Local News: Cox Nursing program to start in spring 2021 (2/8/20) – Monett Times

Non-traditional program has seen a 93 percent success rate

Students wanting to fast-track their education to earn an associate degree in nursing will have the opportunity to take part in a non-traditional program that allows them to attend either day or night and weekend classes in Monett.

This is a great opportunity for students who need more flexibility due to family obligations or jobs, said Dr. Sonya Hayter, vice president of student affairs. We are excited to come educate your students who want to stay in your community.

The program offers lectures, skills training and clinical practices locally, with the exception of pediatric clinics, which are held in Springfield.

Classes will start with the spring semester 2021, but students wishing to enroll must have completed human anatomy, human physiology and chemistry classes beforehand. Students are required to have a minimum of 3.0 cumulative grade point average, and a 2.5 cumulative GPA for completed science courses.

Courses are completed in two years, or four semesters, allowing students to gain employment as registered nurses while continuing to work toward a bachelor of science in nursing.

Many healthcare institutions offer financial assistance to their students, Hayter said.

The program started three years ago in Springfield, and thus far, has an established pass rate of 93 percent.

I hope we get a lot of bilingual nursing students, said Darren Bass, president of Cox Monett Hospital and system vice president of the Community Hospital Group at CoxHealth. That would be awesome. People want to be able to converse in their native language when they are sick. We have been waiting for this program [in Monett] for two-and-a-half years.

For more information on the ASN nights and weekend program, people may visit CoxCollege.edu or call Allison Rainey, admissions counselor and recruiter, at 417-269-3069.

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Not Sure What to Eat? Just Breathe (Literally) – The Spoon

When deciding which diet to follow, most of us rely on friends recommendations, online questionnaires, or internet wisdom. Then again, why not shape your food choices off of your actual breath.

Israel-based startup Lumen gives dining recommendations based off of the amount of CO2 which you exhale into their proprietary device (which reveals whether youre burning carbs or body fat).

We think that breath-based dietary guidance is pretty cool, so we invited Dana Varrone, Lumens VP of Strategic Partnerships, to speak at Customize, our food personalization summit, in NYC later this month. Join us there to hear her talk about how personalization can unlock the power of food as medicine (use code SPOON15 to get 15 percent off those tickets).

But first if you want to learn more about how your breath can indicate what you should be eating, check out our Q&A with Varrone below.

Tell us a little bit about what Lumen does. Lumen is a device and app that helps you take control of your metabolism. Through your breath, the Lumen technology measures your fuel source in real time, telling you if youre using fats or carbs for energy, and provides you with a personalized nutrition plan to help you reach your health and fitness goals.

A metabolic measurement (RQ) that was once costly and time-consuming in a clinical setting is now available through a single breath with Lumen.

Why do you think that there has been a rise in interest around personalized nutrition over the past few years?I think there are three main reasons for the rise. Firstly, people are fed up with going on diets and not getting the results they want, and are starting to recognize that what may work for one person may not work for them. Go Keto as carbs are the devil is on the one extreme and follow the myplate and eat a balanced plate of grains, protein, fruit, veggie and dairy is on the other extreme of the advice spectrum. Couple this with advanced research being published on how various foods may impact your gut and the increase in allergies nationwide, and question marks start going off in peoples minds of perhaps one size does not fit all.

Secondly, with the rise in technologies such as the AppleWatch, fitbit and the like, consumers are seeing the value in getting personalized feedback. Consumers can now see how many steps theyve walked, calories theyve burned and can even get feedback on their heart rate. This immediate feedback empowers consumers to feel like they can now be in control of their own lives, whereas before it was left to your doctor and your yearly physical visits.

Lastly, with the rise in social media and newsfeeds being curated for you, people are demanding speed and instant gratification. This is specifically the case with the millennial generation that have grown up with this being their norm. This results in people wanting answers fast, based on them and their needs, now.

