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Dogs Detecting Lung Cancer With 97% Accuracy May Spell the End of Expensive Screening Methods

Three beagles successfully showed they are capable of identifying lung cancer by scent, a first step in identifying specific biomarkers for the disease – and researchers say the dogs’ abilities may lead to the development of a safe, effective, and inexpensive means for mass cancer screening.

After eight weeks of training, the beagles – chosen for their superior olfactory receptor genes – were able to distinguish between blood serum samples taken from patients with malignant lung cancer and healthy controls with 97% accuracy. The double-blind study is published in the July edition of The Journal of the American Osteopathic Association.

“We’re using the dogs to sort through the layers of scent until we identify the tell-tale biomarkers,” says Thomas Quinn, professor at Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine and lead author on this study. “There is still a great deal of work ahead, but we’re making good progress.”

The dogs were led into a room with blood serum samples at nose level. Some samples came from patients with non-small cell lung cancer; others were drawn from healthy controls. After thoroughly sniffing a sample, the dogs sat down to indicate a positive finding for cancer or moved on if none was detected.

CHECK OUT: After Breakthrough Trials, Alzheimer’s Vaccine That Uses the Body’s Immune System May Soon Be Tested on Humans

Dr. Quinn and his team are nearing completion of a second iteration of the study. This time the dogs are working to identify lung, breast and colorectal cancer using samples of patients’ breath, collected by the patient breathing into a face mask. Researchers say findings suggest the dogs are as effective detecting cancer using this method.

The next step will be to further fractionate the samples based on chemical and physical properties, presenting them back to the dogs until the specific biomarkers for each cancer are identified. The goal is to develop an over-the-counter screening product, similar to a pregnancy test, in terms of cost, simplicity and availability. Dr. Quinn envisions a device that someone can breathe into and see a color change to indicate a positive or negative finding.

Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death worldwide for both women and men, and more than 200,000 people annually in the United States receive a diagnosis of lung cancer. The five-year survival rate for stage IA non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is 92%. That drops to 13% in stage IIIC NSCLC, and after metastasis, the five-year survival rates range from 10% to less than 1%, depending on the stage.

MORE: Be Sure and Floss! Researchers Say Good Dental Health ‘Substantially’ Decreases Risk of Alzheimer’s

Additionally, screening and imaging for lung cancer is costly and not always reliable. Chest X-rays have a high false-negative rate, while CT scans with computer-aided diagnosis have a high false-positive rate. Previous studies indicated that 90% of missed lung cancers occur when using chest X-rays, and CT scans have difficulty identifying small, central, juxtavascular lung cancers.

Dr. Quinn believes his research can lead to better screening and diagnosis solutions, potentially creating a change in cancer detection.

“Right now it appears dogs have a better natural ability to screen for cancer than our most advanced technology,” says Dr. Quinn. “Once we figure out what they know and how, we may be able to catch up.”

Reprinted from the American Osteopathic Association

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From Basements to Thrift Stores, Student Has Collected Hundreds of Wheelchairs and Crutches for the Needy

Photo by Project Embrace
Photo by Project Embrace

A compassionate college student has been on a mission to rescue abandoned medical equipment so he can send them to people who need them.

Mohan Sudabattula is the mastermind behind Project Embrace: a nonprofit that collects secondhand crutches, wheelchairs, orthotic braces, walkers, slings, and rehabilitative gear for reuse.

The 23-year-old student and his team of volunteers collect the equipment by scouring the dusty shelves of thrift stores and accepting personal donations from community members. After the gear is cleaned and refurbished, the group sends it to disadvantaged medical facilities around the world.

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“For somebody whose spouse used a wheelchair or walker before they passed away, it’s hard to think of that equipment going into the trash,” one of the nonprofit volunteers told The Washington Post. “When they give it to us, they feel like they’ve given it a second life. And then to see the recipient’s face light up — that’s extremely rewarding.”

Sudabattula was first inspired to launch his labor of love several years ago while he was studying at the University of Utah and simultaneously volunteering in the prosthetics department at a nearby hospital.

Whenever one of the patients outgrew a prosthetic, the device would simply be thrown away. Prosthetics can’t be reused because they are specifically fitted to each patient, but Sudabattula couldn’t help but wonder if he could rescue other medical equipment from the trash.

