About Us

Where does it come from?

Contrary to popular belief, Lorem Ipsum is not simply random text. It has roots in a piece of classical Latin literature from 45 BC, making it over 2000 years old. Richard McClintock, a Latin professor at Hampden-Sydney College in Virginia, looked up one of the more obscure Latin words, consectetur, from a Lorem Ipsum passage, and going through the cites of the word in classical literature, discovered the undoubtable source. Lorem Ipsum comes from sections 1.10.32 and 1.10.33 of “de Finibus Bonorum et Malorum” (The Extremes of Good and Evil) by Cicero, written in 45 BC. This book is a treatise on the theory of ethics, very popular during the Renaissance. The first line of Lorem Ipsum, “Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet..”, comes from a line in section 1.10.32.

The standard chunk of Lorem Ipsum used since the 1500s is reproduced below for those interested. Sections 1.10.32 and 1.10.33 from “de Finibus Bonorum et Malorum” by Cicero are also reproduced in their exact original form, accompanied by English versions from the 1914 translation by H. Rackham.

Where can I get some?

There are many variations of passages of Lorem Ipsum available, but the majority have suffered alteration in some form, by injected humour, or randomised words which don’t look even slightly believable. If you are going to use a passage of Lorem Ipsum, you need to be sure there isn’t anything embarrassing hidden in the middle of text. All the Lorem Ipsum generators on the Internet tend to repeat predefined chunks as necessary, making this the first true generator on the Internet. It uses a dictionary of over 200 Latin words, combined with a handful of model sentence structures, to generate Lorem Ipsum which looks reasonable. The generated Lorem Ipsum is therefore always free from repetition, injected humour, or non-characteristic words etc.

Why do we use it?

It is a long established fact that a reader will be distracted by the readable content of a page when looking at its layout. The point of using Lorem Ipsum is that it has a more-or-less normal distribution of letters, as opposed to using ‘Content here, content here’, making it look like readable English. Many desktop publishing packages and web page editors now use Lorem Ipsum as their default model text, and a search for ‘lorem ipsum’ will uncover many web sites still in their infancy. Various versions have evolved over the years, sometimes by accident, sometimes on purpose (injected humour and the like).

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Get our latest articles delivered straight to your inbox. No spam, we promise.
Scenic 1

The use of psychedelics as potential treatments for specific mental health issues is on the rise, and some states may soon allow doctors to write prescriptions for them. Schools are stepping up their efforts to teach the therapists and practitioners who will administer psychedelics as clinical trials on them continue and legalization initiatives score victory after victory

Nowhere near as simple as picking up a prescription and taking a tablet at home is psychedelic therapy. In contrast, delivering psychedelics, such as psilocybin, the ingredient in “magic mushrooms,” among others, can take all day while the patient is under the continual observation of qualified professionals

Instructing those practitioners is a priority for Janis Phelps. She is a clinical psychologist who developed and currently oversees the California Institute of Integral Studies’ first-ever approved training program in psychedelic therapy. The San Francisco university, which started classes in 1968, provides instruction in psychology, counseling, spirituality, and eastern medicine.

Since 2016, the CIIS has trained about 800 students in its psychedelic program, according to Phelps. Additionally, as interest in psychedelics increases, more practitioners are looking for training. After enlarging to include a training center in Boston last year, the program’s size tripled, according to her.

In the following ten years, at least 8,000 newly qualified therapists will be required, according to Phelps.

We started educating people even before it was allowed to use, unless you were in a research study, because we realized we needed so many therapists educated and there are so few people on the earth who knew how to use this properly, according to Phelps.

A total of 150 hours of education and multiple in-person training sessions make up the psychedelic treatment curriculum. Numerous students hold medical, psychiatric, and therapeutic licenses. People in non-medical professions such as social workers, nutritionists, ordained clergy, and others are also able to apply.

The techniques utilized in the clinical trials for giving psychedelics and monitoring the participants—procedures that have been approved by the Food and Drug Administration—are taught in universities, including CIIS, according to Phelps.

According to Dr. Anne St. Goar, a former primary care physician who was one of the first CIIS-accredited practitioners and currently oversees the Boston training site, students are also taught to support and validate emotions that arise during the experience rather than trying to direct the patient’s experience themselves. She claimed that, in contrast to talk therapy, patients are urged to process their thoughts silently while the therapist watches. The therapist will play a more active role when necessary or asked, engaging the patient in conversation, providing assurances, or consenting to holding their hand.

