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

Home Security That's a Perfect Fit for Your Lifestyle

LifeShield goes beyond the alarm with home security tailored to pet lovers, geeks, newlyweds, and more.

2012-09-17
YARDLEY, PA, September 17, 2012 (Press-News.org) LifeShield Security is proud to announce LifeShield Lifestyles, a unique tool to help consumers to choose home security systems and products that fit their routines and personalities. By offering security systems that are designed for individuals, families, and real-life situations, LifeShield is continuing its mission to go "beyond the alarm" and provide advanced technology wireless security and peace of mind.

"Home security is really about people, not houses. Homeowners and renters don't install alarm systems to protect walls, ceilings and doors. They buy it to protect their lives, loved ones, belongings, and of course, their pets," said Shannon Dominello, Chief Marketing Officer at LifeShield. "Whether you are a senior, a single, or a super saver, LifeShield Lifestyles can keep your home safe while adapting to your habits and priorities."

LifeShield offers customizable wireless alarm systems with interactive monitoring and free smartphone apps. The innovative force behind the design and development of LifeShield Security systems is that it makes users' lives safer and better. The new LifeShield Lifestyles helps achieve this goal, and shows how the same systems can be used in a myriad a ways to protect homes and keep homeowners in control.

"If your home security system isn't easy to use or doesn't fit your current lifestyle, you just won't use it very often," said Dominello. "Whether you identify yourself as a pet lover, a workaholic, or a military family, your life has different needs from anyone else's. LifeShield can protect your home and help you integrate better safety and security routines into your life without changing it."

LifeShield's Lifestyles can be found at: http://www.lifeshield.com/lifestyle-home-security/

About LifeShield Security
LifeShield Security is the first national, professional grade and professionally monitored wireless security system that uses an easy to set-up "plug and protect" process, providing superior home protection and the best value in total home security. For more on LifeShield Security, visit http://www.lifeshield.com/.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Flu antibody’s 'one-handed grab' may boost effort toward universal vaccine, new therapies

Flu antibody’s one-handed grab may boost effort toward universal vaccine, new therapies
2012-09-17
LA JOLLA, CA -- Scientists from The Scripps Research Institute and Sea Lane Biotechnologies have solved the co-crystal structure of a human antibody that can neutralize influenza viruses in a unique way. The antibody recognizes the crucial structure that flu viruses use to attach to host cells, even though previously this structure had been thought too small for an antibody to grab effectively. The immune protein manages to hit this precise spot by using just a small part of its target-grabbing apparatus. In so doing, it can neutralize a broad range of dangerous flu viruses. "This ...

Most coral reefs are at risk unless climate change is drastically limited

2012-09-17
Only under a scenario with strong action on mitigating greenhouse-gas emissions and the assumption that corals can adapt at extremely rapid rates, could two thirds of them be safe, shows a study now published in Nature Climate Change. Otherwise all coral reefs are expected to be subject to severe degradation. Coral reefs house almost a quarter of the species in the oceans and provide critical services – including coastal protection, tourism and fishing – to millions of people worldwide. Global warming and ocean acidification, both driven by human-caused CO2 emissions, ...

Chemists develop reversible method of tagging proteins

2012-09-17
Chemists at UC San Diego have developed a method that for the first time provides scientists the ability to attach chemical probes onto proteins and subsequently remove them in a repeatable cycle. Their achievement, detailed in a paper that appears online this week in the journal Nature Methods, will allow researchers to better understand the biochemistry of naturally formed proteins in order to create better antibiotics, anti-cancer drugs, biofuels, food crops and other natural products. It will also provide scientists with a new laboratory tool they can use to purify ...

Biggest European health study identifies key priorities in 26 cities

2012-09-17
Researchers have announced the results of the largest ever health and lifestyle survey of cities and conurbations across Europe – including five British urban centres. The research examined and compared the health, life expectancy and lifestyles of the populations of 26 European cities (the Euro-26) and found major differences, not only between cities, but within individual urban areas too. The pan-European study, led in the UK by the Universities of Manchester and Liverpool, identified key priority areas for each city studied that the researchers hope policymakers ...

Chinese scientists discover MVK mutations associated with DSAP

2012-09-17
September 16, 2012, Shenzhen, China–A Chinese research team, led by Anhui Medical University and BGI, has found the strong genetic evidences of mevalonate kinase gene (MVK) mutations link to disseminated superficial actinic porokeratosis (DSAP). It is a major step toward discovering the genetic pathogenesisof DSAP, and sheds an eye-opening insight into its further molecular diagnosis and treatment. The latest study was published online in Nature Genetics. DSAP is a rare, non-cancerous, non-contagious skin disorderthat causes dry, itchy lesions on the arms and legs. It ...

