All News - Page 1102 of 1714 - Good News Network
Home Blog Page 1102

Doctor Delivers Babies With Special Tradition Honoring the ‘Future Important Person’ (WATCH!)

Doctor-Andrew-Jaja-obstetrician-w-baby-UPMCvideo

Dr. Carey Andrew-Jaja, an obstetrician at Magee Womens Hospital in Pittsburgh, has delivered many thousands of babies, but to him each one is special. He welcomes each of them into the world by singing a hearty song in their honor. “Happy Birthday,” is one of his favorites.

Another favorite is, “It’s a Wonderful World.” Whatever the song, Andrew-Jaja delights in the tradition he inherited from his now-retired mentor, who used to sing to every newborn.

He spends the extra time and energy because he believes each one is “a future important person,” and needs to be treated as such.

WATCH the video from the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center – Story tip from Kate Q. Sibole

SHARE to Multiply the GOOD! (Use Buttons Below)

25 Percent Drop in Stroke Rate for Americans

Mother listens to son's heart in a donor recipient - NBC video

heart-stethoscope-lrg-imelenchon-cc

Fewer Americans are having strokes and those who do have a lower risk of dying from them finds a new study led by researchers at Johns Hopkins.

The study found a 24 percent overall decline in first-time strokes in each of the last two decades, especially among people 65 and older. A dramatic 20 percent overall drop in deaths after stroke was recorded each decade, primarily among those younger than age 65. Mortality rates held firm in older people.

The results were similar across race and gender, a finding that researchers were heartened to discover since a previous study suggested African-American stroke rates were not improving.

“We can congratulate ourselves that we are doing well, but stroke is still the No. 4 cause of death in the United States,” says study co-author Josef Coresh, MD, PhD, a professor of epidemiology at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

Coresh worries the obesity epidemic, which began in the 90s, will push rates back up.

The decrease in stroke incidence and mortality is partly due to more successful control of risk factors such as blood pressure, smoking cessation and the wide use of statin medications for controlling cholesterol, according to the researchers. However, an increase in diabetes likely acted in the opposite direction, pushing up stroke rates, though to a lesser extent.

For their analysis, researchers used results from the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities study, which used 15,792 residents of four U.S. communities who were between the ages of 45 and 64 when the study began in the late 1980s.

Nearly 800,000 Americans suffer strokes each year; of those, about 600,000 are first-time strokes. “Stroke is not only one of the main causes of death, but a leading cause of long-term disability in adults. Therefore, prevention is the best strategy,” says study leader Silvia Koton, PhD, MOccH, a visiting faculty member at the Bloomberg School and incoming nursing department chair at Tel Aviv University.

A report on the results is published in the July 16 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA).

Learn more about the study from Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health

Image of the Day – Dinosaur in China Flew With 4 Wings

Changyuraptor-S-Abramowicz-Dinosaur_Institute-NHM

An exquisitely feathered fossil unearthed in northeastern China shows a new dinosaur, named Changyuraptor yangi, which measures more than 4 feet long and — like the Microraptor, which is less than half its size –flies with four wings.

(READ the story from IB Times)

Artist’s rendering by Stephanie Abramowicz, Dinosaur Institute, National History Museum

Despite Air Raids, Israeli Hospital Treats Palestinian Children

Jewish ambulance helpers -United Hatzalah photo

Jewish ambulance helpers -United Hatzalah photo

While her hometown is under constant missile attack from the direction of Gaza, pediatric intensive care unit nurse Irena Nosel cares for critically ill Gazans in an Israeli hospital.

Over the past couple weeks Nosel and her family have scrambled for shelter when the air raid sirens warn of incoming missiles, yet she hasn’t missed a day of work as head nurse at Wolfson Medical Center.

She and the rest of the medical staff are caring for more than a dozen Palestinian children among the Israeli patients there.

“Children are children. They are not our enemies,” she tells ISRAEL21c.

