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Dennis OConnor

Norman Doidge: The Brain That Changes Itself - Full documentary - YouTube - 0 views

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    "The Brain That Changes Itself - Full documentary" Norman Doidge, FRCPC, is a psychiatrist, psychoanalyst, and author of The Brain that Changes Itself and The Brain's Way of Healing.
Dennis OConnor

Empowered Patient Podcast: Overcoming Fear of Aging with Heidi Rataj Documentary Produc... - 1 views

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    "Heidi Rataj is an award-winning documentary producer and director and a caregiver for her mom.  Heidi talks about her own fear of aging and the search for a new narrative for seniors as they age.  While we need to be respectful of all journeys, activating seniors to allow them to accomplish goals is key to a healthier individual and society.  She also points out how digital technology plays a role in coordinating care and enabling people to age in place. @UCSDHealthyAging"
Dennis OConnor

Milasen: The drug that went from idea to injection in 10 months - 0 views

  • itting in freezer at Boston Children’s Hospital is a drug you won’t find anywhere else. It’s called milasen, and the 18 g that the hospital custom-ordered nearly 2 years ago should last for decades. That’s because milasen was designed to treat a single patient—a now 8-year-old girl named Mila Makovec. Milasen was built on decades of work on a class of drugs called antisense oligonucleotides. But after Boston Children’s Hospital scientist Timothy Yu diagnosed Mila with a never-before-seen genetic mutation, he took only 10 months to go from idea to injection. It’s a record-shattering sprint in the typical drug-development marathon, and an unprecedented degree of personalization for a chemical drug.
  • While the story of milasen could be seen as a template for other highly personalized drugs—what the field has come to call n-of-1 therapies—it also raises questions: Who should get these treatments? How will they be funded? And how will the US Food and Drug Administration regulate these projects?
  • Mila’s mom, Julia Vitarello, had started a group called Mila’s Miracle Foundation to raise money to develop a gene therapy for her daughter.
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  • Yu was intrigued. He reached out and offered to do whole-genome sequencing on Mila, her parents, and her younger brother.
  • Julia Vitarello, Mila's mother In March, Yu’s team found that a piece of DNA called a retrotransposon—the genetic remnants of viruses scattered throughout all of our genomes—had spontaneously inserted itself in the middle of a noncoding region of Mila’s CLN7 gene.
  • Black told Yu to renegotiate with the FDA. The 3-month safety study in rats, followed by another couple months to report the data, would take too long. After a letter from Vitarello outlining Mila’s decline, the FDA made a concession: Mila could get the drug after just 1 month of testing, so long as the rat studies continued to 3 months to understand any long-term toxicity.
  • Today, Mila continues to get injections of her drug approximately every 2 months. She used to have up to 30 seizures a day, each lasting more than a minute. Now, she only has a few a day, and they don’t last long,
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    "Sitting in freezer at Boston Children's Hospital is a drug you won't find anywhere else. It's called milasen, and the 18 g that the hospital custom-ordered nearly 2 years ago should last for decades. That's because milasen was designed to treat a single patient-a now 8-year-old girl named Mila Makovec. Milasen was built on decades of work on a class of drugs called antisense oligonucleotides. But after Boston Children's Hospital scientist Timothy Yu diagnosed Mila with a never-before-seen genetic mutation, he took only 10 months to go from idea to injection. It's a record-shattering sprint in the typical drug-development marathon, and an unprecedented degree of personalization for a chemical drug."
Dennis OConnor

Aging Successfully | Conversation | re'flect - 0 views

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    "Gray Matters, the new podcast series, will continue our mission to discuss how we can all age successfully.   re'flect, the documentary series has aired nationally on over 50 PBS stations in over 40 cities and is spreading the positive aging conversation around the US. "
Dennis OConnor

Team | reflect-copy - 1 views

  • HEIDI RATAJ
  • THERESA HOILES
  • PRODUCER, DIRECTOR & SPEAKE
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  • PRODUCER & WRITER
  • What’s more important, quality of life or quantity?”
  • Theresa learned early that age is not an excuse to slow down.
  • Through storytelling, she wants to break the stereotypes associated with aging.
  • This series convinced Heidi that life should be measured in quality not quantity
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    "Gray Matters, the new podcast series, will continue our mission to discuss how we can all age successfully. Heidi Rataj, MA Producer, Gerontologist & Entrepreneur re'flect, the documentary series has aired nationally on over 50 PBS stations in over 40 cities and is spreading the positive aging conversation around the US. "
Dennis OConnor

