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Partnerships are key to biomedical translational success – Open Access Government

Posted: January 8, 2020 at 8:44 pm

UCL has an impressive track record of biomedical translational discovery founded upon academic excellence combined with a close relationship with patients and clinicians. This pipeline of innovation is supported through our professional infrastructure linking UCL to our partner hospitals, exemplified by our three NIHR Biomedical Research Centres (UCL Hospital, Moorfields Eye Hospital and Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children BRCs).

The portfolio is typified by, IP generation, licensing and commercialisation and multiple types of partnerships with not-for-profit companies, creation of social ventures and collaborative research with industrial partners, all aimed to address the most pressing patient, hospital and societal needs.

The research translational ecosystem has changed significantly over the past 10 years. Pharma and biotech industries have reorganised this, cutting back on internal research to free-up resource to fund more open innovation and collaborative science. This has led to fragmentation of the delivery of innovation with an increase in the number of SMEs and growth of CROs to fill the gap.

The governments translational strategy and subsequent evolution of the Industrial Strategy has seen the addition of significant investment to incentivise academics and clinicians to participate in biomedical translation which has transformed the sector.

Below we describe some of the important aspects we consider vital for successful biomedical translation that have evolved within the UCL innovation ecosystem over the past 10 years.

UCL and its partners have put in place flexible, professional and responsive structures that are highly networked and aligned to deliver a step-fold change in delivering biomedical translational impact (Figure 1).

In 2010, taking advantage of downsizing activities in large pharmaceutical companies, UCL established the Translational Research Office (TRO) with senior experienced scientists from industry. Embedded within the universitys School of Life and Medical Sciences, the team provide their complimentary therapeutic development know-how to the academics expertise in their fields of research.

The TRO adopt a life-cycle management approach and establish with the academic the appropriate team to deliver the project for societal impact (e.g. clinical, regulatory, manufacturing, toxicology, PK/PD, commercial etc.).

UCLB business managers are key to realising the commercial possibilities of the academics research and ideas, and are essential to delivering the potential to make a real and positive impact on peoples lives. This coordinated approach, uniting the right mix of knowledge and expertise in support of a shared biomedical translational portfolio has allowed the acceleration of research and the ignition of innovation (Figure 2).

Access to funding is critical to accelerating the translation of projects. Within UCL there are several funds available to researchers that can help them advance their projects:

UCL have taken steps to build upon and accelerate the strong academic drive to translate their novel biomedical science. This is being maximised by coordinating professional support with the interested research community around a particular therapeutic modality and sharing knowledge through the Therapeutic Innovation Networks (TINs).

These multidisciplinary networks have been established in small molecules, cell, gene and regenerative medicine, biologics, repurposing, devices and diagnostics. Supported through a Wellcome Trust Translational Partnership Award, TINs aim to increase knowledge and understanding of translation and patenting, and equip researchers with the skills they need to collaborate with commercial partners.

Translation is a team sport that requires multiple players to be aligned and pulling in the same direction. UCL and its partner hospitals strategy over the past 10 years has enabled the acceleration of biomedical therapies delivering patient impact. The significant commercialisation of its world-leading, world-changing technologies and innovations into spinout companies has collectively raised in excess of 1 billion investment (Figure 2) making UCL the go-to place for organisations looking to partner with academia and hospitals in research, education, innovation and industrial engagement along the entire value chain of therapeutic development.

UCL and its partner hospitals have a well-established innovation ecosystem helping to develop entrepreneurial researchers and drive a pipeline of marketable therapeutic innovations. As we look forward to the next ten years, we will continue to evolve our structures to provide the necessary support to our researchers to advance their amazing science for patient benefit.

Please note: This is a commercial profile

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Stem Cell And Regenerative Therapy Market 2019 New Innovations, Research and Growth Factor till 2024 – Pro News Time

Posted: January 7, 2020 at 7:50 pm

The global stem cell and regenerative medicines market should grow from $21.8 billion in 2019 to reach $55.0 billion by 2024 at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 20.4% for the period of 2019-2024.

Report Scope:

The scope of this report is broad and covers various type of product available in the stem cell and regenerative medicines market and potential application sectors across various industries. The current report offers a detailed analysis of the stem cell and regenerative medicines market.

The report highlights the current and future market potential of stem cell and regenerative medicines and provides a detailed analysis of the competitive environment, recent development, merger and acquisition, drivers, restraints, and technology background in the market. The report also covers market projections through 2024.

Get More Information: https://www.trendsmarketresearch.com/report/sample/11723

The report details market shares of stem cell and regenerative medicines based on products, application, and geography. Based on product the market is segmented into therapeutic products, cell banking, tools and reagents. The therapeutics products segments include cell therapy, tissue engineering and gene therapy. By application, the market is segmented into oncology, cardiovascular disorders, dermatology, orthopedic applications, central nervous system disorders, diabetes, others

The market is segmented by geography into the following regions: North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, South America, and the Middle East and Africa. The report presents detailed analyses of major countries such as the U.S., Canada, Mexico, Germany, the U.K. France, Japan, China and India. For market estimates, data is provided for 2018 as the base year, with forecasts for 2019 through 2024. Estimated values are based on product manufacturers total revenues. Projected and forecasted revenue values are in constant U.S. dollars, unadjusted for inflation.

