Tuesday, April 7, 2009

4-7-9 Updates

http://bit.ly/puPdu Sprint commercial but good perspective on twitter and integration
visualization example: http://tinyurl.com/d8yr3t it mentions twitter too (via @canuckflack)


http://blog.searchenginewatch.com/090407-140506 - page view increase with spokesperson
http://bit.ly/UFDx3

http://www.itbusinessedge.com/cm/blogs/weinschenk/the-status-of-electronic-health-care-upgraded-to-probable/?cs=31655
medical electronic care

10 signs of needing a life http://www.minervity.com/?p=2392

RT franchiselookup . The name speaks growth

Opportunity for SL http://www.bio-medicine.org/biology-technology-1/Ansell-Healthcare-Espresses-Firm-Commitment-to-Support-Continued-Education-of-Healthcare-Professionals-Worldwide-11417-1/

http://bit.ly/iehnq

BRUSSELS, April 7 /PRNewswire/ --
- European Operating Room Nurses Association (EORNA) to Confirm AnsellCares(R), the Ansell Global Healthcare Educational Program, Accepted for Accreditation
Earlier today, Ansell Healthcare, the global leader in healthcare barrier protective solutions, has announced it has taken a further step in supporting the global healthcare professionals community in the area of continued education.
After receiving earlier confirmation of acceptance by its US counterpart (AORN), the AnsellCares(R) educational courses have now also received confirmation of acceptance by the European Operating Room Nurses Association. Focusing on infection control, allergy prevention, barrier protection and nursing procedures, the AnsellCares(R) courses perfectly link into the requirements of continued education for healthcare workers around the world. The Ansell educational courses are actually the first courses offered under the newly launched EORNA Accreditation Council for Education (ACE), and will be made accessible via a web-based portal under the EORNA Academy header.
The AnsellCares(R) self-study courses will initially be made available via the EORNA website. EORNA members will be offered logging in to EORNA Academy section of the website, and make their choice on the "offering" page. AnsellCares course content can then be accessed and downloaded. Tests will taken online, delivering final results and accreditation points through a EORNA ACE certificate.
"We are pleased to further extend our support to healthcare workers in Europe, by offering web-based educational courses," says Irini Antoniadou, President of EORNA. "At EORNA, we wholeheartedly back the high quality and thoroughness of AnsellCares courses. They effectively package best practice for nursing professionals," she continues.
AnsellCares(R) educational programmes have been approv
See RNA? http://www.bio-medicine.org/biology-technology-1/Researchers-develop-new-way-to-see-single-RNA-molecules-inside-living-cells-11415-1/

Biomedical engineers have developed a new type of probe that allows them to visualize single ribonucleic acid (RNA) molecules within live cells more easily than existing methods. The tool will help scientists learn more about how RNA operates within living cells.
Techniques scientists currently use to image these transporters of genetic information within cells have several drawbacks, including the need for synthetic RNA or a large number of fluorescent molecules. The fluorescent probes developed at the Georgia Institute of Technology circumvent these issues.
"The probes we designed shine bright, are small and easy to assemble, bind rapidly to their targets, and can be imaged for hours. These characteristics make them a great choice for studying the movement and location of RNA inside a single cell and the interaction between RNA and binding proteins," said Philip Santangelo, an assistant professor in the Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering at Georgia Tech and Emory University.
Details of the probe production process and RNA imaging strategy were published online in the journal Nature Methods on April 6. In addition to Santangelo, Georgia Tech graduate student Aaron Lifland, Emory University associate professor Gary Bassell and Vanderbilt University professor James Crowe Jr. also contributed to this research. This research was funded by new faculty support from Georgia Tech.
In the study, the probes produced by attaching a few small fluorescent molecules called fluorophores to a modified nucleic acid sequence and combining the sequences with a protein exhibited single-molecule sensitivity and allowed the researchers to target and follow native RNA and non-engineered viral RNA in living cells.
"The great thing about these probes is that they recognize RNA sequences and bind to them using the same base pairing most people are familiar with in regards to DNA," explained Santangelo. "By addin'/>"/>

Contact: Abby Vogelavogel@gatech.edu404-385-3364Georgia Institute of Technology Research NewsSource:Eurekalert

http://www.themarketguardian.com/2009/04/congressional-watchdog-to-drop-a-bombshell-on-the-us-financial-industry/
http://bit.ly/idPt0

RT MarketGuardianCongressional Watchdog to Drop a Bombshell on the US Financial Industry: “set to call for shareholders in.. http://tinyurl.com/cr7ns8

http://bit.ly/iehnq
pete4docSqueeze on US med Doctors has to involve updates on CME also with e-med and dim reimbursements Here is how nurses do it http://bit.ly/iehnq less than 5 seconds ago

pete4dochttp://bit.ly/tjm7 For all the biologics that are going anywhere and whyless than 5 seconds ago from web

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