Vicky Newman - a Registered Dietitian Nutritionist (RDN | Mindful Nutrition Solutions - 1 views

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    "I am a Registered Dietitian Nutritionist (RDN) specializing in an integrated and personalized approach to nutrition, health, and healing. I believe that food not only nourishes the body, but also nurtures the spirit, and is essential for optimal functioning - to be able to live life with exuberance no matter what our age."
Dennis OConnor

Social, Behavioral, and Environmental Enablers for Healthy Longevity - 1 views

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    A Workshop for the Global Roadmap for Healthy Longevity Initiative Nov. 6 (1 PM ET) - Nov. 8 (12:30 PM ET) Live Webcast Join us via live webcast for a 2-day public workshop that will examine the social, behavioral, and environmental enablers for healthy longevity. Workshop participants will discuss the challenges and opportunities, as well as potential solutions and disruptive approaches to enhance social structures that would enable healthier and socially fulfilled lives and ultimately create thriving societies around the world. Sir Michael Marmot, Director of the Institute of Health Equity at University College London, will deliver the keynote address. 
Dennis OConnor

Upload Raw DNA Data & Your Health Info to Advance Medicine | LunaDNA - 1 views

  • LunaDNA is the first health and DNA discovery platform owned by its community of data contributors.
  • you remain in complete control of your data.
  • people are the most important players in research and deserve to be honored as partners in the process.
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    "The Future of Health Depends on Your Data The first people-powered platform where you share health data, advance science and take part in the value created."
Dennis OConnor

Just Putting Patients At The Center Of Health Care Is Not Enough To Improve Care | Heal... - 1 views

  • Just Putting Patients At The Center Of Health Care Is Not Enough To Improve Care
  • Yet, despite the tremendous work of the past 20 years, we have not achieved a health care system that is truly patient centered and equitable.
  • With the RWJF’s support, we managed a portfolio of research projects that examined what health care consumers value when they are buying and using health insurance, shopping for health care, and seeking care in a variety of new and traditional settings
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  • Why aren’t we there yet?
  • Barrier 1: Missing Information and How to Collect It
  • Barrier 2: Inadequate Trust and Respect
  • Barrier 3: Culture of Medicine
  • Barrier 4: Alignment of Incentives
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    "Just Putting Patients At The Center Of Health Care Is Not Enough To Improve Care"
Dennis OConnor

Juhi Ash Center - 0 views

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    FOUNDER & CHIEF PRACTITIONER Juhi Singh, MA, LAc is a Thought Leader in Integrative Medicine and one of the top Acupuncturists in New York City. Mike: speaking of integrative med… I had happy hour with friend Juhi Singh MA LAc who is launching a new multi-specialty integrative med Center. Juhi Ash Center. She is very data-driven in the integrative world.
Dennis OConnor

Mt. Sinai Merger Shuts New York's Integrative Medicine "Crown Jewel" - 0 views

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    Kligler and I spoke at length about the turns of events leading to the decision. At the core of our exchange was the vulnerability of these stand-alone clinics amidst leadership changes and system mergers. I shared that I had recently interviewed his frequent colleague, University of Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine's executive director Victoria Maizes, MD about the shutdown of ACIM's Phoenix-based integrative health clinic. Maizes had referenced what she viewed as a parallel with the Continuum story. In both cases, the clinics seemed to be collateral damage to a larger merger with a dominant player who didn't have much interest in the field.
Dennis OConnor

The Coming Influenza Pandemic: Lessons From the Past for the Future | The Journal of th... - 0 views

