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Prompt Proofing Blog Post: Why We Need Proofreaders

2011-06-17
Ever wonder why on earth you should pay good money to have your blog posts / web copy proofread? Unfortunately writers (yes, even good writers like you) write fast, especially if a deadline is looming. When you're in a hurry you make typos - we all do! In connection with the business copywriting and blogging side of Prompt Proofing, we have to research many specialized fields and I never cease to be surprised how many excellent writers make typos. These are well-educated literate people who are just in a hurry. Unfortunately, at the end of the day, instead of remembering ...

Low testosterone linked to varicoceles

2011-06-17
NEW YORK (June 16, 2011) -- As many as 15 percent of men have varicoceles, masses of enlarged and dilated veins in the testicles. There is new evidence that varicoceles, long known to be a cause of male infertility, interfere with the production of testosterone -- a crucial hormone to maintaining men's health. There is good news too: Microsurgery can increase testosterone levels in these men. Results of new research by physician-scientists at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center are in a recent edition of BJU International. "Varicoceles are a much ...

Messenger orbital data confirm theories, reveal surprises

2011-06-17
Washington, D.C.--On March 18, 2011, the MESSENGER spacecraft entered orbit around Mercury to become that planet's first orbiter. The spacecraft's instruments are making a complete reconnaissance of the planet's geochemistry, geophysics, geologic history, atmosphere, magnetosphere, and plasma environment. MESSENGER is providing a wealth of new information and some surprises. For instance, Mercury's surface composition differs from that expected for the innermost of the terrestrial planets, and Mercury's magnetic field has a north-south asymmetry that affects interaction ...

Stratos Jet Charters, Inc. Explains the Value of Working with ACANA Members

2011-06-17
With the economic downturn still in effect, many air charter consumers are seeking low-cost options for private jet charter. Stratos Jet Charters, Inc., a worldwide air charter agency, warned private jet travelers today that some charter brokerages are offering reduced pricing on charter flights by engaging in unfair, deceptive business practices. In a recent interview on air charter safety, Stratos Jet Charters' president and founder, Joel Thomas, spoke out against charter brokers that engage in illegal charter flight activity, highlighting the value of working with ...

Postnatal depression linked to depression in offspring until age 16

2011-06-17
Washington, D.C., 16 June 2011 – Fortunately, postnatal depression often resolves itself in the weeks following childbirth. But for mothers with more profound or prolonged postnatal depression the risk of subsequent development of depression in their children is strong. A recent study by Lynne Murray and colleagues published in the May 2011 issue of the Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry (JAACAP) is the first to demonstrate that the effects of maternal depression on the likelihood of the child to develop depression may begin as early as infancy. ...

New stem cell research could aid in battle against bulging waistlines

New stem cell research could aid in battle against bulging waistlines
2011-06-17
Innovative adult stem cell research by scientists at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth) could aid efforts to apply the brakes to stem cells that produce the type of fat ringing the waists of millions. Research appeared today online ahead of the print issue of Cell Stem Cell. The scientists have developed a bold approach for targeting fat-generating stem cells that one day could aid in the delivery of drugs that slow the cells' ability to direct fat expansion. Because these cells are also used in regenerative medicine, this approach may ...

Vyzin Unveiled Personal Emergency Response System (PERS) with Remote Health Monitoring That Can Be Used for Entire Family

Vyzin Unveiled Personal Emergency Response System (PERS) with Remote Health Monitoring That Can Be Used for Entire Family
2011-06-17
VESAG watch can now be used by an entire family and its members to avail the emergency medical services more conveniently. Most of the personal emergency response systems or PERS work only for a single member of a house. A VESAG watch can now be used by as many as five members of a family. All the customers will be provided with a unique identification number. With this unique number, they can access their individual account and view their health statistics from VESAG portal. In case the customer does not have access to internet, they can call the customer care centre ...

Taking the 3-D measure of macromolecules:

Taking the 3-D measure of macromolecules:
2011-06-17
VIDEO: In this animation of a 3-D plasmon ruler, developed by a collaboration of researchers with the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and the University of Stuttgart, the plasmonic assembly acts as... Click here for more information. The world's first three-dimensional plasmon rulers, capable of measuring nanometer-scale spatial changes in macrmolecular systems, have been developed by researchers with the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)'s Lawrence Berkeley National ...

Majority of consumers oppose wine in supermarkets, study reveals

2011-06-17
BUFFALO, N.Y. -- A survey of wine drinkers conducted by the University at Buffalo School of Management has found that 54 percent say they are opposed to a New York State proposal to sell wine in supermarkets. In a survey of more than 5,000 households, 42 percent of those opposing wine sales in supermarkets cited "negative impact on small businesses" as their reason for doing so. Other reasons included reduction of wine selection (19 percent), likely end of personalized services (15 percent), end of a unique shopping experience at specialty stores (11 percent), perceived ...

