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Hoping to Be a Grandma One Day, She Bought a Tiny Dress – 7 Years Later, it Turns into Sweet Coincidence

A grandmother’s purchase from 7 years ago is bringing smiles to social media users after Marjorie Zarbaugh made a Facebook post about the serendipitous incident.

Zarbaugh’s mother has always dreamt of having a granddaughter; in fact, the woman from Winter Haven, Florida was so smitten with the idea, she bought a gift for her future grandchild 7 years before it was even born.

Zarbaugh’s mother had been shopping at Macy’s on September 9th, 2011 when she saw a little girl’s dress for sale on a clothing rack. She bought the dress and tucked it away into storage for the day when it would come in handy.

Then in May 2018, Zarbaugh announced that she was pregnant with an unborn daughter named Madelynn. At Zarbaugh’s gender reveal party, her doting mother finally got to give her the dress as a gift.

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“She had bought this little dress years before, hoping she’d have a granddaughter one day,” Zarbaugh wrote in a Facebook post. “I thought it was cool, so I kept the tags on.”

Months later, Zarbaugh was going through her stash of baby clothes when she came across the dress her mother had bought.

Zarbaugh was about to cut the tags off of the dress when she noticed a stunning detail: her mother had bought the dress on Madelynn’s birthday seven years before she was even born.

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“How do you explain that!” wrote Zarbaugh. “Tears, happy tears.”

According to WFTS, the emotional mother says that her decision to keep the tags on the dress was simply “meant to be”.

Be Sure And Pass On The Sweet Story Of Fate To Your Friends On Social MediaPhoto by Marjorie Zarbaugh

Hula Dancing is Proving to Be an Unlikely Source of Reform for Male Prisoners

Hula dancing might not seem like the most obvious pastime for grizzled male prisoners, but it is apparently shaping up to be an unlikely method of reform for California inmates.

The infamous San Quinten State Prison of northern California has been hosting hula classes for the male inmates twice a week – and many of them say that it has become an invaluable source of emotional relief and inspiration.

“Pre-hula, I was a really dark person,” one inmate told Circa. “But hula really spring-boarded it for me. I think, had I not found myself spiritually, I still would be searching.”

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Though there are not many studies that have precisely quantified the benefits of hula dancing, experts say that the traditional art form has a tremendous impact on the physical, mental, and spiritual wellbeing of both Native Hawaiians and non-Natives. This study even says that it helps non-Hawaiian dancers to become more culturally aware and appreciative of other lifestyles.

Similarly, this West Virginia nonprofit has found transformational success in teaching yoga classes at local prisons and correctional facilities.

“The need for healing within the prison environment is profound,” the nonprofit’s co-founder told Good News Network. “They’re using these tools to get in touch with what they care about. What kind of person do they want to be while they’re in prison—and how to find that freedom on the inside while they’re incarcerated. It’s really very powerful.”

(WATCH the video below) – Photo by Patrick Makuakane

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‘Game-Changing’ Approval of Liver Transplant Procedure Expected to Halve the Waiting List

File photo by Senior Airman Nancy Hooks

This “game-changing” new medical procedure is expected to save thousands of people with its promise to halve the amount of patients on liver transplant lists waiting for a reprieve.

The procedure, which was approved for use in the UK this week, uses a perfusion machine to keep donated livers viable for transplantation for three times longer than current methods. The machine works by reducing the rate of tissue deterioration that occurs after the liver has been removed from the donor and extends how long the liver can be stored before transplantation.

Variations of the technique can also allow the liver to be flushed with blood at body temperature and supplied with oxygen, medications, and nutrients, which allows its viability and function to be assessed.

Liver transplantation is a highly successful treatment for end-stage liver disease, which kills 11,000 people a year in England. By the end of the 2017 fiscal year in March 2018, there were 1,043 liver transplants in the UK and 359 patients on the UK active transplant list, according to NHS Blood and Transplant.

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Now that the procedure has been assessed and approved by the National Institute of Health and Care Excellence (NICE), the organization issued final guidelines which recommend that the procedure be used under special arrangements as more data is gathered into its efficacy. However, NICE’s independent advisory committee did not identify any major safety concerns.

Surgeons undertaking the procedure must inform patients about the uncertainty of the procedure’s efficacy, comply with the relevant regulatory and legal requirements of the Human Tissue Authority and should enter details about all patients having this procedure into the NHSBT UK transplant registry.

