Categories
Sport

Guardiola on exit of ‘largest rival’ Klopp: ‘I will sleep higher’

  • Rob Dawson, CorrespondentJan 26, 2024, 06:33 PM ET

Pep Guardiola says he will “sleep better” now Jurgen Klopp has announced his exit as Liverpool manager while hinting that he could extend his contract with Manchester City.

Klopp will step down at the end of the season after winning the Premier League, Champions League, FA Cup, League Cup, Super Cup and Club World Cup during nine years at Anfield.

– Stream on ESPN+: LaLiga, Bundesliga, more (U.S.)

Liverpool have established themselves as the main competitors to Guardiola’s City during the German’s time in England, and Guardiola admitted he will be happy to see the back of his rival.

“I will sleep better,” he said, following City’s 1-0 win over Tottenham on Friday.

“The days before playing against Liverpool were almost a nightmare. Of course he will be missed. I was shocked, like everyone, to the news. I felt a part of Man City would be lost.

“We cannot define our period here together without him and Liverpool; it is impossible. They have been our biggest rival and personally he has been my biggest rival from when he was at [Borussia] Dortmund and I was at Bayern [Munich].

“I think the Premier League is going to miss his charisma, personality and the way his teams play. I wish him all the best.”

Jurgen Klopp and Pep Guardiola have been at the center of one of the Premier League’s great rivalries. James Gill – Danehouse/Getty Images

Speaking Friday following the announcement, Klopp said he had run out of the necessary energy to carry on as Liverpool boss.

Editor’s Picks

2 Related

Guardiola, though, said that after more than seven years at the Etihad Stadium, he still hasn’t ruled out extending his contract, set to end in 2025. He cheekily said he believes he will meet Klopp on the touchline again, despite Klopp saying that his career as a manager may be over.

“Maybe it is an opinion that he will not admit but he will be back,” Guardiola said.

“I know it. Maybe in 10 years time, he may need to recharge his energy. With his personality and his energy, he will be back. National team, other teams, I don’t know but football needs personalities like him.

“I’m fine. I want to do it still for one more year, and maybe extend. I’m fine. I still try to manage.”

Categories
Science

Nancy Grace Roman May Discover the First Stars within the Universe

In the beginning, the Universe was so hot and so dense that light could not travel far. Photons were emitted, scattered, and absorbed as quickly as the photons in the heart of the brightest stars. But in time the cosmos expanded and cooled to the point that it became transparent, and the birthglow of the Big Bang could traverse space and time for billions of years. We still see it as the microwave cosmic background. As the Universe expanded it grew dark, filled only with warm clouds of hydrogen and helium. In time those clouds collapsed to form the first stars, and light again filled the heavens.

None of the stars we see today were among those first stars. Modern stars are rich with elements such as carbon and iron. Heavier elements only formed in stellar cores and other astrophysical processes. The first stars we made only of hydrogen and helium. They must have been massive beasts, with fleeting lives that ended in brilliant supernova explosions. Only their remnants remain. There have been several deep sky searches for these first stars, but we have so far not seen them. There is some indirect evidence of them in the distant Universe, but we have not yet seen their light. Now a new study argues that the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope might capture their dying radiance.

How a TDE of a first-generation star might be observed. Credit: Chowdhury, et al

Formally known as the Wide-Field Infrared Survey Telescope (WFIRST), The Roman Space Telescope is scheduled to launch in late 2026. Like the JWST, it will observe the cosmos in infrared, but Roman will have a wider field of view. This will better enable it to find the highly redshifted light of the first stars. However, the authors note that given the short lifespan of these first stars, Roman will not likely observe them directly. They instead propose looking for evidence of these stars as they are consumed by a black hole.

Specifically, the team proposes looking for what are known as Tidal Disruption Events (TDEs). When a star passes near a black hole, the gravitational tidal forces of the black hole can rip the star apart. As a result, the remnants of the star can be strewn across a large arc. This process takes time and creates a stream of heated gas. The authors modeled the emission spectra of this gas for a first-generation star and found they have a unique signature that lasts for a considerable amount of time. Much of the light from such a TDE would be emitted in the strong ultraviolet, but since they would occur at a cosmic redshift of about z = 10, the light we see would be shifted to the infrared, making it observable by JWST and the Roman Space Telescope.

