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Salarius Pharmaceuticals Hosting Key Opinion Leader Call on Epigenetics, The Regulatory System That Affects Gene Expression – BioSpace

Posted: December 20, 2019 at 2:48 pm

HOUSTON, Dec. 17, 2019 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Salarius Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (Nasdaq: SLRX), a clinical-stage oncology company targeting the epigenetic causes of cancers,today announced that it will host a key opinion leader (KOL) call on Epigenetics, Thursday, December 19th at 12pm Eastern Time.

The call will feature a presentation by KOLs Damon Reed, MD, Moffitt Cancer Center, and Johnathan Whetstine, PhD, Fox Chase Cancer Center, who will discuss Epigenetics, and how drugs that regulate gene expression (epigenetic drugs) are a viable strategy for treatment and management of cancer. They will also discuss recent clinical successes with epigenetic drugs, and what to expect from novel agents. Drs. Reed and Whetstine will be available to answer questions at the conclusion of the call.

The call will also feature a presentation by Salarius management team, which will provide an update on their lead program, Seclidemstat. Management will share the latest on their clinical program and on new areas of interest including immunotherapy and select tumor mutations. Seclidemstat, a reversible LSD1 inhibitor, inhibits LSD1s enzymatic and scaffolding properties, representing a viable therapeutic option for patients who need it the most.

Damon Reed, MD is the Director of the Adolescent and Young Adult Program at Moffitt Cancer Center, an Associate Member of the Sarcoma Department at Moffitt Cancer Center and an Assistant Professor of Pediatrics at the University of South Florida. He is also on staff as a specialty physician at All Childrens Hospital in St. Petersburg, FL. He is the Leader of the National Pediatric Cancer Foundations pediatric phase I consortium, the Sunshine Project. Dr. Reeds research interests include chemotherapeutic approaches to sarcoma in the pediatric and adolescent and young adult population. He is interested in establishing relevant preclinical sarcoma models, establishing and testing biomarkers for targeted therapies and translating predictive testing and combinations of agents towards personalized medicine in sarcoma and other rare cancers. A graduate of Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine in Cleveland, OH, Dr. Reed served a combined pediatric residency program at Boston Childrens Hospital-Harvard Medical School and Boston Medical Center-Boston University School of Medicine. He completed his fellowship training in pediatric hematology/oncology at St. Jude Childrens Research Hospital. Dr. Reed has received numerous academic awards, including graduating valedictorian from Canfield High School and summa cum laude from the University of Dayton. He received the CWRU Medical Alumni Association Board of Trustees Award for Outstanding Service and Contributions to the School of Medicine and was named to the Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society. Dr. Reed is a member of several professional associations, including the American Association for Cancer Research, Connective Tissue Oncology Society and American Society of Clinical Oncology. Dr. Reed is the Principal Investigator of Salariuss ongoing Ewing sarcoma Phase 1/2 clinical trial.

Johnathan Whetstine, PhD is the Program Leader of the Cancer Epigenetic Program at the Fox Chase Cancer Center. A rising star in the field of epigenetics, Dr. Whetstine has made groundbreaking discoveries that have expanded the field and provided significant implications for understanding tumor heterogeneity and drug response. In recognition of the promise of his research, he holds the prestigious Scholar award from the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society and a National Institutes of Health R01 grant, as well as funding from the American Lung Association, Alex Lemonade Stand Foundation and AstraZeneca. Recently, Dr. Whetstine helped coordinate the Epigenetics Symposium: 15 Years of Lysine Demethylases: From Discovery to the Clinic, which brought together experts in the field of LSD1 research. Prior to Fox Chase, Dr. Whetstine was at Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center and Harvard Medical School in Boston, where he served as vice chair of the Epigenetics Program. He also held appointments as associate geneticist and associate professor in the department of medicine, respectively. He completed his postdoctoral fellowship in epigenetics/pathology in the laboratory of Yang Shi, PhD, at Harvard Medical School, and earned his PhD in pharmacology from Wayne State University in Detroit. Dr. Whetstine has served on Salariuss Advisory Board.