“In the 30 years I’ve been involved with transplantation, there have been three or four events which have been game-changers and I’m absolutely certain we are looking at a game-changer that will change the way we practice organ storage and transplantation,” said Professor Darius Mirza, Consultant Transplant Surgeon at University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust.

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“It is already changing practice at the centers that have been able to use this technology either within clinical trials or within an expansion of service evaluation.”

Professor Kevin Harris, program director and clinical advisor for the Interventional Procedures Programme at NICE, said: “This procedure offers hope for patients needing a liver transplant. It offers another way of preserving the liver, and assessing whether livers which might have previously been considered unsuitable, can be used safely.

“The latest evidence reviewed by a NICE committee concluded that the procedure worked well and was safe to be offered to patients who had been fully informed of the risks and benefits. Clinicians should seek approval from their trust’s management and record all data from the procedure in a database.

“By using this procedure, more patients on the organ transplant waiting list could be offered a chance of a transplant and there-by potentially extending their lives.”

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45-year-old Sue Bennett, a mother-of-three from Ranton in Staffordshire, had a liver transplant using this new technique in 2015. She recalled her experience by saying: “I signed up for the trial not knowing I would be one of the first to have this procedure in the country. Before my transplant, I was very ill. I was losing weight, I couldn’t sleep and my quality of life was quite low.

“I had a transplant after the hospital found a donor who was a match. The liver was kept alive using this procedure overnight and I was able to have the operation the following day. Nine days later I was back home,” says Bennett. “My life is unbelievably wonderful. I’m very healthy, I’m very happy and very active. I think I‘ve been very lucky.”

John Forsythe, associate medical director at NHS Blood and Transplant, said: “There has been a huge amount of research in the area of preservation and perfusion methods that allow us to both assess precious donor organs and to enhance their function. This could potentially mean the organ works better and improve transplant outcomes.”

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Vanessa Hebditch, director of policy at the British Liver Trust, said: “Every year hundreds of people with advanced liver disease die whilst waiting for a transplant.

“This new device offers real hope as it may improve transplant outcomes and allow livers that were previously thought to be unsuitable to be used and also increase the time that livers are able to be kept.

“It is an exciting development that has the potential to shorten waiting list times and reduce mortality rates from advanced liver disease. After transplant, the vast majority of people go on to lead full and healthy lives and it is truly amazing to see the transformation.”

(Source: University of Birmingham)

Cure Your Friends Of Negativity By Sharing The Good News To Social Media – File photo by U.S. Air Force / Senior Airman Nancy Hooks

Chick-Fil-A Opened On a Sunday in Order to Grant the Birthday Wish of a Boy With Special Needs

Unlike most fast food chains, Chick-Fil-A is closed on Sundays for religious reasons – but one particular restaurant made a special exception to their schedule earlier this week.

A Chick-Fil-A in Mobile, Alabama opened their doors on Sunday as a means of granting the birthday wish of a 14-year-old boy with cerebral palsy and autism.

Elijah Sprague was born prematurely at 18 weeks old. His mother, Rene, worked in the NICU where Elijah was born. After 6 months of Elijah living at the hospital, Rene decided to adopt him despite doctors saying that it was unlikely for him to live longer than one year.

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Needless to say, Elijah has outlived the grim prognosis and grown up to be a sweet teenager.

Today, the youngster adores Chick-Fil-A and dreams of one day working at a drive-thru window – so as a means of celebrating his birthday, his family asked the owner of the local sandwich restaurant if they could open their doors on a Sunday for Elijah’s special day.

“He was like, ‘Why are you even asking? Absolutely, we have to do it,’” Sprague told CBS News.

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True to his word, the store opened on Sunday and staffers baked cookies for Elijah to give away at the drive-thru window.

More than 40 family acquaintances stopped by the window, some of them even going through the drive-thru multiple times. Afterwards, the exuberant teenager and his friends were able to eat dessert and play in the restaurant.

“This is super special to us,” Sprague said. “Elijah’s not going to graduate like our other kids. He’s not going to get married or have kids. So this is just a really cool experience to us for him to have this level of attention… it’s neat for people to recognize he’s a really cool kid.”

(WATCH the video below or our international viewers can watch it on the CBS News website) – Photo by Rene Sprague

Serve Up Some Positivity To Your Friends By Sharing This Sweet Story To Social Media

Grandmother Spent an Entire Year Cleaning Plastic Off 52 English Beaches in Her Spare Time

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This English grandmother has spent an entire year cleaning all of the trash off of 52 British beaches after she made it her 2018 New Year’s resolution to clean one sandy bay each week.

