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Predictions, Prophets, and Restarting Your Business – Harvard Business School Working Knowledge

Predictions are risky, especially about the future, according to a popular expression. Still, business is inescapably about the futurethats what managers decisions are about. In the current crisis, we have daily grand predictions about new normals, and managers must restart their business and make decisions based on assumptions about the future.

The problem: Most of these prophecies about what is to come are basically straight-line extrapolations of a few weeks of data or sermons about what that prophet believes should happen. These wont be of much use to business leaders making cold, hard decisions about returning to the market.

Heres a common prediction: Social distancing forces people to do more buying online and communicating through social media, thus accelerating a permanent, big shift after the crisis to more ecommerce and virtual models. The evidence, however, is not so clear-cut.

In the first month of social distancing in the United States, online sales at Walmart and Target indeed surged by double digits compared with the year-earlier periodand so did in-store sales as well as sales of jigsaw puzzles and walkie-talkies. Its not clear what we learn from panic buying. So lets look at what was happening online before the virus of 2020.

Ecommerce has been part of the internet for 30 years. Books.com was selling online while Jeff Bezos was still working on Wall Street. After decades of tax-free sales, ecommerce was just 11.4 percent of US retail sales in 2019, according to the Department of Commerce. Meanwhile, social media usage on the major platforms had been essentially flat over the previous four years. (In fact, social media usage had declined among Americans less than 35 years old, and the only age group using Facebook more were people 55 or older, according to Edison Research.) As a marketing medium, online channels were cluttered and increasingly viewed with suspicion as media attention to foreign hackers raised awareness of cybersecurity issues.

Combined with the ability to block ads, the growing costs of acquiring customers online, the experience of Zoombombing, and controls on consumer data by EU regulators and others, its unclear how much buying and selling will be done online in the future.

So, whats a manager to do given the uncertainty of both predictions and prophets? Heres some advice to CEOs, CFOs, sales managers, and others who allocate the major resources in most firms. Whatever else you do in thinking about the future of your business, pay attention to the following:

The crisis demonstrates, painfully, the importance of cash. In his famous essay "The Yield from Money Held, the economist William Hutt described cash in your pocket or on the balance sheet as a fire engine when there are no fires. Or, as the song in the musical Oliver puts it: Money in the bank, thats what counts / Money in the bank in large amounts. The selling cycle is usually the biggest driver of cash out and cash in: Accounts payable accrue during selling, and accounts receivable are mainly determined in most firms by whats sold at what price and how fast.

In surviving and recovering from a crisis, increasing close rates, the efficiency of a sales model, and its segment focus are strategic issues, not only sales management tasks. Consider: when commerce resumes, whats the impact on your business from shortening selling cycles and accelerating time-to-cash by one week, two weeks, or more? If you dont know, find out now and work to shorten ramp-up time and increase productivity in your sales team after the crisis.

A problem with megatrend predictions is that, even if they turn out to be generally accurate, theyre not managerially useful. Companies sell to customers, not to a trend, and priorities must be set. Make sure that key customers are aware of supply disruptions or other problems. Do not assume that, in a global pandemic, everyone knows. They are absorbed with their own business issues.

Big accounts drive a disproportionate amount of a companys revenue (the 80/20 rule), and reliance on large customers has grown. Publicly traded US companies must disclose any customers that account for more than 10 percent of their revenue. A study of this data found that, in many industries, these buyers represented 20 percent to 25 percent of sales by the second decade of the twenty-first century, up from less than 10 percent two decades earlier. In other words, even before the pandemic, there was a big change in the customer portfolio of many companies.

Your salespeople must send consistent messages, not ad hoc responses. Dont leave this aspect of crisis management to emails about your commitment to customers, or telling salespeople to stay focused and take care of customers. Thats an invitation for fragmented responses, multiple promises, and longer-term costs to the brand and strategy. Managers must manage. In an extended disruption, it may even be in your long-term interest to find supply alternatives for a customer. Few quota-carrying salespeople will or can do that.

Important data is account profitability, your cost-to-serve customer A versus customer B. My experience on boards of directors and in work with leadership teams is that vision discussions are fun, and quarterly financial results are tracked closely. But despite much talk about big data, the customer information required to survive and then restart the business after a major downturn is often lacking.

One reason is that, in many firms, the relevant information is effectively the property of an individual rep, not the company. That makes it difficult to set account and segment priorities. Use the current frightening hiatus from business-as-usual to get this data and establish a process for keeping that front-line information flowing and timely. Otherwise, customer focus will remain a perennial slogan, not an organizational reality. Oversight over this activity is as important as it is in the capital budgeting process, innovative ideas in the virtual crisis war room, and the speech about resilience.

Its unclear whether social distancing has made people more eager to transact online, or whether it simply demonstrates the limitations of communicating virtually. The historian William McNeill documented in Plagues and Peoples how epidemics were a recurring norm, not the exception, for millennia. Meanwhile, buying and selling have been social as well as economic transactions since the Greek Agora, the Grand Bazaar in Istanbul, malls in the twentieth century, and through decades of internet use. Will months-long confinement change that deep-rooted human behavior?

Finally, for whats its worth, here is my prediction: The coronavirus will eventually abate and few will remember the many false predictions made during a crisisbut you will still have to live with your business decisions.