Washington University surgeons successfully use artificial lung in toddler

2011-06-17
Two-year-old Owen Stark came to St. Louis Children's Hospital in the summer of 2010 near death from heart failure and dangerously high blood pressure in his lungs. Washington University physicians and surgeons at St. Louis Children's Hospital knew they had to act fast to save his life. They collaborated to make several strategic and innovative decisions that led to the first successful use of an artificial lung in a toddler. Their efforts are reported in the June 2011 issue of The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery. The artificial lung, made by Novalung ...

'Ultrawideband' could be future of medical monitoring

2011-06-17
CORVALLIS, Ore. – New research by electrical engineers at Oregon State University has confirmed that an electronic technology called "ultrawideband" could hold part of the solution to an ambitious goal in the future of medicine – health monitoring with sophisticated "body-area networks." Such networks would offer continuous, real-time health diagnosis, experts say, to reduce the onset of degenerative diseases, save lives and cut health care costs. Some remote health monitoring is already available, but the perfection of such systems is still elusive. The ideal device ...

Why disparities in dental care persist for African-Americans even when they have insurance coverage

2011-06-17
African Americans receive poorer dental care than white Americans, even when they have some dental insurance coverage. To better understand why this is so, researchers at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health and the College of Dental Medicine, surveyed African American adults with recent oral health symptoms, including toothaches and gum disease. Their findings provide insights into why disparities persist even among those with dental insurance and suggest strategies to removing barriers to dental care. The findings are published online ahead of print ...

Scientists develop a fatty 'kryptonite' to defeat multidrug-resistant 'Super bugs'

2011-06-17
Bethesda, MD— "Super bugs," which can cause wide-spread disease and may be resistant to most, if not all, conventional antibiotics, still have their weaknesses. A team of Canadian scientists discovered that specific mixtures of antimicrobial agents presented in lipid (fatty) mixtures can significantly boost the effectiveness of those agents to kill the resistant bacteria. This discovery was published online in The FASEB Journal (http://www.fasebj.org). According to a researcher involved in the study, Richard Epand, Ph.D. from the Department of Biochemistry and Biomedical ...

The sweet growth of plant cells

2011-06-17
Porto Alegre, Brazil- Glycomics is the functional study of the entire set of sugars found in a given species. To some, the term may sound like a distant cousin of more familiar names such as genomics and proteomics. Indeed, while genomics and proteomics of several species have been extensively investigated in the last years, glycomics is still an emerging field. Now, a paper published in Science magazine by an international collaboration headed by Dr. Jose Estevez (University of Buenos Aires, Argentina) and co-authored by researchers from Argentina, Brazil, Denmark, the ...

EPOXI finds Hartley 2 is a hyperactive comet

EPOXI finds Hartley 2 is a hyperactive comet
2011-06-17
Hartley 2's hyperactive state, as studied by NASA's EPOXI mission, is detailed in a new paper published in this week's issue of the journal Science by an international team of scientists that includes Lucy McFadden of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. After visiting a comet and imaging distant stars for hints of extrasolar planets, you could say the spacecraft used for EPOXI had seen its fair share of celestial wonders. But after about 3.2 billion miles (5.1 billion kilometers) of deep space travel, one final wonder awaited the mission's project and ...

Landsat 5 satellite sees Mississippi River floodwaters lingering

 Landsat 5 satellite sees Mississippi River floodwaters lingering
2011-06-17
In a Landsat 5 satellite image captured June 11, 2011, flooding is still evident both east and west of the Mississippi River near Vicksburg, Miss. Standing water is most apparent, however, in the floodplain between the Yazoo and Mississippi rivers north of Vicksburg. On May 19, 2011, the Mississippi River reached a historic crest at Vicksburg. According to the Advanced Hydrological Prediction Service (AHPS) of the U.S. National Weather Service, the river reached 57.10 feet (17.40 meters) that day. By early June, flooding had receded considerably around Vicksburg, but ...

Firestorm of star birth in the active galaxy Centaurus A

Firestorm of star birth in the active galaxy Centaurus A
2011-06-17
Resembling looming rain clouds on a stormy day, dark lanes of dust crisscross the giant elliptical galaxy Centaurus A. Hubble's panchromatic vision, stretching from ultraviolet through near-infrared wavelengths, reveals the vibrant glow of young, blue star clusters and a glimpse into regions normally obscured by the dust. The warped shape of Centaurus A's disk of gas and dust is evidence for a past collision and merger with another galaxy. The resulting shockwaves cause hydrogen gas clouds to compress, triggering a firestorm of new star formation. These are visible ...

