All News - Page 717 of 1721 - Good News Network
Home Blog Page 717

Elementary Schoolers Are Sending Hundreds of Christmas Trees to US Troops Stationed Around the World

Between studying for tests and finishing some last-minute projects, these fifth-grade students are sending 600 donated Christmas trees to service members who will be on duty around the world for the holiday season.

The sweet Yuletide initiative at Bethlehem Elementary School in New Hampshire is their contribution to the Trees for Troops program, currently in its 14th year of operation.

For the troops receiving the trees, the gift of Christmas cheer makes a substantial difference. Sam Patree, one of the first Bethlehem students to participate in the Trees for Troops program, has since become a U.S. Marine. 14 years after he helped donate trees to service members, Patree has received his first tree from the program.

And students aren’t the only ones pitching in to cheer overseas soldiers. More than 200,000 sustainably grown trees from 25 states have been donated to Trees for Troops since was founded in 2005, and FedEx ships them for free.

RELATEDWatch Deaf Janitor’s Emotional Reaction to Children’s Birthday Surprise

In addition to teaching the students how their efforts can positively affect the world, it has also taught them valuable life skills, such as fundraising, time management, and the importance of resource allocation.

“They learn how to raise money,” organizer Nigel Manley told WMUR. “They do cold calling. They write all the tags that send special messages to the troops, and we put them on the trees.”

“I know how it feels to be away from your family and your loved ones during the holidays. It’s a really tough season,” Sam Petree told WMUR. “These kids are supporting the troops, learning about them and what they do, and with that, it builds respect for everybody.”

Visit the Christmas Spirit Foundation to get involved with their tree donation program.

(WATCH the news footage below) – Photo used with permission, Trees for Troops on Facebook

Deck The Halls Of Social Media By Sharing This Great News Story

“Happiness is a butterfly which, when pursued, is always just beyond your grasp but which, if you will sit down quietly, may alight upon you.” – Nathaniel Hawthorne

Quote of the Day: “Happiness is a butterfly which, when pursued, is always just beyond your grasp but which, if you will sit down quietly, may alight upon you.” – Nathaniel Hawthorne

Photo: by Thomas Magnier, CC license, Flickr

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?

Why You Should Stop Setting Goals and How They Might Be Contributing To Your Unhappiness

The Lesson: There is not a significant correlation between personal accomplishment and happiness – in fact, accomplishment often creates new stressors that result in discontentment, as it creates new goals that need to be accomplished in turn. Shawn Achor, however, examines how an incorrect system – one in which happiness is predicated on achievement – can be inverted so that when happiness, not accomplishment, is the primary focus, accomplishment naturally follows.

Notable Excerpt: “Most people follow the formula, which is if you work harder, you’re going to be successful. ‘As soon as you achieve these goals, think how happy you’re going to be’ – think how often we do that. ‘As soon as I finish this project, I’ll be happier … as soon as I get the right job, I’ll feel happier,’ but what we notice is that formula … is scientifically broken … Every time your brain has had a success in the past, what have you done? You’ve changed the goal post for what success looked like almost immediately.”

The Speaker: Shawn Achor is a New York Times bestselling author and Harvard-educated expert on the psychology of happiness. The American motivational speaker has spent much of his life researching the science of happiness and publishing his findings for the masses. Achor also founded GoodThink Inc., an organization dedicated to giving lectures on science-backed methods of pursuing happiness.

The Book: “The Happiness Advantage” discusses how happiness is directly related to our work performance, and our ability to achieve in both our personal lives and a work setting. Using scientific research and psychology, Achor explores what is truly the driving vessel behind success.

(LISTEN to the inspiring talk below) – Photo by Don McCullough, CC

Good Advice? SHARE It – Or Check Out More On Our Good Talks Page

Secret Santa Pays Off $430,000 of Layaway Items at Walmart – Turns Out it Was Tyler Perry

Tyer Perry selfie on social media in 2018

Christmas came early for hundreds of families thanks to Tyler Perry.

Earlier this week, the actor and filmmaker paid for all of the layaway items at two Walmarts in his city of Atlanta, Georgia.

Between the two stores, Perry ended up paying for $432,635 worth of layaways. All the lucky shoppers have to do is pay one penny at the time of pick-up to take their items home.

Though the movie star tried to do the good deed anonymously, he says that unforeseen circumstances revealed him as the Secret Santa.