Do your best to separate hype and headlines from market-driven data and options. When much of the world economy is shut for weeks and possibly months, cascading bankruptcies and higher debt loads probably mean a tightening of purchasing decisions and capital expenditures in many consumer and B2B markets. Your business-development efforts will need to be more focused and productive after the crisis. Start now and take care of these customer basics before you possibly follow a prophet into the wilderness.

Frank V. Cespedes is a Senior Lecturer in the Entrepreneurial Management Unit at Harvard Business School and author of Aligning Strategy and Sales.

[Image: AndreyPopov]

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Predictions, Prophets, and Restarting Your Business - Harvard Business School Working Knowledge

Sunlight exposure and its role in skin-gut axis – NutraIngredients-usa.com

In December, we reported on an intervention study in Canada by Bosman et al. which investigated whether repeated exposure of the skin to UVB light would alter the gut microbiota composition of healthy female volunteers.

Bosman et al. presented evidence that skin exposure to narrowband UVB light modulated the gut microbiome of a specific human cohort. This study presented an increase of biodiversity, Firmicutes and Proteobacteria, and a decrease of Bacteroidetes.

In the present study, scientists at the Laboratory of Molecular Genetics of Microorganisms, Oswaldo Cruz Institute, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, used that research to compare it to their own data on Yanomami, an indigenous population in the Amazon. The researchers identified similarities in the gut microbiome of the two studies. Both presented a high abundance of Proteobacteria, which had been observed as a unique feature in the Yanomami gut microbiome, and based on Bosman et al. study, could be associated with their natural sunlight exposure.

The Canadian study reported that human exposure to UVB light could impact the human gut microbiome modulating diverse bacterial taxa. This conclusion was reached after they analyzed a controlled cohort composed of healthy Caucasian females from Vancouver, Canada. The gut microbiome of this cohort was analyzed before and after repeated skin exposure to a Narrow Band UVB light using a phototherapy device.

The scientists in Brazil note that,People living in this city located at 49N latitude are often unexposed to natural UVB light for up to 6 months of the year. Under these circumstances, individuals are unable to produce significant vitamin D3 in their skin, resulting in its reduction in the serum level, with impact to their health...Human exposition to UVB light is a direct consequence of the latitude, altitude, weather, time of day and season of the year and, indirectly, of human behavior and lifestyles.

The Yanomami inhabit a vast area in the Amazon Region, located around the equator in distinct altitudes. This population is naturally exposed to a high incidence of sunlight and ultraviolet radiation. Additionally, this region also lacks air pollution, a factor that blocks the UVB light from sunlight. The authors also note that for the most part, the group does not wear clothing, sunscreen or any type of protection from sun exposure.

The scientists found similarities in the gut microbiome makeup in the Bosman et al.s group artificially exposed to UVB light and the Amazonian hunter-gatherer Yanomami. Moreover, the UVB light exposure seems to modulate and explain some Yanomami gut microbiome features.

In the Canadian study, the gut microbiome of the cohort presented a higher alpha diversity after the exposition to UVB light, as well as an increase in the relative abundance of Firmicutes and Proteobacteria and a decrease in the relative abundance of Bacteroidetes. When looking at Firmicutes phylum, it was noted that the abundance of Lachnospiraceae, Ruminococcus and Clostridiaeae families was significantly enriched. Additionally, some individuals experienced a Verrucomicrobia increase.

Several of these taxonomic features were also observed in the Yanomami and other hunter-gatherers. The microbiome of these traditional groups has been characterized by higher biodiversity and higher Firmicutes to Bacteroidetes ratio contrasting with urban groups. In Bosman et al.s study, Firmicutes increased after UVB exposure with the enrichment of Lachnospiraceae, Ruminococcus and Clostridiaeae families. These Firmicutes families were also abundant in the traditional groups, and abundance of other Firmicutes families/genera was also observed. In fact, genera from Firmicutes phylum are biomarkers of Amazonian traditional groups: Roseburia and Enterococcus (Yanomami/Brazil), Streptococcus and Anaerostipes (Yanomami/Venezuela), Eubacterium and Lachnoclostridium (Matses), Intestinomonas, Flavonicater and Magasphaera (Tunapuco). Therefore, we concluded that Firmicutes taxa could be related to the lifestyle, diet, and environment among human groups.

Another observation in the Canadian study is the fact that Proteobacteria was enriched after UVB light exposure. A high abundance of Proteobacteria was a unique feature within the Yanomami gut microbiome when compared to other traditional groups and urban groups. The authors say this aspect is unexplainable, noting that it seems that the high exposure to UVB light by the Yanomami due to the environment and their particular lifestyle may be related to the enrichment of Proteobacteria. The Brazilian researchers add that the genus Akkermansia from Verrucomicrobia phylum is a Yanomami biomarker and this phylum also presented an increase in few individuals from Bosman et al. after artificial UVB exposure.

Altogether, the association of UVB light with specific microbiome taxonomic profiles observed in distinct populations leads us to consider that UVB light/sunlight is a tangible factor that should be considered as a modulator of the gut microbiome.

The authors conclude that the environment represents one of the main forces associated with the inter-person microbiome variability over the host genetics and other factors, further studies on gut microbiome should take into consideration sunlight exposure as well as latitude in-depth.

Therefore, a broad exploration of the relationship between human beings, the microbiome and the environment fills gaps in knowledge that can lead us to understand the relationship between the preservation of health and the development of diseases.

Sources:Gut Microbes

2020; DOI: 10.1080/19490976.2020.1745044

Skin exposure to sunlight: a factor modulating the human gut microbiome composition

Authors: L. Conteville et al.