What are the biggest hurdles towards creating personalized dietary guidance towards consumers?I think the biggest hurdles are in asking the right questions to the consumer at the onset and being able to adjust the personalization over time based on both qualitative and quantitative data that takes into account lifestyle changes, life events, food tolerances, goals, and physiology.

What do you think personalized food or drink will look like 5 years down the road?I think data from a variety of touch points will be the primary driver in personalizing a consumers nutrition and will be housed with an engagement app that makes sense of all the data, with Lumen being at the helm of this.

If you want to see Dana speak about how personalization can unlock the power of food as medicine, join us at Customize this month in NYC! Use code SPOON15 to get 15 percent off tix.

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Athlon Takes It to the Next Level Paso Robles Press – Paso Robles Press

Athlon Fitness and Performance has long been a training ground for many of San Luis Obispo Countys top-performing athletes. And yes, sweat, weightlifting, and hard work are a part of the regiment. However, so are deeply rooted values such as integrity, personal responsibility, and the desire to improve.

Ryan Joiner, owner, and coach, opened Athlon in San Luis Obispo in 2003 to fulfill a need for a high-level sports training facility. With an emphasis on coaching and personal training, the membership quickly grew to include athletes from all over the county many going on to compete professionally. Over the years, Athlon evolved from an elite sports performance facility focused only on the strength and conditioning needs of athletes to a more extensive clientele anyone who has fitness goals they would like to achieve.

We help people look and perform their best and help them to create the life they want, Joiner said.

In October 2019, Joiner added a long-planned second Athlon location in the Woodland Shopping Center in Paso Robles.

We have worked with a lot of professional athletes and quite a few high school kids many who were commuting to train with us on their sports performance and athleticism, Joiner said. We knew we wanted to be in Paso Robles and see the area as a powerhouse in California for young athletes. The community is very supportive of its youth and has a huge demographic of strong, young kids, matching our love for coaching young athletes.

The new location offers all of the same services as the San Luis Obispo location, including personal training, sports performance training, and general gym memberships.

If you are looking for a hot tub, sauna, tennis court and ping-pong table, we are not your health club, said Joiner who earned a bachelors degree in exercise physiology from Fresno State and a masters degree in kinesiology from Cal Poly. We are results-driven and focused on getting people the specific results they hope to achieve.

Joiner admits that because of the focus on an athletic approach to training it can be difficult for some people to know if the gym is the right fit for them. But everyone is welcome. We see everyone as an athlete, Joiner said. If you have to step off a curb while carrying a bag of groceries while hanging onto a dog leash at the same time, you are an athlete. Athleticism is the ability to multitask and do many physical things. It is also the ability to work all day without being in pain.

The gyms coaches also work with people who are overcoming injuries or facing physical setbacks.

There are a lot of people who give up on living an active lifestyle because of pain, Joiner said. We are here to help them get past that with a methodical approach to fixing movement patterns.

Joiner has spent the last decade studying functional neurology to better understand the bodys nervous system and its connection to muscles, using that knowledge to help clients reach their goals.

Joiners first client as a personal trainer 25 years ago shaped his future career. The young woman, who suffered a spinal injury that left her unable to walk, came to him determined to not only walk again but run.

Her determination was so powerful for me that I dove in 100 percent and said lets do this, he said. Insurance authorized her to train with me for a year. On our final session, we met at the park and she ran. It instilled the passion in me to want to help people find solutions and I built my business around that.

The values that form the foundation of Athlon have guided not only Joiners interaction with clients but the provided the philosophy for all of the nine fitness coaches, who have a combined 75 years of experience, that work at the two facilities. Some principles are simple: be happy and friendly, act with honor and integrity. Others entail reflection: a reminder that taking personal responsibility requires bravery and sometimes it is necessary to struggle.

We live by those values and ultimately we attract customers that believe in them as well, he said. We lead with good coaching and sportsmanship and the values fall into place.

