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raghul33

Next Generation Antibody Therapeutics Market Share | Size | Forecast - 0 views

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    Market Overview: Next-generation antibody therapeutics includes the use of new improvised therapeutic antibody to form innovative medicines for treating various diseases. Next-generation antibody therapeutics is developed clinically by pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies for several diseases. The Next Generation Antibody Therapeutics Market size was worth $ XX million in 2018 and is forecasted to reach $ XX million by 2026, expected to grow at a high CAGR during the forecast period 2019-2026. Market Dynamics: The Next Generation Antibody Therapeutics Market is growing due to several factors such as rising incidence of chronic diseases, increasing emergence of antibody technology, new drug discovery, large number of government initiatives, and growing research and development activities for new therapies. Rising prevalence of chronic disease such as cancer, asthma, diabetes and COPD are boosting the growth of the next generation antibody therapeutics market. For instance, according to National Cancer Institute in 2018, in United States, an estimated 1,735,350 new cases of cancer will be diagnosed and 609,640 people will die from the disease. The development of next-generation monoclonal antibodies has expanded beyond oncology into all therapeutic areas. For instance, ADCs were initially focused primarily on cancer, but Genentech has applied to infectious diseases, leading to the discovery and development of THIOMAB antibiotic conjugates (TACs) for the treatment of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). The technological advancements in antibody therapeutics have led to the development of more efficient antibody therapeutics, hence, driving the growth in the next-generation antibody therapeutics market. However, stringent government regulation, high cost and time required for research and development activities are some of the factors hindering the growth for global next-generation antibody therapeutics market. Market Segmentation: Based o
Dr Neelesh Bhandari

