Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Animals learn to fine-tune their sniffs

ScienceDaily (Oct. 30, 2012) ? Animals use their noses to focus their sense of smell, much the same way that humans focus their eyes, new research at the University of Chicago shows.

A research team studying rats found that animals adjust their sense of smell through sniffing techniques that bring scents to receptors in different parts of the nose. The sniffing patterns changed according to what kind of substance the rats were attempting to detect.

The sense of smell is particularly important for many animals, as they need it to detect predators and to search out food. "Dogs, for instance, are quite dependent on their sense of smell," said study author Leslie Kay, associate professor of psychology and director of the Institute for Mind & Biology at the University of Chicago. "But there are many chemicals in the smells they detect, so detecting the one that might be from a predator or an explosive, for instance, is a complex process."

Kay was joined in writing the paper by Daniel Rojas-L?bano, a postdoctoral scholar at the University of Chile in Santiago, who received his PhD from UChicago in 2011. Rojas-L?bano, who did the work as a doctoral scholar, was the first author on the publication. Their results are published in an article, "Interplay Between Sniffing and Odorant Properties in the Rat," in the current issue of the Journal of Neuroscience.

Scholars have hypothesized that animals may be able to focus sniffing, just as humans focus their sight to detect a target, like the face of a friend, in a crowd. Humans are also known to be able to adjust their ability to detect specific odors with practice when cooking or sampling wine, for instance.

Kay and Rojas-Libano drew from two ideas proposed by other scholars to test whether animals can focus their sniffs.

In one set of findings, researchers had shown that the nose can act like a gas chromatograph (a device that separates chemicals in complex blends like flower scents), absorbing substances for different times depending on how readily they interact with the water-based mucus on the sensory receptors in the nose. Odorants that have high "sorption values" are easily absorbed into the mucus, while odors that do not absorb easily into water have lower sorption values.

The other finding crucial to the current work was the discovery that changes in the airflow rates of scents entering the nose can change which odors the nose readily detects. Different parts of the nose have different airflows, and classes of receptors suited to detecting specific odors. Researchers had speculated that animals might be able to change airflow to target specific odors in a blend of chemicals, like focusing on smelling a particular scent in a perfume.

But until the publication of the paper by Kay and Rojas-L?bano, no one had been able to test the ideas that arose from those earlier findings.

"Daniel devised an excellent experiment to test these hypotheses," Kay explained. Rojas-L?bano trained rats to detect a specific odor by rewarding them with a sugar pellet when they had detected a target odor and responded correctly. Electrodes attached to the rats' diaphragm muscles measured the rate at which they were taking in air. He then tested the animals with many mixtures of two chemicals to see if they could pick out those containing the target scent.

The rats were successful in making the distinctions, regardless of which type of odor they were seeking. But the rats learned to look for a highly absorbent odor much more quickly than the rats learning to detect a less absorbent odor. The rats also inhaled differently, depending on which type of odor they were detecting. The animals inhaled for a longer time when they were learning to detect the low-absorbing odor, and then reduced flow rates once they had learned to detect the odor, researchers determined.

"What was happening was that the air was moving through the nose at a slower rate and targeting those parts of the nasal epithelium that are further along in the pathway -- those more likely to pick up the low-absorbent odors," Kay said.

For highly absorbent odors, the animals inhaled more quickly because the parts of the nasal cavity that are sensitive to those smells are closer to the start of the nose's air pathway.

"I think one of the most interesting aspects of these experiments is the finding of the difference in difficulty the rats displayed to detect different targets from the same set of mixtures," Rojas-L?bano said. "This shows that there is more to olfaction than just receptor types and combinations. If detection was solely based on chemical-receptor interactions (as people seem to assume quite often), performance levels should have been more similar between the groups of rats. The physical properties of the odors matter a lot, and so does the type of sniff that an individual uses to smell the odors."

