ical Regulatory update for post-registration of biological products in Brazil By www.gabionline.net Published On :: Tue, 29 Oct 2024 09:23:29 +0000 <p>On 3<sup> </sup>June 2024, Resolution RDC No. 876 was published in Brazil in the Official Journal of the Union (DOU)[1], modifying the current regulations regarding the post-registration of biological products (RDC 413/2020).</p> Full Article
ical Top nine biological drugs by sales in 2023 By www.gabionline.net Published On :: Tue, 29 Oct 2024 09:38:14 +0000 <p>The global biologicals market surged to an impressive US$419.07 billion in 2023. Blood and blood products led the market, commanding a dominant 66% share. Oncology stood out as the leading application segment, accounting for 36% of the market. North America held the largest revenue share, at 46%, while the Asia-Pacific region emerged as a rising star, poised to be the fastest-growing region over the next decade.</p> Full Article
ical Transforming healthcare: CinnaGen’s leadership in follow-on biologicals/ biosimilars development and market expansion By www.gabionline.net Published On :: Fri, 08 Nov 2024 13:18:16 +0000 <p> <b>Abstract</b><br />CinnaGen, the largest biopharmaceutical company in the MENA region, is a leader in developing follow-on biologicals/biosimilars. Dr Haleh Hamedifar, Chairperson of CinnaGen, spoke to GaBI<i> </i>(Generics and Biosimilars Initiative) about the company’s strategic focus, which includes expanding its product portfolio, entering highly regulated global markets, and advancing affordable treatments for conditions such as multiple sclerosis and immunological diseases—transforming healthcare in underserved regions.</p><p><b>Keywords</b>: Biosimilars, clinical development, commercialization, MENA</p> Full Article
ical Looking for Opportunities to Accelerate Clinical Research in Rare Diseases By lifescivc.com Published On :: Wed, 17 Jul 2024 11:00:40 +0000 By Mike Cloonan, Chief Executive Officer of Sionna Therapeutics, as part of the From The Trenches feature of LifeSciVC The drug development process in rare diseases is rife with challenges especially when companies target significant differentiation or first-in-class targets. Identifying The post Looking for Opportunities to Accelerate Clinical Research in Rare Diseases appeared first on LifeSciVC. Full Article Business Development From The Trenches Portfolio news Rare Diseases Science & Medicine CFTR Cystic Fibrosis NBD1 Sionna Therapeutics
ical Tell the UK’s research regulator to do more on clinical trial transparency By www.alltrials.net Published On :: Mon, 29 Jul 2019 13:41:09 +0000 The UK body that oversees health research is writing a new strategy on clinical trial transparency and it wants to hear opinions on it. The Health Research Authority (HRA) says its strategy aims to “make transparency easy, make compliance clear and make information public.” It has opened a public consultation on the strategy and some […] Full Article News
ical UK universities and NHS trusts that flout the rules on clinical trials identified in report to Parliament By www.alltrials.net Published On :: Thu, 24 Oct 2019 00:19:34 +0000 An AllTrials report for the House of Commons Science and Technology Select Committee this week has found that 33 NHS trust sponsors and six UK universities are reporting none of their clinical trial results, while others have gone from 0% to 100% following an announcement from the Select Committee in January that universities and NHS […] Full Article News Uncategorized
ical Half of US clinical trials are breaking the law on reporting results By www.alltrials.net Published On :: Fri, 17 Jan 2020 23:30:00 +0000 New research has shown that the majority of clinical trials which should be following the US law on reporting results aren’t. Less than half (41%) of clinical trial results were reported on time and 1 in 3 trials (36%) remain unreported. The research also found that clinical trials sponsored by companies are the most likely […] Full Article News
ical Hundreds of clinical trials ruled to be breaking the law By www.alltrials.net Published On :: Thu, 05 Mar 2020 11:46:11 +0000 A judge in New York has ruled that hundreds of clinical trials registered on ClinicalTrials.gov are breaking the law by not reporting results. The ruling came in a court case launched against the US Department of Health and Human Services by two plaintiffs, a family doctor and a professor of journalism. The case focused on […] Full Article News
ical Clinical Trial Enrollment, ASCO 2013 Edition By www.placebocontrol.com Published On :: Thu, 30 May 2013 17:43:00 +0000 Even by the already-painfully-embarrassingly-low standards of clinical trial enrollment in general, patient enrollment in cancer clinical trials is slow. Horribly slow. In many cancer trials, randomizing one patient every three or four months isn't bad at all – in fact, it's par for the course. The most commonly-cited number is that only 3% of cancer patients participate in a trial – and although exact details of how that number is measured are remarkably difficult to pin down, it certainly can't be too far from reality. Ultimately, the cost of slow enrollment is borne almost entirely by patients; their payment takes the form of fewer new therapies and less evidence to support their treatment decisions. So when a couple dozen thousand of the world's top oncologists fly into Chicago to meet, you'd figure that improving accrual would be high on everyone’s agenda. You can't run your trial without patients, after all. But every year, the annual ASCO meeting underdelivers in new ideas for getting more patients into trials. I suppose this a consequence of ASCO's members-only focus: getting the oncologists themselves to address patient accrual is a bit like asking NASCAR drivers to tackle the problems of aerodynamics, engine design, and fuel chemistry. Nonetheless, every year, a few brave souls do try. Here is a quick rundown of accrual-related abstracts at this year’s meeting, conveniently sorted into 3 logical categories: 1. As Lord Kelvin may or may not have said, “If you cannot measure it, you cannot improve it.” Abstract e15572: Inadequate data availability on clinical trial accrual and its effect on progress in cancer