Frontiers in Microbiology

2019; 10:2410. DOI:10.3389/fmicb.2019.02410

Skin exposure to narrow band ultraviolet (UVB) light modulates the human intestinal microbiome

Authors: E. Bosman et al.

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Sunlight exposure and its role in skin-gut axis - NutraIngredients-usa.com

Children Who Have Difficult Relationships with Their Mothers are Clingy Towards Their Early Teachers – NYU News

Children who experience dependent or clingy relationships with their preschool teachers tend to also have difficulties in their relationships with their mothers finds researchers at the NYU Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development. The new research, published in peer-reviewed academic research journal Attachment and Human Behavior, went even further to find that later in elementary school, these children were prone to being anxious, withdrawn, and overly shy.

Our research suggests that preschool teachers have the potential to play a pivotal role for children who are more dependent, said Robin Neuhaus, lead researcher and doctoral student in NYU Steinhardts Department of Teacher and Learning. By being warm and supportive, and by encouraging children to explore, preschool teachers may be able to reset the trajectories of children who may otherwise struggle with anxiety in elementary school.

Analyzing data from 769 children collected by the National Institute of Healths Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Neuhaus and her colleagues looked at assessments of mother-child attachment patterns from families across the United States. The sample looked at attachment at 36 months, 54 months, first, third and fifth grades, and examined dependency, closeness, conflict and other behaviors between children and their mothers, as well as children and their teachers.

Results from multilevel models showed that clingy behavior with preschool teachers was associated with higher levels of anxious behaviors when children were in fifth grade. Clingy behavior also partially mediated the link between a difficult type of mother-child attachment and anxiety in fifth grade, continued Neuhaus.

In addition to Neuhaus, the research was co-authored by NYU Steinhardt Professor of Education Erin OConnor and Meghan McCormick, a research associate in the Family Well-Being and Childrens Development Policy Area at MDRC. The full research article can be viewed online at https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14616734.2020.1751989. A description and more information about the findings can also be found at Neuhaus and OConnors website: https://www.scientificmommy.com/clingy-teacher-child-relationships.

About the Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human DevelopmentLocated in the heart of New York Citys Greenwich Village, NYUs Steinhardt School of Culture, Education and Human Development prepares students for careers in the arts, education, health, media and psychology. Since its founding in 1890, the Steinhardt School's mission has been to expand human capacity through public service, global collaboration, research, scholarship, and practice. To learn more about NYU Steinhardt, visit steinhardt.nyu.edu.

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Children Who Have Difficult Relationships with Their Mothers are Clingy Towards Their Early Teachers - NYU News

Are Bots Exploiting Coronavirus Fears? – CXOToday.com

By Nikhil Taneja

Coronavirus is a pandemic that the world has not witnessed in quite some time. International borders are closed. Major sports leagues have suspended their games. Employers have asked their workers to work from home. Normal life has been upended and will remain so for the foreseeable future, as the world struggles to get ahead of the deadly COVID-19 virus.

As the information on the novel virus deluges WhatsApp inboxes and social media feeds, the WHO recently warned of a different type of outbreak in regard to coronavirus: the overabundance of information makes it difficult for people to differentiate between legitimate news and misleading informationwhich could be disastrous. EU security services have also warned that Russia is aggressively exploiting the coronavirus pandemic to push disinformation and weaken Western society using its bot army.

An Infodemic

Regular monitoring of internet traffic is being processed by bot managers to track the infodemic that WHO and the EU security services have warned of. Data shows that bots have upped their game. Organizations from social media, e-commerce, and digital publishing industries have witnessed an unexpected surge in bad bot traffic after the rise of the coronavirus pandemic. These bots were involved in executing various insidious activities, including spreading disinformation, spam commenting, etc.

IT was also found earlier this year that nearly 60% of bots could mimic human behavior. This means they can disguise their identity and can create fake accounts on social media sites to post their masters propaganda as a genuine user. With such advanced bots, spreading disinformation becomes easy for countries such as Russia.

Gaining from the pandemic is not limited to Russia and social media. Given the attention that the coronavirus keyword is receiving, cybercriminals and scammers are more vigilant than ever to profit. For example, our research shows there has been an exponential rise in automated attacks on e-commerce and media industry as well. Lets take a detailed look at it.

Coronavirus Related Articles being scraped by Cybercriminals

Malicious actors are always in search of opportunities to scam people. So much so, they wont let go of any significant event, whether its a natural calamity, a pandemic, or a celebration.

Coronavirus is, in this respect, no different than other events. Fear and a continuous need for latest news provide an excellent breeding ground for automated attacks. A lot of phishing campaigns on the internet today are aimed at luring people with the promise of essential or breaking news on COVID-19, enticing them to click on malicious links or open infected attachments.

Research also suggests that cybercriminals are targeting media and digital publishing sites to scrape their unique content, publish scraped content on malware-ridden shady websites, and scam visitors. Over one-fourth of traffic on media sites was bad bot involved in automated activity, including scraping in February.

Search for Sanitizers and Face Masks by Bots

Bots quest to gain from the coronavirus pandemic doesnt end with media sites; they are also targeting e-commerce websites. With around one-third of traffic comprised of bad bots, e-commerce was the second most targeted industry by bad bots in February alone. The sector witnessed an unexpected surge in bad bot traffic after the rise of the coronavirus pandemic.