The authors note that the rate at which TDEs occur for first-generation stars depends on several factors, but given reasonable estimates Roman could expect to see tens of these TDEs per year. So in a few years, we might finally be able to capture the last dying light of the first stars.

Reference: Chowdhury, Rudrani Kar, et al. “Detecting Population III Stars through Tidal Disruption Events in the Era of JWST and Roman.” arxiv preprint arXiv:2401.12752 (2024).

Like this:

Like Loading…

Categories
Technology

World-first mission to detect ripples within the cloth of space-time

The European Space Agency (ESA) has approved the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) mission, the first scientific endeavour to detect and study cosmic ripples from space. 

The launch of LISA is planned for 2035, on an Ariane 6 rocket. The project is expected to be the most expensive and complex the agency has ever undertaken. 

Cosmic ripples, also known as gravitational waves, are created during some of the most dramatic events in the Universe, such as when black holes collide. 

By measuring them, LISA will probe the entire history of the Universe, going back long before stars and galaxies formed. It could even offer a direct glimpse into the very first seconds after the Big Bang.

The <3 of EU tech

The latest rumblings from the EU tech scene, a story from our wise ol’ founder Boris, and some questionable AI art. It’s free, every week, in your inbox. Sign up now!

LISA won’t be just one spacecraft but a constellation of three that will travel in a triangular formation. Each spacecraft will be 2.5 million kilometres apart — more than six times the distance between the Earth and the Moon. 

The three spacecraft will beam lasers between each other. Movements in this laser triangle will allow scientists to detect and study gravitational waves.

Gravitational waves are ripples in space-time that alter the distances between objects. LISA will detect them by measuring subtle changes in the distances between free-floating “golden cubes” nestled within its three spacecraft.

an image of the golden cubes that will be placed inside of all three LISA spacecraftThese solid cubes of cubes of gold-platinum alloy measure gravitational waves. Credit: ESA

“LISA is an endeavour that has never been tried before. Using laser beams over distances of several kilometres, ground-based instrumentation can detect gravitational waves coming from events involving star-sized objects — such as supernova explosions or the merging of hyper-dense stars and stellar-mass black holes,” explained LISA lead project scientist Nora Lützgendorf.

Just over a century ago, Einstein made the revolutionary observation that when massive objects accelerate, they shake the fabric of space-time, producing minuscule ripples. These invisible waves travel at the speed of light and squeeze and stretch anything in their path as they pass by. 

Gravitational waves were first detected in 2015 by scientists at the LIGO observatory in the US. Being positioned in outer space, LISA is expected to radically deepen these initial findings.    

Lasers fired between the satellites, shown in this artist’s concept, will measure how gravitational waves alter their relative distances. Credit: NASA/AEI/MM/Exozet

“Thanks to the huge distance travelled by the laser signals on LISA, and the superb stability of its instrumentation, we will probe gravitational waves of lower frequencies than is possible on Earth, uncovering events of a different scale, all the way back to the dawn of time,” said Lützgendorf. 

LISA will also look closer to home in our own galaxy, detecting merging pairs of compact objects like white dwarfs or neutron stars. “For centuries we have been studying our cosmos through capturing light,” said LISA project scientist Oliver Jennrich. “Capturing the ripples of space-time with LISA will be a real game-changer, like when sound was added to motion pictures.”    

Work to build the instruments and the three spacecraft for the LISA mission will begin in January 2025, once a European industrial contractor has been chosen, the ESA said. The spacecraft trifecta will join ESA’s science fleet of cosmic observers like Euclid, Gaia, and James Webb, in uncovering the origins of the Universe and the laws that govern it. 

Categories
Health

Humana studies grim 2024 forecast attributable to hovering medical prices

A Humana Inc. office building in Louisville, Kentucky, Feb. 3, 2019.

Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Shares of Humana plummeted Thursday after the health insurer issued dismal full-year earnings guidance, citing soaring medical costs that are dogging the broader insurance industry.

Those expenses have spiked as an increasing number of older adults return to hospitals to undergo procedures they had delayed during the pandemic, such as joint and hip replacements. 

Humana, which primarily provides government-backed insurance through the Medicare Advantage program, said it expects adjusted earnings of about $16 per share for 2024. That’s a little more than half of the $29.10 per share that analysts expected, according to LSEG, formerly known as Refinitiv. 