RELATEDMetallica Feeds the Hungry on Every Stop of Their World Tour

“Merry Christmas to everybody!” Perry said in a Twitter video formally announcing the gesture. “I know it’s a hard time, a lot of people are struggling, and I’m just really, really grateful to be able to be in a position to do this.”

Amongst the thousands of followers praising Perry for his kindness, the Walmart Twitter page responded to the video by saying: “Anonymous or not, we hope you know that you just made Christmas for so many families. You went above and beyond. Thank you.”

(WATCH Perry’s announcement video below) – Photo by Tyler Perry

Be Sure And Share This Sweet Story With Your Friends On Social Media

In Bid to Cut Food Waste, Kellogg’s is Using Their Rejected Cornflakes to Make Beer

Instead of letting misfit cereal go to waste, Kellogg’s is turning their rejected cereal flakes into beer.

The food company’s new “Throw Away IPA” is being brewed with 70% wheat and 30% corn flakes that were too small, big, or undercooked to make it onto supermarket shelves from their UK manufacturing locations.

Additionally, 10 pence from every can sold will be donated to Fareshare, a food poverty charity.

The English beer is being made by Seven Bro7hers Brewery, which has locations in Salford and Manchester. According to the beer experts, the brew tastes sweeter than the usual IPA – and it maintains the iconic golden color of its breakfast cereal ingredients.

RELATEDInstead of Burying Their Competition, Fellow Brewers Rush to Save Batch for Injured Beer Maker

Each Throw Away IPA brew uses roughly 132 pounds (60 kilograms) of rejected cornflakes. Since the craft brewery first teamed up with the food company to make the beer earlier in the year, Kellogg’s says that it has reduced their UK-based food waste by 12.5%.

Corporate social responsibility manager for Kellogg’s UK, Kate Prince, said: “Kellogg’s is always exploring different and sustainable ways to reduce food waste in its factories. So it is great to be involved in such a fun initiative with a local supplier.

“Kellogg’s is working hard to eliminate food waste in our manufacturing processes and give our consumers the wholesome products they love with minimum impact on the planet,” she added.

We’ll Cheers To This! Be Sure And Share The Good News With Your Mates On Social Media – Photo by Kellogg’s

Tears Flow as 88-Year-old Finally Meets Biological Daughter She Thought Died At Birth

Genevieve Purinton was only 18 years old when she gave birth to her one and only child back in 1949.

When she asked to see the baby, however, the doctors told her that the child had died.

Now 88 years old, Purinton lives in an assisted living facility in Tampa, Florida. Since her eight siblings have passed away, she didn’t think that she had any immediate family left – but then she got a card from a woman named Connie Moultroup.

The card, which included a phone number, said that Moultroup believed herself to be Purinton’s long-lost daughter.

RELATEDWoman Realizes the Old Dog She Just Adopted Was Same One She Had as a Child

Though news reports do not explain why the doctors misinformed Purinton about her daughter’s death, Moultroup says that her adopted mother passed away when she was only 5 years old. Furthermore, Moultroup’s father went on to marry an abusive step-mom.

For years, Moultroup fantasized about her biological mother coming to rescue her – and while this did not come to pass, she was given an Ancestry DNA kit as a Christmas present from her 50-year-old daughter last year.

The kit led Moultroup to call someone with the same last name as her mother.

MOREWatch Soldier’s Emotional Reunion With Dog She Rescued From Iraq Seven Months Ago

“I said, ‘Here’s my mother’s given name,’” Moultroup told WTVT. “She said, ‘That’s my aunt and she’s still alive.’”

Finally, after 69 years of separation, Moultroup and Purinton met each other at the nursing facility earlier this week and the reunion was an emotional one – because not only did Purinton discover that her daughter was still alive, she also found out that she now has a granddaughter and two great-grandchildren.

(WATCH the emotional news coverage below) – Photo by WTVT

Be Sure And Share This Sweet Story Of Family With Your Friends On Social Media 

‘Never seen anything like it’: Watch Ferry Passenger’s Stunning Footage of 200 Frolicking Dolphins

It was just an ordinary Tuesday morning for Henry Irizawa.

He was riding the ferry from Nanaimo to Horseshoe Bay – a trip that he says that he has made at least 300 times.

Except this time, he was 40 minutes into the trip when the captain came on the PA system and excitedly told the passengers that there was a pod of dolphins swimming alongside the ship.

Sure enough, Irizawa and a dozen other passengers raced to the ship’s deck and were surprised by the sight of what appeared to be 200 Pacific white-sided dolphins speeding through the water.

