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Universities and their students are helping in the coronavirus response in myriad ways – Inside Higher Ed

April 7th, 2020 9:41 pm

How can we help?

That simple question has spurred a flurry of activity among students, faculty, staff and university administrators who have looked for ways to assist health-care workers in the response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Whether its repurposing university-owned equipment to decontaminate N95 masks, mixing hand sanitizer in chemistry labs for use by hospitals, collecting supplies of personal protective equipment -- of which there is a critical national shortage -- or babysitting health-care workers children, professionals in higher education and the students they serve have found all kinds of ways to help.

We go into this field wanting to help others in one way or another, said Brianna Engelson, a fourth-year medical student at the University of Minnesota. Engelson and other medical students founded MN COVIDSitters, a group that matches students with health-care professionals in the Twin Cities metropolitan area needing childcare, pet-sitting or general errand running. Engelson said more than 300 student volunteers are helping more than 200 health-care providers and their families. They're still seeking more volunteers to help more than 100 other families who have signed up for assistance.

Its tough to be on the sidelines watching your mentors and the people who have been such a critical part of your education giving so much while youre sitting back at home feeling a little helpless, said Engelson, who will be starting a residency program in psychiatry at the university in June. I know I certainly did. Being so close to graduation, Im so close to being there with them, yet here I am at home doing nothing. Thats part of it -- wanting to be involved, but also really wanting to support our mentors.

Students and higher education professionals have found all manner of ways to get involved.

Peter Tonge, the chair of the chemistry department at the State University of New York at Stony Brook, helped coordinate an effort to mix hand sanitizer after he received a message from the dean of Stony Brook's College of Arts and Sciences, a chemist, about a shortage at the university hospital. Tonge said the chemistry department used the World Health Organization's formulation for hand sanitizer, which is made up of hydrogen peroxide, glycerol and either ethanol or Isopropyl alcohol -- all raw materials that faculty members had in their labs.

I created a Google spreadsheet and sent it to faculty. In a couple of hours, they filled in a spreadsheet with the location and amount of each of these reagents, Tonge said. We got a cart, myself and two other people went through building collecting all the reagents, took it down to our general chemistry lab, and a postdoctoral associate and a research scientist mixed up the reagents. By 5 p.m. the same day hed received the email, he said theyd made 17 gallons.

That basically exhausted all of our supplies in the building, so we placed an order for another 80 gallons of ethanol, and today we made another 80 gallons of hand sanitizer, Tonge said Friday.

In a similar effort, the Veterinary Diagnostic Lab at Oregon State University manufactured a fluid needed to transport COVID-19 test swabs in a sterile environment with the materials the lab had on hand. The fluid, known as viral transport medium, protects the virus's genetic material until the swab can be tested. Justin Sanders, an assistant professor at Oregon State's Carlson College of Veterinary Medicine, said the lab's scientist initially made three liters of the solution, enough for 1,000 tests, after learning of a shortage from an infectious disease doctor at the Corvallis, Ore.-based Samaritan Health Services. Sanders said the veterinary college has fielded requests for the solution from other hospitals after their efforts were publicized.

Universities, including Oregon State, have also been collecting supplies of personal protective equipment -- including masks, gloves and gowns -- from university labs to donate to hospitals. Oregon State collected 10 pallets of PPE, including an estimated 200,000 pairs of gloves and approximately 8,000 face masks, to donate to county emergency management centers.

We focused on laboratories, kitchen areas, custodial -- anybody that had personal protective equipment, said Mike Bamberger, the emergency preparedness manager at Oregon State University. We collected it up and put in a pile. Then on the main campuses we had people go around and collect it and palletize it and take it over to the local county for distribution.

San Jacinto College, a community college in Texas, also organized a PPE donation drive, collecting supplies from its various health-science programs.

We work with all of our sister agencies, Harris County Emergency Management, Harris County Public Health -- we reached out to them and asked what we could do to help, and they gave us their high-need items, said Ali Shah, the colleges emergency manager. Shah said the college has also collected specimen bags needed by local hospitals and transferred two ventilators owned by its respiratory therapy program to a local hospital. San Jacinto has also partnered with other Houston-area colleges to use 3-D printers to manufacture a component of protective face shields for health-care workers.

Faculty members and students at multiple universities -- including but not limited to Duke University, in North Carolina; Rowan University, in New Jersey; SUNY Stony Brook; and the Universities of Montevallo, in Alabama; and South Carolina -- have mobilized to manufacture masks or face shields using 3-D printers.

Some universities, such as Duke and the University of Nebraska Medical Center, are using different technologies to decontaminate N95 masks, which are in scarce supply.

Michigan State University has repurposed a spiral oven in its Food Processing and Innovation Center -- which is typically used by food companies to test new recipes -- to decontaminate masks using heat. Michigan State has partnered with a local hospital provider, Sparrow Health System, on the effort.

We think this can have a significant impact for our health-care providers in the Lansing region, said Jeffrey W. Dwyer, the director of MSU Extension and senior associate dean of outreach and engagement for the College of Agriculture and Natural Resources. We will simultaneously be able to work with others around the state and even the country to share our protocol with them and work with them to adapt it.

A group of scientific professionals, engineers and clinicians has organized a volunteer consortium, N95DECON, to review and publish scientific information on mask decontamination strategies.

We came together and did what scientists do best -- read available literature, synthesize information, evaluate data and debate vigorously. Our goal is to better equip hospitals and health-care personnel in these challenging times with concise, organized, data-backed information on this important issue, said Hana El-Samad, an organizer of the consortium and the Kuo Family Endowed Professor and vice chair of the department of biochemistry and biophysics at the University of California, San Francisco.

El-Samad emphasized that decontamination is a substitute for what would be the best solution -- an increased supply of PPE. But she said the need for decontamination among health-care providers is great.

It is true that many institutions and medical centers are taking a courageous lead in setting up methods and protocols for decontamination, El-Samad said. "But there are over 6,000 hospitals in the U.S. alone, plus many other settings with professional users of N95 masks in the U.S. and abroad. Only a handful have adopted any decontamination strategies to date, but a growing number are realizing it might be a decision they need to make in the near future.

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Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine at Tufts University sends personal protective equipment, ventilators and other medical supplies to area…

April 6th, 2020 6:50 pm

NORTH GRAFTON, Mass.(April 6, 2020)In the latest in a series of efforts by Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine at Tufts University to help keep the people and animals in its local communities healthy and safe during the COVID-19 pandemic, the schools dean joined forces Thursday with Graftons state representative to deliver a supply of personal protective equipment (PPE) to UMass Memorial Medical Center. Throughout the crisis, the school has donated critical medical supplies to human healthcare facilities, continued to provide emergency and essential veterinary care for its patients, and pursued research projects to help better understand and potentially contribute to treatments for COVID-19.

The schools latest donation of PPE, part of a broader effort by the university to support its local communities and hospitals during the pandemic, was hand-delivered by Alastair Cribb, dean of Cummings School, and state Rep. David K. Muradian, Jr., of Grafton, in an effort to help medical center personnel who are on the front lines of the crisis. This donation was among many the school has made since mid-March, including:

I continue to be amazed by the support from our community during this pandemic, said Michael Gustafson, president, UMass Memorial Medical Center. Donations of PPE like those from Cummings School are helping us to keep our caregivers and our patients safe.

And, in an effort to increase food security for the members of its local community, Cummings School Farm is donating 30 dozen eggs per week, which are being provided to the Grafton Food Pantry and other local food pantries.

The donations Cummings School has made and its many contributions to the health and wellness of the people and animals of our communities will have a significant impact for all of us in the Greater Worcester area, said Rep. Muradian.

Continued services

In an effort to conserve this valuable PPE and to minimize risk of COVID-19 spread, Foster Hospital for Small Animals, Tufts VETS and the Hospital for Large Animals have remained open for emergency and emergent patient cases only, with new protocols to limit person-to-person contact.

As veterinarians, we have a societal responsibility to care for animals in order to uphold the human-animal bond and the mental health of animal owners in a time of great stress, while preserving supplies sorely needed in the human health care system, said Dean Cribb.

Ensuring the integrity of food supply and the livelihood of farmers is also essential for public health and economic viability. Tufts Veterinary Field Service in Woodstock, CT, continues to treat large animal emergencies and perform herd health visits to dairy farms.

Research

Veterinarians contributions to public health go beyond the vital care of animalsthey play a critical role in the development of new therapies and vaccines. They also are crucial to infectious-disease surveillance, especially around pathogens that originate in nature and spread from wildlife to humans, as is suspected with COVID-19. Cummings School researchers are currently involved in multiple research projects related to the study of COVID-19, including readying Tufts New England Regional Biosafety Laboratory for critical studies around the virus, both by Tufts University researchers and other researchers in the community.

For more information about Cummings Schools COVID response and guidance on bringing animals to our facilities for treatment during this pandemic, please visit: https://vet.tufts.edu/latest-updates-from-cummings-school-and-tufts-university/. And, to learn more about how Tufts University as a whole is contributing to COVID-19 efforts, please visit: https://coronavirus.tufts.edu/.

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About Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine at Tufts University

Founded in 1978 in North Grafton, Mass., Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine at Tufts University is internationally esteemed for academic programs that impact society and the practice of veterinary medicine; seven teaching hospitals and clinics that combined log more than 100,000 animal cases each year; and groundbreaking research that benefits animal, human, and environmental health.

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Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine at Tufts University sends personal protective equipment, ventilators and other medical supplies to area...

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College of Veterinary Medicine continues to offer essential services to Kansas and beyond – Fence Post

April 6th, 2020 6:50 pm

MANHATTAN, Kan. The College of Veterinary Medicine at Kansas State University has made accommodations to continue providing the best service possible in animal care and diagnostic services during this time of need.

The colleges recent actions are in line with recommendations from the American Veterinary Medical Association, the World Organization for Animal Health and the World Veterinary Association, who have collectively identified veterinary services as essential. In Kansas, most private veterinary practices remain open with new precautionary protocols to protect clients and professional staff.

Veterinarians serve the public in a variety of capacities beyond animal care, including disease prevention, public health, food inspection and food safety, research on infectious and zoonotic diseases, translational medicine and much more, said Bonnie Rush, dean of the College of Veterinary Medicine. Despite COVID-19, we continue to provide services that are deemed essential for our community and the state. We have worked through staffing and personal safety guidelines to protect workers and limit interruption of essential services.

The Veterinary Health Center remains open to provide care for urgent and emergency patients of all species. It has also taken measures to protect the safety of hospital staff and the community by making scheduling adjustments. These adjustments include a drop-off concierge protocol and a new discharge protocol, just to name a few. The full protocol is posted at vet.k-state.edu/vhc/covid-19.html.

We are making every effort to maintain around-the-clock services for veterinary patients in need, said Elizabeth Davis, interim center director. Concurrently, as essential members of our community, we are working to keep students, staff and faculty healthy and safe. The Veterinary Health Center is committed to provision of high-quality, specialized veterinary services and exceptional training for professional students and specialists in training.

Another College of Veterinary Medicine service, the Kansas State Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory, is providing an added sense of security during a time of uncertainty and unpredictability.

The lab is maintaining regular operating hours, but with staggered shifts for staff, said Jamie Henningson, director of the laboratory. Our services support essential industries and individuals, inside and outside of Kansas, who must continue to operate during this challenging time, which include, but are not limited to, veterinarians, livestock producers, pet owners, rabies testing and the National Animal Health Laboratory Network to detect foreign animal disease or to respond to an outbreak.

