As Doctors Race to Frontline of COVID-19 Crisis, Total Access Medical Guarantees 24/7 Access to Physicians Offering Immediate Patient Care to Meet…

As medical professionals rush to the frontline of the coronavirus outbreak, primary care providers are needed to handle emergency medical concerns and pre-existing health issues. What happens if a person is sick or in risk and they cannot speak to or see their doctor?

Total Access Medical (TAM), a direct primary care service with more than 15 years-experience, helps patients receive the immediate medical attention they need in order to navigate this complicated and confusing pandemic. One of the first affordable and quality physician organizations, also known as concierge medicine, TAM serves a small patient population, with each patient having 24/7 full access to their own personal doctor.

Todays emergency state limits traditional general practitioners to telehealth calls for which patients may be billed out of pocket. In comparison, TAM patients can reach their physician via cell phone, text, email, video, and, when medically necessary, by house calls. Located throughout Philadelphias Western suburbs, South Jersey and Wilmington, Delaware, TAM doctors specialize in family, internal, geriatric and integrative medicine. They offer personalized, attentive care for seniors, individuals and families, potentially alleviating the need for emergency treatment at this crucial time.

"COVID-19 has exposed only a fraction of the shortsightedness and problems of our modern health care system," shared Richard Stamps, President and CEO, Total Access Medical. "The system is designed around illness, not health. We want people to know there is another option out there. Total Access Medical alleviates the stress and fear around this virus and offers expert physicians who partner with their patients in order to work towards a common goal of obtaining optimal health and wellness, at all times."

Patient care is the priority of TAM. Additional benefits of interest at this time include:

- TAM practices are approximately 20% the size of a conventional general practitioner, allowing physicians to genuinely know their patients, and have the time and resources to personally coordinate care as needed.- Patients do not pay a single dime for unlimited access to these benefits outside of their reasonable membership fee, which is more affordable than most gyms.- Members have access to a nutritionist, who during this pandemic can support patients in building an immune boosting diet to help protect themselves from the virus, in addition to providing general weight loss and nutrition information.- Patients receive a minimum of 30 minutes for each appointment and 90 minutes at a minimum for new patient visits and physicals, as time constraints of a traditional medical practice are non-existent.

About Total Access Medical:

Total Access Medical (TAM) is a quality and affordable direct primary care program comprised of a comprehensive suite of services designed to accommodate the needs of each individual patient. TAM offers six expert physicians in family, internal, geriatric and integrative medicine along with additional non-clinical services to further enhance the patient experience. Offices are available in Bala Cynwyd, Bryn Mawr, St. Davids, and West Chester, PA, along with Mt. Laurel, NJ and Wilmington, DE.

Richard Stamps, President and CEO, created Total Access Medical in 2002 due to personal frustrations with the current health system. TAMs direct primary care model includes an affordable, flat-rate annual fee with no copayments for unrestricted access to a concierge doctor of the patients choice.

Additional benefits of Total Access Medical include:

To learn more about Total Access Medical visit http://www.totalaccessmedical.com or call 800-318-6125. Specific features and benefits may vary by physician. A Total Access Medical Personal Care Representative may offer additional details on services.

For media interviews with local physicians or Total Access Medical executive, please call Leslie Padilla at 267-800-4316 or email LPPR@icloud.com.

View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20200331005797/en/

Contacts

LESLIE PADILLA, Principal LPPR, LLCP 267.800.4316E LPPR@icloud.com http://www.LesliePadilla.com

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As Doctors Race to Frontline of COVID-19 Crisis, Total Access Medical Guarantees 24/7 Access to Physicians Offering Immediate Patient Care to Meet...

Expert answers: can cannabis and CBD affect coronavirus? – Health Europa

The biggest question Im getting asked is around how CBD and medical cannabis may affect contracting or recovering from coronavirus, and about what else we can do to stay well.

People are asking if cannabis and CBD can help buffer the immune system against getting COVID-19 in the first place, and if you do get it, can CBD and cannabis help treat it? What about the possibility that NSAID anti-inflammatory drugs may have a negative effect on the virus once you are infected and wait a minute CBD is an anti-inflammatory too, so what does that mean for CBD?

These are all valid questions and so far, even in terms of the anti-inflammatory drugs and the effect on corona, it is still unclear what the relationship is, if there is one. Many doctors are still recommending sticking to Acetaminophen for the fever for now and avoiding NSAID over the counter drugs until we know more.

As for CBD and cannabis, we dont have any studies showing it has any effect on the coronavirus, although there are some interesting studies on medical cannabis and smoked cannabis use and HIV progression.

On Facebook and social media, many CBD and cannabis advocates are claiming that they boosted their immunity successfully against all viruses using the plant, and recommending others do the same.

As both a cannabis specialist and doctor trained in natural medicine and western medicine, it is important to let people know the facts and be totally honest about what we dont know. Its also critical not to make false claims when we are all understandably a bit scared, and of course want to do everything we can to protect ourselves and our loved ones.

The miracle cure claims that some members of the natural wellness community can sometimes make, even when well-intentioned, can have harmful effects on peoples behaviour and also tarnish the industry as promoting snake oils.

This effect can distance our more conventional medicine and research colleagues who are not well versed in botanical medicine, and hurt the progress plant medicine has made in recent years in gaining support and credibility through academic research and inquiry, partnering with the research and those physicians open-minded enough to consider them.

Plant medicines like CBD and medical cannabis do so many amazing things that there is no need to stretch the truth or make claims that cannot be backed up, at least not currently.

Probably the best way we can support our immunity is avoiding alcohol, staying active while we stay home (dance parties in the living room anyone?) and taking up a simple relaxation or meditation practice to decrease stress hormones.

If you are into supplementing, you could consider adding some adaptogen mushrooms, along with liposomal glutathione (not a direct immune boost but may help support the liver).

Eating a diet rich in micronutrients, zinc, vitamin C, flavonoids like quercetin (in both cannabis and apples) and getting good sleep are all good things to start now if you havent already.

Melatonin, our sleep hormone made while we sleep can help healthy immune function too. Deep breathing practices and laughter may also have a positive effect on our immune systems too. So, you can feel like you have done something by putting on a funny film and having a good deep belly laugh to get those lungs working while you self-isolate.

Even if you do everything right you may still end up getting coronavirus, but the good news is that most people not in high risk groups will have a mild illness course and recoup at home. Some carriers may not even have any symptoms at all or even know they had it, which is why social distancing is so important, since asymptomatic transmission rates are thought to be quite high with coronavirus.

Dr Dani Gordon MD, CCFP, ABOIM, ABIHMGuest AuthorUK Cannabis Medicine Specialist US Integrative Medicine Consulting & Training for Physicians

Do you want the latest news and updates from Medical Cannabis Network? Click here for your free subscription, and stay connected with us here.

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Expert answers: can cannabis and CBD affect coronavirus? - Health Europa

Can antibody therapy help fight COVID-19? – Livemint

NEW DELHI: With a long road ahead for vaccines and drugs, scientists are now exploring age-old technique of passive antibody therapy as potential treatment for COVID-19, which has infected over 5 lakh people across the world and killed at least 24,000.

Antibodies are protein molecules released by the body when a foreign substance (like for instance, virus) enters the system. These molecules bind to the foreign substance and neutralize it. Simply put, they are the weapon used by the immune system to fight new infections.

In case of COVID-19, over 1.22 lakh people, including a large young population, infected with the disease have recovered globally. Now, some molecular laboratories and diagnostic companies in countries worst hit by the pandemic -- China and US-- are racing to develop effective tests which can detect and assess these antibodies in the blood of patients who have recovered from the illness and also analyse if the antibody laden plasma of these recovered persons can be infused in patients at early stage of the disease.

It is an age-old technique, a classical way of dealing with infections being used since early 19th century. When a patient is at an early stage of infection, he makes antibody after 5-7 days, but by then he/she gets sicker and its becomes difficult to fight the infection. Basically, your natural antibodies are coming too late to protect you. In this technique, antibody-laden serum from a previously recovered patient can be infused in a patient at an early stage, to prevent the progression of the disease," explains noted virologist T. Jacob John, who retired as Professor of virology from Christian Medical College (CMC), Vellore.

The data is scarce and inconsistent about how effective the technique is against COVID-19 and concerns over any immunological reaction. Some clinical trials are underway, but it is too early to speak about its accuracy, experts said, but added that it may have potential".

