ant Blitz recalls a long line of war movies going back decades, but that doesn't mean it's not relevant By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 04:00:30 EST Following a mother and son during the the Blitz, Nazi Germany's bombing campaign on London during the Second World War, director Steve McQueen's new drama understands the war film — perhaps a bit too well. Full Article News/Entertainment
ant 27 000$ dérobés à Hydro-Québec: un avocat de Laval a volé de l’électricité pendant 14 ans By www.journaldemontreal.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 19:00:00 EST Un avocat de Laval épinglé pour son compteur d’Hydro-Québec trafiqué qui lui a fait économiser près de 27 000$ d’électricité devra payer une amende. Full Article
ant Administration Trump: un «faucon» anti-Chine comme secrétaire d'État, une «tueuse de chiens» à la Sécurité intérieure By www.journaldemontreal.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 18:14:27 EST Un «faucon» anti-Chine à la diplomatie, une gouverneure «tueuse de chiens» à la sécurité intérieure. Full Article
ant «Ce n’est pas légal»: des enfants sélectionnés selon l’ethnie ou la religion dans des garderies By www.journaldemontreal.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 13:28:41 EST La sélection d’enfants selon des critères ethniques ou religieux pour l’admission dans des CPE du grand Montréal n’est pas légale. Full Article
ant «C’était absolument nécessaire»: Laurence Jalbert a tout arrêté pendant deux mois pour guérir de la COVID By www.journaldemontreal.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 15:30:00 EST Laurence Jalbert a dû tout arrêter pendant deux mois Full Article
ant Procès pour triple meurtre à Brossard: incursion dans une scène de crime sanglante et chaotique pour le jury By www.journaldemontreal.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 15:57:33 EST Le jury au procès du père accusé d’avoir décimé sa famille a eu droit à une véritable incursion dans la scène de crime. Full Article
ant Is it a tenant's right to charge an EV at their rental? By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 04:00:00 EST An Ottawa man feels it's his right to charge his car overnight at his apartment building since electricity is included in his rent, but his landlord disagrees. Full Article News/Canada/Ottawa
ant Time limits for trials were meant to speed up justice. They've also halted hundreds of criminal cases By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Sun, 10 Nov 2024 09:00:00 EST Supporters say the Supreme Court of Canada's so-called Jordan ruling in 2016 has sped up proceedings and strengthened Charter rights for prompt justice. But some victims say the time limits for trials work in criminals' favour and cases continue to collapse because those limits are breached. Full Article News/Canada/British Columbia
ant Privacy commissioner launches investigation into World Anti-Doping Agency By www.cbc.ca Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 15:18:44 EST Canada’s privacy commissioner has launched an investigation into the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) and “its handling of biological samples collected from athletes.” Full Article News/Politics
ant Durant tops list of Warrior trade targets By www.news.com.au Published On :: Mon, 20 Jun 2016 23:57:00 GMT AFTER suffering an NBA Finals defeat to ruin the best regular season in history, Golden State’s owner promised to be “very aggressive”. Full Article
ant USADA’s stunning anti-doping swoop on Lesnar By www.news.com.au Published On :: Tue, 21 Jun 2016 02:27:00 GMT BROCK Lesnar was allowed to dodge an anti-doping policy to make his megastar comeback at UFC 200 but what’s happened since is remarkable. Full Article
ant Ce qu’il faut savoir sur la nouvelle saison d’«À propos d’Antoine» By www.journaldemontreal.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 06:00:00 EST La nouvelle saison sera déposée sur illico+ le 13 novembre. Full Article
ant Karol G s’excuse pour des paroles jugées offensantes dans son nouveau single By www.journaldemontreal.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 22:10:51 EST La vedette colombienne du reggaeton Karol G s’est excusée pour des paroles de son nouveau single «+57» jugées offensantes. Full Article
ant Toboggan 2024: La Bottine Souriante et MATTN défonceront l’année à Québec By www.journaldemontreal.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 08:00:00 EST La ville de Québec pourra compter sur des prestations du groupe La Bottine Souriante et de la DJ belge MATTN pour l’amener en 2025. Full Article
ant Découvrez l’étrange rituel du chanteur de Coldplay By www.journaldemontreal.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 08:04:53 EST Chris Martin a intrigué les badauds lundi en embrassant le tarmac de l’aéroport de Sydney. Full Article
ant Why Canada wants more overseas tourists to visit By www.bbc.com Published On :: Thu, 31 Oct 2024 00:01:41 GMT Canada has launched a tourist drive but will tensions with China doom it to fail? Full Article