The guidance adds to Wall Street’s concerns about health insurance company profits falling as medical costs jump. UnitedHealth on Friday also reported its own jump in medical costs, though it was less extreme than Humana’s.

Humana shares closed 10% lower Thursday.

Its forecast dragged down other health insurance stocks. Shares of both UnitedHealth and CVS Health closed around 4% and 3% lower, respectively. Cigna’s stock closed almost 2% lower, and Centene shares ended more than 2% lower.

Elevance Health closed more than 1% higher on Thursday. Unlike Humana, the insurer forecast 2024 earnings above estimates Wednesday, after higher premiums in its commercial business helped control medical costs in the fourth quarter.

Expectations for Humana’s 2024 earnings guidance were already low after the company warned last week that medical costs were running higher than expected in the fourth quarter. It signaled that higher expenses could cut into its profits in the year ahead. 

Humana confirmed that pessimism Thursday. It reported a medical benefit ratio — the percentage of payout on claims compared with premiums — of 90.7% for the fourth quarter. Analysts had estimated that the ratio would be 89.7% for the period, according to LSEG.

The insurer cited an increase in outpatient services, such as orthopedic surgeries, and in inpatient care in November and December among patients enrolled in Medicare Advantage. 

Medicare Advantage plans are privately run versions of the federal government’s Medicare program, mostly for people ages 65 and older. Those plans are one of Humana’s biggest forms of coverage outside insurance it provides for military families and retirees.

Humana posted fourth-quarter revenue of $26.46 billion, which beat analysts’ estimate of $25.42 billion, according to LSEG data. 

But the company posted a loss of $591 million, or $4.42 per share, in the fourth quarter. That compares with a loss of $71 million, or 12 cents per share, during the same period a year ago. 

Excluding certain items, Humana reported a loss of 11 cents per share. Analysts had expected the company to post earnings of 15 cents per share, according to LSEG.

Categories
Entertainment

How Kobe Bryant Unfold the Pleasure of Being a Lady Dad

MacKenly Randolph, daughter of two-time NBA All-Star Zach Randolph, was coached by Kobe at the Mamba Sports Academy (since renamed Sports Academy, the “Mamba” retired) and had made the same helicopter trip from Newport to Thousand Oaks with him and Gigi a week before they died. “He basically taught me how to play defense and how to rotate,” the teen told The New York Times. As a coach, “You would know when he’s mad, or he’s not playing around, but he would never, like, yell at you.”

Zach added, “He loved them girls. He loved my baby. He told me, ‘I love her, man.’ When he told me that, I told him, ‘We’re brothers for life.'”

And he certainly understood where Kobe was coming from. “It’s a great feeling,” Zach, also dad to daughter Maziya as well as three sons, told the Los Angeles Times. “Girl dad, oh man. I wouldn’t change it for anything.”

Keep reading to see more of Kobe Bryant’s MVP moments as a girl dad:

Categories
Science

Local weather Scientists Extra Typically, & Boris Kelly-Gerreyn Extra Particularly – Watts Up With That?

From Jennifer Marohasy’s Blog

Jennifer Marohasy

Black is white, hot is cold. That is what we are continually being asked to believe, including by the counsel for Michael Mann in his defamation trial again Mark Steyn.

If you haven’t already started listening along, I suggest you begin with the re-enactments in the daily Ann and Phelim podcasts. I have just finished listening to Day 5, Mann in the Box. And I’m angry.

I am angry that information can be so misrepresented, and I am also angry that for so many years John Abbot and I have not been properly supported in our fight for the parallel data to enable some checking of the last thirty years of thermometer temperature data for Australia.

If you listen to Day 5, Mann in the Box, you will hear Ann McElinney incredulous that climate scientists could believe tree ring data from 1134 AD, but not 1980 (I might have got those years wrong). Thus, the need to ‘hide the decline’ and for ‘Mike’s trick’, which is swapping to thermometer data from proxy (tree ring) data as convenient, which is routinely done by climate scientists as detailed in the Climategate emails.

As Ann explains, from Michael Mann’s own words, the infamous hockey stick graph that created so much impetus for action on climate change, is reliant on tree ring data that are assumed to be reliable back some centuries but are known to not be reliable since the 1980s – it makes no sense.

