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Tag: Women

  • Judge Blocks Provisions In North Carolina’s New Abortion Law, Nearly All Restrictions Still Remain

    Judge Blocks Provisions In North Carolina’s New Abortion Law, Nearly All Restrictions Still Remain

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    RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — A federal judge on Saturday blocked two portions of North Carolina’s new abortion law from taking effect while a lawsuit continues. But nearly all of the restrictions approved by the legislature this year, including a near-ban after 12 weeks of pregnancy, aren’t being specifically challenged and remain intact.

    U.S. District Judge Catherine Eagles issued an order halting enforcement of a provision to require surgical abortions that occur after 12 weeks — those for cases of rape and incest, for example — be performed only in hospitals, not abortion clinics. That limitation would have otherwise taken effect on Sunday.

    And in the same preliminary injunction, Eagles extended beyond her temporary decision in June an order preventing enforcement of a rule that doctors must document the existence of a pregnancy within the uterus before prescribing a medication abortion.

    Short of successful appeals by Republican legislative leaders defending the laws, the order will remain in effect until a lawsuit filed by Planned Parenthood South Atlantic and a physician who performs abortions challenging the sections are resolved. The lawsuit also seeks to have clarified whether medications can be used during the second trimester to induce labor of a fetus that can’t survive outside the uterus.

    The litigation doesn’t directly seek to topple the crux of the abortion law enacted in May after GOP legislators overrode Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper’s veto. North Carolina had a ban on most abortions after 20 weeks before July 1, when the law scaled it back to 12 weeks.

    The law, a response to the 2022 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that struck down Roe v. Wade, also added new exceptions for abortions through 20 weeks for cases of rape and incest and through 24 weeks for “life-limiting” fetal anomalies. A medical emergency exception also stayed in place.

    On medication abortions, which bill sponsors say also are permitted through 12 weeks of pregnancy, the new law says a physician prescribing an abortion-inducing drug must first “document in the woman’s medical chart the … intrauterine location of the pregnancy.”

    Eagles wrote the plaintiffs were likely to be successful on their claim that the law is so vague as to subject abortion providers to claims that they broke the law if they can’t locate an embryo through an ultrasound because the pregnancy is so new.

    “Providers cannot know if medical abortion is authorized at any point through the twelfth week, as the statute explicitly says, or if the procedure is implicitly banned early in pregnancy,” said Eagles, who was nominated to the bench by then-President Barack Obama.

    And Eagles wrote the plaintiffs offered “uncontradicted” evidence that procedures for surgical abortions — also known as procedural abortions — after 12 weeks of pregnancy are the same as those used for managing miscarriages at that time period. Yet women with miscarriages aren’t required to receive those procedures in the hospital, she added.

    Republican legislative leaders defending the law in court “have offered no explanation or evidence — that is, no rational basis — for this differing treatment,” Eagles said in her order.

    Abortion-rights advocates still opposed to the new 12-week restrictions praised Saturday’s ruling.

    “We applaud the court’s decision to block a few of the onerous barriers to essential reproductive health care that have no basis in medicine,” said Dr. Beverly Gray, an OB-GYN and a named plaintiff in the case.

    A spokesperson for Senate leader Phil Berger, one of the legislative defendants, said Saturday that Eagles’ order was still being reviewed.

    Lawyers for Republican legislative leaders said in court documents in September that the provision requiring the documentation of an intrauterine pregnancy was designed to ensure the pregnancy was not ectopic, which can be dangerous. And “North Carolina rationally sought to help ensure the safety of women who may require hospitalization for complications from surgical abortions,” a legal brief from the lawmakers read.

    State Attorney General Josh Stein, a Democrat, abortion-rights supporter and 2024 candidate for governor, is officially a lawsuit defendant. But lawyers from his office asked Eagles to block the two provisions, largely agreeing with Planned Parenthood’s arguments. Stein said Saturday he was encouraged by Eagles’ ruling.

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  • Short-course radiation as effective as standard treatment for patients who opt for breast reconstruction after mastectomy

    Short-course radiation as effective as standard treatment for patients who opt for breast reconstruction after mastectomy

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    Newswise — SAN DIEGO, October 1, 2023 — In a first-of-its-kind study, people with breast cancer who underwent implant-based breast reconstruction immediately following a mastectomy reported that getting fewer, higher doses of radiation was just as effective as standard radiation, did not increase side effects and saved them time and money. There also was a small improvement in quality of life for women under 45 who received the shortened treatment regimen.

    The FABREC study is the first prospective randomized study comparing quality-of-life and clinical outcomes following accelerated versus conventional radiation therapy specifically for patients with post-mastectomy implant- or tissue-based breast reconstruction. Findings will be presented today at the American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) Annual Meeting.

    “Both the accelerated and standard courses of treatment were equally effective at preventing the cancer from returning and had the same level of side effects. But with shortening the treatment from five weeks to three, patients experienced fewer treatment disruptions, a lower financial burden and other meaningful improvements to their lives,” said senior study author Rinaa Punglia, MD, MPH, FASTRO, an associate professor of radiation oncology at Dana-Farber Brigham Cancer Center in Boston.

    Breast cancer is the second most diagnosed cancer for women in the U.S. About 40% of people with breast cancer have mastectomies and of that group, 62% undergo immediate reconstruction. Reconstruction using tissue expanders or breast implants has grown in popularity in recent years.

    Roughly one-third of patients who get mastectomies also need radiation therapy to the chest wall and lymph nodes, to help prevent their cancer from returning. While standard radiation therapy generally occurs over a period of five weeks, research has shown a shorter course of treatment can be just as effective at preventing the cancer from returning in women who have undergone breast-conserving surgery. Prior research also shows the shorter regimen does not increase side effects and can improve quality of life for these patients.

    FABREC is the first study to compare the shorter and longer courses of post-mastectomy radiation specifically for people who had their breasts reconstructed immediately following mastectomy. Investigators also compared results for people under 45 years old to those 45 and older.

    “Our main goal was to look at patient-reported outcomes, especially in terms of patient well-being,” said lead study author, Julia Wong, MD, FASTRO, also an associate professor of radiation oncology at Dana-Farber Brigham Cancer Center. “We often focus on cancer outcomes, but there are a lot of quality-of-life issues involved in having a mastectomy and reconstructive surgery, a combination a lot of patients are now choosing. We have to look at how these treatments affect patients.”

    The multi-center trial involved 400 participants treated at 16 U.S. health centers who underwent mastectomies followed by immediate breast reconstruction using a tissue expander or implant. Patients were randomly assigned to receive either conventional radiation consisting of 25 fractions across five weeks (50 Gy total; n=201) or hypofractionated radiation consisting of 16 fractions across roughly three weeks (42.56 Gy total; n=199).

    All patients were diagnosed with stage 0 to 3 breast cancer with tumors of any size but not growing into the chest wall or skin. The median age was 47 years. Patients completed questionnaires about their physical well-being and quality of life at baseline and at six, 12 and 18 months following treatment. Median follow-up was 40.4 months.

    Patients in both groups reported similar levels of physical well-being six months after treatment, the primary endpoint of the study (p=0.71). There were some differences between the groups at baseline, including higher energy levels reported by those randomized to receive hypofractionated radiation (p=0.02). Dr. Punglia said this finding likely reflects their positive reactions to the shortened treatment.

    “In our protocol, patients could complete their baseline questionnaire either before or after randomization, as long as it was before they started radiation. And so, patients could be aware of their treatment arm when they answered the questions,” she said. “It seems patients felt more energetic because they knew they would be done with treatment faster.”

    Treatment breaks, which are associated with worse outcomes in breast cancer, were significantly fewer (2.7% vs. 7.7% with conventional treatment, p=0.03) and shorter with the accelerated treatment (average 2.8 days vs. 3.3 with conventional treatment, p=0.03). Patients who needed unpaid time off work also reported taking 50 fewer hours of unpaid leave (73.7 hours vs.125.8 hours, p=0.046).

    There were small improvements in quality-of-life scores among younger patients treated with hypofractionated radiation. Patients younger than 45 reported feeling less bothered by treatment-related side effects (p=0.045) with the accelerated treatments. They also reported better physical well-being (p=0.049).

    There were no differences in the rates of recurrence or side effects between the two groups. Two people (one in each arm) experienced a local recurrence, and 23 (12 in the conventional arm, 11 in the hypofractionated arm) had cancer return to distant sites. Four patients (two in each arm) died during the study period; all were diagnosed with distant metastases.

    The overall rates of chest wall toxicity were lower in both arms than rates previously reported with implant-based reconstruction, said Dr. Wong. Twenty patients in the hypofractionated group and 19 in the conventional group had toxicity in the chest wall area. The analysis found several factors predicted chest wall toxicity on univariate analysis, including higher body mass index (HR=1.02, p=0.003), having a post-operative infection (HR=3.14, p=0.01), whether lymph nodes needed to be dissected (HR=2.07, p=0.03), having more lymph nodes removed (HR=1.05, p=0.01), having a tissue expander versus an implant (HR=3.32, p=0.04), and using preoperative endocrine therapy (HR=2.99, p=0.001).

    Though they had hoped to see more dramatic results, the researchers were happy that delivering higher doses of radiation in less time did not increase side effects. “In fact, overall, the rates of chest wall toxicity were lower in both arms than what’s been seen historically, which is likely because of improvements over time in technique,” said Dr. Wong.

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    See this study presented:

    • News Briefing: Monday, October 2, 11:00 a.m. Pacific time. Details here. Register here.
    • Scientific Presentation: Clinical Trials Session, Sunday, October 1, 10:20 a.m. Pacific time, San Diego Convention Center. Email [email protected] for access to the live stream or recording.
    • Abstract Title: Patient-reported and toxicity results from the FABREC study: A multicenter randomized trial of hypofractionated vs. conventionally fractionated postmastectomy radiation therapy after implant-based reconstruction (LBA 05)

    Attribution to the American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) Annual Meeting is requested in all coverage. View our meeting press kit at www.astro.org/annualmeetingpress.

    ABOUT ASTRO

    The American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) is the largest radiation oncology society in the world, with nearly 10,000 members who are physicians, nurses, biologists, physicists, radiation therapists, dosimetrists and other health care professionals who specialize in treating patients with radiation therapies. Radiation therapy contributes to 40% of global cancer cures, and more than a million Americans receive radiation treatments for cancer each year. For information on radiation therapy, visit RTAnswers.org. To learn more about ASTRO, visit our website and media center and follow us on social media.

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    American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO)

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  • Sexual activity and vaginal dilation associated with fewer side effects after cervical cancer treatment

    Sexual activity and vaginal dilation associated with fewer side effects after cervical cancer treatment

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    Newswise — SAN DIEGO, October 1, 2023 — People who engage in sexual activity or vaginal dilation after chemoradiation treatment for cervical cancer are at lower risk for long-term side effects, according to a new study from researchers in Austria. Findings of the EMBRACE study will be presented today at the American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) Annual Meeting

    “Curing cancer is always our first priority,” said lead study author Kathrin Kirchheiner, MSc, PhD, a clinical psychologist in the department of radiation oncology at the Medical University of Vienna. “But with a growing number of relatively young cervical cancer survivors, the prevention and management of side effects becomes increasingly important to ensure a better quality of life.”