research Probably the most sensible of this year's crop, because rather than trying to make something out of nothing, the authors measure exactly how pervasive the nothing is. Specifically, they attempt to obtain fairly basic patient accrual data for the last three years' worth of clinical trials in kidney cancer. Out of 108 trials identified, they managed to get – via search and direct inquiries with the trial sponsors – basic accrual data for only 43 (40%). That certainly qualifies as “terrible”, though the authors content themselves with “poor”. Interestingly, exactly zero of the 32 industry-sponsored trials responded to the authors' initial survey. This fits with my impression that pharma companies continue to think of accrual data as proprietary, though what sort of business advantage it gives them is unclear. Any one company will have only run a small fraction of these studies, greatly limiting their ability to draw anything resembling a valid conclusion. Abstract TPS6645: Predictors of accrual success for cooperative group trials: The Cancer and Leukemia Group B (Alliance) experience CALGB investigators look at 110 trials over the past 10 years to see if they can identify any predictive markers of successful enrollment. Unfortunately, the trials themselves are pretty heterogeneous (accrual periods ranged from 6 months to 8.8 years), so finding a consistent marker for successful trials would seem unlikely. And, in fact, none of the usual suspects (e.g., startup time, disease prevalence) appears to have been significant. The exception was provision of medication by the study, which was positively associated with successful enrollment. The major limitation with this study, apart from the variability of trials measured, is in its definition of “successful”, which is simply the total number of planned enrolled patients. Under both of their definitions, a slow-enrolling trial that drags on for years before finally reaching its goal is successful, whereas if that same trial had been stopped early it is counted as unsuccessful. While that sometimes may be the case, it's easy to imagine situations where allowing a slow trial to drag on is a painful waste of resources – especially if results are delayed enough to bring their relevance into question. Even worse, though, is that a trial’s enrollment goal is itself a prediction. The trial steering committee determines how many sites, and what resources, will be needed to hit the number needed for analysis. So in the end, this study is attempting to identify predictors of successful predictions, and there is no reason to believe that the initial enrollment predictions were made with any consistent methodology. 2. If you don't know, maybe ask somebody? Abstract 8592: Strategies to overcome barriers to accrual (BtA) to NCI-sponsored clinical trials: A project of the NCI-Myeloma Steering Committee Accrual Working Group (NCI-MYSC AWG) Abstract 1596: Rapid online feedback to improve clinical trial accrual: CODEL anaplastic glioma (AG) (NCCTG/Alliance N0577) as a model With these two abstracts we celebrate and continue the time-honored tradition of alchemy, whereby we transmute base opinion into golden data. The magic number appears to be 100: if you've got 3 digits' worth of doctors telling you how they feel, that must be worth something. In the first abstract, a working group is formed to identify and vote on the major barriers to accrual in oncology trials. Then – and this is where the magic happens – that same group is asked to identify and vote on possible ways to overcome those barriers. In the second, a diverse assortment of community oncologists were given an online survey to provide feedback on the design of a phase 3 trial in light of recent new data. The abstract doesn't specify who was initially sent the survey, so we cannot tell response rate, or compare survey responders to the general population (I'll take a wild guess and go with “massive response bias”). Market research is sometimes useful. But what cancer clinical trial do not need right now are more surveys are working groups. The “strategies” listed in the first abstract are part of the same cluster of ideas that have been on the table for years now, with no appreciable increase in trial accrual. 3. The obligatory “What the What?” abstract Abstract 6564: Minority accrual on a prospective study targeting a diverse U.S. breast cancer population: An analysis of Wake Forest CCOP research base protocol 97609 The force with which my head hit my desk after reading this abstract made me concerned that it had left permanent scarring. If this had been re-titled “Poor Measurement of Accrual Factors Leads to Inaccurate Accrual Reporting”, would it still have been accepted for this year’s meeting? That's certainly a more accurate title. Let’s review: a trial intends to enroll both white and minority patients. Whites enroll much faster, leading to a period where only minority patients are recruited. Then, according to the authors, “an almost 4-fold increase in minority accrual raises question of accrual disparity.” So, sites will only recruit minority patients when they have no choice? But wait: the number of sites wasn't the same during the two periods, and start-up times were staggered. Adjusting for actual site time, the average minority accrual rate was 0.60 patients/site/month in the first part and 0.56 in the second. So the apparent 4-fold increase was entirely an artifact of bad math. This would be horribly embarrassing were it not for the fact that bad math seems to be endemic in clinical trial enrollment. Failing to adjust for start-up time and number of sites is so routine that not doing it is grounds for a presentation. The bottom line What we need now is to rigorously (and prospectively) compare and measure accrual interventions. We have lots of candidate ideas, and there is no need for more retrospective studies, working groups, or opinion polls to speculate on which ones will work best. Where possible, accrual interventions should themselves be randomized to minimize confounding variables which prevent accurate assessment. Data needs to be uniformly and completely collected. In other words, the standards that we already use for clinical trials need to be applied to the enrollment measures we use to engage patients to participate in those trials. This is not an optional consideration. It is an ethical obligation we have to cancer patients: we need to assure that we are doing all we can to maximize the rate at which we generate new evidence and test new therapies. [Image credit: Logarithmic turtle accrual rates courtesy of Flikr user joleson.] Full Article ASCO ethics oncology trials patient recruitment trial delays trial design