While it is too early for India to experiment the approach, scientists in the country are looking at experiments with hope.

Such approach can be tested when the number of infections is very high, like for instance in China or US (where it has crossed 80,000). We are also looking at it, but currently we are not at the stage, where we have sufficient number of people who have recovered from this catastrophic illness. But clearly that is an area which is being keenly observed," said noted scientist Dr Anurag Aggarwal who heads the CSIR- Institute of Genomics and Integrative Biology (IGIB), Delhi.

As on Friday, India recorded as many as 724 cases of COVID-19, out of which around 67 have recovered.

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has already classified it as an investigational new drug under an emergency approval system and clinical trials have begun. China too has been experimenting with the approach since early days of the outbreak, with modest success.

New York has announced its plan to use the therapy as part of its strategy to fight COVID-19 last week. If it succeeds, it may use it for their front-line health workers who may have been exposed to the virus.

A general principle of passive antibody therapy is that it is more effective when used for prophylaxis than for treatment of disease. When used for therapy, antibody is most effective when administered shortly after the onset of symptoms," says the study published in the Journal of Clinical Medicine.

The intervention was also adopted during the 1918 HINI influenza outbreak. A large case study conducted on 1,700 patients who received blood serum from survivors showed low mortality. It also showed some modest results in the 20092010 H1N1 influenza virus. Its efficacy for the new coronavirus remains under investigation.

So far there have been no approved drug or vaccines for COVID-19.

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Can antibody therapy help fight COVID-19? - Livemint

Tips for Staying Well in the Time of Coronavirus – UNLV NewsCenter

Editor's Note: Anne Weisman, directorof wellness and integrative medicine at the UNLV School of Medicine,specializes in integrating massage therapy and other wellness practices into the care and treatment of patients.

Always focused on wellness and particularly in this time of coronavirus the UNLV School of Medicine has several suggestions for remaining healthy.

First, of course, you should follow all of the COVID-19 prevention guidelines recommended by the Centers for Disease Control. Because anxiety and stress can significantly impact immunity, the school has compiled some ideas from a variety of resources that may help you relax.

BREATHE: Sit in a comfortable position. Close your eyes or softly gaze at the floor. Breathe in through your nose and out through your mouth. As you breathe in through your nose think of the word "soft" and as you exhale, think of the word "belly." As you continue to breathe this way, notice your abdomen and notice it feeling soft and relaxed. When we breathe this way, our vagus nerve is taking us out of fight-or-flight and back into the present moment. Continue to breathe this way. If thoughts come, let them come and return back to the words "soft" and "belly."

MIND/BODY MEDICINE GROUPS: Email Dr. Anne Weisman, the School of Medicine's director of wellness, to sign up for online mind/body medicine groups. These groups will be for eight weeks, two hours a week, and limited to eight-12 people per group. Mind/body medicine teaches us skills to regulate our nervous systems naturally and easily. As we fill the groups, we will pick the day of the week and times that work best for you.

STAY PRESENT: The tenet of mindfulness is to bring your awareness into the present moment. Try not to fast forward or rewind right now by imagining the future or going back into the past. Be where your feet are and bring your awareness into the present moment.

SLEEP: Please use these days to practice self-care. Get your seven to nine hours of sleep and feel proud about hitting that benchmark. Guess what sleep does for your immunity?

JOURNAL: Write for a few minutes. Some prompts include: Write three things you are grateful for; Write a dialogue with a symptom, issue, or concern. Use this prompt as if you were writing a script and think of what comes up for you and then ask it a question. Write freely for five to seven minutes.

KEEP MOVING: You can still go outside for a walk. Go for lots of walks outside. Here is what walking does for your immune system. And here'swhat nature does for your immune system. Each of us will be dealing with this new level of stress. Moving keeps your immunity up and the sunshine is great for vitamin D. Many exercise streaming services are currently offering free access, too, such as Daily Burn, Les Mills, and PVolve.

GET THINGS DONE: Clean out a closet, your cabinets, or your car. Set items aside to donate later.

LEARN: Use this time to learn something new. Watch instructional videos on cooking, baking, gardening, playing a musical instrument, writing a screenplay, or any topic you've always wondered about.

PAMPER: Do a face mask, meditate, stretch, or nap!

CRAFT: Paint, draw, doodle, color, scrapbook. It's all mindful and meditative in nature.

CONNECT: FaceTime, phone, text your family and friends. Write a letter to an elder or a soldier. Set up Zoom, Skype, or FaceTime chats to connect with your friends, family, and colleagues.

LAUGH: Try to find something that lightens your day whether its a movie, TV show, meme, or cat video! Laughter is the best medicine.

PLAY WITH YOUR PETS: Think about how happy your pets are that you are home. Play with them and enjoy the love they always give you.

Finally, here is a story that Walk With A Doc sent this week along with some of the tips included above:

There's an iconic nephrologist in Columbus named Lee Hebert, MD. He told us a story on kidney rounds I will never forget. Thousands of years ago, on a gorgeous tropical island, all the trees were talking amongst themselves. A horrible, deadly storm was scheduled to pass through that night. The oak trees said, "We're Mighty Oaks, we're going to stand tall and strong. Nothing is going to mess with us!"

The palm trees said, "So this thing is just supposed to last a few hours? We'll just lean over and let the storm come through." Well, the storm came as scheduled and the following morning there wasn't a single oak within 75 miles of this island. That same morning, every single palm tree yawned, rubbed its eyes, stood tall, and looked around at all its beautiful palm tree neighbors.

Let's be palm trees together.

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Tips for Staying Well in the Time of Coronavirus - UNLV NewsCenter

Doc/Chef Robert Graham, CoFounder of FRESH Medicine and Global Meatless Monday Nutrition Ambassador to hold educational session at the Healthy Food…

Newswise With the growing popularity of the plant-based movement, research shows that diners are increasingly requesting plant-based menu options for their personal health and the health of our planet. As a chef, restaurateur, or foodservice operator, are you showing your diners that you give a fork about what they're eating?

If your answer is no, or youre not sure how to go about it, Doc/Chef Grahams session will be enlightening. Hell discuss how restaurants and foodservice venues can demonstrate their concern for the health of their customers. Hell share his FRESH food bytes and bakers dozen food tips.

A leader in the field of Integrative Medicine, Doc/Chef Graham has prescribed food as medicine for over 10 years. He is an advisor for several food companies and organizations. In January 2020, he and his wife Julie, a certified health coach, launched an online university, FRESH MED U.

Doc/Chef Grahams session will be held:

Monday, March 9

10:30 11:30 a.m.

Education Hub Booth 739 Javits Center, 655 W. 34th St., New York, NY (Eleventh Avenue, between 34th and 40th Streets)

Registering for the Show

Your registration includes admission to the International Foodservice & Restaurant Show of New York, Coffee Fest and Healthy Food Expo New York shows, special events and 40+ educational sessions.

Register at:

https://www.compusystems.com/servlet/ar?evt_uid=349&Promo=WEB

About Doc/Chef Robert Graham

Robert Graham, M.D. is a Harvard-trained physician, board certified in both Internal and Integrative Medicine, a public health scientist, TED speaker, food activist and Chef. One of less than twenty doctor/chefs worldwide, he obtained his culinary degree from the Natural Gourmet Institute. Dr. Graham, currently at FRESH Medicine, is a leader in the field of Integrative Medicine. He has prescribed food as medicine for over 10 years.

About Meatless Monday

Meatless Mondayis a nonprofit public health initiative founded by Sid Lerner, chairman of The Monday Campaigns. The initiative is in association with the Lerner Centers for Public Health Promotion at Johns Hopkins, Columbia and Syracuse universities. Meatless Monday encourages the public to cut back on meat consumption one day a week to reduce the risk of chronic diseases such as diabetes, heart disease, stroke, and cancer, and lessen the environmental impact of meat production on climate change, water and land use. The campaign is founded on research that demonstrates Monday is the day we are most primed to start and sustain a healthy new behavior. Since its 2003 launch, Meatless Monday has become a global movement in more than 40 countries with support from governments, schools, celebrities, restaurants, and local and global organizations around the world.