The federal government still forbids the use of psychedelics outside of clinical research, which is one drawback. This implies that CIIS students receive training on how to lead secure psychedelic sessions without having access to drugs.

In place of psychedelic drugs, CIIS students are instructed in a breathing technique known as “Holotropic Breathwork,” which was created by a psychiatrist in the 1970s. According to CIIS alumnus Dr. Yvan Beaussant, a palliative care physician at Harvard’s Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, “this involves music and breathing techniques as a means to induce a psychedelic-like state.” According to a 2018 review that appeared in Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, breathing exercises may affect the brain’s sleep, meditation, and psychedelic-related brain network activity.

Graduates of CIIS will be able to apply to work in Oregon, the first state to authorize supervised psilocybin sessions, starting in January. Facilitators are required to finish an accredited training course, such as the one provided by CIIS, pass a test, and pay licensing fees. Future students will eventually use the state’s licensed centers as an experience learning environment.

According to Angela Allbee, the section manager of Oregon Psilocybin Services, the state hopes to “show that we can do this safely and truly help individuals with their healing and wellbeing — and encourage additional options for persons that are wanting a different option.”

Why then is there such a rise in interest in psychedelic drug use for mental health?

Since the 1950s, the federal government has regarded psychedelics as illegal narcotics with “no generally recognised medical purpose.” However, psychedelics drew the attention of the medical community in the 1950s. Some hallucinogens, according to early study, may improve empathy in therapeutic work and be useful in treating a number of difficult-to-treat mental health problems, including alcoholism.

The 1970s saw a hiatus in research as psychedelics gained a reputation as harmful recreational drugs. But in the late 2000s, researchers at Johns Hopkins University and New York University returned to exploring their medical potential, sparking a boom in psychedelic research.

Another psychedelic, psilocybin, has been used therapeutically in a number of other clinical studies. According to a new study from the NYU Langone Center for Psychedelic Medicine, two doses of psilocybin in conjunction with therapy helped persons with alcohol use disorders cut back on drinking for eight months. Another study discovered that psilocybin assisted cancer patients in feeling less anxious about their situation. By the end of the month, a significant clinical trial will start looking at whether psilocybin may treat depression when other methods have failed.

Switch on, tune in, or turn off?

Treatment with psychedelic substances is not for everyone and is not as straightforward as giving the patient a pill to take at home. Patients who use psychedelics may have severe sensory and visual disorientation as well as emotionally trying experiences.

According to six psychedelic-trained therapists who talked with NBC News, the “set and setting”—the patient’s attitude going into therapy and the environment they are in—play a significant role in how a trip develops. For this reason, during the medication session, patients lie down and put on headphones and eyewear in an area that is intended to resemble more like a comfortable den than a hospital room.

Eight-hour sessions with MDMA or psilocybin allow the patient to relive past experiences with the help of their therapists. In clinical trials, patients receive therapy sessions both before and after the medicine is administered to help them digest the event.

According to Beaussant, who is studying psilocybin’s potential to lessen end-of-life sorrow at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, the experience “strangely resonates in a very unique and significant way for most people.” Usually, people are better equipped to process trauma or loss and communicate psyche-related issues that feel unresolved.

Long journey ahead

As the largest psilocybin clinical research to date is scheduled to start this month, some states have made an effort to loosen limitations on this drug in particular. In 2020, Oregon voters will decide whether to legalize the controlled adult use of psilocybin. Colorado followed in November, becoming the second state to do so.

However, the FDA will be in charge of deciding a lot of the specifics, including how, which patients, and under what circumstances they can get psychedelic therapy.

According to Kevin Franciotti, a certified addiction counselor in Denver who has received training in the use of ketamine for psychotherapy off-label, the demand for psychedelic therapies is on the rise.

Because there may be a significant shortage of skilled practitioners outside of major cities, he continued, “Patients will initially be quite enthusiastic about this before becoming very disillusioned and frustrated.”

Franciotti endorsed Colorado’s proposal to legalize psilocybin, telling NBC News that it was an opportunity for the state to offer inhabitants alternative treatment alternatives and challenge federal drug laws.

