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Cat Trapped Inside Pillar For 2 Weeks Rescued by Construction Workers

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This cat got another shot at one of its nine lives thanks to some compassionate construction workers wielding power tools.

A team of builders tore apart a pillar of an Idaho home when a man heard meows coming from inside the structure.

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The workers cut open a hole in the pillar where they found a cat who had been trapped inside for two weeks..

“The builder was completely unaware that there was a cat hiding within the walls before enclosing the pillar and we were all happy to see it run free, towards its home!” the video’s description reads.

(WATCH the rescue video below)

 

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University to Host Free Courses on Caring For the Elderly

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Brazilian university students can now learn to take care of their elders free of charge.

The Hospital of the Federal University of Minas Gerais (UFMG) started receiving applications last Friday for their new course on senior caretaking.

The whole course consists of 60 hours of teaching divided into units of learning, tutoring, forums, chats, and lectures. Geriatric doctor Edgar de Moraes, the coordinator of the course, explains the initiative is related to the aging population.

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“Our focus is taking care of both, the family and the professional,” says Mr. Moraes. “We estimate that there are 28 million seniors in Brazil alone, and every year, one million more citizens reach seniority. It’s a fast growing population.”

Since the course occurs on a regular basis, the applications will be reviewed in an ongoing basis. Its tuition – as well as required pedagogical materials – are completely free.

Care For Your Friends’ Happiness: Click To Share – Photo by Agencia Brazil

Iraqi Christians Return to Town Invaded by ISIS to Hold First Mass in 2 Years

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Dozens of Iraqi refugees are returning to the the largest Christian town in the country to have their first holy communion since the city was captured by ISIS in 2014.

The Church of Immaculate Conception in Qaraqosh, Iraq was reclaimed from the jihadis last week after a two-week siege.

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Makeshift wooden crosses were erected along the rooftop welcoming back its dedicated disciples. Syriac Catholic Archbishop of Mosul Butrus Moshe started leading the effort to clean up the damaged church property since the reunited mass on Sunday.

The city is also currently being protected by Christian volunteer soldiers who helped liberate Qarqosh last week.

(WATCH the video below)

 

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Kenya Premiers World’s First Albino Beauty Pageant

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They’ve got talent, they’ve got grace, and they all have beautiful pale faces – it’s the Mr. and Miss Albinism beauty pageant.

The world’s first beauty pageant for men and women with albinism took place in Nairobi, Kenya this week. With 10 female and 10 male contestants, the groundbreaking event drew a crowd of over 1,000 people all ready to help break the stigma behind albinism.

Albinism is a congenital disorder that affects 15,000 sub-Saharan, leaving their skin, hair, and eyes without pigment.

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“I knew I was handsome (but) people with albinism are seen as not beautiful, as not good-looking, and that has an effect on their self esteem,” Isaac Mwaura, Kenya’s first parliamentarian with albinism and founder of the Albinism Society of Kenya, told Thomson Reuters Foundation.

After the pageant, however, all the contestants reportedly said that their confidence was through the roof.

(WATCH the video below)

 

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CEO Gifts 400 Apartments and 1,200 Cars to His Employees

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In celebration of Diwali, a Hindu festival of a lights, this diamond company CEO just gifted 1,716 of his employees holiday bonuses.

Savji Dholakia of Hare Krishna Exports in India spent roughly $7.5 million on 400 flats and 1,260 cars for his best employees.

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This isn’t the first time the 54-year-old Surat-based billionaire has shown his workers such generosity – Savji has distributed the bonuses as an annual Diwali ritual since 2011.

The rewards were in recognition of meeting company goals and incentivizing workers to continue their outstanding performance in the coming business year.

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Immigrant Designer Goes From Sleeping on Park Benches to World Fame

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The story of Roberto Vascon – the fashion mogul who designs purses for the most glorified women in the world – sounds a lot like a movie script. He was born in extreme poverty, became rich, sold everything, fell back into poverty, then became wealthy once more.

Originally born to a very poor family in Raposos, a small city in the country side of Minas Gerais, Brazil, Roberto never had access to formal education. Since his father was an alcoholic, he started working when he was very young so he could help support his family.