RELATED VIDEO: The Magical Murmurations of Half a Million Starlings

“I couldn’t believe it. It was nothing like I had ever seen. Two hundred dolphins just having so much fun, jumping, racing,” Irizawa told CBC. “People around me couldn’t speak. It was so exciting.”

Irizawa, who is from Comox in British Columbia, Canada, quickly pulled out his phone to record a video of the breath-taking sight.

Since he posted the video to Facebook the following morning, it has been viewed hundreds of thousands of times.

He has also been quick to reassure viewers that the dolphins were swimming alongside the ferry and none of them were struck by the vessel – they were simply content to “escort” it to its destination.

(WATCH the video below) – Photo by Storyful 

You Should Dolphinately Share This Amazing Video With Your Friends On Social Media

“To keep our faces toward change and behave like free spirits in the presence of fate is strength undefeatable.” – Helen Keller

Quote of the Day: “To keep our faces toward change and behave like free spirits in the presence of fate is strength undefeatable.” – Helen Keller

Photo: by Antoine Gady, CC license, Flickr

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?

Researchers Develop Cheap, 10-Minute Test That Can Detect Cancer Anywhere in the Body

Australian scientists are being hailed for possibly developing a quick and easy test that can detect any kind of cancer in a matter of minutes.

Cancer is an extremely complicated and variable disease and different types of cancer have different signatures. Up until now, the scientists have had trouble finding a simple signature that was distinct from healthy cells and common to all cancers – but the team was finally able to identify a unique biomarker that was common in every type of cancer they examined, including prostate, colorectal, lymphoma, and several different forms of breast cancers.

The researchers found that – in a healthy patient – there are tiny molecules called methyl groups that are spread across DNA structures. Since the methyl groups are dramatically affected by the presence of cancer, however, the patterns and clusters of methyl groups will change their formations.

The team then developed a simple tool that could search and identify these pattern changes within a matter of minutes.

RELATEDResearchers Develop Molecule That Can Finally Help Stop Arthritis From Wearing Down Joints

“In healthy cells, these methyl groups are spread out across the genome, but the genomes of cancer cells are essentially barren except for intense clusters of methyl groups at very specific locations,” said Dr. Laura Carrascosa, one of the University of Queensland researchers involved in the project.

Professor Matt Trau said their team discovered that intense clusters of methyl groups placed in a solution caused cancer DNA fragments to fold into unique three-dimensional nanostructures that could easily be separated by sticking to solid surfaces, such as gold.

“We designed a simple test using gold nanoparticles that instantly change color to determine if the 3D nanostructures of cancer DNA are present,” explained Trau.

MORECheap, Electric Bandages Speed Up Healing Process From Two Weeks to Three Days

He said cancer cells released their DNA into blood plasma when they died.

“So we were very excited about an easy way of catching these circulating free cancer DNA signatures in blood,” he said. “Discovering that cancerous DNA molecules formed entirely different 3D nanostructures from normal circulating DNA was a breakthrough that has enabled an entirely new approach to detect cancer non-invasively in any tissue type – including blood.

“This led to the creation of [our] inexpensive and portable detection devices that could eventually be used as a diagnostic tool, possibly with a mobile phone.”

CHECK OUT: Drug That Can Stop a Dozen ‘Untreatable’ Cancers Gets Approval—And Company Vows to Help Every Patient Afford It

The new technology has proved to be up to 90% accurate in tests involving 200 human cancer samples and normal DNA.

If it continues to be successful in clinical trials, the technology could be used alongside smartphones to offer cheap and effective cancer screenings to the masses, especially in rural or undeveloped regions of the world.

“Cancer is a complicated disease, [and currently] every type has a different testing and screening system,” said co-researcher Dr. Abu Sina. “In most cases, there is no general test to test their status. Now, people only go [to get checked out] if they have symptoms. We want [cancer screening] to be part of a regular checkup.”

MOREOvarian Cancer ‘Breakthrough’ Drug Prevents Disease Returning for Years

Additionally, having access to frequent cancer screenings could drastically impact cancer mortality rates, as early cancer detection can greatly increase a patient’s chances of survival.

“We certainly don’t know yet whether it’s the holy grail for all cancer diagnostics, but it looks really interesting as an incredibly simple universal marker of cancer, and as an accessible and inexpensive technology that doesn’t require complicated lab-based equipment like DNA sequencing,” Trau said.

