Tag Archives: media

PGIMER-Chandigarh geared up to vaccinate 12,000 healthcare workers – Sify

Chandigarh, Dec 31 (IANS) The PGIMER has chalked out the plan to undertake vaccination against coronavirus of over 12,000 healthcare workers and all requisites are in place to start the process in January 2021, its Director Jagat Ram said here on Thursday.

A task force has also been set up to monitor the storage, infrastructure and manpower requirements and multiple centres created for the vaccination drive, he added.

Dr Jagat Ram also lauded the unwavering commitment and courage of the team from the Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research (PGIMER) in combating corona scourge through 2020.

"The institute has been steadfast in serving COVID-19 patients across the region from day one. Till date, PGIMER has been able to provide treatment to over 3,000 COVID-19 patients, mostly with moderate to severe symptoms."

The PGIMER also contributed substantially to contain the spread of coronavirus by creating round-the-clock testing facilities and conducting around 1,30,000 RT-PCR tests, over 10,000 Genexpert and 6,000 rapid antigen tests (RATs) till date.

In addition, over 60 labs have been established under the mentorship of the PGI.

The renowned institute was selected to undertake one of the trials for various potential drugs for COVID-19, including second and third phases of human clinical trials of 'Covishield' for which the third phase is underway, Jagat Ram told the media.

"Though it was very challenging, but we tried our best to provide patient care services to non-COVID emergency patients reporting from all north Indian states as well, including OPD care to around 10 lakh non-COVID patients and IPD care to another 55,000-odd patients.

"Besides, the institute has been providing OPD services to patients through tele-consultation. A total of 2,11,610 patients have been provided consultation and treatment since its inception in May 2020."

Detailing other milestones, Dr Jagat Ram said that the PGIMER was honoured for the fourth time in a row with national award in 'Best Hospital' category for outstanding contribution towards promotion of cadaver organ donation.

It ranked second in the National Institutional Ranking Framework in the medical category for the third consecutive year.

THE PGIMER chief said that the construction of Advanced Neurosciences Centre and Mother and Child Care Centre was progressing well and hoped to make them operational by the end of 2021.

"Due to lockdown restrictions and non-availability of labourers, work was affected for almost two months, but we tried to cover up the loss when things got back on track. We are now satisfied with the pace of construction," the Director said.

Costing an estimated Rs 495.31 crore, the neurosciences centre is a 300-bed facility for timely, affordable and advanced treatment for neurological and neuroscience disorders.

Costing an estimated Rs 485 crore, the Mother and Child Care Centre is a 300-bed unit for improving obstetric and neonatal tertiary care.

PGIMER's satellite centre at Sangrur in Punjab is now functional, with its OPDs boosting healthcare in the area and easing patient load from that there.

"We are striving hard to make it fully functional in the coming year," the Director added.

--IANS

vg/tsb

Read the original here:
PGIMER-Chandigarh geared up to vaccinate 12,000 healthcare workers - Sify

VIU Researchers Examining Genetics of Canada Lynx | News | Vancouver Island University | Canada – Vancouver Island University News

The lynx-hare predator-prey cycle that has existed for thousands of years in North America is increasingly under threat from climate change.

The lynx are specialist predators that rely almost exclusively on snowshoe hare for food. This has led to a tight link between the populations of the two species; as the snowshoe hare populations rise and fall over a roughly 10-year cycle, lynx populations follow suit, says Dr. Jamie Gorrell, a VIU Biology Professor. When hare abundance is at its peak, lynx have plenty of food and have high survival rates, causing population booms that match, but lag slightly behind, those of the hare.

As snowshoe hare populations begin to decline, some lynx change their behaviour and begin to travel long distances, sometimes more than 1,000 kilometres, in search of food.

To understand how this cycle, which helps maintain the biodiversity of more than a dozen species in the boreal forest, could be impacted by climate change Gorrell and Dr. Evan Hersh, a VIU post-doctoral fellow, are studying the genetics of Canada lynx.

The genetic information will help researchers and conservationists understand lynx movements and connectivity among populations to identify potential habitat corridors that are essential to ensuring lynx populations remain genetically diverse.

Genetically mixed lynx populations will in turn help lessen the impact climate change may have on the stability of the lynx-hare cycle, a process vital to the functioning of boreal and sub-boreal ecosystems, says Gorrell.

Hersh is using genomic analyses and bioinformatics to analyze DNA samples that were collected with the help of Yukon residents, fur trappers and the Yukon Community Ecological Monitoring Program. The samples were collected at multiple phases during a 10-year cycle in hare abundance.

Hersh recently finished his PhD in plant ecology and evolution at the University of British Columbia and has extensive experience in genomic techniques. He says biologists now also need to be computer programmers to be able to crunch the huge amounts of data being generated in the genomic era.

Hersh will be comparing the genetic differences between Canada lynx from different areas. He said with newer techniques, instead of comparing a few hundred genetic markers, researchers can now compare tens of thousands of genetic markers.

Were hoping this thousandfold increase in the amount of data will give us the ability to figure out what is going on with their population structure. To date, no one has really applied these cutting-edge genomic techniques that produce huge amounts of data to analyze the population structure of Canada lynx within a conservation and management context, says Hersh.

The lynx needs these huge chunks of boreal forest that are continuous, not broken into little patches. If something happens in the southern portion of the boreal region, due to human use or climate change, and the area starts getting fragmented, then lynx movement can potentially be impacted, says Hersh.

They could have trouble passing over certain regions where there isnt enough boreal forest for them to travel through, which could have cascading effects on hare populations and potentially disrupt the cycle.

Hersh said if lynx and hare populations no longer follow predictable cycles, this can have tremendous impacts on the biodiversity of Boreal forests. It is estimated that the abundances of over 25 vertebrates are also regulated by this cycle. While the exact consequences of a disruption are difficult to predict, it could alter the natural patterns of genetic variation in all species that fluctuate with the cycle, which could ultimately reduce their ability to respond to future changes in their habitat and climate.

The concern is if climate change reduces the continuity of the forest and lynx cant move as far anymore, then this could disrupt that 10-year cycle.

This relationship between predator and prey could start to fall apart, so thats a potential consequence of climate change that we might not expect to happen. No one knows whats going to happen to the lynx and hare populations, says Gorrell. Most predator-prey relationships are generally stable over time and the abundance of predators and prey will stay relatively constant, but the lynx and hare have these huge peaks and crashes that happen like clockwork and its amazing how that cyclical relationship has maintained over time.