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What It Means To Put Humanity At The Center Of Business In The 21st Century – Forbes

Glass globe photographed in a moth forest

Three weeks ago, the World Economic Forum held its 50th annual meeting, with the theme of Stakeholders for a Cohesive and Sustainable World. Across a variety of sittings, the Forum focused onrenewing the concept of stakeholder capitalism, community engagement and platform capabilities to support global, regional and national initiatives that can possibly generate a positive impact for all stakeholders. At the same time, the Forum announced its wish to rejuvenate the Davos Manifesto to re-imagine its purpose and a clear scorecard for companies and governments.

Indeed, influential businesses such as Microsoft, Unilever, Infosys and Visa announced their commitment to sourcing 100% of their global electricity consumption from renewable sources in pursue of environmental sustainability during the week and just days after the Forum, The Guardian newspaper announced it would stop accepting advertisements from oil and gas companies to limit their financial ties to fossil fuel businesses.

The desire to ground community around a common purpose and a set of shared principles to provide sustained value creation is both timely and amicable; and, it is equally important to take a step back and understand why we are trying to put back humanity at the center of our businesses.

In her book, The Age of Surveillance Capitalism: The Fight for a Human Future at the New Frontier of Power, Shoshana Zuboff writes about regeneration of the most basic existential questions that have been asked for centuries around social strata, generations, society, wealth, power, etc. She explains how in many ways this era is similar to the industrial era and how surveillance capitalism unilaterally claims human experience as free raw material for translation into behavioral data, which would arguably then be used for production of new technologies. She argues instead of labor, the current era feeds on various aspects of humans experience and while industrial civilization flourished at the expense of nature, now, threatening our world, the information civilization will thrive at the expense of human nature, in time, threatening our humanity. Accordingly, she names a number of valid examples to make her case and raises a number of social economical and spiritual questions that deserve in depth discussion for their philosophies.

Unfortunately, when it comes to building spirituality into an organization whether it is a family, a corporation or a government, we have got it a bit wrong. The majority of us carry a bias in our hearts against any cause that feels non-economical in value. Admittedly or not, most of us associate the word spiritual with religion. In reality, the word originates from Old Latin word of spiritus,which referstosoul, courage, vigor, breath, implying liveliness across life experiences.

Businesses, as centers of activity, are uniquely positioned to carry a spirit (and do so), yet, the idea going back to the core purpose of business or the call to re-focus on humanity feels like a catch phrase to many. Some understand it as a suggestion for only caring about the human-beings, others understand it as swapping employees for key stakeholders, others believe it is yet another humanitarian movement raised by a few disadvantaged colleagues.

The Enlarged Definition of Humanness

Though people undoubtedly should be a primary stakeholder for any organization and there is a legitimate need for future organizations to make employees a key priority, recognize the term human expands way beyond a human being in its current philosophy.

In its most common usage, the word human generally refers to the only extant species of the genusHomo anatomically and behaviorally describing modernHomo sapiens as we know it. In scientific terms, the meaning of human, we find has changed on several occasions pointing across a diverse group of animalistic species over time. In anthropology, some identify the category of the human with the speciesHomo sapiens, others equate it with the whole genusHomo, some restrict it to the subspeciesHomo sapiens sapiens while a few others take it to encompass the entire hominin lineage. Finally, in the discipline of psychology, humans designate a certain taxonomic category in which having a physiology is not sufficient to belong to the category.

You see? Although the concept of a human vastly varies in definition etymologically speaking, philosophers distinguish the linguistic meaning of indexical expressions from their content. As such, the content of an indexical is whatever it names.

Another example comes from a collaborative study between the University of Washington and Osaka University, professors Kahn et all., where scholars have jointly studied and tried to characterize what it means to be human to aid robotics design and interactions. They were able to name 10 different aspects of humanness ranging from practicing autonomy to engagement in creativity to carrying moral value and caring for reciprocity.

These descriptions are all relevant because they each provide different angles into the way we define something.