Welcome to the world of climate science where hot is cold and black is white. And more specifically to my world where I have been trying to draw attention to the fact that the temperature data for Australia, and much of the rest of the world, is not reliable for at least the last thirty years. I have shown this through my blog series, Hyping Maximum Daily Temperatures (Parts 1- 7).

Specifically, that the switch over to automatic weather stations where temperature is increasingly measured as electrical resistance through platinum resistance probes that are susceptible to electrical interference particularly at airports, and that can be calibrated to measure how ever many degrees warmer (or cooler) that Andrew Johnston, the current head of the Australian Bureau of Meteorology, might deem appropriate.

I’ve been assured over the last few years, including by Andrew Johnson, that the change from mercury thermometer to platinum resistance probe is not the cause of, nor a contribution to, global warming as reported on the nightly television news. If it was, this would be evident as an increase in the number of hot days and their average temperature – just the same as what we are told has been caused by increasing levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide.

They treat us like mugs (by which I mean idiots or lazy ducks in a park), and for the most part my colleagues behave as such. Thank goodness for Mark Steyn. Finally, someone who calls black for black – except when he is joking.

The most straightforward way to know the effect of the change to temperature probes – and to distinguish this from the potential effects of warming from carbon dioxide – would be to compare the automatic readings from the probes with the manual readings from mercury thermometers at many weather stations over many years.

The bureau has been collecting this data as handwritten recordings on A8 forms. There is no official list but, piecing together information, I am confident that parallel data – measurements from probes versus mercury – exists for 38 weather stations and from many of these there should be more than 20 years of daily data available to enable comparisons. Access to all this information, and its analysis, would enable some assessment of the consequence of the equipment change. The issue is doubly complicated by the bureau using more than one type of probe, changing the type of probe used, and the type of data transmitted electronically – initially averaging values and then changing to the recording of instantaneous values.

It was back in 2015 that I first tried get the parallel data for Wilson’s Promontory Lighthouse. (You can read the letter I first sent to the Bureau by CLICKING HERE, and an overview of the saga by CLICKING HERE.)

Then in December 2017, after John Abbot told me that I had been going about it all wrong, I challenged him to get the data for me. Thus began his attempt to get this data through Freedom of Information (FOI).

After some years, and so much correspondence and denial, rather than hand over the temperature data to John Abbot, we ended up at the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT) with me as the expert witness and him representing himself. That was in February last year, nearly a year ago. Except that trial never proceeded, for reasons I still don’t understand except that Andrew Johnson does not want Boris Kelly-Gerreryn to have to give evidence under oath, for reasons that I do understand.

So, we were forced back into mediation. I was contacted sometime after this by a lawyer concerned that we were representing ourselves. I encouraged him to put the word out through his network that we should get some help, some assistance preferable from someone who understood how difficult it is to win at the AAT and a lawyer experienced in the same. Then I get a phone call from John Roskam asking about all of this because Stuart Woods had contacted him having seen the note from this lawyer to the network of Australian lawyers who ostensibly concern themselves with issues of public interest. Yes, I confirmed, it would be good to get some legal assistance, and that was the last I heard of it.

John Abbot has though received more correspondence from Boris Kelly-Gerreyn specifically a letter dated December 7, 2023. In this letter, the bureau is back to denying that any of this parallel data exists. Boris Kelly-Gerreyn is the General Manager, Data Program and Chief Data Officer, Bureau of Meteorology.

It is the case that in climate science: black is white, and hot is cold and the Conservative side of politics seems, for the most part, to just go along with all of this. The planet is boiling and all of that, let’s go nuclear, say the sitting ducks. Etcetera. Etcetera.

Like this:

Like Loading…

Categories
Sport

Wizards promote Brian Keefe to interchange Wes Unseld Jr.

  • Adrian Wojnarowski, ESPNJan 25, 2024, 08:16 AM ET

The Washington Wizards have promoted top assistant Brian Keefe to interim head coach for the rest of the season, replacing Wes Unseld Jr., the team announced Thursday.

The Wizards are planning a full-scale open coaching search in the offseason.

Keefe joined the Wizards’ staff this season after stops with the Brooklyn Nets, Oklahoma City Thunder, Los Angeles Lakers and New York Knicks. During his time under two different coaching staffs with the Thunder, he worked with Wizards president Michael Winger and GM Will Dawkins in OKC. Keefe was a part of the 2012 Thunder coaching staff that advanced to the NBA Finals.