About Salarius Pharmaceuticals Salarius Pharmaceuticals, Inc. is a clinical-stage oncology company targeting the epigenetic causes of cancers and is developing treatments for patients that need them the most. Epigenetics refers to the regulatory system that affects gene expression. In some cancers, epigenetic regulators often become dysregulated and incorrectly turn genes on or off leading to cancer progression. Drugs that can safely modify the activity of these epigenetic regulators may correct the gene changes that are driving the disease. The companys lead candidate, Seclidemstat, is currently in clinical development for treating Ewing sarcoma, for which it has Orphan Drug designation and Rare Pediatric Disease Designation by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Salarius believes that Seclidemstat is one of only two reversible inhibitors of the epigenetic modulator LSD1 currently in human trials, and that it could have potential for improved safety and efficacy compared to other LSD1-targeted therapies. Salarius is also developing Seclidemstat for several cancers with high unmet medical need, with a second Phase 1 clinical study in advanced solid tumors, including prostate, breast and ovarian cancers. Salarius receives financial support from the National Pediatric Cancer Foundation to advance the Ewing sarcoma clinical program and is also the recipient of an $18.7 million Product Development Award from the Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas (CPRIT). For more information, please visit salariuspharma.com.

Forward-Looking Statements This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. All statements, other than statements of historical facts, included in this press release are forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements may be identified by terms such as will, can, could, believe, feel, plan, allow, will, expect, provide, able to, position, anticipate, progress, potential, target, and similar terms or expressions or the negative thereof. Examples of such statements include, but are not limited to, statements regarding: the companys lead program, Seclidemstat, the companys clinical program and new areas of interest including immunotherapy and select tumor mutations; the potential for Seclidemstat as viable therapeutic option for patients who need it the most; the companys belief that Seclidemstat is one of only two reversible inhibitors of the epigenetic modulator LSD1 currently in human trials, and that it could have potential for improved safety and efficacy compared to other LSD1-targeted therapies; and the companys development of Seclidemstat for several cancers with high unmet medical need, with a second Phase 1 clinical study in advanced solid tumors, including prostate, breast and ovarian cancers. Salarius may not actually achieve the plans, carry out the intentions or meet the expectations or objectives disclosed in the forward-looking statements. You should not place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements. These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties which could cause actual results and performance to differ materially from those discussed in the forward-looking statements. These risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, the following: the ability of the company to raise additional capital to meet the companys business operational needs and to achieve its business objectives and strategy; the companys ability to project future capital needs and cash utilization; available sources of cash, including from CPRIT and its equity line; future clinical trial results; that the results of studies and clinical trials may not be predictive of future clinical trial results; the sufficiency of Salarius intellectual property protection; risks related to the drug development and the regulatory approval process; the competitive landscape and other industry-related risks; market conditions which may impact the ability of Salarius access capital under its equity line; the possibility of unexpected expenses or other uses of Salarius cash resources; and other risks described in Salarius filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including those under the heading Risk Factors. The forward-looking statements contained in this press release speak only as of the date of this press release and are based on managements assumptions and estimates as of such date. Salarius disclaims any intent or obligation to update these forward-looking statements to reflect events or circumstances that exist after the date on which they were made.

ContactsInvestor Relations LifeSci Advisors, LLCJeremy FefferManaging Director(212) 915-2568 jeremy@lifesciadvisors.com

Media Relations:Tiberend Strategic Advisors, Inc.Johanna BennettSenior Vice President(212) 375-2686jbennett@tiberend.com

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Uncovering a defective sperm epigenome that leads to male infertility – Penn: Office of University Communications

Posted: December 20, 2019 at 2:48 pm

One out of eight couples has trouble conceiving, with nearly a quarter of those cases caused by unexplained male infertility. For the past decade, research has linked that infertility to defective sperm that fail to evict proteins called histones from DNA during development. However, the mechanisms behind that eviction and where this is happening in the sperm DNA has remained both controversial and unclear.

Now, researchers atPenn Medicineshow, using newer genome-wide DNA sequencing tools, the precise genetic locations of those retained histones, as well as a key gene regulating it. The findings were published inDevelopmental Cell.

Taking it a step further, the researchers created a new mouse model with a mutated version of the gene,Gcn5, which allows investigators to closely track the defects in sperm from the early stages of sperm development through fertilization and on. This is an important step forward as it could lead to a better understanding of not only infertility in menand ways to potentially reverse itbut also the suspected epigenetic mutations being passed onto the embryo from males either naturally or through in vitro fertilization.

Epigenetics, the factors influencing an organisms genetics that are not encoded in the DNA, play a strong role in sperm and egg formation.

For men who have unexplained infertility, everything may look normal at the doctors: normal semen counts, normal motility. Yet they can still have problems conceiving, says first authorLacey J. Luense, a research associate in the lab of the study's senior author,Shelley L. Berger, the Daniel S. Och University Professor in the departments of Cell and Developmental Biology in the Perelman School of Medicine and Biology in the School of Arts and Sciences, and director of the Penn Epigenetics Institute. One explanation for persistent problems is histones being in the wrong location, which may affect sperm and then early development. Now, we have a really good model to study what happens when you dont get rid of the histones appropriately in the sperm and what that may look like in the embryo.