70-year-old Pat Smith spent all of 2018 on Devon and Cornwall’s most iconic beaches each week, armed with bin bags, rubber gloves and a litter picker. She traveled without fail from one end of the South West to the other, collecting litter in beauty spots from Coverack, Cornwall, to Blackpool Sands, Devon. She even spent her Christmas day picking up plastic bottles and fishing gear on Trevone Beach.

But the married mother-of-two has no intention of stopping her campaign just because the year is over.

“Doing 52 beach cleans in 2018 was my New Year’s Resolution and it’s finally done,” said Smith. “I won’t stop, as our beaches need me.

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“I’m driven to try and protect our living planet for my children and grandchildren and I will continue to do everything in my power to achieve that.”

Smith is the founder of the environmental campaign group Final Straw Cornwall. During her year-long cleanup, she says that she was often joined by other campaigners and volunteers who were determined to help her tidy up beach trash – but on some occasions, people would mistake her for doing community service.

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“People don’t understand I’ve been doing this voluntarily,” says Smith. “We should all take responsibility for picking up the litter, as well as ensuring we don’t drop litter in the first place.”

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Smith, who also runs a bed and breakfast in St. Austell, Cornwall, hopes that her efforts will help people to be more aware of their plastic consumption and recycling habits.

“A lot of the rubbish I have picked up consists of everyday items. These things are used by all of us and it is shocking to find them polluting our beautiful beaches,” she added. “Please let’s try to be more thoughtful in this coming year.”

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“Live as if you were to die tomorrow. Learn as if you were to live forever.” – Mahatma Gandhi

Quote of the Day: “Live as if you were to die tomorrow. Learn as if you were to live forever.” – Mahatma Gandhi

Photo: by Rosanetur, CC license via Flickr

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Chef José Andrés is Up to Good Again: He and His Charity Will Feed Furloughed Feds During Shutdown

 

Chef José Andrés has made international headlines in the past for his efforts to feed people in disaster-stricken areas – which is why he is now being praised for serving up meals to furloughed workers amidst the US government shutdown.

In the past, Andrés and his charity, World Central Kitchen, have cooked up millions of meals for hurricane and wildfire victims.

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Now according to a Twitter announcement, the nonprofit will be opening up a kitchen on Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington D.C. as a means of feeding federal workers and their families.

The #ChefsForFeds kitchen will be serving up free hot meals to furloughed workers with identification every day between 11AM and 6PM starting tomorrow.

“We believe that no person should have to go through the pain of not knowing what to feed their children, so we are opening a kitchen,” Andres said in the video. “World Central Kitchen will be there for all Americans.”

Other people are joining in on the cause, too; as a means of helping the chef, social media users raised over $42,000 for the charity in just two days.

(WATCH Chef Andrés’s announcement video below) – Photo by Bob Nichols / USDA

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Island on the Brink of Disaster Plants Thousands of Trees and is Now a Poster Kid for Adapting to Climate Change

Deforestation and climate change had pushed this tiny Tanzanian island to the brink of destruction; but instead of succumbing to the environmental challenges before them, they became a prime example of adaption and transformation.

The island of Kokota is home to 500 villagers who were struggling to provide themselves with food, water, and work after they had harvested the surrounding trees and resources. Because there was no longer a tree canopy to shade most of the island, the soil turned to dust and the freshwater rivers dried up.

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The lack of clean water forced the people of Kokota to sail for 15 hours as a means of retrieving freshwater from the nearby islands. People who ordinarily spent their days working were instead forced to focus on providing water for the community.

Meanwhile, nearby conservationists had discovered the impacts of reforestation on their own island of Pemba – and after helping Kokota plant over 300,000 trees, the island’s economy and livelihood have been totally transformed.

(WATCH the enchanting short film about Kokota below) – Photo by National Geographic

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By Easing Anxiety for Lower-Income Students With 10-Minute Writing Exercise, Test Grades Soar Dramatically

This fascinating new study shows that easing the anxieties of lower-income high school freshman can cut their test failure rate by half.

The study, which was published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, found that brief pre-exam de-stressing strategies could reduce the performance gap often seen between lower-income and higher income students.

“It’s not just about what you know in a particular moment, but your perceptions of the situation, your worries also matter. Your anxiety can affect how you demonstrate what you know when it matters most,” says Barnard College President Sian Leah Beilock, a nationally recognized cognitive scientist who studies the pressures children face in school and led this week’s study.