When he finally decided to move to Rio de Janeiro, however, his situation only got worse.

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Even though he was washing cars in order to survive, Mr. Vascon says he was starving for the several months he lived in Rio. When the designer saved enough money, he moved to New York City and slept on Central Park benches for four months, using newspapers for heat and learning English from the homeless community.

Far from home and in a worse situation than he was in Brazil, Roberto felt like he was at the bottom of the barrel.

“In Brazil, I had to deal with the same level of poverty I dealt with in NYC – but in America, it is a lot colder and it snows so my situation got substantially worse,” says Roberto in a Portuguese interview. “I was hungry, tired, homesick, freezing, and I asked God to take me back to Brazil. I told God if he helped me to survive I would help a lot of people.”

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That night, Roberto had a strange dream that would change his life forever.

Vascon explains there were thousands of birds landing tree branches that were dropping purses to the ground. The following day, he gathered a load of cans, sold them for $80, bought leather and sewing materials, and proceeded to create 12 purses that were very similar to the ones he saw in his dream.

He was displaying the purses in Central Park when his first customer asked if the purses were from Italy. Little did he know that the woman was Nancy H., the fashion editor for the New York Times. In the midst of their chatting, Roberto told the editor that he needed to focus on sales because he was starving.

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The journalist asked him if he would spend more time with her if she bought the 12 purses. She ended up writing about Roberto’s purses, saying that they had a different energy about them than other brand products.

Roberto Vascon’s because an instant success, making him one of the most famous purse designers in the world.

The entrepreneur made his dream come true when he returned to Brazil and bought his mother a house. Then he opened seven stores in America plus a few others in Japan and Brazil.

Then his life changed again – on the millionaire’s birthday, August 2nd, 1993, nobody called to wish him well and he found himself talking to God once more.

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“Remember that night I told you I would return everything? I guess now is the time.”

So he sold everything and traveled to 128 countries, learning about cultures that were not his own and helping people in whatever ways he could; feeding the poor and paying the college tuition of less fortunate students. He gave away everything he owned.

Roberto says Brazil didn’t welcome him back. When he sold his last possession – a Cartier ring – he traveled to the United States and found himself on the benches of Central Park again.

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A few days later, a woman stopped by and asked if he was Roberto Vascon, the famous purse designer.

“I confirmed that it was me and told her what I had done, and I labeled myself ‘the most educated homeless of Central Park’ and she laughed.”

Again, he didn’t know that the lady was a journalist – she sold the story of the homeless designer to the New York Times and two days later, he was invited to partner with a store and restarted his career. Today, he is rich and famous once more and continuous to help others anonymously.

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The More Connected We Feel to Others, the More Socially Responsible We Are

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A crucial factor in someone’s decision to act in a socially responsible manner is the extent to which they believe that their actions make a difference.

In her recent paper, “Yes, I can: Feeling connected to others increases perceived effectiveness and socially responsible behavior” in the Journal of Environmental Psychology, Natalia Karelaia, an Associate Professor of Decision Sciences at INSEAD, finds that whether a person feels they make an impact or not depends on how socially connected they are.

“Our paper offers new insight into how feeling connected to others affects behavior. We find that identification with a social group has an empowering effect on individuals. People who are highly socially motivated may surrender some aspects of their individuality, but receive in return a sense of strength in numbers that gets absorbed into their own self-image. Consequently, they have a greater belief in the effectiveness of their individual actions, and a clearer conception of how their own choices directly impact the collective,” said Karelaia.

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Her paper studied the consumer habits of more than 600 adults in the US in a survey which sought to understand their social values, sense of connectedness to others and how effective they perceived their actions to be.

Those respondents who felt a high degree of social connectedness felt their individual actions had a greater impact on a larger scale. They were also found to be the most socially conscious consumers, which was reflected in their responses to questions about how often they recycled and whether they were environmentally conscious in their purchasing behavior, such as avoiding products that cause environmental damage or those tested on animals.

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The respondents’ social values, which were measured by their responses to questions of whether particular behaviors were morally appropriate, however, turned out to be a less important predictor of their behavior than whether they felt they could make a difference. While values were important, the belief in one’s ability to make an impact was necessary to influence behavior.