Report Includes:

28 data tables An overview of global markets for stem cell and regenerative medicines Analyses of global market trends, with data from 2018, estimates for 2019, and projections of compound annual growth rates (CAGRs) through 2024 Details of historic background and description of embryonic and adult stem cells Information on stem cell banking and stem cell research A look at the growing research & development activities in regenerative medicine Coverage of ethical issues in stem cell research & regulatory constraints on biopharmaceuticals Comprehensive company profiles of key players in the market, including Aldagen Inc., Caladrius Biosciences Inc., Daiichi Sankyo Co. Ltd., Gamida Cell Ltd. and Novartis AG

Summary

The global market for stem cell and regenerative medicines was valued at REDACTED billion in 2018. The market is expected to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of REDACTED to reach approximately REDACTED billion by 2024. Growth of the global market is attributed to the factors such as growingprevalence of cancer, technological advancement in product, growing adoption of novel therapeuticssuch as cell therapy, gene therapy in treatment of chronic diseases and increasing investment fromprivate players in cell-based therapies.

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In the global market, North America held the highest market share in 2018. The Asia-Pacific region is anticipated to grow at the highest CAGR during the forecast period. The growing government funding for regenerative medicines in research institutes along with the growing number of clinical trials based on cell-based therapy and investment in R&D activities is expected to supplement the growth of the stem cell and regenerative market in Asia-Pacific region during the forecast period.

Reasons for Doing This Study

Global stem cell and regenerative medicines market comprises of various products for novel therapeutics that are adopted across various applications. New advancement and product launches have influenced the stem cell and regenerative medicines market and it is expected to grow in the near future. The biopharmaceutical companies are investing significantly in cell-based therapeutics. The government organizations are funding research and development activities related to stem cell research. These factors are impacting the stem cell and regenerative medicines market positively and augmenting the demand of stem cell and regenerative therapy among different application segments. The market is impacted through adoption of stem cell therapy. The key players in the market are investing in development of innovative products. The stem cell therapy market is likely to grow during the forecast period owing to growing investment from private companies, increasing in regulatory approval of stem cell-based therapeutics for treatment of chronic diseases and growth in commercial applications of regenerative medicine.

Products based on stem cells do not yet form an established market, but unlike some other potential applications of bioscience, stem cell technology has already produced many significant products in important therapeutic areas. The potential scope of the stem cell market is now becoming clear, and it is appropriate to review the technology, see its current practical applications, evaluate the participating companies and look to its future.

The report provides the reader with a background on stem cell and regenerative therapy, analyzes the current factors influencing the market, provides decision-makers the tools that inform decisions about expansion and penetration in this market.

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Chancy Arnold has spent most of his life on the border. He’s now the Border Patrol’s most veteran agent – The San Diego Union-Tribune

Posted: January 7, 2020 at 7:50 pm

Fresh out of the academy yet still very much an agent-in-training, Chancy Arnold was finally being given a little range.

He and his partner were told to drive on the border road east, familiarize themselves with the rolling hills and unmarked trails that would become their new office.

As they approached the base of Otay Mountain, they came upon a man lying face down in the dirt. About 50 yards to the south, a flimsy barbed wire fence denoted the U.S.-Mexico border.

Strange, Arnold thought, does he really think hes hiding from us?

The agents yelled at the man: Get up, we can see you!

He remained still.

The hairs on the back of Arnolds neck began to stand up.

Closer inspection revealed the grisly truth: Someone had driven the migrant through the border, ordered him to the ground and put a bullet in the back of his head, execution style.

Even as a rookie, Arnold thought he had a pretty good idea of what it would be like to be a Border Patrol agent. His father had worn the olive green uniform for as long as he could remember. But the discovery that day was a shock to the system and a first-hand glimpse of the ruthless landscape he was now part of.

That was 1985, and Arnold is now pushing on 35 years in the agency, making him the most veteran agent serving in the nation.

The border has changed considerably in that time.

Arnold has watched the terrain transform into one of fences and roads, surveillance cameras and sensors. Hes seen manpower multiply and missions shift.

Hes seen migration patterns turn from single, Mexican men to unaccompanied children and asylum-seeking families.

Hes had to acknowledge the humanity and desperation of the people he encounters while enforcing the laws and policies hes sworn to uphold.

Hes worked under six presidents and has ridden waves of intense public and political interest surrounding the border.

Most agents retire after 20 to 25 years. Its a hard job, and Arnold doesnt blame them.

But Arnold had always planned to work until the Border Patrol made him leave. That will be in July, when he turns 57.

Since Day 1 in my mind, Arnold said, I was going to work until the end.

Arnold was just shy of 3 years old when his father left his job as a roughneck on a Montana oil rig and joined the Border Patrol in 1965. The Arnolds left the northern plains for the dusty borderlands of El Centro.

The year his father joined was a turning point on the southwestern border. The U.S. bracero program, which had sanctioned agricultural labor by Mexican migrants, had just been shut down. And the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 for the first time restricted legal immigration from the Western Hemisphere, including Mexico, while opening it up to Asia and Africa. Preference was given to those with U.S. citizen family members or desirable skills and professions.

But demand for Mexican labor didnt end, and soon migration that once may have been legal was now illegal, creating a large new population of unauthorized immigrants.

The El Centro sector apprehended some 5,300 migrants in 1965, a figure that more than doubled over the next five years. In neighboring San Diego, apprehensions rose 8-fold to 50,600 over the same period.

I was kind of oblivious to it in some regards, Arnold said of his early awareness of his dads career. I do remember him going off to work and being gone a lot.

It wasnt until Arnold was around 21, working at Safeway grocery store in El Centro, that he could imagine carving his own path as an agent.

What the Border Patrol represented securing our borders, securing our nation appealed to me at the time, he recalled. It also provided for a long-term career, no college degree needed, and the chance to work outdoors.

Quite honestly, its what I knew.

His father accompanied him to pick up his new uniform from a downtown San Diego outfitter. He tried it on for the first time, feeling a newfound connection to his dad.