ant ‘Everyone wants to be Suarez’ By www.dailytelegraph.com.au Published On :: Tue, 31 May 2016 00:20:00 GMT HE was spotted playing soccer in a park by a talent scout on holiday in Uruguay at age 15. Now Andrew Alvarenga has made the first grade side at top division soccer’s Club Atletico Cerro. Full Article
ant 10 bons choix à intégrer dans la boîte à lunch des enfants By www.journaldemontreal.com Published On :: Sun, 13 Oct 2024 17:15:00 EDT Ces produits se démarquent par leurs valeurs nutritives, surpassant celles d’options similaires. Full Article
ant Pour le risque de cancer, l’obésité santé, ça n’existe pas! By www.journaldemontreal.com Published On :: Sun, 20 Oct 2024 17:00:00 EDT Une étude récente confirme que les personnes obèses, même sans anomalies métaboliques, sont à plus haut risque de plusieurs types de cancer. Full Article
ant Santé buccale et cancer du côlon By www.journaldemontreal.com Published On :: Sun, 27 Oct 2024 20:00:00 EDT Une étude récente montre qu’un type de bactérie associée aux maladies des gencives pourrait participer au développement du cancer colorectal. Full Article
ant L’excellente santé des sportifs du week-end By www.journaldemontreal.com Published On :: Sun, 03 Nov 2024 16:00:00 EST 150 minutes d’activité physique durant le week-end procure des bénéfices similaires à la même durée d’exercice répartie sur sept jours. Full Article
ant DGTR releases list of registered parties on anti─dumping investigation on sodium citrate imports from China By www.pharmabiz.com Published On :: Monday, November 11, 2024 08:00 IST The Directorate General of Trade Remedies (DGTR), under the ministry of commerce and industry, has released a list of registered interested parties regarding the ongoing Second Sunset Review anti─dumping Full Article
ant DGTR issues directive for sunset review anti─dumping investigation on Aniline imports from China By www.pharmabiz.com Published On :: Tuesday, November 12, 2024 08:00 IST The Directorate General of Trade Remedies (DGTR), under the Ministry of Commerce and Industry, has issued a notice to all interested parties involved in the sunset review of the anti─dumping investigation Full Article
ant NABL announces joint technical training programme with MANTRA on medical textiles testing By www.pharmabiz.com Published On :: Wednesday, November 13, 2024 08:00 IST The National Accreditation Board for Testing and Calibration Laboratories (NABL), under the Quality Council of India (QCI), has announced a collaborative effort with Man─Made Textile Research Association (MANTRA) in Surat to deliver a specialized technical training programme on medical textiles testing. Full Article
ant Protecting vital medical implants with epoxies By www.medicalplasticsnews.com Published On :: Wed, 06 Nov 2024 17:00:00 -0000 Mike Hodgin, director of strategic applications, Meridian Electronics Division discusses enabling and protecting vital medical implants with epoxies. Full Article
ant Peytant Solutions granted FDA De Novo forAMStent Tracheobronchial Covered Stent System By www.medicalplasticsnews.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 13:00:00 -0000 Peytant has announced that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) granted marketing authorisation (clearance to market in the United States as a Class II device) for the AMStent Tracheobronchial Covered Stent System, a therapy platform. Full Article
ant Astrology Was an Important Science for Medieval People By www.scientificamerican.com Published On :: Wed, 06 Nov 2024 11:00:00 +0000 In medieval times, astrology was considered a serious science, a branch of astronomy. Curator Larisa Grollemond of the Getty Museum, walks us through the medieval zodiac and how someone’s sign decided their day-to-day life. Full Article
ant How Geometry Revealed Quantum Memory By www.scientificamerican.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 13:00:00 +0000 The unexpected discovery of a geometric phase shows how math and physics are tightly intertwined Full Article
ant Plant-Based Soft Medical Robots By www.medgadget.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Dec 2023 16:00:29 +0000 Researchers at the University of Waterloo in Canada have developed plant-based microrobots that are intended to pave the way for medical robots that can enter the body and perform tasks, such as obtaining a biopsy or performing a surgical procedure. The robots consist of a hydrogel material that is biocompatible and the composite contains cellulose […] Full Article Materials Medicine Surgery UWaterloo WaterlooENG
ant As MFP Approaches, Transparency Is More Important Than Ever By feeds.feedblitz.com Published On :: Fri, 11 Oct 2024 10:30:00 +0000 Today’s guest post comes from Angie Franks, Chief Executive Officer of Kalderos. Angie discusses how the Maximum Fair Price provision of the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 will challenge providers, pharmacies, and manufacturers. She explains how Kalderos’ Truzo platform could reduce duplicate claims and address compliance issues. To learn more, register for Kalderos’ October 25 webinar Cracking the MFP Code: How Flexible Technology Helps You Navigate an Evolving Landscape. Read on for Angie’s insights. Read more » Full Article Guest Post Sponsored Post