Lets take a detailed look at how cybercriminals are targeting e-commerce firms through a real-world case study. We monitored the traffic of a top European e-commerce site that has hand sanitizers and face masks listed on its portal. As coronavirus fear increases, bots ramp up their search for face masks and sanitizers.

These automated attacks could be aimed at performing denial of inventory attacks, hoarding these essential products to sell in black markets, or even scraping product details to list similar products on malware-ridden sites to scam people.

As the coronavirus threat intensifies, bots will drive the infodemic much further, continuing to be an efficient tool for cybercriminals, nation-state actors, and conspiracy theorists alike. The impact of information true or false especially in times of fear, uncertainty and confusion is greater. Because communication channels are diverse, authorities have very little control of Bot activity. In the coming months, we expect the use of bots to accelerate due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the US presidential election.

(The author is Managing Director-India, SAARC & Middle East, Radware)

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Are Bots Exploiting Coronavirus Fears? - CXOToday.com

Run is too twisty for its own good – The A.V. Club

TV ReviewsAll of our TV reviews in one convenient place.

The funny thing is that Chase has some of Runs best sequences so far. Director Kate Dennis makes good use of the train set, emphasizing its narrow aisles while having Ruby, Billy, and Fiona constantly cross past each other, especially in the homestretch after Fiona retrieves Billys bag of cash. Dickon Hinchliffes propulsive score amplifies the tension of scenes featuring people doing nothing more than walk to and from train compartments and bathrooms. Theres a clever bit of plotting involving how Fiona cunningly obtains Laurences phone number from Ruby, helping her seal a blackmail scheme. (Archie Panjabis dastardly vibe combined with her calm, collected delivery deserves praise as well.) Wever does some great flustered phone acting when shes talking to Laurence and her son, Scooter, who recently broke his arm at a trampoline park while out with a new nanny. The episode isnt a total wash.

Still, Run pulls the rug out from under the audience in an unexpected and slightly sour way that feels neither productive nor earned. After Ruby and Billy barely make their train headed to Los Angeles, they independently discover that Fiona (or Alice, as Ruby knows her from the department store) is also on board. Ruby continues to overshare with Fiona/Aliceabout Billy, like that he carries around a big bag of cash, all while Fiona taunts Billy via text and tries to find him on the train. Fiona eventually catches up to Billy and tries to persuade him, once again, to give up on running away, claiming that this is just a phase and that hell get sick of Ruby, which will leave her in the lurch. Then she drops a bombshell: Im really glad that she doesnt know the real reason you texted her. Fiona shows Billy a promotional video in which he explains the Run idea directly into the camera. Its partially implied that Billy pulled the trigger to generate material for a new book.

Billy concealing his true motives isnt exactly the problem. Its more about how Run has so far concealed expository information and then provided it to the audience piecemeal. Sometimes it works well, like Ruby detailing her mental health history, and other times it can be slightly maudlin, like Billys explanation for why he abandoned his book tour. (Generally speaking, Run handles Rubys characterization better than Billys.) Yet, Vicky Jones and her writers started from a place of portraying their twin protagonists as desperate, somewhat selfish people who are genuinely drawn to each other, which has so far grounded each new piece of background material weve received so far. This revelation suggests that one embarked on this journey sincerely while the other didnt, which is fine, but Run doesnt treat this like a breach of trust or anything in the ballpark of momentous. Its just another twist, another info point, even though it fundamentally changes how we see Billy. If youre going to play that card, its worth doing it with more consideration.

Of course, the revelation will almost certainly be mitigated by what the situation implies: Billy might have sparked the journey for crass professional reasons, but he fell back in love with Ruby for real while on the train. While thats not an impossible sell, it demands at least some recontextualization of previous scenes to justify the reasoning. (If none of that actually happens, Ill gladly eat crow.) But on top of that, Chase ends up negating some of the nuance from Fionas motivation established in the previous episode. Its appropriate to claim that $10,000 isnt satisfactory compensation for essentially authoring Billys material while remaining uncredited, but Fiona quickly becomes the person who jumps off a moving train with a bag of money after blackmailing her former employer and what amounts to a complete stranger. Though Panjabi has fun with the character, Fionas transformation is a little compressed. She goes from an unseen presence to a righteously determined partner to a train jumper in just too little time.

Its all a little slapdash and signals that Run might be moving away from its best elements, mainly Wever and Gleesons chemistry. The scenes with them this week are mostly small-scale and fun: Ruby and Billys post-coital check-in, which had to be deferred to the cab ride to Union Station because they were late, is an awkward minefield in which Billy says every conceivably wrong thing, but the tension prematurely evaporates when Billy, on the train, sheepishly admits hes a dick. The other good moment occurs when Billy further confesses to Ruby about his on-stage behavior after being confronted by the audience member whose husband died, i.e. he called everyone in the room a bunch of cunts. Moments earlier, however, Fiona tells Ruby that Billy will never be entirely honest with her, and sure enough, Billy doesnt tell her about his true motivations behind sending the Run text.

That isnt flashy stuff, but they feel real and within spitting distance of human behavior, which, theoretically, is supposed to be what remains consistent even if the high-concept premise drives the bus. Instead, those scenes feel more and more like afterthoughts. Now, Fiona and the stolen cash has taken narrative precedence. Its certainly possible that Run has more positive surprises in store, but it could just as easily be the end of the line.

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Run is too twisty for its own good - The A.V. Club

Tiger suspected of fatal attacks on humans removed from Riau – The Jakarta Post – Jakarta Post

A Sumatran tiger was captured by the Riau Natural Resources Conservancy Agency (BKSDA Riau) and removed to the Dharmasraya Sumatran Tiger Rehabilitation center (PRHSD) in West Sumatra on Saturday as it was deemed to pose a danger to local people.