The personal political leanings of the hospital staff run the full spectrum from right to left, but have no bearing on their work.

(READ the full story at Israel21)

Widow’s First Anniversary Dinner Alone is Made Special by Red Lobster Employees

Red-Lobster-buys-dinner-for-widow-IMGUR-Coppin-it-washin-it

Every year for 30 years, she was taken on a date to Red Lobster, her favorite restaurant, by her husband for their anniversary.

This year would be different, according to their daughter, a Reddit user who posted the story on the website.

“He passed away in March from cancer, and today, on what would be their anniversary, my sister took mom to keep the tradition alive,” wrote ‘Coppin-it-washin-it’ on Thursday.

Manager Chad Ward and server Taylor Murrie-Robinson, who work at a Red Lobster in Columbia, Missouri, picked up the check, leaving a note that read:

“We are sorry to hear about your husband’s passing, but we appreciate your loyalty in spending 31 years of your anniversary with us. For your appreciation your meal is on us! We look forward to spending your next anniversary with us! Sincerely, Red Lobster + your server, Taylor.”

(READ the full story at TODAY)

Photo posted on Imgur by Coppin-it-washin-it via Reddit

Germany Celebrates Champions’ Return After 2014 World Cup Win

Germany-welcomed-home-rally-

Germany’s World football champions have arrived back home in Berlin after landing their fourth World Cup title.

Hundreds of thousands of fans welcomed Germany’s World Cup-winning players as they paraded the trophy through Berlin to the Brandenburg Gate on Tuesday.

“Nobody deserved it as much as we did,” Coach Joachim Low said about an hour after Sunday’s 1-0 win over Argentina.

(WATCH the ESPN videos below)

 

 

South Carolina Town Rallies to Get Back Job for Fired Gay Police Chief

love sign

love signEight years ago, the people of a small conservative town in South Carolina voted overwhelmingly for a state amendment banning gay marriage.

Today, residents of Latta are rallying to the defense of their sheriff, Crystal Moore, after she was fired and condemned by the mayor because her lifestyle was “questionable.”

After two decades of service in law enforcement, they said her dedication to the town mattered more than her sexual orientation.

(READ the AP story via the Vancouver Sun)

Story tip from Craig Withers

Alzheimer’s Rate Falling in the United States, Studies Show

Elderly Croatia looking up-KatinkaBille-FlickrCC
Never too old to enjoy the sunshine –Katinka Bille, CC

Elderly Croatia looking up-KatinkaBille-FlickrCC

“The number of new cases of dementia has been declining in recent decades in the United States, Germany and other developed countries, a trio of new studies shows.”

“In one U.S. study, researchers found that compared with the late 1970s, the rate of dementia diagnosis was 44 percent lower in recent years. The sharpest decline was seen among people in their 60s.”

“Improved heart health may be one reason for decline seen in some developed countries.”

(READ the story from HealthDay.com)

Photo credit: KatinkaBille on Flickr with CC license

Photo of the Day – Wales From the Air

Explore the beauty and bustle of Wales from the eye of an aerial camera operated by the folks at Mighty Sky.

Follow surfers and skateboarders, visit castles and industrial sites, all with renewed interest because the images are captured on video from the sky.

(Thanks to Michael Hamilton for submitting his photo. You can upload yours here, and it might be named the Photo of the Day.)

This Package Could Help Amazon Use 200 Times Fewer Boxes

Repack-bag-concept-packaging

With consumers shopping online at more than five times the rate of a decade ago, and total e-commerce sales around $1.5 trillion this year, the number of boxes and packages used for shipping is also exploding.

UK-based designer Yu-Chang Chou hopes to help stem the flow of single-use packages through a new design that can be reused 200 times. He calls it the Repack bag. Once the package is emptied, it can be folded and tossed in a nearby mailbox to return to the post office for someone else to buy and use.

(READ the story, w. photos, from Fast Co-exist)

Take An Adventure in Paradise – Activate Your Spirit With This Video

You are sourced and fueled and funded by a renewable source within you. It never runs out!