Gorrell and Hersh will be completing their research over the next two years thanks to an Accelerate Fellowship grant for $90,000 awarded jointly from Mitacs and Bill Harrower, principal biologist at High-Country Wildlife.

-30-

MEDIA CONTACT:

Rachel Stern, Communications Officer, Vancouver Island University

C: 250.618.0373 lE: Rachel.Stern@viu.ca | T: @VIUNews

List of Project Supports/Partners

Research will be completed thanks to a grant from Mitacs and Bill Harrower, principal biologist at High-Country Wildlife.

This project is also being supported by:

The Community Ecological Monitoring project includes collaboration among researchers from:

Read the rest here:
VIU Researchers Examining Genetics of Canada Lynx | News | Vancouver Island University | Canada - Vancouver Island University News

From SWOT to FOAR: Teaching Your Brain to See the Positives – Entrepreneur

December7, 20207 min read

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Within the broad world of human behavior we know that there is a tendency to see more of the negative than the positive in situations. Our brain processes about 60,000 thoughts a day. Many of them are negative, absurd, or repetitive. More than 90% are repeated and around 80 to 90% are negative, with the consequences that this represents in the reality of that person: negativity, judgments, disappointment, frustration, fear, stagnation, unhappiness.

The psychologist Martin Seligman, promoter of the so-called positive psychology, affirms in his book " Authentic happiness " that for every one hundred articles that talk about sadness, only one is published about happiness. A proportion similar to what happens with the news shown by most of the media.

There is a valuable tool as individuals and also for companies and teams, called appreciative inquiry , which allows focusing on the contributory aspects of the issues to be managed, instead of focusing exclusively on those that remain in the search for solutions.

To be clear: it is not a question of denying reality and what is lived, but of resignifying it and highlighting the aspects that do help to resolve it.

In the business world it is very common to use the SWOT matrix (Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, Threats; also known as SWOT) to analyze different aspects to solve.

Applying a similar model, here aimed at improving decision-making and enhancing human behavior, the appreciative inquiry process invites us to practice the FOAR method, consisting of the review of Strengths, Opportunities, Aspirations and Results.

Image: Depositphotos.com

Appreciative inquiry draws on the contributions of Professor David Cooperrider from Case Western University in the United States, and defines it as the 4D's of appreciation: Discover, Dream ( Dream in English), Design and Plan ( Deliver in English) ). And we cannot change them, because the opportunity presents itself as it is and when it appears; although you do have the power to accept or reject it.

Let's review each of the aspects of the FOAR matrix:

It is the starting point, discovering the tools you have. Everything that is already good and that contributes to the success of the objective is detailed; even when applied to solve challenges.

To focus, it is important to use triggers, for example, what skills do you have, how much do you know about yourself or the topic to be addressed, what values influence your strengths; and also what contributory beliefs -those that we know as positive-, in addition to asking In what do I recognize that I have or have a lot of talent?

This quadrant of FOAR contemplates open-mindedness and the change of internal models to expand beyond the known. There are internal opportunities , for example, the permission you give yourself to experience the new, the predisposition, the encouragement and the enthusiasm to face your process of personal and professional improvement; and also external , where you learn to detect everything that the environment offers as opportunities for improvement - such as taking a course, accessing a contact to resolve a situation, a book that triggered a lateral thinking that you had not considered.

In this area of opportunities, imagination, creativity and innovation become strategic allies to be able to expand your power of perception to solve the different issues that previously concerned you and today you are sitting on them from new perspectives.

Everything that you cannot see yet does not mean that it cannot happen in the future. That is why the FOAR model relies on the world of possibilities .

Possibility is born from internal openness and predisposition for good things to happen. Everything that you aspire to, dream of, want to discover, and yearn to achieve, can find a way of realization through the opportunities you are visualizing, no matter how distant they may seem at the moment.

To determine your aspirations and those of a team, it is necessary to review the strengths and opportunities and specifically establish the goals you want to achieve. As triggering questions: What is really important and what am I passionate about? Where do I or do we want to go? How do I concretely envision the future? (Create a mental image as if it were in HD) How will the successful result of these aspirations be in the concrete? What emotions will be present?

There is an interesting exercise that I would like to propose: make a positive portrait of yourself, and you can also propose it to your team: take a photograph of your face -and it can also be of each member of a team- , and begin to write with a firm hand qualities in different places in that photo. For example, qualities related to vision where you want to go in the eye area; those of communication, in the area of the mouth; that of creativity, on the forehead; empathy and listening skills, in the ears, and so on, you will associate spaces in your photo with qualities that help in appreciative inquiry. You will be surprised by the result. If you need to develop any of these aspects further, view the photo for several weeks in a row daily for a few moments, and let your subconscious mind do the rest.

This is the final consequence of the actions you have taken to reach the goal. It is the concrete effect of an event activated in time.

In this quadrant of FOAR you will define the tangible and measurable indicators of what you want to obtain. Achieving the sale of a certain number of units of a product, opening a new business in a certain strategic location, successfully overcoming a challenge that can empower the person or company, or the conclusion of a negotiation, are some practical examples and concrete.

To achieve the results, it is necessary to draw up the action plan, establish goals using specific methodologies, develop the strategy, determine those responsible and the time in which this point will be reached, and measure partial progress.

It is known to all that results are not obtained without focused action, available energy and clarity to activate everything that is necessary to achieve it. Because just dreaming or imagining it, and even simply having it in a plane of aspiration without action, will not be enough to make them happen.

Image: Depositphotos.com

Discipline, clarity and permanent focus, adjusting deviations and correcting in a positive sense, will be other indispensable tools to achieve this.

Taking into account the structure of the FOAR model, you will be able to enhance the aspects that will help you move forward, and possibilities will arise that perhaps were not taken into account in the traditional SWOT model.

The invitation is to observe, always and permanently, the positive and contributory aspects in all situations. What will happen if you do? You will positively modify your mental model, turning towards one focused directly on what brings you closer to the results you want to obtain, in a more overcoming way, versus that old pattern of having the focus on what you lack or the obstacles.

Read this article:
From SWOT to FOAR: Teaching Your Brain to See the Positives - Entrepreneur

Frontier Medicines and AbbVie Establish Global Partnership to Discover and Develop Novel Therapies and E3 Degraders Against Difficult-to-Drug Targets…

- Multi-year, multi-program R&D partnership to deliver innovative treatment options across cancer and immunological diseases

- Frontier eligible to receive up to $100 million in upfront and milestone payments within the first 12 months of collaboration

NORTH CHICAGO, Ill. and SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, Calif., Dec. 2, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- AbbVie (NYSE: ABBV), a research-based global biopharmaceutical company, and Frontier Medicines, Corp., a precision medicine company drugging challenging protein targets to develop breakthrough medicines that change the course of human diseases, today announced a global strategic collaboration to discover, develop and commercialize a pipeline of innovative small molecule therapeutics against high-interest, difficult-to-drug protein targets.