The project was supported with a grant from the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Chicago. The original article was written by William Harms.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


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Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/strange_science/~3/PeGd8ou79-k/121030210035.htm

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Mavs dump West; Curry could start against Lakers

DALLAS (AP) ? The Dallas Mavericks are moving on without guard Delonte West, and their starting center for Tuesday night's season opener on the road against the Los Angeles Lakers will likely be someone who wasn't even on the roster a week ago.

The Mavericks waived West on Monday, the eve of a second straight season with a major roster makeover. West was part of the first retooling a year ago, and figured to be a valuable role player again before two suspensions in as many weeks for conduct detrimental to the team.

Dallas had to dump West to make room for Eddy Curry, a journeyman center who was picked up last week after San Antonio let him go. Curry likely will get the start against the Lakers because Chris Kaman and backup Brandon Wright are battling injuries.

West, who has bipolar disorder, indicated in a series of tweets after the second suspension that his future in Dallas was in doubt. The eighth-year pro was involved in a pair of locker room incidents during the preseason. He was on his second straight one-year contract for the veteran minimum, which was $1.2 million this season.

Part of West's value a year ago came from being a younger, experienced player to help aging point guard Jason Kidd and another 30-something guard in Jason Terry. But the Mavericks have a much younger backcourt after getting Darren Collison from Indiana to replace Kidd when they missed out on Deron Williams and adding free agent O.J. Mayo to fill Terry's scoring role.

Dallas grabbed Curry last week after he was released by San Antonio, and he had 11 points and seven rebounds in 27 minutes in Dallas' preseason finale against Charlotte on Friday.

The fourth pick of the 2001 draft by Chicago, Curry improved his scoring averages all four seasons with the Bulls before getting traded to New York. He averaged a career-high 19.5 points per game in 2006-07 but has played just 24 games combined the past three seasons.

With West out and Curry in, the Mavericks have nine new players on their roster and should have four new starters on the floor against the Lakers with Dirk Nowitzki recovering from knee surgery. The only holdover is Shawn Marion.

"This is what we got. That's the way it is," said Marion, now second to Nowitzki in Dallas tenure. "We can't harp on it all day. We'll do what we gotta do."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mavs-dump-west-curry-could-start-against-lakers-220559482--spt.html

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Tuesday, October 16, 2012

IRL: Nuu SoftKey, MacBook Air and Thermaltake's eSports Cyclone ...

Welcome to IRL, an ongoing feature where we talk about the gadgets, apps and toys we're using in real life and take a second look at products that already got the formal review treatment.

Welcome back! This week in real-life adventures with gadgetry, Sharif recommends an $80 gaming mouse and Dan pleads with you all not to buy a certain keyboard case for the iPad. As for Philip, he just purchased his first Apple product after years of buying Windows laptops and Zune players, which means he's got a little explaining to do.

NUU Softkey

IRL Nuu SoftKey, MacBook Air and Thermaltake's eSports Cyclone Edition gaming mouseI was looking for an iPad case to help me peck out articles on the go, but NUU's Softkey case for the new iPad / iPad 2 isn't it. The faux-leather folio disguises your tablet in a document wallet respectably enough, but its awkward prop made it useless as an impromptu movie screen on a long haul flight. In fact, the various stand configurations are all so weak that you constantly need to keep your hands on the device to prevent it collapsing before you.

Of course, none of that would matter if its keyboard was useful enough to relegate my laptop to the bottom of my carry-on. Unfortunately, it's topped with a rubber membrane that's too easily parted from its keys, meaning that the only travel you experience is when you depress the sheath in on itself. The keyboard, too, needlessly includes Escape, Arrow and Function keys that, while useful, could have easily been shed to increase the size of the letters. As such, my quest to turn the iPad into a useful work machine will struggle on.

-- Dan Cooper

MacBook Air (13-inch, 2012)

IRL Nuu SoftKey, MacBook Air and Thermaltake's eSports Cyclone Edition gaming mouseI'm not even sure what happened. One minute, I was dead-set on waiting for one of those hybrid laptop / tablet deals running Windows 8. The next, I was braving a New York City downpour to pick up a MacBook Air. I've been a die-hard Windows user since the 3.1 days: I stuck with it through Vista and I eagerly await next month's update. And yet, here in New York, thousands of miles from home, I feel like I've had the OS equivalent of an illicit cross-country fling. What if my wife finds out?

