Black box warning to be added to popular asthma/allergy medicine – KVUE.com

AUSTIN, Texas New warnings for a popular asthma and allergy drug after the FDA links the medicine to mental health issues.

The FDA issued a black box warning for Singulair,or the generic form called montelukast sodium, after studying the serious side effects for more than 12 years.

The FDA has received 14,485 reports from patients experience side effects. More than 10,000 of those are considered serious.

Many of those reports are occurring in young children and teenagers. The FDA said the warning is necessary because "we continue to receive reports of serious neuropsychiatric events with montelukast."

There continue to be reports of serious mental health side effects from people taking this medicine, including dozens of suicides.

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Most of the time doctors and pharmacists get these warnings, but it's important that parents know about them too. According to the FDA, this is what patients should know:

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Merck, the maker of Singulair, sent us a statement:

"At Merck, we are committed to working with regulators, including the US Food & Drug Administration (FDA), to label our products appropriately, enabling physicians to make informed decisions about the products they prescribe.

We remain confident in the efficacy and safety of SINGULAIR (montelukast sodium), a medicine that has been prescribed to tens of millions of indicated patients with asthma and allergic rhinitis since its approval more than 20 years ago. We will work with the FDA to update the labeling for SINGULAIR. Today Merck supplies only a small portion of the overall market.

If patients have questions regarding the use of montelukast they should consult their physician."

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Unofficial list of event cancellations in the Hat – Medicine Hat News

By Medicine Hat News on March 14, 2020.

The Alberta government has asked that all gatherings of 250 people or more be suspended until further notice in an effort to slow the potential spread of COVID-19.

This recommendation affects numerous events in Medicine Hat area, including smaller events which organizers are employing extra caution for.

This list is current as of 5 p.m. on Friday, but please check with organizers of your particular event for further information.

Western Hockey League All games suspended until further notice, including at the Canalta Centre in Medicine Hat. Upcoming games included

Canalta Centre All WHL games until further notice. Fridays Brad Paisley concert, postponed, details on potential rescheduling to follow, Roseanne Barr (May 1), Baby Shark Live! (June 23)

Esplanade Canada Ballet Jorgens Anne of Green Gables the Ballet (Friday), refunds available

Medicine Hat College Journey Towards Healing and Reconciliation Conference (March 23-27) and regional science fair (March 21) have been postponed indefinitely

The Hat Grannies for Alberta Fabric, Yarn and More Sale on Saturday, has been postponed until further notice.

All Raising the Curtain events have been postponed.

Saturdays Polar Plunge in support of Special Olympics Alberta has been cancelled.

The annual Stars of the Festival concert during the Rotary Music Festival has been cancelled. A winner of Fridays Rose Bowl will be published in Mondays News.

The annual Cabane A Scure was slated to run March 21 at Crescent Heights High School. The event has been cancelled, with full refunds being offered on tickets.

The Pecha Kucha event planned for the upcoming Friday has been cancelled. Event staff will work with speakers to get them in at different events.

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Dubious Old Pharmaceutical Posters That Will Make You Appreciate Modern Medicine – Observer

Promotional material for a dicey hemorrhoid cure. Found Image Holdings/Getty Images

As the coronavirus bears down on Americans, its become increasingly clear that the heath care systems we have in place and the infrastructures that tenuously hold society together are not, shall we say, quite completely equipped to handle the onslaught of whats to come. Coronavirus testing is inexplicably difficult to access and still exorbitantly expensive, people whove tested positive with the virus are still traveling, and the elderly have proven to be extremely vulnerable to the illness in and of itself, due to the severe respiratory aspects of the disease.

All of this is to say: if you can detect a particularly high-pitched note of anxiety in the world around you today, its not just you. With this in mind, Observer took a peek back through the archives to find some of the most absurd, far-fetched and downright strange medicine advertisements of years (and centuries) past.

Its one thing to be dealing with a pandemic with 21st century resources, and quite another to contemplate how something like the coronavirus might have gone down smack dab in the middle of the Roaring 20s. Everyone probably would have been so booze-addled back then, they wouldnt have even noticed particularly high fevers or severe coughing.

Advertisement for Bravais iron tonic used to cure paleness, consumption, poorness of blood, etc. Universal History Archive/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Man Sitting at Poker Table, Tarrants Seltzer Aperient, Trade Card, circa 1900. Universal History Archive/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Vintage illustration of an ad for placebo pills to be used in barbiturates-withdrawal therapy, 1950s. Found Image Press/Corbis via Getty Images

Victorian advertisement for Rubifoam liquid dentifrice. 1897. swim ink 2/Corbis via Getty Images

Ayers Cherry Pectoral Advertisement. Getty Images

Advertisment for Harris Flu-Nips, which features the phrase Keep Out the Damp. Buyenlarge/Getty Images

A Victorian trade card advertises Ayers Cathartic Pills, safe, pleasant, and reliable. Buyenlarge/Getty Images

This 1880 ad is maybe the creepiest thing weve ever seen. Transcendental Graphics/Getty Images

As you can see, old advertisements for medicine were essentially just advertisements for dressed-up snake oil. A particular favorite is the ad for Harris Flu Nips, which bears an eerily prescient slogan: Prevention is Better Than Cure. Thats something a company says when they definitely dont have the cure.

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Dubious Old Pharmaceutical Posters That Will Make You Appreciate Modern Medicine - Observer

Medicine taken by millions could increase the risk of catching coronavirus, scientists warn – The Sun

MEDICINE taken by millions of people could increase the risk of catching coronavirus, scientists have warned.

Certain blood pressure drugs have the potential to change the shape of a person's cells and make it easier for the bug to infect them.

The pills - called angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor drugs (ACE) and angiotensin receptor blockers (ARB)- are used to treat diabetes or high blood pressure.

Figures show the most common in England are Ramipril, Losartan, Lisinopril and Candesartan, and were prescribed almost 65 million times last year.

According to a paper published in the British medical journal The Lancet Respiratory Medicine, the new coronavirus - named Covid-19, can latch itself onto human cells and infect them.

This could cause more severe illness, according to the scientists from University Hospital Basel, in Switzerland, and the University of Thessaloniki in Greece.

However the researchers have cautioned that their findings don't prove a link between the drugs and severe cases of the disease, so further studies are needed.

And a doctor has strongly advised anyone on heart medications not to stop or change these without discussion with their doctor.

The article claims that Covid-19 can latch onto something inside the body's cells known as angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2).

Some people with high blood pressure or diabetes have to take medication to increase the amount of ACE2 in their cells to control their conditions.

The research was carried out by looking at other studies of coronavirus patients with severe forms of the illness.

They found that the most common illnesses were high blood pressure (23.7 per cent), diabetes (16.2 per cent) and heart disease (5.8 per cent).

The team then studied how Covid-19 and its nearest cousin, SARS, attach to cells inside the body.

They theorised that blood pressure drugs could make this process easier for these viruses.

Dr Roth's team also suggested thatpeople with diabetes and high blood pressure might be more at risk because of changes in their genes which make them produce more ACE2 naturally.

They wrote: "We suggest that patients with cardiac diseases, hypertension [high blood pressure], or diabetes, who are treated with ACE2-increasing drugs, are at higher risk for severe COVID-19 infection and, therefore, should be monitored."

Dr Michael Roth, from the University of Basel, who led the research, said:"These data suggest that ACE2 expression is increased in diabetes and treatment with ACE inhibitors and ARBs increases ACE2 expression.

We hypothesise that diabetes and high blood pressure treatment with ACE2-stimulating drugs increases the risk of developing severe and fatal Covid-19

"Consequently, the increased expression of ACE2 would facilitate infection with COVID-19.

"We therefore hypothesise that diabetes and hypertension [high blood pressure] treatment with ACE2-stimulating drugs increases the risk of developing severe and fatal Covid-19.

"If this hypothesis were to be confirmed, it could lead to a conflict regarding treatment."

But doctors have warned that the findings were not proof of a link between the drugs and patients should continue taking their medication.

He told MailOnline: "This letter does not report the results of a study; it simply raises a possible question about whether a type of blood pressure and heart disease medication called ACE inhibitors might increase the chances of severe Covid-19 infections.

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"I strongly advise anyone on heart medications not to stop or change these without discussion with their doctor."

He added that stopping medication and requiring hospital treatment could add further strain to the NHS.

Dr Dipender Gill, who works at Imperial College NHS Trust in London added: "Evidence is currently lacking and it is too early to make robust conclusions on any link between use of ACE inhibitors and angiotensin II type-I receptor blockers with risk or severity of novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infection."

