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Tag: Friends

  • Why Do Rapid Tests Feel So Useless Right Now?

    Why Do Rapid Tests Feel So Useless Right Now?

    Max Hamilton found out that his roommate had been exposed to the coronavirus shortly after Thanksgiving. The dread set in, and then, so did her symptoms. Wanting to be cautious, she tested continuously, remaining masked in all common areas at home. But after three negative rapid tests in a row, she and Hamilton felt like the worst had passed. At the very least, they could chat safely across the kitchen table, right?

    Wrong. More than a week later, another test finally sprouted a second line: bright, pink, positive. Five days after that, Hamilton was testing positive as well. This was his second bout of COVID since the start of the pandemic, and he wasn’t feeling so great. Congestion and fatigue aside, he was “just very frustrated,” he told me. He felt like they had done everything right. “If we have no idea if someone has COVID, how are we supposed to avoid it?” Now he has a different take on rapid tests: They aren’t guarantees. When he and his roommate return from their Christmas and New Year’s holidays, he said, they’ll steer clear of friends who show any symptoms whatsoever.

    Hamilton and his roommate are just two of many who have been wronged by the rapid. Since the onset of Omicron, for one reason or another, false negatives seem to be popping up with greater frequency. That leaves people stuck trying to figure out when, and if, to bank on the simplest, easiest way to check one’s COVID status. At this point, even people who work in health care are throwing up their hands. Alex Meshkin, the CEO of the medical laboratory Flow Health, told me that he spent the first two years of the pandemic carefully masking in social situations and asking others to get tested before meeting with him. Then he came down with COVID shortly after visiting a friend who didn’t think that she was sick. Turns out, she’d only taken a rapid test. “That’s my wonderful personal experience,” Meshkin told me. His takeaway? “I don’t trust the antigen test at all.”

    Read: Should everyone be masking again?

    That might be a bit extreme. Rapid antigen tests still work, and we’ve known about the problem of delayed positivity for ages. In fact, the tests are about as good at picking up the SARS-CoV-2 virus now as they’ve ever been, Susan Butler-Wu, a clinical microbiologist at the University of Southern California’s Keck School of Medicine, told me. Their limit of detection––the lowest quantity of viral antigen that will register reliably as a positive result––didn’t really change as new variants emerged. At the same time, the Omicron variant and its offshoots seem to take longer, after the onset of infection, to accumulate that amount of virus in the nose, says Wilbur Lam, a professor of pediatrics and biomedical engineering at Emory University who is also one of the lead investigators assessing COVID diagnostic tests for the federal government. Lam told me that this delay, between getting sick and reaching the minimum detectable concentration of the viral antigen, could be contributing to the spate of false-negative results.

    That problem isn’t likely to be solved anytime soon. The same basic technology behind COVID rapid tests, called “lateral flow,” has been around for years; it’s even used for standard pregnancy tests, Emily Landon, an infectious-disease physician at the University of Chicago, told me. Oliver Keppler, a virology researcher at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich who was involved in a study comparing the performance of rapid tests between variants, says there isn’t really a way to tweak the tests so that they’ll be any more sensitive to newer variants. “Conceptually, there’s little we can do.” In the meantime, he told me, we have to accept that “in the first one or two days of infection with Omicron, on average, antigen tests are very poor.”

    Of course, Hamilton (and his roommate) would point out that the tests can fail even several days after symptoms start. That’s why he and others are feeling hesitant to trust them again. “It’s not just about the utility or accuracy of the test. It’s also about the willingness to even do the test,” Ng Qin Xiang, a resident in preventative medicine at Singapore General Hospital who was involved in a study examining the performance of rapid antigen tests, told me. “Even within my circle of friends, a lot of people, when they have respiratory symptoms, just stay home and rest,” he said. They just don’t see the point of testing.

    Read: COVID science is moving backwards

    Landon recently got COVID for the first time since the start of the pandemic. When her son came home with the virus, she decided to perform her own experiment. She kept track of her rapids, testing every 12 hours and even taking pictures for proof. Her symptoms started on a Friday night and her initial test was negative. So was Saturday morning’s. By Saturday evening, though, a faint line had begun to emerge, and the next morning—36 hours after symptom onset—the second line was dark. Her advice for those who want the most accurate result and don’t have as many tests to spare is to wait until you’ve had symptoms for two days before testing. And if you’ve been exposed, have symptoms, and only have one test? “You don’t even need to bother. You probably have COVID.”