The tiger was captured by a joint BKSDA-police team on the grounds of PT Riau Indo Agropalma in Tanjung Simpang village, Pelangiran district, Indragiri Hilir regency, Riau province at 9 a.m. local time on Saturday.

According to Indragiri Hilir Police spokesperson Adj. Comr. Warno, it took approximately nine hours to secure the tiger, which was captured in a box trap.

BKSDA Riau head Suharyono said that the tiger had to be captured because of recurring conflict between tigers and humans in the area since 2018 in which several residents were killed or injured.

The response has taken a long time because the removal efforts must be conducted very carefully to avoid hurting the animal, he sai

He said that a joint team had been deployed to oversee the human-wildlife conflicts in the area since November 2019 and that a camera had been placed to observe the behavior of the tigers there. Finally, we found the tigers habitat and identified an individual tiger that we suspect has attacked humans, often with fatal results.

Suharyono added that the joint team had done a lot of research and made trap modifications in order to make sure the tigers capture and removal went off without a hitch.

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Tiger suspected of fatal attacks on humans removed from Riau - The Jakarta Post - Jakarta Post

Local leaders weigh ‘Back to Business’ risks of reopening badly – The Daily Memphian

Local COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations suddenly and surprisingly spiked last week.

Officials debated whether to reset the clock on easing social-distancing restrictions, and not reopen the economy until mid-May at the earliest.

Business owners and suburban mayors pushed back. Memphis and Shelby County mayors asked the health department to take another look.

Your quick list of what can open on Monday

Conflicting reopening plans poised to end countywide alliance on pandemic

Medical experts analyzed the numbers and agreed the spikes were easily explained and anomalous.

The sudden rise in COVID-19 cases was the result of an outbreak at the Shelby County Jail. It was serious but contained and not a sign of increasing community transmission.

The surprising rise in virus-related hospitalizations was the result of a new policy. Patients bound for nursing homes must wait at the hospital until they test negative for COVID-19.

The clock kept moving.

Were at a good place right now, Dr. Jon McCullers of UTHSC said Friday. We have a stability in the situation with the pandemic. It is currently under some degree of control. But well be watching this on a daily basis.

The Institute for Public Service Reporting is based at The University of Memphis and supported financially by U of M, private grants and donations made through the University Foundation. Its work is published by The Daily Memphian through a paid use agreement.Follow the Institute on Facebook or Twitter @psr_memphis.

Thats the sort of daily data analysis that will be required to keep a lid on the virus as business restrictions begin easing Monday, officials say.

Its also a preview of the challenges officials face in the days and weeks ahead.

As the local economy gets Back to Business Monday, officials say their biggest concern isnt reopening too soon. Its reopening badly.

Weve done a good job, so far, but the job isnt over. The virus is still spreading, said Dr. Jeff Warren, a physician, City Council member and local COVID-19 Task Force member.

Jeff Warren

If we go back to business as usual, well just feed the virus and well be right back where we were six weeks ago.

Six weeks ago, the challenge was to flatten the lethally upward curve of the COVID-19 pandemic and not destroy the economy.

Starting Monday, the challenge will be to flatten the dangerously downward curve of the economy and not reignite the virus.

Officials are trying to limit the risks by allowing local businesses to reopen in carefully controlled stages with rules that maintain social distancing and other protective measures.

But a growing number of variables could make those rules more difficult to maintain and the risks more difficult to control.

Conflicting policies that allow surrounding suburbs and rural counties to reopen sooner and faster.

Inconsistent policies that allow close-contact businesses such as hair and nail salons to reopen sooner in some places than others.

Unpredictable efforts to allow churches and other houses of worship to resume larger gatherings.

Insufficient testing and tracing that fails to identify and contain outbreaks at prisons, nursing homes or other high-density settings.

The biggest variable is human behavior and a general complacency that the most dangerous part of the pandemic has passed.

On the contrary, local officials warn. The coronavirus isnt gone. It lurks. On surfaces we touch, in the air we breathe, in people we encounter. It thrives on social interaction.

Social distancing worked. We flattened the curve, but we cant go back to business as usual, said Dr. Manoj Jain, the local infectious disease specialist, told members of the Memphis Medical Society in a Zoom conference call Thursday.

Manoj Jain

Things are different now. We have to be careful and cautious without being paralyzed or paranoid. We cant reduce the risk to zero, but we can keep the risk as low as possible and function.

On April 2, 83 people were in Memphis area hospitals with COVID-19 issues. Six days later, that number had increased 50% to 125.

If that trajectory had continued, local hospitals would have been overwhelmed by the end of the month.

Instead, daily COVID-19-related hospital admissions began to stabilize -- and are down down slightly -- since April 8.

Thats a significant date. It came two weeks after the mayors March 23 Safer at Home order began.

The daily rate of new cases also has stabilized since April 8.

Symptoms of COVID-19 appear within two to 14 days after exposure.

The first phase of Back to Business begins Monday, but the timing of the second and third phases will depend on the success of the first.

Over the next two weeks, local officials will keep a close eye on the number of new COVID-19 cases reported every day and the number of people being hospitalized as a result.

And for the first time since the virus was detected in Memphis, local officials will be watching to see where the patients are coming from.