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Drive-Through Coronavirus Tests For UW Medicine Workers : Shots – Health News – NPR

Nurse Jeff Gates prepares to assess another patient in UW Medicine's drive-through coronavirus testing clinic in Seattle. Jon Hamilton/NPR hide caption

Nurse Jeff Gates prepares to assess another patient in UW Medicine's drive-through coronavirus testing clinic in Seattle.

Employees of the University of Washington's UW Medicine system can now get tested for coronavirus without leaving their cars.

The system's medical center in northwest Seattle has turned a hospital garage lot into a drive-through clinic that can test a person every five minutes. They typically get results within a day or so.

But the idea involves more than convenience. It's also about safety.

"Because of the way this virus could be spread, we want to make sure there's good ventilation," says Dr. Seth Cohen, who runs the infectious disease clinic at UW Medical Center Northwest.

Coronavirus has already caused at least 17 deaths in the Seattle area and infected at least 83 people.

So staff have placed three medical tents on the first floor of the center's multilevel garage, which is not enclosed. Signs and orange cones funnel vehicles to the testing site.

On the clinic's first morning of operation, a cold breeze was blowing through the structure. Cohen described it as "excellent airflow that you can feel."

When workers first drive in, they're greeted by Jan Nakahara, a nurse who usually works at the University's Hall Health Center.

"I'm going to have you pull up," she tells the driver. "Don't get out of your car."

These three tents in a parking garage at UW Medical Center Northwest make up a drive-through coronavirus testing clinic for symptomatic employees. Jon Hamilton/NPR hide caption

These three tents in a parking garage at UW Medical Center Northwest make up a drive-through coronavirus testing clinic for symptomatic employees.

For now, the drive-through clinic is limited to health care workers in the university's health care system. And they need to have a fever, dry cough, or other symptoms of COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus.

"If they had symptoms, they would go and fill out a survey online," Nakahara says. "And then if the screeners thought it sounded like it was a possibility of coronavirus, then they were given an appointment today."

The next stop at the testing clinic is in front of the three white medical tents.

Jeff Gates, a nurse at the medical center, approaches each car. Like Nakahara, he's in full personal protective gear, including a clear plastic face mask.

"Hello, my name is Jeff," he tells the driver. "We're going to be doing your swabs today."

Gates prepares to take two swabs through the open window, one from each nostril.

"I'm going to have you lean your head back just a little bit, try not to move on me," Gates says and inserts the first swab. "Sorry, I know that's uncomfortable."

Gates takes the samples he's collected and seals them in plastic tubes. They'll be processed by a lab a few miles away.

"We're going to be testing for both influenza A and B, RSV, as well as COVID-19," Gates tells the driver. "We'll get results back as soon as possible."

"Thank you," he adds. "I hope you feel better soon."

Then it's time for Gates to put on fresh protective gear and get ready for the next arrival.

"It's been going great," he says. "Very smooth. We've had probably seven people come through this morning."

The traffic here is expected to increase dramatically in the next few days.

For now, the clinic will continue to focus on health care workers because they will be essential if the coronavirus continues to spread in the Seattle area.

"We want to make sure that if our staff test negative we get them back to work as soon as we can," Cohen says. "But if they test positive we want to keep them out of the workforce to make sure they're not going on to infect other staff or patients."

The medical center plans to extend in-car testing to first responders who may have been exposed.

The university also expects to work with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to provide coronavirus testing kits that patients can use at home.

Home testing would be "fantastic," Cohen says.

But home kits rely on swabs that don't go nearly as far into the nasal passages as the ones testing clinics use. So scientists still need to verify that the home kits won't miss any infections, Cohen says.

As results from wider testing come in, Cohen says, the information should help public health officials assess the current outbreak.

"It will definitely give us a clue as to whether COVID has other epicenters within Seattle, including other institutions," he says.

So far, the drive-through tests have found lots of flu and a few cases of coronavirus, Cohen says.

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Drive-Through Coronavirus Tests For UW Medicine Workers : Shots - Health News - NPR

Hat’s Villeneuve named to Alberta’s wheelchair basketball team – Medicine Hat News

By Medicine Hat News on March 14, 2020.

Sam Villeneuve may not wind up playing a game for them this season, but at least he can say hes on the provincial wheelchair basketball team.

The 20-year-old from Medicine Hat was named to the team after a training camp last month, making him the first player to graduate from the local adaptive sport team to the Alberta side.

The only games I played was three years ago when we went up to Lethbridge to play a game, then Lethbridges team came down to Medicine Hat, said Villeneuve earlier this month, long before the global pandemic threw every sports future off track. Ive never played on many teams.

It feels good. Yes (I was surprised).

Villeneuve has disabilities such that he speaks slowly and cant easily catch a basketball. But the second-year engineering student at the University of Alberta proved at the training camp his skill set is more than valuable. He said out of two dozen players who attended, only 10 made the team.

In wheelchair basketball, players are classified with a point value between 1.0 and 4.5 based on their level of disability. The lower the number, the greater the disability. A team can only have a total of 14 points worth of players on the court at one time.

Villeneuve says hes a 1.5.

Im able to roll but I cant catch really well, he said. The pass has to be direct, right at me.

It hasnt stopped him. He tried wheelchair rugby after moving north for school, but it took an hour and a half on the bus to get to the practices.

So he found the Northern Lights club team, which holds practices right at the university campus in Edmonton.

I called them, about two and a half months ago, they told me to come out to a practice.

The provincial team was to practice in Red Deer next weekend, but thats unsurprisingly cancelled. So, too is the junior western regionals that were planned for Kamloops April 24-26.

But Villeneuve can still look longer-term in the sport.

Team Alberta, Im not really sure, but if I keep playing and training I could one day go to the Paralympics, he said.

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Air Canada jets out of the Hat – Medicine Hat News

By GILLIAN SLADE on March 12, 2020.

gslade@medicinehatnews.com

Air Canadas flights in and out of Medicine Hat will stop indefinitely on April 1.

Jeff Huntus, Medicine Hat Regional Airport manager says Air Canada has been operating out of the local airport since before 1998 through various contracted carriers.

Its not good news but its the reality of the airline business, said Huntus. I think there were some problems with load factors. It wasnt a well performing route for them and with the coronavirus affecting air travel I think advance bookings just fell dramatically.

Air Canada did not respond to a request for an interview Wednesday.

In May 2019, Air Canada reduced the number of flights between Medicine Hat and Calgary from six a day in 18-seater aircraft to just two a day in larger aircraft with 50 seats, the Dash 8-300.

At the time a spokesperson for Air Canada said its regional flights would be operated exclusively by Jazz Aviation LP as part of our new agreement with Jazzs parent company Chorus and the former smaller aircraft were being phased out.

While not getting into specific numbers Huntus said there has been a noticeable drop in airport traffic since coronavirus. That is not unique to Medicine Hat and Huntus does not believe Air Canadas decision was made based solely on COVID-19.

They have challenges in a number of locations, said Huntus.

For now, WestJet is not making any changes to its schedule in Medicine Hat, a WestJet spokesperson said in an emailed statement.

WestJet has acknowledged the impact of COVID-19 on the airline industry and this week said it would be undertaking immediate cost reduction initiatives, including a freeze on discretionary spending and offering voluntary-leave options.

Last spring, Huntus said the larger aircraft that Air Canada was switching to is faster, reducing flights to Calgary by 10 or 15 minutes. He said any talk in the community about how often flights were cancelled had more to do with the number of people flying out of the airport. There were also the inevitable cancellations due to weather which is beyond the control of airlines.

Huntus had previously said he hoped that Air Canadas decision to switch to larger aircraft, in addition to WestJet flights, would give more options to passengers and could reduce fares.

Huntus acknowledges that competition is good for consumers, but notes Medicine Hat Regional Airport still has a very good air service to Calgary with WestJet.

In a press release, the Medicine Hat and District Chamber of Commerce also commented on WestJet continuing its service.

We hope that both business and leisure travellers will support this services so we can have continued air service from Medicine Hat in the future, said Chamber president Tracy Noulett.

Noulett noted businesses would like to see more options to accommodate daytime business travel, flights to Edmonton and lower fares.

Once the dust settles well ramp up our air service action program again and try and find new operators for the market, said Huntus. If the numbers are right, theres no reason they (Air Canada) wouldnt come back.

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DCH, Family Medicine Clinics offer tips to stop spread of virus – theperrynews.com

The Dallas County Hospital and Family Medicine Clinics implemented a visitor-restriction policy Wednesday, and they have received many questions surrounding the COVID-19 precautions and protocol have been asked over the past 24 hours, according to a statement released Thursday.

The DCH has issued the following tips and guidelines to assist the community during this time.

