Thursday, December 3, 2020

Where are the Best Stock Trades this December?

Famed trader, and POWR Charts editor, Christian Tharp is just giddy about the current market environ...
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Real Estate Income during a Pandemic?

Penny Stock Millionaires

Real Estate Income during a Pandemic?

Alexa Brennan

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Best,

Alexa Brennan
Managing Editor for Robert Kiyosaki

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New HIV/AIDS data, improving maternal health, and more

HRSA eNews December 3, 2020

A Newsletter from the Health Resources & Services Administration (HRSA)

December 3, 2020

A Message from the HRSA Administrator

HRSA Administrator Thomas Engels

On December 1, we observed World AIDS Day to show our support and commitment to helping people with HIV and remember those who lost their battle with HIV/AIDS in the U.S. and around the world.

For three decades, our Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program has played a critical role in the United States' response to ending the HIV epidemic.

We are closer to ending the epidemic because of it.

HRSA remains committed to working with our many partners to increase access to HIV testing, prevention, care, treatment, and services; and to meaningfully advance the Administration's ending the HIV epidemic initiative.

I want to recognize the tremendous work of health care providers on the front lines translating the latest science into practice and providing direct patient services. Thank you for working tirelessly to improve the lives of people with HIV. 

In another public health arena with consequences for thousands of Americans, HRSA continues its fight against the COVID-19 pandemic with the help of our community health center partners and others on the ground.

About 80 percent of health centers now have COVID-19 walk-up or drive-through testing, for example, and have screened more than 4 million patients for the virus in communities nationwide.

Still, prevention remains our strongest ally in this fight. Through basic precautions, together, we can blunt the spread of the virus until a vaccine arrives.

Please check out the latest prevention guidelines from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and always follow the 3Ws – wash your hands, wear a mask, watch your distance.

Thank you,
Tom Engels


HHS Outlines New Plans to Reduce U.S. Pregnancy-related Deaths

photo of a child's hands on a pregnant woman's belly

December 3 - Today, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) released an important HHS Action Plan - PDF and announced a partnership to reduce maternal deaths and disparities that put women at risk prior to, during, and following pregnancy. The U.S. Surgeon General Jerome M. Adams issued a complementary Call to Action to Improve Maternal Health - PDF outlining the critical roles everyone can play to improve maternal health.

Read the news release.


HRSA Announces Highest HIV Viral Suppression Rate in New Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program Client-Level Data Report

image of a stethoscope laying on top of a page showing charts and graphs

A new report from HRSA released this week shows that clients receiving Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program medical care were virally suppressed at a record level – 88.1 percent – in 2019.

This means people with HIV who take medication daily as prescribed and reach and maintain an undetectable viral load have effectively no risk of sexually transmitting the virus to an HIV-negative partner. Led by HRSA's HIV/AIDS Bureau, the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program Annual Client-Level Data Report, 2019, is the sixth annual publication of national client-level data from the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program Services Report (RSR).

The RSR is HRSA HIV/AIDS Bureau's primary source of annual, client-level data reported by more than 2,000 funded Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program recipients and subrecipients across the United States. The publication provides an in-depth look at demographic and socioeconomic factors among program clients served, including age, race/ethnicity, transmission risk category, federal poverty level, health care coverage and housing status. The report also assesses the demographics of those receiving services and highlights the progress and disparities in HIV-related outcomes – particularly viral suppression.

Read the report.


New Study on Factors that Influence Children's Healthy Development

photo of seven children

The ability of 3- to 5-year-olds to practice self-control is an important developmental milestone predictive of later success. Dr. Reem Ghandour, an epidemiologist with HRSA's Maternal and Child Health Bureau, collaborated with researchers at the CDC to examine the risks and protective factors that influence this aspect of a child's development. 

The newly published study, Factors Associated with Self-regulation in a Nationally Representative Sample of Children Ages 3–5 Years: United States, 2016, compared the qualities of parents who identify their preschoolers as "on track" to those "not on track" with this developmental skill. Children described as "on track" more often lived in financially and socially advantaged environments and less often experienced family adversity. Only half of children not "on track" received developmental screening and only 25% of children described as "not on track" received educational, mental health, or developmental services. 

Learn more about the study, or contact Dr. Reem Ghandour.


Medical Journal Highlights HRSA Initiatives in Maternal Health

photo of a mom with her child

HRSA staff contributed to a recently published special supplement to the Annals of Internal Medicine journal, to focus on evidence-based approaches to reduce maternal mortality and morbidity rates in the United States. Experts at HRSA contributed to the journal articles, which address specific HRSA maternal health initiatives, the impact of opioid use during pregnancy and issues faced by rural populations. External authors include partners from the University of Chicago, Stanford University, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, the University of Utah and the World Health Organization.

Learn more about the special supplement.