Some mental health professionals are wondering how drug laws, which continue to render psychedelics illegal at the federal level, affect research in light of the increasing interest in psychedelics in medicine.

Due to federal prohibitions, according to Dr. Franklin King IV, an emergency psychiatrist and the head of training at the Center for the Neuroscience of Psychedelics at Massachusetts General Hospital, “there are a lot of psychedelics out there, but nobody is exploring them.” “The barriers are great, even for psilocybin, to study and obtain FDA approval for medications with insufficient safety data.”

Legalization is consistently the biggest barrier to psychedelic research, according to King, who also noted that it is frequently simpler to obtain financing for studies of other psychoactive drugs with well-established risks, such as opioids, than for psychedelic research. “While there is a big usefulness for them and a huge need for them, psychedelics won’t eliminate or replace all these other treatments we have.

[/et_pb_text][/et_pb_column][/et_pb_row][/et_pb_section]

When Kevin Fair was a young child, he would disassemble his Nintendo console, fix problems, and then put it back together. The Black entrepreneur claims that these experiences were “a life trajectory turning moment” when he discovered the entertainment system was more than a toy.

I believe that digital technology just honestly impressed me, he remarked.

Fair was inspired to learn how to code and repair computers by his love of video games. He founded the Chicago-based company I Play Games! in 2009 to introduce young people of color to a side of video gaming they might not have otherwise realized existed.

Schools and companies like Fair’s strive to prepare children for jobs in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) at a time when the industries lack ethnic diversity by utilizing their interest for esports, or multiplayer competitive video games.

“These kids were born with digital devices in their hands, and if you give them access, the world is theirs,” said businesswoman and academic Jihan Johnston, who launched gaming-obsessed Beatbotics, a company that provides digital education.

Young gamers are diverse, despite industry inequity and representation problems. According to a 2015 Pew Research Center research, Black kids are slightly more likely than their peers to play video games, but White and Hispanic teens also play at about the same rates.

Pew reported last year that the percentages of Black and Hispanic workers in STEM fields in the United States was, respectively, 9% and 8%.

Johnston is redefining the discourse surrounding video games by advising communities of color on how esports may help their children find professions.

She asserted, “I believe that our community is unaware that this can lead to college.”

Information systems major Shemar Worthy, 21, is a senior at DePaul and is currently playing online. Claire Savage/AP Photo

In order to develop practical skills for the video game industry, DePaul University in Chicago introduced a new academic esports scholarship this academic year. According to Stephen Wilke, the school’s esports coordinator, nine out of the ten freshmen grantees are people of color.

One of the recipients of the $1,500 scholarship is Aramis Reyes, an 18-year-old computer science major with a specialty on game creation and development.

The young man in glasses identified himself as a recreational, non-competitive gamer. For Reyes, the potential for storytelling in video games is what makes them so magical. He declared, “I want to delve into so many design ideas.

According to Fair, the skills that gamers naturally acquire assist prepare them for a variety of vocations in IT, coding, statistics, software engineering, and other fields. Competent gamers analyze the data they see on their screens logically and think in frames per second. They are efficient in the modern workplace because they are proficient at typing.

He explained, “All of that is high-end math going in the person’s head right now.

Like Fair, Reyes became interested in coding because of video games.

Everything is so easily found if you know where to search. Reyes pointed to the 10-inch (25-centimeter) spine of a book on learning Python and said, “You know, I honestly went through a secondhand store and got one this thick.

According to Fair, companies like his will aid in closing the diversity gap. Given that testing shows the U.S. is falling behind other developed nations in STEM education, increasing diversity in STEM would promote pay equity, spur innovation, and help keep America competitive on a global level.

Research from the University of California, Irvine, backs up Fair’s approach: researchers working with the North America Scholastic Esports Federation discovered that school-affiliated clubs that use students’ esports interest in an academic setting helped them learn math and science, piqued their interest in STEM, and benefited students at low-income schools the most.

Building out diversity in both esports and STEM requires, according to Grace Collins, a teacher from the Cleveland region who in 2018 founded the first all-girls varsity high school esports team.

“I believe there are many parallels between the difficulties facing diversity in STEM and esports,” the author said. therefore resolving this issue in one location can contribute in their relief in the other,” Collins added.

Reyes, who is Hispanic and Latino, claimed that esports gives students of color a sense of belonging and is “definitely” a way to increase diversity in STEM. Reyes has observed that, despite the claims of civil rights activists that racist hate speech still exists online, the gaming community is largely receptive.