 

The research, which was conducted at the University of Queensland, was published in the journal Nature Communications earlier this week.

(Source: University of Queensland)

Cure Your Friends Of Negativity By Sharing The Good News To Social Media – Photo by University of Queensland

When Cancer-Stricken Farmer Can’t Go Outside, Neighbors Complete His Weeks of Work in a Few Hours

Greg Bishop is never one to ask for favors, but he is always first to offer them – which is why he has become so beloved by the people of Floyd County, Texas.

So when the community heard that the farmer would be unable to participate in this year’s harvest because of the debilitating effects of his chemotherapy treatment, Bishop’s friends and neighbors rushed to his aid and harvested his crop for free.

His crop, spanning 450 acres, was nearly ready to be harvested when his doctor informed him that he must remain indoors due to his weakened immune system – but with the help from the community, the entirety of his harvest was ready to be ginned within days.

Dozens of people came out to lend their support – so many, that some needed to be turned away. A local restaurant provided free burgers to all of the helpers. Even local fuel companies offered to support the event with free fuel and funding, but the farmers decided to pay for the costs anyway.

RELATEDFarmers Stay Silent During Auction So Young Man Can Win the Bid on His Long-Lost Family Farm

Within five hours, the volunteers had processed 1,200 bales of cotton worth $420,000. If Bishop had been forced to do it by himself, it would have taken weeks.

When asked why they so readily offered their help, the volunteer helpers simply gushed about Bishop’s character.

“He’s a very good Christian man. Just a good-hearted man. He’s very humble. He’s just the best person,” Aaron Hendricks, general manager of Floydada Co-Op Gins, shared with Inside Edition.

MOREIsraeli and Palestinian Farmers Find Peace Through Olive Oil

Needless to say, Bishop was emotional over the kindness of his community.

“He was just overwhelmed by what everybody did,” Hendricks told Inside Edition. “He was in tears; He couldn’t thank us enough for what we did.”

The future for Gary Bishop is looking brighter each day, as he continues his treatment and plans for a bone marrow treatment in the upcoming months. His neighbors and friends, ever-willing to help, have established a fund that will help pay for his continuing treatment.

Plant Some Positivity Amongst Your Friends By Sharing The Good News – Photo by Aaron Hendricks

Town Overturns Archaic Snowball Ban After a Determined 9-Year-old Leads the Charge

This 9-year-old boy is already on his way to a seat in Congress after he successfully led a convincing city-wide campaign to lift an archaic ban on snowball fights.

Dane Best was stunned to hear that it was illegal for him to hurl snowballs at his little brother within the city limits of Severance, Colorado.

The ban is technically part of a larger ordinance that was set in place 98 years ago. The ordinance states that it is illegal to throw stones or missiles at any trees, people, property, or buildings – and according to Kyle Rietkerk, assistant to the Severance town administrator, snowballs fall under the “missile” category.

“All of the kids always get blown away that it’s illegal to have snowball fights in Severance,” said Rietkerk, according to the Associated Press. “So, what ends up happening is (town leaders) always encourage the kids with, ‘You have the power, you can change the law.’ No one has.”

LOOKUS Embassy Apologizes for Accidental Mass-Mailing of Invitation for ‘Cat Pajama-Jam Party’

So for the last 98 years, Severance children have always doggedly thrown their winter weapons in secret – until this week.

After he discovered the town law a month and a half ago, Dane became determined to have the ban lifted. He gathered signatures from his classmates and encouraged them to write letters to the city council. Then earlier this week, he made a presentation at the town board meeting asking for the law to be changed.

MOREBusiness Savvy 9-Year-old Sells Out of Cookies by Taking Advantage of Canada’s First Cannabis Sales

Needless to say, the board members unanimously agreed to lift the ban on snowballs.

“We didn’t know that, at his age, he could even have a voice in the community,” Dan’s mother Brooke Best told the Greeley Tribune. “So that’s been pretty cool.”

After Dane was given the honor of throwing the first legal snowball in a century, he says that he now plans on changing other outdated city laws before going on to become US president.

(WATCH the NBC coverage below) – Photo by NBC News

Be Sure And Share This Cool Story With Your Friends On Social Media

2018 Nobel Peace Prize Winners Risk Their Lives to Make the World Better for Victims of Sexual Violence

The Nobel Committee has awarded the 2018 Nobel Peace Prize to Denis Mukwege and Nadia Murad for their efforts to end the use of sexual violence as a weapon of war amidst armed conflict.

