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

Coldwell Banker Premier Realty Broker Provides Foresight and Outlook For Crystal Ball

2012-01-05
Robert (Bob) Hamrick, Chairman and CEO of Coldwell Banker Premier Realty (CBPR), will speak to real estate professionals at the first Crystal Ball Seminar event of the new year, on Friday, January 20, 8:30-10:00 am at the Alexis Park Resort, 375 East Harmon, Las Vegas 89169. Hamrick, who cut his teeth in the real estate industry in the early 1980's, will discuss the current housing market in Southern Nevada as well as provide information about his company's innovative Neighborhood Awareness Campaign (NAC). The NAC's are a series of grass root initiatives that help educate ...

Females may be more susceptible to infection during ovulation

2012-01-05
Bethesda, MD -- A new research report in the Journal of Leukocyte Biology (http://www.jleukbio.org) suggests that a woman's ovarian cycle plays an important role in her susceptibility to infection. Specifically, researchers from Spain and Austria found that women are most susceptible to infection, such as Candida albicans or other sexually transmitted diseases, during ovulation than at any other time during the reproductive cycle. This natural "dip" in immunity may be to allow spermatozoa to survive the threat of an immune response so it may fertilize an egg successfully. ...

BodyLase Skin Spa Announces Two New Staff Members and a Promotion in Raleigh NC

2012-01-05
Karen Albright, president of BodyLase Skin Spa (http://www.getbodylase.com), is pleased to announce the addition of two new staff members and a promotion from within the company. An award-winning medical spa with several lasers and dozens of aesthetic treatment offerings, BodyLase is excited to welcome Ashley Hix and Holly Strickland, and congratulate Meredith Fritz. Welcome to Holly Strickland, our Cary location Spa Manager, and Ashley Hix, an aesthetician in the Raleigh office. Congratulations to Meredith Fritz on her recent promotion to lead aesthetician. Holly ...

Sexual satisfaction in women increases with age

2012-01-05
Philadelphia, PA -- A new study of sexually active older women has found that sexual satisfaction in women increases with age and those not engaging in sex are satisfied with their sex lives. A majority of study participants report frequent arousal and orgasm that continue into old age, despite low sexual desire. The study appears in the January issue of the American Journal of Medicine. Researchers from the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine and the Veterans Affairs San Diego Healthcare System evaluated sexual activity and satisfaction as reported ...

Scientists crack medieval bone code

Scientists crack medieval bone code
2012-01-05
EAST LANSING, Mich. -- Two teams of Michigan State University researchers – one working at a medieval burial site in Albania, the other at a DNA lab in East Lansing – have shown how modern science can unlock the mysteries of the past. The scientists are the first to confirm the existence of brucellosis, an infectious disease still prevalent today, in ancient skeletal remains. The findings, which appear in the American Journal of Physical Anthropology, suggest brucellosis has been endemic to Albania since at least the Middle Ages. Although rare in the United States, ...

World Record Wedding Vow Ceremony Attempt in St. Augustine on February 12

2012-01-05
Join Ripley's Believe it or Not! Museum and Ripley's Red Trains as we attempt to break a world record! On Sunday, February 12th at 2:00 PM, we will attempt to host the world's largest wedding vow renewal ceremony at Ripley's Believe it or Not! Museum in St. Augustine, Florida. The current record is 1,087 couples. Ripley's is looking for couples who would like to participate in this special activity, just two days prior to St. Valentine's Day! Check-in will begin at noon on the 12th. "Brides" will receive a complimentary flower and grooms will receive a ...

New Pregnancy Solutions Review Site Gives Hope To Couples Trying To Get Pregnant

2012-01-05
January 2, 2012, USA - Couples who are trying to get pregnant: http://www.trying-to-get-pregnant.us/ have had, up until now, few options on finding the latest information and resources. Thanks to the new website, http://www.trying-to-get-pregnant.us/, its creator, Neville Pettersson, has made it his mission to help couples who are desperately trying to get pregnant. According to Pettersson, "The aim of this site is to help people get pregnant without having to do what we did. Which is spend thousands of dollars whilst being constantly disappointed and having to ...

Agent shows ability to suppress brain metastasis and related damage

2012-01-05
PHILADELPHIA -- Scientists are one step closer to repairing the damage caused by brain metastasis, a major challenge in cancer treatment, according to data published in Cancer Research, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research. "We are making progress from the neck down in cancer treatment, but brain metastases are increasing and are often a primary reason patients with breast cancer do not survive," said Patricia S. Steeg, Ph.D., head of the Women's Cancers Section at the National Cancer Institute's Center for Cancer Research. Steeg, who is also a ...