“We were particularly interested in whether we could help improve test scores in STEM [science, technology, engineering, and mathematics], an area where a broader representation of students is needed.”

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Job opportunities in STEM fields are expanding, but students from lower-income families are often ill-prepared for them. Much of the discrepancy begins in high school, where they don’t take as many STEM classes as other students, in part because they perform poorly in them. One factor may be that they’re not expected to perform well, which creates performance anxiety. The researchers hoped to address some of the downstream psychological consequences of this anxiety, freeing students’ minds to unleash their potential.

“This study shows that students’ grades are not just about what they know,” said Christopher Rozek, lead author on the study and a postdoctoral scholar in the Department of Psychology at Stanford University. “Students’ emotions factor into how well they do in their classes, and schools should continue to prioritize students’ emotional well-being in order to help students perform up to their potential.”

Close to 1,200 freshmen at a large high school in the Midwest took part in the study. They each completed emotion-regulation exercises before their mid-year and final biology exams. Those randomly assigned to the “expressive writing” intervention were asked to spend ten minutes writing about and openly exploring their feelings about the test. Beilock and other researchers have previously shown that writing about one’s anxieties paradoxically reduces their burden, making them feel more manageable and freeing cognitive resources for the task at hand.

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Students given the “reappraisal” intervention instead tried to turn their anxiety into excitement. They read a passage explaining that physiological arousal – a fast heartbeat and sweaty palms – is actually the body’s way of preparing for an important task and that such energy can be harnessed for success. Then they summarized what they’d just read. Previous research has shown that reappraisal, too, can improve performance.

A third group of students got versions of both the expressive writing and reappraisal intervention. A final group served as a control by summarizing a passage instructing them merely to ignore their stress.

The researchers were especially interested in the performance of lower-income students, those who received free or reduced-price lunch. They found that for these students, using one of the three key interventions – expression, reappraisal, or both – instead of the control task significantly improved exam scores. Average exam scores increased from about 57% to about 63%, reducing the performance gap between lower-income and higher-income students by nearly a third.

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Looking beyond exam scores at whether students actually passed both semesters of their 9th grade science course (versus neither or one), the results were even more dramatic. The interventions increased the passing rate for lower-income students from 61% to 82%. Again, all interventions helped them equally, and none helped the higher-income students.

“What our research shows is that by giving those students who feel the most performance anxiety during evaluative situations in school an opportunity to think differently about their worries and anxieties, we can boost performance,” Beilock says.

This work shows that brief emotional regulation exercise – 10 minutes, twice a year – can dramatically reduce failure rates, and that it can be readily implemented on a large scale in a working school environment.

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Alleviating inequalities in resources will surely be part of any solution to the performance gap. “But one other aspect that is less often focused on is how students feel in those important evaluative situations,” Beilock says. She considers these exercises to be part of a toolbox of techniques that can improve the whole person. “It’s something we think about at Barnard as well,” she adds, “not just what our women are learning in the classroom but how we give them the motivation, the psychological tools, so that they can succeed in any situation.”

Beilock has conducted extensive research on performance under pressure. She’s the author of “Choke: What the Secrets of the Brain Reveal about Getting It Right When You Have To” and “How the Body Knows Its Mind: The Surprising Power of the Physical Environment to Influence How You Think and Feel”.

Additionally, she believes anyone can benefit from expression and reappraisal in high-stress situations – even a college president. “I do some ‘me-search’ in addition to research,” she shares. “I practice what I preach here, such as reminding myself that all the anxiety symptoms I sometimes feel in important situations are actually a sign I’m ready to go.”

(Source: Barnard College)

Be Sure And Share The Good News With Your Friends On Social Media – File Photo by Kychn, CC

After Homeless Man Helps Get His Car Out of the Snow, NFL Player Brings Him to Tears With Thank You Gift

This story of a homeless man coming to the rescue of a distressed motorist is a perfect example of how good deeds can be rewarded in the most unexpected ways.

Dave Cochran is a homeless man who lives out of his car with his dog and girlfriend in Kansas City, Missouri. They had been driving through the ice and snow earlier this week when they saw a few cars get stuck in the powder.

Cochran took particular notice of a stranded driver who was stuck in a car with Texas license plates.

“He wasn’t used to this weather. He isn’t used to this cold. He is from Texas,” Cochran told KSHB. “[So I] just pulled over, I went to help him, then he told me he was a Chiefs player. I didn’t know he was a Chiefs player. I looked at him as a normal person and hoped he would do the same for me like I did for him.”