Advisory Board Members- Global council on Integration of health care - 0 views

  • Neelesh Bhandari MD MBBS, PGP Dr. Neelesh is the founding member and chief mentor of the Registered Society for Knowledge and Health Activitites (RAKSHA) in India, and a business Consultant with EDdRC Educational Technologies, in Hyderabad, India.  Educated in Dubai, and Poona, he is a graduate of the Armed Forces Medical College in Poona and completed a post-graduate program in Human Rights from the Indian Institute of Human Rights, in New Delhi, India. As the Medical Officer in Rajasthan Publis Service commision, his responsibilities included implementation of all National Health Programmes and collection of Health Statistics, provision of medical care and managing health requirements of a population of approximately 28,000 lives.  While at that post, he organized many medical and drug distribution camps for indigent patients.  His medical sepcialisations includes: diagnostic pathology, immunohematology, laboratory medicine and transfusiton medicine.  He has published several papers and posters and presented many case studies at national and state medical conferences in India
  • Neelesh Bhandari MD MBBS, PGP Dr. Neelesh is the founding member and chief mentor of the Registered Society for Knowledge and Health Activitites (RAKSHA) in India, and a business Consultant with EDdRC Educational Technologies, in Hyderabad, India.  Educated in Dubai, and Poona, he is a graduate of the Armed Forces Medical College in Poona and completed a post-graduate program in Human Rights from the Indian Institute of Human Rights, in New Delhi, India. As the Medical Officer in Rajasthan Publis Service commision, his responsibilities included implementation of all National Health Programmes and collection of Health Statistics, provision of medical care and managing health requirements of a population of approximately 28,000 lives.  While at that post, he organized many medical and drug distribution camps for indigent patients.  His medical sepcialisations includes: diagnostic pathology, immunohematology, laboratory medicine and transfusiton medicine.  He has published several papers and posters and presented many case studies at national and state medical conferences in India.
  • Dr. Neelesh is the founding member and chief mentor of the Registered Society for Knowledge and Health Activitites (RAKSHA) in India, and a business Consultant with EDdRC Educational Technologies, in Hyderabad, India.  Educated in Dubai, and Poona, he is a graduate of the Armed Forces Medical College in Poona and completed a post-graduate program in Human Rights from the Indian Institute of Human Rights, in New Delhi, India. As the Medical Officer in Rajasthan Publis Service commision, his responsibilities included implementation of all National Health Programmes and collection of Health Statistics, provision of medical care and managing health requirements of a population of approximately 28,000 lives.  While at that post, he organized many medical and drug distribution camps for indigent patients.  His medical sepcialisations includes: diagnostic pathology, immunohematology, laboratory medicine and transfusiton medicine.  He has published several papers and posters and presented many case studies at national and state medical conferences in India.  Dr. Neelesh is fluent in English and Hindi a
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  • Neelesh Bhandari MD MBBS, PGP Dr. Neelesh is the founding member and chief mentor of the Registered Society for Knowledge and Health Activitites (RAKSHA) in India, and a business Consultant with EDdRC Educational Technologies, in Hyderabad, India.  Educated in Dubai, and Poona, he is a graduate of the Armed Forces Medical College in Poona and completed a post-graduate program in Human Rights from the Indian Institute of Human Rights, in New Delhi, India. As the Medical Officer in Rajasthan Publis Service commision, his responsibilities included implementation of all National Health Programmes and collection of Health Statistics, provision of medical care and managing health requirements of a population of approximately 28,000 lives.  While at that post, he organized many medical and drug distribution camps for indigent patients.  His medical sepcialisations includes: diagnostic pathology, immunohematology, laboratory medicine and transfusiton medicine.  He has published several papers and posters and presented many case studies at national and state medical conferences in India. 
  • Dr. Neelesh is the founding member and chief mentor of the Registered Society for Knowledge and Health Activitites (RAKSHA) in India, and a business Consultant with EDdRC Educational Technologies, in Hyderabad, India.  Educated in Dubai, and Poona, he is a graduate of the Armed Forces Medical College in Poona and completed a post-graduate program in Human Rights from the Indian Institute of Human Rights, in New Delhi, India. As the Medical Officer in Rajasthan Publis Service commision, his responsibilities included implementation of all National Health Programmes and collection of Health Statistics, provision of medical care and managing health requirements of a population of approximately 28,000 lives.  While at that post, he organized many medical and drug distribution camps for indigent patients.  His medical sepcialisations includes: diagnostic pathology, immunohematology, laboratory medicine and transfusiton medicine.  He has published several papers and posters and presented many case studies at national and state medical conferences in India
  • Neelesh Bhandari MD MBBS, PGP Dr. Neelesh is the founding member and chief mentor of the Registered Society for Knowledge and Health Activitites (RAKSHA) in India, and a business Consultant with EDdRC Educational Technologies, in Hyderabad, India.  Educated in Dubai, and Poona, he is a graduate of the Armed Forces Medical College in Poona and completed a post-graduate program in Human Rights from the Indian Institute of Human Rights, in New Delhi, India. As the Medical Officer in Rajasthan Publis Service commision, his responsibilities included implementation of all National Health Programmes and collection of Health Statistics, provision of medical care and managing health requirements of a population of approximately 28,000 lives.  While at that post, he organized many medical and drug distribution camps for indigent patients.  His medical sepcialisations includes: diagnostic pathology, immunohematology, laboratory medicine and transfusiton medicine.  He has published several papers and posters and presented many case studies at national and state medical conferences in India. 
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    Neelesh Bhandari MD MBBS, PGP\nDr. Neelesh is the founding member and chief mentor of the Registered Society for Knowledge and Health Activitites (RAKSHA) in India, and a business Consultant with EDdRC Educational Technologies, in Hyderabad, India. Educated in Dubai, and Poona, he is a graduate of the Armed Forces Medical College in Poona and completed a post-graduate program in Human Rights from the Indi....immunohematology, laboratory medicine and transfusiton medicine. He has published several papers and posters and presented many case studies at national and state medical conferences in India
anonymous

Sept 17 - Health Study Weekly is out | Healthcare Professionals | Scoop.it - 0 views

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    An online newspaper that collects together the week's news relating to health education. Read and subscribe free at: http://paper.li/f-1327779598
anonymous

Oct 8 - Health Study Weekly is out | Healthcare Professionals | Scoop.it - 0 views