Contacts for The Monday Campaigns

Cherry Dumaual PR & Partnerships Director

cdumaual@mondaycampaigns.org 212-991-1056 917-838-7269

Nara Sandberg

Marketing & Partnerships Associate

nsandberg@mondaycampaigns.org

212-991-1055

914-505-0009

###

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Doc/Chef Robert Graham, CoFounder of FRESH Medicine and Global Meatless Monday Nutrition Ambassador to hold educational session at the Healthy Food...

The (over) promise of the mindfulness revolution – San Francisco Chronicle

The phones screen turns a serene blue, and Calm, the leading mindfulness application, opens. At the very center, without capitalization or punctuation, small and faint, are the words take a deep breath.

That gives way to a menu. What brings you to Calm?

The app offers options to reduce anxiety, develop gratitude, build self esteem, even increase happiness.

The next screen offers a seven-day free trial. Once the trial has ended, the annual rate is $69.99, a small price for happiness.

Somewhere around 2010, according to experts and Google search data, the practice of mindfulness began an upward swing. In less than a decade, it has become the fastest-growing health trend in the United States, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Mindfulness rules the online app store. The San Francisco-based Calm is valued at $1 billion, and its competitor Headspace at $350 million. (The industry as a whole has been estimated to be worth as much as $4 billion.) Meditation retreats are en vogue. Corporations offer access to mindfulness in the same way they do for gyms. Even the military uses mindfulness breathing techniques to boost soldiers performance.

But as with any Next Big Thing, there are reasons to be cautious. Some say this rush into mindfulness has outpaced the science and stripped it of its cultural context. All of this threatens to turn a tool for well-being, for situating oneself in the current moment, into a tool for standard American commercialism.

Around the same time mindfulness began its upward trajectory, Ronald Purser, a management professor at San Francisco State University, started to feel the familiar weight of doubt. Hed been doing a fair amount of corporate management training and consulting redesigning the workplace to work better, at least in theory, for everybody. I became somewhat disillusioned and disenchanted, he says. Even when we were making progress, trying to redesign work so employees would have more autonomy and decision-making, the management sort of pulled the plug on some of those experiments.

It was around this time, too, that Chade-Meng Tan, a software engineer at Google, gained notoriety for integrating mindfulness into Googles corporate culture through a series of in-house mindfulness seminars. In 2012, Tan turned those courses into a blockbuster book, Search Inside Yourself: The Unexpected Path to Achieving Success, Happiness (and World Peace), and Purser found himself attending Tans very first public offering.

I became very disappointed by what I saw, just in terms of what the program was and how superficial it was, Purser says. I just saw this as part of the interest in behavioral science techniques as a way of yoking the interest or subjectivity of employees to corporate goals.

A year later, Purser published an essay with the Huffington Post. It was titled Beyond McMindfulness. Mindfulness meditation, he wrote, was making its way into schools, corporations, prisons, and government agencies including the U.S. military. Purser, a student of mindfulness for 40 years, wasnt knocking the practice but was wary of its growing reputation as a universal panacea for resolving almost every area of daily concern. Last year, Purser expanded on the essay and published a book titled McMindfulness: How Mindfulness Became the New Capitalist Spirituality.

Early on in his book, he writes this: I do not question the value of adapting mindfulness for therapeutic use, nor do I deny that it can help people. What bothers me is how its promoters want things both ways: one minute, mindfulness is science, since thats what sells; the next, it stands for everything in Buddhism, since thats what makes it sound deep.

The issues Purser called out eight years ago have only grown with time. Rhetoric, he says, still outpaces results. The practice becomes increasingly decontextualized, meme-ified and gamified. Mindfulness becomes a cure for more and more our happiness, our anxiety, our pain, even world peace.

Its worth pausing a moment to define or at least try to define mindfulness.

At its very core, its deepest and truest roots, mindfulness is a Buddhist meditation technique. There are hundreds, probably thousands of different meditative techniques. This is only one of them, says Mushim Ikeda, a Buddhist meditation teacher. Traditionally, in the Buddhist scriptures, it is said that what we call mindfulness meditation was one of 40 different techniques that the historical Buddha, the one we call the Buddha, talked about. So it wasnt even his one and only meditation technique according to those scriptures.

She knows those scriptures well. Ikeda, who primarily teaches at the East Bay Meditation Center, describes herself as a socially engaged teacher a social justice activist, author, and diversity and inclusion facilitator.

She describes mindfulness meditation as a secular term in Buddhism, one thats also called insight meditation. This is a sort of awareness, she says, that is different from the awareness that we might call everyday awareness the sort we need to drive a car, or maintain a conversation, or use an ATM. She and others describe mindful awareness as spacious and nonjudgmental. Ikeda says, Its been said mindfulness only sees. It does not judge.

The most common technique involves closing the eyes and focusing on the breath and only the breath, moving other thoughts, and the thoughts that come with those thoughts, away and out.

Mindfulness as a secular, western therapeutic intervention did not begin in Silicon Valley. Rather, youd have to go back to 1979 and a man named Jon Kabat-Zinn and the founding of the Stress Reduction Clinic at the University of Massachusetts Medical School. Kabat-Zinn has studied the effects of what he dubbed mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR for short), on everything from brain function to skin disease.

Still, its hard to ignore Silicon Valleys latest role in spreading and expanding mindfulness in the pursuit of a different tech culture value, peak performance. There is Search Inside Yourself, the book that coincided with the movements growth spurt. There are Twitter co-founder Jack Dorseys much-publicized meditation retreats. (Black Mirror, the dystopian science fiction show, seemed to parody both him and the now-ubiquitous apps.) Recently, there was the dopamine fast, a pseudo-scientific dopamine reset by way of doing nothing. (One originator said he drew directly from Buddhist Vipassana meditation when he crafted the fast.)

The voices are soothing and smooth soft, but not quite a whisper. The cadence and diction perfect, gently pulling you along. Birds chatter in the background. Waves move gently to meet a beach. Or maybe a brook babbles as it pushes over and under and between river rocks.

Breathing in ... I am calm.

Breathing out ... I am at peace.

A chime rings, a signal that this 90-second meditation to calm anger has ended. Calm offers its congratulations.

The danger in this rapid evolution is that it threatens to turn a very old practice into a fad that overpromises and underdelivers.

Helen Weng has practiced Buddhist meditation for more than two decades. I was reading a lot of books about psychology because I was unhappy because high school is horrible, she says. And her father, who, along with her mother, had immigrated to the United States from Taiwan, could offer her books about Buddhist philosophy. The two came together. The Dalai Lamas teachings offered her an opportunity to cultivate her own well-being. I dont like the word happiness anymore, but you can use mental exercises to become more aware of your feeling states and your thoughts.

Now Weng works as a clinical psychologist with the psychiatry department at UCSF and a neuroscientist with the Osher Center for Integrative Medicine and the Neuroscape Center, both at UCSF as well. Her scientific work uses magnetic resonance imaging to measure the amount of oxygen in the blood that flows to the brain as people meditate. Essentially, she can track whether the meditator is actually focused on their breath or if their attention has wandered. And in her clinical work, she offers meditation as one of many possible therapeutic interventions.

Still, she calls the recent spread of mindfulness very freaky.

Im very proud that practices from eastern cultures and religions generate so much interest, she says. At the same time, mindfulness and its results are super hard to study. So much so that I just thought I was a bad scientist for a long time. Whats more, she says, meditation isnt always the right sort of behavioral therapy.

Im very disturbed by these messages that meditation basically cures everything or its good for everyone or theres universally very good positive effects. The effects are really moderate and subtle. Its not any better than any other kind of psychotherapy, she says. Part of it is cultural appropriation where its this magical, mystical thing that then people can say does all these things, and I think were still in the height of that and its going to take some time for things to settle down.

Medical students, she says, inevitably ask her how much time they have to commit to mindfulness to make it work. There are studies that show clear benefits to mindfulness. Weng points to one that indicated 30 minutes a day of compassion meditation for two weeks increased altruistic giving to strangers and brain responses to pictures of people suffering.

But the key here is consistency. What happens if you work out for 30 minutes just once? she asks. It benefits you a little bit. Thats good. But if you just do it once, its not going to have a long-term effect.

After the chime and the congratulations, the waves keep moving in and out, and a quote appears onscreen. Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again expecting different results. (A quote sometimes attributed to Albert Einstein, but probably more correctly attributed to Narcotics Anonymous.) And in that moment, Calm reminds you that you really should turn on push notifications, in order to fully experience Calm. Decline and itll ask one more time about its mindfulness reminders.