Steve Rennie of Hammerhouse Named One Of The Top "40 Most Influential Mortgage Professionals Under 40" in 2011

2012-01-05
Hammerhouse LLC, an expanding national recruiting and strategic growth firm for the financial services industry with mortgage sales and leadership placement at its core, announced today that Managing Partner Steve Rennie was named to National Mortgage Professional Magazine's 2011 list of the top "40 Most Influential Mortgage Professionals Under 40." National Mortgage Professional is one of the mortgage industry's leading media trade outlets with a monthly print magazine, online news site and daily news distribution services through NMP Daily and Mortgage News ...

LSUHSC research finds trigger for breast cancer spread

2012-01-05
New Orleans, LA – Research led by Shyamal Desai, PhD, Assistant Professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at LSU Health Sciences Center New Orleans, has discovered a key change in the body's defense system that increases the potential for breast cancer to spread to other parts of the body. The results, reported for the first time, are featured in the January 2012 issue of Experimental Biology and Medicine. For cancer cells shape matters. All cells contain a protein cytoskeleton that acts as a scaffold determining overall shape and function, the position of the cell ...

Simple blood test in the first trimester predicts fetal gender

2012-01-05
Bethesda, MD—A new research study published in the January 2012 edition of The FASEB Journal (http://www.fasebj.org) describes findings that could lead to a non-invasive test that would let expecting mothers know the sex of their baby as early as the first trimester. Specifically, researchers from South Korea discovered that various ratios of two enzymes (DYS14/GAPDH), which can be extracted from a pregnant mother's blood, indicate if the baby will be a boy or a girl. Such a test would be the first of its kind. "Generally, early fetal gender determination has been performed ...

New Jolly Tech Photo ID and Tracking Software Available at ID Wholesaler

2012-01-05
The latest version of Jolly Technologies' software is now available at ID Wholesaler, the largest photo identification products retailer. Jolly's new version 6 is easier to use, offers improved performance and connectivity, and includes enhanced support. In addition to version 6, Jolly has released a new line of tracking products that are tailored to specific applications. Lobby Track is designed for visitor management; Member Track for membership management; Event Track for event badge production and attendee tracking; and Time Track for time and attendance. All of ...

Smaller sibling protein calls the shots in cell division

Smaller sibling protein calls the shots in cell division
2012-01-05
AUGUSTA, Ga. – Scientists have found at least one instance when the smaller sibling gets to call the shots and cancer patients may one day benefit. The protein Chk1 has long been known to be a checkpoint in cell development: it keeps normal cells and damaged cells from dividing until their DNA has been fully replicated or repaired. Now scientists at Georgia Health Sciences University and the California Institute of Technology have discovered a shorter form they've dubbed Chk1-S ("S" stands for short) that essentially neutralizes its longer sibling so cell division can ...

Social Media Agency The Targeted Group Selects Non-Profit LIFESPAN for TG Outreach Program

2012-01-05
The Targeted Group has selected non-profit LIFESPAN for its TG Outreach program - a philanthropic program dedicated to supporting the local community through the time and services of The Targeted Group and its employees. The Targeted Group will develop and execute a comprehensive social media plan that supports LIFESPAN's mission to transform the lives of children and adults with developmental disabilities by providing education, employment and enrichment opportunities. "We are thrilled to have been selected for the TG Outreach program. The Targeted Group's extensive ...

Pacific Timesheet Announces New SaaS Cloud Crew Timesheet Pricing for Construction and Field Services Customers

2012-01-05
Pacific Timesheet has announced that on January 1, 2012 new SaaS Cloud Crew Timesheet pricing will be available to allow customers the option of paying for services using a variety of license options, including offline, supervisor, timekeeping licenses, time off request and timesheet signature licenses. With this pricing schedule, only those users with direct access to the system will need to be licensed. However, if customers need field employees or other offline employees to verify and digitally "sign" their timesheets, or make time off requests for time ...

Anti-sense might make sense for treating liver cancer

2012-01-05
COLUMBUS, Ohio – A new study shows that it is possible to selectively target and block a particular microRNA that is important in liver cancer. The findings might offer a new therapy for this malignancy, which kills an estimated 549,000 people worldwide annually. The animal study, by researchers at The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center – Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute (OSUCCC – James) and at Mayo Clinic, focused on microRNA-221 (miR-221), a molecule that is consistently present at abnormally high levels in liver ...

ATS issues joint statement on key issues and recommendations for critical care research

2012-01-05
To reduce mortality and improve patient care in the nation's ICUs, a task force formed by the Critical Care Societies Collaborative (CCSC), in conjunction with the US Critical Illness and Injury Trials Group (USCIITG) has recommended that research in the field become less fragmented and better account for patient heterogeneity and the complexity of critical illness. The CCSC comprises the American Thoracic Society (ATS), the American Association of Critical-Care Nurses (AACN), the American College of Chest Physicians (ACCP) the Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM). ...