Photo by Project Embrace

He was reminded of a trip that he had taken to India with his parents in 2006 when they brought him to an orphanage for disabled children. Since the youngsters didn’t have access to medical equipment, they had fashioned makeshift wheelchairs out of lawn furniture and bicycle wheels.

Ten years later, Sudabattula returned to the very same orphanage so he could donate several dozen wheelchairs and crutches – all of which were courtesy of Project Embrace.

WATCH: As Disabled Man Frantically Wheels Himself Home Before Tornado, Teen Hops Out of His Car to Help

Since launching the nonprofit from his apartment in 2016, the group has donated over 900 refurbished medical devices to low-income hospitals in India and the United States.

Just last month, Project Embrace volunteers made their second trip to the Utah-Arizona border so they could donate dozens of wheelchairs and walkers to a rural Navajo Nation hospital.

Photo by Project Embrace

“Often times when it comes to healthcare innovation and design, people tend to opt out of professional conversations because they don’t feel qualified enough to contribute to the discussion,” Sudabattula said in a blog post. “This is ironic because access to healthcare (and healthcare innovation) affects everyone — naturally, everyone should then be involved.

“We give our community an opportunity to get involved and by tracking where individual donations end up going, we can show our community exactly where their impact is being made.

“There have been a lot of slip ups along the road, but founding a cause where everyone feels welcome to contribute to greater health will always be the greatest decision I’ve ever made as a student.”

(WATCH the video below)

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17 Years After Being Declared Extinct in the Wild, Turtle Species is Saved by Caretakers of Hindu Temple

It has been 17 years since the black softshell turtle species was declared extinct in the wild – but thanks to the caretakers of a Hindu temple in India, the tiny reptile has been given a chance at recovery.

Due to habitat loss and over-exploitation as a food source, the turtle species disappeared from the northeastern state of Assam, prompting the International Union for the Conservation of Nature to declare the turtle “extinct in the wild” in 2002.

However, the caretakers of the Hayagriva Madhav temple have been nurturing dozens of the little turtles in the ponds around the centuries-old temple.

WATCH: 170 Foxes Are Rescued From Fur Farm and Given New Home at a Buddhist Monastery

The temple’s religious residents say they feel called to protect the species because the turtles are believed to be the reincarnation of the Hindu god Vishnu.

“The population of the turtle in Assam has gone down by a great extent,” turtle rescuer Jayaditya Purkayastha told AFP. “So we thought we needed to intervene and do something to save the species from extinction.”

The devote conservationists have been helping to breed the turtles by collecting newly-laid eggs from around the pond and warming them in an incubator until they hatch.

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Temple caretakers recently partnered with conservational group Good Earth to officially launch a turtle breeding program as a means of reintroducing the species into the wild. Their efforts finally came to fruition in January when the organization successfully released 35 turtle hatchlings – 16 of which were raised at the temple – into the waters of a local wildlife sanctuary.

“This is a milestone in Assam’s turtle conservation history, and it would not have been possible without the interest shown by the temple authorities in the artificial breeding program,” said Mr. Purkayastha, according to The Hindu.

The coalition is now working to expand the breeding program to 18 other ponds around the temple so they can offer sanctuary to other endangered turtle species.

Protect Your Friends From Negativity By Sharing The Good News To Social MediaFile photo by USFWS

Watch Police Officer Help to Save Suicidal Man From Bridge After Offering to Give Him a Hug

A compassionate cop is being hailed as a hero after he managed to talk a suicidal young man off of a bridge by offering him a hug.

The incident occurred back in March when a 26-year-old man climbed over the safety rail of a highway overpass in Phoenix, Arizona with the intention of jumping.

After Officer Aaron Little of the Chandler Police Department arrived on the scene, he comforted the man and offered to give him a hug.

RELATED: ‘Guardian’ Officer Has Saved Over 200 People From Jumping Off the Golden Gate Bridge

In an emotional video that was released by the police department earlier this week, Little can be heard saying: “I’ll hug you, man. I don’t care. I just want to talk to you. I swear.”

Finally after two minutes of encouragement and conversation, Little convinces the man to climb back over the safety rail and return to safety – and true to his word, Little gave the tearful young man a big hug.