ant ACRO Announces Diversity and Inclusion Site Resource Grants Program By www.businesswire.com Published On :: Mon, 15 Apr 2024 11:00:00 +0000 The ACRO D&I Site Resource Grants Program aims to help sites acquire the resources and skills that will get them selected for studies and improve the reach of clinical research into underrepresented communities. The post ACRO Announces Diversity and Inclusion Site Resource Grants Program first appeared on ACRO. Full Article Press Releases
ant ACRO Announces Diversity and Inclusion Site Resource Grants Program By www.acrohealth.org Published On :: Wed, 17 Apr 2024 12:00:00 +0000 ACRO is pleased to announce the launch of the ACRO Diversity and Inclusion Site Resource Grants Program! The ACRO D&I Site Resource Grants Program aims to help sites acquire the resources and skills that will get them selected for studies and improve the reach of clinical research into underrepresented communities. “We are excited to invite […] The post ACRO Announces Diversity and Inclusion Site Resource Grants Program first appeared on ACRO. Full Article Newsletter
ant Bonus Episode: Fast Facts on the ACRO D&I Grants Program By mailchi.mp Published On :: Tue, 21 May 2024 10:13:00 +0000 ACRO’s Good Clinical Podcast is back with bonus episode! Host Sophia McLeod sat down with Tafoya Hubbard and Kristen Surdam to discuss ACRO’s new D&I Site Resource Grants Program. The post Bonus Episode: Fast Facts on the ACRO D&I Grants Program first appeared on ACRO. Full Article DEI News
ant Risk of mortality drops in COVID-19 patients given anticoagulation within a day of hospital admission, research finds By www.pharmaceutical-journal.com Published On :: Fri, 12 Feb 2021 13:58 GMT Starting COVID-19 patients on prophylactic anticoagulation within 24 hours of being admitted to hospital has been linked to a reduced risk of mortality. Full Article
ant Will Your Family Make You a Better Trial Participant? By www.placebocontrol.com Published On :: Mon, 25 Jul 2016 23:03:00 +0000 It is becoming increasing accepted within the research community that patient engagement leads to a host of positive outcomes – most importantly (at least practically speaking) improved clinical trial recruitment and retention. But while we can all agree that "patient engagement is good" in a highly general sense, we don't have much consensus on what the implications of that idea might be. There is precious little hard evidence about how to either attract engaged patients, or how we might effectively turn "regular patients" into "engaged patients". That latter point - that we could improve trial enrollment and completion rates by converting the (very large) pool of less-engaged patient - is a central tenet of the mHealth movement in clinical trials. Since technology can now accompany us almost anywhere, it would seem that we have an unprecedented opportunity to reach out and connect with current and potential trial participants. However, there are signs that this promised revolution in patient engagement hasn't come about. From the decline of new apps being downloaded to the startlingly high rate of people abandoning their wearable health devices, there's a growing body of evidence suggesting that we aren't in fact making very good progress towards increasing engagement. We appear to have underestimated the inertia of the disengaged patient. So what can we do? We know people like their technology, but if they're not using it to engage with their healthcare decisions, we're no better off as a result. Daniel Calvert, in a recent blog post at Parallel 6 offers an intriguing solution: he suggests we go beyond the patient and engage their wider group of loved ones. By engaging what Calvert calls the Support Circle - those people most likely to "encourage the health and well being of that patient as they undergo a difficult period of their life" - trial teams will find themselves with a more supported, and therefore more engaged, participant, with corresponding benefits to enrollment and retention. Calvert outlines a number of potential mechanisms to get spouses, children, and other loved ones involved in the trial process: During the consent process the patient can invite their support team in with them. A mobile application can be put on their phones enabling encouraging messages, emails, and texts to be sent. Loved ones can see if their companion or family member did indeed take today’s medication or make last Monday’s appointment. Gamification offers badges or pop-ups: “Two months of consecutive appointments attended” or “perfect eDiary log!” Loved ones can see those notifications, like/comment, and constantly encourage the patients. Supporting materials can also be included in the Support Circle application. There are a host of unknown terms to patients and their team. Glossaries, videos, FAQs, contact now, and so much more can be made available at their fingertips. I have to admit I'm fascinated by Calvert's idea. I want him to be right: the picture of supportive, encouraging, loving spouses and children standing by to help a patient get through