Requests for Nominations for Voting Members on the Advisory Commission on Childhood Vaccines (ACCV)

photo of four children

HRSA requests nominations for voting members to serve on the Advisory Commission on Childhood Vaccines (ACCV). The HHS Secretary appoints nine voting members to the ACCV and they cannot be employees of the U.S. Government.

E-mail the nominee's resume or curricula vitae to Andrea Herzog or mail the nominee's resume or curricula vitae to:

Director, Division of Injury Compensation Programs
Healthcare Systems Bureau
Health Resources and Services Administration
5600 Fishers Lane
Room 08N146B
Rockville, MD 20857

For more information, read the Federal Register notice (PDF - 194 KB) and Frequently Asked Questions (PDF - 195 KB). Contact Andrea Herzog, Principal Staff Liaison at 301-443-6634.


Informing Health Care Policy by Leveraging Data

Cover of the toolkit for states on informing health care workforce policy by leveraging data

The National Governors Association released a toolkit based on lessons learned during a policy academy on health workforce data. The publication highlights:

  •   The types of questions states can address with data,
  •   Information about data sources,
  •   Key stakeholders to engage, and
  •   Examples from states that have maximized their data.

The toolkit was developed as part of HRSA's cooperative agreement with National Organizations of State and Local Officials (NOSLO).

Check out the toolkit.

image of a calendar

December

  • World AIDS Day (1)
  • National Influenza Vaccination Week (6-12)

 


Funding Opportunities

 

Health Workforce


Nursing Workforce Diversity (NWD) Program - Apply by January 19

Behavioral Health Workforce Education and Training (BHWET) Program for Professionals - Apply by January 21

Advanced Nursing Education - Sexual Assault Nurse Examiners (ANE-SANE) Program - Apply by February 17

 

HIV/AIDS Bureau


Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program Part D -- Women, Infants, Children, and Youth (WICY) Grants Supplemental Funding - Apply by January 12

Building Capacity to Improve Collecting and Reporting Viral Suppression Data to the Medicaid Adult Core Set - Apply by February 16

Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program Part C Capacity Development Program - Apply by February 19

 

Maternal and Child Health


Thalassemia Program - Apply by December 21

Maternal and Child Health (MCH) Leadership, Education, and Advancement in Undergraduate Pathways (LEAP) Training Program - Apply by January 7

MCH Navigator Program - Apply by January 19

UT5 Developmental Behavioral Pediatrics Research Network (DBPNet) - Apply by February 2

Maternal Child Health (MCH) Research Network on Promoting Healthy Weight among Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder and other Developmental Disabilities - Apply by February 3

Leadership Education in Neurodevelopmental and Other Related Disabilities (LEND) - Apply by February 16

National Maternal and Child Health Consortium for Oral Health Systems Integration and Improvement - Apply by February 17

 

Rural Health


Rural Policy Analysis Program - Apply by December 14

Rural Health Care Services Outreach Program - Apply by December 15

Rural Health Clinic Technical Assistance Program - Apply by December 21

Regional Telehealth Resource Center Program - Apply by January 21

National Telehealth Resource Center Program - Apply by January 21

Rapid Response Rural Data Analysis and Issue Specific Rural Research Studies - Apply by January 29

State Offices of Rural Health Program (SORH) - Apply by February 1

 


View All Funding Opportunities


This email was sent to edwardlorilla1986.paxforex@blogger.com using GovDelivery Communications Cloud on behalf of: HRSA · 5600 Fishers Lane · Rockville, MD 20857  GovDelivery logo

Losing his grip on the Fruit Loops box

December 3rd, 2020 View in browser
Muck Rack Daily

Following the end of every month, we report on which publications are getting the most social shares specifically from journalists who are verified on Muck Rack. We also share which articles at those publications are getting the most shares from other journalists. Head over to the blog today to find out the top publications and articles for November, according to journalists.

 
Trending

Completely insane

Once again, there’s plenty of Trump news to get to, but before we do, Stephanie Saul, Kate Kelly and Michael LaForgia of The New York Times have taken a closer look at Georgia Sen. David Perdue’s stock trading during his six years in office, and first of all, how did he find the time?

Their analysis of 2,596 Trades in One Term: Inside Senator Perdue’s Stock Portfolio reveals that he has been the Senate’s most prolific stock trader by far, sometimes reporting 20 or more transactions in a single day.

But if you dig into the details of that piece, well, it gets worse. As Charles Finch says, “This is completely insane. David Perdue basically became a Senator in order to get rich in the stock market.” So it looks like “Georgia’s Perdue and Loeffler might be two of the most unethical Senators in Congress — and that's really a high bar to pass,” Nick Bilton points out.

Thoughts and whatnot

According to the reporting by Matt Zapotosky, Josh Dawsey and Devlin Barrett of The Washington Post, Trump is said to be livid at Barr, with one official suggesting termination possible.