On a recent Friday, Arnold made the familiar trek to Arnies Point, a vista overlooking what used to be one of the most heavily trafficked illegal border crossings.

It looks nothing like it did when he was a mop-haired rookie.

But gazing down, Arnold with a military-style crew cut now turned silver was looking decades into the past.

Chancy Arnold was a rookie Border Patrol agent in 1985.

(Courtesy of Chancy Arnold)

He could see thousands of migrants gathering in a soccer field that has since been filled in by dirt. He could see the vendors in the festival-like atmosphere selling last minute provisions before the nightly surge north. And he could see agents running through the scrub brush in pursuit.

Catch who you can, process them at the station, come back for more. Repeat. That was the pace back in those days.

In 1985, San Diego accounted for more than 427,000 of the southwest borders 1.2 million apprehensions, the most of any sector.

Just like when his father joined the agency, the southwestern border was at another turning point. In 1986, the Immigration Reform and Control Act sought to stem the rising illegal flow by authorizing a 50 percent increase in Border Patrol staffing and toughening criminal laws against employers. At the same time, it provided a pathway for amnesty for certain longtime migrant residents, giving them a chance at legal status.

But illegal immigration continued to grow.

And the increased manpower was slow to materialize. It wasnt until 1994 that the roughly 3,000 agents nationwide in the mid-1980s grew to 4,200, according Syracuse Universitys Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse, which gathers federal data.

About 140 of those agents were assigned to Brown Field station when Arnold began. Their coverage area stretched from just east of the San Ysidro Port of Entry to Otay Mountain. The squat brown building occupied a corner of the small airfield, surrounded by acres of cucumber and bell pepper crops.

It was from here that Arnold departed each evening, donning a minimalist tactical belt holding a six-shooter revolver, six to 12 spare bullets, handcuffs and a radio.

You didnt wear body armor unless you could afford your own.

Agents patrolled in American-made SUVs, with gaping holes in the dashboards where the factory AM/FM radios had been. The chief had had them all removed.

He didnt want us distracted, Arnold said. Still, many agents secretly brought along their own little transistor radios when things got too quiet.

They werent needed most nights.

The border fence then was nothing more than barbed wire or cable strung between poles. It didnt stop foot traffic from coming north, rather, it was meant to stop vehicle loads of drugs or people. It worked sometimes.

Working the swing shift, thered be eight or nine vehicle chases going on at the same time, Arnold recalled. Itd be like a dog fight, trying to figure out whos got this chase and whats going on with that one.

Just north of Arnies Point, finger canyons disappear around the bend. Thats where, in the dense brush, Arnold once hunted for bandits who were hunting for migrants.

The canyons were notoriously violent, a place where robbers could easily hide and prey on those who crossed north. Rapes, assaults and murder were common.

Arnold was just three years out of the academy when he was picked for the elite bandit detail. The Border Crimes Task Force had already been made famous in Joseph Wambaughs 1984 book Lines and Shadows.

The stakes were higher on this assignment, and gunfights were practically inevitable.

In fact, Arnies Point was named for one. Its where Agent Arnie Forsyth was once hit in the buttocks during a shoot-out with bandits.

Unlike the police officers and sheriffs deputies who roamed the canyons disguised as migrants, using themselves as decoys, Border Patrol agents worked the detail in full uniform. Besides, there was no disguising a 6-foot-3-inch tall blond like Arnold out there.

It was more to send a message. Let everyone know we were out there, Arnold said.

Arnold got into his first and only gunfight in a canyon farther west.

Chancy Arnold, assistant patrol chief of the U.S Border Patrols San Diego sector, first worked out of the Brown Field Station. The station has since relocated, but the original building still sits abandoned on the airfield.

(Howard Lipin/The San Diego Union-Tribune)

The detail had intelligence of a two-man ambush operation, where one bandit would hide behind a stand of trees at a T-intersection of two trails while the other would distract passing migrants.

Sure enough, Arnolds group approached and took down the distractor. Then the bandits partner came around from behind with a loaded .45-caliber pistol. The agents fired. The bandit was hit; he survived.

Arnolds rotation on the bandit detail was the second to last before the unit was disbanded. But he credits the experience for making him a better cop.

I think it helped me grow up.

The constant action didnt leave much room for boredom. But it could be demoralizing sometimes.

Hordes of people would be streaming by Arnold at night, and hed sometimes wonder to himself: What am I doing here?

More substantial fencing starting going up around 1990 to stem the flow. But the corrugated landing mat material, installed on its side, acted more like a ladder than a fence.

It was also easily breached with tools.

At the same time, a wave of anti-immigrant sentiment was sweeping the state. Then-Gov. Pete Wilson blamed Washington for inaction on the border and pushed Proposition 187, which slashed state services such as health care and public education to unauthorized immigrants.

A new strategy was launched in 1994 called Operation Gatekeeper that flooded the San Diego border with agents in three tiers a highly visible show of force that would dissuade migrants from crossing in the first place and catch those who did farther inland.

Agents were also outfitted with new vehicles and equipment, while infrastructure like roads and lighting began to transform the border into something resembling a paramilitary zone.

The results were staggering.

Apprehensions soared in the first year to more than a half-million, then they began to drop off sharply. From fiscal 1995 to 2005, overall apprehensions in the sector declined by 76 percent.

However, while some may have been disinclined to make the journey north, most just shifted routes east to the less fortified deserts, into the territory Arnolds father had once patrolled.

In the five years after Gatekeeper was launched, apprehensions in El Centros sector rose from 37,317 to 238,126.

The shift didnt come as a surprise but was rather a tactical decision by leaders push illegal crossings away from large cities and into wilderness areas for easier apprehensions. But the human cost was high, as the harsher environment claimed thousands of lives over the years.

