to fill this vital gap.

While the creation of the Health Institute inspires Concordia Universitys community to challenge their perceptions of health, its inception will also be supported by well-established academic programming.

For instance, the Master of Health and Exercise Science (MSc) programme encourages students to research important fundamental and clinical questions. This includes exploring how the body produces new muscle proteins to face challenges or how stress can influence the cardiovascular system.

Shutterstock

This programmes research agenda is also strong in basic mechanistic sciences. Students gain a clearer understanding of how the body works in the clinical areas of injury prevention and care, as well as in the everyday management of certain chronic diseases through exercise training.

Whereas the Doctorate in Health and Exercise Science (PhD) takes students health research one step further, through fortified links between specialised sciences as diverse as athletic therapy, molecular biology, neurology, nutrition, sleep, and behavioural medicine.

It is very fulfilling to see graduate students succeed in many areas of research, from basic science to clinical applications, says Graduate Programme Director in Health, Kinesiology, and Applied Physiology Dr Geoffrey Dover.

According to the Chair of Health, Kinesiology and Applied Physiology at Concordia Vronique Pepin, the research drive in the Department has really escalated in the past decade or so, to the benefit of undergraduate and graduate students.

Not only do we have new academic programmes (PhD and two new honours in Athletic Therapy and Kinesiology & Clinical Exercise Physiology), but we also have new lines of research in nutrition (Dr. Sylvia Santosa), immunology (Dr. Peter Darlington), sleep (Dr. Thien Thanh Dang Vu), weight stigma reduction (Dr. Angela Alberga) and lower back pain (Dr. Maryse Fortin).

The great thing about these new lines of research is their collaborative potential with each other and with other established research endeavours in the Department, the Faculty, and the University. The possibilities for students interested in health research now seem endless, she says.

Supplementing these programmes is Concordias PERFORM Centre an 8,000 m2 facility housing laboratories, conditioning equipment and functional assessment suites each dedicated to research.

Each of the PERFORM Centres eight suites is equipped with state-of-the-art equipment for students to use.

For instance, the Nutrition Suite has a Metabolic Kitchen, the Imaging Suite has a GE MR750 MRI Scanner and the Functional Assessment Suite has a Gait-Pressure-Mat.

In addition to exclusive facility access, students also become automatic members of the Health, Kinesiology and Applied Physiology Student Association (HKAPSA).

And through this HKAPSA membership, students get to join the Learning Lab where they can use the video library, skeletal and muscular anatomical models, computer software and physiology.

HKAPSA students also attend valuable networking events where they collect useful contacts for their future careers.

Source: Shutterstock

At the Department of Health, Kinesiology & Applied Physiology, the focus is on functional mechanisms from the molecular level to whole systems.

Research topics at the department include nutrition, hormones, body composition, behavioural medicine, chronic illnesses, sleep physiology, neural control of movement, movement and balance control in neuromuscular disorders.

One student benefiting from the universitys vibrant and interdisciplinary research culture is MSc Health and Exercise Science student Jesse Whyte.

The certified athletic therapist chose Concordia to make a long-term impact with his research on women who have undergone breast cancer treatment and developed secondary effects. He is supported by Robert Kilgour, professor in the Department of Health, Kinesiology and Applied Physiology.

The aim of my study is to advance our understanding of secondary lymphedema and its effects on tissues, he said.

Through my research, I compare tissue characteristics of women with stage two, unilateral breast cancer-related lymphedema (BCRL) to their unaffected arms and healthy control arms.

Last year, he delivered an oral presentation titled, Forearm skeletal muscle ultrasound properties in women with breast cancer-related lymphedema at the 2019 National Lymphedema Conference in Toronto.

He has also opened his own studio in Montreal West called ReFitMTL where he hosts classes for cancer patients, the young at heart and children where he addresses movement and balance to encourage a safe and active lifestyle.

Whytes story is just one of many that demonstrate Concordia Universitys capacity to offer meaningful experiential learning to their students.

By providing the next generation of health leaders with contemporary facilities and future-facing curricula, students leave campus confident to evoke real-world change in their communities.

And with continuous support from a faculty of top-tier researchers, Concordia graduates carry their degree forward into careers that positively impact todays health sector.

Follow Concordia University on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Flickr, Instagram, Google+ and LinkedIn.

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The 60-year recruitment crisis | Article – Pulse

Friday, March 6th, 2020

It probably feels as though recruitment is worse now than it ever was.

But, general practice being what it is, there have been plenty of recruitment crises through the ages. (And don't forget to click on the pictures to expand!)

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This 1961 piece says the first decade of the NHS (1948-1958) was characterised by a surplus of doctors, but this situation is in the process of being reversed.

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Later in the year, the Dissector suggests that the number of vacancies in the BMJ show that, as he puts it (it was always he in 1960s Pulse), Practice applicants are below demand.

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There were plus sides to this, of course as we pointed out the following year, GPs scarcity put them in a strong position.

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Fast forward a few years and we report in 1970 on GP manpower in low gear, leading to a growing reliance on foreign doctors. Of course, this is nothing like these days back then, the NHS could actually attract overseas doctors.