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The driver was Jeff Allen, the offensive lineman for the Kansas City Chiefs. Not only that, Allen had been driving to the local stadium for his game against the Indianapolis Colts when his car got stuck.

Thanks to Cochran, Allen made it to kickoff on time.

Allen later took to social media in hopes of tracking down Cochran so he could thank him for his kindness with tickets to the AFC Championship game.

After the tweet was shared thousands of times, Allen finally managed to get in contact with Cochran, who has never been to a Chiefs game before.

Later in an interview, Cochran says that he “bawled” when he heard he would get to attend the game.

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“All I was expecting was a thank you,” says Cochran. “It’s like a dream come true. I saw the message this morning, and I am not going to fake with you, call me soft … I started bawling to know he is a man of his word and he reached out to contact me.”

(WATCH the interview below) – Photo by KSHB

Be Sure And Share This Inspiring Story Of Kindness With Your Friends On Social Media

Canadian Air Traffic Controllers Send Pizza to US Counterparts Affected by Shutdown

As a means of showing solidarity across international borders, Canadian air traffic controllers have been sending pizzas to their American counterparts amidst the government shutdown.

Despite being included amongst the thousands of government employees who will not be receiving paychecks during the shutdown, air traffic controllers are still being forced to work.

A CATCA center in Edmonton, Alberta was the first to order pizzas for American workers since their unit works closely with the control center in Anchorage, Alaska.

As news of their good deed was shared on social media, however, more and more Canadian air traffic controllers joined the movement by ordering pizzas for their US neighbors.

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Some Canadian CATCA centers simply ordered pizzas for the US bases on the other side of the border – but according to CNN, some control centers have been ordering pizzas for any American units with which they share a common trait, such as a Fort McMurray base ordering pizza for El Paso, Texas on the grounds that they’re both oil towns.

Over 350 pizzas have been sent to American traffic controllers, and that number is expected to grow.

“In the big scheme of things, sending some pizzas to people that are missing paychecks is a small gesture,” Peter Duffey, president of the Canadian Air Traffic Control Association told CNN. “But the message that it sends them is a big gesture.”

Fly This Sweet Story Of Kindness To Your Friends On Social MediaPhoto by PWM ATCT

“The means must be as pure as the end, for in the long run of history, immoral destructive means cannot bring about moral and constructive ends.” – Martin Luther King, Jr. (Born 90 years ago)

Quote of the Day: “The means must be as pure as the end, for in the long run of history, immoral destructive means cannot bring about moral and constructive ends.” – Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. (Born 90 years ago today)

Photo: White House photo, 1966

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Graffiti From British Soldiers on D-Day Found in France

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These fascinating pictures detail graffiti left by British soldiers on the walls of a barn in France—just after the Normandy landings on D-Day.

The doodles and names were drawn by troops that had likely liberated the village of Sommervieu, advancing inland following their amphibious landing at Gold Beach.

Soldiers spent the night in a barn, and scribbled their names, their girl’s name, and even their favorite football teams (like Liverpool) on the walls.

Dan Hill, 33, a British military historian who leads battlefield tours for war veterans, heard about the graffiti at a local B&B.

He asked to see the barn and was amazed to discover the range of messages and drawings left by British soldiers almost 80 years ago.

Drawings include a German soldier being captured by the British, and a lone tank.

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Elsewhere were scribbled town names—Nottingham, and Liverpool—which was described as the home of ‘the best football team on earth.’

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The Hertfordshire man said it was quite emotional, “especially given the context of being there researching the second world war.”

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“To find an unknown piece of history without even looking for it was incredible.

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Dan said the signatures and graffiti had a ‘distinctly regional feel’ mostly relating to ‘Lancashire and the North-West of England—“with a nice bit of North-West rivalry.”

One message reads: J Bibby, SS (believed to stand for South Shore) Blackpool – the one and only, Lancs, 9/6/44.

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“It’s a great snapshot of history, continued Dan.

“We don’t know the stories of them as individuals, but they represent a generation of men and women that were involved in one of the defining moments of European history. It would be incredible to find out what became of them.”

Another wall was used for a makeshift schedule with names and times that soldiers were to be on duty throughout the night.

On the walls of a French barn drawn by British soldiers -SWNS

“It was incredible, quite often we like to think there are things like this out there still waiting to be found, but it’s very rare to actually find them these days.”