Little then tells his fellow officers that the man is safe before putting his arm around the rescued civilian and guiding him back to the parking lot.

(WATCH the emotional video below)

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“The first responsibility of love is to listen.” – Paul Tillich

Quote of the Day: “The first responsibility of love is to listen.” – Paul Tillich

Image: by Michael Taggart Photography, CC license

With a new inspirational quote every day, atop the perfect photo—collected and archived on our Quotes page—why not bookmark GNN.org for a daily uplift?

 

This Behind-the-Scenes Footage of Keanu Reeves Voicing New Toy Story Character is Bound to Make You Smile

Just in case you needed one more reason to adore Keanu Reeves, Disney has just released footage of the Hollywood dreamboat voicing the character of his new role in Toy Story 4 – and the results are as funny as they are charming.

In the newest installment of the beloved children’s movie series, Reeves is set to voice character of the toy Canadian stuntman Duke Caboom.

The movie is set to be released on June 21st – and if it’s anywhere close to being as sweet as the previous films in the Toy Story franchise, this movie is bound to be a huge hit.

(WATCH the video below)

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Lower Risk of Type 1 Diabetes in Children Vaccinated Against ‘Stomach Flu’ Virus

By Bradley Johnson, CC license
By Bradley Johnson, CC license

This exciting new study shows that vaccinating babies against a virus that causes childhood “stomach flu” has an unexpected side benefit: it is also associated with a lower risk of developing Type 1 diabetes later on.

As a group, children who got fully vaccinated against rotavirus during their first few months of life had a 33% lower risk of being diagnosed with type 1 diabetes than unvaccinated children – a lifelong disease with no known prevention strategies or cure.

A team from the University of Michigan made the finding using nationwide health insurance data, and published their results in the journal Scientific Reports.

The study provides strong post-market evidence that the vaccine works. Children vaccinated against rotavirus had a 94% lower rate of hospitalization for rotavirus infection, and a 31% lower rate of hospitalization for any reason, in the first two months after vaccination. Rotavirus hits infants and toddlers hardest; it can cause diarrhea and vomiting that can lead to dehydration or loss of fluids.

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Yet the study finds more than a quarter of American children don’t get fully vaccinated against rotavirus, and that the rate varies widely across the country. Less than half of children in New England and Pacific states were fully vaccinated. Two-thirds of children in the central part of the country were fully vaccinated.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends that infants receive the multi-dose vaccine starting no later than 15 weeks, and finish receiving it before they are eight months old. Infants receive the vaccine in oral drops.

The paper’s authors, led by epidemiologist Mary Rogers, Ph.D., caution that they cannot show a cause-and-effect relationship between rotavirus vaccination and Type 1 diabetes risk.

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“This is an uncommon condition, so it takes large amounts of data to see any trends across a population,” says Rogers, an associate professor in the U-M Department of Internal Medicine. “It will take more time and analyses to confirm these findings. But we do see a decline in Type 1 diabetes in young children after the rotavirus vaccine was introduced.”

The new result echoes the findings of a study of Australian children published earlier this year, which found a 14 percent reduced risk of Type 1 diabetes after the rotavirus vaccine was introduced in that country. That study, and the new one, suggest that a childhood vaccine may lead to a lower risk of a later chronic condition.

It also fits with laboratory studies showing that rotavirus attacks the same kind of pancreas cells that are affected in people with Type 1 diabetes.

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The death of insulin-producing cells, called beta cells, means people with Type 1 diabetes depend on injections of insulin, and multiple daily checks of their blood sugar, for life. If the condition is not managed well, people with Type 1 diabetes may develop problems with their kidneys, heart, eyes, blood vessels and nerves over time.

The U-M team used anonymous insurance data from 1.5 million American children born before and after the modern rotavirus vaccine was introduced in 2006. In nearly all cases, the vaccine was free, with no copayment, to the family of the infant. The total lifetime cost of caring for an individual with Type 1 diabetes has been estimated in the millions of dollars.

The risk was especially lower among children who received all three doses of the pentavalent form of the vaccine than those who received two doses of the monovalent form. The pentavalent rotavirus vaccine protects against 5 types of the rotavirus while the monovalent vaccine protects against 1 type.