Are you sure? Its hard to set aside time for yourself in our busy world without a little help.

Farrah Fawcett and Lee Majors are jogging. Theyre tan, of course. Their shorts are short. Her blond hair is fanned out, so are his brown curls. She has a broad, blindingly white smile and a red handkerchief tied around her neck. His jacket is zipped down almost to his navel; his chest is hairy. And right beside them, a headline: Farrah & Lee & Everybodys Doing It: Stars Join The Jogging Craze.

This is the cover of the July 4, 1977, issue of People magazine. Alex Will, the chief strategy officer for Calm, the industry-leading mindfulness meditation app, likes to reference this cover when he talks about mindfulness. (Theres even a copy of the issue at the office.) To understand the future of mindfulness, just look to the past.

Mindfulness is becoming mainstream, Will says. People are starting to understand that taking care of the mind is just as important as taking care of the body. Meditation and mindfulness is one way to do that.

In some respects, Calm isnt doing anything that hasnt already been done. Before smartphones, one could buy a meditation CD, slip it into a home stereo and start counting breaths. The app just makes it more portable and more accessible than ever before. I think one of the reasons Ive been so successful is that it is a very low bar for someone to try and get into, Will says. There are short, two-minute long meditations, narrations to help with sleep, even a beginners guide to mindfulness. Similarly, if you want to go deeper, we have a 30-minute master class where you can learn how to break bad habits.

All of the content, Will says, is vetted by mindfulness instructors, and, now that the app is available in more than 100 countries, the programming is also run by people to make sure translations work. This is very nuanced, he says. Language really matters. The Calm app has also been part of various clinical studies in an attempt to back up the applications rhetoric.

Mindfulness, by the way, has already had its magazine-cover moment. Not quite 37 years after the jogging craze, Time magazine featured the Mindfulness Revolution on its Feb. 3, 2014, issue. A blond, fair-skinned model stands straight, hands at her sides, eyes closed, face slightly upward. And the headline: The science of finding focus in a stressed-out multitasking culture.

Mindfulness began to trend in large part because corporations embraced the practice as a way to help employees relieve stress. This is one of the cruxes of Pursers concerns that mindfulness is just a way to wring more productivity from employees, a sleight of hand that shifts the onus from the company to the worker.

In 2012, the year Chade-Meng Tan published Search Inside Yourself, the idea of offering mindfulness courses to employees still felt novel. The New York Times featured Tan and the course hed developed for Google employees a course that involved meditation, Tibetan brass bowls, stream-of-consciousness journaling and lots of emotional openness. Even then the course was framed as a way to help employees deal with their intense workplace no mention of toning down the intensity.

Eight years later, mindfulness courses are the rule, not the exception. Apple, Nike, HBO and Target have all offered some form of mindfulness training to employees. Aetna, the insurance provider, decided to offer mindfulness and other stress-relief activities (including dog petting) after an internal study found that the most stressed-out employees spent $1,500 more a year on health care. And if a company cant bring a trained expert on board, well, they can always give employees memberships to Calm or Headspace.

The Buddha taught that almost everything comes and goes, says Mushim Ikeda, the East Bay Meditation Center instructor. Its called impermanence or change. And health trends famously come and go. Its a product of our capitalist system.

One year, its a certain kind of berry thats going to cure everything. Another year, its mindfulness meditation thats going to cure everything. Five years from now, heaven only knows, itll be something else. Burnt toast who knows?

Ikeda offers a path forward, a path separate from capitalism, a path that encourages students to cultivate a practice in which they care for themselves so that they may, in turn, care for their communities. Its an approach based in social justice and altruism. And yet, she isnt dogmatic.

Mindfulness, Ikeda says, does not judge.

A person might use mindfulness to lower their blood pressure or achieve peak performance. A corporation might use mindfulness to paper over an inherently unjust and healthy system. All this, she says, is like using a Swiss Army knife for just one thing. Its not what the tool was intended to do, and its not all it can do.

Mindfulness is always mindful awareness of something, Ikeda says. Who knows what a given individual is going to do with it? Or what it will do for them?

An individual might, for instance, become mindfully aware of a broken system.

Ryan Kost is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: rkost@sfchronicle.com. Twitter: @RyanKost

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The (over) promise of the mindfulness revolution - San Francisco Chronicle

Foundation donates $18M to expand psychosocial care for cancer patients – Daily Bruin

A foundation has gifted $18 million to UCLA Health to expand an integrative patient-care program, according to a university press release Thursday.

The Simms/Mann Family Foundations donation will expand the Simms/Mann-UCLA Center for Integrative Oncology which focuses on psychosocial care intended for cancer patients and their families in California. This holistic approach includes psychiatric care, along with educational programs about nutrition and meditation.

The foundations donation is led by Victoria Mann Simms and Ronald Simms, who have previously donated to programs that work to advance integrative medicine and provide care to cancer patients. Their donation will provide funding for the center.

The endowment will also improve a training program offered by the center that trains providers in integrative care.

Since the centers founding, it has cared for over 50,000 patients, held more than 310 lectures and provided training for over 100 fellows for oncology-based psychosocial care around the country.

The Simms/Mann Foundation has now donated over $33 million to UCLA. The donors are also founding board members of the Geffen Playhouse and are credited with supporting other UCLA programs, such as the Jules Stein Eye Institute.

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Foundation donates $18M to expand psychosocial care for cancer patients - Daily Bruin

Putrid Compound May Have a Sweet Side Gig as Atherosclerosis Treatment – Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Putrescine, the compound responsible for perhaps the foulest odor in naturethe smell of decomposing fleshmay also be a remedy for atherosclerosis and other chronic inflammatory diseases, according to a new study led by researchers at Columbia University Irving Medical Center.

This unusual discovery stems from an investigation intothe bodys process for removingdead cells usingmacrophages, a type of white blood cell that digests dead cells.

Its estimated that a billion cells die in the body every day, and if you dont get rid of them, they can cause inflammation and tissue death, says Ira Tabas, MD, PhD,the Richard J. Stock Professor of Medicine and professor of pathology & cell biology (in physiology & cellular biophysics) at Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons. Removing these dead cells by a process called efferocytosis (from the Latin to carry to the grave) is one of the bodys most important functions.

Normally, the process is initiated within minutes of cell death. However,studies have suggested that this essential housekeeping task is impaired in atherosclerosis, promoting the accumulation of plaques.

To learn more, Tabas, Arif Yurdagul Jr, PhD, associate research scientist in the Tabas lab, and colleagues set up human macrophages and dying cells in a dish and watched how the process unfolded.

Thats when they detected the role of putrescine. Macrophages, they found, reclaim arginine and other amino acids from the dead cells they engulf and use an enzyme to convert arginine into putrescine. Putrescine then activates a protein (Rac1) that signals the macrophages to eat more dead cells.Fortunately, when you dissolve putrescine into water, at least at the dosages needed to improve the plaques, it no longer gives off its odor

The results suggested atherosclerosis may be partly a putrescine problem, so the researchers turned to mice with atherosclerosis to investigate.

The researchers found that mice with worsening atherosclerosis had a short supply of putrescine because they didnt have enough of a key enzyme (arginase 1) to make the compound. But when we put putrescine in the animals drinking water, their macrophages got better at eating dead cells and the plaques improved.

The findings suggest that putrescine could be used to treat atherosclerosis and other conditions characterized by chronic inflammation, such as Alzheimers.

But who would want to take a medicine that smells like rotting flesh?

Fortunately, when you dissolve putrescine into water, at least at the dosages needed to improve the plaques, it no longer gives off its odor. The mice drank it without any problem and show no signs of sickness, says Tabas, whose findings were published online Jan. 30 in the journalCell Metabolism.

"Of course we do not yet know the feasibility and safety of using low-dose putrescine to ward off atherosclerotic heart disease and other diseases driven by defective efferocytosis. However, the study shows the potential of treating heart disease with compounds that help macrophages eat dead cells and that are currently in clinical trials for other indications."

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Putrid Compound May Have a Sweet Side Gig as Atherosclerosis Treatment - Columbia University Irving Medical Center

Finding the Universe in a Coffee Cup – SFGate

By Deepak Chopra, MD and Menas Kafatos, PhD

The universe is hard to explain, because there are so many moving parts and so many levels, probably infinite in both cases. It is a cherished goal in physics to unify these parts, but so far success has eluded even the most brilliant investigators. The average person might take an occasional interest in the latest theories about the cosmos, but we think the mystery of the universe faces everyone on a daily basis, as does the solution to the mystery.