STX Golf Announces its 2011 Club Championship Campaign

2011-06-17
STX Golf, world-renowned as an industry pioneer in putter innovation, and for its patented Soft Face Insert Technology, announced today that their 2011 Club Championship Promotion officially begins the same week as the 111th US Open. As the best golfers from around the world tee it up at Congressional to try and capture the coveted US Open Championship, golfers everywhere will be competing to win their own club championship. According to STX Director of Golf Steve Henneman, "To win a club championship is a real honor. It takes time, practice, and skill to be the ...

Where have all the flowers gone?

Where have all the flowers gone?
2011-06-17
It's summer wildflower season in the Rocky Mountains, a time when high-peaks meadows are dotted with riotous color. But for how long? Once, wildflower season in montane meadow ecosystems extended throughout the summer months. But now scientists have found a fall-off in wildflowers at mid-season. They published their results, funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF), in the current issue of the Journal of Ecology. "Shifts in flowering in mountain meadows could in turn affect the resources available to pollinators like bees," says David Inouye of the University ...

LSU researchers see an indication of a new type of neutrino oscillation at the T2K experiment

2011-06-17
BATON ROUGE – LSU Department of Physics Professors Thomas Kutter and Martin Tzanov, and Professor Emeritus William Metcalf, along with graduate and undergraduate students, have been working for several years on an experiment in Japan called T2K, or Tokai to Kamioka Long Baseline Neutrino Oscillation Experiment, which studies the most elusive of fundamental subatomic particles – the neutrino. The team announced they have an indication of a new type of neutrino transformation or oscillation from a muon neutrino to an electron neutrino. In the T2K experiment in Japan, a ...

London Hotels are Full of New Offers and Discounts

2011-06-17
It has a number of hotels throughout the city and the boutique hospitality has provided the brand with a major facelift over the years. Being a highly recognized hotel chain it mainly has hotels in the Central London area which is one of the popular most areas of the city. The various London Hotel plans or packages which the group promotes consists a pool of new offers and discounts. These new offers and discounts are available at the various hotels of the group located in the different parts of the city. The London Club Rooms are one of the newest additions to the ...

New sealant gel is effective in closing spinal wounds following surgery, study finds

2011-06-17
A gel that creates a watertight seal to close surgical wounds provides a significant advance in the treatment of patients following spinal procedures, effectively sealing spinal wounds 100 percent of the time, a national multicenter randomized study led by researchers at UC Davis has found. The substance, a polyethylene glycol (PEG) hydrogel sealant, plugs miniscule leaks in the thin sheath inside the spinal column that encloses the spinal cord, called the dura. The spinal cord and nerves float in cerebrospinal fluid inside the sheath. The gel is an important step forward ...

Medical societies respond to the FDA's safety announcement on the use of Actos

2011-06-17
Chevy Chase, MD – Diabetes leaders today are responding to the announcement made by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) yesterday that the use of the diabetes medication Actos (pioglitazone) for more than one year may be associated with an increased risk of bladder cancer. According to the FDA's Safety Announcement, information about this risk will be added to the Warnings and Precautions section of the label for pioglitazone-containing medicines. The patient Medication Guide for these medicines will also be revised to include information on the risk of bladder ...

Gatekeepers: Penn study discovers how microbes make it past tight spaces between cells

Gatekeepers: Penn study discovers how microbes make it past tight spaces between cells
2011-06-17
PHILADELPHIA - There are ten microbial cells for every one human cell in the body, and microbiology dogma holds that there is a tight barrier protecting the inside of the body from outside invaders, in this case bacteria. Bacterial pathogens can break this barrier to cause infection and senior author Jeffrey Weiser, MD, professor of Microbiology and Pediatrics from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, and first author Thomas Clarke, PhD, a postdoctoral fellow in the Weiser lab, wondered how microbes get inside the host and circulate in the ...

TripAdvisor Awards The Pillars Hotel in Fort Lauderdale "2011 Certificate of Excellence"

TripAdvisor Awards The Pillars Hotel in Fort Lauderdale "2011 Certificate of Excellence"
2011-06-17
The Pillars Hotel is pleased to announce that it has been awarded a "2011 Certificate of Excellence" award from TripAdvisor. This prestigious certificate is awarded to member properties of TripAdvisor who consistently receive excellence ratings from travelers around the world. To qualify, the property is expected to maintain an average rating of 4 or higher out of the possible 5, as reviewed by travelers on TripAdvisor. Additional criteria include the volume of reviews and how recent these reviews are submitted by TripAdvisor travelers. In addition, The Pillars ...
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