Reflecting on the legacy of Gatekeeper, Arnold recently revisited a spot that he said illustrates the monumental turning point for the Border Patrol.

He motioned to the Tijuana levee on his right, a massive concrete culvert that made for one of the other most popular crossing points in the 1980s.

Youd have 2,000, 3,000 people staged here wanting to enter, he recalled. He described makeshift bridges that got migrants over fast-moving water, sometimes manned by smugglers for a fee.

On this day, the levee was empty of people and surrounded by layers of steel bollard fencing newly erected over the past couple years.

He then pointed to Las Americas Premium Outlets on his left, bustling with San Ysidro lunchtime traffic. Homes in the adjacent Coral Gate development, which broke ground in 1999, now sell for over a half-million dollars each.

I never expected in my lifetime these buildings would be here, Arnold said. If youre looking at it from my perspective, what I saw, this is absolutely amazing.

Again following in his fathers footsteps, Arnold transitioned into management.

Hes covered just about every job in the San Diego sector: supervisor, training officer, watch commander. He spent 13 years in the prosecutions unit, readying cases for criminal and administrative court. By then he had gone back to school, earning a criminal justice degree.

He went to Washington on temporary assignment twice (leaving his supportive wife and children home in San Diego both times).

He first served as an acting assistant chief in 2007 for a year as part of a multiagency team to help oversee the Secure Border Initiative Network, or SBInet. The project, rolled out in 2006, was part of an evolving effort to wire up the border with a virtual fence of sorts.

The contractor, Boeing, installed the first network of sensors and surveillance towers on the Arizona border, but the project was eventually halted. The Government Accountability Office pointed to technology that was not custom-made for its purpose and a program that was overrun with costs and poorly managed.

When asked to sum up his brief experience with SBInet, Arnold wryly said: They learned some lessons.

Arnold went to the capitol again in 2009 for nine months to coordinate care for unaccompanied minors, who in the years preceding had been fleeing to the United States in record numbers. The waves had sent authorities scrambling to find a way to place the children, mostly teens, in appropriate housing long term while caring for their short-term needs at Border Patrol stations.

The experience would help prepare him for his current role.

As assistant chief over prosecutions, asset forfeiture, and detentions in the San Diego sector, Arnold has most recently been in charge of mitigating what he calls a humanitarian crisis that started about a year ago with the surge of Central American caravans arriving at the border to seek asylum. Most of them are families.

While some of the migrants follow protocol and present themselves at ports of entry, many see the long wait of metered lines and cross illegally. Then they sit and wait to be arrested, so they can claim asylum.

It is a phenomenon agents werent accustomed to.

We were dealing with unprecedented activity as far as how many people we had in custody, Arnold said.

Many families ended up staying several days at Border Patrol stations, long past the 72-hour limit, as Immigration and Customs Enforcement reluctant to release them into the community determined where to house them next in accordance with a court agreement that sets out the terms of detention for children.

All our Border Patrol stations are set up, built and designed not for families, not for children, but for single, adult males, Arnold said. Single, adult males from Mexico could be processed quickly and returned across the border. These families were in an altogether different situation.

We were holding people in custody longer than we ever intended to hold people in, Arnold said. People in custody longer require more resources.

Agents needed car seats in vehicles to transport infants. The stations required more food, toiletries, diapers and formula. Migrants complained of being crowded into concrete cells, unable to sleep due to constantly chilly temperatures and bright lights, with not enough access to food or showers.

The change in population shifted agents away from patrolling the line and into caretaker roles.

The latest scrutiny comes as a group of doctors urges Customs and Border Protection, the umbrella agency of the Border Patrol, to hold free flu shot clinics in detention centers for migrant children. Three children have died in detention from the flu in the past year, none in San Diego.

A few weeks ago, doctors demonstrated outside the Border Patrols sector headquarters in Chula Vista, where Arnold is based; the day ended with six protesters arrested.

CBP officials have called vaccine programs in short-term detention not feasible.

The current spotlight on the border is perhaps the most intense its ever been and has created political and philosophical rifts across the country. In many ways it illustrates the deeper divisions facing the nation.

The Border Patrol, at the front lines, is often characterized in extremes hero or villain depending on the messenger.

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Chancy Arnold has spent most of his life on the border. He's now the Border Patrol's most veteran agent - The San Diego Union-Tribune

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Underpads Market Report (2019-2025) | The demand for the Market will drastically increase in the Future – BulletintheNews

Posted: January 7, 2020 at 7:50 pm

Global Underpads Market research Report 2019 may be a comprehensive business study on this state of business that analyses innovative ways for business growth and describes necessary factors like prime manufacturers, production worth, key regions and rate of growth. with growth trends, numerous stakeholders like investors, CEOs, traders, suppliers, analysis & media, international Manager, Director, President, SWOT analysis i.e. Strength, Weakness, Opportunities and Threat to the organization and others. This report focuses on Professional Global Underpads Market 2019-2025 volume and value at Global level, regional level and company level.

Global Underpads Market 2019 report provides key statistics on the market status of the Underpads Manufacturers and is a valuable source of guidance and direction for companies and individuals interested in the Underpads Industry. The Underpads industry report firstly announced the Underpads Market fundamentals: type applications and market overview; product specifications; manufacturing processes; cost structures, raw materials and so on.

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Underpads Market is expected to grow at a CAGR of roughly xx% over the next five years, will reach xx million US$ in 2025, from xx million US$ in 2019, according to a new study.

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Underpads Market Report (2019-2025) | The demand for the Market will drastically increase in the Future - BulletintheNews

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Oak Bay’s top stories of 2019 – BCLocalNews

Posted: January 6, 2020 at 10:42 pm

Many stories caught the attention of our readers this year but these were the most-read stories of 2019 online at oakbaynews.com.