The cosmic riddle is easy to state: Is the universe whole? Do its parts all work together, and if so, how? Clearly the universe isnt a machine, because machines are assembled from mechanical parts with visible connections like the gears in a cars transmission. But the universe has a peculiar feature. The moving parts, meaning any physical object, whether as large as a galaxy or as tiny as an atom, depend on probabilities to show us their properties, and these suddenly vanish at the quantum level. Even large, or macroscopic, objects exhibit quantum behavior. To drive the point home, subatomic particles do not have a stable identity. They flicker in and out of one state, following invisible probability waves. The same peculiarity holds true for the other basic ingredients of what we call everyday reality: time, space, and energy. All have an invisible source beyond the physical, even though we experience them in the physical world.

Classical physics, like all of todays science, depends on reductionism, the method that explains a phenomenon by breaking it down into smaller parts. Reductionism is tied to the fundamental idea that reality is physical and that nothing else is needed beyond the physical. Even though modern physics is hugely complex, the outmoded notion that the universe is a gigantic physical mechanism keeps persisting a century after quantum theory dismantled the very notion that the mystery of the universe lies in its tiniest bits and pieces.

If the mystery of the universe can be solved, the solution doesnt lie with a purely physical explanation. If we take an ordinary object like a coffee cup, the mystery of everything is contained in it, and in one stroke the mystery can be solved, because in the experience of holding a coffee cup, you can simultaneously throw out a solution that doesnt work and see that the right solution is dawning. Holding the cup and experiencing it is as important as the cup itself. The two cannot be separated.

Physics can reduce a coffee cup to the smallest scale before everything vanishes in the quantum dimensions known as the Planck scale, named for a seminal quantum physicist, Max Planck, who started the entire quantum revolution in 1903. Measurements of length are extremely tiny, almost infinitesimal at the Planck scale. As a unit of measurement, the Planck length is 100 million trillion times smaller than the proton. Planck theorized that five infinitesimal units that characterize the micro worldlength, mass, energy, temperature, and chargecan be reduced to individual quantum scales to the smallest possible values at the scale where the universe, and everything in it, originates. If you try to imagine the womb of creation, the Planck scale is its location.

Planck-scale units tell us the scale at which the universe began during the Big Bang, but they also mark the end of the road. This is where the laws of nature no longer operate, where smaller is impossible to measure because length itself, along with the whole setup of three dimensions, time, and every known constant, ceases to have meaning. There is much more to say about the Planck scale, but one thing is clear. Physical explanations stop here, and they havent solved the mystery of the origin of the universe. What lies over the Planck scale horizon cannot be known by any kind of physical experiment, data, facts, or any observation.

Where the universe collapses into pure mystery, so does a coffee cup and so do you. You are beyond any facts, which means that physical data concerning you, although interesting and useful, are just provisional, temporary, and relative. In fact, any theory reaches a horizon of understanding about the mysteries that lie beyond. The true, essential you (along with the coffee cup and the entire universe) can only be found following a non-physical path of explanation. This path, which is open to direct experience, is the path of consciousness. We are so conditioned to accept the physical explanation of reality that the path of consciousness seems alien. But consciousness itself already defies the reductionist approachas another great quantum physicist, Erwin Schrdinger declared, it makes no sense to subdivide the mind. It is far more credible and ultimately self-consistent to explain everything as a creation of consciousness than as a machine-like conglomeration of matter and energy.

The Planck scale cannot be observed, only speculated about. But whatever is happening, you and I are the result, along with everything in existence. Something has to be going on, and if it isnt material or physical, if it doesnt take time or occur in space, there is only one thing that the human mind can conceive, which is consciousness. This is a classic example, one might say, of Sherlock Holmess dictum that when every other explanation has failed, the one that remains, however improbable, must be true. Consciousness-based reality is ultimately the cleanest, most self-consistent and irreducible view of the wholeness that science and philosophy are trying to reach.

Assigning the leading role to consciousness isnt improbable. Being conscious is the essence of every experience. Without awareness, there is no known reality. To someone wedded to a purely physical explanation, consciousness is nothing, or at best a lingering mystery that no one can understand, but once you step away from physicalism, consciousness is everything. This choice, between nothing and everything, is crucial; you cant get around it. Planck himself came to believe that consciousness is fundamental to the universe. In an attempt to salvage physicalism, it is argued that the universe existed for billions of years before human beings appeared on the scene to be aware of it.

Physical explanations miss the point. What does it mean to say you are conscious? It means that you perceive, understand, and know. It means that you can think, observe, speak, and act. It means that you have a sense of self. These features of you cannot be created out of physical stuff. It only makes sense that they have always been around, woven into the fabric of existence itself. Consciousness knows, understands, perceives, observes, etc. These are its basic qualities, just as wetness is a basic quality of water.

So the path of consciousness is built up not from bits and pieces of matter, but the process of consciousness creating anything it wants simply by projecting itself. Its creative ability begins with nothing but itself. It doesnt need space, time, matter, and energy. They are tools of creation the way a painter uses the tools of color. A painting needs the tools of color to be created, but clearly the painting is much more than those tools. A coffee cup has local qualities and universal qualities at the same time. It is a thing and it is the idea of the thing. The local qualities are its color, shape, hardness, lightness, and so on. Its universal qualities are invisible, playing their part behind the scene. These are the qualities of creativity embedded in consciousness.

There is every reason to shift our explanations to be consciousness based. When you see a painting, its local qualities are in the picture. You can study the Mona Lisa for hours absorbing these qualities. But implicitly you know that it took a conscious mind, belonging to Leonardo da Vinci, to assemble those local qualities. He conceived how to make the models smile elusive, her beauty enigmatic, her skin luminous, and the inert paint come alive. Without consciousness, no local qualities can exist. The same is true of the universe, your body, a coffee cup, and anything else. Without consciousness to unify everything, we would be left with the only alternative, which is nothing.

DEEPAK CHOPRA MD, FACP, founder of The Chopra Foundation, a non-profit entity for research on well-being and humanitarianism, and Chopra Global, a modern-day health company at the intersection of science and spirituality, is a world-renowned pioneer in integrative medicine and personal transformation. He is a Clinical Professor of Family Medicine and Public Health at the University of California, San Diego. Chopra is the author of over 89 books translated into over forty-three languages, including numerous New York Times bestsellers. His 90th book and national bestseller, Metahuman: Unleashing Your Infinite Potential (Harmony Books), unlocks the secrets to moving beyond our present limitations to access a field of infinite possibilities. TIME magazine has described Dr. Chopra as one of the top 100 heroes and icons of the century.

Menas C. Kafatos is the Fletcher Jones Endowed Professor of Computational Physics at Chapman University. Author, physicist and philosopher, he works in quantum mechanics, cosmology, the environment and climate change and extensively on philosophical issues of consciousness, connecting science to metaphysical traditions. Member or candidate of foreign national academies, he holds seminars and workshops for individuals, groups and corporations on the universal principles for well-being and human potential. His doctoral thesis advisor was the renowned M.I.T. professor Philip Morrison who studied under J. Robert Oppenheimer. He has authored more than 333 articles, is author or editor of 20 books, including The Conscious Universe, Looking In, Seeing Out, Living the Living Presence (in Greek and in Korean), Science, Reality and Everyday Life (in Greek), and is co-author with Deepak Chopra of the NY Times Bestseller You are the Universe (Harmony Books), translated into many languages and at many countries. You can learn more at http://www.menaskafatos.com

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Finding the Universe in a Coffee Cup - SFGate

2020 Will Be The Year of Self-Care With These Top Health and Wellness Trends – Essence

With a new year on the horizon, its no surprise that wellness enthusiasts are already looking ahead to forecast how theyll take their self-care to the next level. Just about every week, it seems like a new Soul Cycle or Equinox has popped up and emerging wellness brands such as FaceHaus, Shape House and Nap Bar are continuing to grow in appeal and popularity.