MORE: 8-Year Study Shows That Simple Treatment Can Reverse Type 1 Diabetes to Almost Undetectable Levels!

Children partially vaccinated – that is, started the vaccine series but never finished it – did not have a lower risk of Type 1 diabetes.

More than 540,000 of the children in the study and born after 2006 received the complete series of rotavirus shots; nearly 141,000 received at least one dose, and more than 246,000 did not.

Another comparison group, born in the five years before the vaccine was available, included nearly 547,000 children.

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In absolute terms, Rogers and her colleagues report that eight fewer cases of Type 1 diabetes would be expected to occur for every 100,000 children each year with full vaccination.

Type 1 diabetes, once called “juvenile diabetes,” only affects a few children out of every 100,000, so having such a large pool of data can help spot trends, says Rogers, an epidemiologist who worked with a team from the U-M Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation, which provided the data used in the study.

“Five years from now, we will know much more,” says Rogers. “The first groups of children to receive the rotavirus vaccine in the United States are now in grade school, when Type 1 diabetes is most often detected. Hopefully, in years to come, we’ll have fewer new cases – but based on our study findings, that depends upon parents bringing in their children to get vaccinated.”

Reprinted from the University of Michigan Health Lab

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Man Goes Viral for Giving Out Free ‘Dad Hugs’ to People Who Needed Them at Pride Parade

Scott “Howie” Dittman doesn’t have to be related to these people in order to show them some good old fashioned fatherly love.

Dittman took up the role of being a surrogate dad for strangers last week when he attended an LGBTQ pride parade in Pittsburgh wearing a tee-shirt that read “Free Dad Hugs”.

Dittman wore the shirt because he had an inkling that there may have been some parade-goers who had experienced familial rejection over their sexuality – and he turned out to be right.

In total, Dittman says that he gave out over 700 hugs over the course of two and a half hours. Though there were many youngsters who were simply happy to have a hug, he said that there were two people who had particularly emotional reactions to his embrace.

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The Pennsylvania dad described his experience with the two hugs in a powerful Facebook post that has now gone viral.

The first hug came from a man who tearfully told Dittman that he had not been able to speak to his parents since they kicked him out of their house for being gay as a 19-year-old.

The other hug came from a woman who simply “hugged him with everything she had.”

“Her story? I don’t know the specifics,” wrote Dittman. “But I know that she saw me from across the street. I wasn’t paying attention.

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“By the time she got to me, she had tears in her eyes,” he added. “She hugged me with everything she had. And I hugged her back. She held on for so long, melting into me, and thanked me endlessly.

Dittman ended his post with a plea for his fellow parents to stick by their kids – no matter their sexuality.

“And if by chance anyone knows these folks, please let them know they can reach out any time they need a surrogate dad to talk to. I’ll be there,” he wrote.

(WATCH the interview below)

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Since Father-Son Duo Designed Revolutionary ‘Honey on Tap’ Beehive, There Are 51,000 New Bee Colonies

Back in 2015, a father-son duo changed the beekeeping game simply by redesigning the traditional beehive – and now, honeybees are benefitting from their profits.

Stuart and Cedar Anderson are the co-creators of the Flow Hive: a brilliantly designed beehive that saves beekeepers hours of work simply by channeling all of its honey into a tap that can be turned on and off at will.

The Flow Hive allows honey to flow out of the hive straight into a jar without crushing or disrupting the bees inside. It can also fit in a small backyard or on a rooftop or balcony.

Cedar, who is a third-generation beekeeper from the rural community of Nimbin, Australia, says that he was inspired to try and design a simpler beehive after his brother was stung during one of their honey extraction missions.

The young inventor knew that there must be an easier way to collect honey without having to wear protective suits, crack open the hive, and disturb the tiny pollinators.

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“Ten years ago, Cedar had this idea: ‘come on, we must be able to get honey from a beehive without opening it, extracting and stressing the bees’,” his father Stuart recalled to ABC News.

After several years of tinkering, the Andersons finally perfected their Flow Hive prototype. Upon raising money for the hive’s manufacturing on Indiegogo, their campaign became the most successful crowdfunding page in the platform’s history by raising over $12 million in 8 weeks.

Four years after their initial success, the Flow Hive has had a dramatic impact on honeybee populations around the world.

