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4 of World’s Biggest Cities to Ban Diesel Vehicles by 2025

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The mayors of Paris, Madrid, Athens, and Mexico City announced at the C40 mayors summit this week that they will be issuing diesel vehicle bans from city centers to fight air pollution.

The bans will hopefully get diesel cars and vans off the roads by 2025 since soot from diesel engines is a major contributor to climate change.

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Health hazards related to diesel fumes include nausea, difficulty breathing, itchy eyes, increased blood pressure, headache, light-headedness, loss of appetite, poor coordination, and difficulty concentrating. The fuel also contains nitrogen dioxide which can seriously damage pedestrians’ lungs.

The mayor of Mexico City, Miguel Ángel Mancera, says that city authorities hope to invest more in public transportation and promoting more sustainable vehicles.

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Anxious Rescue Goat Always Calms Down When Wearing Her Duck Suit

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Polly the rescue goat suffers from anxiety, just like humans do – but she deals with it by wearing a duck suit.

After little Polly was rescued by Goats of Anarchy, a New Jersey-based rescue organization that cares for neurologically challenged baby goats, she was diagnosed with mental anxiety.

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Since the goat was usually comforted by the feeling of being swaddled in a blanket, her caregiver Leanna Lauricella figured a costume would be no different. That’s when she started treating Polly’s anxiety attacks by zipping her up in the cozy little duck pajama suit.

Though Leanna has received some online criticsm from viewers believing that the suit would cause anxiety rather than cure it, the goat expert insists that Polly is a special case with special needs.

You can follow Polly’s adorable exploits by following Goats of Anarchy Instagram and Twitter pages.

(WATCH the video below)

 

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Standing Rock Celebrates Victory After Army Corp Blocks Final Building Permit

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The protestors at Standing Rock have been peacefully rallying against construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline for the last several months –at long last, the Army Corps of Engineers blocked a vital building permit for the pipeline.

The 1,172 mile Dakota Access Pipeline was set to run through Sioux tribe land, causing outrage amongst the natives over possible contamination of their water supply and the desecration of sacred lands. What started as a few dozen protestors eventually grew to a national movement of “water protectors” ushering in the new future of renewables.

After reviewing the environmental consequences and civil rights violations caused by the pipeline, the Army Corps agreed that they have “more work to do” and plan on investigating alternative plans for construction.

MORE2,000 Veterans Just Arrived at Standing Rock to Form Human Shield Around Protestors

“The best way to complete that work responsibly and expeditiously is to explore alternate routes for the pipeline crossing,” Jo-Ellen Darcy, the Army’s assistant secretary for civil works said in a statement.

“Our prayers have been answered,” National Congress of American Indians President Brian Cladoosby said in a statement. “This isn’t over, but it is enormously good news. All tribal peoples have prayed from the beginning for a peaceful solution, and this puts us back on track.”

(WATCH the video below)

 

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Simple Checklist Leads to 82% Drop in Mental Health Patient Suicides

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A new study shows a sharp decline in suicides at Veterans Affairs inpatient mental health units from 2000 to 2015, thanks to the Mental Health Environment of Care Checklist.

The checklist, introduced into the VA in 2007 and used byvmore than 150 VA hospitals nationwide, guides staff in eliminating physical hazards at the mental health inpatient units which raise the risk of patient suicide or self-harm.

The researchers found a sustained reduction in inpatient suicides during the last seven years in the study period, with none occurring each of the last three years.

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The checklist focuses on architectural and other physical-environment changes. Earlier analyses had shown that most attempted or completed suicides on inpatient units were linked to these hazards–for example, a hook or other anchor point that could be using for hanging.

Other potential hazards include non-shatterproof glass and non-tamper-resistant electrical outlets.

The study’s lead author, Dr. Vince Watts, says the research produced two main findings.

“First, it appears that the Mental Health Environment of Care Checklist has had a substantial and persistent reduction in inpatient suicide deaths,” he says. “Second, these findings suggest that architectural and environmental changes may result in more lasting effects in contrast to other improvement strategies for reducing suicides in hospital units.”