    Zoya Qureshi

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    December 29, 2022
  • Being a Young Adult With Ankylosing Spondylitis

    Being a Young Adult With Ankylosing Spondylitis




    Being a Young Adult With Ankylosing Spondylitis

































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    December 14, 2022
  • ‘Friends’ Star Courteney Cox Photobombs Fans Posing on Show’s Iconic Orange Couch

    ‘Friends’ Star Courteney Cox Photobombs Fans Posing on Show’s Iconic Orange Couch

    Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

    Courteney Cox decided to use a workday at Warner Bros. Studios to surprise fans of her iconic 90s sitcom, Friends, with a uniquely funny photobomb: appearing behind people posing on the orange sofa featured in the show’s iconic opening credit sequence.


    NBC | Getty Images

    Unsurprisingly, the reactions from fans ran the gamut from intense emotion — one woman appeared close to hyperventilating — to genuine excitement.

    Cox — Monica Geller on the show — posted the video on Instagram Wednesday. She briefly introduced the prank by saying, “I thought this is a good time for me to surprise Friends‘ fans and photobomb their shots.”

    The video then cut to a variety of fans posing on the orange couch for photos, only to find out once they looked at the results that no less than one of the show’s biggest stars had just popped up in the background.

    Cox’s caption for the video read, “Don’t you hate a photo bomber? #friends,” and a number of celebrity friends like actors Angie Harmon and Jennifer Garner took the opportunity to comment that no, sometimes photobombers are, as Harmon put it, “geniuses.”

    Steve Huff

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    December 1, 2022
  • Jennifer Aniston turns on her Christmas mood, shares PICS of her pups craving for ‘wooden Rudolphs’

    Jennifer Aniston turns on her Christmas mood, shares PICS of her pups craving for ‘wooden Rudolphs’

    The 53-year-old Hollywood actor Jennifer Aniston, who is best known for her role as Rachel in the TV series Friends, has dropped an interesting update ahead of the upcoming Christmas festivities. On Thursday, the actor took to Instagram and highlighted the fun-filled preparations that she has in store for her fans and well-wishers for Christmas. 

    Here is how actor Jennifer Aniston is preparing for Christmas festivities 

    Recently, Jennifer Aniston paid tribute to her father John Aniston, who passed away on November 11 this year. Knowing this, many of Jennifer’s fans were unsure whether she will be willing to celebrate Christmas this year. 

    Amidst such an uncertain atmosphere, Jennifer’s latest post is filled with warmth and positivity. In the pictures shared by the ‘Just Go With It’ actor, she can be seen highlighting her Christmas preparations, after which many fans now look cheerful and are hoping that good times lie ahead.

    In one picture, Jennifer can be seen hugging a towering tree while in the other pictures, her puppies look cheerful looking at the wooden Rudolph. She captioned this memorable post by saying, “Good luck to all the wooden Rudolphs out there.”   

    Many of Jennifer’s fans have also dropped hearts in the comments section. For the unaware, the festival of Christmas is celebrated annually on December 25 across the globe. 

    Jennifer Aniston opens up about her discomfort in using social media platforms

    In a recent interview with the ‘Allure’ publication, Jennifer talked about how she feels using social media platforms. She had said, “I hate social media. I’m not good at it.  It’s torture for me. The reason I went on Instagram was to launch this [haircare] line [LolaVie]. Then the pandemic hit and we didn’t launch. So I was just stuck with being on Instagram. It doesn’t come naturally.”

    “I’m really happy that we got to experience growing up, being a teenager, being in our 20s without this social media aspect. Look, the internet, great intentions, right? Connect people socially, social networking. It goes back to how young girls feel about themselves, compare and despair,” she told the publication. 

    Also Read: Jennifer Aniston receives THIS message from ex Justin Theroux as she reveals her fertility struggle

    1136841

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    December 1, 2022
  • Weird Facts

    Weird Facts

    In 1943, a Luftwaffe pilot came across a crippled B-17 trying to make it home after a bomb run. Instead of shooting it down, the German pilot escorted it home. The pilots met up 50 years later and became friends, and both died within a few months of each other.

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    November 9, 2022
  • Matthew Perry: I Was So ‘Dead Inside’ During The ‘Friends’ Finale, I ‘Felt Nothing’

    Matthew Perry: I Was So ‘Dead Inside’ During The ‘Friends’ Finale, I ‘Felt Nothing’

    Matthew Perry is admitting that he experienced the final moments of his life-changing “Friends” career much differently than his castmates.

    In an excerpt from his new memoir “Friends, Lovers, and the Big Terrible Thing” obtained by BuzzFeed News, Perry reflected on the lack of emotion he felt the moment the last episode of the beloved sitcom wrapped.