    “I hope this research helps to reduce the taboo around sexual health and makes it easier for clinicians to discuss these issues with their patients.”

    Cervical cancer is the fourth most common cancer among women globally. Patients are diagnosed most often around age 50. Standard non-surgical treatment for patients whose cancer has spread to the surrounding tissue or organs involves a combination of radiation therapy, chemotherapy and brachytherapy – inserting radioactive implants directly into the tumor.

    Advances in brachytherapy, such as the use of MRI imaging to pinpoint tumor size and location, along with the ability to deliver precise doses of radiation, have greatly improved tumor control and cure rates in recent years. The five-year survival rate for people with locally advanced cervical cancer is 74%.

    Delivering high doses of radiation to tumors near the vagina, however, can lead to vaginal stenosis – a shortening or narrowing of the vagina – and long-term changes in vaginal tissue that can complicate gynecological examinations or cause pain during intercourse. Physicians often recommend regular and ongoing vaginal dilation to mitigate these side effects and prevent scar tissue from forming, but few studies have quantified its impact.

    EMBRACE is a multi-institutional, prospective, observational study that measured physician-reported vaginal side effects and patient-reported outcomes among 1,416 people with locally advanced cervical cancer. In this sub-cohort of 882 patients, Dr. Kirchheiner and her colleagues compared side effects for people who were sexually active or used vaginal dilators on a regular basis in the years after treatment to those who did not follow this routine.

    In the five years following treatment, patients were seen for a median of 11 follow-up visits with gynecological exams to assess vaginal side effects. They also filled out questionnaires on quality of life, sexual activity and vaginal dilation. Questionnaires were completed at baseline, every three months in the first year, every six months in the second and third years and annually thereafter. The median age of patients was 49 years old.

    Regular vaginal dilation and/or sexual activity – defined as the patient reporting the practice during half or more of their follow-ups – was reported by 64% of patients and was significantly associated with lower risk for moderate grade 2 or higher vaginal shortening and narrowing five years after treatment (p≤0.001).  

    Patients who reported both dilation and intercourse had the lowest risk of grade ≥2 vaginal stenosis (18%), followed by those who were sexually active but did not use vaginal dilators (23%) and those who used dilators but were not sexually active (28%). Patients who did not engage in regular dilation or intercourse were most likely to experience moderate stenosis (37%).

    Analyses also showed that regular sexual activity and/or vaginal dilation was associated with an increased risk for other – but mild – vaginal symptoms, such as grade ≥1 dryness and bleeding.

    This is not surprising, said Dr. Kirchheiner, as vaginal dryness is more likely to be noticed as a lack of lubrication in patients engaging in some form of penetrative activity, and that minor bleeding during or after dilation or intercourse can often be caused by irritation of the vaginal lining.

    “Minor vaginal dryness and bleeding can be managed with lubricants, moisturizer and/or hormone replacement therapy,” she said. “The risk of having these minor side effects should not stop patients from dilating or having sexual intercourse, as these activities may help prevent a more serious, and irreversible, condition.”

    Among people who reported regular sexual activity and/or vaginal dilation, 72% experienced grade ≥1 vaginal dryness, compared to 67% of those who reported none or infrequent dilation/intercourse (p=0.028). Grade ≥1 vaginal bleeding occurred in 61% of patients who reported frequent sexual activity and/or vaginal dilation, compared to 34% of those who did not (p≤0.001).

    While the study’s findings point to a promising option for patients to maintain sexual health following cervical cancer treatment, Dr. Kirchheiner emphasized that this study was observational and therefore can only report correlations. Questions remain regarding the degree to which vaginal dilation and/or sexual intercourse effectively prevent shortening and narrowing, or if the development of vaginal symptoms interferes with the likelihood that patients are able to engage in these activities.

    “In clinical reality, both causal pathways likely will contribute and interact in a vicious circle. However, as we cannot and should not randomize patients in a clinical trial into groups with and without regular dilation, our findings support both clinical experience and the standard of care.”

    Next steps for this area of research, said Dr. Kirchheiner, include considering the role of sexual arousal, such as increased blood flow in the pelvic area, on tissue healing and vaginal health, given the slight advantage of intercourse over dilators in their observational study.

    Yet studies on sexual health following cancer treatment can be difficult to complete, she noted. “Sexual health is a highly individual and sensitive topic to address, both in research and in survivorship care, and it deserves a respectful and comprehensive approach.”

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    See this study presented:

    • News Briefing: Monday, October 2, 11:00 a.m. Pacific time. Details here. Register here.
    • Scientific Presentation: Sunday, October 1, 9:40 a.m. Pacific time, San Diego Convention Center. Email [email protected] for access to the live stream or recording.
    • Abstract Title: Association between regular vaginal dilation and/or sexual activity and long-term vaginal morbidity in cervical cancer survivors (Abstract 4)

    Attribution to the American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) Annual Meeting is requested in all coverage. View our meeting press kit at www.astro.org/annualmeetingpress.

    ABOUT ASTRO

    The American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) is the largest radiation oncology society in the world, with nearly 10,000 members who are physicians, nurses, biologists, physicists, radiation therapists, dosimetrists and other health care professionals who specialize in treating patients with radiation therapies. Radiation therapy contributes to 40% of global cancer cures, and more than a million Americans receive radiation treatments for cancer each year. For information on radiation therapy, visit RTAnswers.org. To learn more about ASTRO, visit our website and media center and follow us on social media.

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  • Liquid biopsies can rapidly detect residual disease following cervical chemoradiation, study finds

    Liquid biopsies can rapidly detect residual disease following cervical chemoradiation, study finds

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    Newswise — SAN DIEGO, October 1, 2023 — Two liquid biopsy tests that look for the presence of human papillomavirus (HPV) in the blood accurately identified patients with a high risk of cervical cancer recurrence after the completion of chemoradiation, a new study confirms. Findings will be presented today at the American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) Annual Meeting

    The study compared two novel tests – a digital polymerase chain reaction (dPCR) test and a sequencing test for genetic material from HPV, the main cause of cervical cancer – and found they were equally effective at identifying residual disease in the blood of patients who recently completed radiation and chemotherapy for cervical cancer. Earlier detection allows for earlier treatment of residual disease and potentially better survival rates. 

    “These non-invasive tests can detect residual disease following chemoradiation treatment earlier than imaging or a clinical exam,” said lead study author Kathy Han, MD, a radiation oncologist at the Princess Margaret Cancer Center at the University of Toronto. “We can detect very minimal disease, before it grows bigger, which potentially will enable us to intervene earlier and improve outcomes for people with cervical cancer.”

    Roughly 11,500 new cases of cervical cancer are diagnosed annually in the U.S., and an estimated 4,000 Americans die from the disease each year. Approximately 30-40% of patients with cervical cancer develop tumor recurrence following chemoradiation, and currently, residual disease is often detected too late to improve survival rates.

    Tissue biopsy has long been considered the gold standard for identifying tumors, but it requires an invasive procedure to sample enough tumor tissue to be visualized on imaging, and it provides a snapshot only of a specific tumor region. Liquid biopsies can detect microscopic components of tumors in bodily fluids such as blood or urine, providing a less invasive option to assess malignancy. Blood tests are the most widely used type of liquid biopsy and can identify circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA), circulating RNA and other markers that signal the presence of cancer, including HPV.

    Because these tests can detect fragments of the HPV virus that remain in the blood following chemoradiation but before tumors recur, “liquid biopsies provide insight before tissue biopsy becomes possible,” said Dr. Han. “If we can predict who might be at higher risk of recurrence, it may be a signal to clinicians to make sure these patients are followed more closely.”

    In a previous, pilot study, Dr. Han and her team collected blood samples from 20 patients with cervical cancer before and after chemoradiation treatment. Using digital polymerase chain reaction (dPCR) tests, they found people with detectable HPV ctDNA at the end of chemoradiation had worse outcomes than those with no detectable HPV ctDNA.

    This new study sought to validate those findings in a larger sample of patients, using both dPCR and more sophisticated HPV sequencing tests. To do so, researchers prospectively enrolled 70 patients from four Canadian centers; all participants were diagnosed with HPV-positive cervical cancer and treated with chemoradiation. Patients were followed for a median of 2.2 years.

    Patients gave blood samples before treatment; they also received blood tests immediately after treatment, between four to six weeks post-treatment and 12 weeks post-treatment. Patients with detectable HPV ctDNA in their blood at each of these three timepoints had substantially worse progression-free survival rates than those with no detectable HPV in their blood.

    Specifically, 53% of patients with detectable HPV ctDNA immediately following chemoradiation were progression-free two years later, compared to 87% of patients without detectable HPV ctDNA immediately after treatment. The difference was even more pronounced at the 12-week mark; patients with detectable HPV ctDNA three months following chemoradiation had a 26% two-year progression-free survival rate, compared to 85% for those without.

    “We were happy to see that we could validate our initial results,” said Dr. Han. “We were surprised, however, to find no significant differences between the digital PCR test and the HPV sequencing test. Even though HPV sequencing was more sensitive than digital PCR, both approaches returned similar results after treatment.”

    In recent years, advances in technology have accelerated the use of liquid biopsies, which are believed to hold great potential for non-invasive cancer screening in high-risk populations. However, the tests are not yet widely available.

    One of the challenges with making HPV ctDNA testing widely available for people with cervical cancer is the variety of HPV types that cause the disease, said Dr. Han, noting that 11 distinct HPV types were detected in their analysis. Yet Dr. Han said the HPV sequencing test was capable of detecting all 11 types with high accuracy and suggested that it could become a generalizable approach for HPV-positive cervical cancer.

    Expanding access to liquid biopsies is also necessary, said Dr. Han, and will be crucial for future research using liquid biopsies to identify patients at high-risk of recurrence and randomizing them to intensive versus standard treatment.

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    See this study presented:

    • News Briefing: Monday, October 2, 11:00 a.m. Pacific time. Details here. Register here.
    • Scientific Presentation: Sunday, October 1, 8:00 a.m. Pacific time, San Diego Convention Center. Email [email protected] for access to the live stream or recording.
    • Abstract Title: Clinical validation of HPV ctDNA for early detection of residual disease following chemoradiation in cervical cancer (Abstract 105)

    Attribution to the American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) Annual Meeting is requested in all coverage. View our meeting press kit at www.astro.org/annualmeetingpress.

    ABOUT ASTRO

    The American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO) is the largest radiation oncology society in the world, with nearly 10,000 members who are physicians, nurses, biologists, physicists, radiation therapists, dosimetrists and other health care professionals who specialize in treating patients with radiation therapies. Radiation therapy contributes to 40% of global cancer cures, and more than a million Americans receive radiation treatments for cancer each year. For information on radiation therapy, visit RTAnswers.org. To learn more about ASTRO, visit our website and media center and follow us on social media.