For more information and updates, visit the College of Veterinary Medicine website at vet.k-state.edu.

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College of Veterinary Medicine continues to offer essential services to Kansas and beyond - Fence Post

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Veterinarians ‘limited on what we can do’ | News – The Independent

April 6th, 2020 6:50 pm

ASHLAND Area veterinary clinics remain open during the COVID-19 pandemic, but only for essential services, which is according to guidelines issued by the American Veterinary Medical Association.

Local veterinarians continue to see some patients, but they are seeing only about half the numbers.

At Ashland Animal Clinic, Dr. Chris Pinkston said hes following the AVMA guidelines and those suggested by the Kentucky Veterinarian Association, which are very similar.

We have stopped routine procedures but are still seeing animals with ailments and illnesses, Pinkston said. An example of ailment or illness is urinary tract infection. They are usually not life threatening, but still an illness enough we can treat easily.

Diane Broughton, office manager at Bellefonte Animal Clinic in Flatwoods, said they have canceled elective surgeries like spaying and neutering and are not seeing animals for wellness visits or vaccinations on those who have had vaccinations previously. The office will see animals that have never been vaccinated, like puppies or adults that have never had shots. Also being seen are those who are sick or have other medical conditions.

Were kind of limited to as to what we can do, Broughton said. The state veterinary office gave us instruction defining what essential services are for us.

No clients are allowed in the building, but curbside service is online.

We will call and triage over the phone, she said. A staff member will go and get the animal and talk on the phone if we need to talk to the owner, and then take the animal back out to the car.

All About Animals Veterinary follows the issued guidelines as well. Jay Nance, office manager, said they are taking emergency cases only, which includes rabies.

Nance said they are seeing about half the number of animals as usual, because they arent boarding, offering day care or providing spaying or neutering, but business remains steady.

Dr. Ursula Nance said if there is a problem with an animal, the owner should first call the office.

(The office) can tell you if you can do something at home or if we need to see the animal, she said. Ive seen too many cases where, if left too long, it can make the animal worse and make treatment more expensive.

Dr. Pinkston said his clinic also has seen about half the normal business, which is about 20 patients a day.

Broughton said things are constantly changing at Bellefonte Animal Clinic.

Weve had dead periods and weve had periods where we have had several people calling, she said. Weve scaled back hours of operation and number of staff members here because we dont have the volume (of cases) we have had. Its how it is in veterinary medicine in general. Weve seen people every day. Theres always a little bit of need and people can pick up medication refills.

Meanwhile, Broughton said owners should put off a veterinary visit for 30 days if the animal is doing well. That means routine blood work as well as spaying and neutering.

We can offer suggestions over the phone for minor things, she said. We have the ability to do telemedicine. Were not set up for that now, but that could be something that could evolve into.

Dr. Pinkston agreed.

It never hurts to call, he said. We encourage our owners to call us and theres many times we can give good advice. Sometimes we can prescribe things over the phone. He said the clinic doesnt use telemedicine but it likely will branch into it.

(606) 326-2661 |

lward@dailyindependent.com

NOTE: For more information about pet care, visit the American Veterinary Medical Associations website at avma.org.

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A Bronx Zoo Tiger Is Sick With Coronavirus. Your Cats Are Probably OK – The New York Times

April 6th, 2020 6:50 pm

Scientists at various labs are looking at animal susceptibility, both in terms of pets and with an eye to what animals could be used in laboratory studies. The same preliminary, unreviewed study that found cats susceptible in the laboratory also found that the virus reproduces poorly in dogs, pigs, chickens and ducks.

Among animals that may be used in laboratory tests, the novel coronavirus infects genetically engineered mice as well as some monkeys. Chimpanzee sanctuaries in the United States have stopped tours and reduced staff members interactions with their animals in case apes may be vulnerable, too.

Ferrets are yet another potential laboratory animal. A report accepted for publication in Cell Host & Microbe documents that ferrets both become infected and pass the virus on to one another, showing some symptoms similar to those of humans, such as a fever, lethargy and coughing. All the animals recovered, however.

Jae Jung, a microbiologist at the Keck School of Medicine at the University of Southern California, was one of the authors on that paper. He said that mice are likely to be on the front lines of testing, particularly for new drugs or vaccines. Established drugs or vaccines that are similar to previous ones used in humans may go straight to human trials.

In genetically engineered mice, the virus appears in all cells, and the symptoms of the mice are not similar to those of humans. Monkeys, Dr. Jung said, are close to humans, but they can be used only in small numbers. Ferrets are particularly useful, because, like monkeys, they do not need to be genetically engineered, but they are easier to raise in a lab than monkeys and the structure of their breathing system is similar in some ways to that of humans. They become infected in the lungs, as humans do.

Ferrets have been used in influenza research and in research on SARS, partly because they cough and, Dr. Jung found, can pass the virus to one another. They may be useful to study how the virus is transmitted.

Dr. Jung said the ferrets showed a fever and lethargy and occasionally coughing. Around Day 10 or 12 of infection, he said, they all recovered.

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Veterinary Medicine Market Trends Analysis, Top Manufacturers, Shares, Growth Opportunities and Forecast to 2026 – Germany English News

April 6th, 2020 6:50 pm

New Jersey, United States: Verified Market Research has added a new research report titled, Veterinary Medicine Market Professional Survey Report 2020 to its vast collection of research reports. The Veterinary Medicine market is expected to grow positively for the next five years 2020-2026.

The Veterinary Medicine market report studies past factors that helped the market to grow as well as, the ones hampering the market potential. This report also presents facts on historical data from 2011 to 2019 and forecasts until 2026, which makes it a valuable source of information for all the individuals and industries around the world. This report gives relevant market information in readily accessible documents with clearly presented graphs and statistics. This report also includes views of various industry executives, analysts, consultants, and marketing, sales, and product managers.

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The main players featured in the Veterinary Medicine market report are:

Market Segment as follows:

The global Veterinary Medicine Market report highly focuses on key industry players to identify the potential growth opportunities, along with the increased marketing activities is projected to accelerate market growth throughout the forecast period. Additionally, the market is expected to grow immensely throughout the forecast period owing to some primary factors fuelling the growth of this global market. Finally, the report provides detailed profile and data information analysis of leading Veterinary Medicine company.

Veterinary Medicine Market by Regional Segments:

The chapter on regional segmentation describes the regional aspects of the Veterinary Medicine market. This chapter explains the regulatory framework that is expected to affect the entire market. It illuminates the political scenario of the market and anticipates its impact on the market for Veterinary Medicine .

The Veterinary Medicine Market research presents a study by combining primary as well as secondary research. The report gives insights on the key factors concerned with generating and limiting Veterinary Medicine market growth. Additionally, the report also studies competitive developments, such as mergers and acquisitions, new partnerships, new contracts, and new product developments in the global Veterinary Medicine market. The past trends and future prospects included in this report makes it highly comprehensible for the analysis of the market. Moreover, The latest trends, product portfolio, demographics, geographical segmentation, and regulatory framework of the Veterinary Medicine market have also been included in the study.

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Table of Content

1 Introduction of Veterinary Medicine Market1.1 Overview of the Market1.2 Scope of Report1.3 Assumptions

2 Executive Summary

3 Research Methodology 3.1 Data Mining3.2 Validation3.3 Primary Interviews3.4 List of Data Sources

4 Veterinary Medicine Market Outlook4.1 Overview4.2 Market Dynamics4.2.1 Drivers4.2.2 Restraints4.2.3 Opportunities4.3 Porters Five Force Model4.4 Value Chain Analysis

5 Veterinary Medicine Market, By Deployment Model5.1 Overview

6 Veterinary Medicine Market, By Solution6.1 Overview

7 Veterinary Medicine Market, By Vertical7.1 Overview

8 Veterinary Medicine Market, By Geography8.1 Overview8.2 North America8.2.1 U.S.8.2.2 Canada8.2.3 Mexico8.3 Europe8.3.1 Germany8.3.2 U.K.8.3.3 France8.3.4 Rest of Europe8.4 Asia Pacific8.4.1 China8.4.2 Japan8.4.3 India8.4.4 Rest of Asia Pacific8.5 Rest of the World8.5.1 Latin America8.5.2 Middle East

9 Veterinary Medicine Market Competitive Landscape9.1 Overview9.2 Company Market Ranking9.3 Key Development Strategies

10 Company Profiles10.1.1 Overview10.1.2 Financial Performance10.1.3 Product Outlook10.1.4 Key Developments

11 Appendix11.1 Related Research

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Tags: Veterinary Medicine Market Size, Veterinary Medicine Market Trends, Veterinary Medicine Market Forecast, Veterinary Medicine Market Growth, Veterinary Medicine Market Analysis

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Auburn expert gives advice on pets and COVID-19 – WHNT News 19

April 6th, 2020 6:50 pm

Posted: Apr 6, 2020 / 02:02 PM CDT / Updated: Apr 6, 2020 / 04:48 PM CDT

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AUBURN, Ala. With recent cases of animals being found to have the COVID-19 disease, people have a lot of questions about coronavirus and their household pets.

In a news release from the university on Monday, Dr. Ellen Behrend, the acting director of Auburn Universitys Veterinary Teaching Hospitals and the Joezy Griffin Professor in the College of Veterinary Medicines Department of Clinical Sciences, broke down recent news about pets infected with COVID-19 and offered best practices for keeping pets and peopl healthy during the pandemic.

Can pets become infected with COVID-19?

Three pets outside of the U.S. have tested positive for the virus that causes COVID-19 and all lived with humans that also tested positive, Behrend said. Of the three positive cases of suspected human-to-animal transmission, the two dogs never showed any symptoms of COVID-19 and never became sick. The third, and most recent positive COVID-19 result in a pet, is a cat in Belgium that developed gastrointestinal and respiratory symptoms about one week after the owner began showing symptoms of COVID-19. It is not known if the virus found in any of these animals was alive or dead, or if the cat coincidentally tested positive for the coronavirus while sick with another problem that caused the symptoms.

Over the weekend, a tiger at New Yorks Bronx Zoo tested positive as well. It is also not clear if animals are able to transmit the virus, or if they are merely carriers. Behrend said they do know that positive tests are neither concerning nor surprising based on previous infectious disease behavior in humans and animals. More research is needed before reliable determinations can be made about human-to-animal and animal-to-human COVID-19 transmission, she said.

Most importantly, she said it is yet another reason to prioritize basic infection control measures, like washing hands after interaction with pets and physically distancing yourself as you would a person you are living with.

How should I care for my pet if I become infected with COVID-19?

If you test positive for COVID-19, let your doctor know that you have pets in your home. Behrend said. Contact with animals should be restricted while you are sick with COVID-19, just like you would distance yourself from other people.

When possible, another member of your household should care for the pets and you should avoid unnecessary contact with your pets. If you have tested positive and are the only person available to care for your pet or service animal, Berhend said you should take care to wash your hands before and after caring for the animal and, if possible, wear a face mask while interacting until you are medically cleared to return to your normal activities.

What do I do if I become infected and my pet gets sick?