Who Likes History? –Post This on Your Friend’s Wall… 

FDA Approves World’s First Device That Could Save Thousands of Preemies From Common Heart Condition

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has just approved a device from one of the most common life-threatening conditions for prematurely born babies.

The Amplatzer Piccolo Occluder is the world’s first medical device that can be implanted in the tiniest babies (weighing as little as two pounds) using a minimally invasive procedure to treat patent ductus arteriosus, or PDA.

The Amplatzer Piccolo, a device even smaller than a small pea, now offers hope to premature infants and newborns who need corrective treatment, and who may be non-responsive to medical management and high risk to undergo corrective surgery.

One of the most common congenital heart defects occurring in premature babies, PDA is a potentially life-threatening opening between two blood vessels leading from the heart. This channel, which is present in normally developing fetuses, is important prior to birth to allow oxygen-rich blood from the mother to circulate throughout the fetus’ body. For most infants, the pathway, or duct, seals itself shortly after birth. In some cases, primarily in babies born prematurely, the PDA fails to spontaneously close, which can make it difficult for babies to breathe normally due to increased blood flow to the lungs. PDA accounts for up to 10 percent of all congenital heart disease.

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Approximately 60,000 premature babies in the U.S. are born each year with a very low birth weight5, and nearly 12,000 (one out of five) of these have a hemodynamically significant PDA – a PDA that is large and causes symptoms – which will require urgent treatment for the baby to survive.

“This approval is a potentially life-saving advance for the very smallest premature infants that will help us treat these delicate babies who might otherwise not be able to survive,” said Evan Zahn, director of the Congenital Heart Program at Cedars-Sinai’s Smidt Heart Institute, and principal investigator for the study that led to FDA approval.

The Amplatzer Piccolo Occluder is a self-expanding, wire mesh device that is inserted through a small incision in the leg and guided through vessels to the heart, where it is placed to seal the opening in the heart. It was designed by Abbott to allow the physician to insert it through the aortic or pulmonary artery, as well as to retrieve and redeploy the device for optimal placement. Because the device is deployed in a minimally invasive procedure, many of the premature babies who are critically ill in the neonatal intensive care unit are able to be weaned from artificial respirator support soon after the procedure.

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Born at 27 weeks, twin babies Irie and Judah Felkner of Columbus, Ohio, were both fighting for their lives in the neonatal intensive care unit when an echocardiogram revealed Irie had a PDA that required immediate treatment.

“The doctor thought Abbott’s Amplatzer Piccolo device was the best solution for Irie, and after learning more about the procedure we decided to move forward,” said Crissa Felkner, Irie’s mother. “You have to live it to fully appreciate what that device did for our daughter. Three days after the procedure, she was making great progress and is now a normal toddler with no limitations. The Abbott device was truly lifesaving for our daughter.”

The Felkner twins were treated as part of the U.S. pivotal trial, ADO II AS, which helped to support the FDA approval of the device. The trial evaluated the Amplatzer Piccolo Occluder and enrolled 50 patients with a PDA who were older than three days at eight centers across the U.S. The safety and efficacy of the device is further supported by additional experience with the device under a continued access protocol involving 150 more patients.

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“Piccolo is a critical advancement in the standard of care for the most vulnerable of premature babies who may not be able to undergo surgery to repair their hearts,” said Michael Dale, vice president for Abbott’s structural heart business. “Our mission is to develop life-changing technology to help people live better lives through improved health. This approval is another important step toward achieving our mission for the patients and physicians we serve.”

The Amplatzer Piccolo device builds on more than 20 years of clinical success for Abbott’s family of Amplatzer Occluder therapies, including the Amplatzer Duct Occluder II product, already approved for use in the U.S., Europe and countries around the world to treat PDA in larger size pediatric patients.

Abbott is committed to developing minimally invasive life-saving pediatric devices that have an immediate impact with long-term benefits, reduce the risks of life-threatening complications and allow physicians to confidently treat the youngest and tiniest patients. The FDA approval of the Amplatzer Piccolo device follows last year’s approval of the world’s smallest rotatable mechanical heart valve. The Masters HP 15mm pediatric mechanical heart valve provided surgeons with a much-needed option for treating vulnerable, high-risk pediatric patients with congenital heart defects and no other approved options.