Truthfully, my reasons for picking up an OS X machine are far more practical than lecherous. It's become increasingly clear that my Windows-only approach is a bit outdated. As part of a group that obsessively covers technology, it only makes sense for me to stay current with as many hardware and software ecosystems as I can. I've used OS X for years in the work environment (and Mac OS 9 before that). But this Ivy Bridge-powered 13-inch Air represents the first time I've ever spent my own money on an Apple product. That's right, no iPods or iPhones in our home. Just look at my Zune HD and Windows Phone.

So far, I'm not regretting my decision. This keyboard and trackpad combo is supremely comfortable and the solid-state drive is impressively quick. As of this writing, I've been on battery for about three hours and only just crossed the 50 percent threshold. The screen may not be Retina-level, but I've no complaints about it so far (though I haven't done any photo editing just yet). Up next: installing Windows 7 (and later Win 8) for a little Boot Camp action so I can have two great OSes on one amazing machine. Yup, I'm officially a two-timer -- and I'm not ashamed.

-- Philip Palermo

Thermaltake eSports Cyclone Edition

IRL Nuu SoftKey, MacBook Air and Thermaltake's eSports Cyclone Edition gaming mouseI admit that when I first wrote about Thermaltake's eSports Cyclone Edition gaming mouse, I didn't take it all that seriously. A protruding 6,000 RPM fan to keep your trigger finger cool and slip-resistant -- isn't that slightly OTT? Well, yes it is. But it's also beautiful, exuberant and happiness-inducing -- as is the very thought that someone out there has the guts to bring stuff like this to market. My Cyclone's fan mostly sits detached and idle on a shelf these days, because Fall where I live is cool enough already, but that detracts little from the $80 mouse itself. It's comfortable and well-built, and rather than just being a boring gimmick it leaves me with a strong sense that someone at TT eSports genuinely loves their job. Not convinced? Check out the Taiwanese company's obscene gold and yellow Chao gaming headphones and you soon will be.

-- Sharif Sakr

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/10/14/irl-nuu-softkey-macbook-air-thermaltake-esports-cyclone-edition-gaming-mouse/

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Shot Pakistani girl can recover, UK doctors say

LONDON/BIRMINGHAM (Reuters) - A Pakistani schoolgirl shot in the head by the Taliban has every chance of making a "good recovery", British doctors said on Monday as 14-year-old Malala Yousufzai arrived at a hospital in central England for treatment of her severe wounds.

Yousufzai, who was shot for advocating education for girls, was flown from Pakistan to receive specialist treatment at Birmingham's Queen Elizabeth Hospital at a unit expert in dealing with complex trauma cases that has treated hundreds of soldiers wounded in Afghanistan.

"Doctors...believe she has a chance of making a good recovery on every level," said Dr Dave Rosser, the hospital's medical director, adding that her treatment and rehabilitation could take months.

He told reporters Yousufzai, whose shooting has drawn widespread condemnation, had not yet been assessed by British medics but said she would not have been brought to Britain at all if her prognosis was not good.

TV footage showed a patient, believed to be the schoolgirl, being rushed from an ambulance into the hospital surrounded by a large team of medical staff.

She will now undergo scans to reveal the extent of her injuries, but Rosser said they could not provide any further details without her agreement.

Pakistani surgeons removed a bullet from near her spinal cord during a three-hour operation the day after the attack last week, but she now needs intensive specialist follow-up care.

The unit at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital, a large blue and white glass-plated complex in the south of England's second city, has treated every British battle casualty for the last decade, Rossner said.

Built at a cost of 545 million pounds ($877 million), the hospital has the world's largest single-floor critical care unit for patients with gunshot wounds, burns, spinal damage and major head injuries.

Treatment for the schoolgirl is likely to include repairing damaged bones in her skull and complex follow-up neurological treatment.