ical Counterfeit Drugs in Clinical Trials? By www.placebocontrol.com Published On :: Thu, 08 Aug 2013 03:02:00 +0000 This morning I ran across a bit of a coffee-spitter: in the middle of an otherwise opaquely underinformative press release fromTranscelerate Biopharma about the launch of their Counterfeits flooding the market? Really? "Comparator Network" - which will perhaps streamline member companies' ability to obtain drugs from each other for clinical trials using active comparator arms - the CEO of the consortium, Dalvir Gill, drops a rather remarkable quote: "Locating and accessing these comparators at the right time, in the right quantities and with the accompanying drug stability and regulatory information we need, doesn't always happen efficiently. This is further complicated by infiltration of the commercial drug supply chain by counterfeit drugs. With the activation of our Comparator Network the participating TransCelerate companies will be able to source these comparator drugs directly from each other, be able to secure supply when they need it in the quantities they need, have access to drug data and totally mitigate the risk of counterfeit drugs in that clinical trial." [Emphasis added.] I have to admit to being a little floored by the idea that there is any sort of risk, in industry-run clinical trials, of counterfeit medication "infiltration". Does Gill know something that the rest of us don't? Or is this just an awkward slap at perceived competition – innuendo against the companies that currently manage clinical trial comparator drug supply? Or an attempt at depicting the trials of non-Transcelerate members as risky and prone to fraud? Either way, it could use some explaining. Thinking I might have missed something, I did do a quick literature search to see if I could come across any references to counterfeits in trials. Google Scholar and PubMed produced no useful results, but Wikipedia helpfully noted in its entry on counterfeit medications: Counterfeit drugs have even been known to have been involved in clinical drug trials.[citation needed] And on that point, I think we can agree: Citation needed. I hope the folks at Transcelerate will oblige. Full Article active comparators drug safety operations TransCelerate
ical Is AI Search a Medical Misinformation Disaster? By spectrum.ieee.org Published On :: Thu, 13 Jun 2024 13:00:04 +0000 Last month when Google introduced its new AI search tool, called AI Overviews, the company seemed confident that it had tested the tool sufficiently, noting in the announcement that “people have already used AI Overviews billions of times through our experiment in Search Labs.” The tool doesn’t just return links to Web pages, as in a typical Google search, but returns an answer that it has generated based on various sources, which it links to below the answer. But immediately after the launch users began posting examples of extremely wrong answers, including a pizza recipe that included glue and the interesting fact that a dog has played in the NBA. Renée DiResta has been tracking online misinformation for many years as the technical research manager at Stanford’s Internet Observatory.While the pizza recipe is unlikely to convince anyone to squeeze on the Elmer’s, not all of AI Overview’s extremely wrong answers are so obvious—and some have the potential to be quite harmful. Renée DiResta has been tracking online misinformation for many years as the technical research manager at Stanford’s Internet Observatory and has a new book out about the online propagandists who “turn lies into reality.” She has studied the spread of medical misinformation via social media, so IEEE Spectrum spoke to her about whether AI search is likely to bring an onslaught of erroneous medical advice to unwary users.I know you’ve been tracking disinformation on the Web for many years. Do you expect the introduction of AI-augmented search tools like Google’s AI Overviews to make the situation worse or better?Renée DiResta: It’s a really interesting question. There are a couple of policies that Google has had in place for a long time that appear to be in tension with what’s coming out of AI-generated search. That’s made me feel like part of this is Google trying to keep up with where the market has gone. There’s been an incredible acceleration in the release of generative AI tools, and we are seeing Big Tech incumbents trying to make sure that they stay competitive. I think that’s one of the things that’s happening here. We have long known that hallucinations are a thing that happens with large language models. That’s not new. It’s the deployment of them in a search capacity that I think has been rushed and ill-considered because people expect search engines to give them authoritative information. That’s the expectation you have on search, whereas you might not have that expectation on social media.There are plenty of examples of comically poor results from AI search, things like how many rocks we should eat per day [a response that was drawn for an Onion article]. But I’m wondering if we should be worried about more serious medical misinformation. I came across one blog post about Google’s AI Overviews responses about stem-cell treatments. The problem there seemed to be that the AI search tool was sourcing its answers from disreputable clinics that were offering unproven treatments. Have you seen other examples of that kind of thing?DiResta: I have. It’s returning information synthesized from the data that it’s trained on. The problem is that it does not seem to be adhering to the same standards that have long gone into how Google thinks about returning search results for health information. So what I mean by that is Google has, for upwards of 10 years