According to the Global Wellness Institute, the global wellness market is now valued at $4.2 trillion, up 12.8% from $3.7 trillion in 2015 and its only expected to continue growing over the next few years as we continue to recognize the importance of valuing ourselves first. As a result, and in an attempt to capitalize on consumer demand, just about every brandfrom weight loss oriented companies such as WW and Jenny Craig to consumer brands such as Nestl and GM is repositioning itself as a wellness company. Its a trend known as the pivot to wellness.

Our friends at MINDBODY recently conducted a 2020 wellness index study, and heres where they think youll be spending all your coins next year to help you get zen.

Experiential Wellness

People love to experience wellness with the most common being spa retreats, fitness pop-ups and wellness festivals. Forty-two percent of those polled valued experiences over material possession. That means in 2020, youll see your favorite brands capitalizing off the intersection of things you love to do trap meets yoga, fitness pop-ups that intersect your favorite apparel companies, and we cant forget wellness-focused vacations such as Cayman Rejuvenate and the Integrative Health Retreat at Carlisle Bay.

More Sleep

Sleep: were all craving it, but likely not getting enough of it. According to the National Sleep Foundation, forty-five perfect of Americans arent getting the sleep they deserve, but that will likely change in the new year. As people want to make this a growing priority, MINDBODYs research showed that 57 percent of people consider sleep to be a luxury (and not a necessity), with 28 percent using sleep apps, to help with this. Expect more downloads of Sleep Cycle and Relax Melodies to help put you down each night. Other ways you can try to prioritize your sleep in 2020 include natural supplements, non-toxic mattresses and bedding such as Casper and Purple, or even popping in midday at a nap pod, such as Houstons Nap Bar.

Emotional Wellness

Our emotional well being is just as, if not more important than physical. Seventy-five percent of those surveyed in MINDBODYs 2020 Wellness Index study agree that personal wellness is a never-ending quest, and this will be seen in the new year by focusing on sustainable and realistic eating habits as well as making more time for your mental health whether it be with therapy, meditation, journaling and expressing gratitude more often. This will be seen by individuals making both small and large actions to preserve their sanity which as Black women, we need to spend more time doing.

Complementary and Alternative Medicine

While Dr. Sebi had been promoting this for decades, mainstream America just now seems to be catching on. Complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) continues to gain in popularity, so much so that 68% of those surveyed in the MINDBODY Wellness Index study agree that alternative medicine is a good complement to modern medicine. In addition to the most popular forms of this, like meditation, guided visualization, and breath work, getting acupuncture, acupressure, and even ear seeding are a few rising practices that will become a lot more accessible in the next year. So, it is no surprise that in 2020 many consumers will look to alternative medicine when it comes to healing and recovery of both the mind and body.

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2020 Will Be The Year of Self-Care With These Top Health and Wellness Trends - Essence

Deepak Chopra On Finding Calm Anywhere You Are – Thrive Global

Deepak Chopra is one of the most influential integrative medicine and meditation experts in the world. However, he wasnt always the epitome of calm. Early in his medical career, as a resident, Chopra turned to smoking and alcohol to combat the stress he was feeling. But noticing that these habits werent working, on an impulse, he decided to change the course of his life. I was very busy taking care of patients. I wanted them to feel better, but I couldnt give them any advice because of my own situation, he tells Thrive. So I decided to be the change I was seeking in others. I started getting good sleep, cultivating healthy emotions like compassion, joy, kindness, and peace, changed my diet to a more plant-based diverse diet, exercised, and started yoga.

This was over 50 years ago. Since then, Chopra has written over 85 books, founded The Chopra Foundation and Chopra Global, serves as a Clinical Professor of Medicine at the University of California in San Diego, and hosts the podcast Deepak Chopras Infinite Potential. TIME has described him as one of the top 100 heroes and icons of the century.

Chopra sits down with Thrive to discuss his latest book, Metahuman: Unleashing Your Infinite Potential, how you can be present anywhere, how to handle criticism, and his advice for managing your relationship with technology.

Thrive Global: What is your morning routine?

Deepak Chopra: I wake up anywhere between 4:00 to 6:00 in the morning, depending on what time I go to sleep, but I get eight hours of sleep every night. Then I do about two hours of a combination of meditation, reflection, breathing, yoga, and I set my intentions for the day, which are always the same joyful, energetic body, love and compassion in the heart, reflective alert mind, and lightness of being. Then, I just do what needs to be done.

TG: For someone who wants to start meditating, what are your tips to begin the practice?

DC: Meditation simply means going beyond the conditioned mind or thought. You can be in that state any moment by being fully aware of any experience, like attending to your breath, to a thought, to a sensation in the body, to an image in the mind, or to using a mantra. So if you want to be in that space right now, close your eyes and ask yourself, I wonder what my next thought is going to be. And there is silence. Thats meditation. You can be in that state all the time.

TG: Often, people are hesitant resistant, really to change. What advice would you give to someone to embrace change?

DC: I think one can be stuck in a rut and a routine because of the addiction to security. Actually, the addiction to security is the biggest cause of insecurity. We dont live in the past. The past is the known. We live in the present that actually creates the future. So if youre not present to experience right now if youre not enjoying experience right this moment, because youre constantly thinking of the future then when the future arrives, even the future that you want, you wont be present for it. The key to actually creating a more meaningful life, a life of purpose, and ultimately a life of success, is to know that we live, breathe, and move in the unknown. Take a risk, otherwise youll be a victim of the past. If you want to be a pioneer of the future, take a little risk.

TG: You have written over 90 books, which is remarkable. What inspires you to come up with new material and new ways of sharing your experience?

DC: My training. Im a physician. My career has evolved from being an internist to being an endocrinologist to a neuroendocrinologist, to somebody interested in mind-body medicine, which then evolved to integrative medicine. Now, Im going a little bit beyond that, into a deeper understanding of what is fundamental reality. We think that reality is this body, this mind, and this world, but actually, theres a more fundamental reality beyond the conditioned mind. I am obsessed with what the wisdom traditions call higher states of consciousness. So every book that I write is actually just a little step further than the previous book, because I think of evolution as a spiral staircase. When I write books, I dont actually think about who Im writing for, or who the exact audience is. Im sharing my own evolution as it has occurred over the last 50 years.

TG: Are there any principles that have really remained steadfast from book one to book 90?

DC: The main principle that has stood through the whole range of books that Ive written, numbers one through 90, is healing. The word healing comes from the word wholeness, which means all-inclusive mind, body, spirit, environment, personal relationships, social interactions, work, well-being, social well-being, community well-being, financial well-being, physical well-being, emotional well-being, and spiritual well-being. Theres a lot to cover, but it all has to do with healing.

TG: With so many distractions around, whats the best way to quiet the noise?

DC: You can quiet your internal dialogue just by being present in the moment to any sensory experience. Right now, even with your eyes open, just be aware of sound, without labeling it, or be aware of your breath, or be aware of the sensations in your body, or simply ask yourself, Am I present? We are distracted by experience without ever being aware of who or what is having the experience.

TG: What is your relationship with technology?

DC: I believe technology is neutral. Technology can destroy the world, but technology today can also help us in rewiring. The internet is the global brain. Everything about the human condition is there. When we personally evolve in the direction of joy, empathy, and compassion, and we share our spiritual practice with others, then we create a sangha. A sangha is a community. Today, with technology, I personally have a sangha, or a community, of 15 million people and its growing. If we keep doing that, then technology becomes a divine tool to create joy and healing. You use technology, dont allow it to use you. Its that simple.

TG: How do you handle criticism?

DC: Social media is a reflection of who we are, collectively, just like the world is a mirror of who we are collectively. So if you really want to make a difference in the world, then you have to be independent of both the criticism and the flattery you get from people who engage with you. If somebody flatters me, I just acknowledge them with a thank you, but internally, it doesnt make a difference. If somebody criticizes me, sometimes I also acknowledge them with a thank you, but internally Im independent of both. If youre dependent on other peoples opinions of yourself, then be prepared to be offended for the rest of your life.

TG: What is your evening routine?

DC: I stop working at around 5:00. I engage with friends and family for a little bit. Usually I also go for a little walk, eat a very light meal before sunset, and ideally go to bed before 10:00 in a totally dark room with total silence and no technology.

Follow ushereand subscribeherefor all the latest news on how you can keep Thriving.

Stay up to date or catch-up on all our podcasts with Arianna Huffingtonhere.