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The Andersons say that they have successfully shipped over 51,000 hives to 150 different countries. Since they launched the hive in 2015, the number of beekeepers in the U.S. alone has increased by over 10%.

Their success is particularly notable since honeybee populations have been steadily dwindling as a result of habitat loss and pesticides.

That’s why now – in celebration of National Pollinator Week – the Andersons are donating their hive proceeds to international honeybee advocacy groups.

CHECK OUT: Over 1 Million Gardeners Have United to Create Global Network of Greenery That Nourishes Bees and Butterflies

“We’re proud to have donated 100% of profits from the sale of our Flow Pollinator House to nine local grassroots pollinator projects in Australia and the United States that are at work protecting wild habitats all around the world,” said Cedar in a statement.

“Pollinators need large areas of habitat to flourish—the more we can do to protect and conserve native habitats, the more opportunities these tiny environmental champions will have to do their important work.”

If you want to learn more about how the hive works or order one for yourself, you can visit the Flow Hive website.

(WATCH the video below) – Photo by the Flow Hive

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Uber Driver Changed Veteran’s Life After She Took Him Home and Saw His ‘Deplorable’ Living Conditions

A compassionate Uber driver has also proven herself to be a guardian angel in disguise after she helped to transform the home of an elderly veteran who was living in “deplorable” conditions.

Last week, Lauren Mulvihill was called to the hospital to pick up an 89-year-old veteran named Ronald Dembner. Since the senior had just been discharged from the hospital, Mulvihill brought him back to his home in Stockbridge, Georgia, expecting for him to be greeted by family members or caregivers.

When they arrived at his house, however, Dembner explained that he lived alone with his dog because his wife and family members had passed away. Mulvihill then helped the senior into his home – and she was shocked by what she found.

The house was filthy. There was mold in the bathrooms; no railing on the stairs; the rugs were soiled; and there were even dog droppings that had accumulated on the floor.

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Despite how Dembner is in a perfectly healthy state of mind, his house fell into disrepair because he has trouble moving around. He has been too afraid to call anyone for help because he is afraid that his house and dog will be taken away from him.

Mulvihill could not bear to let the veteran live in squalor any longer – so she created a public Facebook group called Helping Mr. Ronald in order to rally together some volunteers.

“I have been back and tried to clean up, but I am a single parent and my kids cannot stay inside the home,” Mulvihill wrote in the group. “Mr. Ronald is open and willing to have someone help, but he cannot pay – and again, he is scared to death that they will make him leave his home.”

Photo by Helping Mr. Ronald

Since creating the group, over 800 members have joined in to help clean the house, make repairs, stock the refrigerator, and feed the volunteers.

The volunteers have thus far been able to remove all of the garbage, soiled carpeting, and deteriorated furniture. Next, they plan on repainting the rooms and recruiting an expert to take care of the mold.

MORE: Uber Driver Stumbles Into Gift of New Hands For His 11-Year-old Daughter After Picking Up Engineering Student

Needless to say, Dembner has been overwhelmed by the support.

“The things that are happening are so profound and being done so quickly and efficiently, I just don’t have the words to explain how grateful I am, how thankful I am,” Dembner told 11Alive. “God bless them all for what they’ve done.”

(WATCH the news coverage below)

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“How we appraise our life from our deathbed will be predicated not only on what came to us in life, but how we lived with it.” – Stephen Levine

Quote of the Day: “How we appraise our life from our deathbed will be predicated not only on what came to us in life, but how we lived with it.” – Stephen Levine

Image: by Martin Gommel, CC license

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Why Professor Says There Can Be ‘Good News and Bad News’ With Computer Crash Erasing Student’s Work

Today is MOTH Monday on Good News Network: In partnership with The Moth, a nonprofit dedicated to the art of storytelling, we bring you the most uplifting speakers from live stages across the world.

This college professor knows how students often tend to wait until the last minute to finish their school papers.

She also knows that in the age of technology, if a computer crashes at the last minute, all the last-minute work could be lost in an instant, leaving the student with an epic excuse for missing a deadline.

Though she admits that she is generally pretty harsh on her students and their excuses, Catherine Palmer tells a live audience at The Moth about what happened when she, herself, lost a research paper after her computer’s catastrophic failure—and says there was bad news and good news.