How to prevent illness:

Clean your hands often with soap and water for 20 seconds. If soap is not available, use a hand sanitizer containing at least 60% alcohol. Avoid touching your eyes, nose and mouth with unwashed hands. Avoid close contact with people who are ill and distance yourself with other people in the community. This is important for people who are at a higher risk of getting sick. Stay home if youre sick, except to seek medical care. Cover coughs and sneezes If you ARE sick you should be wearing a face mask when you are around other people. Clean and disinfect frequently touched surfaces daily.

What to do if you are sick?

Stay home except to seek medical care and avoid public places or transportation. Call ahead before visiting your provider to make an appointment If you believe you may have contracted COVID-19, please notify your healthcare provider at the time of your call. This will help the healthcare team take the next steps to keep others from being potentially exposed. Call Dallas County Hospital and Family Medicine Clinics or your family provider with any questions on symptoms, travel, or more information on how to care for a person who is sick and has traveled.

For more information or updates on COVID-19, please visit the website of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

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Here’s How the Married to Medicine Doctors Are Reacting to the Coronavirus Outbreak – Bravo

The Married to Medicine doctors and their significant others have been sharing their thoughts and how they are responding to COVID-19, more commonly known as coronavirus, on social media.

Amid concerns and uncertainty over the coronavirus outbreak, Dr. Heavenly Kimes' husband, Dr. Damon Kimes, provided some words of wisdom and comfort on his wife's Instagram.

Dr. Heavenly shared a video of her husband, who is an emergency medicine physician, giving some guidance on how to cope during this difficult time. "I really feel like this is an opportunity to slow down for a second and think about what's really important: our families, our loved ones. For those of us that are physicians, we're obviously thinking about our patients," Dr. Damon said. "This has sort of gripped our country with fear, anxiety, worry. I don't think we have to worry. I think we need to be vigilant. I think we need to do the things that would prevent us from getting illnesses in general, including coronavirus."

Dr. Damon also gave fans "a word of encouragement," sharing his belief that a treatment for coronavirus will be discovered eventually. "I think, in the meantime, we need to do things like, just simple things: Wash your hands. Stay away from crowds. This is probably not a time for travel," he said. "I think we need to try to stay home as much as we can and allow this disease process to run its course and go away, but we can help that."

He also said that he believes prayer can be "powerful." "We can pray about this, we can do the things that we probably should have been doing before, such as spending time with our families. I know even for me, I've been sometimes too busy and working and focusing on other things. But what this has done for me is allow me a chance to just stop and think, think about what's really important," he shared. "If there's somebody out there that you love, tell them you love them, tell them they're important. Not being able to go and do everything that you want to do makes you realize just how important all of that is."

Dr. Damon ended the video by sharing that everyone should be extra vigilant about their health during this time especially those who are over the age of 60 and those already living with medical conditions.

Mariah Huq, whose husband, Dr. Aydin Huq, is an ER doctor, revealed on Instagram that she has asked him to take off his worn scrubs and place them in a hamper in the back of the car before entering the house. "When you're#MarriedtoMedicinein REAL life during an outbreak and your spouse works Frontline in the Emergency Room you have to create Quarantine zones to protect your kids!#NoScrubsin the house!" Mariah captioned a photo of herself showing off the trunk of her car while wearing a face mask. "Sending prayers to all Healthcare workers during this mess! Stay Well."

Dr. Contessa Metcalfe also recently shared a video on Instagram in which she and her husband, Dr. Scott Metcalfe, disagreed on how one should go about their lives amid the coronavirus outbreak.

The World Health Organization (WHO)recommends washing your hands frequently, practicing social distancing, avoiding touching your eyes, mouth, and nose, practicing respiratory hygiene, seeking medical care early if you have a fever, cough, and difficulty breathing, and staying informed and following advice given by your healthcare provider.

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City Notebook: Difficult to avoid people when we need each other – Medicine Hat News

By COLLIN GALLANT on March 14, 2020.

cgallant@medicinehatnews.com

Were all in this together, but also alone. Its an interesting concept and, while maybe not the most immediate concern of a health scare thats gripping local communities in our hyper-connected world, the social aspects of stemming the spread of the coronavirus are undeniable.

Avoid handshakes, limit visits and unnecessary travel.

Self-isolate for 14 days is recommended. If its possible, working remotely at home could slow the spread and help the health system avoid what could be an overwhelming wave of cases.

The course of action has major implications for businesses and society in general, but also in how we interact with each other.

If it continues for any great length, its easy to see the measures as isolating, if not alienating.

A crisis like a flood involves a call to physical action. This could easily be misconstrued as a call to do nothing.

And how are we to bolster community spirit when there is little opportunity for that community to gather. Can we come together when the key is maintaining a separation?

The head of the City of Calgarys emergency management department Tom Sampson provided food for thought on Friday.

Were using the wrong terminology, he said in a social media post. Were talking about social distance when really this is a time when we need to be as close to our friends, our families as we possibly can be.

So, lets use physical distance, meaning stay close with your friends, but not physically close.

In a busy world, weve already lost much opportunity to gather and interact. We lament life that has become for many a treadmill of driving to and from work, shopping and home.

As the world has gotten smaller, through technology and travel, so too it seems have our close social spheres.

The online universe has brought shopping, new movies and even fast food to our homes at relatively little effort.

The current course of action could easily reinforce it.

But perhaps well arrive at the other side of this knowing the full value of a handshake, a pat on the back, a kiss on the cheek of an elderly relative, an elbow in the ribs after a wise crack.

Perhaps well rediscover the art of conversation, how to make our own fun, how to be productive, self-disciplined, and how to support those around us.

Perhaps. I hope so.

Hotel

Encouraging news broken by the News this week is that the final design of the Iron River hotel project is now before city planners ahead of a final council decision

The developer headed by downtown rejuvenation booster Aaron Burghardt says theres still a lot of work to work to do, but plans are progressing

The design is by FWBA Architects, whose stylish Second Street office was a Burghardt project. Another feather in the cap of the firm is that theyre also working of the new public works building for the County of Forty Mile in Foremost.

A look ahead

The Intermunicipal Collaboration framework hammered out by Medicine Hat, Redcliff, and Cypress County will be unveiled at the citys council meeting on Monday. Another key matter is a final vote on the Tri-Area Intermunicipal Development plan that all three parties must pass, respectively.

100 years ago

A proposal to build rail service between Medicine Hat and Leader, Sask., was unveiled by Canadian Pacific officials, the News reported this week in 1920.

It was stated the 80-mile line could go ahead while the proposed Hat-to-Hanna line of the Canadian Northern Railway system was in doubt.

A forum calling for proportional representation and an end to the first-past-the-post electoral system would be held in Medicine Hat.

Following the opening of new Centre Block of Parliament buildings in February, built after a devastating fire four years earlier, the total construction cost was revealed to be $6.95 million.

Jas. Armstrong, the incumbent reeve of the M.D. of Excelsior was defeated in a by-election, officials in Dunmore reported. Three successful council candidates were Jas. Frinch, of Gros Ventre, Ole Jensen, of Roseberg, and J. Sallows, of Coleridge.

New federal Liberal Leader W.L. MacKenzie Kings call for an early election was defeated by Union government members.

A date for a gopher-killing day would be set by the newly formed local branch of the United Farmers of Alberta.

Collin Gallant covers city politics and a variety of topics for the News. Reach him at 403-528-5664 or via email at cgallant@medicinehatnews.com

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Fort Collins medical group: Call before visiting clinics if you have respiratory symptoms – Coloradoan

After touring the Colorado State University Infectious Disease Research Lab, Sen. Michael Bennet estimates coronavirus vaccine is 18 months out Fort Collins Coloradoan

Associates in Family Medicine is asking all patients with respiratory symptoms or fevers of unknown origin to stay away from its clinics to prevent the spread of the new coronavirus.

Instead, they should call ahead to their doctor's office.

Joseph Prows, a doctor on the Northern Colorado medical group's COVID-19 response team, told the Coloradoanthe company is operating under the assumption that "anyone who is sick (with respiratory illness), until proven otherwise (not to be COVID-19), needs to isolate" due to providers' limited ability to test for the disease as well as vulnerability of high-risk patients.

Larimer County's first presumptive positive case of coronavirus was confirmed Monday a woman in her 50s who has been diagnosed with pneumonia, one of the more serious complications of the disease.

This content is being provided for free as a public service to our readers during the coronavirus outbreak.Please support local journalism by subscribing to the Coloradoan.

Larimer County Department of Health and Environment spokesperson Katie O'Donnell told the Coloradoan that county health officials do not expect a dramatic uptick in cases.

