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

Orthodontist Dr. Leon Klempner at Coolsmiles Orthodontics Launches Charity to Fund Surgeries for Children with Severe Facial Deformities

The Smile Rescue Fund for Kids Non Profit Foundation Helps Children Too Severe for Treatment by Established Charitable Organizations Live a Normal Life.

Orthodontist Dr. Leon Klempner at Coolsmiles Orthodontics Launches Charity to Fund Surgeries for Children with Severe Facial Deformities
2011-07-12
PORT JEFFERSON, NY, July 12, 2011 (Press-News.org) Long Island orthodontist Leon Klempner today announces the launch of The Smile Rescue Fund for Kids, an organization he founded to provide funding to children born with severe facial and craniofacial deformities. These children have such significant challenges that they cannot be helped by their families, governmental agencies and currently established charitable organizations.

Facial deformities result in many challenging medical issues, including feeding problems, hearing loss, unintelligible speech, and recurrent ear infections. But the social and psychological consequences that result are just as devastating. The stigma of looking and sounding different leads to a very difficult and lonely life. Often, peers, communities, and even relatives shun lovable and loving children, ashamed of their appearance and speech and powerless to affect positive change. Some are hidden away in locked rooms, deprived of education, medical care and any socialization with the outside world.

Due to the high costs of treatment around 15,000 USD children with the most severe deformities do not fall into the realm of support that many non-profits and charities provide. Currently, the Smile Rescue Fund for Kids is currently fundraising to pay for the surgery of Saline, a young girl who lives in the Nyanza Province of Kenya.

The Smile Rescue Fund for Kids will raise money in two ways: 1) by soliciting fundraising committee members, who provide ideas and support for ways to raise funds, and 2) by direct contribution through a secure PayPal link on the website. All donations go directly to the medical fund.

The organization's board of directors includes Klempner, along with Alexander Dagum, MD, Chief of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery at Stony Brook University Medical Center, Melissa Studin, Esq., Attorney at Addabbo & Greenberg and Amy Epstein, MBA Managing Director ABI marketing public relations.

The Smile Rescue Fund for Kids was founded by Dr. Leon Klempner of Coolsmiles Orthodontics, a New York orthodontist with offices located in Port Jefferson and Medford NY. He has a strong professional interest in helping children born with dentofacial deformities such as cleft lip and palate. To become a member of the fundraising committee or donate directly, visit www.smilerescuefund.org, send an email to info@smilerescuefund.org, or visit the organization's Facebook page.

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Orthodontist Dr. Leon Klempner at Coolsmiles Orthodontics Launches Charity to Fund Surgeries for Children with Severe Facial Deformities

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

RealCareer Business Education Simulations from Realityworks, Inc. Receives "Best in Tech" Award from Scholastic Administr@tor Magazine

RealCareer Business Education Simulations from Realityworks, Inc. Receives "Best in Tech" Award from Scholastic Administr@tor Magazine
2011-07-12
Scholastic Administr@tor magazine has named RealCareer Business Education Simulations from Realityworks, Inc. a 2011 "Best in Tech" award winner. The national awards were presented at the 2011 International Society for Technology Education (ISTE) conference in Philadelphia on June 28. Scholastic Administr@tor selected the "Best in Tech" winners based on information from educators who have used the new technology, as well as editorial interviews. Ruthie Bass of North Shore Senior High School in Houston, TX provided information on the RealCareer Business ...

Submittal Exchange Launches Integrated LEED Management Software with Direct Submission to USGBC's LEED Online

Submittal Exchange Launches Integrated LEED Management Software with Direct Submission to USGBCs LEED Online
2011-07-12
Submittal Exchange announces the full integration of Greengrade LEED Management Software with its core Integrated Project Collaboration Software, Submittal Exchange for Construction. The timing of the announcement coincides with Greengrade's successful direct integration with USGBC's LEED Online for submitting LEED certification applications. Greengrade is a collaborative online management software tool that allows LEED project teams to communicate, track and manage LEED project information from planning to submission. The new integration between LEED Online and Greengrade ...

OAI: GM Auto Insurance Offer Highlights Minimum Coverage Issue

2011-07-12
General Motors recently announced that it would be teaming up with coverage provider MetLife to offer car insurance with no down payment and no payments for the entire first year following the purchase of certain GM models in Oregon and Washington. What's surprising about the financial protection provided for free through the offer is that it far exceeds the requirements set by law in the two states. Washington currently requires drivers to only carry $25,000 in bodily injury liability protection per person and $50,000 total per accident, along with $10,000 in property ...

Providers Prefer Interface Engine Solutions that Deliver High-performance Interoperability for Seamless Data Flow

2011-07-12
The ever-expanding number of technology applications, combined with meaningful use and other initiatives, results in the increasing demand for application interoperability in healthcare organizations. This in turn places greater pressure and incentive on those organizations to find better and easier ways to facilitate interfacing. Providers want all the horsepower of a robust, scalable, and flexible interface engine (IE) wrapped up in an easy-to-use package. KLAS' new report entitled "Interface Engines: Beyond Interoperability" scrutinizes vendor performance, ...