So says this uplifting video and song by Rev. Michael Bernard Beckwith founder of the Agape Institute in California.

Dr. Beckwith is the originator of the Life Visioning Process, which he teaches throughout the country along with meditation, scientific prayer, and the spiritual benefits of selfless service. He facilitates retreats, workshops and seminars. His books include: Inspirations Of The Heart and Forty Day Mind Fast Soul Feast.

Thousands gather weekly to receive inspiration from Dr. Beckwith at the Agape International Spiritual Center in Culver City

“Adventure in Paradise” is the first of nine tracks on TranscenDance, Michael’s musical album which may be downloaded at itunes.apple.com.

“Love and Joy is everywhere! … Take a holy breath right here.”

(WATCH the video above – Note: the song gets better so keep watching)

Michael-Beckwith-video-screenshot

Biodegradable Urns Will Turn You Into A Tree After You Die

Bios-Urn-PreventDiseaseDotCom

Trees are the lungs of our planet. The more trees we plant, the cleaner our air for generations to come. Instead of cutting down trees to make way for more cemeteries, instead of burying our loved ones using poisonous embalming fluid, a growing number of people with environmental concerns are choosing green burials, which could instead increase the number of trees and fertilize the land.

As a general rule, green burials avoid the use of embalming fluid and cement burial vaults, and can be considerably less costly than traditional burials, ensuring that grieving loved ones are not pressured into high-priced caskets they can’t afford.

Let’s Start Converting Cemeteries Into Forests

A nonprofit organization in Toronto, Canada (PreventDisease.com) is now offering the Bios Urn, a funerary urn made from biodegradable materials that will turn you into a tree after you die. Inside the urn there is a pine seed — or a maple, or oak, or ash — that will grow into a memorial tree to commemorate your loved one. Bios Urns use the natural cycle of life to transform death into growth.

The Heart of The Bios Urn

The top part of the Bios Urn is especially designed to allow the seed to sprout. Before you bury the urn, you will need to mix the components with some dirt from where you want your tree to grow. The components will naturally facilitate germination of the seed when mixed with soil.

heartpfbios-mb9The urn’s structure keeps the seed separate from the ashes, until the urn itself begins to degrade. The lower capsule is where you store the ashes, while the tree grows in the upper compartment. The entire urn becomes part of the sub-soil and a fertilizer for the tree.

The upper capsule is a sealed unit to ensure the good condition of the seed until it begins to sprout. There is no expire date as long as it is kept in a cool dry place.

PreventDisease.com offers a choice of Pine, Ginko, Maple, Oak, Ash, Beech, or Cypress, for $159.99 with free shipping for both North America and Europe.

“Sales have been ongoing for a year and going very well,” says Susan McHilley of the non profit PreventDisease.com, which is selling the green urns.

For more information and to purchase, visit preventdisease.com

Reprinted with permission – photos from preventdisease.com

Photo of the Day – Happy Le Quatorze Juillet Bastille Day!

Bastille-Day-jets-louvre-Jean-Philippe-Gaist-CC-flickr

Today the French National Day of July 14, Fête de la Fédération, commemorates the date 225 years ago when citizens of Paris stormed the Bastille prison during the French Revolution, freeing the seven prisoners being held there and branding the memory of “Bastille Day” forevermore. (1789)

img_3767As an interesting historical footnote, one of the keys to the Bastille, a fortress that was torn down, now resides in George Washington’s home at Mount Vernon. Lafayette sent the key to him in 1790, paying homage to one of the great leaders of the American revolution, a fellow general whom he fought with in the Continental Army against the British a decade earlier in Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and finally, at Yorktown, Virginia.

Top Photo by Jean-Philippe Gaist; Photo of key from Washington Wife

Woman Returns $200 She Stole 15 Years Ago Because ‘I Regret It’

letter-from-Pamela_Hedges-repaying-boss

A woman paid back $200 she stole from a bar 15 years ago while bartending because “it was wrong and I regret it.”