Read more at Penn Medicine News.

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Epigenetics Market: 2020 Industry Outlook, Comprehensive Insights, Growth and Forecast 2030 – Info Street Wire

Posted: December 20, 2019 at 2:48 pm

In a recent study published by Prophecy Market Insights, titled, Global Epigenetics Market Research Report, analysts offers an in-depth analysis of global Epigenetics market. The study analyses the various aspect of the market by studying its historic and forecast data. The research report provides Porters five force model, SWOT analysis, and PESTEL analysis of the Epigenetics market. The different areas covered in the report are Epigenetics market size, drivers and restrains, segment analysis, geographic outlook, major manufacturers in the market, and competitive landscape.

Key Players of Epigenetics Market:

Illumina Inc., Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc., Merck Millipore Limited, Bio-Rad Laboratories, Inc., Qiagen Inc., Zymo Research Corporation, Diagenode s. a., Enzo Life Sciences, Inc. and New England Biolabs Inc.

Download Sample Copy of This Report @ https://prophecymarketinsights.com/market_insight/Insight/request-sample/36

The research report, Epigenetics Market presents an unbiased approach at understanding the market trends and dynamics. Analysts have studied the historical data pertaining to the market and compared it to the current market trends to paint an object picture of the markets trajectory. The report includes SWOT analysis and Porters five forces analysis to give the readers an in-depth assessment of the various factors likely to drive and restrain the overall market.

Market Segmentation:

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Table of Contents

Market Overview: The report begins with this section where product overview and highlights of product and application segments of the global Epigenetics market are provided. Highlights of the segmentation study include price, revenue, sales, sales growth rate, and market share by product.

Competition by Company: Here, the competition in the global Epigenetics market is analyzed, taking into consideration price, revenue, sales, and market share by company, market concentration rate, competitive situations and trends, expansion, merger and acquisition, and market shares of top 5 and 10 companies.

Company Profiles and Sales Data: As the name suggests, this section gives the sales data of key players of the global Epigenetics market as well as some useful information on their business. It talks about the gross margin, price, revenue, products and their specifications, applications, competitors, manufacturing base, and the main business of players operating in the global Epigenetics market.

Market Status and Outlook by Region: In this section, the report discusses about gross margin, sales, revenue, production, market share, CAGR, and market size by region. Here, the global Epigenetics market is deeply analyzed on the basis of regions and countries such as North America, Europe, China, India, Japan, and the MEA.

Application or End User: This part of the research study shows how different application segments contribute to the global Epigenetics market.

Market Forecast: Here, the report offers complete forecast of the global Epigenetics market by product, application, and region. It also offers global sales and revenue forecast for all years of the forecast period.

Upstream Raw Materials: The report provides analysis of key raw materials used in the global Epigenetics market, manufacturing cost structure, and the industrial chain.

Marketing Strategy Analysis and Distributors: This section offers analysis of marketing channel development trends, indirect marketing, and direct marketing followed by a broad discussion on distributors and downstream customers in the global Epigenetics market.

Research Findings and Conclusion: This is one of the last sections of the report where the findings of the analysts and the conclusion of the research study are provided.

Appendix: Here, we have provided a disclaimer, our data sources, data triangulation, market breakdown, research programs and design, and our research approach.

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Epigenetics Market by Applications, Vertical Type, and by Regions, 20162026 (US$ Million) – Market Reports Observer

Posted: December 20, 2019 at 2:48 pm

CMI published a business research report on Epigenetics Market: Global Industry Analysis, Size, Share, Growth, Trends, and Forecasts 20182026. Epigenetics Market with 100+ market data Tables, Pie Chat, Graphs & Figures spread through Pages and easy to understand detailed analysis. The information is gathered based on modern floats and requests identified with the administrations and items.

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The worldwide Epigenetics Market report stresses the most recent advancements, development, new chances, and lethargic traps. It gives a comprehensive position of the worldwide Epigenetics Market. The Epigenetics Market research report covers the present scenario and the growth prospects of the global Epigenetics Market industry for 2018-2026. The report enlists several important factors, starting from the basics to advanced market intelligence which play a crucial part in strategizing. Epigenetics Market manufacturers and is a valuable source of guidance and direction for companies and individuals interested in the Epigenetics Market industry.

Leading Market Player Profile Included in This Report is: Illumina Inc., Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc., Merck Millipore Limited, Bio-Rad Laboratories, Inc., Qiagen Inc., Zymo Research Corporation, Diagenode s. a., Enzo Life Sciences, Inc. and New England Biolabs Inc.