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Things are still not getting any better in 1981. More GPs are needed, said a report from MPs. This is especially so because of the move for GPs to help with the hospital service, and preventative medicine. This is a great help to the current Pulse team, of course, because if reporters ever miss a deadline, they can just submit this story. Again. And again.

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But, a mere year later, it looks like things were picking up. It revealed that in 1981, there had been success in attracting record numbers 826 in all (Messrs Hunt and Hancock look wistfully on).

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However, there are always losers in these scenarios. Spare a moment for Dr Parat Jit Singh who, in the same month, was featured on the front page of Pulse because of his 400 job applications with no success. (Dr Jit Singh if you are reading this, please get in touch, as we know of a few thousand practices looking for a GP now).

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At the start of the 1990s, things were glowing in GP land, and it wasnt just the lava lamps and glowsticks. A report showed that the number of patients per GP was 12% lower than a decade earlier.

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But, as seems to increasingly be the case, two years later and we see that a recruitment crisis is looming in general practice. Trainee numbers are down due to poor pay and the increasing business ethics involved in general practice. Interestingly, the former trainee representative to the RCGP is quoted a Dr Sarah Jarvis, who later became one of the most prominent media doctors around.

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And so it came to pass. In 1995, the crisis showed no sign of abatement.

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An editorial three years later rightly points out that focusing on the recruitment crisis is probably a better way for the BMA to be successful in increasing pay and probably not before time either.

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Thats not to say there were not solutions. One, which seemed eminently sensible, was to recruit more EU doctors. Maybe we can think about that now?

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And another involved incentives for partnerships. Though that will probably never catch on.

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Waco: Sports and Orthopedic Center opens – KWTX

Friday, February 28th, 2020

WACO, Texas (KWTX) Baylor Scott & White Health today opened a new Sports and Orthopedic Center Thursday on the campus of Baylor Scott & White Hillcrest Medical Center in Waco.

The 106,000-square-foot, four-story Ted and Sue Getterman Baylor Scott & White Sports and Orthopedic center provides a full spectrum of sports medicine including rehab, surgery and recovery all under one roof.

The center was a dream of Dr. Jon Ellis and Dr. David Haynes who started as Southwest Sports medicine in 2005.

"It's a wonderful day right? All the contributions of so many people that have gone into making this a reality. This was a 15 year vision that we now stand in front of. It's an amazing feeling, very grateful," Haynes said.

Hundreds of employees of Baylor Scott & White and top business people and community leaders were on hand for the grand opening.

The center provides primary care and preventative medicine, 48 exam rooms, advanced diagnostic imaging, orthopedic surgery center and indoor and outdoor sports performance areas.

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OSF HealthCare Saint Anthony’s: No Reported Cases of Coronavirus Investigated Here, Flu Stats, Preventative Steps Given – RiverBender.com

Friday, February 28th, 2020

ALTON - OSF HealthCare Saint Anthonys Health Center said today there have not been any coronavirus (COVID-19) cases investigated at their location in the Riverbend.

We are aware of a reporting about a suspected COVID-19 case in Belleville, Colleen Reynolds, media relations coordinator for OSF HealthCare based out of Peoria said. I can say to date, OSF HealthCare Saint Anthonys Health Center and related OSF medical clinics have not requested testing and have not put anyone under investigation in the Riverbend as a result of being seen by us.

Below is a story released that the flu is a much bigger threat in Illinois than COVID-19.

Flu Remains Larger Threat than COVID-19

NOTE: CDC reports flu-related deaths in the U.S. has reached 16,000 with six pediatric deaths in Illinois and two in Michigan. This story was updated 2/26/2020 to reflect updated number of pediatric deaths nationally, including in Illinois and Michigan.

Despite heightened alerts about the novel coronavirus, COVID-19, local health leaders stress the seasonal flu remains far more concerning. The two Illinoisans diagnosed with COVID-19 have recovered and returned to work. Meanwhile, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says flu activity remains high in the US and expected to continue for weeks. The agency emphasizes pediatric deaths, at 105, are the second highest since they were included in weekly reporting in 2004.

In Illinois and throughout the country, health facilities are mostly treating the unusual Influenza B-Victoria strain of flu virus. The last time this occurred was the the1992-1993 season. Terri McCrery, infection preventionist for OSF HealthCare says the numbers affected by the new coronavirus cant compare to the seasonal flu.

Youre talking a handful nationally here with the coronavirus and youre talking millions with the flu so we need to be watchful of the flu, she warned.

McCrery says this latest flu strain is affecting children most significantly. The overall cumulative hospitalization rate 47.4 per 100,000 population is similar to that seen in recent influenza seasons; however, "rates in children and young adults are higher than at this time in recent seasons," the CDC reports.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) says there have been increased hospitalizations but fewer deaths from the flu so far this season. Illinois is among the states where the risk remains widespread and high.

Even if you dont often get sick, McCrery says it only takes one exposure to influenza which is a long-lasting airborne virus. She says the flu can have a devastating impact, even on those considered young and with a healthy immune system.