    The final scene of the series features all of the main characters in one of the show’s most popular sets — Monica’s (Courteney Cox) apartment.

    In the emotional scene, movers are clearing out the rest of Monica’s belongings as the characters reflect on all the memories they’ve had in the now-empty space. The tension of the scene is broken by Perry’s snarky Chandler, who gets the final line in the series.

    When Rachel (Jennifer Aniston) asks if everyone has some time to get some coffee — an activity the group of friends often did at their hangout spot Central Perk — Chandler hilariously replies: “Sure! … Where?”

    Courteney Cox as Monica Geller, Matt LeBlanc as Joey Tribbiani, Lisa Kudrow as Phoebe Buffay, David Schwimmer as Ross Geller, Matthew Perry as Chandler Bing, Jennifer Aniston as Rachel Green in a “Friends” cast photo from 1994.

    “It was January 23, 2004,” Perry recalls in his memoir. “The keys on the counter, a guy who looked a lot like Chandler Bing said, ‘Where?’”

    “‘Embryonic Journey’ by Jefferson Airplane played, the camera panned to the back of the apartment door, then Ben, our first AD, and very close friend, shouted for the last time, ‘That’s a wrap,’ and tears sprang from almost everyone’s eyes like so many geysers,” he writes.

    But Perry says he wasn’t feeling the waterworks.

    “We had made 237 episodes, including this last one, called, appropriately enough, ‘The Last One.’ Jennifer Aniston was sobbing — after a while, I was amazed she had any water left in her entire body. Even Matt LeBlanc was crying,” he writes. “But I felt nothing.”

    “I couldn’t tell if that was because of the opioid buprenorphine I was taking, or if I was just generally dead inside,” he adds.

    Perry has been open about the substance abuse problems he had throughout the filming of “Friends.” In 2013, he revealed on ABC News that he struggled with depression, alcohol and prescription drug abuse throughout his tenure on the show.

    “Mostly it was drinking, you know, and opiates,” Perry said at the time. “I think I was pretty good at hiding it but, you know, eventually people were aware.”

    Mathew Perry and Jennifer Aniston in 1998.
    Mathew Perry and Jennifer Aniston in 1998.

    Russell Einhorn via Getty Images

    Apparently, those who were aware included his co-star Aniston, who, Perry revealed in October, confronted him about his drinking.

    “Yeah, imagine how scary of a moment that was,” Perry told Diane Sawyer. “She was the one who reached out the most. I’m really grateful to her for that.”

    In his new memoir, Perry said that, after the final episode of “Friends” wrapped, he decided to go for a walk with the rest of the cast, crew and his girlfriend at the time around the Warner Bros lot. His final moments with those whom he worked with for so long echo the numbness he felt while others mourned the end of the iconic sitcom.

    “We said our various goodbyes, agreeing to see each other soon in the way that people do when they know it’s not true, and then we headed out to my car,” he concludes in the except.


    To stream NBCU shows featured in this piece sign up to Peacock



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    November 7, 2022
  • ‘Friends’ Star Matthew Perry Reveals Harrowing Addiction Journey

    ‘Friends’ Star Matthew Perry Reveals Harrowing Addiction Journey

    By Cara Murez 

    HealthDay Reporter

    THURSDAY, Oct. 20, 2022 (HealthDay News) – Just a few years ago, “Friends” actor Matthew Perry almost died from opioid overuse that nearly destroyed his colon and almost killed him.

    Now, he’s sober and wants to tell his story.

    Perry has written a memoir, “Friends, Lovers and the Big Terrible Thing,” which will be published Nov. 1.

    “I wanted to share when I was safe from going into the dark side of everything again,” Perry told the magazine PEOPLE. “I had to wait until I was pretty safely sober — and away from the active disease of alcoholism and addiction — to write it all down. And the main thing was, I was pretty certain that it would help people.”

    Perry shares that he has gone to rehab 15 times, but he doesn’t say how long he’s been sober.

    “It’s important, but if you lose your sobriety, it doesn’t mean you lose all that time and education,” he says. “Your sober date changes, but that’s all that changes. You know everything you knew before, as long as you were able to fight your way back without dying, you learn a lot.”

    Perry talks about how his alcohol addiction was just beginning when he was 24 and cast on the TV show “Friends.” Perry, now 53, played Chandler Bing on the show.
     