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  • Mammograms are Crucial to Women’s Health: Here’s why

    Mammograms are Crucial to Women’s Health: Here’s why

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    Newswise — Mammograms are Crucial to Women’s Health: Here’s why

    New Brunswick, N.J., October 1, 2023 –While researchers continue to make advancements in cancer detection and treatment for breast cancer, one of the best ways to tackle the disease is through early detection and screening with mammography. Mridula George, MD, associate program director of breast medical oncology and medical oncologist in the Breast Oncology Program at Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey, shares more on the importance of this life-saving cancer screening. 

    1. Breast cancer is a leading health concern for women. According to the American Cancer Society, breast cancer is the most common cancer in U.S. women, behind only skin cancer.
    2. There are several risk factors associated with breast cancer. As with many other diseases, risk of developing breast cancer increases as you get older. You also may be at high risk if you have a mother or sister who developed breast or ovarian cancer or if you have multiple family members who developed breast, ovarian or prostate cancer.
    3. Early disease usually does not cause pain, and self-exams cannot find everything. As the cancer grows, symptoms may include a lump or thickening in or near the breast or in the underarm area, change in the size or shape of the breast, or tenderness. Other symptoms include nipple discharge or the nipple pulled back into the breast, or a change in the way the skin of the breast, areola, or nipple looks or feels (warm, swollen, red, or scaly).
    4. Using low-dose X-rays, mammograms can show abnormal areas or tissues in your breast and can help detect cancer before you have symptoms. Your breast is placed in a special machine between two plates. The plates move together to compress your breast tissue, so it’s easier for the X-ray to obtain a clear image. Once the images are created, they’re stored on a computer where they can be viewed and analyzed by the radiologist and your doctor.
    5. When breast cancer is detected early, and hasn’t spread, the five-year relative survival rate is 99 percent. Breast cancers found during screening exams are more likely to be smaller and less likely to have spread outside the breast.

    Take action now. If you are unsure about breast cancer screening recommendations for your personal situation, discuss with your doctor to make a decision that feels right for you.

    Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey and RWJBarnabas Health is the state’s leading cancer program and only National Cancer Institute-designated Comprehensive Cancer Center.

    Learn more at rwjbh.org/mammo.

     

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    Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey

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  • Exposure to extreme heat associated with adverse health outcomes for pregnant women

    Exposure to extreme heat associated with adverse health outcomes for pregnant women

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    A first-of-its-kind study led by Jun Wu, PhD, professor of environmental and occupational health at UC
    Irvine Program in Public Health, found that exposure to extreme heat had an association with severe
    maternal morbidity (SMM). The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention define SMM as severe and
    unexpected conditions during labor and delivery, such as amniotic fluid embolism, acute myocardial
    infarction, acute kidney failure, cardiac arrest, disseminated intravascular coagulation, heart failure,
    severe anesthesia complications, and sepsis.

    For the past few decades, extreme heat episodes have become more and more frequent. The National
    Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration tracked July 2023 as the hottest on record ever. Women who
    started their pregnancy in the cold season from November through April might be more vulnerable, as
    they would experience the hottest period in Southern California (May-September) in their late
    pregnancy. The severity and duration of extreme heat events will continue to increase and pose more
    threats to pregnant women due to their susceptibility.

    The research findings hope to be used to build targeted interventions that can increase awareness and
    knowledge on how pregnant women can protect themselves from exposure to extreme heat.

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    University of California, Irvine

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  • كشفت دراسة مايو كلينك أن العلاج الإشعاعي بالبروتونات قد يقصر فترة علاج سرطان الثدي

    كشفت دراسة مايو كلينك أن العلاج الإشعاعي بالبروتونات قد يقصر فترة علاج سرطان الثدي

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    Newswise — مدينة روتشستر، ولاية مينيسوتا — في تجربة عشوائية نُشرت في مجلة “لانسيت للأورام” (The Lancet Oncology) اكتشف الباحثون في مركز مايو كلينك الشامل للسرطان أدلة تدعم تقليص فترة العلاج لمريضات سرطان الثدي. قارنت الدراسة جدولين منفصلين للجرعات من العلاج بالبروتونات بالمسح الشعاعي القلمي، وهو النوع الأكثر تقدمًا من العلاج بالبروتونات المعروف بدقته في استهداف الخلايا السرطانية مع الحفاظ على الأنسجة السليمة لتقليل مخاطر الآثار الجانبية.

    تستمر معدلات البقاء على قيد الحياة لمرض سرطان الثدي في التحسن بسبب تقدم طرق التشخيص والعلاج، مما يؤدي إلى زيادة التركيز على تقليل سمية علاج السرطان على المدى الطويل، بما في ذلك العلاج الإشعاعي.

    قبل هذه الدراسة، كانت جميع المريضات اللاتي عولجن بالعلاج الإشعاعي بالبروتون بعد استئصال الثدي (PMRT) قد تلقين دورة مُتعارف عليها مدتها 25 إلى 30 يومًا تُقدم لمدة خمسة أيام في الأسبوع على مدى خمسة إلى ستة أسابيع. ويأمل الباحثون في إثبات أن تكثيف دورة العلاج الإشعاعي بالبروتونات ، وهو شكل من أشكال العلاج الجزيئي الذي يمكن أن يجنب القلب والرئتين من الضرر الإشعاعي، قد يؤدي إلى آثار جانبية مماثلة.

    تم اختيار اثنين وثمانين مريضة ممن لديهن مؤشرات للعلاج الإشعاعي بالبروتون بعد استئصال الثدي (PMRT)، وكثير منهن قد خضعن لإعادة بناء الثدي مسبقًا، إما للتجزئة التقليدية (أجزاء من جرعة الإشعاع) التي تدار في 25 يومًا، أو جدول مكثف لمدة 15 يومًا من نقص التجزئة. في حالة نقص التجزئة، تُعطَى للمريضة جرعة أكبر من العلاج الإشعاعي مع كل علاج، مما يسمح بإكمال العلاج الإشعاعي بالكامل خلال ثلاثة أسابيع فقط. ووجد الباحثون أن العلاج التقليدي والبروتوني ناقص التجزئة أدى إلى سيطرة ممتازة على السرطان مع الحفاظ على الأنسجة الطبيعية المحيطة. وعلاوةً على ذلك، كانت معدلات المضاعفات قابلة للمقارنة بين مجموعتي الدراسة.

    يقول روبرت موتر، دكتور في الطب أخصائي علاج الأورام بالإشعاع وطبيب/عالم في مركز مايو كلينك الشامل للسرطان: “توفر الدراسة أول بيانات محتملة تدعم استخدام العلاج الإشعاعي بالبروتون بعد استئصال الثدي (PMRT) ذو الدورة الأقصر، بما في ذلك في المريضات اللاتي شُخِصن بإعادة بناء الثدي الفوري، والنتائج المدروسة الأولى لتجربة عشوائية في مجال العلاج بجزيئات الثدي”. “يمكننا الآن النظر مع المريضات في خيار العلاج لمدة 15 يومًا بناءً على نتائج العلاج المماثلة التي تمت ملاحظتها مثل الدورة التقليدية الأطول. كما تجدر الإشارة إلى أن الدورة القصيرة أدت في الواقع إلى تقليل الآثار الجانبية الجلدية أثناء العلاج وبعده.”

    والأهم من ذلك أن الباحثين لاحظوا أن الجدول الجديد يجنب المريضات المزيد من الإزعاج والتكلفة والأعباء الأخرى المرتبطة بالنظام الأطول. ونظرًا لوجود عدد محدود من مرافق العلاج بالبروتونات في الولايات المتحدة والعالم، يضيف الدكتور موتر أن إثبات سلامة وقابلية تنفيذ دورة العلاج الأقصر يمكن أن يؤدي إلى زيادة الوصول إلى تقنية شعاع البروتون لعلاج حالات سرطان الثدي التي يصعب علاجها.

    ويقول الباحثون إن هناك ما يبرر إجراء تحقيق إضافي في الجرعة المثالية للعلاج الإشعاعي بالبروتون بعد استئصال الثدي (PMRT) والتجزئة. ويخطط الفريق لإجراء المزيد من الأبحاث، والتحقيق في تسليم العلاج الإشعاعي بالبروتون بعد استئصال الثدي (PMRT) في أقل من خمسة أيام.

    يقول الدكتور موتر: “هدفنا في النهاية هو تخصيص العلاج الإشعاعي استنادًا إلى بيولوجيا الورم”. “نريد تحديد أفضل جداول العلاج الإشعاعي أو مجموعات العلاج الإشعاعي الدوائي الممكنة للقضاء على السرطان مع تقليل الآثار الجانبية”.

    تم تمويل البحث بمنحة من المعهد الوطني للسرطان ومايو كلينك وتبرع من لورانس ومارلين ماتيسون. راجع الورقة البحثية المنشورة للحصول على قائمة كاملة بالمؤلفين ومصادر التمويل وتضارب المصالح.

    تعمل مايو كلينك على توسيع خدمات العلاج الإشعاعي بالبروتونات في مدينة روتشستر، ولاية مينيسوتا، من خلال مشروع توسيع المنشأة بقيمة 200 مليون دولار من المتوقع افتتاحه في عام 2027. افتتحت مايو كلينك أول منشأة للبروتونات في ولاية مينيسوتا في عام 2015. وفي عام 2016، افتتحت مايو كلينك أول منشأة للعلاج بالبروتونات في الجنوب الغربي في موقعها في ولاية أريزونا. يجري الآن إنشاء مبنى متكامل جديد لعلاج الأورام بمساحة 200,000 قدم مربع في حرم مايو كلينك في فلوريدا، حيث سيُقَدم العلاج الإشعاعي بالبروتونات للمرضى عند توفره في عام 2026. ستسمح المنشأة أيضًا للباحثين في مايو كلينك بدراسة العلاج بأيون الكربوهيدرات في التجارب السريرية كعلاج محتمل.

    ###

    نبذة حول مركز مايو كلينك الشامل للسرطان
    اعتمده المعهد الوطني للسرطان ، كمركز شامل لعلاج السرطان، لذلك فإن مركز مايو كلينك الشامل للسرطان يضع حدودًا جديدة لما هو ممكن، بالتركيز على الرعاية المتمحورة حول المرضى، وتطوير علاجات جديدة، وتدريب الأجيال القادمة من خبراء السرطان، وجلب أبحاث السرطان إلى المجتمعات. في مركز مايو كلينك الشامل للسرطان، ثقافة الابتكار والتعاون هي ما يوجه الاكتشافات البحثية التي تغيِّر نهج الوقاية من السرطان، والفحص والعلاج، وتحسن حياة الناجين من السرطان.

    نبذة عن مايو كلينك
    مايو كلينك هي مؤسسة غير ربحية تلتزم بالابتكار في الممارسات السريرية والتعليم والبحث وتوفير التعاطف والخبرة لكل مَن يحتاج إلى الاستشفاء والرد على استفساراته. لمعرفة المزيد من أخبار مايو كلينك، تفضَّل بزيارة شبكة مايو كلينك الإخبارية.