a clinical trial is an attractive one. So is the idea that they're just waiting for us to include them - all we need to do is a bit of digital communication with them to get them fully on board as members of the study team. The problem, however, remains: we have absolutely no evidence that this approach will work. There is no data showing that it is superior to other approaches to engage trial patients. (In fact, we may even have some indirect evidence that it may hinder enrollment: in trials that require active caregiver participation, such as those in Alzheimer's Disease, caregivers are believed to often contribute to the barriers to patient enrollment). Calvert's idea is a good one, and it's worthy of consideration. More importantly, it's worthy of being rigorously tested against other recruitment and retention approaches. We have a lot of cool new technologies, and even more great ideas - we're not lacking for those. What we're lacking is hard data showing us how these things perform. What we especially need is comparative data showing how new tactics work relative to other approaches. Over 5 years ago, I wrote a blog post bemoaning the sloppy approaches we take in trial recruitment - a fact made all the more painfully ironic by the massive intellectual rigor of the trials themselves. I'm not at all sure that we've made any real progress in those 5 years. In my next post, I'll outline what I believe are some of the critical steps we need to take to improve the current situation, and start bringing some solid evidence to the table along with our ideas. [Photo credit: Flikr user Matthew G, "Love (of technology)"] Full Article patient engagement patient recruitment
ant Origami Helps Implant Sensors in Bio-Printed Tissue By spectrum.ieee.org Published On :: Thu, 18 Jul 2024 13:00:03 +0000 In the United States alone, more than 100,000 people currently need a lifesaving organ transplant. Instead of waiting for donors, one way to solve this crisis in the future is to assemble replacement organs with bio-printing—3D printing that uses inks containing living cells. Scientists in Israel have found that origami techniques could help fold sensors into bio-printed materials to help determine whether they are behaving safely and properly.Although bio-printing something as complex as a human organ is still a distant possibility, there are a host of near-term applications for the technique. For example, in drug research, scientists can bio-print living, three-dimensional tissues with which to examine the effects of various compounds.Ideally, researchers would like to embed sensors within bio-printed items to keep track of how well they are behaving. However, the three-dimensional nature of bio-printed objects makes it difficult to lodge sensors within them in a way that can monitor every part of the structures.“It will, hopefully in the future, allow us to monitor and assess 3D biostructures before we would like to transplant them.” —Ben Maoz, Tel Aviv UniversityNow scientists have developed a 3D platform inspired by origami that can help embed sensors in bio-printed objects in precise locations. “It will, hopefully in the future, allow us to monitor and assess 3D biostructures before we would like to transplant them,” says Ben Maoz, a professor of biomedical engineering at Tel Aviv University in Israel.The new platform is a silicone rubber device that can fold around a bio-printed structure. The prototype holds a commercial array of 3D electrodes to capture electrical signals. It also possesses other electrodes that can measure electrical resistance, which can reveal how permeable cells are to various medications. A custom 3D software model can tailor the design of the origami and all the electrodes so that the sensors can be placed in specific locations in the bio-printed object.The scientists tested their device on bio-printed clumps of brain cells. The research team also grew a layer of cells onto the origami that mimicked the blood-brain barrier, a cell layer that protects the brain from undesirable substances that the body’s blood might be carrying. By folding this combination of origami and cells onto the bio-printed structures, Maoz and his colleagues were able to monitor neural activity within the brain cells and see how their synthetic blood-brain barrier might interfere with medications intended to treat brain diseases.Maoz says the new device can incorporate many types of sensors beyond electrodes, such as temperature or acidity sensors. It can also incorporate flowing liquid to supply oxygen and nutrients to cells, the researchers note.Currently, this device “will mainly be used for research and not for clinical use,” Maoz says. Still, it could “significantly contribute to drug development—assessing drugs that are relevant to the brain.”The researchers say they can use their origami device with any type of 3D tissue. For example, Maoz says they can use it on bio-printed structures made from patient cells “to help with personalized medicine and drug development.”The origami platform could also help embed devices that can modify bio-printed objects. For instance, many artificially grown tissues function better if they are placed under the kinds of physical stresses they might normally experience within the body, and the origami platform could integrate gadgets that can exert such mechanical forces on bio-printed structures. “This can assist in accelerating tissue maturation, which might be relevant to clinical applications,” Maoz says.The scientists detailed their findings in the 26 June issue of Advanced Science. Full Article Implants Origami 3d printing Sensors Bioprinting