The Wizards plan to keep Unseld Jr. in a front office role. Winger and Unseld had discussed the coaching change in recent days, and the organization wants to keep Unseld Jr. — son of Wizards Hall of Famer Wes Unseld Sr. — in a long-term capacity with the franchise.

Editor’s Picks

1 Related

It is expected that the Wizards will be seeking a coach with an extensive player development track record when they conduct a wider offseason search. The Wizards are 7-36 and undergoing a full rebuild under the new front office regime of Winger and Dawkins.

“After several thoughtful conversations with Wes, we determined together that a change was needed for the benefit of the team,” Winger, the president of Monumental Basketball — which includes the Wizards and the WNBA’s Washington Mystics — said in a statement announcing the decision.

“Wes embodies the characteristics we value in our organization, and his vast basketball experience will be an asset to the front office as we progress toward our long-term goals. We are thankful that he will continue his contributions to our organization and community.”

Unseld was in the middle of his third season as head coach of the Wizards, going 77-130 before Thursday’s announcement. The Wizards have particularly struggled defensively this season, ranking 29th.

Washington hired Unseld prior to the start of the 2021-22 season after close to two decades as an NBA assistant with the Wizards, Golden State Warriors, Orlando Magic and Denver Nuggets, where he was Michael Malone’s top assistant before returning to the franchise his father led to its only NBA title in 1979 before later serving stints as the team’s head coach and general manager.

Back in October, Washington picked up Unseld’s option for next season.

Last summer, Winger replaced longtime executive Tommy Sheppard as the head of the Wizards’ basketball operations, and quickly moved to reshape the franchise. He traded longtime face of the franchise Bradley Beal to the Phoenix Suns for a package of draft picks and Chris Paul, before re-routing Paul to the Golden State Warriors a few days later in exchange for Jordan Poole, signaling the start of a long rebuild in Washington.

ESPN’s Tim Bontemps contributed to this report.

Categories
Health

Tyson Meals drops CVS, picks Rightway pharmacy profit supervisor

Tyson Foods Inc., sign at Tyson headquarters in Springdale, Ark.

April L. Brown | AP

Tyson Foods will become one of the first Fortune 100 companies to stop using the nation’s traditional large pharmacy benefits managers, as it looks to cut spending on high-cost drugs.   

After putting its benefits contract up for bid, Tyson dropped CVS Health‘s Caremark and chose PBM startup Rightway to manage drug benefits for its 140,000 employees starting this year, the companies said Wednesday. Rightway guarantees it can save employers 15% on pharmacy costs by using a transparent model where it passes drug discounts to employers and plan members, while also providing concierge care to help employees find lower-cost alternatives like generics and biosimilars.

Tyson’s decision adds to an upheaval in the industry, as startups promising lower costs and transparency challenge the largest benefit managers, and pushed them to change their own business models. Tyson made the decision as it saw pharmacy costs soar.

“We were going anywhere between 12% to 14% increases for pharmacy — and on a $200 million spend that’s quite a bit. We found that the specialty (drug) component of our trends … were picking up a lot of the increase year over year,” said Renu Chhabra, Tyson vice president and head of global benefits.

When she tried to get answers on what was driving those trends from the company’s old pharmacy benefit manger, or PBM, Chhabra says she couldn’t get the kind of data she wanted.

“I wanted to look at Humira, and I wanted to see what the acquisition cost was. And then I wanted to understand what Tyson was paying for that; it was very difficult to get to those numbers,” she said. “Part of this was to really get a partner who can help us organize the information, make sure we understand how to manage specialty, and really looking at how to get the best net cost.”

A CVS spokesman told CNBC that while the company will no longer handle Tyson’s overall pharmacy benefits contract, it will continue to provide specialty drug pharmacy services in conjunction with Rightway.

“Our specialty pharmacy services support members managing high cost, complex conditions and typically represent over 50 percent of pharmacy benefit spend in the marketplace,” said CVS Caremark spokesman Phil Blando.

“Historically, we have provided Tyson Foods with significant transparency, including point of sale rebates for its members, a custom retail pharmacy network and unique utilization management strategies that resulted in flat trend over the last several years. Our most recent comprehensive bid would have exceeded the 15 percent savings rate claimed by a competitor and reported by a news outlet,” Blando said.