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  • Estudo da Mayo Clinic revela que terapia por feixe de prótons pode encurtar o tratamento de câncer de mama

    Estudo da Mayo Clinic revela que terapia por feixe de prótons pode encurtar o tratamento de câncer de mama

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    Newswise — ROCHESTER, Minnesota — Em um ensaio aleatório, publicado na revista The Lancet Oncology, os pesquisadores do Centro de Câncer da Mayo Clinic revelaram evidências que respaldam um menor período de tratamento para pacientes com câncer de mama. O estudo comparou dois cronogramas de dosagem distintos de terapia de prótons com varredura de feixe de lápis, o mais avançado tipo de terapia de prótons, conhecido por sua precisão em atingir as células cancerígenas enquanto preserva o tecido saudável para reduzir os riscos de efeitos colaterais.

    As taxas de sobrevida para câncer de mama continuam melhorando graças aos avanços no diagnóstico e tratamento, o que leva ao aumento na ênfase na redução da toxicidade de longo prazo do tratamento de câncer, inclusive a radioterapia.

    Antes deste estudo, todas as pacientes submetidas ao tratamento com radioterapia de prótons pós-mastectomia tinham recebido um tratamento convencional de 25 a 30 dias de duração, administrado cinco dias por semana, ao longo de cinco ou seis semanas. Os pesquisadores pretendiam demonstrar que a redução do ciclo da terapia por feixe de prótons, um tipo de terapia por partículas projetado para minimizar os danos da radiação ao coração e aos pulmões, pode produzir um conjunto similar de efeitos colaterais.

    Oitenta e duas pacientes com indicações de tratamento com radioterapia de prótons pós-mastectomia, sendo que muitas delas tinham feito previamente a reconstrução mamária, foram aleatorizadas para o fracionamento convencional (frações de dose de radiação) administrado por 25 dias ou a um cronograma hipofracionado condensado por 15 dias. Com o hipofracionamento, uma dose maior de radioterapia é administrada para cada paciente, e isso permite que toda a radioterapia seja concluída em apenas três semanas. Os investigadores descobriram que ambas as terapias, a de prótons convencional e a hipofracionada, resultaram em um controle excelente do câncer sem afetar o tecido normal circundante. Além disso, as taxas de complicação foram comparadas entre os dois grupos de estudo.

    “O estudo fornece os primeiros dados prospectivos que respaldam o uso do tratamento com radioterapia de prótons pós-mastectomia com ciclos de prótons mais curtos, inclusive em pacientes com reconstrução mamária imediata, e os primeiros resultados maduros de um ensaio aleatorizado no campo da terapia de partícula mamária”, explica oDr. Robert Mutter, radio-oncologista e médico-cientista no Centro de Câncer da Mayo Clinic. “Agora, podemos considerar a opção de 15 dias de terapia com as pacientes em função dos resultados de tratamento semelhantes e observados no ciclo convencional maior. Cabe observar que o ciclo mais curto resultou de fato na redução de efeitos colaterais na pele durante e depois do tratamento.”

    É importante ressaltar que os pesquisadores observaram que o novo cronograma alivia os pacientes de inconvenientes, despesas e outras dificuldades adicionais associadas com o regime mais longo. Como existe um número limitado dos locais que oferecem terapia de prótons nos Estados Unidos e no mundo, o Dr. Mutter acrescenta que a demonstração da segurança e viabilidade do transcurso mais curto do tratamento poderia resultar em maior acesso para a tecnologia por feixe de prótons para os casos mais difíceis de tratamento de câncer de mama.

    Os pesquisadores afirmam que é recomendável haver investigação complementar quanto à dose e fracionamento ideias para o tratamento com radioterapia de prótons pós-mastectomia. A equipe planeja fazer pesquisa complementar e investigar a administração do tratamento com radioterapia de prótons pós-mastectomia em apenas cinco dias.

    “Basicamente, nosso objetivo é personalizar a radioterapia de acordo com a biologia do tumor”, explica o Dr. Mutter. “Queremos identificar os melhores cronogramas possíveis de radioterapia ou combinações de radioterapia e remédios para eliminar o câncer e minimizar ao mesmo tempo os efeitos colaterais.”

    A pesquisa foi financiada com as subvenções do Instituto Nacional do Câncer dos EUA, Mayo Clinic e uma doação de Lawrence e Marilyn Matteson. Leia o artigo publicado para verificar a lista completa das fontes de financiamento, autores e conflitos de interesse.

    A Mayo Clinic está expandindo os serviços de terapia por feixe de prótons em Rochester, Minnesota, com um projeto de expansão de instalações avaliado em 200 milhões de dólares, cuja inauguração é aguardada para 2027. A Mayo Clinic abriu sua primeira instalação de prótons em Minnesota em 2015. Em 2016, a Mayo Clinic abriu a primeira instalação de terapia de prótons do sudoeste em sua sede do Arizona. Atualmente, a construção de um novo estabelecimento oncológico integrado, com 18.580 metros quadrados, está em andamento na sede da Mayo Clinic, na Flórida, onde a terapia de feixe de prótons será entregue para pacientes, assim que estiver disponível em 2026. A instalação também viabilizará para os pesquisadores da Mayo Clinic o estudo da terapia com íons de carbono em ensaios clínicos como um possível tratamento.

    ###

    Sobre o Centro de Câncer da Mayo Clinic
    Designado como um centro de câncer abrangente pelo Instituto Nacional do Câncer dos EUA, o Centro de Câncer da Mayo Clinic está definindo novos limites de possibilidades, focando em assistência centrada no paciente, desenvolvimento de novos tratamentos, treinamento das futuras gerações de especialistas em câncer e em trazer a pesquisa do câncer para as comunidades. No Centro de Câncer da Mayo Clinic, uma cultura de inovação e colaboração está impulsionando avanços importantes em pesquisa que estão mudando as abordagens de prevenção, rastreamento e tratamento do câncer, além de melhorar a vida dos sobreviventes da doença.

    Sobre a Mayo Clinic
    Mayo Clinic é uma organização sem fins lucrativos comprometida com a inovação na prática clínica, educação e pesquisa, fornecendo compaixão, conhecimento e respostas para todos que precisam de cura. Visite a Rede de Notícias da Mayo Clinic para obter outras notícias da Mayo Clinic.

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  • Is This Premenstrual Condition a Mental Illness or Oppression?

    Is This Premenstrual Condition a Mental Illness or Oppression?

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    This article originally appeared in Undark Magazine.

    For one week of every month, I have a very bad time. My back aches so badly I struggle to stand up straight. My mood swings from frantic to bleak. My concentration flags; it’s difficult to send an email. Then, my period starts, and the curse is lifted. I feel okay again.

    Like some 1 to 7 percent of menstruating women, I meet the criteria for premenstrual dysphoric disorder, or PMDD. According to the most recent edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5-TR), a person with PMDD experiences marked emotional changes—such as sadness, anger, or anxiety—and physical or behavioral changes—such as difficulty concentrating, fatigue, or joint pain—in the week before their period. PMDD can also affect trans men and nonbinary people who menstruate.

    When I first heard of PMDD, it was a revelation. Here was a concrete explanation for the pain and stress I was feeling every month. Better yet, there was a simple, effective treatment: common antidepressant drugs called selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, or SSRIs, which can be prescribed for people to take only in the two weeks before their period. Birth-control pills, cognitive behavioral therapy, and calcium supplements may also help.

    Then I heard about the controversy surrounding the diagnosis. When the American Psychiatric Association added a form of PMDD as a proposed disorder to the diagnostic manual in the 1980s—DSM-III-R—some scholars pushed back. They saw the diagnosis as part of the historical oppression of women, done in the name of mental health. The controversy reared up again as PMDD remained in the 1994 DSM-IV, where it was also listed under “Depressive Disorder Not Otherwise Specified.” Many people who menstruate experience emotional changes during their cycles, so defining it as a mental illness could have serious personal and societal consequences, critics argued. A 2002 Monitor on Psychology article, “Is PMDD real?,” quoted the late psychologist and author Paula Caplan: “Women are supposed to be cheerleaders,” she said. “When a woman is anything but that, she and her family are quick to think something is wrong.”

    In the end, the APA weighed these concerns and pushed ahead, adding PMDD to the DSM-5 as an official diagnosis in 2013. But I found the criticism disquieting. Had I embraced a modern hysteria diagnosis? Were the symptoms I experienced even real?

    Researchers have looked for hormonal differences between people who experience severe premenstrual distress and people who don’t. In some cases, they’ve found them: A 2021 meta-analysis found that people with PMDD tend to have lower levels of estradiol, a form of estrogen, between ovulation and menstruation. But other studies have shown little to no difference in hormone levels. “There are no biomarkers. There’s no test that can be done which helps identify someone with PMDD,” says Lynsay Matthews, who researches PMDD at University of the West of Scotland.

    Instead, to receive treatment, people experiencing premenstrual distress have to monitor their own mind and body. PMDD diagnosis is based on a symptom diary kept over the course of multiple menstrual cycles.

    The symptoms recorded in those diaries can be severe. In a 2022 survey, 34 percent of people with PMDD reported a past suicide attempt. More than half reported self-harm. “If someone has suicidal ideation or self-harm, or suicide attempts every month for 30 years, that wouldn’t be described as a normal female response to the menstrual cycle,” Matthews says.

    There is evidence that SSRIs work for people with PMDD, in ways researchers don’t fully understand. “In some cases, hours after taking an effective SSRI, people can feel a lot better,” Matthews says, referring to PMDD patients. In contrast, people with depression usually need to take SSRIs for weeks before feeling the effects. Researchers know the drugs’ mechanism of action is different for PMDD—they just don’t know why. “When people find that out, they find it quite validating that it is a medical condition,” Matthews says.

    Tamara Kayali Browne, a bioethicist at Deakin University, in Australia, agrees that some people experience serious distress in the week before their period—but disagrees with calling it a mental illness.

    “The crux of the problem seems to be that we are in a patriarchal society that treats women very differently and puts a lot of women under a lot of significant, disproportionate stress,” Browne says. That disproportionate stress begins early. Eighty-three percent of a sample of Australian PMDD patients reported trauma in early life. It continues in adulthood. A Swedish survey of 1,239 people with PMDD found that raising children was associated with higher rates of premenstrual distress.

    Between ovulation and menstruation, many people experience higher physical and emotional sensitivity. They may feel unwilling or unable to deal with the stressors they tolerate the rest of the month: the screaming baby, the messy partner. “Is it the time of the month where the truth comes out?” Browne suggests. Seen in this light, irritability, anxiety, and low mood are understandable reactions to life stressors, not symptoms of mental illness.

    There is a long history of doctors labeling women crazy. There is also a long history of doctors dismissing women’s pain. Debates about premenstrual distress are caught in the middle.

    When critics question PMDD and the less severe premenstrual syndrome, it can feel invalidating. “It’s time to stop questioning whether women’s experiences are real and instead start making them real priorities,” the journalists Emily Crockett and Julia Belluz wrote in response to an article that suggested PMS is culturally constructed.