A 16-year-old junior at Glenwood High School in the Ball-Chatham, Illinois school district died from complications of the flu. Joey Sandhaas, came down with pneumonia and fought for his life for more than a week.

Its not too late to get the flu shot. Dont think youre going to be one of the ones that it skips by and not get the flu because you could get it and it could be deadly, she advised.

OSF HealthCare has imposed visitor restrictions at its hospitals because of the elevated risk. The restrictions encourage people to voluntarily limit hospital visits, especially if feeling ill. Visitors 18 and over must wash or sanitize their hands and wear masks available at hospital and medical office entrances.

McCrery also encourages those who have flu-like symptoms to be seen early, especially if they have underlying health issues.

She urges everyone, Dont go out in public if you have the signs and symptoms the fever, the cough, runny nose. Stay home but then if youre home for a day or two, go be seen. Dont let it wait. The flu can turn into pneumonia, bronchitis and that would be required to be seen by the doctor so please be cautious.

Be seen early if you suspect the flu

Anti-viral drugs can be used to treat flu illness. The CDC recommends prompt treatment for people who have flu infection or suspected flu infection and who are at high risk of serious flu complications, such as people with asthma, diabetes (including gestational diabetes), or heart disease.

If you suspect you have the flu, please call ahead to your health care provider including OSF Urgo or OSF PromptCare so staff can take proper precautions to assess you. OSF OnCall is also an online option where you can be connected virtually to be assessed.

Here are tips to know when to seek emergency care for flu-like symptoms.

Most people with the flu have mild illness and do not need medical care or antiviral drugs. If you get sick with flu symptoms, in most cases, you should stay home and avoid contact with other people except to get medical care.

If, however, you have symptoms of flu and are in a high risk group, or are very sick or worried about your illness, contact your health care provider (doctor, physician assistant, etc.).

Certain people are at high risk of serious flu-related complications (including young children, people 65 and older, pregnant women and people with certain medical conditions). This is true both for seasonal flu and novel flu virus infections. (For a full list of people at high risk of flu-related complications, see People at High Risk of Developing FluRelated Complications). If you are in a high risk group and develop flu symptoms, its best for you to contact your doctor early in your illness. Remind them about your high risk status for flu. CDC recommends that people at high risk for complications should get antiviral treatment as early as possible, because benefit is greatest if treatment is started within 2 days after illness onset.

No. The emergency room should be used for people who are very sick. You should not go to the emergency room if you are only mildly ill.

If you have the emergency warning signs of flu sickness, you should go to the emergency room. If you get sick with flu symptoms and are at high risk of flu complications or you are concerned about your illness, call your health care provider for advice. If you go to the emergency room and you are not sick with the flu, you may catch it from people who do have it.

What are the emergency warning signs of flu?

People experiencing these warning signs should obtain medical care right away.

These lists are not all inclusive. Please consult your medical provider for any other symptom that is severe or concerning.

Yes. There are drugs your doctor may prescribe for treating the flu called antivirals. These drugs can make you better faster and may also prevent serious complications. See Treatment Antiviral Drugs for more information.

CDC recommends that you stay home for at least 24 hours after your fever is gone except to get medical care or other necessities. Your fever should be gone without the need to use a fever-reducing medicine, such as Tylenol. Until then, you should stay home from work, school, travel, shopping, social events, and public gatherings.

CDC also recommends that children and teenagers (anyone aged 18 years and younger) who have flu or are suspected to have flu should not be given Aspirin (acetylsalicylic acid) or any salicylate containing products (e.g. Pepto Bismol); this can cause a rare, very serious complication called Reyes syndrome. More information about Reyes syndrome can be found hereexternal icon.

Stay away from others as much as possible to keep from infecting them. If you must leave home, for example to get medical care, wear a facemask if you have one, or cover coughs and sneezes with a tissue. Wash your hands often to keep from spreading flu to others.

Here are some frequently asked questions about flu vaccines.

Even healthy people need a flu vaccine. Influenza (flu) is a contagious disease which can lead to serious illness, including pneumonia. Even healthy people can get sick enough to miss work or school for a significant amount of time or even be hospitalized. An annual flu vaccine is recommended for everyone 6 months of age and older. Pregnant women, young children, older people, and people with certain chronic medical conditions like asthma, diabetes and heart disease are at increased risk of serious flu-related complications, so getting a yearly flu vaccine is especially important for them. Is the flu vaccine safe? Yes. The flu vaccine is safe. Hundreds of millions of Americans have safely received flu vaccines over the past 50 years, and there has been extensive research supporting the safety of seasonal flu vaccines.

Each year, CDC works closely with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and other partners to ensure the highest safety standards for flu vaccines. The most common side effects of flu vaccines are mild. The flu vaccine cannot cause flu illness; however, it can cause mild side effects that may be mistaken for flu. Common side effects from the flu shot include soreness, redness, and/or swelling from the shot, headache, fever, muscle aches, and nausea.