What we are witnessing for the way we have and continue to define a human is that humanness is and continues to be a direction. If we were to name it in poetry, it would likely read something like: With every step I do, I walk to you, because who am I and who are you without each other? In other words, there is a constant across many definitions that suggests there is a relational aspect to humanness. The Oxford English dictionary lists the hu of human represents the soul of any being physical and other dimensional as a representative part of bigger creation. In that, any being with a soul, living and non-living, may exist but cannot thrive and reach its potential without the other/ the opposite.

Therefore, when we point to the growing need to focus on humanity as the center piece of our 21st century organizations, we are referring to human beings (you and me alike) as a key part, yes, and we are also referring to the nature and other beings whom which human beings cannot survive without as well as the collective and the robotics and intelligent machinery we will have to rely on/ live with in the future.

Indeed, in that dynamic reliance and interconnection lays the fundamentals of any terminology. Taxonomy is vastly critical to creating unprecedented experiences as it shapes our way of becoming, relating and doing/ working through philosophy.

The Benefits of Carrying a Humanity Focus

In order to challenge current claims and bearings of our way traditional way of working, once our taxonomy is enlarged, we must establish new bearings.

We cannot evaluate the trajectory of our businesses separate from civilization and without a clear appreciation for an enlarged definition of humanity. Just as we cannot separate technology from new world order or 21st century business, a business cannot single-handedly be oriented toward profit-making if we want to survive history. Business is not and can no longer be a thing in itself, isolated from economics, society or culture.

That centering around humanness brings relativity with a potential to drive equality and equity into the conversation that is otherwise missing. That centering gives us the benefit to claim every time we single out our focus for example, when we only going after profit; every time we disintegrate or categorize for example, when we look down on a new or a different player; or every time we separate in class for example, when we choose to see certain groups fit for our culture, we are consciously or unconsciously breaking down multiplicities and relying on theories that no longer provide predictability. Realize when we are not actively working towards unity under a set of agreed upon values that honor all thats going to support our individual and collective thriving equitably, we are, indeed, dis-serving our initial intent and becoming blind sided for future possibilities.

On the other hand, when we can learn to integrate, to include and to innovate together, we are contributing to the creation of many and more prosperous opportunities we may not even be able to imagine... Take Goldman Sachs and Amazon, as an example, who arereportedly in talksabout establishing a partnership in which the investment bank would offer small business loans to merchants through the e-commerce giants platform. What might such an arrangement mean for their current customer base or for those looking to pivot into entrepreneurship and the industry? What consumer opportunities we may be missing without the entertainment of such partnership possibilities?

Putting humanity back in the center of business is not only necessary for sustainable value creation and it is equally good for all stakeholders holistic wellbeing.

When in doubt, consider the 5Ps of a 21st century business: (1) Passion beyond ability brings intent to ones sense of self-organizing. (2) Purpose beyond profit brings clarity to common mission. (3) Principles over value drives alignment and increases standards of quality. (4) Focus on potential enables impact beyond human beings specifically toward society and environment. (5) People you think do not speak your language may come in as key stakeholders to save your business in a new market creation dynamic.

5Ps of 21st Century Business

Research validates for us high performing organizations carry spirituality and they differfrom the ordinary kind in that they have a much deeper connection and better self-righting mechanisms than their peers.The individual employees inside organizations, where we record sustained growth over time often demonstrate greater self-mastery and higher self-respect, thus, operating on a basis of trust, creativity and collaboration. They take full accountability jointly for dealing and resolving with issues in kind, even if doing so introduces more emotional risk for individuals singularly. Ultimately, these organizations see every single challenge as a collective opportunity. We can certainly multiply that through other organizations world-wide. The key remains in our intent and choices we make appropriately.

Remember, as paradoxical as it may seem, the success of businesses hoping to take advantage of this new revolution depends on their capacity to put humanity at the center. And by humanity, we dont just point to single categories. For our life and work experiences to be reinvented, we must reflect on new ways of understanding and fulfilling peoples needs, a new economic model that can see beyond profit and a new social contract that can sustain it altogether. Thats exactly what the World Economic Forum is trying to drive with its revised manifesto.