"Our (coronavirus) risk is really, really low here," she said. "It's cold and flu season, so we're seeing a lot ofnot COVID-19 coronavirus just colds and flu."

O'Donnell echoed Prows' advice to stay home if you're sick to prevent spreading any respiratory illnesses not just COVID-19.

"If you're symptomatic at all, you shouldn't be out and about," she said.

The health department is not handling tests for the new coronavirus, she added. All tests are sent directly to the state, which currently has the capacity to run 160 tests per day. Test results can take up to 48 hours.

Prows hopes offices like his will be able to test for the virus in coming weeks, and Associates in Family Medicine's response will evolve "day by day," he said.

Associates in Family Medicine operates nine medical offices with more than 50 providers in Fort Collins, Loveland and Windsor.

Signs will be posted at all Associates in Family Medicine offices reminding patients with those symptoms not to enter the office and directing them to call ahead.The company is working to set up a dedicated phone line for those calls, Prows said. Until that is established, patients should call their regular doctor's office phone number before coming in.

The company is also rolling out the ability to do telemedicine visits by phone or by video conferencing as early as Tuesday, Prows said.

"We must slow this down," he said. "We have finite resources."

Insurance and coronavirus: Governor instructs Colorado insurance companies to waive fees for coronavirus testing

Symptoms of COVID-19 can range from mild to severe; the virus can also be asymptomatic, meaningsome people don't have any symptoms at all.

Themost common symptomsmirror the fluand include fever,tiredness and dry cough. Some people also develop aches and pains, nasal congestion, runny nose, sore throat or diarrhea.

About 1 in 6 people becomes seriously ill and develops difficulty breathing, according to the World Health Organization.If you experience fever, cough and shortness of breath,call yourdoctor.

If you'vetraveled from an area with local spread of COVID-19in the last twoweeks, and have not been in contact with Larimer County Department of Health and Environment, notify the department by calling970-498-6775 between 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday.

During other hours, leave a message (including your contact information) at970-498-6792or complete the department's online form, which is available at http://www.larimer.org/health/communicable-disease/coronavirus-covid-19.

More: Map: Where in Colorado has coronavirus been detected?

Sarah Kyle is a content coach at the Coloradoan. Contact her at sarahkyle@coloradoan.com.Support her work and that of other Coloradoan journalists by purchasing a digital subscription today.

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Health care at brink of collapse in Idlib as hospitals lack medicine to save lives as coronavirus fears loom large, warns Islamic Relief – Syrian Arab…

Hospitals in Idlib are overwhelmed, under-resourced and lacking in essential life-saving equipment and medicines to treat even basic illnesses such as flu and diarrhoea, warns Islamic Relief as the crisis in Syria enters its tenth year.

The conditions are so awful that aid workers from Islamic Relief fear that mass homelessness, chronic illnesses such as heart disease and diabetes as well as infections such as pneumonia combined with conflict related trauma injuries will bring the health system to its knees.

To make matters worse, fears are growing that the shattered health system would not be able to cope with a possible outbreak of the coronavirus and that hundreds of thousands of displaced people would be especially vulnerable to the disease.

Ahmed Mahmoud* Islamic Reliefs Syria Country Director, said: The situation in Idlib is dire, people are exhausted, hungry and afraid. The health system has been shattered by the violence and mass displacement and it is already struggling to cope. Were very concerned that if the coronavirus reaches Idlib this humanitarian catastrophe will only get worse.

There are already mass shortages of beds, ventilators, medicine and proper equipment. Peoples immune systems have been systematically worn down by the violence and years of malnutrition and poverty. With so many people crowded into squalid and unhygienic camps the conditions are rife for an outbreak that we simply do not have the resources to handle.

Eyewitness accounts from Islamic Relief aid workers, and supported doctors and nurses in Idlib paint a grim picture of the humanitarian suffering following intense and indiscriminate fighting that began in early December. Since then up to 1 million people have fled their homes, tens of thousands more endure miserable conditions out in the open and at least 500 civilians have been killed.

While the ceasefire in hostilities announced by Turkey and Russia in early March has brought a short-term reprieve for the millions of civilians caught in the Idlib conflict, Islamic Relief fears it wont ease the humanitarian situation for the people on the ground hundreds of thousands of whom are unable to return and are now trapped in a tiny parcel of land close to the Turkey border.

Islamic Relief has been told by its staff and partner agencies on the ground:

In one harrowing case, Mohammad, a male nurse working at an Islamic Relief hospital in Idlib said he was unaware that he was treating his own dying brother due to his injuries.

The ugliest thing I have ever experienced, is when a badly-injured patient came in and because of the airstrike his face was covered in dust and smoke. Only when I started providing first aid, did I realise it was my brother. I tried to remain calm and be professional to help him but shortly after he died. I was numb I didnt know what to do, where to go, he said in a video testimony filmed by Islamic Relief.

Then a woman started screaming for Gods sake please help us and I told myself I will have to mourn my brother later.

Ahmed Mahmoud,* Islamic Reliefs Syria Country Director said: The civilian population in Idlib as well as medical and aid workers have been systematically terrorised and have found themselves pummelled constantly since December.

The recent ceasefire cannot reverse the critical damage done over the last nine years it just risks sweeping the crisis under the carpet and allowing people to forget about Syria once again, even though the needs are huge and growing.

Were seeing women and children waiting outside in the cold outside hospitals as people struggle to cope. In some places patient numbers have tripled in a month. The system has been brought to the very brink of collapse.

Dr Ishan, a cardiologist working at a major hospital in Idlib supported by Islamic Relief, said that the recent attacks have made many people too scared to access medical care.

The hospital has been attacked several times. Earlier this month, several bombs exploded about 30 metres from the hospital, which broke the windows and doors. I believe the hospital was targeted as the bombs exploded so close to the hospital and in quick succession. Some patients with acute coronary syndrome were too scared to come to hospitals as they are being targeted.

Islamic Relief is one of the biggest providers of medical assistance in Idlib, offering support to 80 health facilities, paying the salaries of more than 150 medical staff and operating four Emergency Mobile Health Units, a fleet of trucks that have been converted to surgical operating rooms that are in high demand whenever bombs start to fly.

But the support is simply not enough, and Dr Ishan warns that more people will die needlessly unless the situation changes. We get lots of heads injuries, but we dont have a CT scan or a neurological surgeon. As a cardiologist its hard as a lot of the cardiovascular equipment that I need is not available. We urgently need more assistance the system is under unimaginable strain.

Even infections such as pneumonia, flu and diarrhoea deadly for the very young and old where living conditions are dire often go untreated because of a lack of essential medicine.

Recently a father came in with his young daughter who was suffering from hypothermia, but it was too late to save her, and she died. Living out in cold camps is killing people. I cant even begin to describe how I felt when the girl died, said Dr Ishan.

Mahmoud said: In nine years, weve never seen this many displaced in so little time and the consequences of this are going to be felt for years to come. Families are now living in a rocky mountain area and ramshackle camps that are not fit for people. They are attaching plastic sheets to two rocks for shelter. Some are still sleeping in the open. They have nowhere to return to. Theyre exhausted, scared and hungry and feel the world has abandoned them.

There are so many illnesses that could have been avoided but people cant afford food, let alone antibiotics. Our staff are seeing a big increase in the number of patients with diabetes who have had their limbs amputated. They dont feel their wounds and they heal a lot slower or get infected and then have to be amputated.

The makeshift camps are filled with a truly alarming number of widows and children. They are grieving and emotionally exhausted by everything thats happened. People are telling us on a daily basis that they cannot take any more that all that is left is to wait for death.

While Islamic Relief has long tried to provide mental health and psychosocial support, the devastation has forced operations to shift to provision of basic supplies such as food, water and shelter. In the current wave of displacement we have provided food to more than 220,000 people and tents and blankets, mattresses and plastic sheets to more than 10,000 people, but much more needs to be done. Last year, we reached more than two million people in the north-west although our teams forecast the needs will be even larger in 2020.

Once dignified people, theyre fleeing for their lives, elderly men describe having to crawling on their hands and knees in the mud to make it to safety and leaving all they have ever known behind in fear. This is not living this is a mass stay of execution for millions of people.

What the people of Idlib need most is a permanent and enduring end to the war as well as access to sustained humanitarian assistance including food, water, shelter, medical care and education for the children.

Islamic Relief is calling on the international community to:

ENDS

Islamic Relief has worked in Syria since the onset of the crisis and in 2019 was a lifeline for over 2.3 million vulnerable people in the country. Spending more than 30 million on humanitarian programming in the country, our assistance includes:

Video footage and photos are available at the following links.