In January and February, local doctors assumed that flu-like symptoms were caused by the flu unless someone had been to China recently or been with someone who had.

The first local COVID-19 cases were people who had traveled to New Orleans and Florida.

Then community transmission began and people here in Shelby County were infecting each other, Jain said. But we may be seeing COVID-19 become a sort of travel-related disease if we start seeing more cases from surrounding rural counties.

So far, about one in four people who have been admitted to Memphis area hospitals for COVID-19 are from counties other than Shelby.

Officials are concerned that could grow and that Memphis area hospitals will bear the brunt of conflicting policies that allow surrounding rural counties and suburbs to reopen sooner and faster.

Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee began easing coronavirus restrictions on businesses in rural West Tennessee counties a week ago.

In Mississippi, retail stores reopened last week with limited capacities, but Gov. Tate Reeves said Friday he would not reopen more businesses this week due to a spike in new cases.

Gyms and fitness centers are reopening Monday in Arkansas, and hair salons probably later this week.

Medical experts have pushed the city not to allow barber shops, beauty shops and other close contact businesses to reopen until the second phase begins at least two weeks from now.

But owners of those businesses are pushing politicians to allow them to reopen this week.

Gov. Lee relented Friday and agreed. Mayors in Arlington and Collierville said Friday they plan to follow state guidelines and allow them to reopen later this week.

Its been tough for those businesses throughout this process, and I feel its important to allow them to open, even if under reduced capacity and strict guidelines, Arlington Mayor Mike Wissman said Friday.

The health risk of reopening the local economy Monday wont be known for at least nine days.

Thats generally how long it takes for someone who is infected with the coronavirus to show symptoms, get concerned, get tested and get the test results back.

By then, of course, an infected person who doesnt self-isolate might infect dozens of others, who can infect hundreds more and so on.

Thats why COVID-19 spread so quickly from Chinese villages, Mardi Gras festivals, Florida beaches and New York City subways.

Testing has shown that about .05% of the general population is infected with the virus at any given time.

Thats one in every 200 people.

As weve seen in cruise ships and choirs, nursing homes and jails, that one person can spread the virus to dozens of people, Jain said.

Thats why the first phase of the Back to Business plan prohibits the gathering of purposeful groups of more than 10.

That restriction was going to include local houses of worship. But on Friday, Lee issued an executive order that prevents local governments from regulating crowd sizes at places of worship.

Both Lee and Strickland are encouraging religious leaders to exercise caution and have their staffs and members wear masks and maintain social distancing while gathering in person.

Rev. Dr. Scott Morris, founder of Church Health, is being more direct.

We would make a mistake if we went straight back into in-person worship, he wrote Friday on behalf of Memphis Clergy COVID-19 Response.

Scott Morris

God, who created our intellect, expects we will use it. Our first priority as faith leaders is to keep Gods people safe.

Limiting large gatherings is one way local officials are trying to prevent outbreaks.

Broad, rapid, accurate and targeted testing is another.

The joint COVID-19 Task Force is working on a plan to expand symptomatic and asymptomatic testing with new self-administered tests.

Current testing methods require health care workers draped in personal protective equipment to collect samples from deep inside a patients nasal cavity.

National Guard medics collect nasal swabs as hundreds of Memphians line up for COVID-19 testing at the Christ Community testing site in Frayser on April 25, 2020. For the first time, testing is being made available to residents not showing symptoms of the disease. (Jim Weber/Daily Memphian file)

The new tests allow patients to swab their own noses and the samples to be tested 10 at a time.

That would make it easier, and a lot less expensive and painful, to test high-risk populations such as hospital and nursing home workers once a week.

More testing will require more efficient and effective contact tracing. Local and state officials are working on plans to bolster the health departments capacity to do that.

Public health departments across the country have been defunded in recent years, Alisa Haushalter, executive director of the Shelby County Health Department, said Friday.Shelby County is always in need of adding resources to our infectious disease control.

The moment they heard Shelby County had confirmed its first COVID-19 case March 8, Paul Martin and Jeff Warren, medical leaders of Trezevant Manor, began locking the place down.

Visitors to the 14-acre retirement community, which includes a nursing home, rehab center and assisted living, had to wear masks. Then visitors were prohibited.

Group gatherings and outside trips were canceled. Residents who went to the doctor or hospital had to quarantine for 14 days when they returned.

All staff wore masks and sanitized everything all the time. Residents ate all meals in their own rooms.

As of Friday, there have been no suspected or confirmed cases of COVID-19 at Trezevant Manor, officials say. More than 400 employees have been tested and all results were negative.

We were lucky, but we also were very proactive and aggressive, said Warren, the City Council member who is Trezevants medical director.

State and local officials are pushing all nursing homes to follow the same procedures, even as the economy begins to reopen.

Meanwhile, Warren is pushing the Council to pass an ordinance this week to require Memphians to wear masks in all public places during a public health emergency.

I wear my mask to protect you, and you wear a mask to protect me, Warren said. Thats the intent. Were all going to have to be very careful for a very long time.

The Back to Business plan will require just as much coordinated care and daily discipline as the Safer at Home orders issued March 23, local officials say.

Itrequires or encourages employees in various work settings to wear masks and gloves.

It requires or encourages employees to stay home and quarantined if theyre showing any flu-like symptoms, or if theyve tested positive for COVID-19.

It requires or encourages employees and customers to maintain social distance of at least six feet in stores, restaurants, houses of worship and other public places.

And it limits the size of purposeful public gatherings to no more than 10 -- except for houses of worship.