"Injuries to bones in the skull can be treated very successfully by the neurosurgeons and the plastic surgeons, but it is the damage to the blood supply to the brain that will determine long-term disability," said Duncan Bew, consultant trauma surgeon at Barts Health NHS Trust in London.

Judging the best way forward in such difficult cases requires a wide range of experienced medics working as a team.

"In trauma, it is really the coordinated impact of intensive care that is critical. It's not just about keeping the patient alive but also maximizing their rehabilitation potential. With neurological injuries that is paramount," Bew said.

Doctors said youth was on her side since a young brain has more ability to recover from injury than a mature one.

"On the positive side, Malala has passed two major hurdles - the removal of the bullet and the very critical 48-hour window after surgery," said Anders Cohen, head of neurosurgery at the Brooklyn Hospital Centre in New York.

MALALA'S SECURITY A PRIORITY

Compared with some of the nation's ageing hospitals, the new National Health Service (NHS) hospital offers a spectrum of services ranging from plastic surgery to neuroscience.

They may all be needed in Malala's case.

The hospital and government officials declined to give any details about the security measures that would be put in place to protect Malala but a spokesman for the interior ministry said her security was "a priority for both Pakistan and the UK".

A hospital spokesman said no extra measures were in place but because the unit treated British military personnel it already had "fairly robust security".

Care of soldiers on the battlefield has improved dramatically in recent years, so that many now survive injuries that would have been a death sentence in the past.

As a result, Birmingham now handles extremely challenging injuries that were previously little known and has built up enormous experience in head and brain injuries, multiple fractures and amputations.

In the last five years, the Birmingham centre has treated 481 service personnel seriously injured in Afghanistan, according to the Ministry of Defence.

She did not come from Pakistan with any of her relatives but the Pakistani Consulate are proving support and her family may join her at a later date.

Yousufzai, a cheerful schoolgirl who had wanted to become a doctor before agreeing to her father's wishes that she strive to be a politician, has become a potent symbol of resistance against the Taliban's efforts to deprive girls of an education.

Pakistanis have held some protests and candlelight vigils but most government officials have refrained from publicly criticizing the Taliban by name over the attack, in what critics say is a lack of resolve against extremism.

($1 = 0.6216 British pounds)

(Additional reporting by Michael Holden, editing by Peter Millership and Diana Abdallah)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/pakistani-schoolgirl-attacked-taliban-sent-uk-treatment-035131487.html

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Prosperity mine support fostered with Facebook



Source: http://www.100milefreepress.net/news/173594891.html

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Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Soda Makers Teaming With Chicago For Wellness Challenge ? CBS ...

Rahm Emanuel attends wellness challenge event with American Beverage Association. (Credit: Craig Dellimore/WBBM Newsradio)

Rahm Emanuel attends wellness challenge event with American Beverage Association. (Credit: Craig Dellimore/WBBM Newsradio)

CHICAGO (CBS) ? The City of Chicago is teaming up with the soda industry to help city employees make healthier choices.

Major soda makers, like Coke and Pepsi, and the American Beverage Association are launching a wellness challenge.

City workers will get new vending machines which will display calorie information so people can make healthier choices. The machines will include more low-calorie drinks.

The challenge also will pit Chicago and San Antonio against each other to see who can be the healthiest city and lose the most weight.

The beverage is putting up a $5 million prize between the two cities.

The vending machines will eventually be made available nationwide.

LISTEN: WBBM Political Editor Craig Dellimore Reports

Source: http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2012/10/08/soda-makers-teaming-with-chicago-for-wellness-challenge/

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Video: ?New Romney? keeps Obama campaign on their toes

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3036697/vp/49335128#49335128

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ROCK HILL: New mountain bike trails open at Riverwalk in Rock Hill ...

? New mountain bike trails are open and free to use at Rock Hill's Outdoor Recreation Center at Riverwalk off Cherry Road.

Riverwalk trails offer varying levels of difficulty ? easy, difficult and most difficult.

The trails branch off of the Piedmont Medical Center trail from a common entry point and then split off based on level of difficulty. The Piedmont Medical Center trail is a 2.25 mile asphalt trail located on the banks of the Catawba River at the Rock Hill Outdoor Center.

