Thursday, December 22, 2011

California sperm donor at odds with federal regulators (Reuters)

OAKLAND, Calif (Reuters) ? An electronics company engineer who the U.S. government considers a one-man sperm bank has fathered an estimated 14 children through free donations of his semen that he advertises over the Internet.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration says the San Francisco Bay-area sperm donor poses a threat to public health and has ordered him to stop or face up to a year in prison and a $100,000 fine.

But Trent Arsenault, a healthy, 36-year-old bachelor who professes a strong religious upbringing, sees his sperm giveaways as acts of compassion and insists he's not abandoning his genetic generosity without a fight.

"Whatever happens with me sets a precedent, which could mean a lot of childless couples," he told Reuters on Monday. "Does the government need to be in people's bedrooms?"

He and the FDA are now embroiled in what is believed to be the first legal battle of its kind, one that has drawn national media attention and could test the limits of the agency's authority to regulate private donations of sperm offered as gifts directly to prospective mothers rather than through commercial sperm banks.

Such donations, often provided by men who are close friends of the recipients, have grown more frequent as single women, lesbian partners and heterosexual couples with fertility problems increasingly turn to alternative sources for artificial insemination.

Arsenault's prolific willingness to share his genetic material, which he promotes on a website touting his fitness as a donor, caught the scrutiny of the FDA.

PROLIFIC DONOR

During the past five years, he has given his sperm on more than 328 occasions to at least 46 women, resulting in 14 births, according to the FDA's best estimates from documentation Arsenault himself provided. This, the agency maintains, poses a risk to public health.

"Under FDA's regulations, sperm donors are required to be screened for risk factors that may increase the chances of transmitting a communicable disease," FDA spokesperson Rita Chappelle explained in an email.

Sperm banks must comply with precise requirements that include a battery of tests to ensure that the donated sperm does not carry human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), hepatitis B or C, syphilis, chlamydia, gonorrhea, human T-lymphotropic virus, cytomegalovirus or various genetic disorders.

Arsenault gets himself screened every six months for that entire list of diseases but cannot afford the specific FDA-approved tests he is supposed to undergo within seven days of each sperm donation, at a cost of $1,700, he said.

The stringent, costly testing regimen is the main reason sperm banks charge hundreds of dollars for their services, says Sherron Mills, executive director of the Pacific Reproductive Services in San Francisco.

Rates there range from $425 to $600 or more per insemination, and any woman who finds such a sum too onerous to pay is probably unable to afford routine costs associated with being a parent, Mills said. "Once you have kids, it costs every bit as much every month," she said.

INSPECTORS AT THE DOOR

FDA regulators paid four visits last year to Arsenault's home in Fremont, California, a few miles east of San Francisco, to inspect what they regarded as his sperm-bank operation there, even though he only provides his own semen and does not charge for his services.

The FDA's inquiry culminated last fall with one final visit by agency officials to his home, accompanied by police, to hand-deliver the cease-and-desist order.

Chappelle declined to say whether the agency is investigating any other freelance sperm donors, many of whom advertise their services on the Internet. But Arsenault has retained a lawyer who is handling his court challenge.

Pending the outcome of the case, the FDA has refrained from enforcing its order, and Arsenault said he has continued to donate sperm.

Besides providing greater health safeguards, Mills said, sperm banks offer their customers stronger legal protection from donors who might try to assert their paternity rights after a child is born.

Arsenault signs forms waiving any parental rights. But Mills said such agreements have been voided in some California cases when a medical doctor was absent from the transaction.

Eleanor Nicoll, spokeswoman for the American Society for Reproductive Medicine, said the involvement of a physician is beneficial in and of itself. "If you're trying to address a medical problem, you should seek medical treatment," she said.

But Arsenault argues that outlawing the kind of free service he provides runs the risk of driving some women to seek sperm donations from more questionable sources.

"If you shut out the sperm donors, they are going to have to meet some bar dude," he said. "Spouses would have to cheat on each other."