Just because you can go out doesnt mean you should go out, Strickland told the public Friday. If we dont abide by the social distancing requirements. We could see a surge in the virus that could result in rolling back the opening and losing the progress weve made so far.

Reopening badly could be devastating for public health and the local economy.

Over the last month, we have entered into the COVID-19 depression with the depth and duration still in doubt, said Dr. John E. Gnuschke, director of the Sparks Bureau of Business and Economic Research at the University of Memphis.

The costs are massive increases in unemployment and economic hardship. Even with federal subsidies for businesses and newly unemployed people, the costs will linger long beyond the initial reopening. Reopening with caution is the best policy and the caution shown by most of our political leaders is warranted.

Gnuschke has been advising the local task force. He told them that political, business and medical leaders must keep working together to assess and balance the risks of reopening with the risks of closing down again.

He also told them they cant do it without the publics cooperation.

It is like a three-legged stool for milking cows, but someone cut off the legs, he said.

Medical, political and economic all three are far too short.People in Memphis can only count on the help of others in Memphis.

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Local leaders weigh 'Back to Business' risks of reopening badly - The Daily Memphian

Worthington’s Skog shares passion for STEM education | The Globe – The Globe

IOWA CITY, Iowa Emily Thornburg, Parker Abbott, Amanda Bullert, Bess Glickman, Camille Hanes,and Tim Skog all doctoral students in the University of Iowa's Neuroscience Graduate Program shared their love for science with students in grades 6-8 at Kids Go STEM in March at the Medical Education and Research Facility on the UI medical campus.

Graduate and professional students led participants in wide variety of hands-on medical simulations and science experiences in such areas as emergency medicine, orthopedics, and gross anatomy. This event is one of around 160 STEM education programs put on by University of Iowa Health Care annually for an average of 17,500 students in grades K-12.

"The STEM industry is growing faster than any other, so we need people to fill those positions in the future," said Emily Strattan, a STEM education specialist for UI Health Care. "We need to have people interested in those careers, and it starts with sparking an interest in students at an early age."

The neuroscience graduate students conducted activities that shed light on the nervous system and how it affects one's behavior. Participants rotated through four 30-minute stations: a tracing activity focused on motor memory, a study of actual animal brains to understand different brain functions, a TENS unit that helps stimulate your nerves to fight depression and chronic pain, and an eye-hand coordination activity involving throwing and catching a ball while wearing goggles.

For Skog and his colleagues, serving as event volunteers plays a key role in their development as doctoral students.

"When you get into higher education, it's very easy to lose sight of the forest and focus on the trees," said Skog, a third-year graduate student from Worthington. "This is a good chance for us to get a wider perspective again and not get stuck in the trees. Most people don't fully understand everything we do. We need to explain it to people in a way that they understand it and appreciate it."

These doctoral students take a walk down memory lane when sharing their appreciation for neuroscience with the young scholars.

"Sometimes we get into our lab experiments and forget about other part of it; the learning about the science and what it was like when we first started," Skog said. "We really enjoy doing this because we get to go back and remember what it was like when we were first exposed to science and how cool it was. It reminds us how cool everything we do every day is."

Neuroscience doctoral students also volunteer in other annual events like Girls Go STEM and the Iowa Brain Bee, a neuroscience competition for high school students. Neuroscience Program administrators don't require their graduate students to attend these events, however, it only takes a few emails to fill out the lineup.

"The importance of outreach activities is impossible to overrate, and graduate students in our Neuroscience Program are incredibly valuable ambassadors for communicating the excitement of a career in science to young people," said Dan Tranel, professor of neurology and psychology and director of the Neuroscience Graduate Program. "The graduate students also find these outreach activities extremely valuable, as they learn how to share their passion for science in ways that young people can relate to."

After the Kids Go STEM event, the doctoral students had some advice for the middle schoolers who are beginning to make their way down the academic road to college.

"You can get a PhD in just about anything," Skog said. "Knowing about a lot of different things can help inform you about whatever you end up doing. Learn the most you can about anything that excites you."

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Worthington's Skog shares passion for STEM education | The Globe - The Globe

Virtual camp will introduce high schoolers to neuroscience – Beckley Register-Herald

For the first time ever, the West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine (WVSOM) will host its annual Just Say KNOW educational summer camp virtually rather than on the schools campus in Lewisburg due to COVID-19.

The weeklong camp, whose theme for 2020 is Neuroscience: Perception or Reality, will be June 15-19. The camp is open to ninth- through 12th-graders as well as recent high school graduates. There is no cost to participate.

Neuroscience is the study of the structure and function of the brain and nervous system. Camp materials will be structured around the five senses and how they help humans interpret their surroundings, a WVSOM press release stated. Participants will discover how signals from our senses of vision, touch, hearing, smell and taste are converted to a language the brain can understand.

Crystal Boudreaux, Ph.D., an assistant professor in WVSOMs biomedical sciences department and director of the Just Say KNOW program, said one of the advantages to hosting the camp online is the opportunity to reach more participants. Unlike in previous years, there will be no limit on the number of attendees for the 2020 camp.

Housing, travel and space are limited when weve hosted Just Say KNOW on campus, Boudreaux said. A disadvantage of a virtual event is not being able to have the campers immersed in the WVSOM community for a week, but were working on ideas to showcase the institution virtually.

