PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Joe Jedlowski Makes Significant Donation to Alzheimer's Association

Joe Jedlowski is pleased to announce a significant donation made to the Alzheimer's Association. This donation will help in many aspects when it comes to research and treatment of this detrimental disease.

2011-06-30
MARLBORO, NJ, June 30, 2011 (Press-News.org) Joe Jedlowski is pleased to announce a significant donation made to the Alzheimer's Association. This donation will help in many aspects when it comes to research and treatment of this detrimental disease. Joe Jedlowski, who is a prominent executive throughout the senior living field, has firsthand knowledge of the effects that Alzheimers has on individuals and their families.

As Regional Vice President of Atria Senior Living Group, Joe was affiliated with many influential groups and organizations within the New Jersey community. In addition to monetary donations, he also holds many notable accomplishments in the assisted living industry. Among these are several which have led to more efficient company programs and living environments for patients. The experience gained in each career position has led Joe to successfully oversee the operations of over 12 assisted living facilities (1400 Units) throughout 8 different states.

Joe Jedlowski's professional career began by obtaining his Degree of Science and Healthcare Administration. Since then, he has developed a proven success record as a Regional Director, Senior Vice President, and VP of operations. Although primary skills include healthcare related fields, Joe is also highly efficient in marketing, planning, and budgeting. His strategies that have been implemented have led to reduced debts, overall growth, and expense reduction.

Executives within the healthcare industry consistently witness the effects of various ailments and diseases, including Alzheimers. Donations, such as the one presented by Joe Jedlowski, allow the Alzheimer's Association to continue with progress towards developing cures and treatments. With numerous contributions to the industry, Joe continues to direct numerous professional and reliable teams and organizations. Further details and information can be found throughout his webpage profile.

Joe Jedlowski
http://www.linkedin.com/in/jedlowski


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

The Cancer Genome Atlas completes detailed ovarian cancer analysis

2011-06-30
An analysis of genomic changes in ovarian cancer has provided the most comprehensive and integrated view of cancer genes for any cancer type to date. Ovarian serous adenocarcinoma tumors from 500 patients were examined by The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) Research Network and analyses are reported in the June 30, 2011, issue of Nature. Serous adenocarcinoma is the most prevalent form of ovarian cancer, accounting for about 85 percent of all ovarian cancer deaths. TCGA researchers completed whole-exome sequencing, which examines the protein-coding regions of the genome, ...

Mr. Dimitri Snowden Announces the Launch of His Personal New Website

2011-06-30
Dimitri Snowden announces the launch of his new website, www.DimitriSnowden.com. The site will be a virtual hub, showcasing Dimitri's online activities and linking his business and personal pursuits in one easy to find location. The new website details Dimitri Snowden's passion for mixed martial arts (MMA), robotics, racing, the environment, and his strategic consulting firm, ion360. The consulting firm specializes in delivering compelling outcomes using clever strategy and smart technology platforms. The newly-launched website states that Dimitri Snowden, within the ...

Lung cancer screening trial shows screening with CT scans reduces lung cancer deaths

2011-06-30
Philadelphia — Results of the National Lung Screening Trial (NLST) published online in the June 30 New England Journal of Medicine report a twenty percent reduction in lung cancer deaths among study participants who were screened with low-dose helical computed tomography (CT) versus those screened with chest X-ray. Conducted by the American College of Radiology Imaging Network (ACRIN) and the National Cancer Institute's Lung Screening Study Group, the NLST enrolled 53,000 current and former heavy smokers aged 55 to 74 at 33 sites across the United States. Lung cancer ...

UCSF-led team decodes evolution of skin and ovarian cancer cells

2011-06-30
A team of researchers led by scientists at the University of California, San Francisco has developed a way to uncover the evolution of human cancer cells, determining the order in which mutations emerge in them as they wend their way from a normal, healthy state into invasive, malignant masses. The work may give doctors a new way to design diagnostics for detecting the signs of early cancers, when they are generally more treatable than in their later stages. This approach relies on teasing apart the DNA of cancer cells, and it is something like genetic archeology. ...

Betting on good luck and 4-leaf clovers

2011-06-30
Research led by the University of Cambridge has found a link between impulsivity and flawed reasoning (such as believing in superstitious rituals and luck) in problem gamblers. Studying compulsive gamblers who were seeking treatment at the National Problem Gambling Clinic, the researchers found that those gamblers with higher levels of impulsivity were much more susceptible to errors in reasoning associated with gambling, such as superstitious rituals (e.g. carrying a lucky charm) and explaining away recent losses (e.g. on bad luck or 'cold' machines). The findings ...