These side effects are NOT the flu. If experienced at all, these effects are usually mild and last only 1-2 days. Even if I get sick, wont I recover quickly? Not necessarily. Influenza can be serious and anyone can become sick with flu and experience serious complications, including active and healthy kids, teens and adults. Even if you bounce back quickly, however, others around you might not be so lucky. You could spread your illness to someone who is more vulnerable to flu. Some people can be infected with the flu virus, but have no symptoms.

During this time, you can still spread the virus to others. Dont be the one spreading flu to those you care about. National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases Office of Health Communication Science Last Updated November 17, 2016 Page 2 of 2 Cant I wait and get vaccinated when/if flu hits my community? It is best to get vaccinated before flu begins to spread. It takes about two weeks after vaccination for antibodies to develop in the body and provide protection against the flu, so the sooner you get vaccinated, the more likely it is that you will be protected once flu begins to circulate in your community. Flu vaccines cant give you the flu. Even if you got a flu vaccine, there are reasons why you might still get flu or a flu-like illness.

You may have been exposed to a non-flu virus. The flu vaccine can only prevent illnesses caused by flu viruses. It cannot protect against other viruses that may cause symptoms similar to flu, like the common cold.

You might have been exposed to flu after you got vaccinated, but before the vaccine took effect. It takes about two weeks after you receive the vaccine for your body to build protection against the flu.

You may have been exposed to an influenza virus that was very different from the viruses included in that years vaccine. The flu vaccine protects against the influenza viruses that research indicates will cause the most disease during the upcoming season, but there can be other flu viruses circulating.

Unfortunately, however, some people who get a flu vaccine may still get sick. How well the flu vaccine works (or its ability to prevent flu) can range from season to season and also can vary depending on who is being vaccinated. However, if you do get sick, flu vaccination might make your illness milder than it would have been otherwise dont avoid getting a flu vaccine because you dont like shots.

The minor pain of a flu shot is nothing compared to the suffering that can be caused by the flu. A flu vaccine reduces your risk of illness, hospitalization, and can prevent you from spreading the virus to your loved ones. So, whatever little discomfort you feel from the minor side effects of the flu shot is worthwhile to avoid the flu. You need to get a flu vaccine every year.

There are two reasons for getting a flu vaccine every year: a) Flu viruses are constantly changing and so flu vaccines may be updated from one season to the next. You need the current seasons vaccine for the best protection. b) A persons immune protection from the vaccine declines over time. Annual vaccination is needed for the best protection.

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OSF HealthCare Saint Anthony's: No Reported Cases of Coronavirus Investigated Here, Flu Stats, Preventative Steps Given - RiverBender.com

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Munson Shares Heart Disease Symptoms for Women to Watch – MyNorth.com

Friday, February 28th, 2020

Whats one thing about cardiology youre most passionate about?

Cardiovascular disease is the number-one cause of death for both men and women. I feel like its not talked about enough that its the number-one cause of death in women, specifically. Theres a big movement for breast cancer, etc., but more women actually die of heart disease or stroke.

What is something you wish your patients would speak up about more?

Often people who have chest discomfort say, Oh I just assumed it was this. I think its human nature to assume its something less serious than your heart. But its better to make sure its NOT your heart, and to not assume its heartburnwhich presents differently in everyone, particularly in women. Women who get chest pain may have atypical symptoms: it could be shoulder pain, jaw pain or shortness of breath or nausea. If theyre getting any of those symptoms with exertion, and only with exertion, its much more concerning for heart disease.

Tell us about the testing available to help prevent heart disease?

I am more into non-invasive testing, so I love being able to get answers for patients non-invasively if possible. I think for women in general, theres more research going into the risk factors that lead to heart disease. If we can help make them aware that their risk is higher, and start more preventative measures earlier in life (between their childbearing years and when cardiovascular disease usually presents), theres good potential to help.

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Munson Shares Heart Disease Symptoms for Women to Watch - MyNorth.com

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Mayor Castor eases Tampa Bay’s coronavirus worries by talking prevention and preparation in Thursday’s press conference – Creative Loafing Tampa

Friday, February 28th, 2020

JaneCastorFL/Facebook

Health officials, politicians, business owners and apprehensive residents have a healthy fear about the spread of coronavirus, or COVID-19, in the Tampa area.

Tampa Mayor Jane Castor is one of those concerned citizens, and she addressed her concerns alongside Hillsborough County Commissioner Chair Les Miller in downtown Tampa in a Thursday afternoon press conference.

Were here to address a global issue that has the potential to impact our entire communitythe coronavirus, or COVID-19, Miller said to start the conference. But let me make one thing clearthere are no reported cases in Hillsborough County, or in the state of Florida.

Throughout the press conference, Castorwith the help of Dr. Charles Lockwood, USFs Health Dean of the Morsani College of Medicinestressed that Bay area officials are continuously preparing for the unfortunate day that coronavirus might make its way into the Bay area.

Were here to ensure our residents that we are as prepared as possible to deal with this disease if and when it arrives in our community, Castor said.

Castor urged Tampa residents to obtain their information from reputable sources and to not fall victim to online rumors, like the paranoid South Floridians who bought all of the face masks in their area. Dr. Lockwood said face masks dont prevent the spread of coronavirus.