The laureates have “made a crucial contribution to focusing attention” on the problem by not only combatting the crime, but, healing the victims.

Nadia Murad is herself a victim of war crimes. She refused to accept the social codes that require women to remain silent and ashamed of the abuses to which they have been subjected. She has shown uncommon courage in recounting her own sufferings and speaking up on behalf of other victims.

Dr. Denis Mukwege has put his own life at risk for decades in order to aid the formerly voiceless victims of wartime violence. Kate Grant, a longtime friend and colleague of Mukwege, paid tribute to the extraordinary physician in an email to GNN.

LOOKMuslims Take Out Full-Page Newspaper Ad to Denounce Anti-Semitism Against “Our Jewish Sisters and Brothers”

“I have been privileged to know Dr. Denis Mukwege for nearly a decade,” she wrote. “When Fistula Foundation adopted a global mission in 2009, he became our very first partner. We have been proud to support his work with more than $2.3 million in grants that help him restore health to thousands of women who have suffered from traumatic fistula incurred as a result of sexual violence.

“Since the announcement in October that he would receive the 2018 Nobel Peace Prize, Fistula Foundation has established the Denis Mukwege Fistula Fund to support his future work, for which nearly $200,000 has already been raised. Our community has also celebrated this news, collecting more than 700 messages of congratulations and well wishes via an e-card. Some of the signatures are from grateful champions of his work from 36 countries around the world.

“He is truly a remarkable man, and it has been a pleasure to get to know him well over the last decade. The son of a Pentecostal minister, Dr. Mukwege is a quietly devout man who told me at our very first meeting that he wanted to do with his hands what he felt that his father had done with his words: make the world a better place.

WATCHAfter Man Plays His Cello at Bomb Site, He Spurs Citywide Movement to Combat Violence With Music

“And he truly has. His 400-bed Panzi Hospital is a beacon of healing and hope to women who have been traumatized by decades of war. It has been said that the Democratic Republic of the Congo is the worst place in the world to be a woman, and if you hear Dr. Mukwege share the stories of women and young girls, you will know this is true. He and his staff work day and night to heal these victims—body and soul.

“What Dr. Mukwege does is important, and dangerous. He is a global force, using his voice beyond the walls of Panzi Hospital to speak on the world stage to denounce the crimes of armed groups that have operated in DRC for more than two decades. He has been targeted by assassins who took his daughters and wife captive. Yet, this remarkable champion of women perseveres.

“Every day, he serves as my North Star. His portrait has hung on the wall next to my desk for nearly as long as I’ve known him. In a white doctor’s coat and a lapel pin that says ‘Do not stand idly by,’ he reminds me every day of the sacrifices he’s made to give the voiceless a voice, and return their health and hope.

WATCHMan Behind the World’s Longest-Running Free Clinic Has Spent 44 Years Treating 2 Million People

“Join the 700+ others from around the world who have already left a message for Dr. Mukwege on our e-card: add your name and message, which will be delivered to him after the Nobel Ceremony on December 10th.”

Kate Grant is CEO of the Fistula Foundation, based in San Jose, California and dedicated to ending the suffering caused by obstetric fistula.

(WATCH the video below) – Photo by the Fistula Foundation

Be Sure And Share The News With Your Friends On Social Media

“In the school of life, difficult people are the faculty. They teach us the lessons that we would be most unlikely to learn on our own.” – Mark I. Rosen

Quote of the Day: “In the school of life, difficult people are the faculty. They teach us the lessons that we would be most unlikely to learn on our own.” – Mark I. Rosen

Photo: by Thomas Hawk, CC license, Flickr

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?

How They Saved a Species in Wyoming (But Was it Worth it?)

The Lesson: A species on the brink of extinction can be saved – but at what point do the expenses and resources spent on that effort become too much to bear? This question has become increasingly difficult to answer, as scientists and journalists alike work to understand the merit of saving a species when doing so has no clear-cut benefit, but this conservationist says that these efforts can result in groundbreaking new discoveries, biotechnology, and perhaps even commercial products.

Notable Excerpt: “…there’s another way that all this ferret saving work could have indirect benefits … CRISPR could be used to help ferrets. But CRISPR (a gene editing technology that could help the ferret become resistant to disease) is so new, there’s a lot to be discovered still, and maybe when scientists poke around with CRISPR for ferrets, they’ll learn something about disease resistance, or genetic diversity. And that could be used to save other species; that could include keystone species, like the bush elephant, or the coral.”