Under the multi-year collaboration, AbbVie and Frontier will utilize Frontier's proprietary chemoproteomics platform to identify small molecules for programs directed to novel E3 ligases and certain oncology and immunology targets. Whereas conventional drug discovery methodologies have been primarily successful against a relatively discrete set of target classes, chemoproteomics-based screening in relevant cellular contexts has the potential to enable targeting of a significantly broader range of proteins. By selecting certain immunology and oncology targets for the collaboration that are considered well validated but to date, inaccessible, the collaboration has the potential to develop highly differentiated and efficacious therapeutics.

Under the terms of the agreement, AbbVie will pay Frontier an upfront cash payment of $55 million, and Frontier is eligible to receive additional milestone payments. In addition, AbbVie will reimburse Frontier's R&D costs through defined stages of pre-clinical development. The companies will collaborate on the research and pre-clinical development of programs directed against E3 ligase, immunology and oncology targets. Upon successful completion of defined stages of pre-clinical development, AbbVie will assume full responsibility for global development and commercialization activities and costs for the programs. Frontier will retain an option to share development activities and expenses for certain oncology programs through the completion of Phase 2. Frontier will be eligible to receive success-based development and commercial milestone payments that could potentially exceed $1 billion, in addition to royalty payments on commercialized products. AbbVie retains the right to expand the collaboration in the future by exercising options to a defined number of additional targets. The collaboration excludes all of Frontier's internal programs for which Frontier retains exclusive global rights.

Story continues

"AbbVie is focused on making investments in promising new technologies that assist us in our mission to develop innovative medicines," said Jose-Carlos Gutirrez-Ramos, Ph.D., vice president, Discovery, AbbVie. "One of our key strategic focus areas is targeted protein degradation and chemoproteomics, and this collaboration with Frontier Medicines will be highly synergistic and complementary to our ongoing efforts."

"AbbVie's commitment to innovative therapies makes them an ideal partner in the development and commercialization of new medicines for cancer and immunological diseases," said Chris Varma, Ph.D., Frontier's co-founder, chairman, and CEO. "With our powerful chemoproteomics platform, we are greatly expanding the universe of therapeutic targets that can be accessed with small molecule drugs. This partnership enables us to build a shared pipeline of novel therapeutics with AbbVie, while Frontier continues to independently advance our internal programs into the clinic."

About Frontier MedicinesFrontier Medicines is a precision medicine company that has pioneered a proprietary discovery and development platform to develop medicines against disease-causing proteins previously considered undruggable. The company is deploying its groundbreaking scientific approaches in chemoproteomics, covalent drug discovery, and machine learning to develop medicines to treat a number of debilitating diseases, starting with cancer. In its quest to "drug the undruggable," Frontier Medicines seeks to significantly broaden the therapeutic landscape with novel small molecule alternatives to change the course of a broad range of diseases. For more information, visit http://www.frontiermeds.com and follow us on LinkedIn.

About AbbVieAbbVie's mission is to discover and deliver innovative medicines that solve serious health issues today and address the medical challenges of tomorrow. We strive to have a remarkable impact on people's lives across several key therapeutic areas: immunology, oncology, neuroscience, eye care, virology, women's health and gastroenterology, in addition to products and services across its Allergan Aesthetics portfolio. For more information about AbbVie, please visit us at http://www.abbvie.com. Follow @abbvie on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and LinkedIn.

Forward-Looking StatementsSome statements in this news release are, or may be considered, forward-looking statements for purposes of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. The words "believe," "expect," "anticipate," "project" and similar expressions, among others, generally identify forward-looking statements. AbbVie cautions that these forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from those indicated in the forward-looking statements. Such risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, failure to realize the expected benefits from AbbVie's acquisition of Allergan plc ("Allergan"), failure to promptly and effectively integrate Allergan's businesses, competition from other products, challenges to intellectual property, difficulties inherent in the research and development process, adverse litigation or government action, changes to laws and regulations applicable to our industry and the impact of public health outbreaks, epidemics or pandemics, such as COVID-19. Additional information about the economic, competitive, governmental, technological and other factors that may affect AbbVie's operations is set forth in Item 1A, "Risk Factors," of AbbVie's 2019 Annual Report on Form 10-K, which has been filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, as updated by its subsequent Quarterly Reports on Form 10-Q. AbbVie undertakes no obligation to release publicly any revisions to forward-looking statements as a result of subsequent events or developments, except as required by law.

Frontier Medicines Media:pr@frontiermeds.com

AbbVie Media:Gentry Lassiter(224) 219-6670gentry.lassiter@abbvie.com

AbbVie Investors:Liz Shea(847) 935-2211liz.shea@abbvie.com

View original content to download multimedia:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/frontier-medicines-and-abbvie-establish-global-partnership-to-discover-and-develop-novel-therapies-and-e3-degraders-against-difficult-to-drug-targets-301183478.html

SOURCE Frontier Medicines

View original post here:
Frontier Medicines and AbbVie Establish Global Partnership to Discover and Develop Novel Therapies and E3 Degraders Against Difficult-to-Drug Targets...

Mental Health Related Movies Receive Good Reviews – Theravive

In a recent study, researchers surveyed 200 movies released between 1977 and 2019 with content about mental illness and found box office returns were higher than average. Those same movies received 15% of Oscar nominations during the time period. While the article still needs peer-review, the findings show that we, as a society, are doing a better job of talking about mental health.

Jolene Caufield, MS with Healthy Howard,agrees with the implications of the findings, that mental health-related media is a byproduct of the public's awareness of the sensitive subject of psychological illnesses. The cinematic media has a reputation for illustrating human behavior and the circumstances surrounding it, said Caulfield. It's only fitting that since the world is entering a destigmatizing era, the media will offer their own version to capture audience interest. This era and the landscape of our current cinema allows for more non-subjective portrayals with improved insights about the issue.

Dr. Michael G. Wetter, PsyD, adds that movies that pertain to mental health issues are more popular and successful because it is a subject that most people can relate to in some way. He explains, It taps into our own experience in dealing with emotions, conflict, and interpersonal relationships. Watching themes associated with mental health play out in a narrative may help us feel that resolution is possible; it provides the opportunity to have an emotional connection without anything required in return.