As you can imagine, this story adds to Daniel Drezner’s #ToddlerinChief thread. Gary Legum offers up “Thoughts and whatnot,” but clearly, “Bill Barr was the deep state’s best undercover saboteur, by a mile,” says Andrew Prokop.

A well-written dose of the truth

Of course, that rant went down behind closed doors. In front of the camera...

“Increasingly detached from reality, President Donald Trump stood before a White House lectern and delivered a 46-minute diatribe against the election results that produced a win for Democrat Joe Biden, unspooling one misstatement after another to back his baseless claim that he really won.” 

That’s the lede of the AP News story by Aamer Madhani and Kevin Freking, but Peter W. Singer thinks, “The second paragraph of this article might be the harshest thing the Associated Press has written since it was formed in 1846.”

Covering the video rant at The Washington Post, Philip Rucker wrote, “Escalating his attack on democracy from within the White House, President Trump on Wednesday distributed an astonishing 46-minute video rant filled with baseless allegations of voter fraud and outright falsehoods in which he declared the nation’s election system ‘under coordinated assault and siege’ and argued that it was ‘statistically impossible’ for him to have lost to President-elect Joe Biden.” 

The heat continues in paragraphs two and three. In fact, says Oliver Willis, “before i forget, i want to note a good journalism thing. this paragraph from the washington post is accurate and because it is factual and not doing ‘both sides’ it is strong. so, well done. Joanne Ostrow calls it “A well-written dose of the truth.” 

As for Trump, John Carroll notes, “Sometimes you wonder, well, is he just lying his head off for tactical purposes, or is he really losing his grip on the fruitloops box. Today I’m wondering about the grip. Tactics, not so much.”

Krakened up

Meanwhile, we found your voter fraud. Nicole Carr of WSB-TV reports that Florida attorney Bill Price is under investigation for registering to vote in Georgia and encouraging others to do the same. And it’s all on tape.

As Brody Logan shares, “A Florida attorney goes on Facebook live encouraging Floridians to use anyone they know's address in Georgia to fraudulently register to vote in the run-offs. He then gives his brothers address in GA and tells viewers they can use that address.” In other words, “Krakened up,” says Evan Perez.

Speaking of, “Sidney Powell released the Kraken. And it turns out the mythological sea beast can’t spell, is terrible at geography and keeps mislabeling plaintiffs in court.” That’s the lede from Zach Montellaro and Kyle Cheney’s story at Politico, Pro-Trump legal crusade peppered with bizarre blunders, and what can we tell you — it’s been quite a day for ledes. Isabel Dobrin thinks that one might be “The best @politico lede... ever?” 

The threats

All of this is serious — and increasingly dangerous — business. As Colleen Long and Calvin Woodward of AP News write, Trump’s grievances are feeding a menacing undertow after the election, with death threats on the rise and election officials hounded into hiding.

Dan Mihalopoulos highlights, “‘This is unprecedented in America.’ Voting machine company exec in hiding, another Trump critic under Secret Service protection, threats against election officials and more.” “President Mobster,” tweets Andrej Mrevlje.

Doesn’t sound pro-life

Jacob Soboroff and Julia Ainsley of NBC News report that after months of pleas by legal advocates, the government has finally handed over new data (for example, phone numbers) that could be critical to helping them reunite separated migrant families. Still a long road ahead: In November NBC News reported that the parents of 666 kids had yet to be found. The filing on Wednesday said some families have since been identified, bringing the number of parents whose whereabouts are still unknown to 628.

And here’s a very unpalatable but unsurprising scoop from John Hudson of The Washington Post: Pompeo invites hundreds to indoor holiday parties after subordinates are warned against hosting ‘non-mission critical events.’ “As administration health officials say covid deaths could approach a half million by February, the White House, State Department, plan big indoor holiday parties with food, drink and music. That doesn’t sound pro-life to me,” tweets Marty Schladen

The COVID surge

The U.S. hit a record daily death toll yesterday, with worse likely to come as the coronavirus rages on. The New York Times reports that more than 100,000 people were hospitalized for Covid-19 as of yesterday, while total cases surpassed 14 million. Experts warn that the nation could be facing the most difficult time in its public health history. 

Sareen Habeshian of KTLA-5 reports that residents in the city of Los Angeles have been ‘ordered to remain in their homes’ amid COVID-19 surge. Many residents were notified with an email and text alert from the city’s NotifyLA System Wednesday night. As Deepa Fernandes says, “This is serious, fellow Angelenos: ‘All travel, including on foot, bicycle, scooter, motorcycle, automobile, or public transit is prohibited.’”

Meanwhile, Austin mayor Steve Adler addressed constituents in a Facebook video telling them they needed to stay home. Wait for it: He was vacationing in Cabo at the time, as Tony Plohetski reports at the Austin American-Statesman.