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Other strategies for preventing suicides in hospitals include training staff better, performing more frequent checks of patients, and implementing a non-punitive culture that rewards incident-reporting and supports its continued improvement.

Watts, a psychiatrist at the White River (Vermont) VA Medical Center, and the study’s other three researchers are with the VA National Center for Patient Safety, based in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

The program was created in 1999 to lead formal patient-safety activities across the VA health system. One of its first actions was to institute a root cause analysis of adverse events such as inpatient suicide.

Root cause analysis, used widely in industry, is a systematic approach that helps organizations identify and address the underlying causes of problems, instead of just “putting out fires” when they occur.

CHECK OUT: Suicide Rates Plummet Among Members of Apache Tribe

In a review of the National Center for Patient Safety’s root cause analysis database, the researchers learned of 29 completed suicides in VA mental health units from 2000 to 2015 (24 before implementation of the checklist and five after). The rate of suicide in mental health units before the program kicked off was 4.2 per 100,000 admissions. It dropped to 0.74 suicides per 100,000 admissions – an 82% reduction.

Structural changes, according to Watts, reduce the burden on hospital staff to prevent suicides.

“The checklist and resulting environmental changes involve hardwiring of changes into the architecture of mental health units,” he says. “Thus, staff don’t have to remember to do something. The unit is just designed that way.”

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Another implication of the finding, Watts says, is that there may be other effective approaches that, like structural changes, create no added burden on staff. One such approach would be the increased use of automated technologies to help provide care for patients with mental illness.

“Our goal is to have no inpatient suicides in the VA,” he adds. “Our hope is that a continued focus on this approach will result in a continued reduction in suicide.”

(Source: Veterans Affairs Research Communications)

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Palestinian Firefighting Teams Offer Help to Israelis Battling Wildfires

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Since the wildfires started spreading throughout central and northern Israel last weekend, nations around the world have offered to assist in extinguishing the blaze—including Palestinians.

Russia, the United States, Turkey, Greece, Italy, Cyprus, and Croatia have all helped to battle over 1,500 fires in Haifa and the areas surrounding Jerusalem. The Israeli government has also accepted the help of four different Palestinian firefighting teams with eight fire trucks.

Arabs and Jews alike reportedly opened their homes to evacuating families.

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60,000 Haifa residents have recently been allowed to return to their residences in a city where 700 homes were damaged by the blaze.

23 different people have been arrested under suspicion that the wildfires were caused by arson.

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Dolly Parton Offers Monthly Cash Support to Families Affected by Tennessee Wildfires

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Beloved country singer and actress Dolly Parton announced on Wednesday that her foundation would be donating $1,000 every month to each family affected by the wildfires raging through the Great Smoky Mountains.

Being a Tennessee native herself, Parton’s foundation and collective of companies, including the Dollywood theme park, resort, and dinner theater, are all contributing to the Sevier County fundraiser, the “My People Fund”.

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The wildfires have ravaged Gatlinburg and Pigeon Forge since Monday night. Several hundred homes have already been damaged, along with thousands of acres of Tennessee wilderness.

If you’d like to donate to the fundraiser, you can visit the Dollywood Foundation website here.

(WATCH the video below)

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Baby Wakes From Coma as Doctors Were Ready To Turn Off Life Support (Video)

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Some might call it luck, others might call it a miracle – either way, Marwa suddenly woke up just when doctors were going to disconnect her life support.

The 1-year-old toddler was hospitalized in September after coming down with a dangerous neurological virus.

Medical experts had advised her parents to disconnect the child’s life support system after aggressive therapy was used just to keep her alive. Additionally, they were skeptical she would ever walk or speak again.

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Ten days after the doctors made the decision to suspend the life support – and after Marwa’s parents submitted a petition with 70,000 signatures asking them to delay the end of life – Marwa woke up.