Festival of Films Starts 2012 with All New Documentaries and Short Films Online

2012-01-05
Festival of Films has just announced its latest schedule of free indie films, documentaries and funny videos online for the first week of 2012. Available online at http://www.FestivalofFilms.com, the website serves as a resource for people looking to watch free full movies online and on their phones. Festival of Films will start off the year with "Life in a Day," a 2011 documentary featuring an arrangement of user clips shot on June 24, 2010 and submitted via Youtube. Joining Festival of Films' selection of free documentaries online, "Life in a Day" ...

Oregon's program to improve care for those with advanced illness highlighted in JAMA

2012-01-05
PORTLAND, Ore. - Oregon's groundbreaking Physician Orders for Life Sustaining Treatment program (POLST) is featured in the latest edition of the Journal of The American Medical Association. The program, which was created by health care professionals two decades ago in an effort to ensure the wishes of those with advanced illness are followed, has now spread to 34 states around the country. The program's key component is an order form that provides clear instruction about the patient's health care preferences to health professionals, such as paramedics and emergency room ...

BUSM researchers identify novel compound to halt virus replication

2012-01-05
(Boston) – A team of scientists from Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM) have identified a novel compound that inhibits viruses from replicating. The findings, which are published online in the Journal of Virology, could lead to the development of highly targeted compounds to block the replication of poxviruses, such as the emerging infectious disease Monkeypox. The basic research was led by Ken Dower, PhD, a postdoctoral fellow in the laboratory of John Connor, PhD, assistant professor of microbiology at BUSM who is corresponding author on the paper. They worked ...

Weatherford International use ONELAN to Improve Communications

2012-01-05
One of the largest oilfield services companies, Weatherford International is headquartered in Switzerland, and currently operates in more than 100 countries across the world, employing more than 52,000 people. The company has regional hubs in major energy-producing regions such as Asia, Canada, Europe, Latin America, the Middle East, Russia, and the United States. Weatherford has a product and service portfolio that spans the life cycle of a well including drilling, evaluation, completion, production and intervention as well as research and development. Weatherford selected ...

Bat brains parse sounds for multitasking

2012-01-05
Washington, D.C. – Imagine listening to music while carrying on a conversation with friends. This type of multi-tasking is fairly easy to do, right? That's because our brains efficiently and effectively separate the auditory signals – music to the right side; conversation to the left. But what researchers have not been able to do in humans or animals is to see a parsing of duties at the single neuron level – until now. Publishing in the European Journal of Neuroscience, renowned bat researcher Jagmeet Kanwal, PhD, associate professor in the department of neurology at ...

Death rate measure used to judge hospital quality may be misleading

2012-01-05
Hospitals, health insurers and patients often rely on patient death rates in hospitals to compare hospital quality. Now a new study by researchers at Yale School of Medicine questions the accuracy of that widely used approach and supports measuring patient deaths over a period of 30 days from admission even after they have left the hospital. Published in the Jan. 3 issue of Annals of Internal Medicine, the study has wide implications as quality measures take on more importance in the healthcare system, notes Elizabeth Drye, M.D., a research scientist at Yale School of ...

NAFA Explains Risk Management With New Webinar Series

2012-01-05
In a perfect world, businesses would never have to deal with uncertainty. Fleet managers, who have to face everything from monetary losses due to vehicles involved in crashes to the loss of life itself, realize this isn't a perfect world. Since it is neither possible nor practical to insure against every situation, it is up to the fleet manager to make sure their vehicles are safe, drivers are trained, and crashes are prevented. To help fleet managers learn more about risk management, NAFA Fleet Management Association is running a Risk Management 101 webinar series February ...

Home monitoring may help manage and reduce costs for heart failure

2012-01-05
Heart failure affects 5.8 million people in the U.S. alone and is responsible for nearly 1 million hospitalizations each year, most resulting from a build-up of body fluid in the lungs and other organs due to the heart's inability to pump effectively. The disease needs to be closely tracked in order to avoid such hospitalizations, and home-monitoring interventions may be especially useful, UCLA researchers say. In their new paper, the UCLA authors discuss the importance of heart failure disease-management and early identification, as well as the treatment of body-fluid ...
Previous
Site 6378 from 8381
Next
[1] ... [6370] [6371] [6372] [6373] [6374] [6375] [6376] [6377] 6378 [6379] [6380] [6381] [6382] [6383] [6384] [6385] [6386] ... [8381]

Press-News.org - Free Press Release Distribution service.