More CNBC health coverage

Choosing a transparent PBM startup

Most large employers work with the three biggest PBM players: CVS‘ Caremark, Cigna’s Evernorth and UnitedHealth Group’s OptumRx. By the end of 2022, those big three PBMs controlled nearly 80% of the pharmacy benefits market in the U.S., according to a Health Industries Research Center report.

The large players contend that they have the scale to save employers on drugs costs, by negotiating big rebates from drugmakers. But they have come under increasing scrutiny from Congress and regulators at the Federal Trade Commission over the lack of transparency into the way they negotiate those discounts, and how much of those savings they actually pass on to employers and patients.

Smaller PBMs like Rightway have marketed themselves as more transparent alternatives, without the conflicts of interest that the more vertically integrated players have.

“The traditional PBM model has operated on a taxi-meter type approach. The more drugs that your members are on, the higher cost drugs that your members are receiving, the more money PBMs have made or are making,” said Rightway co-founder and CEO Jordan Feldman. “We wanted to fundamentally re-architect what it meant to be a PBM … we don’t trap margin because we don’t retain rebates.”

New competition in the industry

Until now, the upstarts challenging the big PBMs have only won over small and medium-sized companies. Tyson is Rightway’s first employer with more than 100,000 workers; its previous biggest client had 10,000 employees.

University of Southern California economist Karen Van Nuys said if more large employers turn to alternatives PBM players, it could improve competition and bring costs down.

“If they’re presented with a broader variety of transparent options where they can actually kind of see and compare … across different PBM providers what it’s going to cost them — I think that enables all of them to make better decisions about which provider to use,” said Van Nuys, a senior fellow at the USC Schaeffer Center for Health Policy and Economics.

But Lawton Robert Burns, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School, is not convinced that the movement toward greater price transparency will be a magic bullet that brings down drug prices.

“They’ve undertaken a lot of competitive strategies to try to deal with this. So, they’re responsive,” Burns said. “Whether or not that’s going to make a huge difference, I don’t know. All I know is that price transparency, in general, just hasn’t solved many of our problems.”

At Tyson, the biggest health problem it hopes to tackle in the year ahead with its new PBM is diabetes management, and finding the right balance when it comes to coverage for GLP-1, or glucagon-like peptide-1, weight loss drugs like Wegovy and Zepbound, which carry a list price of more than $1,000 per month.  

“In June we’ll make those decisions on how we want to treat that, but we have to balance cost with access to care,” said Chhabra. “This is one of the biggest reasons why we also chose Rightway — because we have a lot more flexibility … going forward to make those joint decisions.”

Don’t miss these stories from CNBC PRO:

Categories
Technology

A glimpse into the way forward for tech from the winners of the Amsterdam Science & Innovation Award

Towards the end of last year, the winners of the 16th edition of the Amsterdam Science & Innovation Awards (AmSIA) were announced at the NEMO Science Museum.

This competition — hosted by the Innovation Exchange Amsterdam (IXA) — highlights three innovative ideas from the Netherlands each year. These are split into three categories: health, society, and environment & climate.

Beyond simply spotlighting the fascinating minds behind these inventions, the event also helps make them a reality. For winners, this not only means a €10,000 cash prize for funding, but also access to a community of experts who can help their growth.

Here at TNW, we’re always excited about what’s at the forefront of European technology, so we spoke to each of the three winners to find out more about their work.

Health category winner: Dr. Zeliha Guler and the wound-healing implant

TNW Conference 2024 – Speakers announced!

Meet the powerhouse experts that will take the stage on June 20 & 21 in Amsterdam and save your seat today.

Dr. Zeliha Guler, PhD, is a senior researcher and Principal Investigator in the department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology at Amsterdam UMC.

She won the health category at AmSIA for her work on a dissolvable implant for the treatment of Pelvic Organ Prolapse (POP).

“POP is a multifactorial disease characterised by the descent of the pelvic floor due to loss of tissue strength, and compromised quality of the extracellular matrix,” Guler tells me.

The leading cause of pelvic floor disorders is childbirth, and “the risk for POP may increase by up to 60% for women who have given birth and those over 50.”

Dr. Zeliha Guler

Normally, POP is treated using the patient’s own tissue matter. Unfortunately, 25% of women need another operation because the wounds don’t heal correctly, as that tissue quality is compromised. In case of recurrence, permanent implants are used to treat POP, but they can cause clinical complications.