(WATCH the video below)

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Retired Senior Gets Job After Posting Ad About ‘Dying from Boredom’

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For many aging seniors, retirement is a welcomed and relaxing rite of passage long-anticipated after a lifetime of work – 89-year-old Joe Bartley, however, was just bored.

The British WWII veteran posted an advert in the Herald Express asking for a job. The ad read “Senior citizen 89 seeks employment in Paignton area. 20hrs+ per week. Still able to clean, light gardening, DIY and anything. I have references. Old soldier, airborne services. Save me from dying of boredom!”

The senior described his retired life as “solitary confinement” since his beloved wife Cassie passed away two years ago.

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The plea for employment gained international attention from television stations and newspapers until finally, Joe was called in for a job interview at the Cantina Kitchen and Bar in Paignton, Devon.

Despite it being his first interview in six years, Joe nailed it. He’s due to start work on Sunday clearing tables and helping with other tasks around the restaurant. After allegedly pouring himself a stiff drink when he heard the news, Joe says he’s mostly just excited to start being around people again.

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Soccer Fans Spread Compassion Following Disastrous Plane Crash

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A wave of solidarity and sportsmanship has swept through the world of professional football days after a plane accident killed nearly the entire Brazilian soccer team of Chapecoense and their staff.

Founded in Chapecó, a small city in the countryside of southern Brazil, the Chapecoense team was founded a little over 40 years ago. In the past seven years they managed to play convincingly well to remain in the country’s Major Soccer League.

This year in particular things were going really well for the team, until Tuesday when, on their way to Colombia for a tournament, their charter flight ran out of fuel and crashed, killing 75 people in the worst accident in the soccer history.

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Between the tears and grief (the Brazilian and Colombian presidents declared 3 days of mourning), this disaster brought out the best in people. The Colombian team scheduled to play against Chapecoense, Atlético Nacional, sent an official message to FIFA – the Federation that organizes the tournament – stating they wanted FIFA to declare Chapeconse as the 2016 champions. They also invited every football fan in the region to go to the stadium to say goodbye to fallen roster.

“Tonight was supposed to be a party in celebration of football, but we decided to use this time to invite fans to pay their respects to the athletes and staff of Chapecoense. We would also appreciate FIFA’s understanding in declaring Chapecoense the 2016 Champions of Copa Sulamericana,” according to a translation of the official note.

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Other members of the Brazilian Major Football League also took action, sending FIFA and the Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF) an official letter suggesting that every team on the League should offer a player for free to help rebuild Chapecoense’s roster. They also suggested an amendment to the rules that would save the devastated team from being demoted to the lower leagues over the next three years, in case a losing record would merit it.

Soccer teams, players and cities around the world also expressed their condolences. Players and teams are changing their official social media pictures to the Chapecoense’s logo, and major tourist attractions, such as the Eiffel Tower in Paris, Christ the Redeemer in Brazil and the Orlando eye, in Florida, are adorned with lights of the team colors – white and green.

WATCH: An A-League Soccer Player Stop Game to Rescue Felled Seagull

As this text is being written, the soccer stadium where the match was supposed to happen in Colombia is packed with fans paying their respects for the players. The whole stadium as well as many cities Brazil are singing the chorus “vamo vamo chape” (let’s go Chape), a beautiful gesture from fans everywhere.

FIFA released a note saying they will evaluate the possibilities in a meeting on December 21st. CBF says the agenda of 2016 Major Soccer League includes one more game for each team and they will evaluate what will be done when it’s appropriate.

The Major Football League of 2016 already had crowned a champion, Palmeiras, and that team has obtained authorization from the appropriate authorities and sponsors to play the last game using Chapecoense’s jersey on their final game.

(WATCH the amazing outpouring in the Medellin, Colombia stadium below, where thousands more fans packed the grounds outside)

Click To Share The News With Your FriendsPhoto by UOL 

Santa Train Delivers Free Toys, Clothing to Thousands of Appalachian Families (WATCH)

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Kris Kringle’s main mode of transportation may be reindeer and a sleigh, but he’s also also a big fan of traveling by locomotive.