Because they imply resolution and healing is possible, these movies also give a way to explore and gain a deeper understanding of other people and why they do what they do. Jason Drake LCSW-Ssays movies can provide a safe space to try to understand the struggles that we may experience ourselves and why we do what we do. For a person who is insecure, leaving a movie theater after watching someone portray and conquer insecurity gives hope. For someone battling depression, to see the inner experience shared so precisely byanother, helps that person feel not so alone. We connect with the characters on the screen and project our struggles onto them. In times of difficulty, we get to feel what it feelslike to overcome, if only for that moment. Movies may inspire hope which hope can lead to action.

But writer and director Ryan Lambert has doubts about whether the mental health content is what makes these movies do so well. He wonders if they receive critical acclaim more so than other topics simply because of the subject itself, not any higher level of filmmaking ability. These social issue movies are perceived as better because they are about important ideas, said Lambert, rather than being judged as better on their own terms. Media and award institutions like the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences eat up these prestige pictures, showering them with praise based on their ideological stance instead of their aesthetic value.

Joy Cheriel Brown, a filmmaker with Third Person Omniscient Productions, shares experience with psychosis when she was 18 years old. She doubted whether she would herself again or accomplish her screenwriting dreams. Brown said, I vowed that if I ever figured it out, I would make a film about it to help other young people, which I did with my short film, N.O.S., which sold to ShortsTV this year. For many people, mental illness is stigmatized and they dont understand it. People either relate because they also have a mental illness, or people are curious about it and it fascinates them because it scares them that it could happen to anyone. The success of films about mental illness is not a fluke. Much of my work focuses on it because Im in a unique position of actually living with schizoaffective disorder and I can advocate for those who live with mental illness, and educate those others who dont understand it.

Whether movies are truly top-notch or rated well because of their subject is up for debate, but as more people, like Brown, share their personal experiences, it keeps mental health at the forefront of peoples minds.Jay Shifman, host of the Choose Your Strugglepodcast notes that we all want to feel accepted.Shifman says, stigma still exists around things that are not only perfectly normal but relatively common so people seek other ways to have their questions answered and feel that theyre not different or strange. Simply knowing something is okay enough to cover in a movie can decrease feelings of isolation.

Categories: Mass Media , Mental Health Awareness | Tags: entertainment

Link:
Mental Health Related Movies Receive Good Reviews - Theravive

First Lady of DR Congo Meets Merck Foundation CEO to Mark Together the International Day of Elimination of Violence Against Women and Girls – Outlook…

(Eds: Disclaimer: The following press release comes to you under an arrangement with Business Wire India. PTI takes no editorial responsibility for the same.) Mumbai, Maharashtra, India&Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo Business Wire India DR Congo First Lady partners with Merck Foundation to build healthcare capacity, break infertility stigma and empower girls through education. Merck Foundation CEO underscored their long term commitment to the social and economic development of Democratic Republic of The Congo through their partnership with The First Lady and Ministry of Health.Merck Foundation, the philanthropic arm of Merck KGaA Germany, underscored their long term commitment through starting their partnership with The First Lady of Democratic Republic of the Congo, H.E. Madam DENISE NYAKERU TSHISEKEDI. During the high level meeting held this week, Dr. RashaKelej, CEO of Merck Foundation, appointed The First Lady of Democratic Republic of the Congo as The Ambassador of Merck More Than a Mother to work closely with Merck Foundation to break the stigma of infertility, build healthcare capacity , and empower girls through education in the country. H.E. Madam DENISE NYAKERU TSHISEKEDI, The First Lady of Democratic Republic of the Congo and Ambassador of Merck More Than a Mother emphasized, I am very happy to partner with Merck Foundation and start their valuable programs in our country as their Ambassador. These programs will help us to transform our public health care sector and create a future shift to empower infertile and childless women through access to information, health and change of mindset as well as empower girls through education which is very close to my heart. Dr. Rasha Kelej, CEO of Merck Foundation and President, Merck More Than a Mother emphasized, I am very proud of our partnership with The First Lady Of Democratic Republic of the Congo and welcome her as the Ambassador of Merck More Than a Mother, and new member of Merck Foundation First Ladies Initiative-MFFLI. With the outbreak of the global coronavirus pandemic, building healthcare capacity is of the highest importance, and through our partnership, we are planning to provide specialty training to equip the local doctors with the skills they need to improve access to equitable and quality healthcare solutions. Along with appointing The First Lady of Democratic Republic of the Congo as the Ambassador of Merck More Than A Mother, Merck Foundation also marked the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women. Violence against women and girls (VAWG) is one of the most widespread, persistent and devastating human rights violations, and on the occasion of International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women, We must work together to eliminate violence against women and girls once and for all, Dr. Rasha Kelej, CEO of Merck Foundation.Merck Foundation has enrolled 32 doctors from Democratic Republic of the Congo to master course in Diabetes in French accredited by Diabetes UK as part of their Diabetes Blue Point Program to help the doctors prevent and manage the disease in their communities.Merck Foundation has also provided Fertility and Embryology training to 5 Doctors from Democratic Republic of the Congo with the aim to establish a strong platform of first Fertility specialists and Embryologists to assist infertile couples in the country as part of their historic campaign Merck More than a Mother.Merck Foundation has also enrolled 1 Oncologist from the Democratic Republic of the Congo as part of their Merck Oncology Fellowship Program to increase the limited number of oncologists in the country and plans to enroll more doctors after coronavirus lockdown is over. COVID-19 has severely affected the families of casual and daily workers. To aid this issue, Merck Foundation made a community donation to the casual workers and women to support poor families in Democratic Republic of the Congo as part of their coronavirus response program. We are also planning to support 20 girl students as part of Merck Foundation Educating Katty which aims to empower girls through education in Democratic Republic of the Congo. We are closely working with The First Lady on this new program with the aim to empower girls through education, added Dr. Rasha Kelej, One of the 100 Most Influential Africans (2019, 2020). Merck Foundation also announced 9 winners from Democratic Republic of the Congo for their Stay at Home Media Recognition Awards 2020 which been launched earlier this year in partnership with The First Lady of Democratic Republic of the Congo with the aim to build media capacity and raise awareness about Covid-19 pandemic. The Merck Foundation Stay At Home Media Recognition Awards winners from Democratic Republic of the Congo are:ONLINE CATEGORY WINNERS:FIRST Position: Cassien Tribunal Aungane - Radio Centrale & "Diplomacy & Development" (500 USD)And Mukanya Kafuata Andre Mbote Africa (500 USD)SECOND Position: Stphie Manza Mukinzi Alert Coronavirus (300 USD)PRINT CATEGORY WINNERS:FIRST Position: Mathy Musau Dinyika - Forum Des As (500 USD)MULTIMEDIA CATEGORY WINNERS:FIRST Position: Muemba Wa Muemba Donat Jua Magazine (500 USD)SECOND Position: Jessy Nzengu - Palmier Radio-Tlvision Communautaire (300 USD)THIRD Position: Kazadi Lukusa Nicolas - Radiotlvision Happy Day (200 USD)RADIO CATEGORY WINNERS:FIRST Position: Aly Bukasa Kabambi Radio Communautaire Butook (500 USD)SECOND Position: Jody Daniel Nkashama- Radio Okapi (300 USD)About Merck More Than a Mother campaignMerck More Than a Mother is a strong movement that aims to empower infertile women through access to information, education and change of mind-sets. This powerful campaign supports governments in defining policies to enhance access to regulated, safe, effective and equitable fertility care solutions. It defines interventions to break the stigma around infertile women and raises awareness about infertility prevention, management and male infertility. In partnership with African First Ladies, Ministries of Health, Information, Education & Gender, academia, policymakers, International fertility societies, media and art, the initiative also provides training for fertility specialists and embryologists to build and advance fertility care capacity in Africa and developing countries.With Merck More Than a Mother, we have initiated a cultural shift to de-stigmatize infertility at all levels: By improving awareness, training local experts in the fields of fertility care and media, building advocacy in cooperation with African First Ladies and women leaders and by supporting childless women in starting their own small businesses. Its all about giving every woman the respect and the help she deserves to live a fulfilling life, with or without a child.The Ambassadors of Merck More Than a Mother are: H.E. NEO JANE MASISI, The First Lady of Botswana