The Guest: Kimberly Fraser is a conservation specialist and a trailblazer in the fight to save the black-footed ferret.

The Host: Harvard Graduate Dylan Matthews is a correspondent and journalist for Vox whose 2013 articles written for The Washington Post won him their “Publisher’s Award”. Matthews focuses on topics that are politically scientific and environmentally conscientious.

The Podcast: Produced by Vox, Future Perfect investigates effective altruism and the “innovative solutions to modern problems that no one is talking about”. Stream their episodes, each about 20 minutes per podcast, on Vox’s website, iTunes, and Stitcher.

(LISTEN to the inspiring talk below) – Photo by Kimberly Fraser / USFWS

Good Advice? SHARE It – Or Check Out More On Our Good Talks Page

Scientists Develop Molecule That Can Finally Help Stop Arthritis From Wearing Down Joints

Potential arthritis treatment prevents cartilage breakdown
Injectable material made of nanoscale particles can deliver arthritis drugs throughout cartilage.
Written by Anne Trafton
MIT News

Osteoarthritis, a disease that causes severe joint pain, affects more than 20 million people in the United States. Some drug treatments can help alleviate the pain, but there are no treatments that can reverse or slow the cartilage breakdown associated with the disease.

In an advance that could improve the treatment options available for osteoarthritis, MIT engineers have designed a new material that can administer drugs directly to the cartilage. The material can penetrate deep into the cartilage, delivering drugs that could potentially heal damaged tissue.

“This is a way to get directly to the cells that are experiencing the damage, and introduce different kinds of therapeutics that might change their behavior,” says Paula Hammond, head of MIT’s Department of Chemical Engineering and the senior author of the study.

RELATEDCheap, Electric Bandages Speed Up Healing Process From Two Weeks to Three Days

In the study, the researchers showed that delivering an experimental drug called insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) with this new material prevented cartilage breakdown much more effectively than injecting the drug into the joint on its own.

Osteoarthritis is a progressive disease that can be caused by a traumatic injury such as tearing a ligament; it can also result from gradual wearing down of cartilage as people age. A smooth connective tissue that protects the joints, cartilage is produced by cells called chondrocytes but is not easily replaced once it is damaged.

Previous studies have shown that IGF-1 can help regenerate cartilage in animals. However, many osteoarthritis drugs that showed promise in animal studies have not performed well in clinical trials.

CHECK OUT: Back Pain May Soon Be a Thing of the Past After Scientists Successfully Implant Lab-Grown Spinal Discs

The MIT team suspected that this was because the drugs were cleared from the joint before they could reach the deep layer of chondrocytes that they were intended to target. To overcome that, they set out to design a material that could penetrate all the way through the cartilage.

The sphere-shaped molecule they came up with contains many branched structures called dendrimers that branch from a central core. The molecule has a positive charge at the tip of each of its branches, which helps it bind to the negatively charged cartilage. Some of those charges can be replaced with a short flexible, water-loving polymer, known as PEG, that can swing around on the surface and partially cover the positive charge. Molecules of IGF-1 are also attached to the surface.

When these particles are injected into a joint, they coat the surface of the cartilage and then begin diffusing through it. This is easier for them to do than it is for free IGF-1 because the spheres’ positive charges allow them to bind to cartilage and prevent them from being washed away. The charged molecules do not adhere permanently, however. Thanks to the flexible PEG chains on the surface that cover and uncover charge as they move, the molecules can briefly detach from cartilage, enabling them to move deeper into the tissue.

MOREDoctor That Discovered Natural Way to Treat Vertigo for Free Writes Book On How Sufferers Can Thrive

“We found an optimal charge range so that the material can both bind the tissue and unbind for further diffusion, and not be so strong that it just gets stuck at the surface,” says Brett Geiger, MIT graduate student and lead author of the paper

Once the particles reach the chondrocytes, the IGF-1 molecules bind to receptors on the cell surfaces and stimulate the cells to start producing proteoglycans, the building blocks of cartilage and other connective tissues. The IGF-1 also promotes cell growth and prevents cell death.

When the researchers injected the particles into the knee joints of rats, they found that the material had a half-life of about four days, which is 10 times longer than IGF-1 injected on its own. The drug concentration in the joints remained high enough to have a therapeutic effect for about 30 days. If this holds true for humans, patients could benefit greatly from joint injections — which can only be given monthly or biweekly — the researchers say.