Most of the information assembled is exhibited in a graphical frame alongside the related measurements. The Epigenetics Market report exhibits the working of the fundamental market players, providers, and merchants in detail. The report likewise features the limitations and drivers affecting the Epigenetics Market.

The report likewise incorporates a fundamental profile and data of all the significant market players at present dynamic in the worldwide Epigenetics Market. The organizations canvassed in the report can be assessed based on their most recent advancements, monetary and business diagram, item portfolio, enter drifts in the market, long haul and here and now business methodologies by the organizations with the end goal to remain aggressive in the market.

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Global Epigenetics Market: Regional Segment Analysis

North America (U.S., Canada, Mexico),

Europe (Germany, U.K., France, Italy, Russia, Spain etc),

South America (Brazil, Argentina etc)

Middle East & Africa (Saudi Arabia, South Africa etc).

Asia-Pacific (China, Japan, India)

In order to get a deeper view of Market Size, competitive landscape is provided i.e. Revenue (Million USD) by Players (2013-2018), Revenue Market Share (%) by Players (2013-2018) and further a qualitative analysis is made towards market concentration rate, product/service differences, new entrants and the technological trends in future.

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Epigenetics Market by Applications, Vertical Type, and by Regions, 20162026 (US$ Million) - Market Reports Observer

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Trees of Knowledge – The Wire

Posted: December 20, 2019 at 2:48 pm

The UN Climate Change Conference in Madrid opened on December 2 by calling the climate crisis a war against nature. But trees have always been at war, fighting for their survival. While plants may seem passive in the environment, they can sense their environments, make decisions, and respond to threatsup to a point.

Every autumn holds terrible perils for plants. While many trees drop their leaves every year, the decision of precisely when to do so is a delicate one, as Peter Wohlleben, a German forest ranger, explains in The Hidden Life of Trees. Too soon and trees lose the chance to make food for the coming spring. Too late and an early snow or ice storm can weigh down leaves, tear off branches, and cause fatal injuries.

That decision may seem automatic to a human observer, but individual trees actually make different calls, which shows how subjective the event is. Wohlleben describes 300-year-old oak trees growing side by side. One always sheds its leaves earlier than the others. The timing of leaf drop, it seems, really is a question of character, he writes. The tree on the right is a bit more anxious than the others, or to put it more positively, more sensible. The two others are bolder, he writes, gambling on good weather.

Also Read: Science Isnt the Only Way to Look at a Tree. Marvelling Is Another.

Trees decide when to act based on day length and temperature, which they can easily sense. Rising temperatures mean spring; falling temperatures mean fall. And what this proves as well, Wollenben writes, is that trees must have a memory.

This is quite different from the detailed and emotion-filled memories we recall every day, writes biologist Daniel Chamovitz in the book What a Plant Knows. Yet plants use some of the same mechanisms we do to recall events. Epigenetics is one major way that past experiences stay with us, such as tolerance for cold climatesand with plants, too.

Trees decide when to act based on day length and temperature, which they can easily sense. Credit: Creative Commons

Epigenetic changes affect the way genes are expressed without altering the underlying DNA code. The DNA is wrapped around proteins called histones, Chamovitz writes, and events can change certain histones, which in turn affect which genes turn on or off. In that way, plants remember things like bad weather and attacks by insects. Furthermore, they not only remember environmental stress but they can pass those memories on, because epigenetic changes are heritable. Their seeds come prepared for the problems their parents encountered.

That means they can recognise droughts and recall ways to cope. Trees can prepare to close the pores (stomata) on their leaves to limit water loss or grow fewer stomata, and can be ready to bring up more water from their roots. With something called somatic adaptation, the growing tips of branches can use a different phenotypethat is, change their actual physical formto cope with new anticipated growing conditions. This lets trees survive a wide range of environments. Trees, though we think of them as stationary and static, can use electrochemical gradients to move, as a Venus flytrap closes when an insect touches certain hairs in its trap. These gradients work like the electric signals in our nervous system.

But instead of a nervous system, any centralised source of decision-making, plants have what plant neurobiologist Stefano Mancuso, in The Revolutionary Genius of Plants, calls collective intelligence. Each part reacts to changes in its environment, including the changes in neighbouring parts of its own organism, much like a colony of bees. Even though they have nothing akin to a central brain, Mancuso writes, plants exhibit unmistakable attributes of intelligence. They are able to perceive their surroundings with a greater sensitivity than animals do.

Chamovitz writes, intelligence is a loaded term, but plants are acutely aware of the world around them. They can sense different kinds of light, evaluate chemicals in the air including those emitted by other plants, distinguish different kinds of touches to their leaves, and locate gravity. And plants are aware of their past. They dont know us as individuals, but they know their environment, and people are part of this environment.