Karelaia took these insights into further studies to see whether people’s decision-making could be influenced on the basis of social connectedness. In a second study, to bring about one’s sense of connectedness to others, she recruited 39 undergraduate students and asked one group of them to bring to mind and describe a situation when they were buying a gift for someone. The other group was asked to write about buying something for themselves. Further reinforcing the initial findings, Karelaia found that people in the first group felt more socially connected and were more likely to believe in their actions having an ability to make a difference.

In a third study, 132 US-based adults completed the same writing task as in the second study. Afterwards, in a seemingly unrelated task, participants were asked to provide assistance to a non-governmental organization (NGO). They were told that the researchers conducting the study supported the actions of “EarthAction”, an NGO, and it needed help finding corporate sponsors. To get that help it needed to develop corporate slogans. Participants were asked for their voluntary help in creating between 1 and 5 slogans. Those in the condition that made their connectedness to others more salient, developed more slogans each than those in the control condition.

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Karelaia also put money into the equation. 48 undergraduate students went through the same connectedness manipulation as in study 2 and 3 and were then invited to make a financial contribution to an NGO. The same pattern emerged.

In summary, the sense of one’s connectedness was found to enhance the perceived effectiveness of one’s actions, which in turn raised the participants’ appreciation for the consequences of their behavior. This is especially important for organizations trying to promote ethical behavior. Karelaia’s findings suggest that managers should build a sense of communal awareness, framing the actions of individuals and the firm in the context of the wider community.

“Overall, this suggests that we’re at our ethical best when we feel part of a human community that transcends our immediate surroundings,” said Karelaia.

(Source: Insead)

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Watch Quartet of Paralyzed Musicians Play Music With Only Their Minds

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In order to play complex pieces on stringed instruments, musicians need amazing dexterity to maneuver the different notes.

Thanks to a special interface system, however, this group of musicians can play instruments with only their minds.

The Paramusical Ensemble is a group of four artists with intensely damaged motor control skills. The quartet wears rubber caps made up of Brain-Computer Music Interfacing systems with electrodes that can detect the user’s brain waves. A computer screen is set up in front of the musicians that displays different samples of music – with the help of the caps, all the players have to do is look at the tune that they would like to play.

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Patients suffering from ALS – or Lou Gehrig’s disease – can now embrace their talent despite their disabilities.

The quartet performed a piece called Activating Memory at the Royal Hospital for Neuro-disabilty in London. The melody was captured by Tim Grabham and Professor Eduardo Reck Miranda as part of their nine-minute documentary about the project.

(WATCH the video below)

Paramusical Ensemble from cinema iloobia on Vimeo.

 

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Watch Man Climb Building With Bare Hands to Save Dangling Child

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Real superheroes do exist – and this one is the closest thing to Spider-Man that you’ll ever see.

Earlier this week, passerby in Liaocheng, China started calling for help when they saw a little boy dangling by his neck from a third floor window.

Because of the security cage surrounding the window, the 2-year-old had gotten his head stuck between the bars – if he had moved his head to the left or right, he would have fallen.

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But not on Liang Lee’s watch.

Since Liang lived nearby the incident, he heard the cries for help and came running. Using only his bare hands, the hero scaled the building until he reached the youngster’s window. By grasping the bars with one hand, he used his other to hoist the boy up and out of the window.

(WATCH the video below)

 

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Salmonella Test Results Hold Promise For Non-Invasive Cancer Treatment

Prostate cancer cells by National Institutes of Health

640px-Prostate_cancer Public Domain National Institutes of Health

Although the foodborne disease Salmonella affects millions annually, and is the leading cause of illness in the U.S., the bacteria also has a unique characteristic that allows it to penetrate through cell barriers and replicate inside its host. Now, scientists at the Cancer Research Center and the University of Missouri have developed a non-toxic strain of Salmonella to penetrate and target cancer cells—and results from this study could lead to promising new treatments that actively target and control the spread of cancer.