Syria Material 1: https://www.irdigital.org/?c=17324&k=eb1fddfd6aPassword: syria1interviews

Syria Material 2: https://www.irdigital.org/?c=17327&k=e7681b2ea2Password: syria2footage

Syria Material 3: https://www.irdigital.org/?c=17326&k=712f22d76cPassword: syria3photos

For more information and interviews inside Syria, please contact:

Louise Orton, louise.orton@islamic-relief.org.uk or call +44 7939 141 764

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Health care at brink of collapse in Idlib as hospitals lack medicine to save lives as coronavirus fears loom large, warns Islamic Relief - Syrian Arab...

U of A Professor to Lecture on ‘Bad Medicine’ in Modern Times – University of Arkansas Newswire

Artwork by Courtesy moma.org.

The display of hysterical paroxysms was one symptom that doctors used to diagnose hysteria. Once a common female malady, hysteria is no longer recognized as a medical disorder.

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. Tricia Starks, a professor of history in the J. William Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences, will explore how medical abuse or bad medicine has persisted and flourished in the modern era. She will give a lecture at 5:15 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 5, in the Gearhart Hall Auditorium, room 26. Bad Medicine will be the first of four lectures offered in February that preview Fall 2020 Honors College Signature Seminars.

The concept of bad medicine summons up visions of medieval bleedings, blisterings, cauterizations and other practices where doctors failed to follow the Hippocratic dictum to first do no harm. But medical abuse has persisted and flourished in the modern era, from the overprescription of opioids to unequal treatment based on race and gender.

In the past hundred years weve seen a triumph in public health weve come a long way, Starks said. But there have also been times when medicine goes bad.

Honors College Fellow Susan Tucker, a biology and French double major who plans to go into medicine, took the Bad Medicine seminar when it was first offered in 2018.

I thought it would be important to know mistakes that physicians have made in the past, so I could be a better physician in the future, Tucker said. Ive already used what Ive learned in my experience shadowing doctors.

Starks believes her class will help those who attend become better doctors.

We know there are great disparities in treatment today for people of different ethnicities, for women experiencing pain or heart disease, she said. Some of these differences come from inherent biases within medical training. Hopefully my students, as they have this exposure, will understand where these biases come from and will be able to move forward and be better practitioners.

Starks points to the sensational 1936 trial when socialite Anne Cooper Hewitt sued her mother for having her sterilized at age 20, without her consent.

She was taken in for stomach pain, and thought shed got an appendectomy, but instead she was sterilized, Starks said. Her mother had made the case that she was an imbecile because she was a little too flirtatious with men. The woman could read and write in three different languages. She was an international traveler and she was incredibly well spoken, but her entire reproductive life was taken away from her by her mother as a way to secure her fortune.

African Americans have also experienced a kind of medical apartheid since the antebellum era. The infamous Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment (1932-1972), which followed the progression of untreated syphilis in African American sharecroppers in Alabama under the guise of receiving free health care from the U.S. government.

More recently, connections have been drawn between high-profile philanthropy and high-profit OxyContin, which has ushered in an epidemic of opioid addiction and deaths by overdose.

Tricia Starks joined the history department at the University of Arkansas in 2000 and has taught courses in the history of medicine, world history, Russian and Soviet history, and gender history. Starks is a member of the University of Arkansas Teaching Academy and has been named a Master Teacher in Fulbright College and a Student Alumni Board Teacher of the Year. Starkss primary area of expertise is the history of medicine in Russia and the Soviet Union. She is author ofThe Body Soviet: Propaganda, Hygiene, and the Revolutionary State(University of Wisconsin Press, 2008) andSmoking under the Tsars: A History of Tobacco in Imperial Russia.(Cornell University Press, 2018). She is currently completing a manuscript on tobacco use in the Soviet period.

Starks Bad Medicine is one of four Honors College Signature Seminars scheduled for fall 2020. Other topics will include:

Deans of each college may nominate professors to participate in this program, and those who are selected to teach will become Deans Fellows in the Honors College. The Honors College brings in leading scholars from other institutions to teach some of these courses, as well. For example, Elizabeth Hellmuth Margulis, professor of music at Princeton University, will lead a fifth Signature Seminar, Brain and Music, during the August 2020 intersession.

Honors students must apply to participate, and those selected will be designated Deans Signature Scholars. The course application is posted online on the Signature Seminars web page. The deadline to apply is 11:59 p.m. Friday, April 3.

About the Honors College:The University of Arkansas Honors College was established in 2002 and unites the universitys top undergraduate students and professors in a learning environment characterized by discovery, creativity and service. Each year the Honors College awards up to 90 freshman fellowships that provide $72,000 over four years, and more than $1 million in undergraduate research and study abroad grants. The Honors College is nationally recognized for the high caliber of students it admits and graduates. Honors students enjoy small, in-depth classes, and programs are offered in all disciplines, tailored to students academic interests, with interdisciplinary collaborations encouraged. Fifty percent of Honors College graduates have studied abroad and 100 percent of them have engaged in mentored research.

About the University of Arkansas: The University of Arkansas provides an internationally competitive education for undergraduate and graduate students in more than 200 academic programs. The university contributes new knowledge, economic development, basic and applied research, and creative activity while also providing service to academic and professional disciplines. The Carnegie Foundation classifies the University of Arkansas among fewer than 3% of colleges and universities in America that have the highest level of research activity. U.S. News & World Report ranks the University of Arkansas among its top American public research universities. Founded in 1871, the University of Arkansas comprises 10 colleges and schools and maintains a low student-to-faculty ratio that promotes personal attention and close mentoring.

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U of A Professor to Lecture on 'Bad Medicine' in Modern Times - University of Arkansas Newswire

The Benefits of an Address to Call Home for LVHN Street Medicine Patients – LVHN News

Through the combined efforts of Lehigh Valley Health Networks (LVHN) Street Medicine program, LVHNs Courier Services and the United States Postal Service, Street Medicine patients now can receive mail at a specially created address at LVHN.

Mail can now be separated and couriered to the Street Medicine office and distributed by the administrative coordinator at designated clinics. Patients requiring the mail service sign a contract and agree to follow the designated protocol.

Without a home or family support, LVHN Street Medicine patients without a street address cannot receive most government benefits that will help them out of their current situation, says Nani Cuadrado, program director for LVHN Street Medicine. A street address is needed to obtain Medicaid/Medicare, identification, food stamps, social security and veteran benefits, government-issued phones, and to obtain employment. Providing a mailing address to our patients is a win-win opportunity. Our patients get more holistic care, addressing not only their health care needs, but their social barriers as well.

Cuadrado says the LVHN network benefits because patients who were previously uninsured (due to lack of an address) are now insured and the hospital, in turn, receives reimbursements.

Before Street Medicines intervention, 24 percent of the programs patients had Medicaid. By 2017, almost 85 percent of LVHNs patients were enrolled in Medicaid. Those who werent staying in a shelter or had no friends or family support (to use their street address), utilized one of three places in the Lehigh Valley for a street address to receive their benefitsSt. Pauls Church at 8th and Walnut streets in Allentown; the Lehigh County Conference of Churches at 10th and Linden streets; or New Bethany Ministries on 4th St. in Bethlehem. With the sale of St. Pauls Church in June 2018 and the inability to utilize its street address, Medicaid coverage has decreased from 85 percent to 64 percent for LVHN Street Medicine patients.

US Postal Service policy requires that mail addressed to patients at institutions is delivered to the institutional authorities who, in turn, deliver the mail to the addressee under the institution's rules and regulations. Since LVHN Street Medicine, LVHN Courier Services, and the U.S. Postal Service have partnered and instituted this mail service for their patients, we have seen tremendous benefits for ourpatients. Some are receiving food stamps (and had been struggling with food insecurities), some are able toopen a bank account (with identification), some are able to connect with family/friends with a government-issued phone, and some have even transitioned from homeless to being housed with social security income or disability benefits, Cuadrado says. I am so proud that LVHN is helping patients address many of their barriers. A persons overall health is so much more than health care, its about looking at the person as a whole and doing the best we can to assist with other conditions that are affecting their well-being. Something as simple as a mailing address is certainly a great start.

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The Benefits of an Address to Call Home for LVHN Street Medicine Patients - LVHN News

Anti-Aging And Aesthetic Medicine: The Silent Rise Of This Multibillion Dollar Industry – Forbes

Aging is an inevitable phenomenon. Over the last 40 years, there has been an incredible focus on the aesthetics of aging, particularly with an emphasis on cosmetic anti-aging therapies. These efforts have faced their share of controversy, as scientists continue to debunk false advertising and anti-aging therapies that are not backed by evidence-based medicine. Nonetheless, regardless of the controversy, an entire industry and therapeutic cosmos has silently grown around the promise of aesthetic rejuvenation.