Arsenault said he gets to know couples before donating to them and maintains relationships with many of the children conceived with his sperm, one reason he doesn't want to stop.

"I have made a commitment to families I donated to," he said. "It's a big emotional process to partner with a donor."

(Editing by Steve Gorman and Greg McCune)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/health/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111220/hl_nm/us_sperm_donor_california

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Monday, December 19, 2011

Pr Internship - Brandlink Communications - New York NY

Details: BrandLink Communications is a full-service public relations, events and marketing agency focusing on luxury brands, fashion, beauty, hospitality, consumer goods, literary and entertainment industries. With offices in New York, Los Angeles, Miami, Chicago and Washington D.C., BrandLink Communications offers unique public relations and marketing capabilities, as well as building a strategic partnership platform with other brands that have the same philosophy and goals as our clients all the while maintaining a boutique style, hands on approach with our clientele.

BrandLink Communications is seeking qualified, passionate applicants for the Spring 2012 Internship Program. We are looking for outgoing, intelligent, take-charge interns looking to gain knowledge in fashion and / or lifestyle Public Relations.

Our preferred applicants have previous public relations experience, ability to work with and feel comfortable speaking with high profile editors. Applicants should also feel comfortable working on-site at events and have excellent phone and communication skills.

Job Description - to become familiar with the responsibilities of a full service PR Agency such as:
? Regular office maintenance ie; answering phones and taking messages in a clear and concise manner, showroom pulls, keeping the office, showroom, copy room and designated intern desks organized.
? Client maintenance such as: Clipping, status reports and archiving press credits
? Celebrity and press / media out reach using Microsoft Excel, Cisions Research Module, IMDB Pro, etc.
? On-site event / red carpet support
? Client pitches, target media list building, celebrity outreach lists, RSVP lists for events, proposals and media alerts
? Showroom pulls for editors, producers and / or talent. Provide showroom support with market appointments, celeb showroom visits and will be responsible for sample traffic flow
? Research projects

***SERIOUS APPLICANTS ONLY, as this is a competitive program!***

Per your acceptance of our Terms of Use, if you aggregate, display, copy, duplicate, reproduce, or otherwise exploit for any purpose any Content (except for your own Content) in violation of these Terms without ENTERTAINMENTCAREERS.NET's express written permission, you agree to pay ENTERTAINMENTCAREERS.NET three thousand dollars ($3,000) for each day on which you engage in such conduct.

Source: http://www.entertainmentcareers.net/BrandLink_Communications/PR_Internship/job/131075/

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Sunday, December 18, 2011

'The Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson': Sean Hayes Talks Betty White And Oprah Winfrey (VIDEO)

As his production company is behind TV Land's "Hot in Cleveland," Sean Hayes has gotten to know Betty White very well. He even has a guest spot coming up in the third season of the hit show. He admitted that he's amazing by her energy at nearly 90 years old on "The Late Late Show" (Weeknights, 12:30AM ET on CBS).

"She's actually 112," Craig Ferguson quipped. "Lithe for her age."

The pair shifted gears a bit when Ferguson asked Hayes if he knew Oprah Winfrey. Without missing a beat, Hayes responded, "She actually drove me today." He even said she was outside the studio waiting for him with Stedman.

It was certainly gracious of her to take the time out of her schedule so shortly after her trip to Haiti, where she toured an encampment for Haitians displaced by the massive 2010 earthquake.

TV Replay scours the vast television landscape to find the most interesting, amusing, and, on a good day, amazing moments, and delivers them right to your browser.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/12/16/late-late-show-sean-heays-betty-white-oprah-winfrey-video_n_1153032.html

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Spotted: Ty Burrell?s Modern Family

Frances enjoys an ice cream while visiting dad Ty Burrell on the set of Modern Family Tuesday in Los Angeles.

Source: http://feeds.celebritybabies.com/~r/celebrity-babies/~3/CU91rct9PO8/

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Saturday, December 17, 2011

Why 2011 Was Jennifer Aniston's Best Year Ever! (omg!)