at this point, had a search policy called Your Money or Your Life. Are you familiar with that?I don’t think so.DiResta: Your Money or Your Life acknowledges that for queries related to finance and health, Google has a responsibility to hold search results to a very high standard of care, and it’s paramount to get the information correct. People are coming to Google with sensitive questions and they’re looking for information to make materially impactful decisions about their lives. They’re not there for entertainment when they’re asking a question about how to respond to a new cancer diagnosis, for example, or what sort of retirement plan they should be subscribing to. So you don’t want content farms and random Reddit posts and garbage to be the results that are returned. You want to have reputable search results.That framework of Your Money or Your Life has informed Google’s work on these high-stakes topics for quite some time. And that’s why I think it’s disturbing for people to see the AI-generated search results regurgitating clearly wrong health information from low-quality sites that perhaps happened to be in the training data.So it seems like AI overviews is not following that same policy—or that’s what it appears like from the outside?DiResta: That’s how it appears from the outside. I don’t know how they’re thinking about it internally. But those screenshots you’re seeing—a lot of these instances are being traced back to an isolated social media post or a clinic that’s disreputable but exists—are out there on the Internet. It’s not simply making things up. But it’s also not returning what we would consider to be a high-quality result in formulating its response.I saw that Google responded to some of the problems with a blog post saying that it is aware of these poor results and it’s trying to make improvements. And I can read you the one bullet point that addressed health. It said, “For topics like news and health, we already have strong guardrails in place. In the case of health, we launched additional triggering refinements to enhance our quality protections.” Do you know what that means?DiResta: That blog posts is an explanation that [AI Overviews] isn’t simply hallucinating—the fact that it’s pointing to URLs is supposed to be a guardrail because that enables the user to go and follow the result to its source. This is a good thing. They should be including those sources for transparency and so that outsiders can review them. However, it is also a fair bit of onus to put on the audience, given the trust that Google has built up over time by returning high-quality results in its health information search rankings.I know one topic that you’ve tracked over the years has been disinformation about vaccine safety. Have you seen any evidence of that kind of disinformation making its way into AI search?DiResta: I haven’t, though I imagine outside research teams are now testing results to see what appears. Vaccines have been so much a focus of the conversation around health misinformation for quite some time, I imagine that Google has had people looking specifically at that topic in internal reviews, whereas some of these other topics might be less in the forefront of the minds of the quality teams that are tasked with checking if there are bad results being returned.What do you think Google’s next moves should be to prevent medical misinformation in AI search?DiResta: Google has a perfectly good policy to pursue. Your Money or Your Life is a solid ethical guideline to incorporate into this manifestation of the future of search. So it’s not that I think there’s a new and novel ethical grounding that needs to happen. I think it’s more ensuring that the ethical grounding that exists remains foundational to the new AI search tools. Full Article Ai search Google Disinformation Generative ai Large language models Health Medicine Search
ical Electrical Stitches Speed Wound Healing in Rats By spectrum.ieee.org Published On :: Tue, 08 Oct 2024 15:00:03 +0000 Surgical stitches that generate electricity can help wounds heal faster in rats, a new study from China finds.In the body, electricity helps the heart beat, causes muscles to contract, and enables the body to communicate with the brain. Now scientists are increasingly using electricity to promote healing with so-called electroceuticals. These electrotherapies often seek to mimic the electrical signals the body naturally uses to help new cells migrate to wounds to support the healing process.In the new study, researchers focused on sutures, which are used to close wounds and surgical incisions. Despite the way in which medical devices have evolved rapidly over the years, sutures are generally limited in capability, says Zhouquan Sun, a doctoral candidate at Donghua University in Shanghai. “This observation led us to explore integrating advanced therapeutics into sutures,” Sun says.Prior work sought to enhance sutures by adding drugs or growth factors to the stitches. However, most of these drugs either had insignificant effects on healing, or triggered side-effects such as allergic reactions or nausea. Growth factors in sutures often degraded before they could have any effect, or failed to activate entirely.The research team that created the new sutures previously developed fibers for electronics for nearly 10 years for applications such as sensors. “This is our first attempt to apply fiber electronics in the biomedical field,” says Chengyi Hou, a professor of materials science and engineering at Donghua University.Making Electrical Sutures WorkThe new sutures are roughly 500 microns wide, or about five times the width of the average human hair. Like typical sutures, the new stitches are biodegradable, avoiding the need for doctors to remove the stitches and potentially cause more damage to a wound.Each suture is made of a magnesium filament core wrapped in poly(lactic-co-glycolic) acid (PLGA) nanofibers, a commercially available, inexpensive, biodegradable polymer used in sutures. The suture also includes an outer sheath made of polycaprolactone (PCL), a biodegradable polyester and another common suture material.Previously, electrotherapy devices were often bulky and expensive, and required wires connected