The Santa Train brings joy to 14 low-income Appalachian towns in 3 states during its a 110-mile journey of compassion. The cars are loaded with volunteers, toys, clothing, gifts, and, of course, the big man in red himself.

At every stop this year, Santa and his assistant, country singing star Darryl Worley, distributed their goodies to families waiting in Kentucky, Virginia, and Tennessee.

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The Santa Train has become a holiday tradition in the area, with a lot of the region’s older people having experienced the event as a kid. Now they get to take their grandkids to the same stops where they remember Christmases in the past.

This year reportedly marked the 74th running of the train, which delivered 5000 gift bags and 15 tons of presents, including fresh fruit and books.

(WATCH the video below)

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Former Nazi PoW Leaves His $500K Estate to Scottish Town That Showed Him Kindness

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Heinrich Steinmeyer was taken as a prisoner of war during his service as a Nazi soldier in WWII. His time as a PoW, however, provided him with friendships that would last until his death at age 90.

When he was 19, Heinrich was held at the camp in Cultybraggan, Comrie, Scotland and was stunned by the kindness he was shown despite his sordid military background. After the war ended, he frequently returned to Comrie to visit the people who befriended him.

When he died in 2013, he left his entire $488,000 estate to Scotland.

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The BBC reports his will reads: “Herewith, I would like to express my gratitude to the people of Scotland for the kindness and generosity that I have experienced in Scotland during my imprisonment of war and hereafter.”

The Comrie Development Trust has reportedly had difficulty managing the veteran’s legacy due to complications with German processing, but his Last Will and Testament has been allocated toward providing care for the elder residents that showed him compassion in the 1940’s.

Click To Share The News With Your FriendsPhoto by Comrie Development Trust

Check Out This Gingerbread Mansion That Took 500 Hours to Build

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This is no measly gingerbread house – this is a fully-fledged French Renaissance-style chateau that took 500 hours of labor to build.

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The Biscuiteers, a team of talented pastry artists working at a London cookie boutique, built a gingerbread replica of Waddesdon Manor.

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Ever since they started the edible endeavor in September, the artists have used 65 pounds of butter and sugar, 240 eggs and 475 pounds of icing.

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Click To Share This Tasty Masterpiece With Your FriendsPhotos by Biscuiteers

Can’t Get Home For the Holidays? This Guy Can Help

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Peter Shankman knows what it’s like to be away from his family – that’s why he’s making sure that others will be home for Christmas as well.

The American entrepreneur travels a lot for work-related ventures, allowing him to stock up on frequent flyer miles along the way. This year in particular, Shankman says he broke his previous record by flying a total of 350,000 miles. For comparison, he states that the moon is 238,000 miles away.

That’s why he’s using Imgur, an online image-sharing website, to host an air miles donation offer. Users can post their stories and why they want to go home for the holidays – then, fellow users can up vote or down vote on the comment. Whichever stories have the most upvoted approval, they get the miles.

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“After I gave away miles last year, Imgur reached out to thank me, which I thought was super cool,” wrote Shankman. “But again this year, even after giving away my miles to my assistant, my friends, and my family, I have a lot of miles left over.”

“I’d like to send at least two, (hopefully three or four or more) Imgurians home for the holidays this year, because I like making people smile.”

If fellow users also have some stockpiled miles to spare, they can join forces with the charismatic corporate speaker and donate them to the cause. The post has already been viewed over 800,000 times.

Fly This Story To Your Friends: Click To SharePhoto by Peter Shankman

Black Santa is Coming to the Mall of America For 1st Time

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Ho ho ho, Saint Nicholas is here to spread racial diversity – and Christmas cheer!

For the first time in history, the Mall of America in Twin Cities, Minnesota will host a black Santa Claus, played by Larry Jefferson.