When Pamela Hedges, owner of the sports bar Gibb’s, found out a letter in her mailbox, she thought it was a credit letter from a bank. But when she opened the envelope, she was stunned to find a $200 check and a handwritten apology from a worker she employed fifteen years ago.

(WATCH the video below or READ the story from WWGP-ABC News)

Story tip from Julia Frerichs

Teen Who Lost Leg to Cancer Gets Dream Escort to His Prom

Kieran_Maxwell-UK-cancer-survivor-familyphoto

A teenage cancer survivor who lost his leg to a rare form of the disease had his dreams cut short to one day become a police officer.

However, thanks to a thoughtful teacher, Kieran Maxwell was given a taste of what it would be like to ride with his blue uniformed heroes on Friday night when off-duty police arrived at his house to take him and his date to the school prom

(WATCH the video below or READ the story at the Daily Mail)

 Thanks to Craig Withers for submitting the link!

India’s ‘Plastic Man’ Turns Litter Into Paved Roads

garbage-can-on-city-street-Sam_Javanrouh-CC-Flickr
A professor of chemistry in Madurai, India believes the mounds of trash lining the roads and fields to be a “wonderful resource” for his country.

The innovator created a method for building roads by transforming common plastic litter—not only thicker acrylics and bottles but also grocery bags and wrappers—into a substitute for bitumen in asphalt.

Rajagopalan Vasudevan’s become known as Plastic Man and travels throughout India instructing engineers how to apply it. To date, more than 5,000 kilometers (3,000 miles) of plastic roads have been laid in at least 11 states.

(READ the story from Business Week)

Photo by Sam Javanrouh, with CC license

Photo of the Day – Your Supermoon Photos, July 12

Supermoon over Dallas by Dave Hensley
Supermoon over Dallas by Dave Hensley
Supermoon over Dallas by Dave Hensley

The first of the 2014 summer supermoons filled the night sky last night. Here are some of your photos from around the United States.

CLICK to see the gallery.

(All photos via Flickr with Creative Commons licenses.)

Sunni and Shiite Brotherhood in Iraq Still Exists Playing Game Of Rings

Mheibbis-ring-gamie-in-Iraq-video

In Iraq, a Ramadan game called Mheibbis brings even Sunnis and Shiites together in peaceful competition.

A ring game traditionally played between neighborhoods during the holy month, Mheibbis (meaning, rings) has offered men the opportunity to break Baghdad’s tension and offer messages of unity and brotherhood — even between rival sects.

(READ or LISTEN to the story from NPR News)

Photo: Video on Wikipedia shows Mheibs game playing

5,000 Years Old: Ancient Yew Tree Identified In Wales

yew-tree-in-Normandy-1600yo-CC-Roi.dagobert

A yew tree that hunkers over a graveyard near a church in Wales is more than 5,000 years old, according to experts — making it older than the Great Pyramid of Giza.

The church has launched a campaign to protect old yews throughout the region.

(READ the story from NPR News)

Photo credit: Yew in Normandy is 1600 years old by Roi.dagobert with CC license – Wikipedia

 

Photo of the Day “Manhattanhenge” – Today is NYC Solstice

NYC-sunset-Manhattanhenge-CC-Dan_Nguyen

Today is the annual day of the year when Manhattan’s street grid, first laid out in 1811, aligns perfectly with the setting sun over New Jersey. The sun is so aligned that on a clear day it shines down the East-West streets, illuminating both the north and south sides of the streets, a day sometimes referred to as a Manhattan Solstice or, as Neil deGrasse Tyson calls it, Manhattanhenge.

You can look the sun setting in the New York burough at 8:25 p.m. and then be sure to look again for the first FULL “supermoon” of the summer which will appear in the Saturday evening sky.

(LEARN more from Tyson, or on Wikipedia, here)

Photo by Dan Nguyen, taken from a taxi in NYC (CC license on Flickr)