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Deepak Chopra On Finding Calm Anywhere You Are - Thrive Global

IBJI Stands by Chicago Red Stars Through Their First Championship Game and Wishes Sam Kerr Luck – Chicago Daily Herald

As the official medical partner of the Chicago Red Stars for the last five seasons, IBJI has become more than just a supporter--we have developed a very close and integrated relationship with the team.

"With every win and loss the Red Stars encounter, IBJI is there by their side through the highs and lows," stated Matt Repa, IBJI Sports Medicine Business Development. "But this year was really something special, the teamwork and energy they've shown throughout the finals is a testament to the high level of commitment and dedication these athletes have."

Just as winning teams are developed over the course of many seasons, in 2019, IBJI expanded the care services offered to the Red Stars to strengthen and promote a playoff-ready lineup. Our goal, throughout the season, was to support the team in all areas and be a comprehensive sports medicine provider. The strength of IBJI lies in the "total package," which is a group of seven, led by medical director Roger Chams, MD, a board-certified orthopedic surgeon; primary care sports medicine physician Angelo Savino, MD; physician assistant Molly Uyenishi, PA-C, MSMS; sports neurologist Anthony Savino, MD; head physical therapist Bria Wanzung, PT, DPT, ATC; high performance director Megan Young, PhDc, CSCS, USA-SPC, and head athletic trainer Megan Blackburn, ATC.

High performance director Megan Young, PhDc, CSCS, USA-SP, joined the group this year to contribute her expertise in strength and conditioning.

"In my first year with the club, it was a privilege to provide data-driven context around training and match demand for the coaching staff and individual athletes. Working on the performance side with some of the most elite footballers in the world; to assist and support them in physical training and development was a joy. These players, staff and club have a passion for the game and bringing home championships," Young said in regards to working with the Red Stars.

Medical director Roger Chams, MD, said, "It has been an honor and a privilege to take care of such incredible, dedicated athletes and phenomenal women role models. [The team] definitely put up a great fight! I am proud of everyone."

Integrative care and collaborative partnerships are important for any team to be successful. In IBJI's position, we have collaborative care, top to bottom. The players don't have to go out to different resources for everything--they have it all in-house. That allows the athlete to feel secure in communication and the collaboration of care.

General Manager of IBJI's Health Performance Institute, Cory Leman, MS, CSCS, states, "We've worked diligently to develop a model that not only improves athlete performance but also strives to reduce and treat injuries with cutting edge science. We take pride in helping to produce not only powerful athletes, but athletes that are marked by longevity and health."

We look forward to assisting in the health and training for the Chicago Red Stars, so that they can come back even stronger next season! IBJI also thanks Sam Kerr for her contributions to the team. We wish her the best of luck in her future endeavors! Learn more about our sponsorship with the Chicago Red Stars at ibji.com.

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IBJI Stands by Chicago Red Stars Through Their First Championship Game and Wishes Sam Kerr Luck - Chicago Daily Herald

How to reduce your stress and thrive, starting today! – Thrive Global

One of the most common health challenges of our time ischronic stress, which, we know can cause, or play a major role in the development of chronic disease. In the midst of multiple demands in todays world, and the fast pace of life, its hard not to be in the fight or flight mode most of the time. We all feel the weight of the stress of work, family, health, social stressors, or unexpected events. The process of evolution hasnt yet caught up to the fast- changing world of multitasking, the speed with which we communicate, make decisions and create and execute our to-do lists. Its hard to be present and appreciate the moment. While naturally programmed to seek security and control, its hard for us not to worry about things that are uncertain (read: everything in life!).

It is no surprise that the U.S. adult population reports significant levels of stress about the future, finances, healthcareto name a few examplesin recent surveys of theAmerican Psychological Association.

We cannot control the outside world, but we CAN CONTROL how we RESPOND to it.

Here are simple, yet powerful tips of how you can cultivate a practice of mindful responsiveness and awareness, rather than be in a loop of never-ending stress, worries and negative thinking.

Whether meditation is new for you, or has been something youve tried but couldnt do, I invite you to view it with a beginners mind. Allow yourself to be patient even when those thoughts are racing, and you are not paying attention to your breath, mantra, or the object of your meditation. A key aspect of the practice of meditation is that we feel acceptance of discomfort, boredom or distraction. This acceptance will lead to a sense of comfort (even with discomfort!) and greater ease with which we practice, which will lead to a more consistent practice. The results are limitless and can range fromimproved moodin individuals with depression,better sleep, andless chronic pain. Beware, consistent practice can also lead to a complete mind and body transformation and a more optimistic outlook on life!

Here are some ofmy favorite meditation resources:

In order to realize our full potential and ease our bodies into the healing mode, it is necessary that we turn down the always on fight or flight mechanism, and activate our parasympathetic nervous system. Regular mindfulness and meditation practice will help with this.

I hope that as you create your own mindfulness journey, you let your inner beauty, love and compassion shine, and that you illuminate this world with kindness and wisdom that are more powerful than ever. I trust that you will find more peace and more ease, as you follow the steps here. Keep me posted on your journey!

Namaste,Dr. Bojana

*This article originally appeared on http://www.drbojana.com

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How to reduce your stress and thrive, starting today! - Thrive Global

Meet University of Arizona Arthritis Center researchers – Jewish Post

Conquering Arthritis Meet the University of Arizona Arthritis Center Researchers will be presented Wednesday, Nov. 6, 6-7:15 p.m., at the Health Sciences Innovation Building on the UA Health Science campus, 1670 E. Drachman St., Tucson.

This event features a look into the future of care, prevention, and ultimately a cure, for this debilitating disease. A panel discussion with UArizona Arthritis Center Director C. Kent Kwoh, MD, pain management specialist Mohab Ibrahim, PhD, MD, and mind-body medicine pioneer Esther Sternberg, MD, will follow the researcher open house and poster displays.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimate nearly 55 million Americans have some form of arthritis, including almost half of those over age 65. Arthritis affects more women than men and can affect children as young as 6 months old. It is the leading cause of disability in the United States.

The UArizona Arthritis Center is Arizonas only multi-disciplinary center of excellence dedicated to research and education into the causes, treatments and eventually a cure for arthritis. The center conducts basic, translational and epidemiological research to understand why patients get arthritis, the risk factors for who gets arthritis and analyzes the outcomes to understand how arthritis impacts the patients quality of life.

Featured UArizona Arthritis Center researchers who will present at the event include:

Research topics will include:

Seating for the lecture is limited and prior registration is requested. For more information or to register, visit the UArizona Arthritis Center website, arthritis.arizona.edu, or call 520-626-5040 or email [emailprotected]

Free parking is available after 5 p.m. in the Lot Specific 2012 parking lot next to the Health Sciences Innovation Building and the Lot Specific 2147 parking lot across the street on Cherry Avenue between Helen and Mabel Streets, as well as in all Lot Specific parking lots on the UArizona Health Sciences campus and the Health Sciences Garage (formerly the Banner University Medical Center Tucson Visitor/Patient Parking Garage) at 1501 N. Campbell Ave. For disabled parking, or drop off location next to the Health Sciences Innovation Building, please email [emailprotected], or call 520-626-5040.

If you have questions concerning access, wish to request a Sign Language interpreter or disability-related accommodations, contact Tracy Shake, 520-626-5040, email: [emailprotected]

The lecture is part of the Living Healthy with Arthritis series of free monthly talks presented by the UArizona Arthritis Center at the UArizona College of Medicine Tucson and supported through the Susan and Saul Tobin Endowment for Research and Education in Rheumatology.

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Meet University of Arizona Arthritis Center researchers - Jewish Post

Integrative Medicine | St. Marys | Lewiston, Maine

Integrative Medicine is a specialty that uses all aspects of healing from conventional andcomplementary care. It takes into account the importance of all factors of life on health, both internal (mind, body, and spirit) and external (social and environmental). Integrative Medicine puts a focus on natural, less invasive, and evidence-based care plans for optimal health.

Why consult with an integrative medicine provider?

A 90-minute consultation includes:

Program Director - Anne Brown, MD

Anne Brown, MD has been an internist at St. MarysRegional Medical Center since 1996. She attended medical school at University ofVermont and completed her residency at theOcshner Foundation in New Orleans, Louisiana, and her mind-body training at the Benson-Henry Institute, an affiliate of Massachusetts General Hospital andHarvard Medical School. She completed her fellowship training in 2014 at the University of Arizona to becomea specialist in Integrative Medicine, for which she is is board certified.