Landon Luther, the owner of the Santa Experience at Mall of America, says that he first spotted Jefferson at the Santa Convention in Branson Missouri. Since Jefferson happened to be the only Kris Kringle of color out of 1,000, Luther thought it would bring an exciting change of pace to their holiday meet-and-greet experience.

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“It gives [kids] something to identity with, but Santa is still just Santa,” Jefferson said in the video below. “Just Saturday, I was doing an event, and one child said, ‘Santa, you’re brown,’ and I said, ‘Yes, I am, but Santa comes in many different colors.’ He said, ‘Oh,’ so I gave him a candy cane, he ran off with other kids.”

(WATCH the video below)

 

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2,000 Veterans Just Arrived at Standing Rock to Form Human Shield Around Protestors

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Native American members of the Sioux Tribe in North Dakota have endured water cannons and rubber bullets from police forces seeking to evict the protestors – but now they have some much-needed allies.

2,000 veterans with the Veterans Stand for Standing Rock organization have just arrived at the Standing Rock campsite to surround and protect the protestors.

“We want to offer them a moment of peace and, if we can, take a little bit of pressure off,” said Ashleigh Jennifer Parker, a Coast Guard veteran and spokeswoman for Veterans Stand for Standing Rock.

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Though the campsite is reportedly playing host to the maximum amount of occupants, 1,000 more veterans say that they plan on joining the protest at some point during the coming week. The 2,000 vets who just arrived plan on guarding the protestors from December 4th through to December 7th. Some plan to stay indefinitely.

The Sioux tribe have been protesting the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline: a $3.8 billion, 1,172-mile pipeline that would stretch underneath a lake on the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation. Not only would the DAPL threaten the safety of their water supply, but it also violates the land that is sacred to the tribe. Construction was supposed to take place through Bismark, North Dakota, but the plans were allegedly rerouted because of concern over possible water contamination.

North Dakota Governor Jack Dalrymple has issued a warning of eviction because of the harsh weather conditions, but Standing Rock representatives said that “they were in it for the long haul” and would not budge without resolution.

 

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Spain Gets Rid of Fascist Named Streets to Honor Women Instead

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Due to a continuously changing political map, Spain will no longer be the home of General Franco Street – instead, several cities in the Spanish nation will be renaming their fascist road names to honor women.

Currently, only about 5% of the nation’s streets are named after females, most of which are religious figures and saints. The gender imbalance is not specific to Spain – a government survey of 7 major world cities found that only 27.5% of streets were named after women.

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Ever since Franco’s rule ended in nearly 40 years ago, the Spanish government only enforced a law promising to rededicate all public spaces named after autocratic heritage in 2007. The problem is only just now being addressed because of the change in municipal politics since the 2015 elections.

Several cities such as Bilbao, Oviedo, and Càdiz plan on correcting the imbalance by renaming 80% of their streets with civil rights activists, physicists, artists, novelists, famous journalists, and revolutionaries during Franco’s regime. Some roads will ever honor international women of talent and inspiration, such as Frida Kahlo, Rosa Parks, and Jane Austen.

Spread The Good News: Click To SharePhoto by David Pérez, CC

Magic Mushrooms Show Groundbreaking Psychological Relief in Cancer Patients

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In a small double-blind study, Johns Hopkins researchers report that a substantial majority of people suffering cancer-related anxiety or depression found considerable relief for up to six months from a single large dose of psilocybin — the active compound in hallucinogenic “magic mushrooms.”

MORE: How to Grow Magic Mushrooms at Home

The researchers cautioned that the drug was given in tightly controlled conditions in the presence of two clinically trained monitors and said they do not recommend use of the compound outside of such a research or patient care setting.

The Johns Hopkins team released its study results, involving 51 adult patients, concurrently with researchers from New York University Langone Medical Center, who conducted a similarly designed study on 29 participants. Both studies are published in the Journal of Psychopharmacology on Dec. 1.