If your pet begins to show some symptoms of COVID-19, contact your veterinarian for advice. If you become infected and your pet gets sick also, Behrend says keep the animal in the house, isolate the pet from people and other animals and practice good hygiene when interacting with your pet limit touching, dont snuggle, dont put your face near your pets face, wash your hands afterwards, etc. Be careful with your pets, Behrend said practice some distancing and extra hygiene until you are both healthy, but do not abandon them.

Can animal vaccines protect me against COVID-19?

According to Behrend, the short answer is no. There are coronavirus vaccines made for animals, but they do not protect against the specific type of coronavirus that causes COVID-19.

What are best practices for keeping my pets healthy?

Use the same distancing practices for your pets as you use for yourself, Behrend said. Limit contact with people, especially people with fever or respiratory symptoms. Dont take pets into crowded areas and maintain a distance from others when walking your dog. If a place is safe for you, it should be safe for your pets.

Where can I find information about COVID-19 and my pets?

Behrend suggests the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website atwww.cdc.govand the American Veterinary Medical Association website atwww.avma.org for accurate, up-to-date pet-related information about COVID-19.

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Auburn expert gives advice on pets and COVID-19 - WHNT News 19

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Veterinary Telemedicine in the age of COVID-19 – News – Alice Echo News-Journal

April 6th, 2020 6:50 pm

In light of the COVID-19 pandemic and the associated restrictions on public activity, many people are looking for ways to safely go about their daily lives indoors and online. Luckily, telemedicine supports this goal, and allows individuals to ensure their health and the health of their pets digitally.

Dr. Lori Teller, a clinical associate professor at the Texas A&M College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences, speaks to pet owners about the basics of veterinary telemedicine and how this tool can be especially useful in the midst of a pandemic.

Telemedicine is the exchange of medical information from one location to another using electronic communications to diagnose, treat or improve a patients health status, Teller said. In most cases, all that an animal owner needs to connect is a smartphone with a working camera, microphone and chat feature.

A computer or tablet may also be used, provided that it is capable of two-way communication and has internet access. In many cases, a telemedicine appointment will be a real-time, live video and audio exchange.

A veterinarian can evaluate many things via telemedicine, Teller said. The first thing will be to obtain a patients history and determine what the current problem is. If the problem is something that can be visualized, such as a skin lesion or limping, then pictures or videos will be helpful. Behavioral and nutritional problems can often be handled via telemedicine as well.

Telemedicine appointments are most effective when there is an established veterinarian-client-patient relationship (VCPR), as the veterinarian may be able to more accurately make a diagnosis and create a treatment plan. If there is no established VCPR, a veterinarian will still be able to provide general advice.

Rules on what the outcome of a telemedicine appointment can be, including the prescription of medications, vary by state.

It is important to note that telemedicine does not replace a physical exam, so there will be times when the veterinarian will tell the client that the patient needs to be seen, Teller said. Telemedicine can play a huge role, especially in times of disaster, such as a pandemic or hurricane, in helping a client determine if a trip to the veterinarian is needed and, if so, when is it needed.

If a pet has a life-threatening emergency, difficulty breathing, pale or bluish gums, has ingested a toxic substance or something large enough to cause an obstruction, is unable to urinate or to stand, has increased seizures, is non-responsive, is experiencing difficulty during labor, has vomiting and diarrhea and lethargy, or is experiencing other serious veterinary conditions, they should be brought to a veterinary clinic.

Teller recommends calling ahead of time to let the clinic know youre coming and what the problem appears to be.

Telemedicine is an extremely valuable tool to help provide care for a patient, she said. It is not a substitute for in-person veterinary care that requires a physical exam or diagnostic tests, such as blood work or imaging, but is a way to manage patients in-between visits to the hospital.

During times of disruption, such as the current pandemic, telemedicine can be an excellent way to ensure that your furry friend continues to get the care they need while also following social distancing requirements and staying safely indoors.

Telemedicine is especially valuable during a pandemic because it can be used to help the veterinarian and the client determine if and when the patient needs to be seen in the hospital or if the problem can be managed at home, at least for the short term, Teller said. It also helps conserve PPE (personal protective equipment) and other resources for emergencies and for human health care facilities.

Pet Talk is a service of the College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences, Texas A&M University. Stories can be found on the Pet Talk website. Suggestions for future topics may be directed to editor@cvm.tamu.edu.

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Veterinary Telemedicine in the age of COVID-19 - News - Alice Echo News-Journal

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During pandemic, essential workers brave through fears and fill critical needs – NBC News

April 6th, 2020 6:50 pm

Workers in the United States from health care to transportation continue to provide critical services during the pandemic, from delivering packages to driving across the country to distribute supplies to local businesses preparing for emergencies. The NBC News Social Newsgathering team interviewed essential workers in America about their roles and how they're filling an essential need and meeting demand as cases of the coronavirus increase across the U.S.

Ben Hertle has been working as a delivery driver for the United Parcel Service in Maple Grove, Minnesota, for the past decade and is doing so now as packages are needed during this critical time.

Im watching person after person after person lose their job, and I have a job and Im grateful for that, but at the same time, theres so much pain around me that Im seeing as a driver, Hertle told NBC News.

Hertle, 34, lost his job delivering groceries during the U.S. financial crisis in 2008 and carries a feeling of gratitude for his current position.

He remembers applying for a seasonal job opening on the UPS website in 2010 and then becoming a full-time delivery driver.

I feel that Im bringing something thats more than just a box. Its bringing healing and hope, he said from his delivery truck.

Hertle said he and his colleagues maintain limited contact to comply with social distancing guidelines, and he is using hand sanitizer and washing his hands as much as he can.

Im carrying medical supplies, Im carrying very important critical medicine to people, and thats the difference for me, he said.

An essential need is also being filled by over the road truck drivers like Douglas Mcconnaughhay in Arkansas.

My uncle was a truck driver, and ever since I was a tot and I sat up on his truck, it was just something about it, it just got in my blood, Mcconnaughhay told NBC News.

Let our news meet your inbox. The news and stories that matters, delivered weekday mornings.

Mcconnaughhay, 54, has been a truck driver for about 25 years and drives across the country delivering a variety of supplies like paper for cardboard boxes and recycling to farmers supplies and lawnmowers.

He drives 70 hours a week Monday through Frida in a Peterbilt truck and only has about 34 hours to spend with his family in Cabot.

He said one of his biggest challenges is finding a place to buy food while on the road with many restaurants and eateries closed during the pandemic.

He also worries about the fear of exposing his family to the virus when he returns home each week.

My main issue is I cant bring the virus back home to my wife because of her health issues. I just want to be able to be safe and make sure that my home stays healthy and safe, Mcconnaughhay said.

To the truck driver, just stay strong and keep on keep on. Theres some that have it a lot worse than me, he said.

Matt Kinley is the interim fire chief for the Seminole County Fire Department in Florida, where hes served for 19 years.

Kinley wants to ensure that his staff stay safe and healthy while collectively working to stop the spread of the virus. We dont want to be in the same position where everybody is sick overwhelming the system, he said.

Kinley said he and his colleagues are spending long hours managing and guiding paramedics and firefighters and command staff on preparation and ensuring that theyre protected in the process.

He said his fire department acts as an all-hazards fire department helping anyone from a sick patient to responding to a radioactive spill.

So much extends to our families," Kinley said. "Were all just blessed that were out here providing a community service, trying to keep the rock stable at home."

The chief has split up command staff into two separate buildings, a public safety building and a training center and identified primary and backup people.

At home, Kinley said his wife is taking care of their two children, 4 and 7, and home-schooling them while taking care of her parents and in-laws.

I couldnt do what I do without them, he said.

Dr. Alastair Cribb is a veterinarian and dean of a Massachusetts veterinary school and is ensuring that animal patients continue to get treatment during this pandemic.

Its very important that veterinary medicine is still available for people that need to care for their animals while keeping everyone as safe as possible, Cribb told NBC News.

For precautionary measures, Cribb said that his clinics are not allowing owners of animals to enter with their pets but instead to allow their staff to pick them up outside.

He said that the Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine loaned out ventilators and donated personal protective equipment to support Tufts Medical Center in Boston to fill a scarcity of resources for health care workers. He said that other U.S. veterinary hospitals have done the same.

We have other ventilators that we could use short term with our patients, Cribb said.

Rima Abdelkader is a senior reporter for Social Newsgathering at NBC News in New York.

Shako Liu contributed.

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Thermometers climb through Wednesday – WBRZ

April 6th, 2020 6:50 pm

Look for a warm start to the week as highs approach 90 by Wednesday. A cold front will move into the region by the end of the week.

THE FORECAST:

Today and Tonight: Look for some high clouds to thicken over a mostly sunny sky to start the new week. Southerly winds will take hold over the area, increasing the potential for spotty to isolated showers to develop by the evening. The influx of warmth and moisture from the Gulf of Mexico will guide afternoon high temperatures into the mid 80s. Overnight brings the best shot at a shower, though coverage will be low. Thermometers will stop in the upper 60s.

Up Next: Continued onshore flow will aid the development of spotty showers on Tuesday as well. High temperatures will continue to increase through the 80s and approach the 90s on Wednesday. A frontal system will then move into the region on Thursday and Friday. This willbring the potential for showers and thunderstorms, and some cells could be strong. Thermometers will take a turn for the cooler behind that system, and unlike the past couple of frontal passages, this cool air mass will have some staying power.

The Mississippi River: At Baton Rouge, major flood stage continues with a level of 42 as of Monday morning. Around April 11, the river is projected to crest near 43. The high water is primarily an issue for river traffic and river islands, although some inundation will continue for a few spots north and south of Baton Rouge that are not protected by levees. Unprotected low-lying areas will be flooded and agricultural operations will be impacted on the west side of the river. The grounds of the older part of Louisiana State University's campus become soggy. This includes the area around the Veterinary Medicine building, the Veterinary Medicine Annex, the stadium and ball fields. The city of Baton Rouge and the main LSU campus are protected by levees at this level. This comes after a year where the gauge at Baton Rouge spent a record smashing run of 212 consecutive days above flood stage between January and August. Peaking at 44.1 on March 19, 2019 the river set its 7th highest recorded crest at Baton Rouge. The level is also high in New Orleans and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has opened the Bonnet Carre Spillway. From May to July 2019, the Spillway was open for a record 79 consecutive days during its second opening of the year. If the Spillway is opened in 2020, it will mark the fourth time in five years and the 15th time since being built in 1931.

THE EXPLANATION:

A ridge of high pressure over the Gulf of Mexico will maintain above average temperatures through the middle of the week. While, mainly dry conditions are anticipated, advancing Gulf moisture amidst onshore winds will allow isolated showers to develop. The chances may be enhanced somewhat by some weak upper level impulses riding over the ridge with the best, albeit low, chance for isolated showers overnight Monday and through Tuesday. Wednesday will be the warmest day of the week with high temperatures approaching 90 degrees. Then, a frontal system will move into the region late Thursday. With several days of warmth and moisture priming the atmosphere, showers and thunderstorms should readily develop. This period will need to be monitored for some stronger activity. The first front will knock temperatures down a bit, as it crawls into the Gulf of Mexico. It is expected to stall close enough to the region that clouds and isolated showers will stick around into the weekend. A second front will then move in during the middle of the weekend. While confidence is low at this time, the current forecast is for this front to flush out the lingering clouds and showers and provide a prolonged period of cooler and drier than average conditions into early next week.