    At the same time, when left unchecked, casual sexism can seep into the medical discourse around PMDD. Early pharmaceutical advertisements marketing SSRIs for PMDD show how this works in practice. In 2000, Eli Lilly packaged fluoxetine hydrochloride in a pink-and-purple capsule and branded it Sarafem. Advertisements for the drug featured incapable, unreasonable women; one fights a shopping cart, another bickers with her (male) partner. “Think it’s PMS? Think again. It could be PMDD.” (The Sarafem brand has since been discontinued.)

    What if we can question the structural factors that make life harder for women while providing medical support for people who are suffering? Could the critiques lead us to more, not fewer, options for people with PMDD?

    Medical interventions can be lifesaving for people with PMDD. But they don’t address a society that places a heavy burden on the shoulders of people assigned female at birth.

    Browne compares severe premenstrual distress to a broken leg. “If you have a broken leg, you really do need painkillers, because you’re experiencing pain,” she says. “But it’s not going to be helpful in the long term if you don’t deal with whatever the underlying cause is.” In the week before menstruation, the life stressors a person with PMDD deals with the rest of the month can feel unbearable. Those life stressors can and should be addressed alongside conventional medical treatment.

    One common stressor is the caregiving load. “Parenting is not only a massive trigger, but it’s also the biggest burden or the biggest guilt that comes with having PMDD,” Matthews says. “Not only are you struggling yourself every month, but you also feel as though you’re failing your children every month.” The co-parent can help alleviate this burden. When fathers spend more time with their kids—and doing child-related chores—mothers tend to be less stressed about parenting.

    Another stressor is relationship difficulties. The emotional changes that come with the premenstrual phase can make conflict with a partner more likely. They can also prompt the PMDD sufferer’s partner to dismiss those feelings. “Nowadays, a partner might still be inclined to say, ‘Wait a minute, I know it’s that time of your month again. You’re just being oversensitive,’” Browne points out. Women in relationships with women, who tend to be more understanding of premenstrual change than men, report a more positive experience of the week before their period.

    Researchers have done great, necessary work to understand PMDD, work that should continue. How are people who experience premenstrual distress biologically different from people who don’t? Can we find new, more effective drugs to treat that distress?

    In the meantime, we need to build a better world for people who experience premenstrual distress. Doctors can prescribe medicine, but managers can make accommodations in the workplace. Co-parents can take on more caregiving responsibility. And partners can provide love and support.

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  • Iran: Draft hijab law tantamount to ‘gender apartheid’ say rights experts

    Iran: Draft hijab law tantamount to ‘gender apartheid’ say rights experts

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    “The draft law could be described as a form of gender apartheid, as authorities appear to be governing through systemic discrimination with the intention of suppressing women and girls into total submission,” the independent experts said.

    They stressed that the proposed parliamentary Bill to Support the Family by Promoting the Culture of Chastity and Hijab and existing de facto restrictions are inherently discriminatory and may amount to gender persecution.

    “The draft law imposes severe punishments on women and girls for non-compliance which may lead to its violent enforcement,” the experts warned.

    It also violates fundamental rights such as the right to take part in cultural life, freedom of opinion and expression, the right to peaceful protest, and the right to access social, educational, and health services, they added.

    Mahsa Amini death

    “After months of nationwide protests over the death of Jina Mahsa Amini and against restrictive veiling laws, the authorities have introduced a tiered system of punishments targeting women and girls,” the experts said.

    The 22-year-old was arrested in Tehran and taken into custody nearly a year ago by the so-called morality police for her alleged failure to comply with the already strict hijab laws.

    She reportedly fell ill at a police station with witnesses testifying that she had first been severely beaten, and later died in hospital. Iranian authorities denied that she had been assaulted.

    Culture war

    The UN-appointed added the proposed new punishments under the draft legislation would “disproportionately affect economically marginalised women”.

    The use of culture by the Iranian government as a tool to restrict the rights of women and girls is misplaced, the experts warned, noting that “culture is formed and evolves with the participation of all”.

    By using terms such as “nudity, lack of chastity, lack of hijab, bad dressing and acts against public decency leading to disturbance of peace”, the draft law seeks to authorise public institutions to deny essential services and opportunities to those who will not comply.

    Directors and managers of organisations who fail to implement the law could also be punished; the independent experts warned.

    ‘Weaponizing’ morality

    “The weaponization of “public morals” to deny women and girls their freedom of expression is deeply disempowering and will entrench and expand gender discrimination and marginalisation, with wider negative consequences for children and society as a whole,” the experts said.

    They note that the so-called morality police have also been reportedly redeployed in some areas since early July, potentially to enforce compulsory veiling strictures.

    The bill was submitted to parliament by the Government and the judiciary on 21 May. Since then, it has been amended several times, with the latest draft significantly increasing the number of punishments for non-compliance.

    “We urge authorities to reconsider the compulsory hijab legislation in compliance with international human rights law, and to ensure the full enjoyment of human rights for all women and girls in Iran,” the experts said.

    Experts’ mandate

    Special Rapporteurs and other independent human rights experts are appointed to monitor and report on specific country situations or thematic issues.

    They serve in their individual capacity, are not UN staff and do not receive payment for their work.

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  • Stress, insomnia linked to irregular heart rhythms after menopause

    Stress, insomnia linked to irregular heart rhythms after menopause

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    Research Highlights:

    • A study of more than 83,000 questionnaires by women ages 50-79, found more than 25% developed irregular heart rhythms, known as atrial fibrillation, which may increase their risk for stroke and heart failure.
    • Stressful life events and insomnia were strongly linked to the development of atrial fibrillation, highlighting the need for mental well-being evaluations to be included with physical health examinations.

     

    Newswise — DALLAS, Aug. 30, 2023 — After menopause an estimated 1 in 4 women may develop irregular heart rhythms — known as atrial fibrillation – in their lifetime, with stressful life events and insomnia being major contributing factors, according to new research published today in the Journal of the American Heart Association, an open access, peer-reviewed journal of the American Heart Association.

    Atrial fibrillation may lead to blood clots, stroke, heart failure or other cardiovascular complications. It primarily affects older adults, and more than 12 million people in the U.S. are expected to develop atrial fibrillation by 2030, according to the American Heart Association.

    “In my general cardiology practice, I see many postmenopausal women with picture perfect physical health who struggle with poor sleep and negative psychological emotional feelings or experience, which we now know may put them at risk for developing atrial fibrillation,” said lead study author Susan X. Zhao, M.D., a cardiologist at Santa Clara Valley Medical Center in San Jose, California. “I strongly believe that in addition to age, genetic and other heart-health related risk factors, psychosocial factors are the missing piece to the puzzle of the genesis of atrial fibrillation.“

    Researchers reviewed data from more than 83,000 questionnaires by women ages 50-79 from the Women’s Health Initiative, a major U.S. study. Participants were asked a series of questions in key categories: stressful life events, their sense of optimism, social support and insomnia. Questions about stressful life events addressed topics such as loss of a loved one; illness; divorce; financial pressure; and domestic, verbal, physical or sexual abuse. Questions about sleeping habits focused on if participants had trouble falling asleep, wake up several times during the night and  overall sleep quality, for example. Questions about participants’ outlook on life and social supports addressed having friends to talk with during and about difficult or stressful situations; a sense of optimism such as believing good things are on the horizon; and having help with daily chores.

    During approximately a decade of follow-up, the study found:

    • About 25% or 23,954 women developed atrial fibrillation.
    • A two-cluster system (the stress cluster and the strain cluster).
    • For each additional point on the insomnia scale, there is a 4% higher likelihood of developing atrial fibrillation. Similarly, for each additional point on the stressful life event scale, there is a 2% higher likelihood of having atrial fibrillation.

    “The heart and brain connection has been long established in many conditions,” Zhao said. “Atrial fibrillation is a disease of the electrical conduction system and is prone to hormonal changes stemming from stress and poor sleep. These common pathways likely underpin the association between stress and insomnia with atrial fibrillation.”

    Researchers noted that stressful life events, poor sleep and feelings, such as depression, anxiety or feeling overwhelmed by one’s circumstances, are often interrelated. It’s difficult to know whether these factors accumulate gradually over the years to increase the risk of atrial fibrillation as women age.

    Chronic stress has not been consistently associated with atrial fibrillation, and the researchers note that a limitation of their study is that it relied on patient questionnaires utilized at the start of the study. Stressful life events, however, though significant and traumatic, may not be long lasting, Zhao notes. Further research is needed to confirm these associations and evaluate whether customized stress-relieving interventions may modify atrial fibrillation risk.

    Study details and background:

    • Participants were recruited between 1994 and 1998.
    • The average age of the 83,736 women included in the study was about 64 years old. Approximately 88% of the group were women who self-identified as white; 7.2% identified as Black women; and 2.9% self-identified as Hispanic women.
    • As women live longer, they may face higher risk and poorer outcomes associated with atrial fibrillation. While high blood pressure, obesity, Type 2 diabetes and heart failure are recognized risk factors, more research is needed about how the exposure to psychosocial stress and overall emotional well-being over time may affect the potential development of atrial fibrillation.

    Co-authors, their disclosures and funding sources for the study are listed in the manuscript.

    Studies published in the American Heart Association’s scientific journals are peer-reviewed. The statements and conclusions in each manuscript are solely those of the study authors and do not necessarily reflect the Association’s policy or position. The Association makes no representation or guarantee as to their accuracy or reliability. The Association receives funding primarily from individuals; foundations and corporations (including pharmaceutical, device manufacturers and other companies) also make donations and fund specific Association programs and events. The Association has strict policies to prevent these relationships from influencing the science content. Revenues from pharmaceutical and biotech companies, device manufacturers and health insurance providers and the Association’s overall financial information are available here.

     

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  • FIFA suspends Spanish football president Rubiales for 90 days after kiss

    FIFA suspends Spanish football president Rubiales for 90 days after kiss

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    FIFA’s disciplinary committee investigating his conduct at the Women’s World Cup final, where he kissed a player without her consent.

    FIFA’s Disciplinary Committee has provisionally suspended Royal Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) head Luis Rubiales for 90 days after he grabbed player Jenni Hermoso’s head and kissed her on the lips after Spain’s victory at the Women’s World Cup.

    Rubiales had been expected to announce his resignation on Friday but instead said he would not step down and the RFEF threatened legal action to defend him after Hermoso said she did not consent to the kiss he gave her.

    “The chairman of the FIFA Disciplinary Committee … has decided today to provisionally suspend Mr Luis Rubiales from all football-related activities at national and international level,” FIFA said in a statement on Saturday.

    FIFA’s move is the latest development in a deepening confrontation between Rubiales and the RFEF and Hermoso and her Spain teammates, which the players say has tarnished the glory of their World Cup win in Australia last Sunday.

    The Spanish national team that won the World Cup, as well as several other players, have said they would not play international matches while Rubiales remains head of the federation.