H.E. FATOUMATTA BAH-BARROW, The First Lady of The Gambia

H.E. MONICA GEINGOS, The First Lady of NamibiaH.E. ANGELINE NDAYISHIMIYE,The First Lady of Burundi

H.E. REBECCA AKUFO-ADDO, The First Lady of Ghana

H.E ASSATA ISSOUFOU MAHAMADOU, The First Lady of NigerH.E. BRIGITTE TOUADERA, The First Lady of Central African Republic

H.E. COND DJENE, The First Lady of Guinea Conakry

H.E. AISHA BUHARI, The First Lady of NigeriaH.E. HINDA DEBY ITNO, The First Lady of Chad

H.E. CLAR WEAH, The First Lady of Liberia

H.E FATIMA MAADA BIO, The First Lady of Sierra LeoneH.E. ANTOINETTE SASSOU-NGUESSO, The First Lady of Congo Brazzaville

H.E. MONICA CHAKWERA, The First Lady of Malawi

H.E. ESTHER LUNGU, The First Lady of ZambiaH.E. DENISE NYAKERU TSHISEKEDI, THE First Lady of Democratic Republic of Congo

H.E. ISAURA FERRO NYUSI, The First Lady of Mozambique

H.E. AUXILLIA MNANGAGWA, The First Lady of Zimbabwe Merck Foundation launched new innovative initiatives to sensitize local communities about infertility prevention, male infertility with the aim to break the stigma of infertility and empowering infertile women as part of Merck More than a Mother COMMUNITY AWARENESS CAMPAIGN, such as; Merck More than a Mother Media Recognition Awards and Health Media Training Merck More than a Mother Fashion Awards Merck More than a Mother Film Awards Local songs with local artists to address the cultural perception of infertility and how to change it Children storybook, localized for each country Click on icon below to Download Merck Foundation Apphttps://www.merck-foundation.com/MF_StoreRedirectionJoin the conversation on our social media platforms below and let your voice be heard Facebook: Merck FoundationTwitter: @MerckfoundationYouTube: MerckFoundationInstagram: Merck FoundationFlickr: Merck FoundationWebsite: http://www.merck-foundation.comAbout Merck Foundation The Merck Foundation, established in 2017, is the philanthropic arm of Merck KGaA Germany, aims to improve the health and wellbeing of people and advance their lives through science and technology. Our efforts are primarily focused on improving access to quality & equitable healthcare solutions in underserved communities, building healthcare and scientific research capacity and empowering people in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) with a special focus on women and youth. All Merck Foundation press releases are distributed by e-mail at the same time they become available on the Merck Foundation Website. Please visit http://www.merck-foundation.com to read more. To know more, reach out to our social media: Merck Foundation; Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, YouTube and Flickr. To View the Image Click on the Link Below:Dr. RashaKelej, CEO of Merck Foundation & President, Merck More Than a Mother during her meeting with H.E. Madam DENISE NYAKERU TSHISEKEDI, The First Lady of Democratic Republic of The Congo and Ambassador of Merck More Than a Mother. PWRPWR

Disclaimer :- This story has not been edited by Outlook staff and is auto-generated from news agency feeds. Source: PTI

See more here:
First Lady of DR Congo Meets Merck Foundation CEO to Mark Together the International Day of Elimination of Violence Against Women and Girls - Outlook...

Symphony of Cellular Activities Revealed by Fluorescent Imaging Technique – SciTechDaily

MIT researchers have developed a way to simultaneously image up to five different molecules within a cell, by targeting glowing reporters to distinct locations inside the cell. This approach could allow scientists to learn much more about the complex signaling networks that control most cell functions. Credit: Courtesy of the researchers

Fluorescent imaging technique simultaneously captures different signal types from multiple locations in a live cell.

Within a single cell, thousands of molecules, such as proteins, ions, and other signaling molecules, work together to perform all kinds of functions absorbing nutrients, storing memories, and differentiating into specific tissues, among many others.

Deciphering these molecules, and all of their interactions, is a monumental task. Over the past 20 years, scientists have developed fluorescent reporters they can use to read out the dynamics of individual molecules within cells. However, typically only one or two such signals can be observed at a time, because a microscope cannot distinguish between many fluorescent colors.

MIT researchers have now developed a way to image up to five different molecule types at a time, by measuring each signal from random, distinct locations throughout a cell. This approach could allow scientists to learn much more about the complex signaling networks that control most cell functions, says Edward Boyden, the Y. Eva Tan Professor in Neurotechnology and a professor of biological engineering, media arts and sciences, and brain and cognitive sciences at MIT.