Tampa Bays aggressive preventative and prepared measures are similar to that of Floridas approach to coronavirus as a whole. Although some Floridians may worry about the heavy international tourism surrounding Disney World, Gov. Ron DeSantis squashed anxieties in a his own Thursday press conference, stating that the state of Florida is fully committed, and is doing everything we can to prepare and respond to coronavirus.

Earlier this month, US. Rep. Charlie Christ wrote a letter to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDCP), stating that there should be more of an emphasis on transparency about how coronavirus is spread. But Florida health officials arent currently revealing information about monitoring possible cases since the virus has yet to be declared a public health crisis.

Perhaps the scariest thing about coronavirus is the fact that it is so contagious, and one can be infected without showing symptoms. Concerned citizens can meet that challenge with strong preventative measures, like simply washing their hands, and education about the virus. In the Thursday press conference Dr. Lockwood said that 80% of people with coronavirus are asymptomatic or only show mild symptoms.

RELATED:Wash your damn hands, Tampa Bay

It's probably also worth pointing out that a different virus, influenza (aka the flu), has already sickened at least 13 million Americans this winter and killed 6,600 people.

The first cases of the coronavirus were reported in Wuhan City, Hubei Province, China in late December 2019, and now there are 48 countries reporting infections, according to live updates from the New York Times.

According to the CDCP, various symptoms associated with coronavirus are fever, cough and shortness of breath.

Although there are no reported cases of coronavirus in Florida, Mayor Castor and the rest of Tampa Bay are making sure the Bay area is prepared if the unfortunate day ever comes. In the spirit of preparedness, Castor promises minute-by-minute updates on any further news surrounding coronavirus.

Miller added Floridians and Tampeos alike should not fear the coronavirus at this point because states health officials have not yet declared it acrisisbut that might change very soon.

Early on Thursday, the state of California reported the first instance of a community-transferred infection. All other reported cases in the U.S. have been obtained overseas.

But in the meantime, wash your damn hands and chill out.

Follow @cl_tampabay on Twitter to get the most up-to-date news + views. Subscribe to our newsletter, too.

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Mayor Castor eases Tampa Bay's coronavirus worries by talking prevention and preparation in Thursday's press conference - Creative Loafing Tampa

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Highland Family Medicine doctor helps us understand the threat of Coronavirus – RochesterFirst

Friday, February 28th, 2020

ROCHESTER, N.Y. (WROC) Dr. Jeff Harp of Highland Family Medicine discussed the Coronavirus, its spread, and what you need to know about it Thursday during News 8 at Sunrise.

Actually, theres not one coronavirus, theres a whole bunch of coronaviruses, explained Dr. Harp. They basically range from the common cold to very serious diseases like this SARS thing that just happened, MERS, and what were having right now. So, its a whole family of one type of virus.

The current strain, COVID-19, originated in China. When it comes to symptoms, Dr. Harp said theyre not dissimilar to the common cold. So look for cough, fever, and trouble breathing. But the trouble is with some of these viruses, like the one that were seeing here, it can go on to very serious diseases like pneumonia, kidney failure, and even death.

Dr. Harp said this strain of Coronavirus, COVID-19, has been identified in 32 countries. Were learning more about exactly how deadly it is at this point. So at one point, it seemed like a lot of people who were getting it were getting very seriously ill. Now, it looks like perhaps about 2% of the people who get the disease will eventually succumb to it, die from it, which is a lot less serious. For example, the Middle Eastern virus that was around a couple years ago, it was about a third of people that got it would die from it.

Fear of Coronavirus and its impact has been reflected across the global economy and in the actions of individual people. Some have taken to wearing masks as a preventative measure. Its serious if ones exposed to it, noted Dr. Harp. Its not as contagious as many viruses, but its also preventable through the same kind of way that you would prevent the common cold. So we recommend that people take precautions. Obviously, traveling to China right now is not really the thing to do. Dont go outside when youre sick. Dont hang around sick people. If youre sneezing or someones sneezing, you know, cover the sneeze. Throw out the stuff that you use to clean it up. And then just use common sense in terms of, you know, touching objects, cleaning surfaces, that sort of thing.

If you want to learn more about Coronavirus and the current strain, COVID-19, Dr. Harp said go online to cdc.gov/coronavirus.

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Highland Family Medicine doctor helps us understand the threat of Coronavirus - RochesterFirst

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Working To Stop Illegal Wildlife Trade Of Cheetahs In Somaliland – MENAFN.COM

Friday, February 28th, 2020

(MENAFN - Somali Land Sun)

Somalilandsun : It is estimated that every year more than 300 young cheetahs are illegally snatched from Ethiopia, northern Kenya, Somalia and Somaliland.

Illegal wildlife trafficking is an ever-increasing problem for the conservation of species in the wild, and the trafficking of cheetahs is no exception. It is estimated that every year more than 300 young cheetahs are illegally snatched from Ethiopia, northern Kenya, Somalia and Somaliland, then smuggled out of Somaliland to be sent across the Gulf of Aden to the Arabian Peninsula where they are bought and sold in illegal online sales to the wealthy.