What they may not realise is how dramatically the human part of their environment is altering the rest. Winter comes later, spring comes earlier, storms come more erratically and cause more damage. Summers are hotter, and droughts occur more often and are more severe.

Also Read: How I Became a Tree is an Ode to All That is Neglected

Trees know how to adapt, but there is a limit, says Andrew Mathews, a professor of environmental anthropology at the University of CaliforniaSanta Cruz. His work emphasises forestry and sustainability. In Europe, the last ice age ended about 12,000 years ago, which is only 20 generations for trees, he says, so adult trees are out of sync anyway with the climate, but thats not their most immediate problem.

Trees dont live in climate. They live in weather, he says, and they can adjust several times in a lifetime to cope in ways that animals cant, dropping leaves earlier or later, changing the shape and texture of their leaves, altering structures in their trunks, or growing deeper or shallower roots. Trees can even migrate to better climate zones by sending seeds carried by winds or animals to sprout in new areas. But can they move fast enough? Even if they do, new habitats are limited. Trees in mountainous areas can migrate to higher latitudes as temperatures rise, but even if they move fast enough, they may be pushed upslope until they have nowhere else to go and will become extinct in that location, Mathews says.

Trees in mountainous areas can migrate to higher latitudes as temperatures rise. Photo: Samuel Ferrara/Unsplash

Even if plants do succeed in adapting to climate change by changing their location or schedule, theyre not alone in their biospheres. The flowers they may decide bloom earlier or later need pollinators. Will the bees, birds, butterflies, wasps, spiders, and flies move in tandem with the trees, and if they do, will they be on the same schedule? Scientists just dont know.

We can debate the definition of intelligence, but we know that trees can identify and solve problems in ways that we cant. They remember that spring is coming, and when it does theyll be ready to sense the weather and make their decisions in response. But what they dont know is that their decisions become more critical with every passing season and year. Our decisions are just as critical. But we know that we can foresee the futureand as smart as they are, the trees cant.

This piece was originally publishedonFutureTense, a partnership betweenSlatemagazine, Arizona State University, and New America.

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Trees of Knowledge - The Wire

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WeTheTrillions Says The Future Of Public Health Is Female And Plant-Based – Forbes

Posted: December 20, 2019 at 2:47 pm

WeTheTrillions wants to make it easier for people - especially women - to eat healthier, with an ... [+] emphasis on fruits, vegetables, and other plant-based foods.

Its long been said that food is medicine, but the healthcare system doesnt always treat it as such. Despite the fact that we need to eat every day, multiple times a day, just to stay alive, medical schools in the U.S. provide on average only 19 hours of nutritional education throughout a doctors training.

As a result, your doctor may be able to prescribe you a medicine to treat high blood pressure, diabetes, or any number of other conditions, but they simply might not know how to advise you to try to prevent illness in the first place.

But some folks are trying to change that. WeTheTrillions is a public benefit corporation that is approaching nutritious food as not just part of a healthy lifestyle, but as one of the first to leverage technology and prescription-grade delivered meals as the frontlines of preventative healthcare to stop the epidemic of chronic conditions touching more than 60 percent of adults in the US. The company is named for the trillions of microbes in each of our gut biomes along with trillions of cells, which make up the central focus of the companys food-as-medicine because of the gut biomes role in well, virtually every part of our lives and bodies.

WeTheTrillions main product is ready-to-eat customized meal and snack options, and those who subscribe to their weekly meal plans also have access to health specialists to discuss and stay on top of their goals and concerns. They also provide software to clinicians so they can track progress and help patients reach tangible results through a customized food program. This could be for patients suffering from IBS, diabetes, anemia or any other female-related hormonal imbalances.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 50 percent of doctors recommendations to patients with chronic illnesses are not followed and this number goes up to more than 70 percent when it comes to lifestyle changes like dietary guidelines, says Lamiaa Bounahmidi, Founder and CEO of WeTheTrillions. Closing that gap is already making WeTheTrillions an appealing solution to hundreds of doctors across the US who see this as an immediate intervention to leverage theory and practice for preventative healthcare and help save trillions of dollars in healthcare bills - effectively staunching the leading public health crisis of the 21st century: chronic disease.

To know your eligibility for a WeTheTrillions program, you first start by filling out a 3-minute online intake quiz and then have a 20-min call with a health specialist to fully customize your plan and agree on clear target biomarkers levels to reach. The process is based on an aggregation of evidence-based randomized controlled trials to provide a fully science-driven approach beyond fad diets.