There are thousands of molecules encoded by the genome, and theyre interacting in ways that we dont understand. Only by watching them at the same time can we understand their relationships, says Boyden, who is also a member of MITs McGovern Institute for Brain Research and Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research.

In a new study, Boyden and his colleagues used this technique to identify two populations of neurons that respond to calcium signals in different ways, which may influence how they encode long-term memories, the researchers say.

Boyden is the senior author of the study, which was published on November 23, 2020, in Cell. The papers lead authors are MIT postdoc Changyang Linghu and graduate student Shannon Johnson.

Just like listening to the sound of a single instrument from an orchestra is far from enough to fully appreciate a symphony, Linghu says, by enabling observations of multiple cellular signals at the same time, our technology will help us understand the symphony of cellular activities. These four images compare various ways scientists make molecular activity visible, with the new technique on the bottom right. Credit: Courtesy of the researchers. Edited by MIT News

To make molecular activity visible within a cell, scientists typically create reporters by fusing a protein that senses a target molecule to a protein that glows. This is similar to how a smoke detector will sense smoke and then flash a light, says Johnson, who is also a fellow in the Yang-Tan Center for Molecular Therapeutics. The most commonly used glowing protein is green fluorescent protein (GFP), which is based on a molecule originally found in a fluorescent jellyfish.

Typically a biologist can see one or two colors at the same time on a microscope, and many of the reporters out there are green, because theyre based on the green fluorescent protein, Boyden says. What has been lacking until now is the ability to see more than a couple of these signals at once.

Just like listening to the sound of a single instrument from an orchestra is far from enough to fully appreciate a symphony, Linghu says, by enabling observations of multiple cellular signals at the same time, our technology will help us understand the symphony of cellular activities.

To boost the number of signals they could see, the researchers set out to identify signals by location instead of by color. They modified existing reporters to cause them to accumulate in clusters at different locations within a cell. They did this by adding two small peptides to each reporter, which helped the reporters form distinct clusters within cells.

Its like having reporter X be tethered to a LEGO brick, and reporter Z tethered to a KNEX piece only LEGO bricks will snap to other LEGO bricks, causing only reporter X to be clustered with more of reporter X, Johnson says.

With this technique, each cell ends up with hundreds of clusters of fluorescent reporters. After measuring the activity of each cluster under a microscope, based on the changing fluorescence, the researchers can identify which molecule was being measured in each cluster by preserving the cell and staining for peptide tags that are unique to each reporter. The peptide tags are invisible in the live cell, but they can be stained and seen after the live imaging is done. This allows the researchers to distinguish signals for different molecules even though they may all be fluorescing the same color in the live cell.

Using this approach, the researchers showed that they could see five different molecular signals in a single cell. To demonstrate the potential usefulness of this strategy, they measured the activities of three molecules in parallel calcium, cyclic AMP, and protein kinase A (PKA). These molecules form a signaling network that is involved with many different cellular functions throughout the body. In neurons, it plays an important role in translating a short-term input (from upstream neurons) into long-term changes such as strengthening the connections between neurons a process that is necessary for learning and forming new memories.

Applying this imaging technique to pyramidal neurons in the hippocampus, the researchers identified two novel subpopulations with different calcium signaling dynamics. One population showed slow calcium responses. In the other population, neurons had faster calcium responses. The latter population had larger PKA responses. The researchers believe this heightened response may help sustain long-lasting changes in the neurons.

The researchers now plan to try this approach in living animals so they can study how signaling network activities relate to behavior, and also to expand it to other types of cells, such as immune cells. This technique could also be useful for comparing signaling network patterns between cells from healthy and diseased tissue.

In this paper, the researchers showed they could record five different molecular signals at once, and by modifying their existing strategy, they believe they could get up to 16. With additional work, that number could reach into the hundreds, they say.

That really might help crack open some of these tough questions about how the parts of a cell work together, Boyden says. One might imagine an era when we can watch everything going on in a living cell, or at least the part involved with learning, or with disease, or with the treatment of a disease.

Read Real Time Spying on the Symphony of Cellular Signals That Drive Biology for more on this research.

Reference: Spatial multiplexing of fluorescent reporters for dynamic imaging of signal transduction networks by Changyang Linghu, Shannon L. Johnson, Pablo A. Valdes, Or A. Shemesh, Won Min Park, Demian Park, Kiryl D. Piatkevich, Asmamaw T. Wassie, Yixi Liu, Bobae An, Stephanie A. Barnes, Orhan T. Celiker, Chun-Chen Yao, Chih-Chieh (Jay) Yu, Ru Wang, Katarzyna P. Adamala, Mark F. Bear, Amy E. Keating and Edward S. Boyden, 23 November 2020, Cell.DOI:: 10.1016/j.cell.2020.10.035

The research was funded by the Friends of the McGovern Institute Fellowship; the J. Douglas Tan Fellowship; Lisa Yang; the Yang-Tan Center for Molecular Therapeutics; John Doerr; the Open Philanthropy Project; the HHMI-Simons Faculty Scholars Program; the Human Frontier Science Program; the U.S. Army Research Laboratory; the MIT Media Lab; the Picower Institute Innovation Fund; the National Institutes of Health, including an NIH Directors Pioneer Award; and the National Science Foundation.

Read this article:
Symphony of Cellular Activities Revealed by Fluorescent Imaging Technique - SciTechDaily

Next four years with Biden will be truthful, transparent and predictable – Montgomery Advertiser

Jim Vickrey, Special to the Advertiser Published 12:56 a.m. CT Nov. 25, 2020

Jim Vickrey writes from his native Montgomery, where he resides after a nearly fifty year-long career as a college professor, lawyer, and university president. He is Professor Emeritus at Troy University.(Photo: Mickey Welsh / Advertiser)

Did you hear it? I did.

As President-elect Joe Biden announced the latest round of new leaders in his administration, I heard a collective sigh of relief in our house and in houses around the country at the very least in the homes of more than 80,000,000 Americans who voted for just this kind of change.

But, I suspect, many millions of other Americans are also welcoming the low-key sort of focused and experienced leadership we are being introduced to. And did you notice? The announcements were not about the soon-to-be-president; they were about the qualifications of the individuals and of their desire to "serve others" in our land and to make America a lamp of positive world leadership ... again. That is how we keep America great.

For at least the next four years, beginning January 20, 2021, we won't have to wonder what the next outrageous tweet from the WH will say ... what American laws and traditions are being violated ... what norms of decent human behavior might be trashed before nightfall ... what long-standing U.S. policies (e.g., environmental regs) are being ignored and/or wiped off the books.No, we are now seeing a return to rational, fact-based decision-making of the sort we deserve, of the sort George H.W. Bush and Barack Obama personified (I didn't like some of their decisions but I admired the way they made all of them).