Be Sure And Share The Good News With Your Friends On Social Media – Photo by Rima R, CC

‘Eye-opening’ Dementia Breakthrough Announced Today by USC Researchers

artist rendering blood vessel leaking
Illustration released by Arthur Toga / USC

A study suggesting dementia may be caused by leaky blood vessels in the brain was welcomed by the Alzheimer’s Society who said it could lead to earlier diagnosis and potential treatments.

A research team at the University of Southern California found that leaky capillaries turned out to be early onset indicators of Alzheimer’s disease, signaling cognitive impairment before the hallmark toxic protein buildup begins.

They now believe that repairing the leaks could slow down the devastating neurological illness—or even prevent the debilitating condition. Though cautioning that future studies are needed, one co-author called the results “eye-opening.”

Dr James Pickett, head of research at Alzheimer’s Society, said: “Our researchers have been working for years to investigate how blood vessel health links to dementia, and to understand how leaks in the blood brain barrier could increase the risk of dementia.

“This study suggests these leaks are happening very early in the development of Alzheimer’s, sometimes even before toxic proteins build up, and could therefore be used to diagnose the disease earlier, or even be a target for potential treatments.”

The five year study of 161 older people published today in Nature Medicine found that those with the worst memory problems also had the most leakage, regardless of whether abnormal amyloid and tau were present.

“If the blood-brain barrier is not working properly, then there is the potential for damage,” said co-author Arthur Toga, a director at USC’s Keck School of Medicine. “It suggests the vessels aren’t properly providing the nutrients and blood flow that the neurons need. And you have the possibility of toxic proteins getting in.”

artist rendering blood vessel leaking
Illustration released by Arthur Toga / USC

Berislav Zlokovic, another director at the school’s  Zilkha Neurogenetic Institute said this could open the door to much earlier diagnosis using brain scans. Then drugs could be used to plug the leaks, before symptoms begin.

“Earlier diagnosis would allow us to test drugs on people while there’s still a chance to reverse it,” notes Pickett.

– Photo provided by SWNS

“Dogs are wise. They crawl away into a quiet corner and lick their wounds and do not rejoin the world until they are whole once more.” – Agatha Christie

Quote of the Day: “Dogs are wise. They crawl away into a quiet corner and lick their wounds and do not rejoin the world until they are whole once more.” – Agatha Christie

Photo: Cavalier King Charles spaniel in the rain

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?

Video UPDATE: Veteran Gets to Meet, Reward Detroit Teen Girls Who Returned Wallet With Cash

Yesterday afternoon, smiles and hugs filled the front room in this West Detroit home where, just days earlier, somber resolve that a disabled veteran would never see his money, credit cards, or identification again.

Marc Walsh got the news that two girls returned his wallet to a nearby store after finding it in the snow, and he told a local news channel that he really wanted to meet and reward them.

The Detroit Fox News affiliate found the 14-year-old Vincent sisters and arranged a meeting yesterday between the overjoyed veteran and the delighted teens.

Walsh said his faith in humanity was restored, and gave the girls the couple hundred dollars that was in the wallet they returned.

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When the girls saw the military ID card, they thought of their grandfather, a veteran, and said they hoped someone would be respectful, and do the same, if they found his wallet.

“People are saying thank you for turning it in and everything—it’s great,” Makhia told Fox 2.

“I feel really happy and grateful that I could help somebody, because I know other people would have kept the money,” Makyla concluded.

(WATCH the reunion below) – Security Camera footage via FOX2

CELEBRATE the Good – Share the Role Models as Examples…

Formerly Homeless Bus Driver Wins Awards Because He Never Stops Smiling – And His Passengers Love It

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A former homeless man has been crowned London’s top bus driver, after spending only 16 months on the job. His reputation climbed to the top because he never stops smiling—despite battling traffic gridlock every day.

Pat Lawson is over the moon about his new title. The 50-year-old says his cheerful disposition was reborn when he finally managed to land on his feet following a “dark and vicious cycle” of homelessness, crime, drug abuse, and prison time.

“My mum gave me advice and I didn’t take it,” says Lawson. “I was hot-headed in school and got expelled. I went to prison for stealing cars and met hardened criminals, ended up there again and started a dark and vicious cycle.”

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The cycle escalated until the father-of-three met a defining moment 16 years ago when an unprovoked attack left him in the hospital fighting for his life and questioning his bad choices.

“I thought I was going to die and I started thinking of my children. I knew it was life or death. I kept thinking, how did I end up in this situation?” says Lawson. “And that’s when I said, I need help. I wanted to climb out of the gutter.”