How bees decide what to be

How bees decide what to be
2012-09-17
Johns Hopkins scientists report what is believed to be the first evidence that complex, reversible behavioral patterns in bees – and presumably other animals – are linked to reversible chemical tags on genes. The scientists say what is most significant about the new study, described online September 16 in Nature Neuroscience, is that for the first time DNA methylation "tagging" has been linked to something at the behavioral level of a whole organism. On top of that, they say, the behavior in question, and its corresponding molecular changes, are reversible, which has ...

Clinic-based community program helps with childhood obesity

2012-09-17
Could a clinic-based intervention that assists in dealing with childhood obesity be scaled down into an easily-taught, community-based program? Yes, according to a new feasibility study conducted by researchers at Temple University's Center for Obesity Research and Education and published in the journal, Pediatrics. Working in partnership with UnitedHealth Group and the Greater Providence YMCA, the Temple researchers conducted a six-month program on weight loss and management for 155 children and their parents or guardians in Providence, R.I. "We've known for decades ...

Study suggests gap in treatment of sexually transmitted diseases among teens

2012-09-17
STANFORD, Calif. - California's pediatricians-in-training are not adequately educated about the methods to prevent recurrent sexually transmitted infections in teenagers. That's the conclusion of a study from the Stanford University School of Medicine and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital examining pediatric residents' knowledge of laws governing treatment of their patients' sexual partners. "Unless you treat the partner, your patient gets re-infected," Neville Golden, MD, an adolescent medicine specialist at Packard Children's and professor of pediatrics at Stanford. ...

PARP inhibitors may have clinical utility in HER2-positive breast cancers

2012-09-17
PHILADELPHIA — Poly (ADP-Ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitors, shown to have clinical activity when used alone in women with familial breast and ovarian cancers linked to BRCA mutations, may be a novel treatment strategy in women with HER2-positive breast cancers, according to the results of a study published in Cancer Research, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research. Currently, women with HER2-positive breast cancers are treated with therapies that target HER2. However, many women with this form of cancer either fail to ever respond to these targeted ...

Attractive names sustain increased vegetable intake in schools

Attractive names sustain increased vegetable intake in schools
2012-09-17
The age-old parental struggle of convincing youngsters to eat their fruits and vegetables has some new allies: Power Punch Broccoli, X-Ray Vision Carrots — and a host of catchy names for entrees in school cafeterias. Cornell University researchers studied how a simple change, such as using attractive names, would influence elementary-aged children's consumption of vegetables. In the first study, plain old carrots were transformed into "X-ray Vision Carrots." 147 students ranging from 8-11 years old from 5 ethnically and economically diverse schools participated in tasting ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Sea reptile’s tooth shows that mosasaurs could live in freshwater

Pure bred: New stem cell medium only has canine components

Largest study of its kind highlights benefits – and risks – of plant-based diets in children

Synergistic effects of single-crystal HfB2 nanorods: Simultaneous enhancement of mechanical properties and ablation resistance

Mysterious X-ray variability of the strongly magnetized neutron star NGC 7793 P13

The key to increasing patients’ advance care medical planning may be automatic patient outreach

Palaeontology: Ancient tooth suggests ocean predator could hunt in rivers

Polar bears may be adapting to survive warmer climates, says study

Canadian wildfire smoke worsened pediatric asthma in US Northeast: UVM study

New UBCO research challenges traditional teen suicide prevention models

Diversity language in US medical research agency grants declined 25% since 2024

Concern over growing use of AI chatbots to stave off loneliness

Biomedical authors often call a reference “recent” — even when it is decades old, analysis shows

The Lancet: New single dose oral treatment for gonorrhoea effectively combats drug-resistant infections, trial finds

Proton therapy shows survival benefit in Phase III trial for patients with head and neck cancers

Blood test reveals prognosis after cardiac arrest

UBCO study finds microdosing can temporarily improve mood, creativity

An ECOG-ACRIN imaging study solves a long-standing gap in metastatic breast cancer research and care: accurately measuring treatment response in patients with bone metastases

Cleveland Clinic presents final results of phase 1 clinical trial of preventive breast cancer vaccine study

Nationally renowned anesthesiology physician-scientist and clinical operations leader David Mintz, MD, PhD, named Chair of the Department of Anesthesiology at the UM School of Medicine

Clean water access improves child health in Mozambique, study shows

Study implicates enzyme in neurodegenerative conditions

Tufts professor named Fellow of the National Academy of Inventors

Tiny new device could enable giant future quantum computers

Tracing a path through photosynthesis to food security

First patient in Arizona treated with new immune-cell therapy at HonorHealth Research Institute

Studies investigate how AI can aid clinicians in analyzing medical images

Researchers pitch strategies to identify potential fraudulent participants in online qualitative research

Sweeping study shows similar genetic factors underlie multiple psychiatric disorders

How extreme weather events affect agricultural trade between US states

[Press-News.org] Home Security That's a Perfect Fit for Your Lifestyle
LifeShield goes beyond the alarm with home security tailored to pet lovers, geeks, newlyweds, and more.