The anti-aging market is positioned to reach $271 billion by 2024. Studies report that anti-wrinkle products alone will reach $12.8 billion dollars in market share by 2027. The American Society of Plastic Surgeons also noted the growth in rates of cosmetic surgery procedures from the year 2000 to 2018: breast augmentation procedures increased by 48%, abdominoplasty (tummy tuck) procedures were up by 107%, and most notably, the use of Botox injections increased by an astounding 845%. According to this report, there has been an overall increase by 163% in the number of total cosmetic procedures from the year 2000 to 2018. Indeed, these startling figures not only indicate the immense value of this market, but also point to an industry that shows no signs of slowing down.

Plastic surgeon marking the skin for surgery.

Congruently, healthcare providers and practices have also benefited from this immense growth. An Allegran/BSM Medical Aesthetics Database study found that revenues have steadily increased for medical aesthetic and dermatology practices/clinics across the USA, due in large part to providers offering more varied aesthetic services and hiring staff dedicated solely to this business. Industry growth is likely also due to the fact that the practice of cosmetic medicine, which was once a domain reserved solely for dermatologists and plastic surgeons, is now being practiced by other specialists; in a 2014 survey, it was reported that upto 22% of family physicians are now providing some form of cosmetic and aesthetic medicine in their practices. Thus, this phenomenon is permeating all aspects of the modern healthcare practice.

However, as with any multibillion dollar industry that undergoes dramatic and exponential growth, the rapid rise of the anti-aging market has caused controversy. In 2008, a group of 51 scientists published a groundbreaking scientific report, raising concerns around the lack of scientific and evidence-based medicine behind some anti-aging treatments. More recently, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is similarly attempting to address concerns in this area, warning consumers about sham products and cosmetic myths. Fortunately, there is a growing scientific community that is focused on educating the public about evidence-based anti-aging strategies and techniques, so that consumers are well informed and aware of genuine, scientifically proven therapies.

Variety of skin and body care products.

Ultimately, however, in order to responsibly grow this industry, certain parameters need to be maintained. As with any other medical procedure or pharmaceutical product, regulators and practitioners alike need to be increasingly wary of new or untested products that claim to have anti-aging effects without significant evidence-based backing. The same should be said about the practice of actually administering these products to patients. Anti-aging therapy should be considered a form of medical practice, and as with any form of medicine, it is imperative that governing bodies place strict standards of competency, training, and technical pre-requisites prior to allowing practitioners to administer these therapies on their own accord. These steps will certainly be necessary in the coming decades, as there is no doubt that public demand will continue to fuel this phenomenon. However, maintaining close oversight and a strict emphasis on evidenced-based medicine, is the only way to ensure the safe, sustainable, and patient-centered growth of this robust industry.

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Anti-Aging And Aesthetic Medicine: The Silent Rise Of This Multibillion Dollar Industry - Forbes

Sports Medicine Brand Gsport Owes Their Success to the Quality of Their Products and the Quality of Life They Provide for Employees – Yahoo Finance

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla., Jan. 29, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --Predictions for the Sports Medicine market look increasingly optimistic with sales forecasts over $300 Million in the next five years. While this boom leaves room for competition among existing companies, many brands vying for a place in this rapidly expanding frontier may find product quality is one factor in their long-term market success.

Fueled by predictions that the North American market will take the lead in the coming sports-medicine boom, Chinese company Gsport expands to sell its products in the United States for the first time since the company's inception in 2003. Founded in China's Zhejiang Province, Gsport quickly rose to the top of the sports medicine market because of its unique advantage for quality control. Controlling all aspects of production, from brainstorm to assembly line, conveniently located in one manufacturing facility, gave Gsport the edge over its competition when it came to product quality.

But the real secret to their success might be Gsport's "Human-Oriented" corporate culture. The company's core belief in integrity and treating their workers fairly has paid off by way of productivity and scientific development. Gsport is considered an "industry trendsetter" when it comes to how they treat their employees, with a Worker's Fund available for sick or injured employees. While on the job employees have access to world-class break rooms with fully equipped gymnasium, as well as tennis and basketball courts, and ping-pong tables. For employees who commute in to the Zhejiang facility, often living far from family in more rural areas, Gsport provides a travel fund and vacation time so that workers can travel home.

Happy workers seem to create better products, keeping Gsport in the business of supplying the highest standard of sports medicine products for almost 20 years. The company's most popular products include Cohesive Cold Bandages and Kinesiology Tape, all developed with the highest level of rigorous testing.

Kinesiology tape is a huge factor in the boom in sport's medicine. With athletes from around the world wearing kinesiology tapes while out on the field, more consumers are becoming aware of this safe and effective product.

Gsport's kinesiology tape works by gently lifting the skin to allow for greater blood flow to affected muscles during and after physical activity. More blood and more oxygen reaching muscles means less damage from muscle use. Gsport's kinesiology tape does not stick to hair, making removal easy and painless.

From product quality to quality of life, Gsport's recipe for success has brought them international recognition and an ever-expanding customer base.

Please direct inquiries to:Noel Ramune 954-399-2207233286@email4pr.com

View original content:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/sports-medicine-brand-gsport-owes-their-success-to-the-quality-of-their-products-and-the-quality-of-life-they-provide-for-employees-300994896.html

SOURCE Gsport

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Sports Medicine Brand Gsport Owes Their Success to the Quality of Their Products and the Quality of Life They Provide for Employees - Yahoo Finance

Precision Medicine in Primary Care: Bespoke. Genetic and Genomic. And Maybe Not Ready. – Managed Care magazine

Say precision medicine and people think of personalized cancer treatment. But this innovation has already begun to revolutionize primary care tooeven though the jury is still out, in many cases, on whether it makes a clear difference in outcomes.

Just what precision (alias personalized) medicine is isnt always spelled out precisely. But usually it is discussed as prevention or treatment that takes into account individual differences among patients, most often genetic differences. Some people expand the concept to consider individual differences in environment and lifestyle.

In adult primary care, two subsets of precision medicine have attracted the most attention recently: predictive genetic testing and pharmacogenomics.

Predictive genetic testing is what it sounds like: A genetic test that forecasts a persons chance of getting a disease. The term is also applied to germline genetic tests that provide some indication of the predisposition being passed down to offspring. Proponents see predictive genetic testing for certain inherited conditions as a way to unearth risks in people who can then get early treatment or take preventive steps to head off serious and possibly costly conditions. Actor Angelina Jolie put BRCA testing as a predictive genetic test into the public consciousness with her announcement in 2013 that she underwent a double mastectomy after testing positive for a BRCA mutation.

Pharmacogenomics studies show how a persons genes can affect his or her response to medications. Ideally, pharmacogenomic (sometimes called pharmacogenetic) results could end some of the trial and error with drugs and help providers and patients choose the most effective drug right off the bat.

Where federal dollars are concerned, precision medicine has already stepped out of the cancer box. In 2015, President Barack Obama committed $215 million to precision medicine research, including a genomic study of more than a million Americans to extend precision medicine from cancer to other diseases. A year later, the 21st Century Cures Act expanded this funding to $1.5 billion over the next 10 years.

Aided by a multibillion-dollar genomic testing industry, some providers have started testing precision medicine beyond oncology. In 2018, Geisinger Health System in central Pennsylvania made a splash by announcing that it would add DNA sequencing to routine primary care. A small number of other hospitals are starting to monetize these tests. In August 2019, STAT reported that a handful of academic medical centers, including Brigham and Womens Hospital and the Mayo Clinic, have started elective genome sequencing clinics for generally healthy patients willing to pay hundreds, sometimes thousands of dollars in cash for a genetic workup.

Skeptics see carts preceding horses; solid evidence that routine genetic testing results in better outcomes is lacking. As one genome-sequencing clinic leader conceded in the STAT article, such testing can lead to expensive follow-up testing. Not surprisingly, payers have been reluctant to cover sequencing tests of various kinds.

Regulators have breathed life into some kinds of testing and poured cold water on others. Last year, 23andMe was the first testing company to get FDA approval to market a direct-to-consumer genetic test for three (of the more than 1,000 known) BRCA gene mutations linked to increased risk of breast, ovarian, and prostate cancer. But in April 2019, the agency issued a warning letter to Inova Health System in Northern Virginia to stop marketing pharmacogenomics tests it claimed could predict patients responses to antidepressants, opioids, and other drugs. The FDA said it was unaware of data to support these claims.

