SAN LUIS OBISPO, CA, April 25, 2012 (Press-News.org) Etna Interactive, a dynamic Web services firm, will be a featured exhibitor at The Aesthetic Meeting 2012 in Vancouver.
During The American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery (ASAPS) meeting, May 5-8 at the Vancouver Convention Center, board-certified plastic surgeons from around the world will engage with industry-related companies about their products and services.
As a special bonus, Etna Interactive will be offering free half-hour website assessments, personalized Web marketing advice and a show guide handout with helpful tips for choosing reliable Web marketing partners.
Additionally, seasoned Web marketer and Etna Interactive President Ryan Miller will join a distinguished panel of presenters on Tuesday, May 8, to discuss the business side of aesthetic plastic surgery.
"As plastic surgeons, ASAPS members are trained for success in the operating room," Miller says. "Our role in this year's meeting reflects our commitment to the surgeons' success in their offices."
Website: http://www.etnainteractive.com
Etna Interactive Featured at Aesthetic Meeting in Vancouver
Etna Interactive, a dynamic Web services firm, will be a featured exhibitor at The Aesthetic Meeting 2012 in Vancouver.
2012-04-25
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Locked down, RNA editing yields odd fly behavior
2012-04-25
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — Because a function of RNA is to be translated as the genetic instructions for the protein-making machinery of cells, RNA editing is the body's way of fine-tuning the proteins it produces, allowing us to adapt. The enzyme ADAR, which does this editing job in the nervous system of creatures ranging from mice to men, even edits itself. In a new study that examined the self-editing process and locked it down at two extremes in fruit flies, Brown University scientists found some surprising insights into how this "fine-tuning of the fine-tuner" ...
New Infographic Makes Caravan Insurance That Little Bit More Exciting!
2012-04-25
As part of their commitment to providing useful information in plain English, specialist niche insurance broker Cover4caravans.co.uk have added a fun and useful infographic to their website highlighting information you may not know from the caravan universe.
For example:
- it is estimated that there are a whopping 500,000 tourers on the road in the UK- with around 15-20% not insured;
- the average cost of a claim is 19.25% more than cost of a caravan insurance policy;
- the UK's most expensive static caravan in the UK is the Haulfryn Anniversary Lodge in Wales, that ...
Flu vaccination reminder via text messaging improves rate of vaccination among low-income children
2012-04-25
CHICAGO – A text messaging intervention with education-related messages sent to parents increased influenza vaccination coverage compared with usual care in a traditionally hard-to-reach, low-income, urban, minority population of children and adolescents, although coverage overall remained low, according to a study in the April 25 issue of JAMA.
"Timely vaccination is the cornerstone of influenza prevention through vaccination of susceptible populations before illness becomes epidemic in communities. The effectiveness of the influenza vaccine in children and adolescents ...
Lucky Player Wins EUR16,758 at Casino UK
2012-04-25
April has proved to be a lucky month for a Casino UK player when she hit the jackpot playing slot games. D.W. was playing the classic slots game Cash Splash when she hit a big win of EUR16,758. She is one of the many players who have struck it lucky this month.
The game Cash Splash is a 3-Reel slot with a Progressive Jackpot. This game captures the classic feel of traditional casino slots but adds a modern twist with high-quality graphics and new bonus features. This, along with many other slot games, is available to play at Casino UK. The casino boasts an impressive ...
Botox injections associated with only modest benefit for chronic migraine and daily headaches
2012-04-25
CHICAGO – Although botulinum toxin A ("Botox") injections are U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved for preventive treatment for chronic migraines, a review and analysis of previous studies finds a small to modest benefit for patients with chronic migraine headaches and chronic daily headaches, although botox injections were not associated with greater benefit than placebo for preventing episodic migraine or chronic tension-type headaches, according to an article in the April 25 issue of JAMA.
"Migraine and tension-type headaches are common. Although up to 42 percent ...
Non-Drug Treatments for ADHD by Integrative Psychiatry Experts Dr. Richard P. Brown and Dr. Patricia Gerbarg is Released on Internet Bookseller Web Sites and in Bookstores by WW Norton
2012-04-25
Richard P Brown, MD, and Patricia Gerbarg, MD, Integrative Psychiatry experts, are authors of a new book with the latest complementary treatments for ADD/ADHD entitled Non-Drug Treatments for ADHD: New Options for Kids, Adults, & Clinicians (WW Norton, 2012, hardcover, 272 pages, ISBN 978-0-393-70622-2), now in release on Internet bookseller web sites, and in US and UK bookstores.