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The Johns Hopkins group reported that psilocybin decreased clinician- and patient-rated depressed mood, anxiety and death anxiety, and increased quality of life, life meaning and optimism. Six months after the final session of treatment, about 80 percent of participants continued to show clinically significant decreases in depressed mood and anxiety, with about 60 percent showing symptom remission into the normal range. Eighty-three percent reported increases in well-being or life satisfaction. Some 67 percent of participants reported the experience as one of the top five meaningful experiences in their lives, and about 70 percent reported the experience as one of the top five spiritually significant lifetime events.

“The most interesting and remarkable finding is that a single dose of psilocybin, which lasts four to six hours, produced enduring decreases in depression and anxiety symptoms, and this may represent a fascinating new model for treating some psychiatric conditions,” says Roland Griffiths, Ph.D., professor of behavioral biology in the Departments of Psychiatry at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. He notes that traditional psychotherapy offered to people with cancer, including behavioral therapy and antidepressants, can take weeks or even months, isn’t always effective, and in the case of some drugs, such as benzodiazepines, may have addictive and other troubling side effects.

Griffiths says his team’s new study grew out of a decade of research at Johns Hopkins on the effects of psilocybin in healthy volunteers, which found that psilocybin can consistently produce positive changes in mood, behavior and spirituality when administered to carefully screened and prepared participants. The study was designed to see if psilocybin could produce similar results in psychologically distressed cancer patients.

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“A life-threatening cancer diagnosis can be psychologically challenging, with anxiety and depression as very common symptoms,” says Griffiths. “People with this kind of existential anxiety often feel hopeless and are worried about the meaning of life and what happens upon death.”

For the study, the investigators recruited 51 participants diagnosed with life-threatening cancers, most of which were recurrent or metastatic. They were chosen from a total of 566 individuals reached through flyers, web advertisements and physician referrals. Most participants had breast, upper digestive, GI, genitourinary or blood cancer, and each had been given a formal psychiatric diagnosis, including an anxiety or depressive disorder.

Half of the participants were female with an average age of 56. Ninety-two percent were white, 4 percent were African-American and 2 percent were Asian.

Each participant had two treatment sessions scheduled five weeks apart, one with a very low psilocybin dose (1 or3 milligrams per 70 kilograms) taken in a capsule and meant to act as a “control” placebo because the dose was too low to produce effects. In the other session, participants received a capsule with what is considered a moderate or high dose (22 or 30 milligrams per 70 kilograms).

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To minimize expectancy effects, the participants and the staff members supervising the sessions were told that the participants would receive psilocybin on both sessions, but they did not know that all participants would receive one high and one low dose. Blood pressure and mood were monitored throughout the sessions. Two monitors aided participants during each session, encouraging them to lie down, wear an eye mask, listen to music through headphones and direct their attention on their inner experience. If anxiety or confusion arose, the monitors provided reassurance to the participants.

In addition to experiencing changes in visual perception, emotions and thinking, most participants reported experiences of psychological insight and often profound, deeply meaningful experiences of the interconnectedness of all people.

The researchers assessed each participant’s mood, attitude about life, behaviors and spirituality with questionnaires and structured interviews before the first session, seven hours after taking the psilocybin, five weeks after each session and six months after the second session. Immediately after the sessions, participants completed questionnaires assessing changes in visual, auditory and body perceptions; feelings of transcendence; changes in mood; and more.

Structured clinical interviews, such as the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale and the Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale, and patient questionnaires, like the Beck Depression Inventory and the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, assessed depression and anxiety. Other questionnaires assessed quality of life, death acceptance, meaningful existence, optimism and spirituality — generally defined as a search for the meaning of life and a connection to something bigger than one’s self. To measure the changes in attitudes, moods and behavior over time, the researchers administered a questionnaire that assessed negative or positive changes in attitudes about life, mood and behavior.

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With regard to adverse effects, Griffiths says 15 percent of participants were nauseated or vomited, and one-third of participants experienced some psychological discomfort, such as anxiety or paranoia, after taking the higher dose. One-third of the participants had transient increases in blood pressure. A few participants reported headaches following the session.