“Salmonella strains have a natural preference for infiltrating and replicating within the cancer cells of a tumor, making the bacteria an ideal candidate for bacteriotherapy,” said Robert Kazmierczak, a senior investigator at the Cancer Research Center at Missouri University. “Bacteriotherapy is the use of live bacteria as therapy to treat a medical condition, like cancer.”

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Kazmierczak and the team at the Cancer Research Center at MU developed ‘CRC2631’, a Salmonella strain that has been genetically modified to render the bacteria nontoxic and enhance its natural ability to target and kill cancer cells—without harming normal, healthy cells. The Salmonella strain was administered directly into the circulatory system of mice with prostate cancer.

“We found that the mice tolerated the treatment well and when examined, their prostate tumors decreased by about 20 percent compared to the control group,” Kazmierczak said. “One of the most remarkable aspects of Salmonella is its ability to target, spread and persist inside the tumor. We are taking advantage of this ability by using Salmonella to carry or generate effective chemotherapeutic drugs, concentrating them at and throughout the tumor. The goal of this treatment is to develop a bacterial vector that can destroy the tumor from the inside out and reduce the amount of side effects endured by patients with cancer.”

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CRC2631 is derived from a Salmonella sample that was stored in a test tube at room temperature for more than 50 years. The sample originates from the Demerec collection, a collection of mutant strains of Salmonella collected by geneticist Milisav Demerec and curated by Abraham Eisenstark, scientific director at the CRC and professor emeritus of biological sciences at MU. The collection contains over 20,000 different samples of Salmonella, with half of the samples housed at the Cancer Research Center where researchers affiliated with MU focus on three areas of cancer research: early detection, targeted treatment and new, effective chemotherapy.

“The uniqueness of CRC2631 differentiates our Salmonella strains from other universities trying to achieve the same goal; it is one of a kind,” Eisenstark said. “The strain of Salmonella we are using is essential to the success of our study.”

(Source: University of Missouri-Colombia) – Photo by National Institutes of Health, Public Domain

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Homeless Man Protects Motorcyclist’s Forgotten Keys and Refuses Reward

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Even though a homeless man had the opportunity to take advantage of a forgetful motorcyclist, he knew he wanted to do the right thing.

43-year-old Francisco Hernández had been sleeping in a public shelter for the last six months since becoming homeless. During the day, he earns money by guiding drivers to available parking spaces on the streets of Colombia in exchange for tips.

It was supposed to be a regular business day for Mr. Hernández last Wednesday until he found a parked motorcycle with the keys left in the bike. He tried to give the keys to some nearby police officers, but they told him to go to the police station.

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“The police station was really far and I couldn’t go,” Hernádez told Verne, “so I decided to keep the key and I asked for a paper and pen in a local store so I could leave a note.”

The note, which gave him the name of the shelter, read, “Hi, my name is Paco and I have the keys for your motorcycle. Don’t worry – I’m in the Comuneros street until 7 and then I’m at the Jesus abandonado.”

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The owner of the motorcycle, 27-year-old Pedro Teruel, said that he initially thought Jesus Abandonado was the name of another street. But the worker inside the store informed Mr. Teruel that the man who had the keys was actually a homeless man worried that somebody would steal Pedro’s property, and directed him to the shelter.

Though Pedro eventually found Francisco and had his keys returned, the homeless man refused to accept a reward.

“I see so much corruption and people getting angry about it. If I accepted the money I would just be one of them and I’m not,” says Mr. Hernández. “We must help one another because it’s the right thing to do, without any kind of expectation for a reward.”

Drive Away Depression: Click To Share This Sweet Story Photo by Pedro Teruel

Man Pays Off All Overdue Lunch Fees at Hometown Elementary School

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Jerry Fenton wanted to give back to his alma mater in a special way, so he opened his wallet—and his heart—to the families with overdue lunch fees.

Earlier this week, Fenton walked into Grimes Elementary School of Burlington, Iowa and wrote a check for $700 – enough to pay off the current $458 debt, and to buy lunch for many struggling students in the future.

“I gave them extra money in the account so that every kid at Grimes Elementary school won’t be hungry the rest of this school year,” Fenton posted on Facebook last Tuesday. “Now it’s your turn to do something good for your fellow man.”