Former Oak Bay Mayor Nils Jensen has died

The District of Oak Bay mourned the loss of a community leader this year with the death of former mayor Nils Jensen in April, after a short battle with cancer.

Jensen spent more than 15 years sitting on Oak Bay council and was elected mayor in 2011, serving two terms.

Jensen also served as chair of the Capital Regional District (CRD) board, trustee for the Greater Victoria Public Library and chair of BC Mayors Caucus. He spent 12 years as chair of the CRDs water board.

He was remembered fondly by friends, family, members of the community and other local politicians. Thousands of residents filled the Dave Dunnet Community Theatre at Oak Bay High to reflect on the legacy he left behind.

Seat belt requirement a double bogey, B.C. golf industry says

Also topping the list for 2019 is a story involving WorkSafeBC rethinking its plan to require golf courses across the province to outfit all of their motorized equipment with seat belts and rollover protection bars, after an industry outcry about cost and impracticality of the move.

In a letter to Tourism Minister Lisa Beare, the MLAs for Revelstoke and Parksville said the requirement would cost the B.C. golf industry as much as $20 million to upgrade its equipment. The extra costs would be disastrous for B.C. tourism as prices rise and golfers can easily shift vacations to Alberta, Montana, Idaho or Washington.

WorkSafeBC is working on revisions to section 16 of its Occupational Health and Safety regulation, the part dealing with mobile equipment such as foklifts, all-terrain vehicles and golf carts, spokesman Ralph Eastman said in an email to Black Press Media. Consultation was conducted over the past year and more will be done.

Greater Victoria developer rushes to demolish historic wall before Oak Bay applies heritage permit

Controversy over historical elements in the community also caught the attention of readers.

The District of Oak Bays council conducted an emergency meeting on Oct. 17 in order to issue a Temporary Protection Order for the property at 1561 York Pl.

Starting at 7 a.m. that same morning, executive staff from Abstract Development took jackhammers, crowbars and shovels to a 122-year-old stone wall, while angry neighbours watched.

The demolition took place under a posted Stop Work Order tacked onto a nearby tree, but Abstract staff on site pointed noted the order only said the company had to cease anything which required permits, while all they were doing was landscaping.

The Stop Work Order was put in place after Oak Bay council agreed to apply a Heritage Conservation Permit (HCP) bylaw on the property, which would require property owners to seek a permit from the District before making any changes to heritage components, such as the wall. At the time the bylaw had received its third reading and was scheduled for approval at the end of the month.

Abstract commenced the work today in order to protect the companys existing rights to the property, as it is anticipated that the District of Oak Bay will be implementing a Heritage Control Period bylaw in the Prospect neighbourhood by the end of the month, said Adam Cooper, director of development for Abstract in a statement.

In a fight against cancer, Victoria mans only stem cell match was his own donation

Readers hearts went out to a Greater Victoria man battling cancer.

Jeremy Chow applied to be a stem cell donor a few years ago after watching a 30-second Canadian Blood Services commercial calling for Asian donors. The father of two young girls had no way of knowing that soon, he would be in need of new stem cells and the only donor match would be unusable because it was his own.

According to Canadian Blood Services, these life-sustaining immature blood cells are found in bone marrow, peripheral circulating blood and umbilical cord blood. They can become red or white blood cells or platelets and do incredible work for people like Chow, replacing their unhealthy cells and reducing the likelihood that the cancer will return.

Hundreds of protesters drown out anti-SOGI speakers in Oak Bay

Rounding out the top stories of 2019 is the hundreds of protestors who mobilized in Oak Bay outside the Windsor Pavillion.

They were there to protest the Erosion of Freedom event, hosted by anti-SOGI speaker Jenn Smith, who speaks against the SOGI 123 (sexual orientation and gender identity) resources taught in B.C. schools.

the event had been a source of controversy in the community both towards organizers and the District of Oak Bay, which received backlash for allowing it to go ahead in one its community spaces.

Protest movements cropped up online to counter the evenings program, including a protest created by Greater Victoria School District trustee Ryan Painter that drew hundreds to the Windsor Pavilion.

vnc.editorial@blackpress.ca

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Einstein, the Moon, and You – SFGate

Posted: January 6, 2020 at 7:44 am

By Deepak Chopra, MD and Menas Kafatos, PhD

At the present moment a lot of the basic principles of traditional physics are in a confused state of disarray. Occasionally the media carries a story about strange discoveries by modern science on the order of black holes or dark matter and energy, suggesting that such phenomena are as yet unexplained. What isnt publicized is that many if not most of the most commonly cherished ideas in traditional physics are dead as dodos. They are either wrong, impossible to verify, or contradicted by other more modern ideas without the contradiction being resolved.

Here is a list of the dead dodos, although some might still be clinging to life tenuously.

Without giving it a passing thought, countless people accept these outdated or outright dead ideas as a given, the same way that religious societies accept the idea of an external God as a given. If you accept either the traditional religious or scientific worldview, you are unwittingly living by unexamined ideas that came to you second hand. It would be better to expand human potential by living free of second-hand ideas. But this is a daunting proposition.

As discussed in a previous post, Why Einstein Was Wrong about the Moon, even the most brilliant minds can wind up defending flawed ideas as if they were facts. The nub of the matter was Einsteins stubborn belief in the physical world as something independent and pre-existing, needing no input from human beings. To repeat the incident that began this series of posts, [Einstein] once walked back from the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton with the late Abraham Pais. The moon was out and Einstein asked Pais, Do you really believe the moon is not there when you are not looking at it?