“Before beginning the study, it wasn’t clear to me that this treatment would be helpful, since cancer patients may experience profound hopelessness in response to their diagnosis, which is often followed by multiple surgeries and prolonged chemotherapy,” says Griffiths. “I could imagine that cancer patients would receive psilocybin, look into the existential void and come out even more fearful. However, the positive changes in attitudes, moods and behavior that we documented in healthy volunteers were replicated in cancer patients.”

Up to 40 percent of people with cancer suffer from a mood disorder, according to the National Comprehensive Cancer Network.

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Anticipating wide interest in the psilocybin research from scientists, clinicians and the public, the journal solicited 11 commentaries to be co-published with the study results written by luminaries in psychiatry, palliative care and drug regulation, including two past presidents of the American Psychiatric Association, a past president of the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology, the former deputy director of the U.S. Office of National Drug Control Policy, and the former head of the U.K. Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Authority. In general, the commentaries were supportive of the research and of using these drugs in a clinical setting as tools for psychiatry.

(Source: NYU Langone Medical Center)

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Watch A-League Soccer Player Stop Game to Rescue Felled Seagull

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The Sydney FC goalkeeper Danny Vukovic isn’t just a talented goalkeeper – he’s now the hero of an injured seagull who was struck during Wednesday night’s FFA Cup final game.

The team’s defender Sebastian Ryall kicked the ball in a short range pass that accidentally hit the low-flying bird.

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As it tumbled to the green, Vukovic signaled to the ref that the bird was hurt, and he was transporting it to safety.

After scooping it up into his goalie gloves, he hurried to the sidelines where he gently deposited it onto the ground and gave it a few get-well pats on the head before heading back to his station.

One of the announcers exclaimed that the gull – who did not suffer any lasting harm – would become the FFA Cup mascot. Though it remains to be seen, the bird already has its own Twitter account.

(WATCH the video below)

More Young People Are Watching Planet Earth 2 Than Reality TV

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Contrary to popular belief suggesting that millenials aren’t interested in anything but their smart phones, BBC has recently confirmed that their hit documentary series Planet Earth 2 has more viewers in the 16-35 age demographic than reality TV show The X Factor.

Their most popular episode, the ‘Mountains’ second installment, scored 1.8 million young viewers out of their 12 million in a week rather than The X Factor’s 1.4 million out of seven million.

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The series’s presenter Sir David Attenborough attributes its success to the soundtrack composed by Hans Zimmer; improvements in technology; and young viewers’ fixation on the importance of the planet’s future.

Planet Earth made history by becoming the first wildlife documentary to be shot in high-definition. The show not only provides incredible snapshots of a world still mostly unexplored, but it also shows the ever-increasing amount of impact made by climate change on the environment. You can tune into its next episode via the BBC at 8:00PM on Sundays.

Click To Share The News With Your FriendsPhoto by Stuck in Customs, CC

Adorable 5-Year-old Becomes Honorary Cop After Giving Flowers and Hugs to Seniors

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Officer Oliver Davis may be small and adorable, but he takes his job very seriously.

This pint-sized policeman has made it his job to visit nursing homes in Overland Park, Kansas and give out hugs, roses, and kisses to all the residents.

“Everyone told me it made their day. He asked me if it was ok to hug them and I said yes! So he would pass out a flower and give each one a hug,” Brandi Davis told the Good News Network. “We have been been to 3 nursing homes so far and he loves it and wants to go to more.”

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His kindness doesn’t just stop at the elderly – the preschooler is very careful about keeping an eye on the rest of the community as well.

“He wakes up every morning and puts on his uniform and then has to ride his motorcycle rain or shine to check on all of the neighbors. He then has to sit on the street with his radar gun to check for speeders!”

Officer Oliver spreads so much spread love in his town, the local police force gave him an honorary police badge and salute for his kindness.

(WATCH the adorable video below)

 

Freeze! Click To Share The Sweetness With Your FriendsPhotos by Brandi Davis