Lethrese Rosete, a sophomore, concurred and described DePaul’s esports group as “a very safe and friendly environment.”

Rosete, 20, is studying in user design experience to hone her coding abilities while also combining her creativity.

At the university’s Esports Gaming Center, Lethrese Rosete participates in an online game. Claire Savage/AP Photo

She brings up the president of Activision’s Blizzard Entertainment, who was fired following a discrimination and sexual harassment lawsuit citing a “frat boy” culture that became “a breeding ground for harassment and discrimination against women,” as an example of how she is aware of inequality issues in STEM and video game design.

DePaul, according to Rosete, does not feel that way. All of us are simply here to learn, she remarked.

Rosete claimed that when the first-person shooter video game Valorant added a new Filipina character, she screamed and ran around in ecstasy.

The American-Filipina Rosete said, “I felt at ease.” “I thought my time had come for representation,”

However, video games alone won’t close the STEM diversity gap. It’s a structural issue that transcends esports, according to Wilke.

On the other hand, a lack of representation, online radicalism, and pricey equipment purchases might exacerbate inequality and reinforce prejudices.

Another issue is online safety. According to U.S. federal officials, Fortnite creator Epic Games will pay a total of $520 million to resolve allegations including methods used to lure gamers into making purchases and concerns about children’s privacy.

Fair advised parents to maintain a “good attentive check” on what their children are doing online. He declared, “There’s a lot of rubbish out there.”

Teenagers’ access to game consoles and computers vary according to their family’s income, and the Federal Reserve stated in 2021 that average Black and Hispanic households earn nearly half as much as average white households.

Despite surveys indicating an increase in developers of color, white men continue to dominate the game sector.

Fair stated that there is still much to be done to increase racial diversity in esports and STEM fields.

“I can raise a sizable number of kids who enjoy FIFA. But that doesn’t necessarily guarantee that they’ll want to become engineers, he added. “You have to attempt to sort of explicitly demonstrate how what they’re doing, the activity that they want to engage in, connects to something that they can make money in.”

[/et_pb_text][/et_pb_column][/et_pb_row][/et_pb_section]

A British historian, an Italian archaeologist, and an American preschool teacher have never met, yet they have a strong pandemic tie.

The three ladies are credited for defining, naming, and bringing long COVID into the public’s notice in early 2020, despite having strikingly similar symptoms.

Rachel Pope of Liverpool turned to Twitter in late March 2020 to discuss her perplexing symptoms caused by a coronavirus infection, which were then nameless. In May of that year, Elisa Perego of Italy used the phrase “long COVID” for the first time in a tweet. Amy Watson in Portland, Oregon, was inspired to name her Facebook support group “long hauler” after the trucker cap she was wearing, and “long hauler” quickly became part of the epidemic vernacular.

Scientists are still attempting to understand out why some people develop lengthy COVID and why a tiny percentage, like the three ladies, have long-term symptoms nearly three years after the pandemic.

Millions of people throughout the world have long had COVID, reporting a variety of symptoms such as weariness, lung issues, brain fog, and other neurological symptoms. Although evidence shows that most recover significantly within a year, current data reveal that it has linked to more than 3,500 fatalities in the United States.

Here is some of the most recent evidence:

ARE WOMEN AT A HIGHER RISK?

According to several studies and anecdotal data, women are more prone than males to acquire lengthy COVID.

There might be biological causes for this.

According to Sabra Klein, a Johns Hopkins researcher who researches immunity, women’s immune systems often produce higher responses to viruses, bacteria, parasites, and other pathogens.

Women are also far more prone than males to suffer from autoimmune illnesses, in which the body incorrectly assaults its own healthy cells. Long COVID, according to some experts, might be the result of an autoimmune reaction produced by the virus.

Women’s bodies have greater fat tissue, and new study reveals that the coronavirus may lurk in fat following infection. Scientists are also investigating if changing hormone levels in women may raise the dangers.

Another point to consider: women are more likely than males to seek medical attention and are typically more sensitive to changes in their bodies, according to Klein.

“I don’t believe we should dismiss it,” she stated. Klein believes that both biology and behavior are at work.

It’s no surprise that three women were instrumental in shedding light on lengthy COVID.