Listen to her inspiring story below…

The Moth gives people an opportunity to tell a true story in front of a live audience, and sometimes their stories are chosen to air on the radio show, now celebrating its tenth year, and broadcasting on 485+ public radio stations—and on The Moth podcast, which is downloaded over 52 million times a year.

The Moth’s third book, Occasional Magic: True Stories About Defying the Impossible is now available for purchase through your favorite booksellers.

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For the First Time in History, America’s Renewable Energy Capacity is Now Greater Than Coal

Despite how the United States has endured ongoing political tensions in the face of climate change, this exciting new report says that the nation is actually becoming greener than ever.

According to an analysis by the conservational group SUN DAY Campaign, newly-added electrical generating capacity from renewable energy sources – such as biomass, geothermal, hydropower, solar, and wind – has now surpassed that of coal for the first time in history.

The analysis, which was based on the latest monthly “Energy Infrastructure Update” report from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), notes that 18 “units” of new wind capacity (1,545 MW) and 102 units of new solar capacity (1,473 MW) were added during the first four months of this year.

Coupled with four new units of hydropower, the renewable energy’s share of all available U.S. generating capacity was pushed up to 21.56%. By comparison, coal’s share dropped to 21.55% (down from 23.04% a year ago).

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This all being said, capacity is not the same as actual generation. Capacity factors for nuclear power and fossil fuels tend to be higher than those for most renewables. For calendar year 2018, the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) reports that renewables accounted for a little more than 17.6% of the nation’s total electrical generation – that is, a bit less than their share of installed generating capacity in 2018 (over 21.2%). Coal’s share of electrical generation in 2018 was 27.2%.

FERC’s data also reveals that the nation’s renewable energy capacity has been adding, on average, one percentage point each year. That is, a year ago, it was 20.66%; three years ago, it was 18.16%. The share of the nation’s generating capacity provided by utility-scale solar alone has more than doubled during the past three years from 1.42% to 3.23%. Meanwhile, wind’s share has increased from 6.43% to 8.25% and is now on track to surpass hydropower (8.41%) within the next few months.

Moreover, the same report indicates that by May 2022, proposed “high probability” generation additions and retirements could result in a net increase in renewable energy capacity of 40,993 MW. By comparison, net capacity by nuclear, coal, oil, and natural gas combined could actually decline by 24 MW; that is, retirements would exceed additions.

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While net growth by just natural gas is projected to be 18,530 MW, that is more than offset by net losses for coal (12,409 MW), nuclear (5,106 MW), and oil (1,039 MW). And even natural gas’ projected net growth will be dwarfed by that of wind (25,117 MW) and almost equaled by that of utility-scale solar (14,846 MW).

Further, if FERC’s projections prove accurate, in three years, renewable energy sources will provide nearly one-quarter (i.e., 24.15%) of the nation’s total available installed generating capacity with wind alone accounting for over a tenth (10.01%) and solar at 4.32%. The balance will be provided by hydropower (8.16%), biomass (1.33%), and geothermal (0.33%).

The report is an exciting follow-up to an international report that was released in April showing that renewable energy now accounts for one-third of all global power capacity.

Power Up With Positivity By Sharing The Good News To Social Media – Photo by D.H. Parks, CC

Inspired by Dad’s Viral Photo, John Legend Helps Pampers Install 5,000 Changing Tables in Men’s Restrooms


Thousands of men’s restrooms are about to get a much-needed upgrade thanks to John Legend, Pampers, and a dad’s viral Instagram photo.

Donte Palmer is a father-of-three who was sick and tired of going into men’s restrooms to change his son’s diaper only to find that the bathroom was not equipped with a changing table.

In 2018, Palmer had finally had enough. The determined dad from Jacksonville, Florida took a photo of himself squatting against a wall in order to change his son’s diaper on his lap and published the picture to social media.

He then began using the hashtag #SquatForAChange in order to encourage businesses and organizations to install changing tables in men’s restrooms.

RELATED: When School Places Ad For Male Mentors, They’re Overwhelmed by ‘Volunteer Dad’ Responses

After months of social media campaigning, Pampers finally answered Palmer’s call to action by pledging to install over 5,000 changing tables in public restrooms across North America before 2021.