to an external battery. The new stitches are instead powered by the triboelectric effect, the most common cause of static electricity. When two different materials repeatedly touch and then separate—in the case of the new suture, its core and sheath—the surface of one material can steal electrons from the surface of the other. This is why rubbing feet on a carpet or a running a comb through hair can build up electric charge.A common problem sutures face is how daily movements may cause strain that reduce their efficacy. The new stitches take advantage of these motions to help generate electricity that helps wounds heal.The main obstacle the researchers had to surmount was developing a suture that was both thin and strong enough to serve in medicine. Over the course of nearly two years, they tinkered with the molecular weights of the polymers they used and refined their fiber spinning technology to reduce their suture’s diameter while maintaining strength, Sun says.In lab experiments on rats, the sutures generated about 2.3 volts during normal exercise. The scientists found the new sutures could speed up wound healing by 50 percent over the course of 10 days compared to conventional sutures. They also significantly lowered bacteria levels even without the use of daily wound disinfectants, suggesting they could reduce the risk of post-operation infections.“Future research may delve deeper into the molecular mechanisms of how electrical stimulation facilitated would healing,” says Hui Wang, a chief physician at Shanghai Sixth People’s Hospital.Further tests are needed in clinical settings to assess how effective these sutures are in humans. If such experiments prove successful, “this bioabsorbable electrically stimulating suture could change how we treat injuries in the future,” Hou says.The scientists detailed their findings online 8 October in the journal Nature Communications. Full Article Electroceuticals Biodegradable devices Triboelectric Electrotherapy
ical AI is Revolutionizing Healthcare, But Are We Ready for the Ethical Challenges? By medcitynews.com Published On :: Thu, 07 Nov 2024 15:09:00 +0000 Navigating the regulatory and ethical requirements of different medical data providers across many different countries, as well as safeguarding patient privacy, is a mammoth task that requires extra resources and expertise. The post AI is Revolutionizing Healthcare, But Are We Ready for the Ethical Challenges? appeared first on MedCity News. Full Article Artificial Intelligence Daily Health IT MedCity Influencers AI AI bias bias challenges discrimination ethics health IT
ical Clinical Lab Tests Need Stronger FDA Oversight to Improve Patient Safety By www.pewtrusts.org Published On :: Mon, 11 Jan 2021 09:23:00 -0500 In vitro diagnostics (IVDs) play an indispensable role in modern medicine. Health care providers routinely rely on these tests—which analyze samples such as blood or saliva—to help diagnose conditions and guide potentially life-altering treatment decisions. In 2017, for example, clinicians ordered blood tests during about 45% of emergency room visits in the United States, according to the Centers... Full Article
ical Standard Technology Presents Opportunities for Medical Record Data Extraction By www.pewtrusts.org Published On :: Tue, 26 Jan 2021 10:38:00 -0500 Technology has revolutionized the way people live their lives. Individuals can use smartphones to access their bank account, shop from almost any store, and connect with friends and family around the globe. In fact, these personal devices have tethered communities together during the coronavirus pandemic, allowing many people to maintain much of their lives remotely. Full Article
ical Extending the Patentable Life of 3D Printers: A Lesson From the Pharmaceutical Industry By www.lifescienceslawblog.com Published On :: Tue, 19 Jan 2016 17:34:48 +0000 Modern innovation typically occurs one step-improvement at a time. Some clients initially question whether their new application of an existing technology is patentable. Usually, the answer is ‘yes.’ Under U.S. law (and most other jurisdictions), an innovation to an existing technology is patentable so long as at least one claim limitation is novel and non-obvious....… Continue Reading Full Article Biotechnology FDA Intellectual Property Legislation
ical New EU Rules for Medical Devices By www.lifescienceslawblog.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Jul 2016 20:50:14 +0000 After four years of negotiations, European lawmakers agreed on June 15 on a new EU Medical Devices Regulation (MDR). The MDR is the equivalent to the FDA’s CDRH regulations in the United States and essentially specifies the applicable rules when importing medical devices into Europe, which is the world’s second-largest device market. Rules relate, for...… Continue Reading Full Article Life Sciences Practice MDR SRN UDI
ical Statistical Model Building for Large, Complex Data: Five New Directions in SAS/STAT Software By support.sas.com Published On :: 2016-09-08T12:00:00Z This paper provides a high-level tour of five modern approaches to model building that are available in recent releases of SAS/STAT. Full Article
ical An Overview of ODS Statistical Graphics in SAS 9.4 By support.sas.com Published On :: 2016-09-16T12:00:00Z This paper presents the essential information that you need to get started with ODS Graphics in SAS 9.4. Full Article
ical Fitting Multilevel Hierarchical Mixed Models Using PROC NLMIXED By support.sas.com Published On :: 2016-10-06T12:00:00Z This paper provides an example that shows you how to use multiple RANDOM statements in PROC NLMIXED to fit nested nonlinear mixed models, and it provides details about the computation that is involved in fitting these models. Full Article