Why was this even an issue? Surely we can believe in the moon, and all gross physical objects, existing without us. Youd never suspect, cocooned in a worldview you take for granted, that Einstein of all people could be wrong about something so basic and obvious to our senses. But beginning with the quantum revolution over a century ago, as old accepted ideas went the way of the dodo, they were replaced by ideas closer to what is the actual reality. Here is a list of the most crucial ones, which weve selected because they apply to you as an individual.

In our book, You Are the Universe, we expand upon these ideas in detail. What matters to the individual is whether a better worldview exists than the one propped up by shaky, often dead ideas absorbed second hand.

Such a worldview lies beyond theory and is centered entirely on the creative aspect of consciousness. The replacement ideas just listed are not wishful thinking or anti-scientific. There are leading physicists, other scientists, and philosophers expounding them every day. Lets imagine that a new and better worldview did arise and got accepted. Some time in a future we cannot predict, a team of advanced alien explorers from a distant star system might send back a report to their home planet about human beings that would read like the following:

The human species is no longer as lonely, isolated, insecure, and self-doubting as they once were, nor as arrogant. They no longer attack and despoil their planet. Instead, they realize that they are immersed and entangled in the very fabric of Nature. They take responsibility as conscious agents who shape their own personal reality and in turn their environment. They humbly recognize that the universe at every moments springs from an inconceivable source.

Rather than worshiping this source or ignoring it, humans celebrate the infinite creative potential of consciousness. Now that they understand how consciousness works at the very basis of reality, humans have adopted the role that always belonged to them, as co-creators of everything they know as real. The very universe they participate in is tailored to support human evolution.

This shift in worldview represents the merger of two realms that humans kept apart, quite arbitrarily, for centuries, the realms of in here and out there. The two got united as one consciousness creating and governing everything. In fact, humans now see the world as nothing but consciousness modifying and reshaping itself constantly. This shift has had the practical effect of bringing body and mind together as a unity, the bodymind.

There is enormous optimism on the planet for the first time in memory. No longer tied to conditioning from the past and anxious anticipation about the future, humans have learned to live in the present moment. In the present they have rediscovered the richness of insight, intuition, imagination, curiosity, love, compassion, personal growth, and their common humanity.

Old rigid barriers of religious dogma, racial divides, and aggressive nationalism have come down thanks to the global effort that saved Earth from ecological disaster, just in the nick of time. Humans see boundless untapped potential within themselves, and this belief is taught to every child growing up. All of these changes are rooted in one tremendous insight, that reality is consciousness-based. No longer insignificant life forms clinging for survival on the speck of a planet floating in the cold void of infinite space, humans have reimagined themselves. In so doing, they realize that they have been imagining themselves all along. Its lucky they made this insight in time to turn their destiny around.

No one can read the future, but we can say that everything in the aliens report is plausible and has science on its side. Coming to terms with a new and better worldview will spring from science naturally, as the next step of the human project to understand who we are and why we are here.

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

Menas C. Kafatos is the Fletcher Jones Endowed Professor of Computational Physics at Chapman University and the Director of the Center of Excellence in Earth Systems Modeling and Observations. Author, physicist and philosopher, he works in quantum mechanics, cosmology, the environment and climate change and extensively on philosophical issues of consciousness, connecting science to metaphysical traditions. Member or candidate of foreign national academies, he holds seminars and workshops for individuals, groups and corporations on the universal principles for well-being and human potential. As dean and vice provost, he promoted interdisciplinary educational and research projects, leading many grants. His doctoral thesis advisor was the renowned M.I.T. professor Philip Morrison who studied under J. Robert Oppenheimer. He has authored more than 333 articles, is author or editor of 20 books, including The Conscious Universe (Springer, 2000), Looking In, Seeing Out (Theosophical Publishing House, 1991), Living the Living Presence (in Greek, Melissa, 2017; and in Korean, Miruksa Press, 2016), Science, Reality and Everyday Life (in Greek, Asimakis 2019), and is co-author with Deepak Chopra of the NY Times Bestseller You are the Universe (Harmony/Random House/Penguin, 2017, translated into many languages and at many countries). You can learn more at http://www.menaskafatos.com

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Ear acupuncture can help manage pain, anxiety and depression – CapeGazette.com

Posted: January 6, 2020 at 7:44 am

For the growing numbers of Americans who seek help dealing with anxiety, depression and sleep disorders, centuries-old Chinese medicine provides a non-invasive, non-pharmaceutical and highly effective solution.

Auricular acupuncture, which is centered on the ears, is a particularly intriguing technique for treating a variety of symptoms related to these issues.

This form of auricular therapy has been used successfully to relieve acute and chronic pain experienced by soldiers and veterans. Called battlefield acupuncture, its been studied extensively by the Department of Defense and Veterans Administration medical centers, with proven results in reducing back, musculoskeletal, neuropathic and headache pain.

Similar to other forms of acupuncture, auricular therapy focuses on how areas of the body are connected through pathways called meridians or channels.

For instance, massaging a specific area of your temple can eliminate a migraine, said Denise Demback, LAC, an experienced local acupuncturist. We have found that stimulating certain areas within your ear can alleviate a number of ailments.

Unlike other acupuncture therapy, ear seeds - small gold buttons or tacks placed within the ear can remain in place for several weeks, supplying a constant, ongoing source of relief. In addition, inserting the ear seeds is a quick and convenient process, with no need to disrobe or lie down for an extended period of time, making it easier for patients to consider. In fact, the National Acupuncture Detoxification Association protocol used by practitioners for both emergency response and community wellness calls for insertion of ear seeds while the patient is standing.