Notably, theyre also looking to set up machines in urban and rural food deserts that offer affordable options via subsidization through the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program and other government assistance programs. And all the food is 100% plant-based, a choice justified by medical evidence that currently points to a veggie-heavy diet for its abilities to fight heart disease, diabetes, and strokes as well as hormonal balance and gut health.

But their approach to food as preventative medicine is more specific and science-backed than simply offering healthy plant-based foods. While the meals are, theoretically, for anyone looking to eat well and improve their health, much of the emphasis is on using food to treat Polycystic ovary syndrome, menopause symptoms, fertility, and other issues pertaining to womens reproductive health. Even the general health issues WeTheTrillions seeks to address, like anemia, often disproportionately affect women, especially women of color.

Theres a reason to believe that this method of specifically targeting womens reproductive and general health could be an effective strategy in improving the overall health of society. Overwhelming evidence links maternal health to that of children, which together affect the overall health of society. A society with healthy women is more likely to have healthy children who will grow into healthy adults. WeTheTrillions emphasis on the health of female-sexed people is not exclusive, but it is strong and forward-thinking.

There are a plethora of premade or prepped meal kits on the market now, many of which are vegan, organic, and health-focused. Not all of them, however, can claim to have the medical emphasis of WeTheTrillions, with its specific issue-based meal plans and grand focus on making food accessible via work, school, physicians, and public assistance.In a way, its simplicity is inspiring: to improve the health of society at large, eat plants. The work of doctors, scientists, and public health experts boil down to some tasty vegetables on your plate customized to your unique health needs.

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WeTheTrillions Says The Future Of Public Health Is Female And Plant-Based - Forbes

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Low blood pressure is a risk and should be taken seriously – Chicago Daily Herald

Posted: December 20, 2019 at 2:47 pm

We all know that high blood pressure increases the risk of coronary artery disease and stroke but rarely is information presented on the risks of low blood pressure. A number of medical studies have claimed little or no serious medical risk associated with low blood pressure with serious medical risk only being defined as a heart attack and stroke. Other medical studies suggest that low blood pressure does increase the risk of coronary artery disease, falling and even increases the risk of dementia and Alzheimer's disease. In both traditional and on-traditional medicine, low blood pressure is usually ignored even if there are clinical findings of the blood pressure being too low.

The medical risks of chronic high blood pressure are now well defined. But it was not always the case. At the turn of the century, high blood pressure was so common in the elderly that it was considered the natural result of aging. The famous Framingham Heart Study (1949-1952) showed that those with a systolic blood pressure over 159 had a three to six times increased of heart disease. Since then the relationship between high blood pressure and illnesses has been clearly delineated. As a result, many medications are available to lower high blood pressure are available and numerous lives saved.

Low blood pressure is not uncommon but with the increasing use of medications, not limited to blood pressure medications, low blood pressure has become a relatively common. Besides high blood pressure medications, drugs often used for Parkinson's disease, depression/anxiety, sedative-hypnotics, pain medications and muscle relaxants all can cause low blood pressure. This effect can be intensified when specific medications are used in combination.

There is limited clinical research on low blood pressure but two recent medical studies are pertinent today. One large study in the American Journal of Preventative Medicine looked at the risk of falls and loss of consciousness in almost one half a million people with low blood pressure. The concluded that a systolic blood pressure less than 110 significantly increased the risk of serious falls and loss of consciousness.

Another study in the Indian Heart Journal found that there is an increased risk of atrial fibrillation in people who had a history of dizziness with standing (serious low blood pressure). Atrial fibrillation is an irregular heartbeat that increases the risk of blood clots, stroke and heart failure. It most commonly occurs in the elderly as does low blood pressure. Interestingly high blood pressure is also a risk factor for atrial fibrillation. In this study low blood pressure also increased the risk of stroke and a 50 to 100 percent increased mortality rate probably secondary to a higher incidence of coronary heart disease and heart failure.

Traditional therapy for low blood pressure includes graded exercise, generous salt intake and caution going from sitting/laying to standing. I have found that a critical review of a patient's medications, select herbs and regular meditation can be curative. Low blood pressure should be taken as seriously as high blood pressure.

Dr. Patrick Massey, M.D., Ph.D., is medical director of complementary and alternative medicine at Alexian Brothers Hospital Network, and president of ALT-MED Medical and Physical Therapy, 1544 Nerge Road, Elk Grove Village.