    FIFA’s disciplinary committee also ordered Rubiales and RFEF officials and employees alike to refrain from contacting or attempting to contact Hermoso or those around her.

    “The decision adopted by the chairman of the FIFA Disciplinary Committee has been communicated today to Mr Luis Rubiales, the RFEF and [European football body] UEFA for due compliance.”

    Rubiales said he would defend himself.

    A statement released by the Spanish football federation on Saturday said, “Luis Rubiales has stated he will legally defend himself in the competent bodies, he fully trusts FIFA and reiterates that, in this way, he is given the opportunity to begin his defence so that the truth prevails and his complete innocence is proven.

    ‘Global laughing stock’

    FIFA had already said earlier this week it launched an ethics probe against Rubiales. Further information on the proceedings will not be provided “until a final decision has been taken”, FIFA said.

    Rubiales is also a vice president of UEFA, holding the number-three-ranking elected position at the top of the European football body, which pays him 250,000 euros ($270,000) annually plus expenses.

    He was elected to the executive committee by UEFA member federations in 2019 and was within weeks promoted to the vice presidency by UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin. Neither UEFA nor Ceferin have commented on the Rubiales scandal this week.

    In a complex situation, Spain’s government, via its Higher Council for Sports, filed a lawsuit on Friday alleging Rubiales violated the country’s sports laws through sexist acts. Spain’s secretary of state for sports, Víctor Francos, said the government would move to temporarily suspend Rubiales – pending the court ruling – if the court agreed to hear the case.

    If found guilty by the Spanish court, Rubiales could be ruled unfit to hold office. Francos said he would ask the court to move its regular Thursday meeting up to Monday.

    Messages of support for Hermoso poured in from the world of women’s football, and beyond.

    Real Madrid, Barcelona and other clubs issued statements criticising Rubiales and backing the government’s move to remove him.

    “I want to give my unconditional support to Jennifer Hermoso and the players. I condemn the behaviour of the president of the Spanish Football Federation. And I regret that people aren’t talking about the historic achievement of winning the World Cup,” said Xavi Hernandez, Barcelona’s manager.

    Political parties from both the left and right in Spain said Rubiales was unfit to continue in his post. Iberia airlines and other sponsors for the federations said they were with the government as well.

    On Saturday, Spanish sports daily Marca summed up the previous day’s events with a front-page headline “Global Laughing Stock” over a photo of a smiling Rubiales walking between rows of the general assembly.

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  • Indonesian doctors act on tell-tale signs of family violence

    Indonesian doctors act on tell-tale signs of family violence

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    When the parents of an injured five-year-old boy told Dr. Fai’zah A. Salim that he fell off a ladder, she was not convinced and suspected otherwise.

    Trained by UNFPA in the Central Sulawesi capital city of Palu to identify both physical and psychological signs of domestic violence, she referred the boy to a social counsellor. Shortly afterwards, he explained what really happened and how his father had beaten him for mischief.

    Recognition is the first step

    “Recognition is the first step to being able to help,” Dr Salim said. “We need to do a lot more than treat symptomatic wounds.”

    The Public Health Centre, or Puskemas, where Dr. Salim works, is part of a UNFPA pilot programme to combat gender-based violence and other forms of domestic violence.

    The programme covers 11 districts in Indonesia, including Palu. Under it, UNFPA supports the Government in policy making and trains health care providers. Local partners are encouraged to advocate for victims to come forward and seek help beyond treating their physical wounds.

    The results are significant. In the first three months of 2023, staff at Puskemas Sangurara had already identified seven cases of domestic violence, compared to between one and two over an entire year in the past. “Is it because of the advocacy or because we are better trained to recognize the symptoms of gender-based violence? Probably both,” Dr. Salim said.

    Serious concerns about gender-based violence

    Despite significant progress in gender equality, including increased access for women and girls to education, employment, and health services, gender-based violence remains a serious public health and human rights concern in Indonesia, said Norcahyo Budi Waskito, a Programme Officer at UNFPA Indonesia. National policies, strategies and legal documents have been put in place.

    However, these have not always been implemented at the local level. The Government has recognized the need for a systematic solution to ending gender-based violence and has partnered with UN agencies such as UNFPA and UN Women.

    The number of reported cases has increased from around 216,000 in 2012 to close to 458,000 in 2022, according to the National Commission on Violence against Women. This suggests that efforts to encourage more victims to come forward is having an effect.

    But, the numbers probably do not represent the full picture, as what goes on behind closed doors in a family home is still considered taboo by many, and reporting it carries a stigma.

    Shame is not the only reason that keeps victims from coming forward; there is also a financial disincentive.

    Annisa Rahmah, an emergency room physician at Palu’s Anuta Pura Hospital, said some victims choose to walk out once she identifies cases as domestic violence because the treatment would then not be covered by government health insurance.

    “It is depressing to see them walk away,” she said. Those who stay get are offered a treatment package, including psychological counselling.

    Victim support

    Besides training medical staff, UNFPA also supports community groups and non-governmental organisations (NGOs). In Palu, the women’s organisation Libu Perempuan, for instance, has 30 volunteers – from lawyers to psychologists – to help victims. The association also runs a safe house, where currently two families live, and organizes training programmes, including trainings for men on the prevention of gender based and family violence.

    United Nations

    “It was an important mindset change in society that helping victims is as critical as bringing perpetrators to justice,” says Maya Safira, programme coordinator. All of her colleagues participated in UNFPA courses.

    In a country of 280 million people and over 7,500 districts, UNFPA’s training in 11 districts can only go so far. But, UNFPA Programme Officer Budi Waskito said the pilot project offers a model other donors or the Government can replicate.

    “We provide a recipe, but cannot cook every meal,” he said.

    UNFPA works closely with the Ministry of Health so that the training it offers can be scaled up by the Government. It has helped the ministry develop a training manual for medical staff, response guidelines for hospitals, and guidance for local advocacy programmes.

    The Ministry of Health is looking into replicating the success of this project, said Kartini Rustandi, Director of Reproductive Health, Age, and Elderly.

    “The Ministry of Health continues to make efforts to accelerate equitable distribution of health facilities capable of managing violence against women and children and capacity building for health workers either through regular budget funds, specific budget allocation, or in collaboration with donors,” she said.

    For Dr Faiza, the goal is clear.

    “Until we have prevented every case of gender-based violence, we have more work to do,” she said. “And we are doing it.”

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  • Backlash After Spanish Football Exec Kisses World Cup Player During Medal Ceremony

    Backlash After Spanish Football Exec Kisses World Cup Player During Medal Ceremony

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    Royal Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) President Luis Rubiales is under fire for kissing Spanish forward Jennifer Hermoso on the lips during the medal ceremony celebrating the team’s Women’s World Cup victory.

    After Spain took down England, 1-0, players queued onstage in Sydney, Australia, on Sunday to receive their medals and congratulations from officials.

    When Hermoso reached Rubiales, he embraced her, grabbed her face and kissed her, video of the moment showed.

    “Hey, but I didn’t like it,” Hermoso later said of the kiss in an Instagram Live as she and teammates celebrated in the locker room, according to a recording of the livestream posted online that has been translated from Spanish.

    However, in a statement given to media later by the RFEF, Hermoso described it as a “natural gesture of affection.”

    “It was a totally spontaneous mutual gesture because of the immense joy that winning a World Cup brings,” the statement attributed to Hermoso said, according to a translation. “The president and I have a great relationship, his behavior with all of us has been outstanding and it was a natural gesture of affection and gratitude.

    “We have won a World Cup and we are not going to lose sight of what is important,” the statement said.

    Rubiales greets player Aitana Bonmati of Spain during the medal ceremony. The Spanish soccer exec kissed several players on their cheeks.

    Catherine Ivill via Getty Images

    Rubiales rejected charges that the kiss was inappropriate, telling Spain’s Radio Marca that people describing it as such were “idiots.”

    “When two people have an unimportant gesture of affection, we can’t listen to idiocy,” he said.

    On social media, Rubiales’ actions were widely criticized.

    Craig Foster, a human rights activist and former Australian national soccer player, called for Rubiales to be “stood down immediately.”

    “Women in sport are daily subject to an extreme power differential, objectification, harassment, sexual abuse and an absence of agency and power. This is horrific,” he posted.

    Telegraph Women’s Sport reporter Molly McElwee said it was sickening.

    “For Luis Rubiales to do this to Jenni Hermoso during the proudest moment of her career, stood next to Spain’s royal family, and with the world’s media watching, makes me sick,” she wrote. “The complete audacity. Reminder that this is the leader of a federation that failed to back its players.”

    Rubiales also held and embraced other players as they received their medals, kissing some of them on their cheeks.

    Spanish TV presenter Claudya Carolina slammed Rubiales’ behavior as “unpresentable” and accused him of touching the players “excessively.”

    Spain’s World Cup victory follows a tumultuous year for the team, which revolted against its coach, Jorge Vilda, last fall.

    Fifteen players on the team said last year they would not play under Vilda, whose management and coaching style they said had negative affects on their emotional state and their health.

    The RFEF backed Vilda, who stayed on as coach. The players who rebuked him were forced to apologize as a condition of their return to the team.

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  • Spain Wins Its First Women’s World Cup Title, Beating England 1-0 In The Final

    Spain Wins Its First Women’s World Cup Title, Beating England 1-0 In The Final

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    SYDNEY (AP) — Spain won its first Women’s World Cup title less than a year after a player rebellion, holding off England 1-0 on Sunday after Olga Carmona’s first-half goal.

    The victory made La Roja the first team to hold the under-17, under-20 and senior world titles at the same time. Spain is the fifth winner in nine editions of the Women’s World Cup and joins Germany as the only two nations to win both the men’s and women’s titles.

    At the final whistle the Spanish players piled on each other in front of their goal. They were still dancing on the field until the trophy presentations, where they kissed the trophy and raised their arms in triumph as golden glitter fell from above.

    The Lionesses were trying to bring a World Cup back to England for the first time since the men won it in 1966. The wait will go on.

    “They’re a fantastic team. I think first half we weren’t our best, second half, we definitely put the fire in,” England captain Millie Bright said. “But yeah, we just couldn’t finish it today. This is the hard part of football.”

    For England, Bright said, the loss brought a “huge amount of disappointment.”

    “You know at first you feel like you failed with not winning,” she said. “I think in a couple of weeks and it settles it will be really really proud.”

    In an open game featuring multiple chances for both teams, Carmona’s left-foot strike in the 29th minute — finishing off a fast-breaking counterattack after Lucy Bronze lost possession — remained the only goal.

    Carmona also scored the game-winner in the 89th minute of Spain’s 2-1 semifinal victory over Sweden, becoming the first player since Carli Lloyd in 2015 to score in a World Cup semifinal and final.

    Spain had a chance to double the lead in the 68th after a VAR review awarded a penalty for Keira Walsh’s handball, but Jenni Hermoso’s penalty attempt was saved by Mary Earps, who anticipated perfectly and dived to her left.

    England coach Sarina Wiegman said she thought that would be the momentum shifter for her team.