Why 2011 Was Jennifer Aniston's Best Year Ever!

After years of heartache and series of box office bombs, Jennifer Aniston finally got her groove back.

The 42-year-old actress dated a handful of men following her 2005 split with Brad Pitt, but it wasn't until she began romancing her Wanderlust costar Justin Theroux, 40, that she really found love again.

PHOTOS: JENNIFER ANISTON'S BEST YEAR EVER

"Jen hasn't felt this way about anyone since Brad," an insider told Us Weekly in August. Added another pal: "They are moving quickly, but they know the feelings they have about [each other] are different from past romances."

Aniston's new romance wasn't the only cause for celebration in 2011. In addition to starring in two hit movies (Just Go With It and Horrible Bosses), the actress expanded her social circle. She grew closer to Reese Witherspoon (who played her sister Jill on Friends) and vacationed with E!'s Chelsea Handler.

PHOTOS: Jennifer Aniston's hair history

"Jennifer Aniston makes me laugh," Handler, 36, has raved. "She's irreverent and hilarious, and she sends me really, really funny e-mails."

Aniston surrounded herself with more strong women when she got behind the lens as part of Lifetime's Five anthology. Joined by Demi Moore, Alicia Keys, Penelope Spheeris and Patty Jenkins, first-time director Aniston helped viewers empathize with five women's battle with breast cancer.

VIDEO: Ouch! Jennifer Aniston kicks a Chelsea Lately staffer in the crotch

Aniston's talents were recognized in July when she received the ultimate honor: taking part in the iconic hand and footprint ceremony at Grauman's Chinese Theatre in Hollywood.

"Man, I have to tell you, I never thought in my wildest dreams that I'd be sticking my body in cement for a good reason," Aniston joked.

PHOTOS: Jen's amazing bikini body through the ages

Making the event more special? Theroux and Handler joined Aniston for the momentous occasion.

For more on Jennifer Aniston's landmark year -- including her unforgettable hair makeover, her renovated NYC apartment, her first fragrance launch, and much more -- click through the Jennifer Aniston's Best Year Ever gallery now!

Get more Us! Follow us on Twitter, Friend us on Facebook, Subscribe to Us Weekly

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/omg_rss/rss_omg_en/news_why2011_jennifer_anistons_best_ever_150253040/43927298/*http%3A//omg.yahoo.com/news/why-2011-jennifer-anistons-best-ever-150253040.html

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This Will Be the Best View of New York City [Architecture]

The best views of New York aren't in Manhattan. They are on the East River side of Brooklyn or Long Island City. And when this new hotel by the Williamsburg Bridge is finished, it will be the very best view of all. By far. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/MjKWwTmExn4/this-will-be-the-best-view-of-new-york-city

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Friday, December 16, 2011

In third-degree burn treatment, hydrogel helps grow new, scar-free skin

ScienceDaily (Dec. 13, 2011) ? Johns Hopkins researchers have developed a jelly-like material and wound treatment method that, in early experiments on skin damaged by severe burns, appeared to regenerate healthy, scar-free tissue.

In the Dec. 12-16 online Early Edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the researchers reported their promising results from mouse tissue tests. The new treatment has not yet been tested on human patients. But the researchers say the procedure, which promotes the formation of new blood vessels and skin, including hair follicles, could lead to greatly improved healing for injured soldiers, home fire victims and other people with third-degree burns.

The treatment involved a simple wound dressing that included a specially designed hydrogel -- a water-based, three-dimensional framework of polymers. This material was developed by researchers at Johns Hopkins' Whiting School of Engineering, working with clinicians at the Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center Burn Center and the Department of Pathology at the university's School of Medicine.

Third-degree burns typically destroy the top layers of skin down to the muscle. They require complex medical care and leave behind ugly scarring. But in the journal article, the Johns Hopkins team reported that their hydrogel method yielded better results. "This treatment promoted the development of new blood vessels and the regeneration of complex layers of skin, including hair follicles and the glands that produce skin oil," said Sharon Gerecht, an assistant professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering who was principal investigator on the study.