--Josh

The WBRZ Weather Team is here for you, on every platform. Your weather updates can be found on News 2, wbrz.com, and the WBRZ WX App. on Apple and Android devices. Follow WBRZ Weather on Facebook and Twitter for even more weather updates while you are on the go.

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‘The Incredible Dr. Pol’: Does Dr. Emily Have Children? – Showbiz Cheat Sheet

April 6th, 2020 6:49 pm

Dr. Emily Thomas may be gone from The Incredible Dr. Pol, but shes not forgotten.

The hardworking veterinarian showed what she was made of on the reality show, putting in long hours even while far along in one of her pregnancies.

If youre wondering how many kids the Georgia native has, heres what we know.

It was hard to see Dr. Emily leave the Nat Geo Wild program. She had been a fan favorite since 2015, repositioning cows stomachs, palpating them, removing grubs from nasty infections it was all in a days work for Dr. Emily.

After she left The Incredible Dr. Pol, she was replaced by two new veterinarians, Dr. Ray Harp and Dr. Lisa Jones.

A big fan of Dr. Pols, Dr. Harp as a young man watched the reality show and was inspired to become an animal doctor seeing the tireless Dr. Pol working his rounds on various farms and at his practice.

In 2010, the 37-year-old Dr. Harp was managing a day care for dogs in Philadelphia and made the decision to return to school to become a vet technician.

It was while he was working at an animal clinic in Kansas City that he began to get the itch to become a veterinarian and gave serious thought to medical school. Encouraged by his wife, he enrolled at Kansas City University and earned his doctor of veterinary medicine degree in 2019.

He and his family ended up in Michigan, although he admits hes more of a fan of sunnier climates.

Its really beautiful, he said of Michigan. Im just worried that its going to be really snowy soon.

Dr. Emily, while she was working at Dr. Pols clinic, had her husband, Tony, working alongside her in the clinic, helping out all the veterinarians, guests, and their clients.

Currently, at the practice Dr. Emily is now working with in Virginia, her husband is working with her there as well.

Tony, writing on Dr. Emilys personal blog, said of their move, . . . when it was time to leave Michigan, we had an idea of what we wanted.

Virginia became an obvious place for us. Within Virginia, the Shenandoah Valley was appealing. The Shenandoah National Park is basically in our front yard, and there is a nice river for canoeing and kayaking.

Dr. Emily and Tony have three children: India born in 2013, Oscar born in 2015, and Calvin born in 2018.

Based on her blog, its safe to say that part of the reason so many viewers were drawn to her was for her sometimes shocking honesty. But its nothing any other mother hasnt thought at least once.

She said recently on Twitter, ALL night I was unable to sleep despite meds just imagining all of my children dying from the #Covid_19. Then, groggy early morning, I hear that all three kids are downstairs. My very first thought Ugh! I guess I better get up and go take care of those monsters.

Read more: The Incredible Dr. Pol: The Real Reason Dr. Emily Left

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Determining How Many Veterinarians are in the Workforce is Trickier Than You Think – PR Web

April 6th, 2020 6:49 pm

AMES, Iowa (PRWEB) April 06, 2020

Food animal veterinarians (FAVs) are vital for the health and well-being of our nations food supply, but the profession faces challenges that are not well understood, which ultimately impacts the workforces ability to recruit and retain professionals.

FAVs are key to providing the world with a safe and secure food supply, says Dr. Christine Navarre, DVM, MS, DACVIM, of Louisiana State University. They work directly with producers to ensure the health and welfare of food producing animals as well as working in food safety and other public health areas.

Navarre recently chaired a task force addressing the issue in a new paper published by the Council for Agricultural Science and Technology (CAST). She, along with other veterinary scientists and experts, focused on two themes affecting the profession: economic and social factors.

The authors describe economic challenges as changes in the agricultural industry that affect supply and demand. The latter are often informed by available databases, for example, the American Veterinary Medical Associations membership database, which represents 82 percent of U.S. veterinarians. However, it is difficult to determine how many individuals in the database work with food-producing animals due to missing or outdated self-reported information.

Other inconsistencies also cause issues in workforce studies that are often used to inform the amount of FAV professionals in the workforce and how many are needed. A lack of detailed employment data, differences in methodology and an ever-changing animal agricultural landscape make predicting how many FAVs are needed difficult," Navarre says.

Social factors also influence students and professional veterinarians choices for where and what they practice. Among the top social challenges include the students income-to-debt ratio, which is considerably high for FAVs. Many veterinarians also cite the lack of support in rural agricultural communities among the barriers that curb them from this type of work. For example, veterinarians with spouses tend to search for communities that are capable of providing a career for their significant other.

While there are challenges to building a strong FAV workforce, the CAST papers authors outline strategies that may increase recruitment and retention for the profession.

Despite the difficulties, FAVs and the producers they serve are innovative and adaptable, and will find ways to keep providing for the health and welfare of food animals and producing safe and affordable food, Navarre says.

The paper, Impact of Recruitment and Retention of Food Animal Veterinarians on the U.S. Food Supply, is available to download for free on the CAST website. A free webinar will take place at noon CST on April 7. More information about the webinar can be found here: https://conta.cc/3bljbxl.

Task Force Authors:

About CAST The Council for Agricultural Science and Technology is an international consortium of scientific and professional societies, companies, and nonprofit organizations. Through its network of experts, CAST assembles, interprets, and communicates credible, balanced, science-based information to policymakers, the media, the private sector, and the public.http://www.cast-science.org

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New therapy could combat persistent joint infections in horses – Feedstuffs

April 6th, 2020 6:49 pm

A new therapy could combat persistent joint infections in horses, potentially saving them from years of pain, based on Morris Animal Foundation-funded research at North Carolina State University.

The North Carolina State researchers developed a platelet-rich plasma (PRP) lysate that, when teamed with antibiotics, can eradicate bacterial biofilms common in joint infections, the Morris Animal Foundation said in an announcement. The therapy could also be applied to other species, including humans and dogs.

The team published their findings in the Journal of Orthopaedic Research.

"This could really provide a more effective way of clearing a joint infection quickly so that the horse does not suffer long-term consequences of joint damage," said Dr. Lauren Schnabel, associate professor of equine orthopedic surgery at North Carolina State University, a primary investigator of the study. "For any horse's well-being, it's important to make them as comfortable as possible, as quickly as possible to avoid laminitis and other complications."

Horses are more prone to joint infections than other animals due to their predominantly outdoor, active lifestyles coupled with a lack of tissue protection over the joints of their lower limbs, the announcement explained. Any wound near a joint, regardless of its size, requires immediate veterinary attention. Left untreated, they can be life-threatening.

Current joint infection treatment usually involves surgical flushing of the joint and giving antibiotics. Despite aggressive care, about 6-10% of horses die as a result of the infection or associated complications. For horses that survive, more than 50% will suffer from chronic arthritis for the rest of their lives, the foundation said.

A common complication that impedes successful treatment is the tendency for some bacteria to form biofilms in the joint. A biofilm is a sticky, slimy shield that forms around bacteria in synovial fluid. They become so large that immune cells can't attack them properly. Biofilms also render the bacteria metabolically inactive, which makes them more resistant to antibiotics.

To create their PRP lysate, the research team took blood from the small herd of horses at the North Carolina State College of Veterinary Medicine and isolated the platelets, which are known to aid in healing. Then, the researchers packed 50 times the number of platelets that would be found in an equal amount of blood into their product. For comparison, typical PRP, for orthopedic and sports medicine purposes, is created by concentrating platelets usually up to three times what is found in a comparable amount of blood, the announcement said.

The team felt that this super-concentrated product would be better at stopping infections than conventional PRP.

The team lysed the platelets to release antimicrobial peptides -- proteins that attack bacteria. The researchers separated out the antimicrobial peptides, and then, after testing those against common bacteria, all the horses' peptides were pooled together for one lysate product. The team collected synovial fluid from the horses' knees with harmless taps. The fluid was seeded with bacteria in the laboratory and allowed to grow biofilms. Finally, researchers tested three methods to attack the biofilms: antibiotics alone, lysate alone and a combination of antibiotics and lysate.

According to the Morris Animal Foundation, the researchers found that antibiotics alone were completely ineffective, and the lysate alone significantly decreased the bacterial load. However, the antibiotic and lysate combination completely eradicated the biofilms and bacteria.

Schnabel said her team has used this experimental therapy on horses with great results. Because the process to create the lysate is both complicated and expensive, her team is trying to find a way to produce it more efficiently. They also are trying to identify the exact peptides responsible for the antibacterial properties, so they can be synthesized and production scaled up to reach the greatest number of horses, the foundation said.

"This is really a critical piece of evidence to show this is a therapy with enormous potential to make traditional antimicrobials more effective," said Dr. Janet Patterson-Kane, Morris Animal Foundation chief scientific officer. "Clearing bacteria more quickly and effectively from infected joints is a much-needed piece of the solution for this complex disease."

If successful, this approach also has translational potential to help other species, including people. For example, biofilm formation and infection are a significant problem for people with metal implants, such as those used in joint replacement surgeries. Dr. Jessica Gilbertie, first author on this publication and former Morris Animal Foundation fellowship trainee under the mentorship of Schnabel, is working on making PRP lysate from other species, including dogs, because they also can suffer from biofilm formations related to surgical procedures.

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Experts: In rare cases, pink eye was an early warning sign of coronavirus – WTHR

April 6th, 2020 6:48 pm

HOUSTON (KHOU11) Theres another possible symptom to add to the list of early warning signs of coronavirus.

Conjunctivitis, commonly known as pink eye, has been seen in some patients, although it's rare.

But if you have pink eye -- along with other common symptoms like fever, dry cough and shortness of breath -- you should call your doctor.

On March 30, the American Academy of Opthalmology alerted doctors that patients who need to be treated for pink eyewho also have a fever and respiratory symptoms and/or have traveled to high-risk areas -- may have COVID-19. As a result, they warned doctors to cover their mouth, nose and eyes when treating these patients, and to disinfect tools and office areas well afterward.

It isnt surprising that coronavirus could cause this symptom, Dr. Richard Watkins, infectious disease physician and professor of internal medicine at Northeast Ohio Medical University, told Prevention.

Neither the CDC nor World Health Organization has confirmed pink eye as a symptom of coronavirus.

But experts say it wouldnt be surprising.

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Global Opthalmology Surgical Microscopes Market with Competitive Analysis, New Business Developments and Top Companies: Carl Zeiss AG, Takagi…

April 6th, 2020 6:48 pm

Opthalmology Surgical Microscopes Marketis expected to gain market growth in the forecast period of 2020 to 2027. Data Bridge Market Research analyses the market to grow at a CAGR of 10.5% in the above-mentioned forecast period.The growing awareness amongst the physicians and patients regarding the benefits associated with the usage of surgical microscopes will directly impacting the growth of the opthalmology surgical microscopes market.

The major players covered in the opthalmology surgical microscopes market report are Leica Microsystems, Carl Zeiss AG, Takagi Ophthalmic Instruments Europe Ltd., Novartis, Rexxam Co., Ltd., HAAG-STREIT GROUP, Karl Kaps GmbH & Co. KG, Alltion (Wuzhou) Co., Ltd., Seiler Instrument Inc., ACCU-SCOPE, OLYMPUS CORPORATION, Global Surgical Corporation, Danaher, among other domestic and global players. Market share data is available for Global, North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific (APAC), Middle East and Africa (MEA) and South America separately. DBMR analysts understand competitive strengths and provide competitive analysis for each competitor separately.