Cars can be parked in a lot at the trail head.

Current hours for the trails are 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.

For more information visit www.rockhilloutdoorcenter.com or call 326-2453.

Anna Douglas 803-329-4068

Source: http://www.heraldonline.com/2012/10/09/4324145/new-mountain-bike-trails-open.html

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Saturday, October 6, 2012

Rising seas washing away Ghana's former slave forts

As sea levels rise on Ghana?s populated shores, the government mulls defense measures for its forts, castles, and communities.

By Chris Stein,?Contributor / October 4, 2012

President Obama speaks to the media following his tour of the Cape Coast Castle, a former slave holding facility, in the town of Cape Coast, Ghana, in this July 2009 file photo.

Jason Reed/Reuters/File

Enlarge

The ocean is starting to wash away historical slave trading forts and castles on the coast of Ghana, threatening a thriving tourist industry as well as the homes of coastal dwellers.?

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The waves have already taken a toll on Ada Foah?s Fort Kongenstein, an 18th ?century Danish trading fort. All that remains of it are dilapidated foundations and collapsing arches hanging off of a shelf of sand. The sea has claimed the rest.

The beating taken by this smaller fort may soon be in store for the castles at Cape Coast and Osu, both UNESCO World Heritage sites, along with most of the coastal forts and?key attractions for the country?s $2.1 billion tourist industry.

The forts were built by the Danish for defense and slave trading before eventually coming under the control of the British in the 19th century, and their foundations on rocky terrain affords them some protection, says scientist?Kwasi Appeaning Addo, but they, too, will fall to the tides if measures are not taken.?The castle at Osu, which is also the seat of government, may flood as soon as 2050, Mr. Addo says.

?Erosion is a major threat to coastal tourism,? says Addo, a lecturer in coastal science at the University of Ghana. ?The foreign castles are particularly at risk.??

Blame climate change, Addo says. Sea levels in parts of Accra, Ghana?s capital, could rise by up to 80 centimeters by 2100, according to a study he authored. The coast in the capital is receding at just over one meter a year, he says, while Ada Foah loses about 3.5 meters a year, according to a recent University of Ghana study.

Local causes, too

But also to blame is the growth of human population along the coast, which will likely be exacerbated as Ghana?s offshore oil industry brings more people to the shores for work. Also not helping: the practice of "sand winning," where soil is taken from the beach as a cheap building material for houses.

In addition, the tides determine if Enoch Tawiah has a home.?

When the seas are low, Mr. Tawiah fishes tuna and redfish in the azure waters behind his house. But when the ocean surges, he and the other residents of the eastern Ghana town of Ada Foah must flee inland, with no assurance that their homes will be there when they get back.

?People that are not lucky, [the water] will break their houses,? Tawiah says. He estimates over 100 of his neighbors evacuate ? to the homes of relatives, if they?re lucky ? during storms.

Adaptation efforts

With the beach retreating, the government has tried to encourage the residents of Ada Foah to follow suit, offering to resettle them further inland, says Eugene Dugbatey, a district assemblyman. They won?t go, Mr. Dugbatey says; the sea is where these fishermen make their money.

So Ghana?s government has stepped in with expensive infrastructure projects meant to preserve the coast.

A sea defense wall is under construction in Ada, made of a series of rock groins that jut perpendicularly from the shore.

?It?s a sand trap,? says Andre Olivier, a site engineer for the $78 million project that is expected to finish at the end of next year. ?You?re stopping the current? behind the rocks ?and then sedimentation takes place."

Groins are used elsewhere along the Ghanaian coast. Further east, near the city of Keta, a series of groins protects Fort Prinzensten, another Danish settlement that was nearly destroyed by waves before the walls were built, according to a report by UNESCO.

Near Accra, the UNESCO report said the sloping piles of rocks that prevent further soil erosion called revetments are shoring up beaches that have already sustained erosion.