Gerecht said the hydrogel could form the basis of an inexpensive burn wound treatment that works better than currently available clinical therapies, adding that it would be easy to manufacture on a large scale. Gerecht suggested that because the hydrogel contains no drugs or biological components to make it work, the Food and Drug Administration would most likely to classify it as a device. Further animal testing is planned before trials on human patients begin. But Gerecht said, "It could be approved for clinical use after just a few years of testing."

John Harmon, a professor of surgery at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and director of surgical research at Bayview, described the mouse study results as "absolutely remarkable. We got complete skin regeneration, which never happens in typical burn wound treatment."

If the treatment succeeds in human patients, it could address a serious form of injury. Harmon, a coauthor of the PNAS journal article, pointed out that 100,000 third-degree burns are treated in U. S. burn centers like Bayview every year. A burn wound dressing using the new hydrogel could have enormous potential for use in applications beyond common burns, including treatment of diabetic patients with foot ulcers, Harmon said.

Guoming Sun, Gerecht's Maryland Stem Cell Research Postdoctoral Fellow and lead author on the paper, has been working with these hydrogels for the last three years, developing ways to improve the growth of blood vessels, a process called angiogenesis. "Our goal was to induce the growth of functional new blood vessels within the hydrogel to treat wounds and ischemic disease, which reduces blood flow to organs like the heart," Sun said. "These tests on burn injuries just proved its potential."

Gerecht says the hydrogel is constructed in such a way that it allows tissue regeneration and blood vessel formation to occur very quickly. "Inflammatory cells are able to easily penetrate and degrade the hydrogel, enabling blood vessels to fill in and support wound healing and the growth of new tissue," she said. For burns, the faster this process occurs, Gerecht added, the less there is a chance for scarring.

Originally, her team intended to load the gel with stem cells and infuse it with growth factors to trigger and direct the tissue development. Instead, they tested the gel alone. "We were surprised to see such complete regeneration in the absence of any added biological signals," Gerecht said.

Sun added, "Complete skin regeneration is desired for various wound injuries. With further fine-tuning of these kinds of biomaterial frameworks, we may restore normal skin structures for other injuries such as skin ulcers."

Gerecht and Harmon say they don't fully understand how the hydrogel dressing is working. After it is applied, the tissue progresses through the various stages of wound repair, Gerecht said. After 21 days, the gel has been harmlessly absorbed, and the tissue continues to return to the appearance of normal skin.

The hydrogel is mainly made of water with dissolved dextran -- a polysaccharide (sugar molecule chains). "It also could be that the physical structure of the hydrogel guides the repair," Gerecht said. Harmon speculates that the hydrogel may recruit circulating bone marrow stem cells in the bloodstream. Stem cells are special cells that can grow into practically any sort of tissue if provided with the right chemical cue. "It's possible the gel is somehow signaling the stem cells to become new skin and blood vessels," Harmon said.

Additional co-authors of the study included Charles Steenbergen, a professor in the Department of Pathology; Karen Fox-Talbot, a senior research specialist from the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine; and physician researchers Xianjie Zhang, Raul Sebastian and Maura Reinblatt from the Department of Surgery and Hendrix Burn and Wound Lab. From the Whiting School's Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, other co-authors were doctoral students Yu-I (Tom) Shen and Laura Dickinson, who is a Johns Hopkins Institute for NanoBioTechnology (INBT) National Science Foundation IGERT fellow. Gerecht is an affiliated faculty member of INBT.

The work was funded in part by the Maryland Stem Cell Research Fund Exploratory Grant and Postdoctoral Fellowship and the National Institutes of Health.

The Johns Hopkins Technology Transfer staff has filed a provisional patent application to protect the intellectual property involved in this project.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Johns Hopkins University.

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Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/12/111213131956.htm

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