Patients who are experiencing severe anxiety, depression or other mental health issues may want to consult with their healthcare provider about ear acupuncture as a way to relieve symptoms and improve overall well-being.

Be wary, however, of doing it yourself by purchasing ear seeds online and placing them in your ears.Its best to see a trained acupuncturist or an AcuDetox specialist licensed to perform the NADA protocol in the state of Delaware.

Ear acupuncture focuses on these five areas, shown to be connected to other pathways in the body:

1: Sympathetic, located along the outer edge of the ear, is connected to the stress response. Acupuncture releases spasms and dilates blood vessels, helping balance the autonomic nervous system, which controls breathing, heartbeat and digestive processes.

2: Shen Men, an oval-shaped depression inside the upper ear, is also known as the spirit gate. Acupuncture in this area is believed to anchor the spirit and calm the mind, used to help patients deal with insomnia, pain management, hyperactivity, high blood pressure, fear and panic attacks.

3. Kidney, in the ears center, is known as the water element, and is at the root of Chinese medicines yin and yang balance for optimal health. Acupuncture in this area, thought to control the essence of graceful aging, can help strengthen lower legs, spine and bone marrow, improve digestion and fertility, and more. It is also used to help calm fear, paranoia and mistrust, and boost confidence.

4. Liver. Found along the ridge inside the ear, the wooden element is connected to regulating blood flow. Acupuncture provides relief for metabolic functions, such as nourishing the liver, ligaments, skin, nails and hair, and helping regulate menstruation, sleep, mood, and digestion. Stimulating this area with acupuncture is also helpful in dealing with emotions of anger, violence, frustration or depression.

5. Lung. The area on the lower side of the ear ridge, known as the metal element, controls respiration and functions of the skin. Acupuncture is associated with clearing up imbalances of apathy, lethargy, lack of inspiration and grief.

Dr. Uday Jani treats the whole patient using an integrative medicine approach at Shore View Personal Care, a concierge practice on Route 9 near Milton. He is board-certified in internal medicine and fellowship trained in integrative medicine. For more information, call 302-684-0990 or go to http://www.udayjanimd.com.

Denise Demback, a licensed acupuncturist and diplomate of Oriental medicine, has been in practice since 2002. A graduate of the Maryland Institute of Traditional Chinese Medicine, she is nationally board certified in both acupuncture and Chinese herbs. For more information, call 410-241-7467 or go to http://www.activelifeacupuncture.com.

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Razors end extended No-Shave November – The Herald

Posted: January 6, 2020 at 7:44 am

Photos by Marlena Sloss/The HeraldJasper Police Officer Brent Duncan looks at his Fu Manchu mustache shaved as a joke by Mike Cravener of Jasper, left, while getting a hot towel shave at Mike's Barber Shop in Jasper on Thursday. Members of the Jasper Police Department grew out their beards during November and December to raise money for the Lange-Fuhs Cancer Center, and Mike Cravener volunteered to give the officers hot towel shaves. Duncan said it was his first time getting a straight razor shave and he was nervous beforehand.

By BILL POWELLbpowell@dcherald.com

A series of hot, straight-razor shaves done gratis Thursday at Mikes Barber Shop officially ended a Jasper Police Department extended, augmented No-Shave November that raised money for the fight against cancer.

Jaspers police department had traditionally allowed officers to grow beards in November in exchange for participation donations funneled to local worthy causes. That practice rose to the next level this holiday season.

Officer Michael Stallman came up with a new approach after talking with Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department officers during an October training workshop. The Indy officers were already sporting beards and Stallman learned that, since October was Breast Cancer Awareness Month, they were doing something special to support a female officer who fought and won that particular battle.

Stallman returned and went to his department brass with a proposal: Jasper police could raise money for the Lange-Fuhs Cancer Center by paying $20 a month during November and December in exchange for the opportunity to sprout beards.

But he took the proposal further.

Stallman wanted to make the fundraiser open to everyone in the department, including dispatchers, administration and detectives. And his idea was also to support the fight against all types of cancer.

Jasper Police Chief Nathan Schmitt has his beard shaved with a straight razor for the first time by Chinno Rivera of Evansville at Mike's Barber Shop in Jasper on Thursday. "They do a better job shaving you than I do," Schmitt said after his shave was done.

Since he and his wife, Autumn, operate a custom embroidery and banner business MAS Whatknots they would give each participant a T-shirt in the color promoting awareness of the cancer fight important to them: pink for breast cancer, yellow for bone cancer, orange for leukemia and so on.

For dispatchers and others whose uniform of the day is a polo shirt, the Stallmans also offered to embroider department shirts with the color thread that promoted awareness of a particular cancer.

Cancer has affected a lot of the people at the police station in some way or form, Stallman says.

His sales pitch worked. The program got a stamp of approval and the Stallmans handed out more than 30 shirts.

There are so many shades of shirts out there we had to jump across a couple of different manufacturers to get all the different colors, Stallman says. It went really well.

The fundraiser channeled more than $1,200 to the Lange-Fuhs Cancer Center. There was overwhelming participation in Jasper and officers with the Huntingburg Police Department who had staged their own No-Shave event added their proceeds to Jaspers total to join forces. Connie Egloff, integrative medicine coordinator with Lange-Fuhs Cancer Center, was on hand at the barbershop to accept the donation Thursday.

There was also something to be said for the publics interaction with bearded officers with non-traditional T-shirt colors peeking out from under uniform shirts, said Stallman, who had sported a hot pink T-shirt under his standard uniform blouse.

Sometimes, for folks to see us not being clean-cut, maybe its an icebreaker, Stallman says. People do interact with us different. Its been a little bit of an icebreaker and started a few conversations.