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Low blood pressure is a risk and should be taken seriously - Chicago Daily Herald

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Glen Cove Hospital begins expansion and modernization of Family Medical Center – ROP Common – The Island Now

Posted: December 20, 2019 at 2:47 pm

By ETHAN MARSHALL

After three years of focused fundraising efforts by community members, Glen Cove Hospital has begun renovation and expansion of its $5.5 million outpatient Family Medicine Center. Located on the ground floor since the Family Medicine Center was established in the 1970s, the practice will be relocated to a new modern space on the third floor.

The centers clinical staff currently provides personalized medical services to patients of all ages. It offers primary, prenatal and pediatric care, preventative services as well as behavioral health and gynecological services to underserved members in the community and other residents.

The expanded, 6,660 square-foot Family Medicine Center is expected to open in late spring 2020. It would serve more than 18,500 patients annually, representing a 40 percent increase in patient volume.

We have a long and proud history of providing high-quality health care services to members in need in our community, said Barbara Keber, MD, chair of family medicine at Glen Cove Hospital and vice-chair of family medicine at Northwell Health. Our new Family Medicine Center will not only accommodate more patients, but the renovation will create a welcoming and modern environment as well as upgrades that enhance clinical care and collaboration.

The Family Medicine Center will feature 12 exam rooms, bedside ultrasound machines, a procedure room, laboratory and medication room and modern reception and seating areas. A focal point of the space will be a large glass-enclosed area, which will offer central viewing and monitoring of the center. It will also provide much-needed space for clinical team members to collaborate and huddle before patient visits in a confidential setting.

The center is a designated patient-centered medical home that recognizes the coordinated, comprehensive medical care provided by the interdisciplinary team. Clinicians include physicians, residents, nurses, nurse practitioners, social workers and other health care professionals. Many of the centers staff are bilingual to better communicate with the areas Spanish-speaking community.

Glen Coves Family Medicine Center has the distinction of also being one of the original family medicine residency training programs in the United States. More than 230 board-certified family physicians have received training at Glen Cove Hospital.

We are extremely grateful to the hospitals Advisory Council and caring individuals in the community who spearheaded the fundraising campaign for the Family Medicine Center, making this vision into reality, said Kerri Anne Scanlon, RN, Glen Cove Hospitals executive director. The state-of-the-art Family Medicine Center has been designed to provide quality medical care and to deliver the best patient experience possible.

Nancy Taylor, a member of the Advisory Council and longtime supporter and volunteer at the hospital, said, Weve been working towards this goal for a long time. The Family Medicine Center was in dire need of renovation.

A resident of Locust Valley, Taylor said she was delighted when hospital leaders asked if shed donate to the Family Medicine renovation project through her family charity, the David S. Taylor Fund. Taylors late husband, David S. Taylor, served as Board of Trustees chair of the hospital from 1988-1990 and later Board of Trustees chair of the North Shore Health System from 1994-1995. Mrs. Taylor and her family have had a long history of giving back to Glen Cove Hospital. She volunteers once a week at the hospitals main reception desk and her sister volunteered in the Emergency Department for 33 years. David Taylor worked as an orderly in the hospital when he was young.

To date, the community fundraising efforts have totaled $3.5 million. This will benefit Glen Cove Hospital as part of Northwell Healths $1 billionOutpacing the Impossible campaign, which supports capital projects, improves hospitals and clinical programs, advances research and funds endowment for teaching and research initiatives.

Story submitted by Northwell Health.

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Glen Cove Hospital begins expansion and modernization of Family Medical Center - ROP Common - The Island Now

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HIV prevention drugs will play key role in stemming disease – The Oakland Press

Posted: December 20, 2019 at 2:47 pm

World AIDS Day was observed on Dec. 1, bringing worldwide attention to an epidemic that continues after nearly 40 years, and still needs to be eradicated. About 1.1 million people in the U.S. are living with HIV today, and roughly 15 percent of them are unaware they are infected.

The good news is that through the use of Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP), and the drugs associated with this treatment (including Truvada, and the newly FDA-approved drug for PrEP, Descovy), there is a brighter hope for ending new cases of HIV.

PrEP is targeted at individuals who are not infected by HIV and want to prevent infection. A daily regimen of two oral antiretroviral medications (emtricitabine and tenofovir alafenamide) in one pill, when taken correctly, reduces the risk of acquiring HIV by up to 97 percent.

PrEP should be used as part of a comprehensive strategy, including adherence to daily administration and safer sex practices, including condoms/barrier protection, to reduce the risk of sexually acquired HIV.

This strategy of prevention is critical to achieving the goal of lowering infection rates in years to come, and the goal of ending the HIV epidemic within 10 years.

The newly approved medication also has the benefit of being cleared for men with lower kidney and liver functionality range, good news for those in the LGBTQ community who are ages 55 and up, because they now have an option for HIV prevention that wont interact with other medications.