Boudreaux said the camp will include interactive activities, virtual lectures and games that promote a greater understanding of the human sensory network. Participants will receive a list of household materials to gather at the start of each day and will also learn about topics outside of neuroscience, such as health care careers, osteopathic principles and practice, and WVSOMs Rural Health Initiative.

The week will wrap up with a showcase that will be recorded so attendees can share their accomplishments with family and friends.

Prospective attendees must email an essay detailing their interest in the virtual camp to Karen Wines, a WVSOM biomedical sciences instructor, at kwines@osteo.wvsom.edu by May 29. The letter of recommendation from a teacher required in previous years has been waived.

Campers will need an internet connection in order to participate. Instructions to access the activities will be provided to registrants after the May 29 application deadline.

Jordan Nelson

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Virtual camp will introduce high schoolers to neuroscience - Beckley Register-Herald

Trojans hoped to show offseason work on the field – Mount Vernon News

News file photoCenterburg pitcher Sam Bassett starts his delivery during a 6-0 KMAC loss to Fredericktown on May 1, 2019. Bassett was one of two seniors for the Trojans who had their season canceled because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Bassett plans to attend Ohio State next year to study neuroscience in an honors pre-med program.

CENTERBURG There was a lot of excitement around the Centerburg baseball team this winter. It was easy to tell just by sheer numbers.

We had the biggest turnout this winter for open gyms weve ever had, said 21st-year coach Joe Smith. Guys were putting the time in working out, with the bats, throwing, everything.

Centerburg had 29 players on its roster, including junior varsity, when all was said and done.

But just as baseball was starting up, the COVID-19 pandemic hit. Spring sports were postponed for about a month before being officially canceled April 20.

Senior Sam Bassett was looking forward to his first season as a featured player in his last season of baseball.

Its unfortunate to say the least, Bassett said. I dont have any problems with the way anythings been handled. Its just unfortunate for all of us seniors. Ive been playing baseball since I was five years old. So, I put a lot of time and effort into the game. This was going to be my last year and my last chance to bookend everything, take my time and say goodbye to the game.

Bassett is moving on to study neuroscience at Ohio State. He said hes doing the honors program on a pre-med track.

Im very excited for what the future holds, he said. I hope well be able to start the school actually on campus because that would not be fun to have to start online.

The Trojans lost their top two starting pitchers off of last years team, who went 12-9 overall and 8-6 in the Knox-Morrow Athletic Conference, to graduation in Jackson Goulter and Brenden Christy. Goulter was All-Ohio three times and Central District player of the year twice.

We lost those two and I still felt pretty good about this year, Smith said.

But its difficult to replace a pair of pitchers of that caliber.

There was a lot of question marks, quite honestly, Smith said. Weve been fortunate weve had some really good teams for quite a while now. We won (in 2018) and graduated five starters (off that team) and still came back last year with a really good core. Our record could have been better, but we graduated two four-year starters (in Goulter and Christy) last year.

Goulter and Christy were limited on the mound because of injuries, which opened the door for others to gain experience.

Tyler Harry (junior) and Joey Tepper (junior) really put the time in, Smith said. Along with Sam Bassett and Brock Hurtt (junior), I thought we had a really good pitching staff that we could compete with.

I was really excited about what the future held for our team, Bassett said. I pitched a decent amount last year. After we lost our top two pitchers, me and (Harry and Tepper) were going to have to take the brunt of the pitching. A lot of innings were going to fall on us.

I was extremely excited to see how (Harry and Tepper) would perform this year. Last year, they stepped up pretty majorly because both (Goulter and Christy) got injured halfway through the season. We (all) had to step up and take a bigger role and we did pretty well. But those of those guys really developed well during the offseason.

Juniors Sam Hansen and Brayden Lama and sophomores Dakota Baer, Isaiah Reynolds and Jarred Rings would have spent time on the mound as well.

Bassett and Harry would have shared time at the first base because of pitching responsibilities. Hurtt was slated to be the third baseman, splitting time with Tepper because of pitching duties.

Sophomore Dalton Hall and junior Ian Arny would have split time behind the plate.

(Hall) played extraordinarily well last year, Bassett said. I wanted to see how that would translate into this year. He was already one of our top players, and I interested to see if he would build on that.

(Arny)s a great kid, who works hard, Smith said. We were going to have those guys platoon a little bit to get Dalton out in front of the plate once or twice per week.

Rings solidified himself at second base last season.

(He) started every game there as a freshman and most likely (would have) been there this year, Smith said. Lucas Jagger (junior) was competiting with him putting the time and battling along with sophomore Mick Mead. All of them were doing a nice job and working hard.

Lama was penciled at shortstop.

Hes a very good athlete (with) a great arm and good range, Smith said. Hes swinging the bat really well too. He spent more time on it than he ever has and its paying off. Hes looking really good.

Reynolds is the Swiss Army knife of the infield, playing any position based on need.

Hanson and fellow junior Trey Kendrick as well as sophomore Dakota Baer were going to roam the outfield.

Kendrick is our only returning starter from last years team, Smith said. Were still sorting some guys out position-wise. We were excited about all three of those guys. They all run pretty well and help us out offensively too. Weve got a pretty solid outfield with those three guys.

Senior Tyler Noble skipped his junior year to graduate early. Hes a first-time varsity player, who would have seen some in the outfield, as a pinch-runner and a relief pitcher.

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Michael Rich: 740-397-5333 or mrich@mountvernonnews.com and on Twitter, @mrichnotwealthy

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Trojans hoped to show offseason work on the field - Mount Vernon News