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Global Opthalmology Surgical Microscopes Market is the matchless market research report that conducts industry analysis on products, markets, companies, industries and many countries internationally. Market information related to specific stock, currency, commodity and geographic region or country has also been analysed in this report. Opthalmology Surgical Microscopes Market report deals with abundant parameters in detail to suit the requirements of business or clients. These parameters range from latest trends, market segmentation, new market entry, industry forecasting, target market analysis, future directions, opportunity identification, and strategic analysis to insights and innovation. All of these are analysed and evaluated by a team of innovative, enthusiastic and motivated researchers and forecasters so that nothing lefts uncovered in the Opthalmology Surgical Microscopes Market report.

Market Analysis and Insights of Global Opthalmology Surgical Microscopes Market

Increasing cases of cancer among the growing population, rising incidences of eye disorder, increasing investment for the development of technical and advanced products are some of the factors that will enhance the growth of the opthalmology surgical microscopes market in the forecast period. On the other hand, expansion of research activities will further create new opportunities for the growth of opthalmology surgical microscopes market in the above mentioned forecast period.

High cost of devices and lack of skilled professionals are acting as a restraint factor for the growth of opthalmology surgical microscopes market in the above mentioned forecast period.

This opthalmology surgical microscopes market report provides details of new recent developments, trade regulations, import export analysis, production analysis, value chain optimization, market share, impact of domestic and localised market players, analyses opportunities in terms of emerging revenue pockets, changes in market regulations, strategic market growth analysis, market size, category market growths, application niches and dominance, product approvals, product launches, geographic expansions, technological innovations in the market. To gain more info onData Bridge Market Researchopthalmology surgical microscopes market contact us for anAnalyst Brief, our team will help you take an informed market decision to achieve market growth.

Global Opthalmology Surgical Microscopes Market Scope and Market Size

Opthalmology surgical microscopes market is segmented on the basis of product, application and end user. The growth amongst these segments will help you analyse meagre growth segments in the industries, and provide the users with valuable market overview and market insights to help them in making strategic decisions for identification of core market applications.

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Opthalmology Surgical Microscopes Market Country Level Analysis

Opthalmology surgical microscopes market is analysed and market size insights and trends are provided by country, product, application and end user as referenced above.

The countries covered in the opthalmology surgical microscopes market report are U.S., Canada and Mexico in North America, Germany, France, U.K., Netherlands, Switzerland, Belgium, Russia, Italy, Spain, Turkey, Rest of Europe in Europe, China, Japan, India, South Korea, Singapore, Malaysia, Australia, Thailand, Indonesia, Philippines, Rest of Asia-Pacific (APAC) in the Asia-Pacific (APAC), Saudi Arabia, U.A.E, South Africa, Egypt, Israel, Rest of Middle East and Africa (MEA) as a part of Middle East and Africa (MEA), Brazil, Argentina and Rest of South America as part of South America.

North America dominates the opthalmology surgical microscopes market due to the implementation of advanced technology and acceptance of novel technical platform.

The country section of the opthalmology surgical microscopes market report also provides individual market impacting factors and changes in regulation in the market domestically that impacts the current and future trends of the market. Data points such as consumption volumes, production sites and volumes, import export analysis, price trend analysis, cost of raw materials, down-stream and upstream value chain analysis are some of the major pointers used to forecast the market scenario for individual countries. Also, presence and availability of global brands and their challenges faced due to large or scarce competition from local and domestic brands, impact of domestic tariffs and trade routes are considered while providing forecast analysis of the country data.

Healthcare Infrastructure growth Installed base and New Technology Penetration

Opthalmology surgical microscopes market also provides you with detailed market analysis for every country growth in healthcare expenditure for capital equipments, installed base of different kind of products for opthalmology surgical microscopes market, impact of technology using life line curves and changes in healthcare regulatory scenarios and their impact on the opthalmology surgical microscopes market. The data is available for historic period 2010 to 2018.

Competitive Landscape and Global Opthalmology Surgical Microscopes Market Share Analysis

Opthalmology surgical microscopes market competitive landscape provides details by competitor. Details included are company overview, company financials, revenue generated, market potential, investment in research and development, new market initiatives, global presence, production sites and facilities, production capacities, company strengths and weaknesses, product launch, product width and breadth, application dominance. The above data points provided are only related to the companies focus related to opthalmology surgical microscopes market.

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Absorbable and Non-Absorbable Sutures Market Share Analysis and Research Report by 2025 – Express Journal

April 6th, 2020 6:48 pm

Growth Analysis Report onAbsorbable and Non-Absorbable Sutures Market size | Industry Segment by Applications (Cardiovascular, Orthopedic, Gynecology, Opthalmology, General Surgery and Others), by Type (Absorbable Sutures and Non-Absorbable Sutures), Regional Outlook, Market Demand, Latest Trends, Absorbable and Non-Absorbable Sutures Industry Share & Revenue by Manufacturers, Company Profiles, Growth Forecasts 2025.Analyzes current market size and upcoming 5 years growth of this industry.

A new research report titled Absorbable and Non-Absorbable Sutures market Analysis 2025 is a wide-ranging qualitative analysis of growth factors covering provincial openings, application landscape, product demand trends, and end-use portfolio of the Absorbable and Non-Absorbable Sutures industry. The report also outlines the competitive structure of the Absorbable and Non-Absorbable Sutures industry detailing the analysis and Absorbable and Non-Absorbable Sutures market share dominance of the prominent players.

As we are in the market research industry since last few years dedicated towards providing valuable insights of Absorbable and Non-Absorbable Sutures Market to business professional, industry experts, decision makers, Market consultant and other businesses. Absorbable and Non-Absorbable Sutures Market report is an extensive analysis of all available companies with their growth factors, research & methodology, Absorbable and Non-Absorbable Sutures Market Dynamics, Business Overview, Sales, Revenue, Absorbable and Non-Absorbable Sutures Market Share and Competition with other Manufacturers.

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Repot Scope:

Absorbable and Non-Absorbable Sutures market competition by top Manufacturers:

As far as the competitive spectrum is concerned, the report also enlists the information regarding the Absorbable and Non-Absorbable Sutures market growth tactics undertaken by the industry players, such as expansion strategies and mergers and acquisitions.

Absorbable and Non-Absorbable Sutures Market Outlook by Applications:

Absorbable and Non-Absorbable Sutures Market Statistics by Types:

Also, this report discusses the key drivers influencing Absorbable and Non-Absorbable Sutures market growth, opportunities, the challenges and the risks faced by key players and the market. It also analyzes key emerging trends and their impact on present and future development methodology

Absorbable and Non-Absorbable Sutures Market Report Provides Comprehensive Analysis as Following:

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Global Stem Cell Reconstructive Market- Industry Analysis and Forecast (2020-2027) – Publicist360

April 6th, 2020 6:47 pm

Global Stem Cell Reconstructive Market was valued US$ XX Mn in 2019 and is expected to reach US$ XX Mn by 2027, at a CAGR of 24.5% during a forecast period.

Global Stem Cell Reconstructive Market

Market Dynamics

The Research Report gives an in-depth account of the drivers and restraints in the stem cell reconstructive market. Stem cell reconstructive surgery includes the treatment of injured or dented part of body. Stem cells are undifferentiated biological cells, which divide to produce more stem cells. Growing reconstructive surgeries led by the rising number of limbs elimination and implants and accidents are boosting the growth in the stem cell reconstructive market. Additionally, rising number of aged population, number of patients suffering from chronic diseases, and unceasing development in the technology, these are factors which promoting the growth of the stem cell reconstructive market. Stem cell reconstructive is a procedure containing the use of a patients own adipose tissue to rise the fat volume in the area of reconstruction and therefore helping 3Dimentional reconstruction in patients who have experienced a trauma or in a post-surgical event such as a mastectomy or lumpectomy, brain surgery, or reconstructive surgery as a result of an accident or injury. Stem cell reconstructive surgeries are also used in plastic or cosmetic surgeries as well. Stem cell and regenerative therapies gives many opportunities for development in the practice of medicine and the possibility of an array of novel treatment options for patients experiencing a variety of symptoms and conditions. Stem cell therapy, also recognised as regenerative medicine, promotes the repair response of diseased, dysfunctional or injured tissue using stem cells or their derivatives.

The common guarantee of all the undifferentiated embryonic stem cells (ESCs), foetal, amniotic, UCB, and adult stem cell types is their indefinite self-renewal capacity and high multilineage differentiation potential that confer them a primitive and dynamic role throughout the developmental process and the lifespan in adult mammal.However, the high expenditure of stem cell reconstructive surgeries and strict regulatory approvals are restraining the market growth.

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Global Stem Cell Reconstructive Market Segment analysis

Based on Cell Type, the embryonic stem cells segment is expected to grow at a CAGR of XX% during the forecast period. Embryonic stem cells (ESCs), derived from the blastocyst stage of early mammalian embryos, are distinguished by their capability to distinguish into any embryonic cell type and by their ability to self-renew. Owing to their plasticity and potentially limitless capacity for self-renewal, embryonic stem cell therapies have been suggested for regenerative medicine and tissue replacement after injury or disease. Additionally, their potential in regenerative medicine, embryonic stem cells provide a possible another source of tissue/organs which serves as a possible solution to the donor shortage dilemma. Researchers have differentiated ESCs into dopamine-producing cells with the hope that these neurons could be used in the treatment of Parkinsons disease. Upsurge occurrence of cardiac and malignant diseases is promoting the segment growth. Rapid developments in this vertical contain protocols for directed differentiation, defined culture systems, demonstration of applications in drug screening, establishment of several disease models, and evaluation of therapeutic potential in treating incurable diseases.

Global Stem Cell Reconstructive Market Regional analysis

The North American region has dominated the market with US$ XX Mn. America accounts for the largest and fastest-growing market of stem cell reconstructive because of the huge patient population and well-built healthcare sector. Americas stem cell reconstructive market is segmented into two major regions such as North America and South America. More than 80% of the market is shared by North America due to the presence of the US and Canada.

Europe accounts for the second-largest market which is followed by the Asia Pacific. Germany and UK account for the major share in the European market due to government support for research and development, well-developed technology and high healthcare expenditure have fuelled the growth of the market. This growing occurrence of cancer and diabetes in America is the main boosting factor for the growth of this market.

The objective of the report is to present a comprehensive analysis of the Global Stem Cell Reconstructive Market including all the stakeholders of the industry. The past and current status of the industry with forecasted market size and trends are presented in the report with the analysis of complicated data in simple language. The report covers all the aspects of the industry with a dedicated study of key players that includes market leaders, followers and new entrants. PORTER, SVOR, PESTEL analysis with the potential impact of micro-economic factors of the market has been presented in the report. External as well as internal factors that are supposed to affect the business positively or negatively have been analysed, which will give a clear futuristic view of the industry to the decision-makers.