Most of these cubs are pulled from their mothers prematurely and kept in poor conditions with inadequate food and water. Less than 25% of these captured cheetah survive to the buyers. And those that do survive are often in poor health, with fractured bones, infections and malnutrition.

Of those that are sold, the average lifespan is only 5 years of age, and most die due to causes related to stress and malnutrition. With less than 7,500 cheetahs surviving in the wild, compiled with the low reproductive rates of wild cheetahs, these numbers are unsustainable. Experts estimate that, than in less than 10 years, the cheetah could be extinct in Northern Africa.

The Cheetah Conservation Center (CCF) led by Dr. Laurie Marker, along with the Somaliland government's Ministry of Environment and Rural Development (MoERD), has been working since 2011 to set up a task force to help rescue confiscated cheetah cubs. Rescued cubs were initially sent out to sanctuaries in Ethiopia and Djibouti. After the laws changed in Somaliland, a cheetah sanctuary was started in the capital city of Hargeisa in 2017. Currently there are more than 45 cheetah cubs at the cheetah safe house, with more than 30 of those arriving in 2019.

Most of the confiscated cubs come into the safe house in critical condition, including severe dehydration, injuries and infectious diseases and require intensive care. Needless to say, in-country resources for cheetah care are very limited.

Because of the scarce in-country resources, CCF contacted Dr. Margarita Woc Colburn to help assist with the cheetahs. Dr. Woc Colburn assisted with the care of these confiscated cheetahs by acting as one of the veterinary consultants, utilizing her cheetah expertise.

Overall, Nashville Zoo has been supporting the Somaliland-CCF cheetah efforts through donations of medications and equipment, but last September, the Zoo sent Dr. Woc Colburn to Somaliland to assist with the health assessment of 30 cheetahs.

She worked in conjunction with Laurie Marker and a South African veterinary team led by Dr. Peter Cadwell. During her time there, the team fully examined the cheetahs at the safe house, as well as evaluated and developed preventative care protocols and assisted in the training of local veterinarians. Based on the findings of the exams, improved nutrition and preventative medicine protocols were set in place. Dr. Woc Colburn continues to be a core veterinary consultant for the project.

Future plans include the building of a cheetah conservation center outside of Hargeisa, where the cheetahs will have room to roam and breed, as well as creating a main education center to help educate the public about cheetahs and how to stop illegal wildlife trade. Nashville Zoo continues to support these efforts by ongoing donations of medications and medical equipment, as well as allowing Dr. Woc Colburn to provide veterinary expertise via telecommunication consults with Somaliland.

This press release was produced by the Nashville Zoo . The views expressed here are the author's own.

By. Press Release Desk, News Partner

MENAFN2702202001620000ID1099767727

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Working To Stop Illegal Wildlife Trade Of Cheetahs In Somaliland - MENAFN.COM

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Med students aim to fill in sexual education gaps in high schools with new initiative – UM Today

Friday, February 28th, 2020

February 25, 2020

Today is the Canadian Federation of Medical Students National Day of Education and the Max Rady College of Medicines Global Health Portfolio is highlighting an initiative by students involved with the reproductive and sexual health component of their portfolio. The group is hoping to fill in the gaps in Manitobas current sexual education curriculum by training medical students to deliver workshops to high school students.

After the groups successful campaign last year for universal coverage of the abortion pill Mifegymiso in Manitoba, this year its focus is on preventative medicine, including the prevention of unplanned pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and an overall emphasis on sexual health and well-being.

They have planned training sessions for interested medical students to gain the skills they need to effectively lead formal and engaging sexual health education workshops in the community. The group is working with the Womens Health Clinic and is receiving guidance from the Clinic in designing the program. They hope to collaborate with local high schools and begin delivering the workshops in the spring or fall of this year.

We caught up with Jacqueline Donner, a second-year medical student and a local officer of reproductive and sexual health with the Global Health portfolio to talk about this project.

How did this initiative come about?

I think many Manitobans feel theres a big gap in the sexual health component of our school system. A lot of our peers feel that they didnt really get a comprehensive education, and certainly not a sex positive one. We realized as future physicians, we will have the privilege and responsibility at times of playing the role of sexual health educator for people, so we wanted to be as well-equipped as possible.

Why do you think sexual education is important?

Sexual health is all-encompassing. It plays into many aspects of our life. Many people in our community feel excluded by the way sexual health is currently taught. Sexual health is not just for people who are cis and straight. Were being very careful about our terminology so everybody feels included. When you have a good knowledge of sexual health and are able to take some ownership of your own sexual health, its very liberating, and allows you to enter other parts of your life feeling autonomous and independent.

How will you train medical students to deliver this information?

Were working with the Womens Health Clinic to do a series of three workshops that will provide us with legitimate training to enter schools and educate young people. We had our first workshop this past Sunday.

The format that Womens Health Clinic uses, that we will emulate, is using interactive, group-based activities for students of all ages to break down those barriers to talking about sex and sexual health. It looks at the different components of sexual health from a more holistic approach. It doesnt just involve the biology of sex, but everything from body positivity to self-love to the role of media in our perception of ourselves and our sexuality.

What are some of the things you learned about in the workshop?