ical Michelle Yeoh hadn't heard of musical Wicked before being asked to join cast of movie By www.asiaone.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 12:14:38 +0800 Michelle Yeoh had never heard of Wicked before she was asked to join the cast of the movie-musical. The Oscar-winning actress plays Madame Morrible in the new film version of the hit stage show, which is based around characters first seen on screen in 1939 movie The Wizard of Oz. She's confessed she knew nothing about the popular musical before she was approached by director Jon M. Chu about joining the cast. According to The Hollywood Reporter, she said: "At that point, I had no clue what he was talking about because I had not seen Wicked the musical before. I knew Wizard of Oz, who doesn't, but not Wicked because I hadn't been going to the theatres and was not doing what I love which is watching musicals for quite a while, I hate to say." The new movie stars Cynthia Erivo as Elphaba and Ariana Grande as Glinda during their time at Shiz University in the Land of Oz with Michelle's character Madame Morrible serving as the school's headmistress. Michelle went on to say: "So I read it [the script] and called Jon back and said, 'This is a musical and she sings'. And he said, 'Oh easy, you'll have fun, you're up for the challenge.' Full Article
ical My Chemical Romance teases new project By www.asiaone.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 17:15:32 +0800 My Chemical Romance teased a new project on social media. The Welcome to the Black Parade rockers — who broke up in 2013 before releasing new song The Foundations of Decay nine years later — have largely kept things quiet since their reunion tour ended in March 2023, besides a headline slot at When We Were Young Festival last month. On Monday (Nov 11), the band's official Instagram shared an image of a hazy skyline and confetti alongside Russian letters which translate to "TPK". The cryptic post was captioned: "If you could be anything, what would you be?" https://www.instagram.com/p/DCPw84izQkN/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link&igsh=MzRlODBiNWFlZA== While there are no further hints about the message and what it could mean, fans have suggested it may refer to MCR's scrapped record The Paper Kingdom, which was ditched in 2013 and would have been their fifth album. Full Article
ical Teen in critical condition with Canada's first presumptive human case of bird flu By www.asiaone.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 09:30:33 +0800 TORONTO — A teenager is in critical condition in a British Columbia children's hospital, sick with Canada's first presumptive human case of avian influenza. "This was a healthy teenager prior to this, so no underlying conditions," said provincial health officer Bonnie Henry in a news conference on Tuesday (Nov 12). "It just reminds us that in young people this is a virus that can progress and cause quite severe illness and the deterioration that I mentioned was quite rapid." British Columbia health officials said on Saturday the province had detected Canada's first human case of H5 bird flu in a teenager. Full Article
ical Reining in Rebellion: The Decline of Political Violence in South America, 1830–1929 By www.belfercenter.org Published On :: Mar 12, 2024 Mar 12, 2024 After a century of rebellion, South America experienced a rapid decline in revolts in the early 1900s. Historical narratives and an analysis of a comprehensive new dataset show that the decrease stemmed in large part from the expansion and professionalization of the region’s militaries, which were driven by an export boom and the threat of interstate conflict. Full Article
ical When in power, people start making money, Maran told U.S. Political Officer By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Mon, 23 May 2011 05:03:27 +0530 The estranged DMK M.P. spoke about party's corrupt image & predicted its downfall; criticised ‘freebies'; praised Rahul Gandhi; was ‘very downbeat' about United Progressive Alliance's electoral prospects Full Article India
ical Data | Unknown sources of political income spiked after electoral bond entry, BJP cornered lion’s share By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Fri, 18 Nov 2022 10:45:21 +0530 National parties’ unknown income rose from 66% to 71% in the three years before and after the scheme’s introduction Full Article Data
ical Odisha political parties urge ECI to ensure neutrality of government machineries during elections By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Sat, 17 Feb 2024 20:38:13 +0530 As many as 3.32 crore voters will cast their votes in 37,809 polling stations across State Full Article Other States
ical Dynamics of Nuclear and Radiological Terrorism Threats to Post-Soviet Russia By www.belfercenter.org Published On :: Jun 21, 2022 Jun 21, 2022 Simon Saradzhyan was invited to publicly brief the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) committee addressing the adequacy of strategies to prevent, counter, and respond to nuclear terrorism, and identify technical, policy, and resource gaps. The consensus study is a congressionally mandated analysis included in the 2021 National Defense Authorization Act (Section 1299I) sponsored by the Office of the Secretary of Defense (Policy). Nearly 60 stakeholders concerned about this topic from the Department of Defense, US Department of Energy, National Nuclear Security Administration, State Department, National Security Council, US Congress, the National Labs, and many non-governmental organizations were in attendance. The briefings are available at the NAS event website. Video of the presentation can be found here. Full Article
ical Pest-resistant Maize Variety Opens Way for Technological Advancement By www.belfercenter.org Published On :: Sep 10, 2015 Sep 10, 2015 "It is estimated that the spotted stem borer and the African stem borer reduce Kenya's maize crop by 13 per cent or 400,000 tonnes annually. Controlling the pest using biotechnology will not only reduce Kenya's food imports, it will also equip the country with new techniques that can be redeployed for other sectors such as drug and vaccine development." Full Article
ical Unraveling the Political Dynamics Shaping the U.S. Strategy for Technology Leadership By www.belfercenter.org Published On :: Feb 20, 2024 Feb 20, 2024 Although there is broad agreement between the two major parties on the desirability of technology leadership, significant sources of tension—and confusion—persist. By examining the political dynamics that led to the enactment of the CHIPS and Science Act, Constanza M. Vidal Bustamante and Douglass Vijay Calidas probe these tensions and seek to assess their likely impact on the federal technology strategy in the coming years. Full Article