The report also helps in understanding Global Stem Cell Reconstructive Market dynamics, structure by analysing the market segments and projects the Global Stem Cell Reconstructive Market size. Clear representation of competitive analysis of key players by Application, price, financial position, Product portfolio, growth strategies, and regional presence in the Global Stem Cell Reconstructive Market make the report investors guide.Scope of the Global Stem Cell Reconstructive Market

DO INQUIRY BEFORE PURCHASING REPORT HERE: https://www.maximizemarketresearch.com/inquiry-before-buying/54666

Global Stem Cell Reconstructive Market, By Sources

Allogeneic Autologouso Bone Marrowo Adipose Tissueo Blood Syngeneic OtherGlobal Stem Cell Reconstructive Market, By Cell Type

Embryonic Stem Cell Adult Stem CellGlobal Stem Cell Reconstructive Market, By Application

Cancer Diabetes Traumatic Skin Defect Severe Burn OtherGlobal Stem Cell Reconstructive Market, By End-User

Hospitals Research Institute OthersGlobal Stem Cell Reconstructive Market, By Regions

North America Europe Asia-Pacific South America Middle East and Africa (MEA)Key Players operating the Global Stem Cell Reconstructive Market

Osiris Therapeutics NuVasives Cytori Therapeutics Takeda (TiGenix) Cynata Celyad Medi-post Anterogen Molmed Baxter Eleveflow Mesoblast Ltd. Micronit Microfluidics TAKARA BIO INC. Tigenix Capricor Therapeutics Astellas Pharma US, Inc. Pfizer Inc. STEMCELL Technologies Inc.

MAJOR TOC OF THE REPORT

Chapter One: Stem Cell Reconstructive Market Overview

Chapter Two: Manufacturers Profiles

Chapter Three: Global Stem Cell Reconstructive Market Competition, by Players

Chapter Four: Global Stem Cell Reconstructive Market Size by Regions

Chapter Five: North America Stem Cell Reconstructive Revenue by Countries

Chapter Six: Europe Stem Cell Reconstructive Revenue by Countries

Chapter Seven: Asia-Pacific Stem Cell Reconstructive Revenue by Countries

Chapter Eight: South America Stem Cell Reconstructive Revenue by Countries

Chapter Nine: Middle East and Africa Revenue Stem Cell Reconstructive by Countries

Chapter Ten: Global Stem Cell Reconstructive Market Segment by Type

Chapter Eleven: Global Stem Cell Reconstructive Market Segment by Application

Chapter Twelve: Global Stem Cell Reconstructive Market Size Forecast (2019-2026)

Browse Full Report with Facts and Figures of Stem Cell Reconstructive Market Report at: https://www.maximizemarketresearch.com/market-report/global-stem-cell-reconstructive-market/54666/

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The rise of ‘rich woman face’: how to halt the ageing process (for a certain price) – Telegraph.co.uk

April 6th, 2020 6:47 pm

'Let me tell you about the very rich,' wrote F Scott Fitzgerald. 'They are different from you and me.' Above all, in the lengths they will go to acquire, and preserve, perfect skin.

Sheikha Moza bint Nasser, the consort of the former Emir of Qatar, may well be the richest person I've ever met. She certainly has skin like no one else on the planet. She's 61 but looks about 40, with a face that seems to have no visible pores, perhaps because it's sculpted out of alabaster.

Admittedly, she is carefully made-up on a regular basis, so she would have been unlikely to want to attend a recent dinner party of Gwyneth Paltrow's in Beverly Hills, at which guests were banned from wearing any cosmetics at all. Kate Hudson and Demi Moore were among those who gamely took the challenge, the idea of which was to allow the assembled LA A-listers to show off their natural glow.

But they don't, of course, rely wholly on nature for their radiance. Moore's evening beauty routine (pared back to the minimum because, she says, "I like to keep it simple") includes eight separate products, with a total cost of 743.50, from a cleansing elixir to a 355 replenishing facial oil and a rose-quartz facial massager in the shape of a butterfly.

No wonder that, far from being petrified at the thought of the make-up-free dinner, she felt 'full of joy', according to her Instagram posts. Her face wasn't coated in foundation, but it was insulated by a thick layer of cash.

With skincare that promises actually to reverse the visible signs of ageing, beauty brands feel entitled to charge impressive sums. La Prairie has one serum, its Platinum Night Elixir, that sells for over 1,000 for 20ml. It costs about 10 more per gram than solid gold. Imagine if your cat knocked that one off the dressing table.

On the other hand, the scientist who developed it says the peptides and amino acids contained in a single daily drop will leave your skin visibly younger-looking and fresher in two weeks. Users say it feels like wrapping your face in cashmere.

La Prairie Platinum Rare Cellular Night Elixir 20ml, 1,018, Harvey Nichols

I rely on Dr Phillip Levy, a Swiss dermatologist and wound-healing specialist based in Geneva, whose moisturisers and serums are proven to revitalise dermal stem cells to kick-start your skin's own production of collagen. Another doctor - German-born Michael Prager, who operates from a clinic in Wimpole Street - emphasises the rejuvenating effects of combating pollution with an antioxidant cream that fights off free radicals.

Neither of these medical-grade ranges comes cheap, but though Dr Prager's day oil contains pure gold, at 225 for 30ml (drmichaelprager.com), it's not actually as expensive as buying the precious metal itself.

If you're going down the Sheikha Moza route to moneyed perfection with a lavish use of make-up, Gucci Westman is a name to conjure with. This make-up artist, who has worked with Natalie Portman and Nicole Kidman, has her own range, Westman Atelier.

Lip suede in Les Rouges, 75, Westman Atelier (net-a-porter.com)

Yes, the colours are lush but, even better, the brand is 'clean' - beauty-speak for vegan, against animal-testing, paraben-free and so on. Plus, the products moisturise, plump up collagen and soothe as you apply them. Even the mascara conditions your lashes. So what if it costs 58?

Equally impressive is Shiseido's luxury line, Cl de Peau, which does a foundation that's 250 for 27ml, in 13 shades. Again, it's a beauty treatment with SPF and moisturiser as much as a make-up product, and it's what I'll put on if I want anyone to tell me I look glowing.

But, of course, more precious than any cream or blush stick is a little personal attention. Dr Costas Papageorgiou operates out of Harrods and has fairly expensive-looking skin himself. He makes use of a battery of lasers, Botox, fillers and ultrasound, but the key to his success is the consultation that starts off the process.

The Foundation,250, Cl de Peau Beaut (harrods.com)

Seeing your own face in unforgiving 3D on a computer may be a shock, but it certainly helps pinpoint the areas you'd like him to focus on. He's very hot on correcting facial symmetry, which starts out pretty good in babies, but with time and use, the muscles on the face become less symmetrical as bits start to droop or wrinkle. Generally, the more lopsided you are, the more antique you look, and he can address that with filler, Botox and even thread lifts.

But I'm not one for the injectables. It's his Hybrid Energy Lift - a combination of ultrasound, infrared, light and laser - that I really rate (from 6,000 for 120 minutes, facialplasticslondon.com). It, too, stimulates collagen production, but it also gets rid of visible veins and redness, and even reduces big pores. I have had to change the tone of my foundation for a paler one since he did for my (mild) rosacea.

Radical3 Reboot Pro Peel, 89, Dr Levy (editorslist.co.uk)

The key, says Dr Papageorgiou, is to delay and reverse the "ageing cascade". This slow car crash of fine lines around the eyes, sun damage and heavy jowls is all thanks, he says, to "fat atrophy and bone resorption".

But subtlety is all - "A great result is one that shows no signs of intervention"- and nothing, he warns, can really be achieved unless you have a healthy diet, exercise and take vitamins.

Debbie Thomas, at her D.Thomas clinic in London, has a similarly personalised approach. You don't book in for a single treatment, you book for an hour of her expert time, and she'll use a cocktail of lasers, micro-needling and products depending on what you need (475 for a DNA Laser Complete 2 session, dthomas.com).

"I'm afraid,"she says, "traditional facials are not going to transform your skin for more than a few days. You need to upgrade to more advanced treatments if you want long-term results. And those will be more costly."And who can say it's not worth the money?

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The New New Math: Inside the Russian School of Mathematics – Boston magazine

April 6th, 2020 6:46 pm

K-12 Education

It touts itself as the key to helping your child get a leg up at school and presumably into college. Is this just the latest case of wealthy suburbanites keeping up with the Joneses, or has a Russian woman in Newton figured out a better way to teach to American kids?

Russian School of Mathematics cofounder Inessa Rifkin started teaching kids extra math at her dining room table in Newton more than 20 years ago. Today, the program has 40,000 students in 53 schools in 12 states, Washington, DC, and Canada, in addition to a booming online program. / Photo by Jason Grow

On a January afternoon at the Russian School of Mathematics headquarters, a 6,500-square-foot bilevel brick building in a Newton corporate office park, Inessa Rifkin leads 15 excitable third and fourth graders through a lesson on graphs. She is in her sixties and chic in a blue-gray tunic over a crisp white button-down, skinny black pants, and a Tiffany-style silver pearl necklace. When she asks a question, her Russian accent unflinching, more than half of the students put their hands in the air. Not a single one has a cell phone on his or her desk. No ones staring into space.

About halfway through the two-hour class she asks, Quiz or break? The group is unanimous in its decision: Quiz it is!

For Rifkin, there are two reasons to celebrate: Not only have the kids willingly chosen a quiz, but just before class began shed learned that the Russian School of Mathematicsthe extracurricular K12 program she cofounded with fellow Soviet Union expat Irina Khavinson in Newton 22 years agohad surpassed 40,000 students. RSM has 53 locations in 12 states, Washington, DC, and Canada. Online classes already have students from 24 countries, and are growing faster than Rifkins son, Ilya, who is the CEO, can find qualified teachers to teach them.

As the schools birthplacebut also as a particular hotbed of do-more, get-ahead parentingMassachusetts is ground zero for Russian Math. Inessa Rifkin estimates that one in four elementary students in Lexington is enrolled in her after-school program; the majority of kids start in second grade and continue through at least eighth, though many go all the way through high school. I remember we couldnt believe it when we got 40 students that first year, she says. Back then, she held classes around her dining room table, and the neighbors complained about the lines of cars coming and going. These days, RSM employs a traffic cop to help keep order during pickup and drop-off at the schools flagship location, which can accommodate several hundred kids at any given time. We never even considered ourselves businesswomen, Rifkin says of herself and Khavinson, acknowledging that they didnt have a proper business plan until 2009, when Ilya quit his job at a Manhattan hedge fund to join the company at his mothers urging. And in this business plan, he wrote we would reach 10,000 students, Rifkin says. I laughed. Ten thousand students? From where?

A decade later, Russian Math is nothing short of a phenomenon. Rifkin and Khavinson have been approached by eager VCs several times over the past 20 years to invest or buy them out and have turned down every offer. Parents of students in Russian Math, meanwhile, note with pride that their kids are two or three years ahead of their peers in math at school, and the company boasts of students remarkable scores on standardized tests (a 774 average math score for juniors who take the SAT) and high GPAs in school. The lobby at HQ displays photos of alumni alongside their recent college acceptances: Brown, Dartmouth, MIT, Georgetown.

Still, not everyone thinks the program is the best thing thats happened to math education since flashcards. Critics say it has questionable academic value to children and is focused more on accelerating students than deepening their understanding of the material. Whats more, theres growing concern that the significant proportion of students enrolled in Russian Math in some Boston suburbs is having a negative effect on the learning environment inside regular school classrooms. Some see RSM as less of a mathematical miracle and more of an example of savvy marketing colliding headlong into suburban parental panic. In a prior age, if your child was having trouble in math, youd hire a tutor, if you had the money, says Jon Star, an educational psychologist at Harvard who researches math education. But all these kids who are going to Russian Math arent going there because theyre having trouble in math. Theyre going there because the public school is not going fast enough for what parents perceive their child needs. So its just a very different set of motivations.