    Spain’s victory comes despite a near-mutiny by players last year. Fifteen players said they were stepping away from the national team for their mental health while also calling for a more professional environment.

    Three of those players — Ona Batlle, Aitana Bonmatí and Mariona Caldentey — reconciled with the federation and were at the World Cup.

    England had momentum going into the tournament after winning the European Championship at home last summer, including a quarterfinal win over Spain. But three of the team’s best players, captain Leah Williamson, Fran Kirby and Beth Mead, all had knee injuries that kept them off the World Cup squad.

    Wiegman was the first coach to take her teams to back-to-back World Cup title matches. She led the Netherlands to the final in 2019, but fell 2-0 to the United States. She’s now 0-2 in the championship match.

    England was coming off a 3-1 victory over host Australia in the semifinal. Lauren James, who was the team’s top scorer with three goals and three assists, was forced to sit out two matches after being suspended for stomping on Nigeria’s Michelle Alozie to open the knockout stage.

    While James was available for the final, Wiegman started Ella Toone and used the Chelsea winger as a second-half substitute in a double change to spark the attack.

    One of England’s best chances was in the 16th when Lauren Hemp’s blast caromed off the crossbar. A minute later, Salma Paralluelo raced toward goal but couldn’t get a clean shot and Earps stopped Alba Redondo’s attempt in the scramble in front of the net.

    Coach Jorge Vilda started 19-year-old Paralluelo, who scored the breakthrough goal for Spain against Sweden, and the game-winner in extra time over the Netherlands in the quarterfinal. Those efforts helped her win the young player of the tournament award, while Earps won the Golden Glove for best goalkeeper and Bonmati won the Golden Ball for best player of World Cup.

    Paralluelo nearly scored seconds from half time but her shot hit the post.

    Hemp had another chance in the 54th but sent it wide. A minute later she was handed a yellow card for a foul on Laia Codina.

    Vilda had a challenge in working around two-time Ballon d’Or winner Alexia Putellas, who was still working her way back from a torn ACL last year. For the final, Putellas was on the bench at the start.

    Putellas went into the game with 15 seconds left in regulation, but there were 13 minutes of stoppage time.

    After the match Putellas was in tears as her teammates danced in front of the flag-waving fans behind the team’s bench.

    There were 75,784 fans at the final at Stadium Australia, including tennis great Billie Jean King, increasing the record attendance for the tournament to more than 1.975 million.

    SYDNEY (AP) — Spain won the Women’s World Cup for the first time with Olga Carmona’s first-half strike giving La Roja a 1-0 victory over England in Sunday’s final.

    Both teams were playing in the final for the first time. The win gave the Spanish women their first major international trophy and avenged a quarterfinal loss to eventual champion England in the European championship last year.

    The Lionesses went into the final unbeaten and aiming to bring a World Cup back to England for the first time since 1966.

    England goalkeeper Mary Earps made a stunning save to Jenni Hermoso’s penalty kick in the 70th after Keira Walsh was penalized for a hand ball on a VAR review.

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  • U.S. Women’s National Team Coach Resigns After Early World Cup Exit

    U.S. Women’s National Team Coach Resigns After Early World Cup Exit

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    U.S. women’s national team coach Vlatko Andonovski has resigned, a person familiar with the decision told The Associated Press on Wednesday.

    The move comes less than two weeks after the Americans were knocked out of the Women’s World Cup earlier than ever before.

    The person spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because the move had not been officially announced.

    The four-time tournament champions struggled throughout this World Cup. A victory over Vietnam to kick off the group stage was followed by a pair of draws against Netherlands and Portugal — barely enough to get the team into the knockout stage,

    The Americans played well in the Round of 16 against Sweden, but ultimately fell on penalties after a scoreless tie. The U.S. scored just four goals over the course of the tournament.

    The United States had never finished worse that third in the tournament.

    The 46-year-old Andonovski was named coach of the United States in October 2019, taking over for Jill Ellis, who led the United States to back-to-back World Cup titles. He finished 51-5-9 during his time with the team.

    USA coach Vlatko Andonovski looks on during a match in Melbourne, Australia on August 6. Andonovski has resigned as the team’s coach following its early exit from the tournament.

    Erick W. Rasco via Getty Images

    It wasn’t just the World Cup that hurt Andonovski’s chances of keeping his job. The United States also finished with a disappointing bronze medal at the Tokyo Olympics.

    Kate Markgraf, general manager of the U.S. women’s team, stuck with Andonovski following the Olympics and the team focused on developing young players ahead of the World Cup.

    The United States was bitten by injuries in the run-up to the tournament, losing a pair of key players. Mallory Swanson injured her knee during a friendly in April, and captain Becky Sauerbrunn couldn’t recover from a foot injury in time.

    The World Cup was challenging for many elite teams because of the ever-growing parity in the women’s game. Germany, Brazil and Canada, the winners in Tokyo, also got knocked out early.

    Andonovski was head coach of Seattle’s OL Reign in the National Women’s Soccer League when he was hired.

    During his seven years in the NWSL, he led the now-defunct FC Kansas City from the league’s inception in 2013 until the club folded in 2017, winning two league titles with the team.

    Andonovski, a native of Skopje, Macedonia, played for several teams in Europe before embarking on a professional indoor soccer career in the United States.

    His predecessor, Ellis, was named coach of the team in 2014 and led the U.S. to eight overall tournament titles, including victories at the World Cup in 2015 and 2019. Over the course of her tenure, the United States lost just seven matches.

    Now the process will start to find a replacement, and the timeline is relatively short. The United States has already qualified for the 2024 Olympics in France.

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  • New genetic model predicts breast cancer risk

    New genetic model predicts breast cancer risk

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    • The model will allow, for the first time in Israel, the determination of a personal genetic risk score for breast cancer based on the genetic profile of each woman. This development could form the basis for the implementation of a personalized early detection policy – women at high risk of breast cancer will be advised to start screening tests for early detection from a younger age, and more frequently.
    • According to Tel Aviv University researchers: “Such a policy may save lives and enable a more efficient use of the health system’s resources.”

    Newswise — Researchers at Tel Aviv University have developed a computational model that makes it possible to predict each woman’s genetic risk of developing breast cancer based on her genetic profile. The research was based on a large-scale international study that included genomic data of about a quarter of a million women with and without breast cancer, and applied its findings to about 2000 Israeli women. The team of researchers explain that, “Our method will allow the health system to move to a personalized early detection policy – when those who are identified as being at high risk will be tested from a younger age and more frequently. Focusing the screening tests using the model may save lives and will save health system resources.”

    The research was conducted by doctoral student Hagai Levi under the guidance of Prof. Rani Elkon from the Department of Human Molecular Genetics and Biochemistry at the Tel Aviv University School of Medicine, and Prof. Ron Shamir from the Blavatnik School of Computer Science at Tel Aviv University. The research was carried out in collaboration with Prof. Shai Carmi from the Faculty of Medicine at Hebrew University, with Prof. Shay Ben Shachar – Director Of Precision Medicine and Genomics at Clalit Research Institute, and with Dr. Naama Elefant from the Hadassah University Medical Center.  The study was published in the Journal of Medical Genetics.

    Prof. Elkon explains that in 2003 the sequencing of a draft of the human genome was completed, creating new opportunities for improvement in medicine, with an emphasis on personalized medicine. The basic idea was that the better we know how to determine whether a certain person is genetically predisposed to a certain disease, the more we can take appropriate preventive measures.

    Prof. Elkon adds that since then, extensive research effort has been invested to identify genetic differences between people which may indicate a genetic susceptibility to specific diseases, especially the common ones such as  cancer, heart disease, diabetes, schizophrenia, and Alzheimer’s. Studies of this type, known as  Genome-Wide Association Studies (GWAS), compare the genomes of sick and healthy people, and find hundreds of genetic variants whose presence is associated with increased risk of having the disease being studied. Each variant by itself increases the risk to a very small degree, but when a significant number of relevant variants accumulate in the genome of a certain person, their risk of getting sick increases significantly.

    The studies assign a ‘genetic risk score’ to each participant, and in large samples, these scores typically follow a bell distribution: the majority of the population are in the middle, and at the two extremes are people with extremely high or low risk scores of having the same disease. The challenge of medicine is to identify in advance those people who have a high genetic tendency to get sick, especially of diseases that can be prevented or detected in early stages.

    The current study was based on the findings of a huge international GWAS study that identified genetic variants associated with breast cancer by analyzing the genetic profiles of approximately 130,000 breast cancer patients from dozens of medical centers in Europe and the United States alongside approximately 100,000 healthy women who served as a control group.

    The team of researchers from Tel Aviv University wanted to check if the findings of the international study could be used to reliably predict the risk of breast cancer of Israeli women, using a sample of about 1,000 patients and about 1,000 healthy women,  collected by Prof. Gad Rennert from the Carmel Medical Center. “If a genetic predisposition to breast cancer is discovered in a woman, there is something that can be done! Early detection may save lives,” emphasizes Prof. Elkon, and continues, “It is important to note that at this stage our research focused on Jewish women of Ashkenazi origin, which is the population closest genetically to the participants of the international study on which our model was based.”

    The researchers built a computational genetic model to predict the risk to the Israeli participants by determining a ‘genetic risk score’ for each woman and dividing the participants into deciles according to the risk score they received. The findings revealed that women in the top decile of the score calculated by the model have a four times higher chance of getting breast cancer compared to women in the bottom decile. In other words: the genetic risk score has a significant ability to predict the risk of breast cancer among the population examined. The researchers confirmed their findings on another sample of breast cancer patients collected by physician-researchers in the oncology and genetics departments at the Hadassah Medical Center.

    Prof. Elkon concludes: “Our research revealed that we already have the tools to identify, based on their genetic profile, Israeli women with an increased risk of developing breast cancer. According to the risk score it is possible to recommend that women at high risk of breast cancer start screening tests for early detection from a younger age, and more frequently. Such a policy may save lives and allow more efficient use of the health system’s resources. We hope that the promising results will lead to clinical use of the prediction method we developed and will improve the early detection of this disease. Our research group is now starting a follow-up study, in collaboration with Prof. Rinat Yerushalmi, Director of the Breast Oncology Unit at Beilinson Hospital, which will focus on collecting data and building a genetic model to calculate the risk of the disease for women of all ethnicities in Israel.”

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  • Taking Stock of Two Decades of Trailblazing Protocol on Womens Rights in Africa

    Taking Stock of Two Decades of Trailblazing Protocol on Womens Rights in Africa

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    Women and girls in Kenya’s West Pokot celebrate as the government cracks down on those practising harmful Female Genital Mutilation in the area. CREDIT: Joyce Chimbi/IPS
    • by Joyce Chimbi (nairobi)
    • Inter Press Service

    To halt and reverse the systemic and persistent gender inequality and discriminatory practices against women in Africa, the African Union Assembly adopted the Protocol to the African Charter on Human and Peoples Rights on the Rights of Women in Africa 2003 in Maputo, Mozambique.