Lawson was given the chance to turn his life around when he crossed paths with volunteers from the Single Homeless Project (SHP). The charity retrained Pat as a bus driver, and he says that he immediately fell in love with the job.

MORE – When Homeless Man Finds Artwork That Sells for Thousands, Man Tracks Him Down to Split the Earnings

“I’ll say good morning to every single passenger and give them a big smile,” Lawson remarked. “I was told it wouldn’t last long but passengers told me to keep on going.”

From searching London’s streets for somewhere to sleep, optimistic Pat can now be found cheerily greeting passengers on the 26 bus from Hackney Wick to Waterloo. Since starting the job in March 2017, he has won two awards and received more than 100 acknowledgments from members of the public.

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In July, he won Transport for London (TfL’s) Hello London Award for Outstanding Customer Service after receiving 45 commendations from passengers. Then, in October, he scooped up the Top London Bus Driver prize at the UK Bus Awards with 66 public reviews.

CHECK OUT: Homeless Man Becomes a Hero After Saving Woman Who Jumped From Bridge

Pat’s extraordinary journey doesn’t stop there, either – he is already planning to write a book about his turbulent experiences as a means of helping others who may be trapped in a “dark hole”.

“The key is having the determination to change,” added the driver. “I have been at rock bottom but it was the support from the charities … that has really helped me.”

SWNS

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China’s ‘Ice Boy’ Has New Home–and New Hope–After Viral Photo Sparked Flood of Donations

It has been one year since a photo of Wang Fuman’s icy hair went viral on Chinese social media and earned him the nickname “Ice Boy”.

On that particular morning, Wang’s hair and eyebrows had accumulated an excess of icy frost after his daily 3-mile trek to school in the cold.

Every day, the 9-year-old boy spent over an hour hiking from his mud home to the Zhuanshanbao Primary School in Zhaotong City.

Upon arriving at the school after a long journey through the snow, Wang’s teacher posted a photo of the third grader to social media as a means of praising the student for his tenacity.

The photos were shared thousands of time – and as more and more people learned of the region’s harsh conditions of poverty, donations started to pour in.

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One year later, Wang’s life is very different from when the viral photo was taken.

Reporters from the People’s Daily recently visited the youngster and found that he and his family had been able to move from their cracked mud hut into a 2-story smart house in the village of Zhuanbaoshan – which is just a 10-minute walk from his school.

His father was also able to get a construction job closer to his family where he now earns a salary that is higher than the average wages in the area.

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Wang’s family was not the only ones to benefit from the photo, either; his school, which had previously been unable to afford proper heating, has been completely renovated so that it now has an art room, laboratory, computer room, and dormitories for children who shouldn’t be walking long distances to school every day.

“All the attention [the students have received] has made them feel the wonder of the world and their ideas have changed a great deal,” said Fu Heng, the school’s deputy principal. “The seeds of dreams that one day they will be able to walk away from the mountains have been planted, and they are very hopeful for the future.”

Despite the fame and attention that Wang has received in the last year, however, the youngster is reportedly still very humble and earning top marks in his class so he can one day fulfill his dream of becoming a police officer.

(WATCH last year’s news coverage of the “Ice Boy” below)

Be Sure And Share This Inspiring Story Of Transformation With Your Friends On Social Media

Global Suicide Rate Has Declined By 29%, With Millions of Tragedies Avoided Since 2000

An inspiring new report says that fewer and fewer people are having to endure the tragedy of suicide as the global rate continues to decline.

According to a recent issue of The Economist, the global suicide rate has fallen by 29% since 2000 with notable declines in several demographic groups of people.

For starters, rates of alcohol abuse and suicide amongst middle-aged Russian men have made a notable decline since peaking following the fall of the Soviet Union.

Great Britain, as well as many other European countries, has seen a reduction in suicides after rates peaked in 1934 during the Great Depression. Suicide rates in Japan, India, and South Korea have all receded since the 1990s, with Chinese women experiencing a stunning drop of 90%.

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Even though older people tend to show higher rates of suicide compared to their younger counterparts, older demographic groups have also shown a promising decline.

The one exception to worldwide declines is the United States, where rates have risen steadily since 2000.

The Economist says that many of these declines could be thanks in part to urbanization, fewer arranged marriages, and more legislation that limits means of self-abuse.

Regardless of the reasons, the 29% decline is equal to the survival of roughly 2.8 million people over the course of the last two decades – and that is certainly no small step for mankind.

Share This Positive Trend and Some Hope on Your Timeline – Photo by Thomas Hawk, CC