Its important to note, though, that the newest drug option is not available for women, because there have not been any trials in women to date, leaving only one option for women taking part in PrEP.

At Corktown, where more than 125 patients are currently taking PrEP medication, we teach that prevention isnt only about taking the pills. It requires commitment over the long haul to have the proper effect.

PrEP is marketed toward specific populations, including African-American and LatinX men who have sex with men, transgender women of color, people in a relationship with an HIV-positive partner, and IV drug users. I believe PrEP should be for anyone who asks for it. We make sure to understand each persons story, then determine if PrEP is the best fit for their preventative treatment.

We also recommend follow-up care as the PrEP program continues, so we can identify any financial or social barriers that may prevent the patient from following through on their treatment.

There are also cost-savings programs available that can make both medications affordable to patients with financial hardship, which is often a barrier to getting treatment to those who need it.

In the end, the battle against HIV is winnable, and a large part of that success will come through preventive medicine programs to limit new infections.

Especially among at-risk populations, spreading the word about prevention medication, including the new alternative, will be an essential part of making the number of new HIV cases as close to zero as possible in the years to come.

Dr. Latonya Riddle-Jones is medical director at Corktown Health Center in Detroit, and an assistant professor of Internal Medicine and Pediatrics at Wayne State University School of Medicine. Corktown Health Center is the only health clinic in Michigan focused on treating LGBTQ patients. Visitcorktownhealth.org.

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HIV prevention drugs will play key role in stemming disease - The Oakland Press

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Trumps holiday gift: Cutting off help to the poor – The Boston Globe

Posted: December 20, 2019 at 2:47 pm

Such conservative bromides ignore the evidence that SNAP beneficiaries by and large do not want to depend on government difficult circumstances in their lives make it necessary and that the program does not dissuade them from working. Depriving them of assistance will only exacerbate their poverty, and cost Americans in other ways.

The policy change, effective April 1, will oust nearly 700,000 people from food stamps nationwide and cut $5.5 billion in SNAP spending over five years. Approximately 35,000 of those affected live in Massachusetts. They are underemployed adults who have no children and are not disabled generally, a group of people not eligible for the benefit. But a longstanding waiver program has allowed the Commonwealth and other states to enroll such people in SNAP for more than three months in a three-year period if they live in localities with high unemployment or a tight job market. A recent study revealed that nationwide this group of childless individuals has received an average of $181 every month in SNAP benefits due to the state waivers.

The new rule will impose stricter criteria for issuing the state waivers. The government wants to move more able-bodied SNAP beneficiaries toward self-sufficiency and into employment. These waivers have long been seen a weakness of the program a loophole exploited by low-income individuals who simply dont want to work at a time when there are 7 million job openings nationwide and the unemployment rate is at 3.6 percent.

But, the Trump Administration is ignoring . . . the connection between geography and employment opportunities, said Georgia Katsoulomitis, executive director of the Massachusetts Law Reform Institute, in a statement. "For example, this rule will disproportionately harm communities of color that are already struggling with economic instability and limited employment opportunities resulting from decades of explicit and implicit labor and housing discrimination.

Requiring some recipients of SNAP benefits to work more is a dramatic change from longstanding policy, one that Congress itself rejected twice last year when it was proposed in Trumps budget and in the farm bill the latter by a bipartisan House vote of 330-83. The new rule also rests on a grave misconception about the food assistance program: SNAP is intended to address hunger and help people rise out of poverty, not to compel them to work.

Indeed, there is no evidence that the new SNAP rule will result in more people gaining steady jobs. Instead, research has shown that nondisabled, low-income individuals face a complex set of barriers to self-sufficiency that have nothing to do with whether they get food stamps. Some cycle in and out of low-paying jobs or can only get irregular hours, while others are noncustodial parents who support children in their extended family as grandparents or uncles.

Whats more, Stephanie Ettinger de Cuba, executive director of Childrens HealthWatch at Boston Medical Center, warns that reducing SNAP benefits could increase health costs in the long run. SNAP acts as important medicine across the lifespan, she said. Food insecurity and hunger are highly correlated with negative health outcomes, such as depression, diabetes, and anemia. One study showed that participation in SNAP was associated with a reduction in health care expenditures by roughly $1,400 per person per year. In Massachusetts, health care costs related to food insecurity and hunger were estimated at $2.4 billion in 2016. Food, in this way, is like preventative medicine or primary care.

The move to curb the SNAP state waiver program is misguided, and ought to be reversed by the next president. Denying help getting food to the poor wont do much to help them find full-time work. More likely, it will have a damaging impact on public health, which ultimately affects us all.

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