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The donation helped approximately 89 kids and their parents. Most of the students don’t even know when they’re over drafted because the notice goes straight to the parents.

“Wowsers! Jerry Fenton, a citizen of our community paid for all overdue lunches of all Grimes kids today!” posted the school on their Facebook page. “Jerry, you are our hero!”

Feed Your Friends Some Positivity: Click To SharePhoto by Ben+Sam, CC

Woman Surprised to Find Stolen Car Returned With Gas Money, Nice Note

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This accidental car thief might have gotten away with the perfect crime – except the culprit didn’t have any criminal intentions at all.

Erin Hatzi woke up at her home in Portland, Oregon on Tuesday to find her old red Subaru missing from the driveway.

After checking her security footage, she saw the cameras had filmed someone getting into her car and sitting with the engine idling for seven minutes before finally driving away.

Thinking that it was peculiar for a car thief to waste time in the owner’s driveway, Erin filed a police report for her stolen automobile.

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She didn’t have to wait very long, however, when on Wednesday evening, Erin’s husband saw a police officer talking to a woman who had returned the car with a note–and cash– left inside.

The note read: “Hello, So sorry I stole your car. I sent my friend with my key to pick up my red Subaru at 7802 SE Woodstock and she came back with your car. I did not see the car until this morning and I said, ‘That is not my car.’ There is some cash for gas and I more than apologize for the shock and upset this must have caused you. If you need to speak further, with me, I am ______ and my number is _____. So so sorry for this mistake.”

As it turns out, the intended car was parked 10 yards away from the “stolen” car, and older Subaru keys are sometimes interchangeable with other model’s locks, which resulted in the mix-up.

Drive This Story Over To Your Friends: Click To SharePhoto by Erin Hatzi

One-Legged Man Hops Into Funny Annual Halloween Costumes–LOOK

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As a motivational speaker and author, he has spent his life helping people look on the bright side of life–and for years his Halloween pranks have helped them look at the funny side of having only one leg.

Josh Sunquist, who lost a leg at age nine, has dreamed up some seriously humorous costumes. Last year, using a sign and a wooden frame, Josh hopped around on Halloween as an IHOP restaurant (Oh, the irony).

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In years past, he’s been the one-legged lamp from A Christmas Story, a foosball player, a flamingo, and a gingerbread man with his leg eaten, from Shrek. This year, he dressed up in gold to become Lumiere, the candle-holder from “Beauty and the Beast.”

 

“In high school I wore a prosthesis all the time and didn’t want anyone to find out I was missing a leg,” Josh says on his website. “But now I’m more comfortable with who I am and what I look like, and I guess with these Halloween costumes you could even say that I celebrate what makes me different.”

Several people on the internet have accused him, assuming he is taking money from IHOP for doing the costume, yet Josh says the pancake restaurant is in no way connected and that he doesn’t even eat there due to their lack of gluten-free food.

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Since losing his leg to a rare form of bone cancer, Josh has published two books, attracted ten million views on Youtube, and been a member of the US Paralympic Ski Team and the US Amputee Soccer Team.

(WATCH his video below demonstrating his Halloween ‘hoppiness’)

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Skin Patch to Treat Peanut Allergies Will Benefit Children

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A wearable patch that delivers small amounts of peanut protein through the skin shows promise for treating children and young adults with peanut allergy, with greater benefits for younger children, according to the one-year results from an ongoing clinical trial. The treatment, called epicutaneous immunotherapy or EPIT, was safe and well-tolerated, and nearly all participants used the skin patch daily as directed.

“To avoid potentially life-threatening allergic reactions, people with peanut allergy must be vigilant about the foods they eat and the environments they enter, which can be very stressful,” said NIAID Director Anthony S. Fauci, M.D. “One goal of experimental approaches such as epicutaneous immunotherapy is to reduce this burden by training the immune system to tolerate enough peanut to protect against accidental ingestion or exposure.”

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The ongoing trial is sponsored by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), part of the National Institutes of Health, and conducted by the NIAID-funded Consortium of Food Allergy Research (CoFAR), which is led by Hugh Sampson, M.D., of Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York. Stacie Jones, M.D., of the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences and Arkansas Children’s Hospital, chairs the study. One-year outcomes are published online on October 26 in the Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology.