ical The Hacking of Culture and the Creation of Socio-Technical Debt By www.belfercenter.org Published On :: Jun 13, 2024 Jun 13, 2024 In an era in which internet companies dominate both public and private life, both power and culture are increasingly corporate, write Kim Córdova and Bruce Schneier. Full Article
ical Kyrgyzstan in Crisis: A Geopolitical Juncture By www.belfercenter.org Published On :: Apr 29, 2024 Apr 29, 2024 Kyrgyzstan is currently at a critical geopolitical juncture in which it is forced toconfront its longstanding ties with Russia against a backdrop of internal and externalpressures towards autocracy. Once celebrated as the ‘island of democracy’ in CentralAsia, the small nation faces significant challenges in light of internal authoritariantendencies and external pressure following Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine inFebruary 2022. This report, therefore, examines the role of Kyrgyzstan within theglobal democracy versus autocracy debate that has intensified in the past two yearsand assesses President Japarov’s neutrality with regards to Russia’s invasion andBishkek’s shifting allegiances.This report relies on a qualitative methodology that builds on field research conductedin Kyrgyzstan in August 2023. As such, this report incorporates interviews withKyrgyz civil society organizations and other stakeholders working on issuesincluding, but not limited to, democratization, corruption, human rights, media, andthe rule of law. The report presents an in-depth analysis of the Russian influence withregards to the Kyrgyz political system, civil society, and strategic relationship withMoscow, underpinned by the historical context of Kyrgyz-Russian relations. Full Article
ical Uptick in Russian-African Diplomacy Moscow’s Evolving Geopolitical Plans By www.belfercenter.org Published On :: Jun 2, 2023 Jun 2, 2023 A spate of high-level diplomatic gatherings demonstrates that the Russian leadership remains keen to implement a strategy of expansion, rather than merely sustainment, of its relations with the rising Africa. Full Article
ical Healthcare in Focus: Political Hurdles and Policy Progress in Africa By www.belfercenter.org Published On :: Apr 25, 2024 Apr 25, 2024 On April 23, the final session examined healthcare access policies and public health initiatives across Africa. In our discussions, we explored the politics of health and healthcare policy, particularly in light of the COVID-19 pandemic. We identified political barriers to expanding healthcare coverage and access, and the dialogue centered on areas of progress in addressing infectious and chronic diseases. Beyond focusing on the challenges in implementing effective healthcare policies, in this session we invited participants to propose policy solutions as we look towards the future. The study group counted with the presence of external expert guest Dr. Salma Abdalla. Dr. Abdalla is a Sudanese medical doctor and Assistant Professor in Global Health and Epidemiology at Boston University School of Public Health. She was the Director of the Rockefeller-Boston University 3-D Commission on Determinants of health, Data science, and Decision making. She also served as a secretariat member for the WHO Independent Panel for Pandemic Preparedness and Response during the COVID-19 pandemic. Furthermore, Katie Chen, Master in Public Administration/ International Development Candidate at Harvard Kennedy School, delivered a memo briefing on how to boost childhood immunization rates in African countries, including through increased vaccine manufacturing, drone delivery., and behavioural interventions to combat vaccine hesitancy. Full Article
ical The Historical Puzzle of US Economic Performance under Democrats vs. Republicans By www.belfercenter.org Published On :: Mar 28, 2024 Mar 28, 2024 We have heard much about the puzzle that US economic performance under President Joe Biden has been much stronger than voters perceive it to be. But the current episode is just one instance of a bigger historical puzzle: the US economy has since World War II consistently done better under Democratic presidents than under Republican presidents. This fact is even less widely known, including among Democratic voters, than the truth about Biden’s term. Indeed, some poll results suggest that more Americans believe the reverse, that Republican presidents are better stewards of the economy than Democrats. Full Article
ical Climate Change: Political Implications and Policy Response in Africa By www.belfercenter.org Published On :: Apr 18, 2024 Apr 18, 2024 The fourth session addressed the pressing issue of climate change and its political implications in Africa. This session highlighted the disproportionate impact of climate change effects on African nations and how governments are responding through policy measures. A significant focus of the discussion was placed on current climate financial models and the challenges to accessing funding for renewable energy and electrification projects in Africa. The study group counted with the presence of external expert speaker Ely Sandler, Fellow at the Belfer Center. Ely has worked as a senior consultant at the World Bank and previously at Morgan Stanley for nearly a decade. Policy proposals that Ely developed at Harvard were presented at COP27 and are now being adopted by the World Bank and UAE COP28 Presidency, with the hope of catalyzing trillions of dollars of green investment, in part through Article 6 of the Paris Agreement. Full Article
ical Strategic Myopia: The Proposed First Use of Tactical Nuclear Weapons to Defend Taiwan By www.belfercenter.org Published On :: Mar 14, 2024 Mar 14, 2024 David Kearn argues that the idea that the first use of nuclear weapons since 1945 would be by the United States in the defense of Taiwan against a conventional Chinese invasion would have significant, negative, and long-lasting, diplomatic ramifications. It is difficult to fathom the myriad potential consequences, but U.S. nuclear weapon use would almost certainly shatter the non-proliferation regime as a functioning entity, incentivize states (including China) to acquire or improve their existing nuclear arsenal, and damage America's standing globally. Full Article