ant Next-Gen Brain Implant Uses a Graphene Chip By spectrum.ieee.org Published On :: Sat, 20 Jul 2024 13:00:02 +0000 A Barcelona-based startup called Inbrain Neuroelectronics has produced a novel brain implant made of graphene and is gearing up for its first in-human test this summer. The technology is a type of brain-computer interface. BCIs have garnered interest because they record signals from the brain and transmit them to a computer for analysis. They have been used for medical diagnostics, as communication devices for people who can’t speak, and to control external equipment, including robotic limbs. But Inbrain intends to transform its BCI technology into a therapeutic tool for patients with neurological issues such as Parkinson’s disease.Because Inbrain’s chip is made of graphene, the neural interface has some interesting properties, including the ability to be used to both record from and stimulate the brain. That bidirectionality comes from addressing a key problem with the metallic chips typically used in BCI technology: Faradaic reactions. Faradaic reactions are a particular type of electrochemical processes that occurs between a metal electrode and an electrolyte solution. As it so happens, neural tissue is largely composed of aqueous electrolytes. Over time, these Faradaic reactions reduce the effectiveness of the metallic chips.That’s why Inbrain replaced the metals typically used in such chips with graphene, a material with great electrical conductivity. “Metals have Faraday reactions that actually make all the electrons interact with each other, degrading their effectiveness...for transmitting signals back to the brain,” said Carolina Aguilar, CEO and cofounder of Inbrain. Because graphene is essentially carbon and not a metal, Aguilar says the chip can inject 200 times as much charge without creating a Faradic reaction. As a result, the material is stable over the millions of pulses of stimulation required of a therapeutic tool. While Inbrain is not yet testing the chip for brain stimulation, the company expects to reach that goal in due time.The graphene-based chip is produced on a wafer using traditional semiconductor technology, according to Aguilar. At clean-room facilities, Inbrain fabricates a 10-micrometer-thick chip. The chip consists of what Aguilar terms “graphene dots” (not to be confused with graphene quantum dots) that range in size from 25 to 300 micrometers. “This micrometer scale allows us to get that unique resolution on the decoding of the signals from the brain, and also provides us with the micrometric stimulation or modulation of the brain,” added Aguilar.Testing the Graphene-Based BCIThe first test of the platform in a human patient will soon be performed at the University of Manchester, in England, where it will serve as an interface during the resection of a brain tumor. When resecting a tumor, surgeons must ensure that they don’t damage areas like the brain’s language centers so the patient isn’t impaired after the surgery. “The chip is positioned during the tumor resection so that it can read, at a very high resolution, the signals that tell the surgeon where there is a tumor and where there is not a tumor,” says Aguilar. That should enable the surgeons to extract the tumor with micrometric precision while preserving functional areas like speech and cognition.Aguilar added, “We have taken this approach for our first human test because it is a very reliable and quick path to prove the safety of graphene, but also demonstrate the potential of what it can do in comparison to metal technology that is used today.”Aguilar stresses that the Inbrain team has already tested the graphene-based chip’s biocompatibility. “We have been working for the last three years in biocompatibility through various safety studies in large animals,” said Aguilar. “So now we can have these green lights to prove an additional level of safety with humans.”While this test of the chip at Manchester is aimed at aiding in brain tumor surgery, the same technology could eventually be used to help Parkinson’s patients. Toward this aim, Inbrain’s system was granted Breakthrough Device Designation last September from the U.S. Food & Drug Administration as an adjunctive therapy for treating Parkinson’s disease. “For Parkinson’s treatment, we have been working on different preclinical studies that have shown reasonable proof of superiority versus current commercial technology in the [reduction] of Parkinson’s disease symptoms,” said Aguilar.For treating Parkinson’s, Inbrain’s chip connects with the nigrostriatal pathway in the brain that is critical for movements. The chip will first decode the intention message from the brain that triggers a step or the lifting of the arm—something that a typical BCI can do. But Inbrain’s chip, with its micrometric precision, can also decode pathological biomarkers related to Parkinson’s symptoms, such as tremors, rigidity, and freezing of the gait. By determining these biomarkers with great precision, Inbrain’s technology can determine how well a patient’s current drug regimen is working. In this first iteration of the Inbrain chip, it doesn’t treat the symptoms of Parkinson’s directly, but instead makes it possible to better target and reduce the amount of drugs that are used in treatment.