But groins only go so far to alleviate erosion, Addo says. While the areas upstream of the groins may recover, those downstream will be depleted further. And curbing erosion is not Ghana?s job alone, he argues.

?What happens in C?te d'Ivoire eventually affects Ghana. What happens in Ghana is affecting Togo and affecting Benin and may affect Nigeria,? he says. He called for the countries to work together to come up with a strategy to combat erosion.

Still, Tawiah holds out hope that the groins lining the beach will save his home and livelihood.

?When the sea defense wall [is built], then I think we can stay,? Tawiah says. Until then, he will be at the mercy of the seas. ?For now there is no change. For now.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/rw11vQZHzJg/Rising-seas-washing-away-Ghana-s-former-slave-forts

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October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month: Learn More About ...

http://www.virginiawomenscenter.com

Just like all aspects of your health, education and regular preventative check-ups?can help keep you informed and engaged in your care. However, it?s also important that you pay close attention to your own body so that you can know what is normal for you and seek medical care when your health changes and is no longer normal. With your breast health, this self-awareness is no exception.

Women?s breasts are always changing. They change during the menstrual cycle, pregnancy, breastfeeding and menopause. Along with these normal changes, problems can arise. It is important for you to be aware of any changes in your breasts. Tools such as screening mammograms and clinical breast exams, which are procedures that are performed by health care professionals at facilities like Virginia Women?s Center, can help detect breast cancer before it has progressed.

In addition to regular screening mammograms and clinical breast exams, some women choose to perform a formal step-by-step breast self-exam and others prefer a visual inspection. No matter the technique you choose (both can be performed in the comfort of your own home and without any formal training), it?s important that you are aware of what your breasts normally look and feel like. Should you notice any changes, you can proactively seek medical care.

When inspecting your breasts, stand or sit in front of a mirror. Pay attention for the following changes

  • Changes in color or shape of your breast
  • Changes in color or texture of your skin
  • Changes in nipple shape or texture
  • Evidence of nipple discharge
  • Dimpling or puckering anywhere on your chest

It?s common for women to be so concerned performing breast self-exams ?right? that they become stressed over the technique. Performing a breast self-exam or a visual inspection of your breasts regularly are both ways for you to know how your breasts normally look and feel and to notice any changes. The goal, with or without a formal breast self-exam, is to report any breast changes to your health care provider right away.

In addition to being aware of your own health, it?s important to be knowledgeable about your specific family history, which can shape your health both in the present and the future. Knowing your family and personal health histories can help you and your health care provider determine the best plan for your individual care.

In the end, it?s important to remember that all women are unique and different. In addition to staying on top of preventative appointments and screenings, self-awareness is a key aspect to detecting changes not only in your breasts, but in your overall health.

Virginia Women?s Center is an advertiser on Richmondmom.com

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Virginia Women's Center

Women's health care has changed a lot over the last few decades. That?s why Virginia Women?s Center has brought the medical services women most rely on under one convenient roof. Virginia Women's Center is care that revolves around you.

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Source: http://richmondmom.com/2012/10/05/breast-self-awareness/

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Friday, October 5, 2012

New Treadmill Helps Physical Therapy Patients Defy Gravity ...

About the panel

Barbara Ficarra Barbara Ficarra, RN, BSN, MPA is an award-winning journalist, media broadcaster, health educator, speaker and consultant More??

David Harlow David Harlow is Prinicipal of the Harlow Group LLC, a healthcare law and consulting firm based in Boston, MA. More??

Stephen Schimpff Stephen C. Schimpff, MD is the retired CEO of the Univ. of MD Med. Center and the COO of the Univ of MD Medical System. More??

Andrew Schorr Andrew, a leukemia survivor and respected medical journalist is the founder of PatientPower, an excellent web resource. More??

John Sharp John Sharp has interests in social media in healthcare and clinical research informatics including secondary use of EMR More??

Christina Thielst Christina Thielst is a hospital administrator, consultant, educator and author with 30 years of healthcare experience. More??

Source: http://healthworkscollective.com/trish-broome/54236/new-treadmill-sinai-helps-physical-therapy-patients-defy-gravity

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