Having met Joe Biden years ago in Birmingham and having observed him closely as vice president, I have every confidence that he will make the perfect president to follow in the wake of the disruptions of the past 1,400 days, which he will not add to.I also know that he will be as transparent, truthful and predictableas possible. Hewill not try to break the record of the current president, whose total of documented falsehoods and lies now exceeds 27,000 and counting.

God bless America, indeed, as John Kerry made me say today as I listened to him and the other highly qualified appointees/nominees speak of their honor and humility in the face of the announcements of their new leadership challenges.

Rationality, factuality, patriotism with an emphasis on the country rather than on personal aggrandizement, values we were taught on our mothers' knees, true religion that honors God and people and actually believes in operationalizing Jesus' Great Commandment (which is actually the Great Jewish Commandment) these are going to be evident again in the People's House, which has been soiled by unlawful political use of it in campaign events, especially during the past six months. Sigh.

And did you notice: The stock market did not "crash" during the last 16 days indeed, it just set a new record (it crossed the 30,000 mark; the media did not stop talking about "COVID ... COVID ... COVID on November 4 (how could they in the wake of the tidal wave of infections the current team in D.C. is leaving the new team with?); and the predictions of massive voter fraud from mail-in balloting turned out to be frauds themselves? None of the "hoaxes" turned out to be so.

I am so glad to have lived long enough to treasure this moment in our country's history. As Carlyle said, "Change ... is painful, yet ever needful."

Jim Vickrey writes from his native Montgomery, where he resides after a nearly fifty year-long career as a college professor, lawyer, and university president. He is Professor Emeritus at Troy University.

Read or Share this story: https://www.montgomeryadvertiser.com/story/opinion/2020/11/25/next-four-years-biden-truthful-transparent-and-predictable/6418813002/

Read more:
Next four years with Biden will be truthful, transparent and predictable - Montgomery Advertiser

Caveats in Genetic Testing: Reporting in the Media – The Great Courses Daily News

By Roy Benaroch, M.D., Emory UniversityPersonal genetic testing is now quite common, but consumers should know about the drawbacks. (Image: Dusan Petkovic/Shutterstock)Are the Example Cases Relevant?

In the October 2017, The New York Times, published an article headlined Personal Genetic Testing is Here. Do We Need It? The tone of the article was set by the subheading: Jody Christ, in her home in Elysberg, PA, says genetic testing saved her life, though experts warn such tests require caution.

This article begins with a personal story, in this case, of a 62-year-old Jody Christ who struggled unsuccessfully for years to control her high cholesterol.

A genetic test revealed she had familial hypercholesterolemia, which put her at high risk for atherosclerotic heart disease, and she underwent a triple-bypass heart surgery. The article quotes Ms. Christ, If I had not taken that test I might be dead by now. Thats a dramatic and unequivocal endorsement of this kind of genetic test.

But this startling example isnt a realistic example of the kind of genetic testing that the rest of this article talks about. Ms. Christ had intractably high cholesterol and testing revealed a definite, causal diagnosis. She needed to have been tested for arterial blockages anyway, even without the genetic test.

This is a transcript from the video series The Skeptics Guide to Health, Medicine, and the Media. Watch it now, on The Great Courses Plus.

The remainder of the article discusses testing on asymptomatic people, or people who dont experience any health problems. And that kind of testing is very different.

Continuing from theTimesarticle:

Experts [] also warn that some consumers may be led astray by genetic findings that are overblown or irrelevant. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, for example, takes a cautious approach to personal genomics tests, telling consumers on its website to think before they spit and that evidence on the ability of genetic information to change health behavior has been lacking.

But that cautious sentiment is followed by a paragraph about a company offering testing for genetic variants linked to several kinds of cancer, or another test for heart problems. A medical officer at one of these companies says: This is really for people who dont have any reason to think that theyre at particular riskbut the problem is you really dont know unless you do the genetic test.

Some services, according to the article, claim to predict how well youll respond to different medications or even to different kinds of exercises, or which foods you should eat, or even which types of wine you might prefer.

So, the tests range from things that have at least some scientific support to claims that are just silly. Quoting a professor of genetics, the article says, Theres this mixture of some that have real solid footing and then some that have zero footing.

TheTimesarticle, though beginning with a personal endorsement, did at least superficially present a caveat, by covering the shortcomings inherent in the interpretation of these tests.

Learn more abouthow to better understand and evaluatemedical data.

A 2017Huffington Postarticle focused on a different caveat that ought to be considered before testing. Titled What to Consider Before Taking a 23andMe Test, the thesis was revealed in the subhead, You might not want to know all of your health results. The title refers to testing by a specific company, 23andMe, which is one of the largest direct-to-consumer genetic testing companies.

The article begins in the first person, which is ordinarily taboo in traditional journalism, but gives the article a more personal touch.

I stared at the email announcing Your 23andMe results are ready for several minutes before I had the courage to uncover my genetic health and ancestry secrets.

The article continues, talking about how more and more of these consumer genetic tests are likely to become available. The FDA has announced theyve streamlined approval, and there are several new start-ups that are ready to offer testing for your risk of cancer, genetic diseases, and, quote, an untold number of insights.

A handful of labs are working on offering a very low-cost way to sequence your entire genome, perhaps for as little as $100, in the next few years. Yet experts worry, to quote the article directly again, that consumers might be psychologically unprepared to handle frightening health information.

This is especially true about tests for diseases that currently have no cure, like Alzheimers or Parkinsons disease. In fact, the FDA approval of 23andMes health tests explicitly requires consumers to opt in to testing for these kinds of conditions.

Learn more abouthealth, medicine, and the media.

And, again, theres the crucial importance of understanding that these tests do not make a diagnosis. They can only predict a risk level. The Huffington Post article did say that toward the end, but what it didnt say is that we cannot be sure of the accuracy of these risk estimates.

So what did the authors testing show? The 23andMe material said shed have a 5%-7% chance of having Alzheimers by age 75. But we should take a look at the context the article didnt provide. According to the Alzheimers Association, the risk of having Alzheimers in the 65-74 year age range is between 3% and 9%. The evaluated risk is not much more accurate than the general estimate.

So, the media will often tell you the result of tests but not the complete context. The consumer and the reader should always know the caveats and the pitfalls.