“I’m excited, I’m honored, I’m using the moment to teach my boys that if you have a dream, if you have an issue with something, open your mouth, chase it, go attack that thing you want and it’ll come,” Palmer told Metro. “That’s why I’ve been giving my heart to this campaign to change men’s lives. I’m proud to have a huge partnership with Pampers and Koala Care which will help people really receive my message.”

Singer-songwriter John Legend has even joined the initiative by partnering with Pampers and Koala Care in order to encourage other businesses to follow their example.

LOOK: Role Model Dad Spurred to Lose 92 Pounds in 5 Months After One Hiking Trip With His Kids

“I am so excited to play a role in Pampers’ Love the Change campaign. I love being a hands-on dad, and it is so important that we acknowledge the active role dads are playing in their babies’ lives,” Legend said in a press release. “Spending time out and about with my kids is one of the greatest joys in my life, but it’s frustrating when I am out with [my son] and the men’s restroom doesn’t have a baby changing table.”

“I’m proud to support Pampers as it paves the way for more inclusive parenting by providing all of us dads out there with the tools we need to succeed,” he added.

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633 Divers Just Set the World Record for Largest Ocean Cleanup After Collecting 1,600 Pounds of Trash

A massive group of eco-friendly scuba divers have just set the Guinness World Record for the largest underwater cleanup.

Over 633 divers donned their wetsuits and masks last week at the Deerfield Beach International Fishing Pier in Florida so they could pick up all the fishing gear and plastic waste from the ocean floor.

Though the total amount of recovered garbage is still being calculated with experts expecting the number to grow, officials say that the cleanup resulted in at least 1,626 pounds of trash and 60 pounds of fishing line being recovered from the ocean floor – and city officials say that they will be recycling and disposing of all of the collected ocean waste accordingly.

LOOK: Adidas Test to Sell Shoes Made of Ocean Plastic Was So Successful, They’re Going Even Further

This is the fifth annual ocean cleanup of the area that has been orchestrated by the Dixie Divers and Deerfield Beach Women’s Club. The previous world record for the largest underwater cleanup was set in Egypt back in 2015 with 614 divers – but the Florida divers says that they are simply happy to do their part in tidying up the sea.

“It doesn’t matter what happens today with the Guinness World Records,” Guinness adjudicator Michael Empric told the Sun Sentinel. “What really matters is that everyone is out there cleaning up around the pier and trying to improve the community.”

If you want to see the full photo gallery of the historic event, you can check out the Snap Photography website.

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Girl Makes Teddy Bears That Hide IV Bags for Young Hospital Patients – And She’ll Soon Give Them Away for Free

A 12-year-old girl has come up with an ingenious little toy to ease the anxieties of young hospital patients just like her.

Ella Casano was diagnosed with a rare autoimmune disease called idiopathic thrombocytopenia purpura when she was just 7 years old.

The disease means that Ella’s blood doesn’t clot normally and she generally has a very low amount of blood platelets. Despite how the disease generally goes away over time, Ella has never healed from the condition.

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So in order to replace the amount of platelets in her bloodstream, Ella receives a special treatment that is delivered through an IV drip every 8 weeks.

Unfortunately, Ella was always intimidated by the atmosphere of her Connecticut hospital – and she often felt anxious going in to get the IV treatment.

That’s why she invented the Medi Teddy: a sweet stuffed teddy bear toy that can hide the front of a child’s IV bag. That way, instead of seeing a plastic hospital bag filled with mysterious liquids and medications, a young patient can look at a smiling toy friend.

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“When I had my first infusion, I was surprised and a little bit intimidated by the look of the amount of tubing and medical equipment on my IV pole,” says Ella. “As I saw more and more children experiencing the same feelings, I became more interested in creating a friendlier experience for young IV patients, so I created Medi Teddy.”

Since Ella and her family created a GoFundMe campaign to raise money for the Medi Teddy’s manufacturing, they have surged past their goal and raised almost $20,000.

The family is now trying to launch a nonprofit around the Medi Teddy so they can give away the toys away for free.