A survey published two years ago in Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics found that clopidogrel, a blood thinner, was the medication most commonly tested for a druggene interaction, followed by simvastatin and warfarin. Nearly 40 academic medical centers and community health systems testing ways to implement pharmacogenomics in clinical practice were surveyed.

Some evidence suggests that traditional screening methods may not identify everyone at risk for certain inherited conditions. In a study published in Science three years ago, researchers at Geisinger and Regeneron (which manufactures Praluent, a drug used to treat familial hypercholesterolemia) found that only about one in four people carrying the familial hypercholesterolemia gene variant met the Dutch Lipid Clinic Network criteria (widely used diagnostic criteria) for genetic testing. Still, evidence for the clinical utility of many pharmacogenomic or predictive genetic tests is pretty scanty at this point.

Right now, for the average primary care provider, there are a relatively limited number of situations where pharmacogenomic testing is clearly beneficial to outcomes in a way thats dramatic, says Greg Feero, MD, a faculty member at Maine Dartmouth Family Medicine Residency and a former senior advisor to the director of the NIHs genomics research division.

For predictive genetic testing, there are a few notable exceptionshereditary breast and ovarian cancer, Lynch syndrome, and familial hypercholesterolemiaif certain criteria such as family history of the condition are met. The CDC has designated genomics applications for these conditions as Tier 1, the highest tier on its evidence-based ranking system of genomic applications by their potential for a positive public health impact.

In a 2017 editorial published in American Family Physician, Vinay Prasad, MD, and Adam Obley, MD, of Oregon Health and Science University said that rigorous meta-analyses havent yet shown that genotype-guided dosing for warfarin, clopidogrel, or antidepressant selection is better than usual care. Prasad is a well-known critic of what he sees as the proliferation of medical treatments and therapies without good evidence behind them. We need to know on a broad scale that [these tests] improve outcomes for patients, and dont just reassure physicians theyre choosing a better drug, Obley tells Managed Care.

Prasad and Obley also argued in their editorial that without further proof of improved outcomes, routine genetic testing could just fuel more inappropriate care. Guidelines carve out clear boundaries for who should get tested because there are scenarios in which the risks and benefits of preventive measures arent known, they said, noting that the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force advises against genetic testing for BRCA mutations in women without a family history of BRCA-related cancers.

A small pilot study suggests that genetic testing in primary care may not lead to improved outcomes. In 2017, The Annals of Internal Medicine published the first randomized trial of whole-genome sequencing in primary care. Gene variants were found in 20% of the participants whose genomes were sequenced. But six months later none of them had improved outcomes.

The test produces lots of information, says Obley, who wasnt involved in the study. But its not clear that any patient was managed differently in a way that improved their health.

Without evidence supporting the clinical utility of routine pharmacogenomics or genetic testing, most payers are unwilling to cover them. Some exceptions exist, such as employers that offer routine genetic testing as an employee benefit. In a blog post published in 2018, Color Genomics touted Visa and the German software company SAP as customers. Medicare covers pharmacogenomic testing of two gene variants that predict warfarin responsiveness for beneficiaries enrolled in a randomized, controlled clinical study that meets certain standards.

The high cost of genetic testing has been cited as another reason insurance coverage is limited, but payers may not budge even as testing gets cheaper. The cost of doing the test itself has been declining quite rapidly, says Kathryn Phillips, a health economics professor at University of CaliforniaSan Francisco who researches personalized medicine access, quality, and reimbursement. She has disclosed in recent studies that she is a paid consultant for Illumina, a DNA sequencing company. But she says its hardand its going to take longerto figure out where to use genetics in primary care in healthy populations, and [for insurers] to pay for it.

The current state of evidence and bleak reimbursement prospects havent deterred early adopters from embracing precision medicine in primary care. For Megan Mahoney, MD, chief of general primary care at Stanford Medicine, precision medicine begins with going after data on key determinants of healthnot just genes, but also environmental factors, social determinants, and health behaviors.

In a yearlong pilot of 50 patientsmore than half of whom were at risk for cardiovascular conditionsStanford Medicine care teams created personalized care plans to prevent and manage chronic illness. The plans leveraged data from several sources, including genetic-risk assessments and genetic testing for the three CDC Tier 1 conditions and remote monitoring devices.

Before the pilot, which ended in 2018, Stanford did not offer routine genetic testing in primary care. So far, that hasnt changed. But Stanford is making the genetic-risk assessment tested in the pilot available to its primary care providers, hoping it can increase screening rates for the Tier 1 conditions, says Mahoney. Studies show that many primary care providers are uncomfortable evaluating and addressing genetic risk. Five patients in the pilot discovered through the genetic risk screening that theyre at high risk for breast cancer, demonstrating that this type of tool can help to identify previously unknown risks.

Post-pilot, Stanford is also offering patients with poorly controlled blood pressure connection to a Bluetooth-enabled blood pressure cuff and health coaching as part of a larger study. Genetic testing has dominated the discussion of precision medicine in primary care, but Stanfords experience shows that it isnt the only way to tailor preventive care to individual patients needs.

Even if clinical utility is ultimately shown, folding precision medicine into primary care will likely follow the path of many new developments in medicine: There will be some early adopters, but most practices will have a wait-and-see and depends-on-the-reimbursement attitude.

Educating doctors on how to interpret, use, and communicate genetic testing results to patients will be one of the biggest hurdles. Theyll be learning on the job, says Susanne Haga, associate professor of internal medicine at Duke Universitys medical school, who leads educational activities in genetics and genomics for the Duke Center for Applied Genomics. An obstacle course of other possible barriers awaits: the limited number of certified genetic counselors, concerns about privacy and genetic discrimination, and the potential for the lack of diversity in genomic data sets to exacerbate disparities in care.

Still, Haga sees the convergence of three factors that will force the health care systems hand and usher in precision medicine in primary care: patients increasing ability to influence decisions about their care, the declining cost of testing, and a critical mass of people, numbering in the millions, who will have had their DNA sequenced in genome programs such as Geisingers or several national genomics research initiatives.

Its coming, she says, one way or another.

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Precision Medicine in Primary Care: Bespoke. Genetic and Genomic. And Maybe Not Ready. - Managed Care magazine

Decibel Therapeutics Announces Strategic Research Focus on Regenerative Medicine for the Inner Ear – BioSpace

BOSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Decibel Therapeutics, a development-stage biotechnology company developing novel therapeutics for hearing loss and balance disorders, today announced a new strategic research focus on regenerative medicine approaches for the inner ear. The company is also announcing a collaboration and option agreement that gives Decibel exclusive access to novel compounds targeting proteins in a critical regenerative pathway.

Decibels research focus on regeneration will be powered by the companys research and translation platform. The company has built one of the most sophisticated single cell genomics and bioinformatics platforms in the industry to identify and validate targets. Decibel has also developed unique insights into regulatory pathways and inner ear delivery mechanisms that together enable precise control over gene expression in the inner ear and differentiate its AAV-based gene therapy programs.

Our deep understanding of the biology of the inner ear and our advanced technological capabilities come together to create a powerful platform for regenerative medicine therapies for hearing and balance disorders, said Laurence Reid, Ph.D., acting CEO of Decibel. We see an exciting opportunity to leverage this platform to address a broad range of hearing and balance disorders that severely compromise quality of life for hundreds of millions of people around the world.

The first program in Decibels regeneration portfolio aims to restore balance function using an AAV-based gene therapy (DB-201), which utilizes a cell-specific promoter to selectively deliver a regeneration-promoting gene to target cells. In collaboration with Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Decibel will initially evaluate DB-201 as a treatment for bilateral vestibulopathy, a debilitating condition that significantly impairs balance, mobility, and stability of vision. Ultimately, this program may have applicability in a broad range of age-related balance disorders. There are currently no approved medicines to restore balance. Decibel expects to initiate IND-enabling experiments for this program in the first half of 2020.

Decibel is also pursuing novel targets for the regeneration of critical cells in both the vestibule and cochlea of the inner ear; these targets may be addressable by gene therapy or other therapeutic modalities. As a key component of that program, Decibel today announced an exclusive worldwide option agreement with The Rockefeller University, which has discovered a novel series of small-molecule LATS inhibitors. LATS kinases are a core component of the Hippo signaling pathway, which plays a key role in regulating both tissue regeneration and the proliferation of cells in the inner ear that are crucial to hearing and balance. The agreement gives Decibel an exclusive option to license this series of compounds across all therapeutic areas.

The agreement also establishes a research collaboration between Decibel and A. James Hudspeth, M.D., Ph.D., the F.M. Kirby Professor at The Rockefeller University and the director of the F.M. Kirby Center for Sensory Neuroscience. Dr. Hudspeth is a world-renowned neuroscientist, a member of the National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator. Dr. Hudspeth has been the recipient of numerous prestigious awards, including the 2018 Kavli Prize in Neuroscience.