“Parkinson’s patients take huge amounts of drugs that have to be changed over time just to keep up with the growing resistance patients develop to the power of the drug,” said Aguilar. “We can reduce it at least 50 percent and hopefully in the future more as our devices become precise.” Full Article Graphene Brain computer interface Parkinson's disease Neurotechnology Brain implants
ant Biocompatible Mic Could Lead to Better Cochlear Implants By spectrum.ieee.org Published On :: Mon, 22 Jul 2024 12:00:02 +0000 Cochlear implants—the neural prosthetic cousins of standard hearing aids—can be a tremendous boon for people with profound hearing loss. But many would-be users are turned off by the device’s cumbersome external hardware, which must be worn to process signals passing through the implant. So researchers have been working to make a cochlear implant that sits entirely inside the ear, to restore speech and sound perception without the lifestyle restrictions imposed by current devices.A new biocompatible microphone offers a bridge to such fully internal cochlear implants. About the size of a grain of rice, the microphone is made from a flexible piezoelectric material that directly measures the sound-induced motion of the eardrum. The tiny microphone’s sensitivity matches that of today’s best external hearing aids.Cochlear implants create a novel pathway for sounds to reach the brain. An external microphone and processor, worn behind the ear or on the scalp, collect and translate incoming sounds into electrical signals, which get transmitted to an electrode that’s surgically implanted in the cochlea, deep within the inner ear. There, the electrical signals directly stimulate the auditory nerve, sending information to the brain to interpret as sound.But, says Hideko Heidi Nakajima, an associate professor of otolaryngology at Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts Eye and Ear, “people don’t like the external hardware.” They can’t wear it while sleeping, or while swimming or doing many other forms of exercise, and so many potential candidates forgo the device altogether. What’s more, incoming sound goes directly into the microphone and bypasses the outer ear, which would otherwise perform the key functions of amplifying sound and filtering noise. “Now the big idea is instead to get everything—processor, battery, microphone—inside the ear,” says Nakajima. But even in clinical trials of fully internal designs, the microphone’s sensitivity—or lack thereof—has remained a roadblock.Nakajima, along with colleagues from MIT, Harvard, and Columbia University, fabricated a cantilever microphone that senses the motion of a bone attached behind the eardrum called the umbo. Sound entering the ear canal causes the umbo to vibrate unidirectionally, with a displacement 10 times as great as other nearby bones. The tip of the “UmboMic” touches the umbo, and the umbo’s movements flex the material and produce an electrical charge through the piezoelectric effect. These electrical signals can then be processed and transmitted to the auditory nerve. “We’re using what nature gave us, which is the outer ear,” says Nakajima.Why a cochlear implant needs low-noise, low-power electronicsMaking a biocompatible microphone that can detect the eardrum’s minuscule movements isn’t easy, however. Jeff Lang, a professor of electrical engineering at MIT who jointly led the work, points out that only certain materials are tolerated by the human body. Another challenge is shielding the device from internal electronics to reduce noise. And then there’s long-term reliability. “We’d like an implant to last for decades,” says Lang. In tests of the implantable microphone prototype, a laser beam measures the umbo’s motion, which gets transferred to the sensor tip. JEFF LANG & HEIDI NAKAJIMAThe researchers settled on a triangular design for the 3-by-3-millimeter sensor made from two layers of polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF), a biocompatible piezoelectric polymer, sandwiched between layers of flexible, electrode-patterned polymer. When the cantilever tip bends, one PVDF layer produces a positive charge and the other produces a negative charge—taking the difference between the two cancels much of the noise. The triangular shape provides the most uniform stress distribution within the bending cantilever, maximizing the displacement it can undergo before it breaks. “The sensor can detect sounds below a quiet whisper,” says