“The clinical benefit seen in younger children highlights the promise of this innovative approach to treating peanut allergy,” said Daniel Rotrosen, M.D., director of NIAID’s Division of Allergy, Immunology and Transplantation (DAIT).

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CoFAR researchers at five study sites randomly assigned 74 peanut-allergic volunteers aged 4 to 25 years to treatment with either a high-dose (250 micrograms peanut protein), low-dose (100 micrograms peanut protein), or placebo patch. The investigators assessed peanut allergy at the beginning of the study with a supervised, oral food challenge with peanut-containing food. The patches were developed and provided by the biopharmaceutical company DBV Technologies under the trade name Viaskin. Each day, study participants applied a new patch to their arm or between their shoulder blades.

After one year, researchers assessed each participant’s ability to consume at least 10 times more peanut protein than he or she was able to consume before starting EPIT. The low-dose and high-dose regimens offered similar benefits, with 46 percent of the low-dose group and 48 percent of the high-dose group achieving treatment success, compared with 12 percent of the placebo group. In addition, the peanut patches induced immune responses similar to those seen with other investigational forms of immunotherapy for food allergy. Investigators observed greater treatment effects among children aged 4 to 11 years, with significantly less effect in participants aged 12 years and older.

“Epicutaneous immunotherapy aims to engage the immune system in the skin to train the body to tolerate small amounts of allergen, whereas other recent advances have relied on an oral route that appears difficult for approximately 10 to 15 percent of children and adults to tolerate,” said Dr. Rotrosen.

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Nearly all of the study participants followed the EPIT regimen as directed. None reported serious reactions to the patch, although most experienced mild skin reactions, such as itching or rash, at the site of patch application.

“The high adherence to the daily peanut patch regimen suggests that the patch is easy-to-use, convenient and safe,” said Marshall Plaut, chief of DAIT’s Food Allergy, Atopic Dermatitis and Allergic Mechanisms Section. “The results of this study support further investigation of epicutaneous immunotherapy as a novel approach for peanut allergy treatment.”

Additional studies in larger groups of children are needed before the therapy could be approved for wider use. The CoFAR study continues to assess the long-term safety and effectiveness of peanut EPIT. After the first year, all participants began receiving high-dose daily patches, and they will continue in the study for a total of two and a half years of EPIT.

(Source: National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases)

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Dad Constructs Cloud Halloween Costume for ‘Princess Cumulus’ (WATCH)

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The dad who rose to internet fame after constructing an LED stick figure costume for his daughter has done it again with his “Princess Cumulus” costume.

His daughter, also known as Glowy Zoey, wanted to be a storm cloud for Halloween – so, using a blow up suit, LED lights, and programmed arduino software, her father made her into an adorable weather wonder girl.

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“I like to go a little crazy with costumes for my daughter every year,” he explains on Youtube. “We have fun making them together.”

Because the suit is a little impractical for trick-or-treating, Zoey is simply going door-to-door as wonder woman – but that doesn’t detract from how cute she is in her stormy outfit.

(WATCH the adorable videos below)

 

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Students Surprise Beloved Teacher With Tickets to the World Series

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This high school teacher has been a lifelong fan of baseball’s Cleveland Indians – and thanks to a few of his own fans, he will be in the stands when they play in the World Series this week.

Mr. Gage has taught high school English at Struthers High School in Struthers, Ohio since the 90s and earned himself many adoring students over the years. Current pupils and those previously graduated have all benefitted from the inspiring impact he has made on their lives—and were ready to give back.

In an effort to honor the beloved educator, Josh Miely – a graduate of 1998 – spread the word among all his students, young and old, asking them to donate to a GoFundMe page for World Series tickets.

In just 6 days, the campaign had raised $2,500.

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“Mr. Gage was the teacher that unlocked my potential and allowed me to understand the creative gifts I was given,” Josh Miely told the Good News Network. “He’s been a constant in my life since school even though I moved away from Struthers and then Ohio upon college graduation. To see that the impact he had on me is as widespread as I had hoped among all his students and to see that we all are happy to help him recognize one of his dreams has been immensely rewarding.”