Connie Egloff, integrative medicine coordinator at the Lange-Fuhs Cancer Center, center, hugs Jasper Police Officer Mike Stallman after he presented her with $1,240 for the Lange-Fuhs Cancer Center raised by the Jasper and Huntingburg Police Departments as Jasper Police Officer Brent Duncan, left, Jasper Police Officer Grant Goffinet, and Chinno Rivera of Evansville watch at Mike's Barber Shop in Jasper on Thursday.

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David Bowie tribute project Sons of the Silent Age play two of the artist’s most iconic albums – Chicago Reader

Posted: January 6, 2020 at 7:44 am

This dedicated, lushly meticulous David Bowie tribute band debuted at Metro in 2013 as a benefit for a cancer charity. Theyve carried that tradition forward (albeit with different charities) into each subsequent performance at the venue, as well as expanding their scope into other fund-raising events and special showsincluding a few full-album sets and a 2015 appearance at the David Bowie Is . . . exhibit at the Museum of Contemporary Art. At the bands core are front man Chris Connelly and drummer Matt Walker, and their nine-piece ensemble can be swaggeringly loose or as tightly tailored as the Thin White Dukes trousers, as the moment demands. Theyve also folded in guest artists, among them Ava Cherry, Sinead OConnor, Shirley Manson, and actor Michael Shannon (whos played the roles of Bowies pals Iggy Pop and Lou Reed). Its no small task to manifest the charisma needed to do justice to Bowies material, and Connelly admirably sways up to the challenge. Hes more of an interpreter than an imitatorthough his performances are sometimes so uncanny that I wouldnt be surprised if hes subject to the occasional spirit possessionand he provides his own fresh nuance on beloved hits as well as deeper cuts. At this concert (which features Shannon again), Sons of the Silent Age will play two classic Bowie albums in their entirety: 1972s The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From Mars and 1976s Station to Station. A portion of the proceeds will be donated to cancer patients at the NorthShore University HealthSystems Integrative Medicine Program. v

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Integrative Pet Vet column: Celebrating the bond we share with our pet companions – Glenwood Springs Post Independent

Posted: January 6, 2020 at 7:44 am

The holiday season represents many things including reconnecting with family and friends. Enjoying time with family and friends is an important part of the holiday season, highlighting their value in our lives. Not surprisingly, our pet companions have become a critical part of our families and our circle of friends. They play an important role, on many levels, in our daily lives. The number of households with pets continues to increase. An estimated 85 million U.S. families have pet companions in 2019. That is 67% of households compared to 56% in 1988 based on American Pet Products Association surveys. There are approximately 90 million dog and 94 million cat companions in the U.S.

The holidays provide an opportunity to acknowledge and celebrate our bond with our pet companions. Including pets in our holidays continues to increase with an estimated $67 to $185 per pet spent for gifts this year, 54% of pets have a Christmas stocking, 29% will receive a Christmas card, 16% will be featured in their family Christmas card, and 3% of pets will write a letter to Santa.

These statistics are only a superficial reflection of how important our pets are to us individually. Pets provide unconditional love and companionship. They contribute to increased quality of life, reduced rates of cardiovascular disease and obesity, and lower levels of anxiety, depression and loneliness. Pet companionship also improves recovery from illness.

In addition to these contributions, pet connections have far reaching effects for children including benefits for child development, reduced childhood incidence of certain diseases, and improved response to therapy. Pet companions are great listeners that reduce stress reactions in children performing stressful tasks. Other studies show that classroom pets facilitate learning, respect and empathy. There is also a reduction in aggressive child behaviors.

The benefits of pet companionship extend beyond the classroom into the workplace. Pets in the workplace relieve stress, make the work environment more comfortable, facilitate social interaction, increase productivity, and improve interactions with customers. These factors lead to higher job satisfaction, higher employee retention, and a feeling that the workplace supports physical health and mental well-being.

With all this in mind it is easy to understand that pet companions also contribute to increased quality of life, life satisfaction, and physical and mental health in the elderly. Elderly that have contact with pets are more mobile and have improved social interactions.

During the holidays, take time to recognize and celebrate the contribution that pet companions make to all our lives. Dont forget that they need to be kept safe from holiday hazards like small toys they can ingest, foods that can be toxic to them, under-cooked foods that can lead to food poisoning, houseplants that can be toxic, salt on the sidewalks that can irritate feet, and the cold temperatures that can be problematic. Also remember that pets can become stressed by all the holiday activities that change schedules and bring people into our homes. Dogs need to stay on schedule with their normal exercise routines. Cats also benefit from exercise and play so take time for them. Ultimately these interactions will reduce your own holiday stress and improve the quality of your social interactions.

For pets that are stressed by the holiday activities, consider the Bach Flower remedies like Rescue Remedy, nutraceutical products designed to reduce anxiety, anti-anxiety herbs, and pheromones like Feliway for cats and Adaptil for dogs. Essential oils like lavender can be calming but be cautious with essential oils around cats because cats are susceptible to toxicity.

If you have questions about pet safety during the holidays or stress management for your pets, contact your veterinarian. Enjoy the holidays with your pet companions. Happy Holidays.

Ron Carsten, DVM, PhD, CVA, CCRT was one of the first veterinarians in Colorado to use the integrative approach, has lectured widely to veterinarians, and has been a pioneer in the therapeutic use of food concentrates to manage clinical problems. He is also the founder of Colorado Animal Rescue (CARE). In addition to his Doctor of Veterinary Medicine, he holds a PhD in Cell and Molecular Biology and is a Certified Veterinary Acupuncturist and Certified Canine Rehabilitation Therapist. He practices integrative veterinary medicine in Glenwood Springs.

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