The Centers for Disease Control is cautious about genetic testing because there is generally very little evidence about the ability of genetic information to change health behavior.

Some genetic testing services claim that their tests can predict how well an individual will respond to different medications or even to different kinds of exercise, or which foods you should eat, or even which types of wine you might prefer.

The FDA wants customers to opt in for genetic tests for diseases which have no cure or prevention, such as Alzheimers or Parkinsons disease. This is because consumers might be psychologically unprepared to handle frightening health information.

Go here to see the original:
Caveats in Genetic Testing: Reporting in the Media - The Great Courses Daily News

What The University Of Illinois Learned From Reopening Amid The Pandemic – – Illinois Newsroom

URBANA When University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign officials decided to reopen in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, they launched an ambitious plan to keep the virus at bay. The approach included mandatory twice-a-week testing, using a saliva-based test developed by its own researchers.

The campus own modelers predicted early on that, with the testing program and other restrictions in place, there would be no more than 500 cases by Thanksgiving break, when classes shift to entirely virtual and most students leave campus.

But the true number of coronavirus cases at the University of Illinois turned out to be much higher: more than 3,800 among all students and employees. Campus officials say at least 3,091 cases have occurred among the estimated 35,000 to 38,000 students living on or near campus, roughly 8% of the student body.

Now, those higher-than-expected case numbers are leading the university to change its approach to combating the virus. Those helping develop campus reopening plans like university epidemiologist Rebecca Smith are looking more closely at ways to modify student behavior.

What went wrong

Smith says the campus initial approach while informed by research that shows frequent mass testing is a critical component to safely reopening college campuses relied too heavily on technology. It did not take into consideration certain aspects of human behavior that could thwart reopening plans.

The biggest lesson is that technology cannot save us from a pandemic, she says.

The majority of students, faculty and staff did an amazing job at adhering to campus requirements, Smith says. But a minority of students and employees made decisions that suggest they dont believe the virus is a risk to them and are not concerned about protecting the broader community.

The models the campus relied on assumed that people would not defy public health orders and do things like host or attend parties while knowingly infected with the virus.

There was just the assumption that telling somebody that they were infected meant that they were to isolate, Smith says. We didnt think that people would choose to ignore isolation orders.

Modelers also did not expect that students would ignore contact tracers calls and voicemails. And they assumed the contact tracing process carried out by the local health department would occur more quickly than it did.

With the nature of this virus, even a small number of people flouting the rules can cause major outbreaks and thats what played out at the University of Illinois.

The campus saw a spike in coronavirus cases early on in the semester, prompting campus officials to add new restrictions and warn of the potential for shutting the campus back down.

The effort to clamp down on spread worked, Smith says, and new daily cases even dipped into the single digits for a time.

But as the virus prevalence in the community ticked up, even small gatherings like football watch parties, Halloween get-togethers of 10 people or less led to spread. Smith says students also traveled off campus more frequently than they expected, likely bringing the virus back with them.

Both the campus and the state are suffering from the fact that borders dont mean anything to a virus, she says. So right now, what were seeing on campus a lot is just the statewide spread of the virus coming onto our campus.

What went well

While there was a lot of concern early on that bringing students back would spread the virus into the community, Smith says testing and contact tracing data show no indication that that happened.

Champaign-Urbana Public Health Administrator Julie Pryde confirmed that student cases appeared to remain on campus.

There are also no signs of virus spread linked to in-person classroom settings. Rather, clusters among students tend to be either their social networks or their residences. And those two overlap, so its hard to tease them apart, Smith says.

Smith also notes that the purpose of modeling was never to make a firm prediction on how many cases would occur by the end of the semester. Rather, epidemiological modeling helps researchers compare different scenarios and make decisions about what efforts are likely to lead to the best outcomes.

She adds, People took that number [of 500 cases] and said: This is whats going to happen. Modelers will never say that. So, yes, the prediction was not correct compared to the reality, but I would not have expected it to be because there was so much we didnt know at that time.

Most other campuses that reopened only tested people with symptoms of known exposure, Smith says.

But the University of Illinois attempted whats known as a whole population surveillance program, [which] is understood by infectious disease epidemiologists as the best way to find and control a disease that spreads through asymptomatic infection, Smith says.

This is particularly important on college campuses, since college-age students who contract the virus are most likely to show few or no symptoms.

So we know that with the majority of our cases, if we had only tested [people with symptoms], we would not have found them, she says.

Pryde notes that Champaign County, which includes the university, has completed more than 1 million tests about 12% of all testing done in the entire state of Illinois.

Rapid, frequent testing is crucial, Pryde says. And [the University of Illinois] figured out a way to do that. That, coupled with the mitigation efforts, are really a model for the country.

Looking ahead

Despite these efforts, more people contracted the virus than university officials had hoped.

So going forward, Smith says the university is taking a new approach.Hard scientists, like herself, who have been mostly focused on the technological aspects of reopening, are now working closely with University of Illinois social scientists and communications experts to develop a strategy that better accounts for human behavior.

Countries that have done well at controlling the spread of the virus have a culture with a less individualistic mindset and more emphasis on care of the entire community, Smith says.

This is something that everybody at all levels of pandemic control knows: In order to control the pandemic, we have to care for other people and we have to make those choices, Smith says.

The big question is: How do you shift the culture of a college campus?

The University of Illinois is now conducting surveys and focus groups with students to learn what strategies may be more successful at motivating them to make choices that protect the health of the entire community. Smith says these efforts are ongoing.

Before we can actually change peoples minds and attitudes about how to keep everybody safe, we have to understand why theyre making the choices that they are, she says.

These strategies will be important both for the success of the spring semester and down the road when students will be asked to be immunized once a vaccine becomes available.

Meanwhile, campus officials want students who are staying in the Champaign-Urbana area between now and January to be tested at a campus testing site every other day especially if they travel away from the area and return.

The biggest change for the spring semester involves starting a week later than usual on Jan. 25 and having students return a week before classes start to quarantine until they receive two negative coronavirus test results.

Smith expects another bump in COVID-19 cases in January, as students return to campus during a time when theres likely to be even more widespread community transmission.

But shes hopeful the immediate test-and-quarantine approach, along with strategies developed in tandem with campus social scientists, will help control the spread of the virus.

This story was produced by Side Effects Public Media, a news collaborative covering public health.

Christine Herman is a reporter atIllinois Public Media. Follow her on Twitter: @CTHerman

See original here:
What The University Of Illinois Learned From Reopening Amid The Pandemic - - Illinois Newsroom