MOREFDA Grants ‘Breakthrough’ Status to Psilocybin Mushroom Therapy for Untreatable Depression

In the animal studies, the researchers found that cartilage in injured joints treated with the nanoparticle-drug combination was far less damaged than cartilage in untreated joints or joints treated with IGF-1 alone. The joints also showed reductions in joint inflammation and bone spur formation.

“Delivery of growth factors using nanoparticles in a manner that sustains and improves treatments for osteoarthritis is a significant step for nanomedicines,” says Kannan Rangaramanujam, a professor of ophthalmology and co-director of the Center for Nanomedicine at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, who was not involved in the research.

Cartilage in rat joints is about 100 microns thick, but the researchers also showed that their particles could penetrate chunks of cartilage up to 1 millimeter — the thickness of cartilage in a human joint.

RELATEDCannabis Oil ‘Significantly’ Improves the Symptoms of Crohn’s Disease in Small, First-of-its-Kind Study

“That is a very hard thing to do. Drugs typically will get cleared before they are able to move through much of the cartilage,” Geiger says.

The researchers began developing this material as a way to treat osteoarthritis that arises after traumatic injury, but they believe it could also be adapted to treat age-related osteoarthritis. They now plan to explore the possibility of delivering different types of drugs, such as other growth factors, drugs that block inflammatory cytokines, and nucleic acids such as DNA and RNA.

Reprinted with permission from MIT News

Cure Your Friends Of Negativity By Sharing The Good News To Social MediaPhoto by Brett Geiger and Jeff Wyckoff

When Homeless Man Finds $17,000 Outside of Food Bank, He Turns It In So It Can Help Feed Others

When a homeless man stopped by his local food bank for a meal early one August morning, he found a lot more than just food outside their door.

Kevin Booth had originally planned to grab some of the free baked goods that are left outside of the Sumner Food Bank for people to take when the facility is closed at night. Instead, he saw a peculiar brown paper bag sitting outside the locked front door.

Thinking that it held food, Booth opened the bag only to see that it contained stacks of $20 bills.

The bag was collectively filled with $17,000 in cash. Needless to say, that money would have made a great difference to Booth, and there was no one around to know that he had taken it.

LOOKWhen Stranger Finds Lost Wallet on Airplane, He Returns It to Owner With Even More Cash Inside

But the 32-year-old says that he knew that the money would serve more people at the food bank, so he waited until volunteer Anita Miller arrived to open up the facility.

“There are a lot of people who would have taken it,” Booth told the News Tribune. “I’m just not that person.”

She was shocked to hear about what had been left outside their door, and she immediately called the police. Though the Sumner Police Department of Washington reviewed their security footage, they were not able to identify who dropped off the package.

RELATEDGuy Transforms Man He Thought Was Online Scammer into Village Saint by Sending Him $30 Camera

After waiting the necessary 90 days for someone to claim the cash, they turned it over to the food bank and honored Booth for his compassion.

Miller says that she has been sharing the cash with Booth by giving him portions of the donation in the form of gift cards. Though he lives in a tent in the nearby forest, he has turned down her offers of shelter, although he does accept her gifts of winter clothes.

WATCHGirl Scout’s Hilariously Honest Cookie Reviews Lead to Record-breaking Sales

Additionally, a town resident has started a GoFundMe campaign to help raise money for Booth to buy the VW van that he dreams of using as shelter.

The food bank serves free meals to roughly 1,000 people every month, including Booth – and thanks to the mysterious multi-thousand dollar package, which is the largest donation ever made to the food bank, they will finally be able to finance a new walk-in freezer, Miller excitedly told reporters.

(WATCH the news coverage below) – Photo by Kurtis Hedge via GoFundMe

Be Sure And Share The Incredible Story Of Honesty With Your Friends On Social Media

Dog Saves Its Owner’s Life When It Sniffs Out Cancer, Not Once, But Three Times

This Siberian husky doesn’t just have a sweet face to look at – she’s also got a nose that is credited for saving her owner’s life.

Sierra the dog has been able to smell Stephanie Herfel’s ovarian cancer not once, but three times. On top of that, she has also managed to sniff out cancer in nearby strangers as well.

Sierra’s first cancer detection occurred in 2013 when the pup was roughly 2 years old. At the time, Herfel had been experiencing some abdominal pain, but a doctor had simply prescribed her some antibiotics for an ovarian cyst. She became concerned, however, when Sierra reacted oddly to Herfel’s stomach.