Guler’s team believed this could be solved with dissolvable implants — but that wasn’t enough in itself.

She tells me her and the team have been “working with degradable knitted implants to eliminate or minimise clinical complication” for some time. 

While they found these offered great mechanical support, they differed too much from natural tissues. This is when she thought of using electrospun scaffolds, as she “became aware of its ability to mimic the natural cellular environment, fostering improved compatibility with cells.” 

In addition, they added oestrogen in the scaffold to improve tissue healing after the surgery.

This approach was successful enough for her to win the health category award. 

Image of Dr. Zeliha Guler winning the innovation award in the health category Dr. Zeliha Guler winning the health category award at AmSIA

But the next step for Guler? That’s growth.

She tells me she’s “seeking the attention and collaboration of medical device companies to support a comprehensive, long-term follow-up study for [their] electrospun (ES) scaffold.”

Beyond this, Guler wants to explore the commercialisation and widespread distribution of the technology. This would include situations not just for POP, but also something that can be used to heal all sorts of wounds.

It goes without saying just how impactful that could be.

Society category winner: Pepijn van Rutten and the laughing gas breathalyser

Pepijn van Rutten — who won the society category in the Amsterdam Science & Innovation Awards — is part of the team behind Respira, a laughing gas breathalyser.

When I spoke with him, van Rutten explained the issues the Netherlands has with laughing gas.

“Incidents have increased more than tenfold,” he tells me, “this sadly leads to more than 120 severe injuries and 20 deaths every year in [the country] alone.”

He continues, saying that while there are reliable ways to test people for alcohol and most other drugs, this isn’t the case for laughing gas.

“That’s why we are developing a breathalyser,” van Rutten says.

Him and the team are hoping that — just like in the past with alcohol testing — there will be a strong preventive effect when drivers know they can get caught for using the drug.

“This way, our sensor can reduce the number of accidents, create safer roads, and save lives.”

Pepijn van Rutten

Van Rutten tells me he and the team were inspired after watching a report on the Dutch news about the increasing frequency of people driving under the influence of laughing gas. This was a huge motivating factor.

They wanted to “have a positive impact on society by making our roads safe” — and hoped they could create a technology to reverse the trend.

These are the roots of Respira.

Working in a team of three at the Demonstrator Lab at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, van Rutten and his colleagues focused on making Respira “as easy to use, reliable, and accurate as possible while remaining affordable.”

Something they have, to a certain extent, achieved.

A head with a mask on a table attached to a machine with loads of cables This is the very first prototype of Respira — and not the finished product.

Following the win and €10,000 in funding, the team plans to make the prototype that’s even smaller and more robust, but they’re even more excited about what’s coming next.

“We have big plans for the future,” van Rutten says, “our technology can be easily applied to the detection of other chemicals in breath, for example biomarkers that are related to certain diseases.”

This means the team could technically create a cheap and easy way to breathalyse humans and animals for disease — all before the first symptoms show.

“We see the development of our laughing gas sensor as a first step in creating a breath analysis platform that is aimed at creating a safer and healthier society,” van Rutten tells me.

And who could argue with that?

Environment & Climate category winner: Olivier Lugier and sustainable nanoparticle production

Nanoparticles could be a lifeline to a huge number of sectors, including everything from biomedicine to sustainable energy production, but there’s a problem: they’re unbelievably complex.

This is the issue that Olivier Lugier, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Amsterdam, set out to tackle with his team.

A portrait photo of Olivier Lugier wearing a grey sweater Olivier Lugier

The intricate nature of nanoparticles is a blessing and a curse. 

Yes, it provides them with the sort of properties that can fix problems, but “that complexity also makes them hard to produce without relying on polluting solvent and tedious production methods that often lead to unreliable products,” Olivier Lugier tells me.

Lugier and his team came up with equipment and a procedure that allows the easy production of a wide number of nanoparticles. This can be achieved in a single step and without using solvents — which is a huge step forward from our current situation.

The goal, Lugier tells me, is to turn nanoparticles from expensive laboratory materials into elements that can actually be used in day-to-day devices.

A gloved hand is holding a small glass bottle with dark substance insideA glimpse at the nanoparticles.

Inspiration for this project came from Dr. Stefania Grecea, the group leader of Functional Materials. 