Rockefeller scientists are at the leading edge of discovery, and we are excited to see the work of Dr. Hudspeth move forward in partnership with Decibel, said Jeanne Farrell, Ph.D., associate vice president for technology advancement at The Rockefeller University. The ambitious pursuit of harnessing the power of regenerative medicine to create a new option for patients with hearing loss could transform how we address this unmet medical need in the future.

In parallel with its new research focus on regenerative strategies, Decibel will continue to advance key priority preclinical and clinical programs. DB-020, the companys clinical-stage candidate designed to prevent hearing damage in people receiving cisplatin chemotherapy, is in an ongoing Phase 1b trial. Decibel will also continue to progress DB-OTO, a gene therapy for the treatment of genetic congenital deafness, which is being developed in partnership with Regeneron Pharmaceuticals. The DB-OTO program aims to restore hearing to people born with profound hearing loss due to a mutation in the otoferlin gene and is expected to progress to clinical trials in 2021.

To support the new research focus, Decibel is restructuring its employee base and discontinuing some early-stage discovery programs.

About Decibel Therapeutics, Inc. Decibel Therapeutics, a development-stage biotechnology company, has established the worlds first comprehensive drug discovery, development, and translational research platform for hearing loss and balance disorders. Decibel is advancing a portfolio of discovery-stage programs aimed at restoring hearing and balance function to further our vision of a world in which the benefits and joys of hearing are available to all. Decibels lead therapeutic candidate, DB-020, is being investigated for the prevention of ototoxicity associated with cisplatin chemotherapy. For more information about Decibel Therapeutics, please visit decibeltx.com or follow @DecibelTx.

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Decibel Therapeutics Announces Strategic Research Focus on Regenerative Medicine for the Inner Ear - BioSpace

‘Lucky Dog’ Scout thanks UW School of Veterinary Medicine with WeatherTech Super Bowl Commercial – The Badger Herald

UW Madisons School of Veterinary Medicine had no idea saving one of their furry patients would land them on the biggest screen in America Scout, the Lucky Dog, and the School of Veterinary Medicine will be featured in a WeatherTech Super Bowl LIV commercial.

According to David Vail, UW Professor of Oncology and a member of Scouts treatment team, Scout first arrived at the UW School of Veterinary Medicine in 2019 following his unexpected collapse at his home in Illinois. Vail said Scout was diagnosed with a rare form of cancer with a tumor growing on his heart.

Vail said Scouts owner, David MacNeil, CEO and Founder of WeatherTech, was directed to experts at UW in the face of the cancers 1% survival rate at 12 months. Vail said the MacNeil family never gave up on Scout, and openly pursued the most aggressive form of treatment while maintaining the best quality of life possible for Scout .

[Scouts family] was very concerned and committed to Scout. They asked all the right questions, Vail said. The right patient and the right caregivers made him an excellent patient to treat.

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Vail said Scout has a type of cancer in his blood vessels, making it difficult to treat, especially with the tumor on his heart. According to Vail, UW had the special radiation and imaging equipment needed to reach the heart tumor.

With this treatment, Vail said Scouts tumor shrank by about 90%. While Scout is still undergoing chemotherapy and immunotherapy to try to kill cancer cells in his body, Vail said Scouts been able to maintain his same quality of life.

Hes normal Scout. [The MacNeils] still fly him down to Florida where their second home is, Vail said. He swims in the ocean and runs on the beach.

WeatherTech completely funded the thirty-second commercial entitled Lucky Dog. The commercial will air most likely during the second quarter of the Super Bowl LIV game on Feb. 2, according to Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. It narrates Scouts journey with UW staff and encourages viewers to donate.

Mark Markel, Dean of the School of Veterinary Medicine, said the MacNeils ability to share Scouts story in a Super Bowl commercial is nothing short of extraordinary.

Scouts story is amazing. There is nothing like this, particularly in the context of a Super Bowl commercial, in any other higher educational institute, any university, and certainly not a school of medicine, Markel said. I think it is a testament to pet owners passion about their animals, that many consider them a member of the family.

Markel said all money received in relation to the commercial will go to cancer treatment or research. Markel said it will go towards funding treatment programs as well as state of the art equipment.

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Vail said he believes the commercial will show people there is hope when dogs get cancer. With the Schools partnerships in comparative oncology for humans and animals, Vail said the money will help accelerate research in the one medicine idea the idea that all cancers in all species can be managed with the same approach to treat aggressive cancers for both people and pets.

Were really hopeful and very grateful to the MacNeils. They could have been content with just treating Scout, Vail said. Theyve decided they are not content with that and they want to take a more global approach to helping pet dogs with cancer.

Vail said Scout will spend all this week and next week undergoing radiation treatment for lung nodules, a result of the metastatic disease that comes with his cancer.

Vail said despite the low odds of completely eradicating the cancer, UW will keep fighting for Scout.

The likelihood of cure is not high, Vail said. But we are out to give him as much quality for as long as we can.

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'Lucky Dog' Scout thanks UW School of Veterinary Medicine with WeatherTech Super Bowl Commercial - The Badger Herald

If you want to develop a new medicine, Boston is the place – The Boston Globe

If you were to go make a movie, youd go to Hollywood; if you want to develop a new medicine, Boston is the place, said Daphne Zohar, founder and CEO of PureTech Health, a Boston-based biotech company.

There are more than 700 biotech companies in the state, according to the Massachusetts Biotechnology Council, with roughly 500 residing in Boston and Cambridge. They employ some 75,000 people in Massachusetts, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, accounting for about $12 billion in wages 2018.

It all works because the nexus of top-tier research universities, world-class teaching hospitals, fledgling startups, and a few multinational pharma companies have created a critical mass straddling the Charles River.

Take, for example, Alnylam Pharmaceuticals. In 2002, the company began to explore a theory, co-discovered by a scientist at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, that tinkering with extracellular RNA communication might treat disease. It raised money from Boston VC Polaris Partners, leased a cramped space in Cambridge, and recruited a team from nearby biotech stalwarts Millennium Pharmaceuticals and Biogen. Fast-forward through a couple decades of scientific peaks and valleys, and Alnylam now has two FDA-approved medicines, a pipeline of nine more potential ones, and roughly 1,200 employees to bring the plan to fruition. All while staying in Massachusetts.

Such success stories were unimaginable about four decades prior, when Kendall Square was a stretch of warehouses and factories. Lita Nelsen, who enrolled at MIT in the 1960s, recalls that one could tell which way the wind was blowing by whether it smelled like the Lever Brothers soap plant or the Necco wafer factory.

All that would change in 1977, when Cambridge became the first city in the world to set rules around genetic engineering. The idea was to prevent an apocalyptic superbug from crawling out of some over-ambitious lab, but the effect was like an open-for-business sign to biotech entrepreneurs around the globe. Where other cities offered uncertainty, Cambridge had a workable blueprint.

Nelsen, who spent 30 years leading MITs office for out-licensing discoveries, was there to see Kendalls nascent biotech scene flourish. Biogen, Genzyme, and Repligen arrived in the early 1980s. Then came VCs from New York and California, lured by the promise of cutting-edge biology. By the late 1990s, Big Pharma took notice and began building research hubs alongside Cambridges many startups. In time, the biotech sector became a self-sufficient economic force.

I dont know what to say but that it happened, and then it built on itself, Nelsen said. Its a pretty complicated sauce. Youre never sure which ingredients are absolutely critical and which just help it along.

Massachusetts biotech companies are constantly getting launched, shuttered, or consumed, but the ecosystem persists because the people tend to stick around, said Samantha Truex, CEO of the recently formed Quench Bio. That makes it easy to recruit for the next startup idea, and it creates a multigenerational brain trust, available for free consulting in the line for coffee.

Its almost like an upward spiral, if you will, Truex said. Thats what has made it grow and flourish.

Massachusetts decades of success in biotech have inspired more than a few cities, states, and nations to try replicate that complicated sauce. It often creates a tricky game of chicken-or-egg. How do you attract entrepreneurial scientists if theres no anchor industry? And how do you rope in major drug companies if you dont have researchers to fill their pipelines?

There are way more failure stories than there are success stories, said Michael Ringel, a senior partner at Boston Consulting Group, who focuses on research and development. The failures tend to be around just throwing money at it and not realizing that theres a system that has to be put in place.

Damian Garde covers biotech for STAT. He can be reached at damian.garde@statnews.com. Follow him on Twitter @damiangarde.

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If you want to develop a new medicine, Boston is the place - The Boston Globe