Pope, 46, began documenting her symptoms in March 2020: flu-like symptoms, followed by problems with her lungs, heart, and joints. After a month, she began to have “OK” days, but the symptoms lingered.

She and a few other sick coworkers connected with Perego on Twitter. “We kind of began gathering together because that was basically the only location where we could do that,” Pope explained. “In 2020, we’d joke about getting together for Christmas and throwing a party,” Pope added. “Obviously, things progressed, and I believe we stopped joking.”

Watson founded her virtual long truckers club in April of that year. The others quickly picked up on the nickname and adopted it.

THE MONO VIRUS

Several studies show that the common Epstein-Barr virus may be involved in some cases of protracted COVID.

According to Dr. Timothy Henrich, a virus expert at the University of California, San Francisco, inflammation generated by coronavirus infection can activate herpes viruses, which persist in the body after producing an acute illness.

The Epstein-Barr virus is one of the most prevalent herpes viruses, infecting an estimated 90% of the US population. The virus can induce mononucleosis or symptoms that are mistaken for the common cold.

Henrich is one of the researchers that discovered immunological markers indicating Epstein-Barr reactivation in the blood of long-term COVID patients, particularly those who experience tiredness.

These indicators are not present in all long-term COVID patients. However, it’s plausible that Epstein-Barr is producing symptoms in people who have it, though additional research is needed.

Some researchers think Epstein-Barr causes chronic fatigue syndrome, a disorder that has many parallels to lengthy COVID but is similarly unconfirmed.

OBESITY

Obesity is a risk factor for severe COVID-19 infections, and researchers are investigating why.

Researchers from Stanford University are among those who have discovered evidence that the coronavirus may infect fat cells. In a recent investigation, scientists discovered the virus and symptoms of inflammation in adipose tissue from COVID victims.

The virus can multiply in adipose tissue, according to laboratory testing. This suggests that adipose tissue might act as a “reservoir,” potentially fueling extended COVID.

Could adipose tissue removal be used to cure or prevent certain cases of extended COVID? The idea is intriguing, but the research is preliminary, according to Dr. Catherine Blish, a Stanford infectious diseases professor and senior author of the paper.

Researchers at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center are investigating leptin, a hormone generated by fat cells that can alter the immune system and cause inflammation.

They intend to investigate if injections of a synthetic antibody might lower leptin levels, and thereby inflammation caused by coronavirus infections or protracted COVID.

“We have a sound scientific foundation and preliminary evidence to demonstrate that we could be on the right road,” Dr. Philipp Scherer remarked.

DURATION

Based on data from earlier in the epidemic, it is expected that around 30% of patients infected with the coronavirus would acquire protracted COVID.

Most people who have lasting, recurring, or new symptoms after an illness will recover in three months or less. According to a recent research published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, around 15% of individuals who experience symptoms at three months will continue to have them for at least nine months.

Identifying who is at risk for long-term symptoms is a “difficult subject,” according to Dr. Lawrence Purpura, an infectious disease expert at Columbia University.

Long COVID appears to be more common in persons with severe illnesses, while it can equally afflict those with moderate infections. Those whose infections cause serious lung damage, including scarring, may have shortness of breath, coughing, or exhaustion for up to a year. A smaller percentage of individuals with mild initial COVID-19 infections may develop neurologic symptoms such as persistent weariness and brain fog for more than a year, according to Purpura.

“The vast majority of people will recover,” he stated. “It’s critical that folks understand that.”

It’s a little consolation for the three ladies who pioneered the recognition of extended COVID.

Perego, 44, experienced heart, lung, and neurological issues and is still very ill.

She recognizes that scientists have learnt a lot in a short period of time, but she believes that “there is a gap” between long-term COVID research and medical care.

“We must integrate scientific knowledge into improved treatment and policy,” she stated.

Watson, who is about to turn 50, claims she has “never had any type of recovery.” She has suffered from severe headaches, as well as stomach, neurological, and foot issues. She recently acquired severe anemia.

She wants the medical profession will take a more systematic approach to managing lengthy COVID. Doctors say it’s challenging since they don’t know what’s causing it.

“I just want my life back,” Watson said, “and it doesn’t appear like that’s going to happen.”

[/et_pb_text][/et_pb_column][/et_pb_row][/et_pb_section]

Recent Reviews