Such behavior can put even more pressure on kids who are already feeling unprecedented levels of anxietyand on parents to keep up with one another, either for perception or for something to talk about at dinner parties. Newton mother of three Marcela Almeida, whose oldest child started at RSM in third grade, her middle child in first, and her youngest in kindergarten, found herself smack dab in the middle of the rapidly accelerating suburban mathematical arms race. She says she enrolled her kids in RSM even before shed decided there was anything particularly wrong with the education they were getting for free at the public schools. I felt a tremendous pressure from our community to send our kids to RSM, she says. It appears as though attending RSM is the norm where we live, so I didnt want them to be behind.

Irina Khavinson worked as a math teacher for 15 years in St. Petersburg before teaming up with Rifkin to found the Russian School of Mathematics. / Photo by Jason Grow

Rifkin came to the United States from the Soviet Union with her husband, Victor, and their two kids, Ilya and Masha, with eight suitcases and $90 in 1988. She got a job as a mechanical engineer at Kronos, a maker of labor-management software. Ilya was in eighth grade when Rifkin says she started to question his motivation in school. His grades were fine, but not great; she assumed he was being lazy. So I looked at what he was learning, she says. The math wasnt up to my standards. He did not know things I thought he should know by then. The lessons lacked cohesive flow; they were disconnected from one to the next and the process focused more on getting to the correct answer than understanding how to get there. No wonder Ilya wasnt motivated, she thought, and of course he and his friends all hated maththe material was prescribed, rote, and very dull. Rifkin started talking to other parents. Slowly, I came to the realization that its not that hes lazy, she says. He takes advantage of everything thats offered to him. But not much is offered to him.

Rifkin started tutoring her son and some of his friends after work using lessons she remembered from an elite mathematics school that shed attended in Minsk. The kids seemed to respond, and she began to think of ways to offer lessons to even more students, envisioning a structured program with teachers who would demand respect from their students and a math curriculum that would make learning funand effective. Not something where someone comes to your house and your child feels like, My parents pay you money so you do what I tell you to do, which could not be more American, she says.

Her first step: Find a teacher. I started to ask around, Who knows good teachers from back in the Union? she says. In response, a few people told her that somebody told them that somebody had mentioned a woman named Irina. Then 47, Khavinson had been a math teacher for 15 years in St. Petersburg, then known as Leningrad. In Boston, she was working as an accountant and tutoring kids on the side, using a mix of Russian textbooks and lessons shed developed on her own.

In December 1997, not long after teaming up, Khavinson and Rifkin advertised a meeting at Temple Beth Elohim in Wellesley to talk about the state of their childrens math education. Six hundred people showed up, mostly Russian-Jewish immigrants. Rifkin stood before them and presented her idea for the Russian School of Mathematics. She talked about building a community based on a common need, a place where kids could learn math and play together, and parents could get acquainted with one another. She didnt have to explain to fellow Russians why math was important. To them, Rifkin says, math is what puts minds in order. Whats more, for immigrant families, STEM is considered a lifeline and the pathway to success in the United States. I said, We know what good mathematics is. Lets try to do that here for our kids, she recalls. One Newton mom, Olga Dadasheva, stood up and said she recognized the problem, but asked what made Rifkin think she was the one who could solve it. And I said to her, Rifkin recalls, You pretty much dont have any other choice but to let me try.

Dadasheva, who arrived in the U.S. from Moscow in 1989 and was working as a software developer, had been looking for math tutoring for her daughter, who was 12 at the time. Its easy to criticize American education in general, Dadasheva says now. But Russians in particular have this experience where it has to be hard at school. You have to work very hard and get great marks. And that was missing in American schools, where it was more like, If you can do it, thats great. If you cannot do it, thats great, do it tomorrow.

That night at the temple in Wellesley, Rifkin and Khavinson convinced 60 students to commit, all children of Russian immigrants. Says Rifkin: It was less a business than a movement.

Once RSM students (and their peers) started to see the edge they had over the other kids in school, and the confidence that resulted, more kept comingRussian students, but also children of Chinese and Indian and European immigrants, too. By February 1998, Rifkin had quit her job at Kronos, and by September of that year, RSM had enrolled 150 students and moved to its first commercial location on Beacon Place in Newton, a two-room space on the second floor, over a hair salon. In 1999, Rifkin took out a home equity loan to buy a small white house with blue shutters on busy Centre Street, onto which her husband installed a large sign that read, The Russian School of Mathematics. It was all the advertising they needed, Rifkin says. In no time, the first Americans started showing up.

Biotech entrepreneur Heidi Wyle was one of them. She and her husband had moved to Weston for the good public schools, she says, but teachers were not teaching math the way she thought they should. We used to joke that in the Weston schools, it was like, No child allowed ahead, says Wyle, whose children are now grown and in their twenties. They were happy to handle the kids who needed help, but they didnt want these kids who were really bright.

Wyle was instrumental in introducing RSM to her circle of high-powered, highly educated friends, which included several parents who were professors at Harvard and MIT. But a 2001 article that ran on the front page of the Boston Globe, A Russian Solution to a U.S. Problem, was the key to drawing in American families en masse, Rifkin says. The writer basically drove by on a Sunday morning and saw these kids playing outside the house, she recalls. He stopped and asked a very cute kid, What are you doing here? And the kid said, Im studying math. He said, Youre studying math on a Sunday morning? Why? And the kid said, Because I want to get smart and go to MIT. The morning after the story ran, Rifkin arrived at the little house on Centre Street to find a line out the door.

Teacher Irena Burmistrovich instructs a classroom full of engaged students. / Photo by Jason Grow

From the start, Rifkin and Khavinson developed the RSM curriculum in-house, taking some of what Rifkin had used to teach Ilya and some of what Khavinson had used with her students, and then put the first round of tuition payments they received into further developing the coursework. They relied largely on the network of parents gathered that night at Temple Beth Elohim to find Russian migrs, many of whom worked in academia, to help create lesson plans that emphasized critical thinking and reasoning over memorization. Advanced concepts, such as algebra, were introduced as early as first grade, using age-appropriate approaches and lots of visuals, because according to Rifkin and Khavinson, studies show that kids who learn algebra at an early age have better cognitive development overall. They encourage students to reach calculus by 10th or 11th grade.

Still, Rifkin and Khavinson argue their strategy is not as simple as merely giving students next years work. The main difference between Russian Math and the math being taught in schools, they say, boils down to a methodology that emphasizes derivation over memorizationof learning the reasons behind the answersand a visual approach that helps students see the math, and therefore understand it better. Russian Math students also put in more face time with teachers: Since most kids sign up for 90 minutes to four hours a week in concentrated blocks, they theoretically get a chance to understand concepts more deeply. Classes are smaller, too, averaging around 12 students, and divided by ability levels, which means that teachers can teach to students very specific needs in a way that public school teachers just cant. Its almost like how you do athletics here, Rifkin says. Its not for your child to become an Olympic finalist. Math for us is not to become a mathematician, but to become a good thinker.

Wyle, whose kids had also tried the math-enrichment program Kumon but quickly lost interest, remembers being impressed the first time she took her then-first grader to sit in on an RSM class. They were doing algebra, she says. And the way they did it would be, like, two kids balanced on a seesaw. And underneath one kid, there might be the number seven, and underneath the other kid and a weight is a number five. And then they would ask the students, What does the weight weigh? and of course the kids would say two because they could see it, right? Their whole approach was built around seeing the math, and I myself could sort of see quantum mechanics by the time that class was over. They were teaching kids to see and understand. Not just do.

Most important, students seem to like it. Newton mom Ellen Chu and her husband initially enrolled their daughter in RSM because she told them she hated math. This year, she started her first year of college at Oxford, majoring in math and computer science. I think my daughter came to love math because RSM introduced her to more-complex, nuanced math, which she found exciting, Chu says. Based on her experience, I think the school is trying to help its students think, problem-solve, and enjoy math.

Meanwhile, Wyle says RSMs teachers are warm and invested and create a tightknit community. Even from the very early days, she recalls, when the kids got high SAT scores, when they were merit finalists or stuff like that, for the teachers, it was like our kids were their kids.

Make no mistake, Russian Math can be an adjustment, especially for students who start when theyre older. Four hours of extra math every week is a lot, and theres homework, too. Maria Rubio, whose two daughters attended RSMs Framingham and Wellesley locations and who first heard about the program from a Polish mom at her kids bus stop, says her older daughter was moved up a level at RSM after a teacher there said she wasnt being challenged enough. The first year, the poor girl, Rubio says. They would give her stacks of hundreds of exercises just so she could catch up. Rubio asked the teacher if she was really sure her daughter was ready. She told me, Im not going to keep her in the lower class because, I mean, this is about challenging them, Rubio recalls. This is not about anything else. She doesnt belong there. She has to go to the other level. So she struggled but she made it and she became really, really fluent and now I always thank those big stacks of exercises.

In another success story, Belmonts Alanna Fincke sent her son to Russian Math last year as an eighth grader at his request. For Jonah, the way they taught made more logical sense to him than the way it was taught in his public school, Fincke says. Hed previously attended, and liked, Kumon. And yet, Fincke says, There was something about Russian Math that just seemed like a challenge, and he really liked that.

All of the kids I talked to said Russian Math puts them at an advantage in their regular math classes, where they tend to do better on testsor, at least, they dont have to study as hard to do okay. Rifkin believes that better grades arent all theyre getting: Grades matter, but theyre also more confident, she says. I see this in the girls we teach, especially. They enjoy their smartness tremendously. Theyre not shy of being smart, or of having a voice in class. I see them when they start with us and I see them when they leave us and theyre different people.

Photo by Jason Grow

Not everyone is convinced, though, that there is anything particularly special going on at Russian Math, other than kids spending four hours a weekor moreworking on arithmetic. (In Jonahs case, his parents even hired a tutor to help him do better in Russian Math, which may be the next level of the mathematical arms race.) Parents may think it is helping their kids, but Harvards Jon Star says there is no evidence that enrollment in RSM translates into better grades in schools or better standardized test scores. Whats more, he takes issue with the idea that Russian math is somehow better than the math thats taught in public schools. In fact, he doesnt even think its demonstrably unique. Part of the RSM sales pitch, Star says, is that its coursework engages students more, and differently, than their normal school curriculum. But he says theres no universal school of math in Russia that everyones following and that is significantly different from what is taught in the U.S. Id urge parents to be cautious with that claim, he says, because just because the teacher teaches math while speaking with a Russian accent doesnt make it better.

What Star suspects is really going on is that Russian Math is merely teaching kids the same math they learn in their regular curriculum, just earlier and fasterwhich he says is pretty low-hanging fruit in the world of math education.