Workplace transformations are no longer an aspect of the distant future. Where traditional value chains are being collapsed and new market innovations are being sought through by minute, we invite HR and business leaders to engage in a regenerative process and lead organizations to take advantage of a rapidly closing window to create a new future of work and equitable life experiences for all new century citizens.

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What It Means To Put Humanity At The Center Of Business In The 21st Century - Forbes

Digital revolution: Embryonic horses briefly have five toes – Horsetalk

(a) Illustration of arrangement and relative sizes of pre-cartilaginous condensations in developing Equus forelimb and hindlimb digits based on reconstructions of histological sections of 3035 dpc embryos from this study.(b) Fossil transition series of adult horse FL digits (isometrically scaled) showing the sequence of reduction of anterior and posterior digits and increasing dominance of central digit III. (i) Phenacodus, (ii) Hyracotherium, (iii) Mesohippus, (iv) Hypohippus, (v) Hipparion, (vi) Dinohippus. Illustration from Solounias et al.

For a few short days in the womb, horses have five tiny toes, research reveals.

Horses are born with feet that are effectively a single digit, with two flanking remnants identified as digits 2 and 4.

Now, Kathryn Kavanagh, a biologist at the University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth, and her colleagues have shown that early horse embryos go through a stage with five-digit condensations.

These effectively condense during fetal development into the foot structure familiar to all horse owners.

Surprised by their discovery, the researchers re-examined the initial stages of digit condensation of all digit-reduced four-limbed animals where suitable information was available.

They found that, in all cases, early embryos have five or four digits, with the first digit missing in the case of the latter.

The persistent five-digit initiation in the horse and other digit-reduced modern animals underscores a durable developmental stability at the initiation of digits.

Kavanagh launched into the research after sorting through preserved horse embryos. She noticed that, in early gestation, there were unmistakeably five clusters of developing cells in the area where the foot goes on to develop.

As Kavanagh and her colleagues noted in their paper in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B, the evolution of the modern horse limb is one of the most iconic evolutionary transitional stories documented in the fossil record, in particular the reduction of the number of toes during the evolution of the horse lineage.

Recent work has concurred with older hypotheses that modern horses arose from a five-toed ancestor with intermediate descendants that have reduced numbers of digits.

Modern horses are called single-toed because they possess an enlarged central digit 3 with a thick metapodial called the cannon bone and three smaller distal phalanges that complete the main digit in both their front and bag legs.

Alongside this large third digit lie two very small splint metapodials, identified as remnants of digits.

Research has shown that just a month or so after the formation of the embryo, the central digit of the modern horse is already relatively large and the two digits that will become the remnants are being reduced.

The limited data on horse embryology suggested that horses only ever formed three digit remnants during their development and it became an important cornerstone of the general view of the evolutionary developmental biology of digits.

By contrast, a recent palaeontology paper proposed a novel hypothesis, based on bone articulations and ridges in fossil horses and vasculature in late foetal horses, that the identities of all five ancestral digits might be preserved in the metacarpal anatomy of the modern horse adult, but direct evidence was lacking.

This same study also proposed that the frog in the hoof is a remnant of all five digit condensations, although embryological evidence was again lacking.

For their study, Kavanagh and fellow researchers Scott Bailey and Karen Sears assessed early digit development by studying embryonic limbs from horses aged 29 to 35 days after the stallion was mated to the mare.

They found evidence of five digits in the embryonic horse, but this formation lasted only a couple of days. Their subsequent reduction follows a striking parallel with evolution in the famous fossil transition series in the horse lineage, they reported.

Looking at the data on a wider array of four-legged animals, it appears there is both a developmentally favoured maximum of five and a developmentally favoured minimum of four for early digit condensations, with digit 1 missing.

Careful scrutiny is warranted to determine whether digit 1 initiation is truly missing in species in which only four digit condensations are thus far reported.

Kavanagh Kathryn D., Bailey C. Scott and Sears Karen E. Evidence of five digits in embryonic horses and developmental stabilization of tetrapod digit number.287 Proc. R. Soc. B http://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2019.2756

The study can be read here.