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“Every man has his secret sorrows which the world knows not; and often times we call a man cold when he is only sad.” – Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

Quote of the Day: “Every man has his secret sorrows which the world knows not; and often times we call a man cold when he is only sad.” – Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

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Personal Items Given by ‘Lawrence of Arabia’ to His Landlady While He Was Hiding Out Are Auctioned

David Convery Senor Auctioneer with Arabian Janbiya dagger with bone handle - SWNS

A collection of personal items belonging to ‘Lawrence of Arabia’ left to his landlord while he was a secret lodger have sold for £26,000 at auction.

The unique lot of T.E. Lawrence items were given to Mrs Fanny Hatcher, while he was staying with her, hiding out from the public and his thousands of admirers shortly before he died in 1935.

The British military hero, who was decorated for his efforts in assisting the Arab Uprising in 1917, spent 18 months with the family at their modest home in Southampton—and although Fanny eventually became aware of the ‘quiet lodger’s true identity it was kept a secret from her son Donald, 13.

The schoolboy knew him as “Aircraftman Shaw” and at the end of his stay Lawrence gifted to him not just the original Arabian Janbiya dagger and Lund & Sons campaign knife, but the very RAF hat he was wearing as he left.

Ripping the badge off his cap and placing it on Donald’s head, Lawrence made his way back to his own cottage in Dorset, for what would be the final time.

Most valuable among the historic artifacts, including the two daggers and hand-written and signed letters, was that Royal Air Force cap.

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Royal Airforce Cap belonging to T.E. Lawrence (Lawrence of Arabia) – All photos by SWNS

They had been in the possession of the Hatcher family for over 80 years.

Anita Manning, managing director Great Western Auctions, said: “It was a pleasure to bring to market items that had been owned by T.E. Lawrence, one of the most significant figures in British Military history.”

In July 1933, Fanny Hatcher, who ran a boarding house, had no idea as she wrote the name TE Shaw in the guest’s register, that the gentleman who would come to be part of the family over the next 18 months was, in fact, the man responsible for uniting the Arab Tribes and taking the port of Aqaba.

The taking of the legendary port is still thought to be one of the greatest and most daring military attacks in modern history.

David Convery Senor Auctioneer with Arabian Janbiya dagger with bone handle – SWNS

An archaeologist, army officer and diplomat, Lawrence was also a prolific writer—and became world famous after publishing Seven Pillars of Wisdom in 1926, an autobiographical account of his participation in the Arab Revolt. Certain parts of the book, which George Bernard Shaw helped to edit, serve as lush essays on military strategy, Arabian culture and geography, and other topics.

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Lawrence was afraid that the public would think that he would make a substantial income from the book, and he stated that it was written as a result of his war service. He vowed not to take any money from it, and indeed he did not. After his death in a motorcycle accident at age 46, his brother inherited his copyrights and a substantial amount of income was donated directly to the RAF Benevolent Fund and to archaeological, environmental, and academic projects.

Further notoriety came to his story after Peter O’Toole portrayed Lawrence in the 1962 film Lawrence of Arabia, and was nominated for an Academy Award for the performance.

MORE: First Time in 21 Years, Copyrighted Works Enter Public Domain: ‘The drought is over’

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Bald Eagle Weighed Down by Large Ball of Ice is Freed By Locals Who Jumped into Frozen Lake – Watch

This eagle couldn’t eat or fly after it became weighed down by a heavy ice ball attached to its tail on the shores of frigid Lake Michigan. Luckily some birdwatchers found it in peril and called a team of rescuers to the scene.

Volunteers from Wings of Wonder tried to corral the raptor toward shore—by wading into the Great Lake themselves amongst large floating ice blocks.

Chris Johnson was on shore while Ken Scott captured this video at the same time that his insulated chest waders were leaking, as he tried to maintain his footing.

“Chris was right where he needed to be and had the presence of mind to intercept the guy who seemingly was looking for an assist at the same time we were offering one,” reported Scott on his YouTube channel, Ken Scott Photography.

Capturing the bird in a blanket, they transported him to the rescue center in Leelanau County for a series of “forced defrostation” experiments. Warm tap water was finally able to remove the “ice beast”, and several days later, on February 10, the eagle, unhurt was ready to be released into the wild once again.

(WATCH the video below…)

“Dads are most ordinary men turned by love into heroes, adventurers, story-tellers, and singers of song.” – Pam Brown

Steven Sim, CC license

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