“She put her nose on my lower belly and sniffed so intently that I thought I spilled something on my clothes. She did it a second and then a third time. After the third time, Sierra went and hid. And I mean hid!” Herfel told the Journal Sentinel.

RELATEDWatch Dog Rush to Rescue Struggling Canine Friend After He Falls into Backyard Pool

Herfel eventually found that the anxious pup had curled herself up into a ball in the back of a closet. Herfel then listened to her instincts and made an appointment with a gynecologist only to have a series of tests reveal that she had stage 3C ovarian cancer several weeks later.

She had been fortunate to receive the diagnosis before the cancer had spread any further. After undergoing a hysterectomy, Herfel stayed on chemotherapy meds until 2014. Then in 2015 and 2016, Sierra sounded the olfactory alarm again by hiding in the closet – this time for when the cancer reoccurred in Herfel’s liver and then in her pelvic area.

Additionally, Sierra hid in the closet when a friend with a pre-known ovarian cancer case stopped by their home in Madison, Wisconsin for a visit; and the pup reacted the same way when a worker came by to help remodel Herfel’s kitchen. Herfel and her husband then notified the worker’s boss because they felt it was the right thing to do.

WATCHDog That Shoplifted a Book on ‘Abandonment’ is Given the Love It Was Asking For

Herfel, now 52 years old and retired from her job as a proposal writer, is currently cancer-free and working as an advocate for the disease – and she hopes to write a book about the dog who saved her life.

“I owe my life to that dog,” Herfel told the Sentinel. “She’s really been a godsend to me. She has never been wrong.”

Be Sure And Share This Pawesome Story With Your Friends On Social MediaPhoto by Stephanie Herfel

“The night shall be filled with music, and the cares that infest the day shall fold their tents… and silently steal away.” – Longfellow

Quote of the Day: “The night shall be filled with music, and the cares that infest the day shall fold their tents… and silently steal away.” – Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

Photo: Pueblo, Colorado, © GWC

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?

DJ Spins Records From His Garden Shed Since 1974 for an Audience of One – His Wife

For the last 44 years, this self-made DJ has played for the “smallest audience in the world” from his garden shed – but that’s about to change. Hear The Good News Guru tell the heartwarming story (from the November 30, 2018 Ellen K. Morning Show on KOST-103.5 radio in Los Angeles).

WATCH the video from the BBC at GNN… (Image from BBC video Tweet)

Subscribe to our Good News podcast on iTunes, or for Android devices on Podbean.

How to Go Through a Divorce and Make it Out Stronger

The Lesson: Divorce doesn’t need to be the end of a relationship. Perhaps this may be the case in a romantic sense, but two individuals can still work together for the sake of their family and their personal well-being. In this podcast, Laura Wasser discusses not only how to survive a divorce, but how to emerge stronger on the other end of it, all while avoiding the negative influences of an industry predicated on the legality behind divorce.

Notable Excerpt: “It’s weird to me that we are more willing to talk about breast cancer than we are about divorce. I think when people go into it they feel so isolated. [My parents] divorced when I was about sixteen, and they were great test cases for what we preach, not only at the firm, but at [my online divorce service] because they did it in the most civil, amicable, respectful way, and I kind of grew up going ‘oh, why is this a big deal? We’re still a family.’”

The Guest: Laura Wasser is a successful divorce attorney and the founder of the online divorce service, It’s Over Easy. Having been raised in a household with divorced parents, Wasser seeks to create a mature conversation about divorce – one that promotes stability and amiability during the difficult period of divorce. Having consulted notable celebrities such as Ryan Reynolds, Heidi Klum, and Angelina Jolie, Wasser has become a prominent influence in how divorces of our day and age are handled.

The Host: Over the course of his 30-year career in psychology, health, and counseling, Dr. Drew Pinsky has become a goldmine of information on dealing with trauma. Dr. Drew is the author of several bestselling self-help books, including “Cracked: Life on the Edge in a Rehab Clinic” and “The Mirror Effect”. In addition to hosting multiple hit podcasts, such as The Dr. Drew and Adam Show and the Dr. Drew Show, he is famous for hosting several reality TV shows and self-help radio segments.

The Podcast: The Dr. Drew Podcast covers topics including medical health and wellness, family, relationships, and mental health, all under the auspice of Dr. Drew’s knowledge and medical expertise.

(LISTEN to the talk below) Editor’s note: podcast contains some explicit content. Photo by Nick Youngson, CC.

Good Advice? SHARE It – Or Check Out More On Our Good Talks Page