    “I could handle it, kind of. But by the time I was 34, I was really entrenched in a lot of trouble,” he admits. “But there were years that I was sober during that time. Season 9 was the year that I was sober the whole way through. And guess which season I got nominated for best actor? I was like, ‘That should tell me something.’”

    Among his lows during the “Friends” years were when he was taking 55 Vicodin a day and weighed only 128 pounds.

    “I didn’t know how to stop,” Perry says. “If the police came over to my house and said, ‘If you drink tonight, we’re going to take you to jail,’ I’d start packing. I couldn’t stop because the disease and the addiction is progressive. So it gets worse and worse as you grow older.”

    His cast mates were aware of his conditions and patiently propped him up.

    “It’s like penguins. Penguins, in nature, when one is sick, or when one is very injured, the other penguins surround it and prop it up. They walk around it until that penguin can walk on its own. That’s kind of what the cast did for me.”
     

    A few years ago, at age 49, Perry nearly died because of his addiction. His colon burst from opioid overuse, causing him to spend two weeks in a coma, five months hospitalized and to use a colostomy bag for nine months.

    “The doctors told my family that I had a 2% chance to live,” Perry told PEOPLE. “I was put on a thing called an ECMO machine, which does all the breathing for your heart and your lungs. And that’s called a Hail Mary. No one survives that.”

    Perry said he’s now healthy and that scars on his stomach remind him of his journey to sobriety.

    “I’m pretty healthy now,” Perry said, before joking, “I’ve got to not go to the gym much more, because I don’t want to only be able to play superheroes. But no, I’m a pretty healthy guy right now.”

    Perry said his therapist suggested that when he thinks about taking Oxycontin, he think about the possibility of having a colostomy bag for the rest of his life.

    “And a little window opened and I crawled through it and I no longer want Oxycontin anymore,” Perry said.

    Perry, the only survivor among five people put on an ECMO machine at his hospital the night his lengthy stay began, is determined to help others who struggle with addiction.

    “I say in the book that if I did die, it would shock people, but it wouldn’t surprise anybody. And that’s a very scary thing to be living with. So my hope is that people will relate to it, and know that this disease attacks everybody. It doesn’t matter if you’re successful or not successful, the disease doesn’t care,” Perry said.

    He has learned “everything starts with sobriety. Because if you don’t have sobriety, you’re going to lose everything that you put in front of it, so my sobriety is right up there,” he says. “I’m an extremely grateful guy. I’m grateful to be alive, that’s for sure. And that gives me the possibility to do anything.”

    More information

    The U.S. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration can help people struggling with addiction.

     

     

    SOURCE: PEOPLE magazine

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    October 20, 2022
  • Austin Pets Alive! | We Need Your Help Ending Needless Euthansia!

    Austin Pets Alive! | We Need Your Help Ending Needless Euthansia!

    Sep 27, 2022

    It’s so important to me to give every vulnerable animal the chance at life they deserve. That’s why APA!’s No Kill mission is at the heart of everything I do, even at home. When my own pup Echo came to APA! during Hurricane Harvey, she and her brother had distemper, a dangerous virus with symptoms like tremors, lethargy, and fever.

    Echo’s brother sadly passed away shortly after arriving at APA!, but
    Echo has been by my side ever since. If Echo had stayed much longer in
    another city without the resources to give her the round-the-clock care
    and mobility support she needed, she might not have grown up into the
    talkative companion she is today. Needless euthanasia is still an unfortunate reality for pets like Echo in cities that haven’t adopted No Kill yet.

    Without APA!’s experience and passion for saving pets like Echo,
    animals with severe illnesses or injuries might have nowhere to turn.
    Because of the lifesaving and innovative programs pioneered here
    (including for dogs with distemper!), vulnerable pets have a shot at
    recovery and the life they deserve. We can only save animals in need and give them the chance to thrive in loving homes because of the support of friends like you!

    I fostered Echo as she battled the virus, which left her paralyzed at just 8 weeks old. Echo
    was sick during her critical growth phases as a puppy and still lives
    with the lasting effects of her fight with distemper. Her front leg
    sticks out to the side but she can scoot around the yard faster than
    many dogs with 4 fully functioning legs! She has a cart that helps give
    her limbs a rest from being laid on. All this means that, despite her
    rough start to life, Echo’s routine just looks a little different than it might for other dogs!

    So many vulnerable animals like her just need some extra love and care
    to survive and thrive. When you support APA!’s lifesaving programs
    today, you’ll help pets like Echo survive tough battles with illness and injury.

    Will you join us to give more vulnerable animals like my beloved pup Echo the second chance at life they deserve?