“She thought to combine multiple physico-chemical processes into one to synthesise functional materials,” Lugier says. “When we realised that it could also produce advanced core-shell nanoparticles in a single step without solvent, we saw its potential and decided to continue developing the method and prototype equipment.”

Winning the award can have a huge impact for Lugier and his colleagues. Their next steps involve improving the technology and doing all they can to optimise the process.

Alongside this, they’re launching a startup called Nano Hybrids, which is in the process of incorporation, to assist the commercialisation of nanoparticles.

Once this is achieved, the group hopes that nanoparticle technology is no longer stuck in labs, but instead can be used to improve the entirety of society.

Final thoughts

It can be easy to feel gloomy and down about the state of the world, where big companies seem to be burning the planet in search of profit — and that’s why it’s so invigorating to read about schemes like the Amsterdam Science & Innovation Award.

Here, we can get a glimpse into the world of scientists and researchers that are doing everything they can to alter the world.

They’re making the technologies today that will be defining the tech world of tomorrow — and that’s a beautiful thing.

Categories
Entertainment

21 Savage Says “Broke” Dad and mom Are Higher Than Wealthy Dad and mom

21 Savage has an interesting perspective on parenthood that challenges the common belief that wealth equates to good parenting.

The rapper recently sat down for an interview on Shannon Sharpe‘s ‘Club Shay Shay,’ which premiered on Wednesday (January 24).

Juggling Fatherhood With A Hectic Rap Career

During their discussion, Savage candidly discussed his thoughts on parenthood, comparing his own upbringing to what he can now offer his children.

The 31-year-old believes that financial stability isn’t the key to successful parenting.

Savage admitted that his demanding career often hinders his ability to be there for his kids, adding, “I be feeling like I don’t be doing all the way my job because of my job.”

He used his profession as an example, explaining that despite the money and fame he’s attained, he has far less time to be a present dad.

21 Savage says broke parents are better than rich parents during his interview with Shannon Sharpe pic.twitter.com/LUBEEsqvby

— Akademiks TV (@AkademiksTV) January 24, 2024

 

Savage noted that while money allows for certain opportunities and advantages, it often comes at the cost of time spent with loved ones, which, according to him, is priceless.

He further explained his standpoint: “When you’re not financially well-off, you have more time. You’re present for a lot of the moments. Gifts matter, but at the same time, they don’t.”

“So I be trying to like, balance that out […] You work to receive, to gain all the success and all the good sh*t, but it’s like I feel like the best parents in my opinion is parents that don’t got it all. I feel like broke parents are better than rich parents, in my opinion.”

Perhaps it’s not about how much you have but how much time you’re willing to give.

Despite his concerns over balancing family life and his career, however, 21 Savage’s work continues to thrive.

His recently released third studio album, ‘American Dream,’ has been well received by fans, debuting at No.1 on Billboard’s Hot 100.

Per Rolling Stone, his latest body of work sold an impressive 133,000 copies in its first week.

21 Savage Thinks People Are Envious Of His Ties To Drake

During the conversation on ‘Club Shay Shay,’ Savage also touched on his long-standing friendship with friend and frequent collaborator Drake.

The pair have previously collaborated on songs including ‘Rich Flex’ and ‘Jimmy Crooks.’

Not to mention, they also released a whole joint album together, titled ‘Her Loss,’ in November 2022.

But their relationship goes far beyond being great business partners.

When asked if he felt people in the industry were envious of his connection with Drake, Savage posed a rhetorical question in return, “What [do] you feel like a man is if he’s jealous of how cool two other men are? What [do you] think?”

21 Savage speaks on the Drake hate. pic.twitter.com/jypFwFsUDn

— Episodes (@episodesent) January 24, 2024

Sharpe’s response summarized it perfectly, “That’s some hating a**, you know what.”

He also credited Drake for not stifling him out of his worth when he signed up to join him on the It’s All A Blur Tour.

In support of their album, the two decided to hit the road together. When Sharpe asked what’s been the best thing about touring with Drizzy, he responded, “The money.”

“That s**t just comes period when you reach a certain level. Drake ain’t finna pay you nothing that [you’re] not worth. It’s not like he’s just paying you because you’re his friend. They paying you your fee.”

Swipe to see 21 Savage share his views on dating and other aspects of his career.

RELATED: WATCH: 21 Savage Performs In First International Show Since Becoming A Permanent U.S. Resident