We did some exercises that broke down basic terminology. We also talked about body image, body positivity and the harms of dieting. They do a cool activity using skittles to help visualize the spread of STIs. The visualization of these issues translates well into a classroom environment, especially since we are trying to reach youth.

Do you hope that once established, these workshops will continue on an on-going basis?

We want to establish a long-standing relationship with Womens Health Clinic and also hope that it becomes something that can perpetuate on its own. Once we gain this training, we can continue to train our fellow students. I hope theres a snowball effect and more students can be involved in coming years.

CHANTAL SKRABA

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Med students aim to fill in sexual education gaps in high schools with new initiative - UM Today

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Meditation in NZ prisons offering keys to freedom – Stuff.co.nz

Friday, February 28th, 2020

All over New Zealand, prisoners are breaking out of their cells and the Department of Corrections is quite happy about it.

The freedom the prisoners are finding has nothing to do with the physical bars that contain them they are escaping their mental prisons, using the keys of meditation to open the door.

For more than three years, Ishaya monks of the Bright Path have been teaching ascension meditation techniques in prisons around the country. This follows a successful trial at Rimutaka Prison.

Savitri and Prasada Ishaya first approached Corrections in 2016 to volunteer as meditation teachers in prison, inspired byA Mindful Choice a documentary film made by two Kiwi colleagues about the positive power of ascension meditation including in one of Mexico's most notorious prisons.

Chris McKeen/Stuff

For more than three years, Savitri Ishaya and other monks have been teaching ascension meditation techniques in prisons around the country.

"I was so impressed and inspired by the fact that people who had suffered terribly traumatic lives and experiences were able to find peace even in a prison environment," Savitri says.

She showed the film to Corrections and they decided to trial meditation at the Drug Treatment Unit (DTU) at Rimutaka Prison.

Since then, the teachers have returned for many block courses and the teaching of ascension meditation has expanded to six prisons across the country. Last year, 46 courses were delivered in prisons teaching about 400 people, including some Corrections staff.

Chris McKeen/Stuff

The main benefit to inmates from ascension meditation is in the way they're able to stop themselves from falling back into old behaviour patterns.

Frith Dunlop, clinical manager at the Rimutaka DTU, says the men come to the high security unit through a dual mechanism first their case manager will recommend the DTU as part of their rehabilitation but the prisoners also have to agree to it, so there is an element of self-selection.

Then as part of their course they are offered the opportunity to take the ascension meditation course. Dunlop says around half the inmates in each intake put up their hands.

"There are always people in the group who are motivated and are willing to try anything. We do a lot of preparation before the coursewhat's involved, what to expect and, basically asking them: 'What have you got to lose?"'

Dunlop said the main benefit she's seen from ascension meditation is the way the inmates are able to stop themselves from falling back into old behaviour patterns they are less reactionary.

"When they start falling back into old thinking patterns, they've got a simple way to find a moment to pause to reset themselves and put themselves back on track we see that all the time, right in front of our eyes: you can see they are going down a certain path and they just stop. And then they have the time to rationalise what they are doing and get back on the right track."

Chris McKeen/Fairfax NZ

Savitri says her students are motivated because they are "hungry for peace".

And she's seen success where she least expected it, recalling one prisoner who grudgingly volunteered for the programme.

"One that I'm thinking of, I really didn't expect him to be interested, I didn't expect him to last the first day," she says.

"But after the first session he started to make noises that showed something was changing in him. And then he started to talk about how he suddenly realised that he was in charge of his thoughts. We encourage our guys to journal and he started journalling about how his reality has changed because he's been able to change the way he thinks.

"That was a huge revelation for him because he was at the start of a long sentence and was quite depressed about it he made it clear that he feels positive [now] about doing the rest of the sentence and that he can handle anything he can just practise his techniques at any time when things get hard or he gets frustrated or overwhelmed. And this is a person I didn't expect to last the first day."

Savitri says some of the changes she's witnessed in the prisoners have been profound.

"These guys are interested because they are hungry for peace they have got powerful motivation to drop their thoughts and they are very interested in learning how to drop emotions particularly anger.

"They know that when the red mist comes they often can't control what happens next. So, to have a tool that allows them to notice when they are starting to get triggered into traditional patterns of behaviour and to use the technique as a circuit breaker is great," she says.

"The guys who are ready to change areso good at putting this into practice that the change can happen rapidly because they really want it."

She says it's amazing to see the difference in the individuals and the group from the beginning to the end of the course.

One of the reasons a depressed or angry prisoner can make a sudden change within a few days is because the ascension meditation techniques are simple and easy to practise, says Savitri.

Chris McKeen/Stuff

Ascension meditation enables you to release stress through the day. "I call it preventative medicine if you're doing it every day, the stress levels don't overflow. You're much more resilient, calm and coming from a much more present place."

"It's a simple tool that allows us to let go of our thoughts and emotions there are lots of patterns of behaviour that come about through the way people relate to their thoughts, and when we are always focused on our thoughts and believing them, we don't realise how they often drive our actions."