How safe is mist netting? First large-scale study into bird capture technique evaluates the risks

How safe is mist netting? First large-scale study into bird capture technique evaluates the risks
2011-06-30
Capturing birds using mist nets to study behaviour, movement or the demographics of a species is one of the most common research techniques in ornithology, yet until now there have been no large scale studies into the risks mist nets pose to birds. Writing in the British Ecological Society's Methods in Ecology and Evolution researchers from California used a dataset of over 345,000 records to evaluate the risks of mist netting. The research, led by Erica Spotswood from the University of California at Berkeley, used data from organisations across the United States and ...

Drink-fueled memory blackouts among students predict future injury risk

2011-06-30
The higher the number of drink fuelled memory blackouts a student experiences, the greater is his/her risk of sustaining a future injury while under the influence, reveals research published online in Injury Prevention. Memory blackouts refer to the inability to recall events; they do not refer to loss of consciousness as a result of drinking too much. Research indicates that alcohol alters nerve cell communication in the hippocampal region of the brain, which affects memory formation. Hazardous drinking - and its consequences - "are pervasive on college campuses," ...

Junior doctors clueless about what to do during major incidents

2011-06-30
Junior doctors have no idea what they should be doing when a major incident, such as a terrorist attack or transport disaster, occurs, reveals research published in the online journal BMJ Open. This knowledge gap could be critical, says the author, especially as the UK's current terrorism threat level is classified as "severe," meaning that a terrorist attack is highly likely. The Department of Health defines a major incident as "any event whose impact cannot be handled within routine service arrangements." It involves special procedures by one or more of the emergency ...

Outpatient electronic prescribing systems don't cut out common mistakes

2011-06-30
Outpatient electronic prescribing systems don't cut out the common mistakes made in manual systems, suggests research published online in the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association (JAMIA). And not all systems are the same: some perform worse than others, the study shows. The rapid adoption of electronic prescribing systems has in part been fuelled by the belief that they would reduce the sorts of errors commonly made in manual prescribing systems, the authors say. The authors base their findings on an analysis of just under 4,000 computer generated ...

ESC calls for greater awareness of potential for adverse events from bleeding as a result of PCI

2011-06-30
Sophia Antipolis, France: 30 June 2011: The European Society of Cardiology (ESC Working Group on Thrombosis) is calling for greater attention to be paid by health care staff to reducing bleeding in patients with acute coronary syndromes (ACS) undergoing percutaneous coronary interventions (PCI), and for increased research in the field. The position paper, published online today in The European Heart Journal, summarises current knowledge regarding the epidemiology of bleeding in ACS and PCI, and provides a European perspective on management strategies to minimise the extent ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Novel treatment combination improves progression-free survival in metastatic, estrogen-receptor-positive HER-2-negative breast cancer

ESMO 2025: Trial results show belzutifan shrinks rare neuroendocrine tumors and improves symptoms in patients

ESMO 2025: Dual targeted therapy shows promise in previously treated advanced kidney cancer patients

New generation of Antibody-Drug Conjugates (ADCs) shows unprecedented promise in early-stage disease

Sylvester Cancer Tip Sheet for October 2025

Three science and technology leaders elected to Hertz Foundation Board of Directors

Jump Trading CSO Kevin Bowers elected to Hertz Foundation Board of Directors

Former Inscripta CEO Sri Kosaraju elected to Hertz Foundation Board of Directors

Citadel’s Jordan Chetty elected to Hertz Foundation Board of Directors

McGill research flags Montreal snow dump, inactive landfills as major methane polluters

A lightweight and rapid bidirectional search algorithm

Eighty-five years of big tree history available in one place for the first time

MIT invents human brain model with six major cell types to enable personalized disease research, drug discovery

Health and economic air quality co-benefits of stringent climate policies

How immune cells deliver their deadly cargo

How the brain becomes a better listener: How focus enhances sound processing

Processed fats found in margarines unlikely to affect heart health

Scientists discover how leukemia cells evade treatment

Sandra Shi MD, MPH, named 2025 STAT Wunderkind

Treating liver disease with microscopic nanoparticles

Chemicals might be hitching a ride on nanoplastics to enter your skin

Pregnant patients with preexisting high cholesterol may have elevated CV risk

UC stroke experts discuss current and future use of AI tools in research and treatment

The Southern Ocean’s low-salinity water locked away CO2 for decades, but...

OHSU researchers develop functional eggs from human skin cells

Most users cannot identify AI bias, even in training data

Hurricane outages: Analysis details the where, and who, of increased future power cuts

Craters on surface of melanoma cells found to serve as sites for tumor killing

Research Spotlight: Mapping overlooked challenges in stroke recovery

Geographic and temporal patterns of screening for breast, cervical, and colorectal cancer in the US

[Press-News.org] Joe Jedlowski Makes Significant Donation to Alzheimer's Association
Joe Jedlowski is pleased to announce a significant donation made to the Alzheimer's Association. This donation will help in many aspects when it comes to research and treatment of this detrimental disease.