  • in the case of a true pandemic, hospital capacity may well be overwhelmed, and healthcare workers may themselves become ill. 
  • However, the lessons learned within the osteopathic medical profession as a result of the 1917-1918 pandemic could prove useful once again if (or when) a new influenza pandemic occurs.
  • Time to roll up sleeves, vaccinate patients, and hone osteopathic manipulative skills
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  • Obviously, the data collected shortly after the 1917-1918 pandemic must be treated cautiously.
  • In 1918, C.P. McConnell, DO,11 reported that the most effective treatment during the influenza pandemic was begun early in the onset of symptoms (within the first 24 hours) and consisted of carefully applied muscular relaxation and, most importantly, relaxation of the deep and extensive contractions of the deep spinal musculature and mobilization of the spine. These treatments would be repeated two or three times early in the course of the infection, along with traditional supportive measures such as hydration. During later influenza epidemics, such as the 1928-1929 and the 1936-1937 outbreaks, various lymphatic pump treatments and more attention to the cervical and upper thoracic regions were added to this recommended treatment protocol.12 These treatments, individualized to each patient's needs, were apparently the most commonly applied osteopathic medical procedures during the epidemics. 
  • action of these treatments were to diminish somatic inputs from contracted muscles
  • that had further stimulated the already overactive sympathetic system
  • hyperreactivity exacerbated the counterproductive and deadly immune respons
  • OMT) likely enhanced lymphatic drainage and encouraged appropriate immune response
  • we have no controlled data on the effects of OMT on the pandemic influenza
  • Noll et al13 demonstrated that OMT given to elderly patients with pneumonia decreases medication use and hospital stay
  • Whatever the mechanism, these beneficial outcomes have taught us a great deal about how the osteopathic medical profession might handle a coming pandemic.
  • treatments used back then can be used again and do not require patient hospitalization
  • methods can also be taught to family members
  • do not rely on the availability of potent, expensive, and often harmful (especially when one is in a weakened condition) medications.
  • treatments can be delivered by osteopathic medical students under the direction of a physician—a measure that would add significantly to the pool of trained healthcare providers available to assist the public in such an emergency.
  • OMT is meant to improve function, enabling the body itself to better
Dennis OConnor

Meet Master Yuantong Liu - Hunyuan Qi Therapy - 0 views

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    "Master Liu is sharing Zhineng Qigong theories, principles and methods since over 40 years and was trained directly by Dr Pang Ming during the rigorous teachers' program in the Huaxia Zhineng Qigong Clinic & Training Center - globally renowned as the first "medicine-less hospital in the world"."
Dennis OConnor

Master Yuantong Liu - Posts - 0 views

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    Master Liu's Facebook Group.
f0under730to

Ticking Time Bomb - Lyme Disease is not an East Coast Phenomenon - 3 views

San Diego now has a direct link to the Bay Area Lyme Foundation's Biobank. https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/columnists/story/2020-03-06/column-ticking-bomb-lyme-disease-is-not-an-east-coast-phe...

lyme-disease research self-study data

started by f0under730to on 13 Mar 20 no follow-up yet
Dennis OConnor

Katie Teague on Vimeo - 0 views

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    "Katie Teague is an independent documentary filmmaker and multi-media mystic working in the realm of transformational storytelling."
Dennis OConnor

The Future of Care Preserving the Patient-Physician Relationship .pdf - 0 views

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    Recommended by Tyler Orion - John Noseworthy, M.D. Mayo Clinic - The New England Journal of Medicine,
Dennis OConnor

Story & AIHM - Is Your Story Making You Sick? - 0 views

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    "Is Your Story Making You Sick? has screened at top conferences and mental health organizations across the country-catalyzing important conversations about this innovative and effective approach to healing. From addiction treatment to trauma-informed communities - leading healthcare organizations and beyond - many have found our film to be a powerful tool to share a message of recovery, healing, and hope."
Dennis OConnor

San Diego Community News Group - La Jolla doctor donates late father s tissue to help L... - 0 views

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    "Before now, La Jolla biochemist Dr. Sharon Wampler never spoke publicly about the controversy that plagued her father's battle with Lyme Disease. Sharon's father, Whitfield (W.E.) Wampler, was age 92 when he passed away August of 2016. While it's unknown exactly how long W.E. lived with Lyme, his more severe symptoms-including joint failure and loss of hearing and eyesight-spanned over ten years."
Dennis OConnor

Summary of Lyme in CA_Feb2020.pdf - 0 views

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    Compiled by Sharon Wampler
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