In Canada, Alberta has asked the federal government and the Red Cross for field hospitals as COVID spreads. David Cochrane of CBC News reports that the province is struggling with soaring COVID-19 cases and would likely receive at least four field hospitals — two from the Red Cross and another two from the federal government.

Former Presidents Obama, Bush and Clinton are volunteering to get their coronavirus vaccines on camera to prove it’s safe. Shelby Lin Erdman reports that CNN has reached out to representatives for former President Jimmy Carter to see if he would be willing to take the vaccine publicly as well.

A couple of must-reads

First, from Anna Orso of The Philadelphia Inquirer: Police beat her and took her son during West Philly unrest. A month later, they’re still ‘petrified.’

From this infuriating and heartbreaking story, Erin McCarthy highlights, “‘We’re not going to let them be the saviors for this child, when in fact, the police were the ones that terrified this child.’ The real story behind the viral photo of an officer holding a little boy amid unrest in Philly, expertly told by @anna_orso. “ “This piece by @anna_orso is a damn knockout. Well done,” tweets Joseph Darius Jaafari.

Next, “Prosecutors dismissed charges against Robert Kraft and other men busted for consensual sex acts, but they're still making the women involved pay (THIS IS INSANE).” Paula Froelich links to Elizabeth Nolan Brown’s story at Reason, Florida Masseuse Ordered to Pay $31,573 After ‘Soliciting’ Robert Kraft To ‘Commit Prostitution.’ 

“Over and over again, the political fight against what’s labeled ‘sex trafficking’ is portrayed as a battle to help and protect women. Over and over again, as @ENBrown constantly shows, the facts say otherwise,” tweets Peter Suderman.

Kid of the Year

Time magazine has named its first-ever Kid of the Year, and she’s 15-year-old scientist and inventor Gitanjali Rao, who was selected from a field of more than 5,000 nominees. Rao spoke with Angelina Jolie “about her astonishing work using technology to tackle issues ranging from contaminated drinking water to opioid addiction and cyberbullying, and about her mission to create a global community of young innovators to solve problems the world over.”

Tweets Fiza Pirani, “me: omg I just want every kid to be a kid also me: 🥺🥺🥺😍😍😍” Also, “If you’re hoping to be Time’s next Kid of the Year, or the parent of one, choose your reading materials well, I’m just saying,” tweets James Temple, and here’s your hint: He’s an editor at MIT Technology Review. (Rao told Jolie, “My pop-culture news is actually MIT Tech Review. I read it constantly.”)

Well, this is a nice story

It is, David Fanner. It’s also “Peak #Australia 😂” tweets Chris Johnston. They’re referring to On the first day of ... Australian family finds live koala in their Christmas tree, by Matilda Boseley of the Guardian, and Joy Hui Lin is “Here for the koala content.”

Jennifer King shares, “I am going home to put up my Christmas tree immediately!” We should clarify, we can’t be sure every tree comes with a koala this year (some come with owls). But the point is, “Happy holidays to this koala only,” tweets Patricio Chile.

 
Watercooler

Question of the Day

Yesterday we asked: In the movie Clue, how many husbands (her own, not other women’s) did Mrs. White say she’d had?

Answer: Just the five: “Husbands should be like Kleenex: soft, strong and disposable.” (All hail Madeline Kahn.) As the film approaches its 35th anniversary (!) on December 13, enjoy this ode to the flames on the side of Madeline Kahn’s face, by Caroline Framke.

Congrats to…David Daniel, who was first to tweet the correct answer, just ahead of Mathew Tombers, Craig Pittman and Martin Cohn, and most importantly, all four included the Kleenex quote.

Your question of the day for today is…In December of 771, Charlemagne became sole ruler of the Frankish Empire, which is an excuse for us to ask, what actor found out on the PBS show “Finding Your Roots” that Charlemagne is his 40th great-grandfather?

As always, click here to tweet your answer to @MuckRack.

 
Leaderboard

Featured Journalist: Dashveenjit Kaur

Today’s featured journalist is Dashveenjit Kaur, a senior technology reporter with Tech Wire Asia and TechHQ, based in Malaysia. In addition to tech, Dashveenjit is experienced in Parliament and business reporting. Her first job in journalism was working as a business writer for The Malaysian Reserve. She shares that being a journalist “means being the voice for many and the bridge to connect people to information. To be a storyteller of the happenings around the world.” When she’s not at her computer, you’ll find her in her garden with her plants or reading. Head over to Muck Rack to find out more about Dashveenjit and see some of her work.

 
Don’t forget - if you change your job in journalism or move to a different news organization, be sure to email us (hello [at] muckrack [dot] com) so we can reflect your new title. News job changes only, please! Thanks!

Today's Muck Rack Daily was produced by Marla Lepore.






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