ical A War Without a Name: The Iran-Israel Relationship in Historical Perspective By www.belfercenter.org Published On :: Jul 24, 2024 Jul 24, 2024 The defining tension in Middle Eastern politics today—and the most combustible pile of tinder—is between the State of Israel and the Islamic Republic of Iran. The antagonism between the two countries has existed for more than forty years. It has played out across the region for more than twenty years within the context of the Middle East’s wider tumult. It has not been restricted to diplomacy, either, but has played out through various means: covert, proxy, political and psychological warfare. Observers of this conflict have as a result tended to describe this state of affairs with obscure terms: “cold” war, “shadow” war, or other words that allude to the existence of an active and geopolitically consequential antagonism but imply an ambiguity that plain old “war” never could. Full Article
ical New Program Informs Teachers' Ethical Decision Making - ProEthica� Training Program By www.multivu.com Published On :: 18 Apr 2016 11:15:00 EDT New program offers educators techniques and strategies for improving awareness of professional risks and vulnerabilities, and for the application of professional ethics in daily decision making. Full Article Education New Products Services Broadcast Feed Announcements MultiVu Video
ical Jorge Narvaez, el embajador de fuerza de milk life, apoyó la campaña “Somos Fuertes” con una experiencia musical y una donación a un centro YMCA de Los Angeles - La fuerza de la familia By www.multivu.com Published On :: 16 Jun 2015 11:55:00 EDT Jorge Narvaez habla sobre la unión y la fuerza de la familia Full Article Noticias para la comunidad hispana Aviso de Contenido para Radio TV California
ical Family That Overcame Infertility Awarded Educational Grant as Winner of Ferring Pharmaceuticals' 2014 Heart to Heart Video Contest - The Park Family�s Infertility Story By www.multivu.com Published On :: 11 Feb 2015 16:10:00 EST The Park Family�s Infertility Story Full Article Healthcare Hospitals Medical Pharmaceuticals Pharmaceuticals New Products Services Awards Broadcast Feed Announcements MultiVu Video
ical DDN Storage Drives Critical Insights that Allow VBI to Combat the World�s Largest and Deadliest Ebola Outbreak - Virginia Bioinformatics Institute Video Case Study By www.multivu.com Published On :: 25 Feb 2015 09:50:00 EST Virginia Bioinformatics Institute Video Case Study Full Article Biotechnology Computer Electronics Computer Software Healthcare Hospitals Medical Pharmaceuticals Broadcast Feed Announcements MultiVu Video
ical World-renowned doctor heads neurosurgery clinic at European Medical Center - World-renowned doctor heads neurosurgery clinic at European Medical Center By www.multivu.com Published On :: 06 Mar 2015 12:30:00 EST World-renowned doctor heads neurosurgery clinic at European Medical Center Full Article Biotechnology Healthcare Hospitals Medical Pharmaceuticals Medical Equipment Pharmaceuticals New Products Services MultiVu Video Corporate Expansion
ical John Hancock Teams with Chris O'Donnell to Recognize Consumers' Healthy Steps To Physical, Emotional, and Financial Wellness - #5MoreNow By www.multivu.com Published On :: 08 Apr 2015 15:03:00 EDT #5MoreNow Full Article Banking Financial Services Healthcare Hospitals Insurance New Products Services Broadcast Feed Announcements Survey Polls & Research MultiVu Video
ical Strategic Partners, Inc. Launches New Medical Apparel Line with CERTAINTY� Antimicrobial Technology - CERTAINTY� Video By www.multivu.com Published On :: 06 May 2015 10:10:00 EDT Strategic Partners, Inc. has created the next generation of medical apparel using the leading antimicrobial technology of CERTAINTY�. Full Article Chemical Fashion Healthcare Hospitals Medical Pharmaceuticals Textiles Infectious Disease Control New Products Services Broadcast Feed Announcements MultiVu Video
ical Nonsurgical Facelift - Marketing Gimmick Or Legitimate Cosmetic Procedure? - Longitudinal Care For Facial Aging By www.multivu.com Published On :: 18 May 2015 19:00:00 EDT Is a Nonsurgical Facelift a Reality and How Does it Impact Facial Aging? Full Article Healthcare Hospitals Medical Pharmaceuticals Cosmetics & Personal Care Broadcast Feed Announcements MultiVu Video
ical West Pharmaceutical Services, Inc. and HealthPrize Technologies Announce Self-Reporting and Barcoding Capabilities for Self-Injection Technology - West and HealthPrize Collaboration By www.multivu.com Published On :: 17 Sep 2015 15:10:00 EDT West and HealthPrize are collaborating to provide an end to end connected health solution for pharmaceutical companies and the patients they serve. Full Article Healthcare Hospitals Medical Pharmaceuticals Pharmaceuticals Broadcast Feed Announcements MultiVu Video
ical Invuity� Launches Hidden Scar Program For Breast Cancer Surgery At American College Of Surgeons (ACS) Annual Clinical Congress 2015 - Top Breast Cancer Surgeons Discuss Advanced Surgical Options By www.multivu.com Published On :: 01 Oct 2015 17:06:00 EDT Top Breast Cancer Surgeons Discuss Advanced Surgical Options Full Article Computer Electronics Healthcare Hospitals Medical Pharmaceuticals Medical Equipment New Products Services Trade show news Broadcast Feed Announcements MultiVu Video
ical Spanish Researchers Discover the Way Through Which Foetuses Really Hear and Respond to Musical Stimuli - Institut Marqu�s By www.multivu.com Published On :: 06 Oct 2015 18:25:00 EDT Institut Marqu�s Full Article Entertainment Healthcare Hospitals Medical Pharmaceuticals Music Broadcast Feed Announcements MultiVu Video
ical National Sports Commentator, Dr. Jerry Punch, Together with Men's Health Network and Endo Pharmaceuticals, Encourages Men with Peyronie's Disease to Ask About the Curve - Ask About the Curve Public Service Announcement By www.multivu.com Published On :: 09 Mar 2016 16:00:00 EST Ask About the Curve Public Service Announcement Full Article Healthcare Hospitals Medical Pharmaceuticals Pharmaceuticals New Products Services Broadcast Feed Announcements Survey Polls & Research MultiVu Video