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Digital revolution: Embryonic horses briefly have five toes - Horsetalk

Single and ready to mingle? Texas third best state for singles – Times Record News

Claire Kowalick, Wichita Falls Times Record News Published 9:00 a.m. CT Feb. 8, 2020

If youre looking for love this Valentines Day, you might not be alone in the Lone Star state.

A recent study by WalletHub found Texas was the third best state for singles.

Using 29 key indicators of dating-friendliness, they found the state favorable in many areas including topping the list for the most restaurants and movie theaters per capita.

Florida topped the list in 2020 as best for singles, followed by California.

With about 34 percent of U.S. adults reporting that they have never been married, living in the right place might make all the difference.

Texas also ranked:

In this file photo, a young couple take a selfie during the annual lighting of the MSU-Burns Lights. Texas was listed in a recent study as the third best state for singles.(Photo: Christopher Walker/Times Record News)

Subject expert Paul Rose, Ph.D., associate dean, School of Education, Health and Human Behavior, Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, saidstrong, fulfilling relationships are a key factor in human happiness. He believes people should consider living in places that they are most likely to find strong friendships and other human connections.

Singles in the dating world should not feel like they have to spend a great deal of money on a date to have a good time, Rose said.

Many of the activities that bring joy to people and set the stage for enjoyable conversations cost little or nothing, he said.

Some examples include going for a walk in a beautiful place, cheap or free concerts, plays and lectures, picnics or meals at home.

If youre frugal or are trying to establish better financial habits, planning inexpensive outings not only saves you money but also helps you assess whether you and your date are a good match, Rose said.

Diana T. Sanchez, professor at Rutgers, State University of New Jersey, said when people are single and moving to a new location, they should look at the male-to-female ratio and see if people living there match up to your values.

More than beauty and attraction, we like those who are similar to us. So, if you care about a certain cause, lifestyles, or political attitudes, you should live in a place that reflects those values or has access to those lifestyles because it will be easier to find someone who shares your passion," Sanchez said.

For the full report, visit: https://wallethub.com/edu/best-states-for-singles/31667/.

Claire Kowalick, a senior journalist for the Times Record News, covers local government, military and MSU Texas. If you have a news tip, contact Claire at ckowalick@gannett.com.

Twitter: @KowalickNews

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Are Insects Capable of Moral Behavior? – JSTOR Daily

Are insects conscious, capable of a subjective experience of the world? And, if so, can they be moral actors, or victims of immoral acts (like, say, being flushed down the toilet)? These questions interest modern scientists. And, as Jeanette Samyn writes, they also mattered to nineteenth-century naturalists who asked questions about behavior and morality in relation to the nonhuman world.

Writing in the 1810s and 1820s, British entomologists William Kirby and William Spence presented parasites as tools of God. To them, lice represented a punishment for both personal uncleanliness and for oppression and tyranny.

Still, Kirby, Spence, and other biologists wrestled with whether insects could be moral actors. Were they driven purely by instinct or capable of some sort of reason? And how could their more disgusting behaviors be reconciled with a universe ordered by God? Charles Darwin wrote that it was difficult to believe that a beneficent & omnipotent God would have designedly created the Ichneumonidae with the express intention of their feeding within the living bodies of caterpillars. Instead, he wrote, he preferred to look at everything as resulting from designed laws, with the details, whether good or bad, left to the working out of what we may call chance. Not, he added somewhat glumly, that this at all satisfies me.

Other naturalists presented insects as moral beings. Some chose to focus on a few charismatic speciesnotably bees, which had long been admired as sociable, productive creatures who were helpful to humans. But Samyn points to a different take on the value of insect life presented by Louis Figuier, a French writer who interpreted science for a popular audience. His 1868 book The Insect World fascinated and repulsed readers with descriptions of astonishing insect behavior. He ascribed conscious choice, industriousness, and sociality to the bugs. In some cases, he did this by anthropomorphizing themdescribing a flea laying eggs as a foreseeing mother, for example. But often, the value he found was totally independent of human ethics, lying simply in their status as living creatures that play a part in the web of natural life. For example, he praised the marvelousindustry, patience, and dexterity and biological intelligence of parasitic fleas, ticks, and lice.