Lang.Emma Wawrzynek, a graduate student at MIT, says that working with PVDF is tricky because it loses its piezoelectric properties at high temperatures, and most fabrication techniques involve heating the sample. “That’s a challenge especially for encapsulation,” which involves encasing the device in a protective layer so it can remain safely in the body, she says. The group had success by gradually depositing titanium and gold onto the PVDF while using a heat sink to cool it. That approach created a shielding layer that protects the charge-sensing electrodes from electromagnetic interference.The other tool for improving a microphone’s performance is, of course, amplifying the signal. “On the electronics side, a low-noise amp is not necessarily a huge challenge to build if you’re willing to spend extra power,” says Lang. But, according to MIT graduate student John Zhang, cochlear implant manufacturers try to limit power for the entire device to 5 milliwatts, and just 1 mW for the microphone. “The trade-off between noise and power is hard to hit,” Zhang says. He and fellow student Aaron Yeiser developed a custom low-noise, low-power charge amplifier that outperformed commercially available options.“Our goal was to perform better than or at least equal the performance of high-end capacitative external microphones,” says Nakajima. For leading external hearing-aid microphones, that means sensitivity down to a sound pressure level of 30 decibels—the equivalent of a whisper. In tests of the UmboMic on human cadavers, the researchers implanted the microphone and amplifier near the umbo, input sound through the ear canal, and measured what got sensed. Their device reached 30 decibels over the frequency range from 100 hertz to 6 kilohertz, which is the standard for cochlear implants and hearing aids and covers the frequencies of human speech. “But adding the outer ear’s filtering effects means we’re doing better [than traditional hearing aids], down to 10 dB, especially in speech frequencies,” says Nakajima.Plenty of testing lies ahead, at the bench and on sheep before an eventual human trial. But if their UmboMic passes muster, the team hopes that it will help more than 1 million people worldwide go about their lives with a new sense of sound.The work was published on 27 June in the Journal of Micromechanics and Microengineering. Full Article Hearing aids Cochlear implant Medical devices Assistive technology Medical implants
ant Pregnant and Empowered: Why Trust is the Latest Form of Member Engagement By medcitynews.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Nov 2024 14:18:00 +0000 Three ways health plans can engage, connect with, and delight their pregnant members to nurture goodwill, earn long-term trust, and foster loyal relationships that last. The post Pregnant and Empowered: Why Trust is the Latest Form of Member Engagement appeared first on MedCity News. Full Article Daily MedCity Influencers Patient Engagement Payers health plans maternity member engagement pregnancy trust
ant FDA Takes Step Toward Removal of Ineffective Decongestants From the Market By medcitynews.com Published On :: Fri, 08 Nov 2024 18:38:33 +0000 The FDA has proposed removing oral phenylephrine from its guidelines for over-the-counter drugs due to inefficacy as a decongestant. Use of this ingredient in cold and allergy medicines grew after a federal law required that pseudoephedrine-containing products be kept behind pharmacy counters. The post FDA Takes Step Toward Removal of Ineffective Decongestants From the Market appeared first on MedCity News. Full Article BioPharma Daily Legal Pharma biopharma nl Clinical Trials FDA legal over-the-counter phenylephrine
ant Where Medicare Advantage Goes From Here By medcitynews.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 03:51:00 +0000 Now is the time for health plans to step up and embrace the tools and strategies that will not only meet regulatory demands, but also drive innovation in care delivery. The post Where Medicare Advantage Goes From Here appeared first on MedCity News. Full Article Daily MedCity Influencers Payers Policy Providers CMS Health Policy Medicare Advantage Star Ratings
ant Researcher Looks to Plants in Search for New Antibiotics By www.pewtrusts.org Published On :: Mon, 11 Jan 2021 10:17:00 -0500 Dr. Cassandra Quave’s path to her work as a leader in antibiotic drug discovery research initiatives at Emory University in Atlanta started when she was a child and she and her family dealt with her own serious health issues that have had life-long repercussions. Full Article
ant Antibiotic Sales for Use in Food Animals Increased Again in 2019 By www.pewtrusts.org Published On :: Thu, 21 Jan 2021 16:33:00 -0500 Sales of medically important antibiotics for use in food-producing animals increased 3% in 2019, according to recent data from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. This is the second year in a row that the quantities of antibiotics sold for animal use have risen, underscoring the need for further FDA action to ensure judicious use of these lifesaving drugs. Full Article