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    An online newspaper that collects together the week's news relating to health education. Read and subscribe free at: http://paper.li/f-1327779598
anonymous

Sept 24 - Health Study Weekly is out | Healthcare Professionals | Scoop.it - 0 views

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    An online newspaper that collects together the week's news relating to health education. Read and subscribe free at: http://paper.li/f-1327779598
anonymous

Sept 3 - Health Study Weekly is out | Healthcare Professionals | Scoop.it - 0 views

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    An online newspaper that collects together the week's news relating to health education. Read and subscribe free at:  http://paper.li/f-1327779598
leoreeves

Health and wellness: Smoking reduces the ability to taste sweets in women - 0 views

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    A new analysis says that fat ladies who smoke cigarettes might not have the interest towards sweets.
ecoecos

Dieta ricca di fibre riduce il rischio di tumore al colon - 0 views

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    diigo.ecoecos.deb69 @ post.diigo.com
Ciara Usher

Quality Bed that Contributes to Healthy Living - 1 views

I like my new Craftmatic bed! I am having a quality sleep every night because I am sleeping on my new Craftmatic bed. It really helps me every time my back sores. Its amazing adjustability allows m...

Craftmatic adjustable beds

started by Ciara Usher on 25 May 11 no follow-up yet
Dr Neelesh Bhandari

NEJM -- A Strategy for Health Care Reform -- Toward a Value-Based System - 0 views

  • A Strategy for Health Care Reform — Toward a Value-Based System Michael E. Porter, Ph.D.   PDF PDA Full Text Add to Personal Archive Add to Citation Manager Notify a Friend E-mail When Cited E-mail When Letters Appear PubMed Citation Despite many waves of debate and piecemeal reforms, the U.S. health care system remains largely the same as it was decades ago. We have seen no convincing approach to changing the unsustainable trajectory of the system, much less to offsetting the rising costs of an aging population and new medical advances. Today there is a new openness to changing a system that all agree is broken. What we need now is a clear national strategy that sets forth a comprehensive vision for the kind of health care system we want to achieve and a path for getting there. The central focus must be on increasing value for patients — the health outcomes achieved per dollar spent.1 Good outcomes that are achieved efficien
ashley kate

Understanding Surrogate Pregnancy | Surrogate Motherhood - 0 views

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    Surrogate pregnancy is a process in which another woman will carry a baby for nine months and then will relinquish the baby to the couple. This is meant for women or couples that are unable to have children for whatever reason, be it infertility, age, or medical problems. Another option is adoption, which is a legal process to create a new, permanent relationship between a child and an adult. A woman that decides to be a surrogate may be family, friends, or may be a complete stranger. Surrogate pregnancy can be arranged through agencies that help find the couple a woman who will be their surrogate mother for a fee. If the agency arranges for surrogacy, careful inspection is done to make sure the health of the surrogate is guaranteed to avoid possible pregnancy risks. Surrogacy may also be set up without the help of an agency. Surrogate pregnancy can be done in one of two ways. The first way is by artificial insemination, in which a sperm is injected into the surrogate mother's body. The surrogate is the baby's biological mother, but after the birth of the child, he/she is given to be raised by the biological father and his partner or spouse. This is known as traditional surrogacy. The second way is to have a woman's eggs (usually about five eggs) and a man's sperm injected into the surrogate mother. In this case, the surrogate is not the biological mother. This is known as gestational surrogacy. The fees paid for a surrogate pregnancy will be anywhere from ten-thousand to sixty-thousand dollars. The average price for a surrogate mother is anywhere from ten-thousand to thirty-thousand dollars, but other fees such as medical fees, egg donors (if one is used), lawyer fees, or fertility clinics can, of course, up the price. Gestational surrogacy tends to cost more than traditional surrogacy because more medical complications arise in pregnancy. Surrogate mothers that carry babies for members of their family may do it for expenses only, or may get no rewards
david derouen