Genetic study sheds new light on auto-immune arthritis

2011-07-12
The team of researchers from the Universities of Bristol, Queensland (Australia), Oxford, Texas and Toronto, used a technique called genome-wide association where millions of genetic markers are measured in thousands of people that have the disease and thousands of healthy individuals. Markers which are more frequent in individuals with the disease are more likely to be involved in the condition. Using this approach the investigators found an additional seven genes likely to be involved in the condition, bringing the total number of genes known to predispose to AS ...

Unlocking the genetics and biology of ankylosing spondylitis

2011-07-12
A study involving over 5,000 people living with the joint disorder ankylosing spondylitis has identified a series of genetic variants associated with increased susceptibility to the condition as well as providing new clues to how the condition may be treated in the future. The study, a collaboration between the Australo-Anglo-American Spondyloarthritis Consortium and the Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium, also provides one of the first confirmed examples of gene-gene interaction seen in humans. Ankylosing spondylitis is an autoimmune disease that affects as many ...

Light propagation controlled in photonic chips -- major breakthrough in telecommunications field

2011-07-12
New York, NY — July 10, 2011 — Researchers at Columbia Engineering School have built optical nanostructures that enable them to engineer the index of refraction and fully control light dispersion. They have shown that it is possible for light (electromagnetic waves) to propagate from point A to point B without accumulating any phase, spreading through the artificial medium as if the medium is completely missing in space. This is the first time simultaneous phase and zero-index observations have been made on the chip-scale and at the infrared wavelength. The study, to ...

U of T researchers build an antenna for light

2011-07-12
TORONTO, ON – University of Toronto researchers have derived inspiration from the photosynthetic apparatus in plants to engineer a new generation of nanomaterials that control and direct the energy absorbed from light. Their findings are reported in a forthcoming issue of Nature Nanotechnology, which will be released on July 10, 2011. The U of T researchers, led by Professors Shana Kelley and Ted Sargent, report the construction of what they term "artificial molecules." "Nanotechnologists have for many years been captivated by quantum dots – particles of semiconductor ...

Quick test can predict immune responses to flu shots

2011-07-12
Researchers at the Emory Vaccine Center have developed a method for predicting whether someone will produce high levels of antibodies against a flu shot a few days after vaccination. After scanning the extent to which carefully selected genes are turned on in white blood cells, the researchers can predict on day three, with up to 90 percent accuracy, who will make high levels of antibodies against a standard flu shot four weeks later. The results were published online July 10 in the journal Nature Immunology. "It often takes several weeks after vaccination for an ...

A murder in the magpie's nest

2011-07-12
VIDEO: This is a video of a violent interaction between the mother and the perpetrator recorded on the first day of infanticide recorded on April 28, 2010. Click here for more information. Finding their young dead in the nest is not uncommon for bird mothers. In many bird species some of the nestlings die before they leave the nest. This is known as "brood reduction", a common form of infanticide that the parents are to blame. On the other hand, witnessing a perpetrator killing ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Myocardial infarction may be an infectious disease

Access to four-year colleges that effectively serve low-income students is uneven across U.S., new study finds

American Meteorological Society announces 2026 weather, water, and climate honorees

Transcutaneous vagal nerve stimulation for gastrointestinal disorders

WSU study suggests returning students didn’t drive COVID-19 outbreaks in town

CURE GABA-A announces GABRA1 proof-of-concept for nanolipid particle therapy with Grann Pharmaceuticals

Global Virus Network announces 2025 Rising Star Mentorship Program Awardees

SEOULTECH researchers develop smart adhesive system based on starfish for aquatic applications

SEOULTECH researchers develop smarter, more controllable hydrogel pores

New material design strategy unlocks magnetic tunability in quasicrystal approximants

SEOULTECH researchers develop game-changing wireless technology that could transform mobile communications

Online therapy can help treat bulimia, offering hope for women lacking access to care

Reinventing fiber-based pressure sensors

Deforestation could account for over a third of heat deaths in areas of tropical forest loss researchers find

Innovative backpack enhances stability for people with ataxia

Mapping the heart of volcanoes when they wake up

Cosmic butterfly reveals clues to Earth's creation

Phone snubbing more damaging to insecure partners, study finds

Treating heart failure patients with anti-obesity medication reduces greenhouse gas emissions and improves clinical outcomes

Cardiac arrest in space: New research shows that automatic chest compressions are more effective for CPR when both rescuer and patient are floating in microgravity

Older age and low fitness levels are associated with heartbeat abnormalities that increase future cardiovascular risk

‘Built for cutting flesh, not resisting acidity’: sharks may be losing deadly teeth to ocean acidification

Study reveals beneficial effects of diet and exercise on alcohol-related adverse liver health

Making the weight in four years

AI review unveils new strategies for fixing missing traffic data in smart cities

Scientists discovered hopfion crystals – which are flying in spacetime

For bees, diet isn’t one-size-fits-all

How a malaria-fighting breakthrough provides lasting protection

Cognitive Behavioural therapy can alter brain structure and boost grey matter volume, study shows

Largest ever study into cannabis use investigates risk of paranoia and poor mental health in the general population

[Press-News.org] Orthodontist Dr. Leon Klempner at Coolsmiles Orthodontics Launches Charity to Fund Surgeries for Children with Severe Facial Deformities
The Smile Rescue Fund for Kids Non Profit Foundation Helps Children Too Severe for Treatment by Established Charitable Organizations Live a Normal Life.