To some readers, this approach was horrifying. Cultural critic John Ruskin wrote that The Insect World made him sick with disgust by its descriptionsof all that is horrible in insect life. Ruskin wasnt just grossed out. Samyn writes that he was describing moral revulsion at the way Figuier and other naturalists celebrated what he considered mindless, instinctive behavior. To Ruskin, humans were completely distinct from other animals in that they have both instincts and consciousness, and it was only conscious effort that made human action valuable or praiseworthy.

Ultimately, of course, science can only go so far in answering questions about values and morality. But knowing whether insects really have an experience of the world might still influence how we humans think about our own values and actions.

JSTOR is a digital library for scholars, researchers, and students. JSTOR Daily readers can access the original research behind our articles for free on JSTOR.

By: Jeanette Samyn

Nineteenth-Century Literature, Vol. 71, No. 1 (June 2016), pp. 89-114

University of California Press

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‘An exceptional broadcaster who will be sorely missed’ – RTE.ie

Working as an anchor on Six One News is one of the most high-profile positions in Irish broadcasting.

But from the moment Keelin Shanley sat in the presenter's chair, she looked as if she had been doing the job for years.

A tenacious interviewer and warm communicator, she was the ideal choice for this prestigious role.

And with over 20 years experience as a journalist and broadcaster, Keelin quickly became the much-loved presenter of the countrys main news bulletin.

Born in CountyDublin, Keelin studied biochemistry at Trinity College and worked for a while as researcher in the Department of Pharmacology in the University of Bologna.

After presenting a number of science and technology RT programmes in the late 1990s, her skill in front of the camera quickly became apparent and she made the switch to mainstream current affairs. It was a field in which she was to excel.

Read more:RT broadcaster Keelin Shanley dies following illness'Keelin was the best of us, we are poorer for her loss'

She also worked for broadcasters including Radio France International and CNN World Report, but she would spend the majority of her career with RT where her flexibility and breadth of knowledge saw her present a wide variety of shows.

Although she was incredibly comfortable in a studio environment, she was just as skilled as a reporter out on the road.

From 1999 she was a popular and dynamic member of the Prime Time team as a reporter and presenter. In her time there she made a number of acclaimed documentaries, many of which focused on social issues and gave voice to people on the margins of society.

She also reported from a number of developing countries for the Far Away, Up Close strand, including documentaries on the plight of child soldiers in the Lord's Resistance Army in Uganda and the rebuilding of Liberia.

In 2002, she pioneered the Prime Time Investigates strand with Saturday Night, Sunday Morning, an hour-long Prime Time special on binge-drinking culture.

Keelin went on to make further Prime Time Investigates on health inequality, cocaine abuse, homelessness, people trafficking, deportations and teenage criminality among other subjects.

In more recent times, Keelin presented Morning Edition, The Consumer Show, Crimecall and The Irish Book Awards on RT One. She also worked as a radio presenter across several programmes on RT Radio 1 - Morning Ireland, News at One, Today with Sean O'Rourke and Late Debate.

She won many awards for her work including IFTAs, a Law Society Award and a Radharc award.

Keelin took the reins of Six One News in January 2018. It was a position she hugely enjoyed.

In a newsroom environment that can often be busy and stressful, she was a calm and reassuring presence, easy to work with, helpful and encouraging of other colleagues.

She was a warm and compassionate broadcaster but also an incisive interviewer and a role model for women starting out in the business. But her time on the bulletin was brought to a premature end as she faced cancer.

Keelin was an exceptional broadcaster, a fiercely intelligent reporter and a much-loved presence in RT, where she will be sorely missed.

Above all she will be missed by her family, her husband Conor, children Ben and Lucy, her wide family and a large circle of friends.

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Internal Organs | Anatomy System – Human Body Anatomy …

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