Meanwhile, Hilary Kreisberg, director of the Center for Math Achievement at Lesley University and a former fifth-grade teacher turned math coach, says her experiences with RSM students have led her to question the claim that Russian Math focuses more on developing a deep understanding of math instead of memorization. In fact, she has seen the opposite. From what Ive seen, they come in well above their grade-level standards in terms of memorization, but not in terms of content understanding, she says. Many of them very quickly get to an answer or can compute in a fast way, but they cant necessarily explain to me what theyre doing or why theyre doing it. And explanations, she says, are a critical component of mathematics. In public school teaching, we are very strictly taught that the goal is not to accelerate, Kreisberg says. The goal is not to extend their thinking into another grade level, but to go deeper with the current grade-level standards because theres always more you could learn about a topic.

Many parents, though, love the accelerated curriculum and feel it gives their kids an edge, not just in high school but in the ever more competitive quest for admission to an elite university. Every last one of the dozen-plus RSM parents I spoke with told me that their child was way ahead of their regular math class, which they viewed as evidence of a less-than-challenging curriculum and further proof of how far behind American math is.

Star and Kreisberg say this attitude is part of a misguided race to calculus, where the view is that the sooner a student gets there, the better. Its not about helping your kid get to where they should be in math to really understand the math deeply. Its about going fast so you can get ahead of everyone else, with the perception that that helps. And for what? Star asks. There is zero evidence that it helps your child to take calculus in 10th grade.

Parents of RSM students note with pride that their kids are two or three years ahead of their peers. / Photo by Jason Grow

Not surprisingly, the popularity of Russian Math has posed a significant challenge for schools, whose teachers now find themselves struggling with how to instruct an increasing number of students whove already seen the material. The range in students abilities in a single classroom has always been a hurdle for educators. Now that rangeand the challengeis far bigger.

Ultimately, it isnt just an issue for teachers, but for the very kids who attend RSM. Many of them are bored in math class and have lost their curiosity, Kreisberg says, which is an essential part of math. My experience with students who have engaged in Russian Math is that they oftentimes have this arrogant disposition of, I already know this, I dont need to learn it again, even though they might be missing foundational gaps because theyre so accelerated. She continues, They dont want to learn a different way to solve something. They just want to get to the answer because they can. I have a harder time teaching those students than any other students that I work with.

It isnt just RSM kids whose learning in school is affected, but non-RSM kids, too, who begin to question their abilities even if theyre performing perfectly well at grade level. Kreisberg says that when RSM kids in class make rapid-fire calculations, the other students begin to feel theyre not good at math, and that to be good they need to be in the RSM program.

In the worst cases, the Russian Math kids are rude and disrespectful to their teachers. Chu recalls hearing her daughter describe a situation at her high school in which RSM students were constantly correcting and criticizing their regular school teacher. The word my daughter used, Chu says, was insufferable.

Kreisberg views the popularity of Russian Math as representative of a general lack of respect for teachers. Who determines if a child is too advanced for their regular school curriculum? she says. Its usually the parents, who are not qualified educators. But theyre not going into hospitals and telling doctors, Hey, you should use this more-advanced procedure because I read about it somewhere. Nobody questions what we do in medicine, but we question educators all the time because we dont value our teachers. While thats likely not entirely truemedical professionals have complained about this very problem since the first season of ERseveral parents did admit that they enrolled their children in RSM without ever bothering to talk to their kids school. We realized early on that the school didnt have accommodations for our daughters specific level, Rubio says. But we never asked the school about it. Because we had RSM.

At the same time, many RSM parents and students seem to expect teachers to teach to their accelerated level, and at least some schools seem to be complying. According to RSM, Newton South has added new courses and additional levels of math or provided RSM kids with extra homework in order to keep these kids engaged (and their parents happy).

In most cases, though, teachers dont teach to the RSM kids accelerated levels, presumably because theyre busy teaching the rest of the students who are learning on the normal public school schedule. Rubio says one of her daughters was separated out of class for a year. They would give her a packet with some supposedly more-advanced stuff, and she would go out into the hallway with another girl and do work together, she says. And I said, But what do you do if you have a question? And she would say, Oh, I just ask [the other girl]. And I said, What if she has a question? And she said, She asks me.

RSM also says that other towns, including Weston and Winchester, are taking more-extreme measures. They have started specifically asking parents to refrain from enrolling their children in the Russian School of Mathematics, something that only seems to spark more ire among parentsand which gets tricky when teachers from those districts are spotted dropping off their own kids there. (None of the schools mentioned in this article, nor many others contacted for this story, responded to repeated requests for comment.) Star thinks schools could do a better job communicating their plan for attending to advanced childrens math instruction needs, instead of just discouraging enrollment in RSM. But maybe in some communities, he says, it already feels like they lost the battle.

There is also the issue of elitism. RSM says that classes start at $20 an hour, which may be a handy way of making it sound affordable; tuition for most students is at least $2,000 per course. It is likely not a coincidence that its locations are all in upper-middle-class towns. According to a 2019 report about after-school math from Pioneer Education, all but one of the Massachusetts towns where RSM has locations have a median household income of $93,600 or more, compared to the statewide average of $67,800; five are among the 20 Massachusetts communities with the highest median income. While Kumon has partnered with schools in inner cities to provide its program to low-income families, RSM has no similar program. (It does, however, offer financial aid to 10 to 15 percent of its students.)

Chu says that in middle school, her daughters teachers were openly critical of RSMs elitist nature, and Chu doesnt disagree with them. Neither does Wyle, saying, I understand why [the schools] would have that defensive position, because its tough for them when they have some significant cohort in their class who are getting this world-class math education, and then theres everybody else. But from my perspective, I never would have been at the Russian School of Mathematics if it hadnt been for Westons bad math curriculum.

On a Saturday morning in late January, the lobby at RSMs Newton headquarters has become the new soccer-field sidelines: Moms in Canada Goose parkas chat animatedly, clutching Yeti mugs, as sleepy kids shuffle into their respective classrooms. The parking lot is a showroom of Range Rovers and white Audis. My God, we spent so much money on it, says mom Maria Rubio of the years her two daughters attended RSM. But it is amazing.

Continued here:
The New New Math: Inside the Russian School of Mathematics - Boston magazine

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Your Mind Is the Most Important Factor in Successful Investing – Nasdaq

April 6th, 2020 6:46 pm

Investment icon Warren Buffett once said, "Success in investing doesn't correlate with IQ ... what you need is the temperament to control the urges that get other people into trouble in investing." In other words, it's not about being smart, it's about how you think. Warren Buffett actually learned that from value investing legend Benjamin Graham, who was extolling the importance of emotion in investing before Buffett bought his first stock. In fact, there's now a whole branch of finance that looks at this issue, called behavioral finance. It's basically a blend of psychology and finance that examines all of our all-too-frequent mental mistakes. You make them -- but we all do.

If you want to be a successful investor, you need to understand these misconceptions. Here's a primer on why your mind is the most important factor in investing.

If you ask a room full of people if they are above-average drivers, almost everyone will raise their hand. That's statistically impossible, since roughly half have to be worse than average. This is anecdotal, but it gets to the heart of the matter. We all think we are better than we really are. And in investing that's a big blind spot, and one that will often lead you astray.

Image source: Getty Images

This isn't to suggest that you (yes, you specifically) aren't smart and capable. It's just that you are likely to overestimate just how smart and capable you are. That will lead you to believe that what you are doing is right without question. In other words, although terribly cliche, the first thing you need to do is admit you have a problem. And once you do that, you can start to look at ways that you might be wrong about your investment decisions.

This, however, never ends, because you will be human all of your life. So you'll need to be on guard forever. Getting "you" right is a lifetime effort.

The human mind has two broad ways of thinking. One is slow and calculated, the other quick and emotional. By nature we tend to use the quick way most often. It makes sense -- if there's a car bearing down on us as we cross the street, we can't sit around and contemplate what to do. Investing, however, requires us to move past quick decisions and use the vast processing power of our minds. Sounds easy, but when we're under stress we usually revert to quick, emotional thinking. Investing is stressful even on a good day. (Today, with COVID-19 pushing us into a bear market and likely into a recession, it's even more stressful than usual.)

You need to make changes to your process so you limit the stress and give your calculating mind time to work. For example, you might stop placing trades during market hours, and instead set up your trades before or after the market closes using limit orders. That way you don't feel pressure to act. Or instead of watching the market every second looking for a stock to buy, look at companies and create a list of names you'd like to own. After you have that list, figure out the prices you'd be willing to pay, and only buy them at those prices. You get the idea -- pull yourself out of high-stress situations and you'll give yourself the space to make better choices.

You make mistakes, we all do. It's actually a good thing, because it's the way human beings learn. That, however, doesn't mean you should accept mistakes, especially since we're prone to making the same ones over and over again.

If you like big dividend yields, for example, you'll probably find yourself attracted to companies where the dividends are at severe risk of being cut. Kinder Morgan (NYSE: KMI), for example, had a yield in the double digits before it cut its payout in 2016 because its aggressive use of leverage limited its access to capital in a difficult energy market. The midstream giant is still trying to rebuild trust with investors.

If you find value stocks attractive, you'll probably find yourself looking at stocks that are cheap for a reason. Sears Holdings had iconic retail names and owned a huge collection of physical properties, but none of that allowed it to avoid the fact that the retailer was increasingly falling behind peers. It ended up in bankruptcy court, effectively wiping out equity investors.

And if you think growth is the best way to go, you'll likely have to stop yourself from buying wildly overpriced shares driven by nothing more than a wish and prayer. There are any number of manias that can be used to illustrate this one, but one of the best is internet stocks in the late 1990s. Booking Holdings (NASDAQ: BKNG) is a good example. It went public under the Priceline name in 1999 at the peak of the hype, rocketed higher, and then lost 99% of its value over the next two years. It was a real business, and still is, but it took roughly a decade for the stock to get back to its IPO price after that decline. Obviously, there was too much hope and hype in the price when the stock came public.

If you know your investment style, then you need to figure out what can go wrong with that style. For example, Bruce Berkowitz, the manager of Fairholme Fund, has a list of things that companies often do that lead to disaster. He is, essentially, trying to kill a company before he buys it. The list includes things like taking on too much debt and spending more cash then a business can generate.

There are three big takeaways from this list. One, Berkowitz examined his process and figured out where he often goes wrong -- recognizing that he isn't infallible. Two, he created a list to test his decisions -- questioning himself before he acts. And three, the list forces him to slow down and work outside of the pressure cooker that is Wall Street -- removing the intensity of time constraints.

These are just three points to consider, but they cover a lot of ground. And they get to the heart of the matter. You are your own worst enemy when it comes to investing. In fact, you will dramatically improve your investment performance simply by limiting the mistakes you make. It isn't an easy journey, but it's one that good long-term investors have to go on at some point. If you don't, you'll continue to make the same mistakes over and over again, and your investment results will suffer for it.

But you have the power to do something about. First admit that, when it comes to investing, you have a problem -- and it's you.

10 stocks we like better than Kinder MorganWhen investing geniuses David and Tom Gardner have a stock tip, it can pay to listen. After all, the newsletter they have run for over a decade, Motley Fool Stock Advisor, has tripled the market.*

David and Tom just revealed what they believe are the ten best stocks for investors to buy right now... and Kinder Morgan wasn't one of them! That's right -- they think these 10 stocks are even better buys.

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Reuben Gregg Brewer has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool owns shares of and recommends Booking Holdings and Kinder Morgan. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

The views and opinions expressed herein are the views and opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of Nasdaq, Inc.

Excerpt from:
Your Mind Is the Most Important Factor in Successful Investing - Nasdaq

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