Corrections lists the benefits of the meditation programmes as: managing anger, stress, tension and trauma; improved communication with others, including whnau and Corrections staff; motivation to participate in rehabilitation programmes to address offending, and education and offender employment activities.

There has been a lot of research on what is known as emotional contagion, the transfer of moods among people in a group. The basic premise is summed up in the old quote "misery loves company" one person's negative mood can influence others in a family, workplace or group. And the reverse is true a positive mood is equally catchy; it can increase co-operation and decrease conflict important in a prison setting.

It's something Dunlop has noticed within Rimutaka's DTU, with a ripple effect based on how many men in the unit have taken the course.

"The last time that Savitri and Prasadacame through was the most powerful I've seenwe noticed a real shift," Dunlop says.

"We noticed significant shifts in behaviour, compliance and morale. It changed the whole unit even when the whole unit didn't undertake the programme. But those who did brought peace back to the unit with them."

Dunlop speculates that because the unit always has some inmates who have been there for a while, they can positively affect newcomers by talking up meditation and continuing to practise it themselves.

"We've always got a few people left from the last intake that have done the ascension course. This is about the fourth or fifth time in the past two years that we've had them in so there's a number of people who have done it, so when we are trying to encourage newcomers to give it a shot, we've got men saying, 'This is really valuable."'

Those who have already learned are keen to resit the course and the new students come more willingly because their peers have recommended it, she says.

"We've got another course coming up in March and we will have even more people in the unit who have done it once or twice before, so we expect the next time around will be a more powerful effect."

This doesn't surprise Savitri her experience is that the prisoners who embrace the techniques are strong advocates for its power.

"The guys who get keen on it are very good at passing on their experience to others they all like to talk about it and how they are changing.

"It takes a while for them to trust us and then to be willing to open up and try the techniques and sometimes people aren't ready to do that but for those who are ready, once they've done the first couple of lessons they start to meditate in their cells and they get quite enthusiastic."

She likens regular practice of meditation to a pressure valve that can release stress, a huge benefit in a prison where anger and quick tempers can cause trouble.

"It enables you to release a lot of stress through the day so it's not building up. I call it preventative medicine if you're doing it every day, the stress levels don't overflow. You're much more resilient, calm and coming from a much more present place.

"A guy might have someone say something to him and in the past he would have flared up or even given him the bash but, after learning to meditate, they say things like. 'I just used my technique and I was able to let it go.' That might seem like a small thing, but it's huge to these guys. For them to be able to let that stuff go is just amazing."

The next step in the programme, besides spreading to other prisons beyond the current six, is to get some real measurement of what until nowhas been anecdotal success stories.

Dunlop says thereare national statistics available on what's calledRQthe rehabilitation quotient of all the DTUs around the country, but there are no site-specific stats held, so it's hard to pull out variables such as what difference meditation has had on prisoners once they are released.

But Dunlop is a believer and it seems Corrections can see the benefits too.

"I can't speak for Corrections but I can speak for the support they've shown the programme they believe in and want it to keep happening.

"I've sat in on a few of the courses with the men and it's something I practise several times daily and this is what people don't understand: it doesn't have to take time if you're busy.

"I sometimes do just a couple of minutes four times a day like when I'm shifting from one job to another it's like getting closure in my mind about what I've just been working on and freshen up for the next step.

"Definitely before I get out of the car and walk into the prison, I do a quick session and if something particularly stressful is going on, I use it as a strategy."

Another measure of success is that the rest of the world is starting to take notice of what is happening in some New Zealand prisons.

Since prisons in Mexico and New Zealand began offering ascension meditation, their counterparts in other countries are also getting involved. The Ishaya monks have started going into prisons in Norway and Spain and the first course is about to be taught in a facility near Perth, Australia.

"We want to wake people up to know that peace is possible," says Savitri.

FINDING YOUR PEACE: TESTIMONIALS FROM PRISON STUDENTS

"Like many other men in my situation, I wasn't granted the luxury of a healthy upbringing. [This] led me to develop many very negative unhelpful views about myself, others and the world. These views and beliefs are the bricks and mortar of my internal mental prison, far more secure and complex than any maximum security prison and until now I considered it escape-proof.

"I was blown back in my seat at the first class when [the teacher] said it's all too often that we think we are just bad or broken. And that's exactly what my beliefs tell me. That's what all the drug use and looking for love and acceptance outside myself has been all about. The downside to that antisocial lifestyle has been making poor choices and bad decisions in which people have been hurt. I can't undo that tragedy. However, with your knowledge and teachings of meditation I can start to break down the beliefs and views that created the thoughts... I can't thank you enough for the keys to my prison... Just know that there are others like me serving life sentences who need this."

Testimonial from a prison student

"I was burdened by raging thoughts, irregular sleep patterns and general anxiety. However by using the meditation techniques I have been able to really calm my mind. I have been experiencing deep, peaceful sleep and have noticed that my general anxiety has been reduced significantly."

Testimonial from a prison student

Mindfulness versus meditation

Mindfulness is a bit of a buzzword, butwhat's the difference between that andmeditation?

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Meditation in NZ prisons offering keys to freedom - Stuff.co.nz

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