    The Maputo Protocol was designed in line with the realities of the plight of women on the continent. Providing tailor-made solutions to lift women from beneath the crushing weight of a cultural system that disadvantages women from birth. Twenty years on, it is time to take stock.

    “The 20th Anniversary of the Maputo Protocol is a historical advocacy moment for women’s rights advocates. It offers an opportunity to demand from African Governments real and tangible change for women and girls in their countries,” Faiza Mohamed, Africa Regional Director of Equality Now, tells IPS.

    “By acceding to the Maputo Protocol, lifting reservations, fully domesticating, and implementing the Protocol, and ensuring their compliance with accountability processes. Beyond this, it signifies the generational changes over two decades and points to the need to reflect on future generations and to future-proof the Maputo Protocol and the SOAWR Coalition.”

    The Solidarity for African Women’s Rights (SOAWR) is a coalition of over 80 civil society organizations, a pan-African women’s movement that pushes for accelerated ratification of the protocol in non-ratifying states while holding governments accountable to deliver for women in line with the Protocol.

    Mohamed stresses that the SOAWR Coalition is a remarkable testament to the power of women’s organized movements and their capacity to influence transformative policy agendas, leaving a lasting impact.

    “Through its persistent efforts, SOAWR has successfully kept the protocol on the agenda of AU member states, leading to significant influence as 44 out of 55 African states have ratified or acceded to the Maputo Protocol. This achievement has turned the Protocol into a potent public education tool for women’s rights, both at the national and grassroots levels,” she explains.

    “Notably, there has been substantial progress in the advancement of national jurisprudence on women’s rights, as well as in the empowerment of women themselves. Thanks to the coalition’s effective public sensitization campaigns, formerly taboo subjects like sexual and reproductive health rights, female genital mutilation, and polygamy have become open and advanced topics in various countries.”

    The coalition has demonstrated how much women and like-minded partners can achieve working in solidarity. Additionally, each organization continues to push the women’s agenda forward – pushing and pulling in the same direction, to realize the dream of a society where women are fully represented in every corner of the spaces they call home.

    “The Maputo Protocol comes out of the African feminist fire, and we need to keep it burning. That it is one of the most progressive legal instruments that came out of Africa. That it represents our diversity and our strength because we are not a monolith. It also represents the power of collective action and also the dream of the Africa we want,” says Nigerian-born Becky Williams, a young woman who now lives in Uganda and works for Akina Mama wa Africa.

    Equality Now is currently advocating for adopting the Multi-Sectoral Approach in implementing the Maputo Protocol. The Multi-Sectoral Approach (MSA) provides a framework for convening different sectors within governments and actors outside of government in a joint effort to implement women’s rights as provided for in the Protocol.

    Mohamed emphasizes that if recognized and embraced by governments and civil societies, the Maputo Protocol can be a powerful tool for change as it offers women a tool for transforming the unequal power relations between men and women that lie at the heart of gender inequality and women’s oppression.

    To coincide with the Maputo Protocol’s 20th anniversary, SOAWR, Make Every Woman Count (MEWC), and Equality Now released a report titled, “Twenty years of the Maputo Protocol: Where are we now?” Providing a detailed account of progress made thus far, successes, challenges and recommendations.

    Regarding rights related to marriage and child marriage, the report finds that several countries have adopted constitutional reforms related to the prohibition of forced marriage. For example, the constitution of Burundi guarantees marriage equality. The constitutions of Guinea, Malawi, Uganda, and Zimbabwe set the legal age of marriage at 18 years. AU Member States have enacted legislation on rights related to marriage.

    On economic and social welfare rights, half of the African states maintain constitutional provisions guaranteeing equal remuneration for work of equal value or the right to fair or just pay. More than half of African states have laws mandating equal remuneration for work of equal value.

    Regarding health and reproductive rights, almost all African states maintain constitutional provisions related to health and/or health care, and many enshrine the principle of non-discrimination based on health. Notably, six countries, including Angola, Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, South Africa, and Zimbabwe, enshrine rights related to reproductive health care, such as access to family planning education or reproductive/maternity care.

    While women’s rights have come a long way, the report stresses that there is a long way to go and makes specific key recommendations, such as the need to address the right to abortion and treat each case as espoused in the Protocol. It also suggests that the Maputo Protocol should be used to protect women and girls’ reproductive health rights and advocates that Member states remove laws that fail to protect reproductive health rights.

    It advocates for the passing of family laws to protect women’s rights before, during, and after marriage and establish special courts to deal with complex marriage issues. In addition, it suggests that Governments implement regional and international treaties such as the Maputo Protocol and educate women and girls on these.

    It would like to see programmes that allow young women to return to school after giving birth promoted and demands that early marriage be criminalized, and customary law is adapted so that it no longer defines what happens to women in marriage.

    It asks governments to provide universal health services and insurance access, especially for pregnant, vulnerable, and/or specially protected women. It requires member states to improve infrastructure, training, and equipment for health services in rural areas.

    Equally important, the protocol includes the empowerment of women and girls to realize their sexual and reproductive health rights through awareness campaigns delivered in communities and schools and wishes to see menstrual hygiene management incorporated into national legal frameworks through awareness-raising activities from more actors, especially parliamentarians.

    IPS UN Bureau Report


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    © Inter Press Service (2023) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service

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  • Vilcek Foundation and Pen + Brush Release Free Coloring Book of Dynamic Contemporary Artists

    Vilcek Foundation and Pen + Brush Release Free Coloring Book of Dynamic Contemporary Artists

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    “This Is Who We Are: Color the Artists of Pen + Brush Gallery,” the latest collaboration from the Vilcek Foundation and Pen + Brush, is available as a free download on Vilcek.org

    The Vilcek Foundation has partnered with Pen + Brush to develop a digital coloring book featuring 25 works by 15 leading artists who work with the gallery. This Is Who We Are: Color the Artists of Pen + Brush Gallery highlights the many ways in which contemporary artists are exploring themes of gender, immigration, economics, and the natural world. The coloring book is available as a free .pdf download from the Vilcek Foundation. 

    Works in the digital coloring book are reproduced in full color and also interpreted as line drawings by illustrator Paula Kinsel, along with short artist biographies on each of the creators. The book is intended to build visibility and awareness of the included artists while encouraging readers and users to delight in the diversity of artists and artwork championed by Pen + Brush. 

    The book’s title was inspired by a group exhibition shown at Pen + Brush in 2021, titled This Is Who We Are, which shifted models of traditional exhibitions by enabling the curators and artists to rotate in and add works to the exhibition as works on view sold. Launched as the United States emerged from the darkest days of the COVID-19 pandemic, the exhibition was a commitment to the values of Pen + Brush: to uplift, promote, and find meaningful financial support for artists. Says Dawn Delikat, executive director of Pen + Brush, “It is a statement of empowerment intended to honor their individuality and each of their artistic voices, while bringing them together through the common ground of the Pen + Brush.”

    “This coloring book and its collection of selected artists and work salutes what we do here at Pen + Brush,” says Bird Piccininni, Gallery Manager and Associate Curator at Pen + Brush. “Paula Kinsel’s line drawings of the original works capture the unwavering strength, identity, and confidence of the artists we work with globally and intergenerationally. These artists empower themselves, their subject, and their audience. It’s a unique and extraordinary combination of whimsy and activism.”

    “These artists empower themselves, their subject, and their audience. It’s a unique and extraordinary combination of whimsy and activism.” – Bird Piccininni, Pen + Brush

    This Is Who We Are: Color the Artists of Pen + Brush Gallery is the second coloring book collaboration between the Vilcek Foundation, Kinsel, and Pen + Brush. In 2020, the foundation published Be a Good Ancestor: The Michela Martello Coloring Book, highlighting works by Pen + Brush artist Michela Martello (born in Italy). 

    Established in 1894, Pen + Brush is a publicly supported not-for-profit fighting for gender equity in the arts. Pen + Brush provides a platform to showcase the work of women, non-binary, and female-identified transgender artists and writers to a broader audience with the ultimate goal of affecting real change within the marketplace. 

    Learn more and download a free copy of the coloring book at Vilcek Foundation: This Is Who We Are: Color the Artists of Pen + Brush Gallery

    The Vilcek Foundation

    The Vilcek Foundation raises awareness of immigrant contributions in the United States and fosters appreciation for the arts and sciences. The foundation was established in 2000 by Jan and Marica Vilcek, immigrants from the former Czechoslovakia. The mission of the foundation was inspired by the couple’s respective careers in biomedical science and art history. Since 2000, the foundation has awarded over $7 million in prizes to foreign-born individuals and has supported organizations with over $6 million in grants.

    The Vilcek Foundation is a private operating foundation, a federally tax-exempt nonprofit organization under IRS Section 501(c)(3). To learn more, please visit vilcek.org

    Source: The Vilcek Foundation

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  • ‘Players have 9-5 jobs’: South Africa’s coach calls for more support

    ‘Players have 9-5 jobs’: South Africa’s coach calls for more support

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    Desiree Ellis calls for government and sponsors to help Banyana Banyana push on and professionalise after historic World Cup run ends.

    South Africa’s women’s football team will receive a hero’s welcome this week for their World Cup exploits, but if they are to reach their full potential they will need more support and a professional domestic league to play in, coach Desiree Ellis has said.

    The team exceeded expectations by getting past the first round in Australia and New Zealand, their journey ending in the last 16 in Sydney on Sunday in a 2-0 defeat to the Netherlands.

    After losing all three games in their first World Cup in France four years ago, Banyana Banyana looked a much-improved outfit as they almost held heavily fancied Sweden to draw, led against Argentina and then scored a dramatic last-gasp winner to edge out Italy for a place in the knockout stages.

    But if they are to do better next time, Ellis insists that clubs in the country must turn professional to keep up with the countries at the top of the world game.

    Companies had a responsibility to invest in the women’s game, she said.

    “To the sponsors. I don’t know how you can ignore something special like this,” Ellis said of her team’s tournament run.

    “I don’t know how you cannot assist in getting us to climb the ladder, and not assist in getting us to be better. We still have players who have a 9-5 job, and then have to go train in the evening.

    “I think that is unacceptable … I think the corporate world needs to stand up and, and really take notice. Otherwise, we will come back in four years’ time and go through the same thing … we could have gone further.

    She said South Africa could win the World Cup with more support and urged the government to help sponsors come on board.

    “It’s not just our senior team, it’s our youth teams as well – there’s no sponsors.”

    As well as the Women’s World Cup headlines, success in T20 cricket and hosting the Netball World Cup have boosted the profile of women’s sport in South Africa.

    But the build-up for the footballers was marred by a strike over money that Ellis said could have been avoided.

    It proved an embarrassment for the South African Football Association, which is bidding to host the next Women’s World Cup and was only settled when billionaire Patrice Motsepe, the Confederation of African Football president, made a donation to the team.

    In the end, the dispute proved no deterrent as South Africa broke new ground.

    “I think as a group, we need to hold our heads up high. When we qualified for the last 16, the whole country went crazy and I’m expecting them to go crazy when we get back,” added Ellis.

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