“Mr. Gage was overjoyed when he saw that we hit goal and knew he would be able to actually go to the World Series. I approached him before starting the campaign and he was humbled by the offer but wasn’t expecting us to be able to raise the funds so swiftly.”

The teacher will be seated up top, behind home plate on the Indians dugout side for Game Two of the World Series on Wednesday night.

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‘Naked’ Penguin is Warmer After This Special Wetsuit was Created

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This little bird won’t be shivering anymore thanks to a specially-made wetsuit that will keep its tiny body warm.

Due to excessive feather loss that sometimes occurs when penguins are in their natural habitat, Adelie the penguin was left totally in the nude.

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Aviculturalists in charge of the arctic birds at Seaworld Orlando set to work creating a suit that would mimic penguin feathers’ insulation.

Adelie can now be seen swimming, waddling, and sliding happily with her penguin comrades at the Antarctica: Empire of the Penguin exhibit.

(WATCH the video below)

Slide This Story Over To Your Friends: Click To SharePhoto by SeaWorld Orlando 

Nations Unite to Create World’s Largest Marine Reserve in Antarctica

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In a groundbreaking agreement between 24 different countries and the European Union, the world’s largest marine reserve will be established in Antarctica’s Ross Sea.

The meeting of the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources that took place in Hobart, Australia on Friday finally agreed to designate 600,000 square miles as a zone protected from harmful human activity – that’s twice the area of Texas.

72% of the marine protected area will be a ‘no-take’ zone, which forbids all fishing, while other sections will permit some harvesting of fish and krill for scientific research. The sanctuary will also provide a valuable control space for researchers to compare the ecosystems of Antarctic waters with human interference to those without.

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Since the location is a popular commercial fishing spot for China and Russia, the agreement is a long-awaited victory in environmental preservation and political harmony.

“This has been an incredibly complex negotiation which has required a number of Member countries bringing their hopes and concerns to the table at six annual CCAMLR meetings as well as at intersessional workshops,” says CCAMLR Executive Secretary, Andrew Wright.

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“This decision represents an almost unprecedented level of international cooperation regarding a large marine ecosystem comprising important benthic and pelagic habitats. It has been well worth the wait because there is now agreement among all Members that this is the right thing to do and they will all work towards the [marine protected area’s] successful implementation,” he said.

Though the sanctuary’s protection won’t go into full effect until December 2017, the polar ‘Garden of Eden’ is home to the richest collection of wildlife whose survival will benefit greatly from the agreement.

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Chobani Announces Paid Parental Leave Policy For All Employees No Matter the Wage

chobani-released

Not only is their yogurt delicious, but Chobani is also a shining example of a happy and fair place to work.

Chobani founder, Chairman, and Chief Executive Officer Hamdi Ulukaya announced earlier this month that the company would be offering six weeks of 100% paid parental leave to all salaried and hourly employees starting in 2017.

The policy extends to any mothers or fathers adopting, fostering, or giving birth to a child in their home.

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“As a founder and a new father, my son opened my eyes to the fact that the vast majority of workers in this country don’t have access to paid family leave when they have a new child,” said Ulukaya. “That’s especially true when it comes to manufacturing and that needs to change in this country and Chobani needed to be part of that change.”

Chobani also announced that it had been given the Great Place to Work® certification, an independent recognition given to the country’s best workplaces. Using proprietary assessment tools, advisory services, and certification programs, including Best Workplaces lists and workplace reviews, Great Place to Work provides the benchmarks, framework, and expertise needed to create, sustain and recognize outstanding workplace cultures.

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The certification is fitting considering the immigrant CEO’s decision early this year to offer 10% of the corporation’s stock to 2,000 employees as incentive to stay and continue working.

The yogurt company’s parental leave policy change follows that of several American corporations wanting to give their employees the time that they need with their kids, like Hilton Hotels and Netflix. Since the United States is one of the only industrialized nations that doesn’t guarantee paid parental leave, the policy changes will hopefully give birth to a more positive trend in worker benefits.

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