    With gratitude,
    Ellen

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    September 27, 2022
  • Austin Pets Alive! | Austin Subaru Shares the Love!

    Austin Pets Alive! | Austin Subaru Shares the Love!

    Jun 23, 2021

    Every year, Austin Subaru partners with local nonprofits for their Share the Love campaign held at the end of each year.

    We are so honored that Austin Subaru selected Austin Pets Alive! as their hometown charity last year — for the seventh year in a row! We can all agree that 2020 proved to be a tough time for so many people. But even through a ravaging pandemic, Austin Subaru persevered and through this cause marketing campaign, raised a significant amount of money — $100,000!

    Legacy is ready for adoption!

    Year after year, Austin Subaru meets and then exceeds their donation from the year prior. What’s even more impressive, you ask? For the second year in a row, they have raised $100,000 during their Share the Love campaign! Genny Hill, owner at Continental Automotive Group says, “our commitment to APA! allows us to share the love that our team and our guests have for their pets. We are excited to continue this partnership and happy to contribute to an organization that acts on the affection and appreciation we have for our furry friends.” For Austin Pets Alive!, every penny counts. We are able to stretch that money a LONG way. Here are some of the types of work we can do with that donation:

    • $100 — Provides intake vaccinations, dewormers, and spay/neuter for one puppy.
    • $225 — Provides immune-boosting IV Vitamin C for three puppies.
    • $500 — Supports maintenance and repair of current IV pumps.
    • $1,000 — Purchases a new IV pump to keep puppies hydrated and alive as they fight Parvovirus.

    With Austin Subaru’s $100,000, Austin Pets Alive! has the ability to effectively treat and provide the resources to keep our pups alive and well as they fight Parvo. APA! is creating a future where no animal will be unnecessarily euthanized and with generous gifts like that of Austin’s Subaru’s, we’re able to continue to work towards that mission. With every animal who walks through our doors, along with our current animals, APA! will be able to do what we do best — provide lifesaving care and get our furry friends into loving homes!

    Our Austin Pets Alive! team, along with the woofs and purrs are so gracious! Thank you to Austin Subaru and their wonderful pet-loving sales team for a successful fu

    ndraiser. We love working closely with organizations like Austin Subaru, who truly understand and encompass our no-kill mission and work to advance that undertaking.

    Be like Austin Subaru and share the love to keep Austin No Kill.

    Source link

    June 23, 2021
  • Indie Developer, Knowledge Crunch Releases Its First in a Series of Mobile Game Apps, WordPash

    Indie Developer, Knowledge Crunch Releases Its First in a Series of Mobile Game Apps, WordPash

    Press Release
    –


    updated: Jun 14, 2016


    La Jolla, CA, June 14, 2016 (Newswire.com)
    –
    Available today, the app Word Pash, is a word game mobile app for everyone in the global audience who enjoys playing games on their iPhones or iPads. Whether you are a third grader or Ph.D, word buff or student studying for that SAT, foreign student or international business person, within no time, you will get hooked to this word game.

    The app is visually appealing, maximizes social features, and has multi-player modes so that you can challenge your friends or play against random players. Because it adapts to any level of word difficulty you are never bored with too easy a level or overwhelmed by one too hard. You can challenge your friends or anyone on Facebook who wants to play.

    “I love the viral sounds”

    Mechanical Turk, Reviewer

    WordPash has a vast database of words arranged in order of difficulty that runs from easy words through Ph.D levels. Users can upgrade their game play experience with 105 hours of recorded audio at whatever levels they choose along the way. Male and female voices encourage perfect pronunciation of unknown new words surely to be encountered as you pass level after level. One of our beta testers John (Real name not disclosed) opines that “The fast 5 game was really fun! I like how you can listen to the definitions” There are 172 levels of play and coins can be earned to buy various power ups and audio compliments.

    Veteran computer pioneer, David Kay, of Kaypro and WordSmart Corps, is heading up the team that developed Word Pash over the last year. Peter Hompot, artist, Kevin Tran, software engineer, and Poorvi Adavi, social media marketing director, round out the management group.

    Please visit http://www.wordpash.com/ for more information on Word Pash, including screenshots and videos of the app.

    If you would like further information on Word Pash or you would like to schedule an interview please contact:

    David Kay, President

    Phone: 619-890-8068                                

    Email: davidk@wordpash.com

    Find us on Facebook and @WordPash on Twitter

    To download the app: https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/word-pash/id1057735478?mt=8

    Source: Knowledge Crunch, Inc.

    Source link

    June 14, 2016
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