ant FDA Proposal Will Not Sufficiently Curb Injudicious Use of Antibiotics in Food Animals By www.pewtrusts.org Published On :: Wed, 27 Jan 2021 14:10:00 -0500 The Food and Drug Administration published a concept paper in early January that describes a preliminary proposal for how the agency will ensure that companies developing antibiotics for administration to animals establish defined, evidence-based durations of use for all medically important antibiotics. Full Article
ant Will an Anti-Nausea Drug Boost GLP-1 Sales? By worldofdtcmarketing.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Nov 2024 10:11:28 +0000 GLP-1 receptor agonists, used to treat Type 2 diabetes and now widely prescribed for weight loss, have seen […] The post Will an Anti-Nausea Drug Boost GLP-1 Sales? appeared first on World of DTC Marketing. Full Article Business of the drug industry
ant The Dark Side of Medicare Advantage Incentives By worldofdtcmarketing.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 10:57:43 +0000 We’ve all seen Medicare Advantage (MA) plans become a significant player in the healthcare industry. Yet, with the […] The post The Dark Side of Medicare Advantage Incentives appeared first on World of DTC Marketing. Full Article As I See It Cost of healthcare in the U.S. in the news Medicare Advantage
ant Denzel Washington confirms he will star in Black Panther 3 before retirement By www.asiaone.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 09:59:50 +0800 Denzel Washington has confirmed he will star in Black Panther 3 before his retirement. The 69-year-old actor is the first to talk about the existence of a third film in the blockbuster Marvel franchise — which will follow the 2018 original and 2022 sequel Black Panther: Wakanda Forever — and has also revealed the film will be among a handful of roles he will take on before he bows out of acting after a career spanning four decades. Confirming director Ryan Coogler has written a role just for the Oscar-winner for the third instalment, Denzel told Australia's Today show: "At this point in my career, I'm only interested in working with the best, I don't know how many more films I will make, probably not that many. I want to do things that I haven't done." Sharing the roles he has lined up before he bids farewell to his Hollywood career, he said: "I played Othello at 22, I'm now going to play it at 70. After that, I'm playing Hannibal. After that, I've been talking with Steve McQueen about a film. After that, Ryan Coogler is writing a part for me in the next Black Panther. Full Article
ant 'I just want closure': Qoo10 vendors, customers accept they will likely not get money back By www.asiaone.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 08:05:08 +0800 SINGAPORE - When an online retailer began selling his products on e-commerce platform Qoo10 in August 2023, he did not bat an eyelid when it took 30 to 45 days for the platform to disburse his first payout, compared with about three to seven days for other e-commerce sites he was using. But nearly a year later in July, payments owed to his business by Qoo10 had ballooned to about $1.6 million, as the platform’s payment delays exceeded two months and disbursements began trickling in, in smaller amounts. The Singaporean, who wanted to be known only as Mr T and did not wish to divulge what he sold, pulled the plug on his Qoo10 shop this year in the middle of July, and filed a civil claim with the courts. He obtained a default judgment in October for Qoo10 to pay him what he is owed, after the e-commerce site failed to serve a notice of intention to contest or not contest the claim. Mr T, who added that he had borrowed nearly $1 million from banks, friends and relatives to pay his suppliers, said: “I am not holding out hope that I will get much, or any, of my money back from Qoo10... By this point, I just want closure because it’s been so stressful.” Full Article
ant Improving Migrant Child Welfare at the Southwest Border By www.belfercenter.org Published On :: Feb 28, 2023 Feb 28, 2023 Policymakers need to act now and place child welfare professionals, not law enforcement actors, at the border to effectively screen and interview migrant children. Information sharing practices need to be improved, with a movement away from paper documents that can easily get lost to an approach that is digital, secure, and accessible by the child, their guardian, their lawyer, and their doctor. Further, the enforcement processing facilities need to undergo an immediate infrastructural transformation with the addition of new design features that are necessary and sensitive to the majority demographic that are held within facilities—children and families. These actions are doable and require no legislative action. Migrant children deserve decisive action to ensure that their health, safety, and well-being is not jeopardized as they seek refuge in the United States. Full Article
ant 204260: U.S. special forces were embedded with Pakistan troops in 2009 anti-Taliban operations in the North-West Frontier Province By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Sat, 21 May 2011 02:27:46 +0530 Full Article The Cables