"This book is a winner! (It is) a lively, well-researched, hugely needed book on treatments for ADHD that do not involve the use of medication. In no way anti-medication, it addresses ...
Heart infection involving ICD associated with high rate of complications, risk of death
2012-04-25
CHICAGO – Patients with infective endocarditis involving implanted cardiac devices experience a high rate of complications such as valve infections, heart failure, and persistent bacteremia, and high in-hospital and 1-year mortality rates, particularly if there is valve involvement, according to a study in the April 25 issue of JAMA.
"Cardiac electronic devices, including permanent pacemakers and implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (ICDs), are increasingly implanted worldwide, with estimates of more than 4.2 million patients with a permanent pacemaker or ICD implanted ...
VLBW infants born at hospitals known for nursing excellence have better outcomes on some measures
2012-04-25
CHICAGO – In a study that included more than 72,000 very low-birth-weight infants, among those born in hospitals with recognition for nursing excellence (RNE), compared with non-RNE hospitals, there was a significantly lower rate of hospital infection, death at 7-days and severe intraventricular hemorrhage but not lower rates of death at 28-days or hospital stay mortality, according to a study in the April 25 issue of JAMA.
"One in 4 very low-birth-weight (VLBW) infants (less than 1,500 grams [3.3 lbs.]) dies in the first year of life; nearly all deaths (87 percent) occur ...
Watching and waiting is best management for pregnant women whose waters break early
2012-04-25
Pregnant women whose waters break late in preterm pregnancy but before they are in labor—the medical term for this situation is preterm prelabor rupture of the membranes—are best managed by monitoring and waiting until they deliver spontaneously rather than by inducing labor according to a study by Dutch researchers published in this week's PLoS Medicine.
In their study, David van der Ham, from the Maastricht University Medical Center, Netherlands, and colleagues randomized over 500 pregnant women with preterm prelabor rupture of the membranes between 34-37 weeks gestation ...
Many countries still lack a health research strategy
2012-04-25
Although there has been a steady increase in medical research from low- and middle- income countries in recent decades, there are still many countries that lack anything resembling a health research strategy, according to international experts writing in this week's PLoS Medicine.
In anticipation of the upcoming World Health Report on the need for health research, Martin McKee from the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, UK and colleagues make the case for the importance of establishing national health research strategies so that public health systems can function ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Scientists glimpse how enzymes “dance” while they work, and why that’s important
California partnership aided COVID-19 response and health equity, report finds
University of Oklahoma secures $19.9 million for revolutionary radar technology
Study finds restoring order to dividing cancer cells may prevent metastasis
High-accuracy tumor detection with label-free microscopy and neural networks
Wayne State research reveals fetuses exposed to Zika virus have long-term immune challenges
Researchers deconstruct chikungunya outbreaks to improve prediction and vaccine development
Study finds one-year change on CT scans linked to future outcomes in fibrotic lung disease
Discovery of a novel intracellular trafficking pathway in plant cells
New tool helps forecast volcano slope collapses and tsunamis
Molecular coating cleans up noisy quantum light
From Parkinson's to rare diseases, discovered a key switch for cellular health
Tiny sugars in the brain disrupt emotional circuits, fueling depression
Mini-organs reveal how the cervix defends itself
Africa, climate, and food: How to feed a continent without increasing its carbon footprint
Researchers demonstrates substrate design principles for scalable superconducting quantum materials
How better software choices could cut US health care costs
Concussion history in NCAA athletes yields mixed health outcomes
Counting plastic reveals hidden waste and sparks action
Warming oceans may pose a serious threat to American lobsters
Deaths from drug-induced unintentional injury rise across the US
In car crashes with pedestrians, age and zip code may predict extent of traumatic injuries
AI optimizes evacuation, diagnosis, and treatment of wounded soldiers in Ukraine
Mastectomy linked to worsened sexual health, body image after surgery
Drop in credit score after cancer diagnosis linked to increased mortality, study shows
Use of weight loss drugs before bariatric surgery has soared in recent years, study finds
EMS call times in rural areas take at least 20 minutes longer than national average
Rectal bleeding in young adults linked to 8.5 times higher risk of colorectal cancer
Hospital closures disproportionately affect socioeconomically disadvantaged communities
Global disparities in premature mortality
[Press-News.org] Etna Interactive Featured at Aesthetic Meeting in VancouverEtna Interactive, a dynamic Web services firm, will be a featured exhibitor at The Aesthetic Meeting 2012 in Vancouver.