Integrative programs we offer:

For more information on Integrative Medicine at St. Mary's, please contact:Dr. Anne BrownSt. Mary's Integrative Medicine & Weight Management198 Main Street, Lewiston, ME 04240(207) 753-4970

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Integrative Medicine | St. Marys | Lewiston, Maine

Integrative Medicine – Natural Therapies at Virginia Mason …

At Virginia Mason, we understand the importance of caring for the whole person. And that each individual's path to optimal health is unique. That's why we have partnered with the Bastyr Center for Natural Health to expand our continuum of care by creating the Center for Integrative Medicine.

Integrative medicine offers a balanced, holistic approach to health. It combines the latest breakthroughs in Western medicine with the centuries-old wisdom of natural therapies. We find this approach safe, appropriate, and effective for our patients.

At Virginia Mason's Bainbridge Island and downtown Seattle locations, our caring experts offer natural therapies along with traditional medical approaches. We believe in the interconnection of mind, body and spirit, and our goal is to empower you to be a co-creator of your own wellness.

This approach offers:

Dr. Astrid Pujari, the center's medical director, is board-certified in both Internal Medicine and in Integrative Holistic Medicine. Dr. Pujari has extensive experience in integrating nutritional, herbal and mind-body therapies with Western medicine.

The Center for Integrative Medicine at Virginia Mason has partnered with the renowned natural health experts at the Bastyr Center to offer a variety of services, including:

Cash or credit card payment for these services is due at the time of treatment. Upon request, we can provide documentation for you to send to your insurance company.

Our Integrative Medicine program is evidence-based and data driven, providing the same quality standards we hold throughout our healthcare system. It is part of our team approach to medicine, and we work together with our other medical experts at Virginia Mason.

For more information or to schedule an appointment, call (206) 341-1202.

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Integrative Medicine - Natural Therapies at Virginia Mason ...

Integrative Medicine in Philadelphia Healing Arts Center …

Our Integrative Medicine Physician

Steven Rosenzweig, MD graduated from the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine in 1986 and completed his residency training in Emergency Medicine at Jefferson University Hospital in 1989. He was a full-time Jefferson physician until 2007. During that time he served as the Founding Medical and Academic Director of the Thomas Jefferson University Center of Integrative Medicine, which opened its doors in 1998. In 2007 he established his independent, private practice in Integrative Medicine and also joined the teaching faculty of Drexel University College of Medicine.

Dr. Rosenzweig is Board Certified in Emergency Medicine and Palliative Medicine. He extended his medical training through the study of Anthroposophical Medicine, a European-based system of Integrative Medicine. He participated in professional training under the direction of Jon Kabat-Zinn, PhD, founder of the Stress Reduction Clinic at the University of Massachusetts Medical Center (UMMC), and has completed the Teacher Development Intensive in Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction offered at the Stress Reduction Clinic at UMMC. He also completed Professional Certification Training in Interactive Guided Imagerysm through the Academy for Guided Imagery.

Dr. Rosenzweig is Clinical Associate Professor at Drexel University College of Medicine where he is Director of the Program in Medical Humanism and Professional Values in the Office of Educational Affairs. He directs courses in Bioethics, Community Service Learning and Professionalism. He teaches mindfulness and Integrative Medicine, and has been developing mind-body projects as part of the community service curriculum. He is also an Adjunct Associate Professor at Jefferson Medical College where he currently lectures on botanical medicine and racial disparities in healthcare. Dr.Rosenzweig is also a member of the medical staff of Hahnemann University Hospital and Abington Memorial Hospital.

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Integrative Medicine in Philadelphia Healing Arts Center ...

Integrative Health and Wellbeing | NewYork-Presbyterian

Personalized, Comprehensive Care for Your Mind, Body, and Spirit

At Integrative Health and Wellbeing at NewYork-Presbyterian, in collaboration with Weill Cornell Medicine, we provide comprehensive care to promote your physical, psychological, and social well-being. We offer an integrative, holistic approach that is based on the latest medical research. Our complementary therapies can help to prevent disease, promote relaxation, reduce stress and anxiety, and relieve symptoms associated with disease or its treatment.

Our services are not in place of the health care your doctor provides, but are in addition to it. We partner with you and your medical providers to help you live a better life for years to come. Find out how you may benefit from services such as:

We understand that each person's path to health is a different journey. That's why we perform a comprehensive assessment to customize your care to meet your individual needs. We work with you to create and carry out your personalized health plan, in as intensive or as relaxed a pace as you desire. You can visit us as often as twice weekly or less frequently the choice is yours.

Call us at 1-646-NYP-WELL (1-646-697-9355) to make an appointment. We are located in the DavidH.KochCenter at 436 East 69th Street (between York and 1st Ave) New York, NY 10065. The entrance is located on 69th Street.

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Integrative Health and Wellbeing | NewYork-Presbyterian

Engaging in community awareness – Courier-Gazette & Camden Herald (subscription)

By Paula Jackson Jones | Aug 19, 2017

As a nonprofit whose mission is to raise awareness, foster education, advocate for change and provide local support to Maines Lyme community, we truly enjoy engaging with the communities and hosting or participating in events that help further knowledge of tick-borne disease. Plain and simple: We enjoy helping people get better!

Tick-borne disease can be confusing to diagnose and even more difficult to treat. Because many people think that a tick bite can only cause Lyme Disease, we are conditioned to look for the bulls-eye rash and if/when it does not present, we are left wondering why we feel so horrible. Because testing is unreliable, many people continue to walk around infected and dont even know it. Many of them have a different tick-borne disease all together or co-infections that were never addressed. Its during these community times that we get one-on-one connection with people, sharing our experiences, listening to their stories and concerns and giving resources and direction. People want real answers, tangible results, and they want restored hope that they can get better. Having been down that road and now in complete remission for more than three years, this is as real as it gets.

We engage locally with people as much as possible, because you cant just go to the internet and get the answers. If anything, you come away feeling more confused and baffled by the variances among medical providers. Some go by a clinical examination, others strictly by testing, some follow outdated guidelines and treatment protocols, while others stay up-to-date with the current protocols and treatment options. Some medical providers say youre cured after 14 days of antibiotics, while others understand the complexities of tick-borne diseases, including delayed diagnosis and the potential need for longer treatment and supportive measure to rebuild. Part of being out in the community raising awareness and sharing information is educating people, empowering them to take advantage of the options that are available to them and giving them control over their own health.

There are lots of avenues one can travel when ill, choosing from mainstream western medicine to alternative eastern medicine. The introduction of integrative medicine, using the best of both worlds, gives the patient the best possible outcome, from deciding which protocol to use to kill off an infection to implementing supportive medicines that help rebuild and strengthen. Its allowed and accepted with other diseases ~ tick-borne disease should be no different.

We are fortunate to be networked with more than 100 medical providers in Maine who are highly educated in tick-borne disease and use a variety of treatment modalities. We like to say that seeing a provider who has a large tool box is your best bet as a patient to get better, because there is no one size fits all approach to treating tick-borne disease and no two patients present alike. Symptoms and medical histories vary, as well as genetics. Treating a patient with a tick-borne disease must be individualized, and no one understands this better than MLDSE.

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Engaging in community awareness - Courier-Gazette & Camden Herald (subscription)

The Doctor Is In: Living with Chronic Pain – Fox 2 Detroit

Content provided and sponsored by Beaumont Health

The National Institutes of Health estimates more than 25 million people in the United States live with chronic pain. If you've experienced pain every day for the past three months, you have chronic pain. It's the most common cause of long-term disability, according to the NIH.It can rob you from doing the most basic things, like dining out, shopping or even leaving your house. So what can you do? And where can you find relief?

Beaumont Health is offering a free clinic Wednesday, August 23rd to help those with chronic pain. The interactive program will explore pain science and self-management techniques including strategies from integrative medicine, behavioral health and physical and occupational therapy. During the event, participants will set personal goals to better manage their pain. Registration is required.

Living with Chronic Pain: A free, interactive workshop to help you live a meaningful life.

Beaumont/ Troy

Moceri Learning CenterWednesday, Aug. 236:30 - 8:30 p.mRegistration is required online or by phone(800) 633-7377

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The Doctor Is In: Living with Chronic Pain - Fox 2 Detroit