Ultimate Civics » Blog Archive » Corporations Are Not Persons - 0 views

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    By Ralph Nader & Carl J. Mayer New York Times, April 9, 1988 Our constitutional rights were intended for real persons, not artificial creations. The Framers knew about corporations but chose not to mention these contrived entities in the Constitution. For them, the document shielded living beings from arbitrary government and endowed them with the right to speak, assemble, and petition. Today, however, corporations enjoy virtually the same umbrella of constitutional protections as individuals do. They have become in effect artificial persons with infinitely greater power than humans. This constitutional equivalence must end. Consider a few noxious developments during the last 10 years. A group of large Boston companies invoked the First Amendment in order to spend lavishly and thus successfully defeat a referendum that would have permitted the legislature to enact a progressive income tax that had no direct effect on the property and business of these companies. An Idaho electrical and plumbing corporation cited the Fourth Amendment and deterred a health and safety investigation. A textile supply company used Fifth Amendment protections and barred retrial in a criminal anti-trust case in Texas. The idea that the Constitution should apply to corporations as it applies to humans had its dubious origins in 1886. The Supreme Court said it did "not wish to hear argument" on whether corporations were "persons" protected by the 14th Amendment, a civil rights amendment designed to safeguard newly emancipated blacks from unfair government treatment. It simply decreed that corporations were persons. Now that is judicial activism. A string of later dissents, by Justices Hugo Black and William O. Douglas, demonstrated that neither the history nor the language of the 14th Amendment was meant to protect corporations. But it was too late. The genie was out of the bottle and the corporate evolution into personhood was under way. It was not until the 1970's that corporations
raghul33

Skin Substitutes Market Size, Share and Trends | Industry Report, 2019-2026 - 0 views

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    Market Overview: Skin substitutes are natural, synthetic or biosynthetic materials, used to cover large wounds to restore at least some of the functions of the skin. Skin substitutes provides temporary or permanent wound closure and protect the wound from infection, further damage and water loss, and reduce pain. They also facilitate the growth of the normal skin over the wound. Skin substitutes provide a permanent solution and are used in the treatment of conditions like burns, trauma wounds, diabetes or venous ulcers, where skin grafts may not be possible. Market Dynamics: Rising chronic skin diseases is expected to drive the skin substitutes market. For instance, according to the global burden of disease study 2013, Skin conditions contributed around 1.79% to the global disease burden. According to the World Health Organization, about 132,000 melanoma skin cancers occur each year worldwide. Thus, the rising chronic diseases is increasing the demand for skin substitutes in the forecast period. Rising prevalence of diabetes is expected to boost the market. This is owing to the risk of developing a diabetic foot ulcer over the period of time in diabetic patients. For instance, WHO has reported that the incidence of diabetes for all age-groups worldwide was estimated to be 2.8% in 2000 and 4.4% in 2030. The total number of people with diabetes is anticipated to rise from 171 million in 2000 to 366 million in 2030. Thus, as a consequence, the prevalence of diabetes related complications are expected to increase over the forecast period. There are several limitations to the commercially available skin substitutes, like reduced vascularization, poor mechanical integrity, failure to integrate, scarring, and immune rejection. Market Segmentation: Rise in preference for acellular skin substitutes to implant-based skin surgery is expected to drive the growth of the skin substitutes market. For instance, the American Society of Plastic Surgeons in 2012, reported that
leoreeves

Health and wellness: protein helps your hair grow and lose weight - 0 views

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    protein helps your hair grow and lose weight -Researchers have showed how hair growth activated fat tissue growth within the skin below the follicle may lead to the development of a cream to dissolve fat. particularly, the protein that activated follicle growth was shown to conjointly inhibit fat production
Mike Chelen

Statement of Support for AIDS Doctors Detained by Iranian Authorities - January 15, 200... - 0 views

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    Boston, MA -- Julio Frenk, Dean of the Harvard School of Public Health, today expressed "the continuing concern and distress of the public health community regarding the detention by Iranian authorities of Dr. Kamiar Alaei, a 2007 Masters of Science graduate of our School, and of his brother, Dr. Arash Alaei. The brothers are Iranian physicians working on the prevention and treatment of HIV/AIDS and who, in the course of their studies and work, have interacted with the international public health community."
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