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Entertainment

Garrison Brown’s Remaining Texts Earlier than Loss of life Revealed by Police

The latest season explored Kody’s strained relationships, including his estrangement with Garrison and Gabe.

“Since I last talked to Dad, I bought a house,” Garrison said in an October episode of Sister Wives. “I’ve gotten into school and I got the car that I wanted, that he told me I should never get.” 

Days before his death, Garrison shared that he had rescued a cat into his brood, which already consisted of two other feline friends that he adopted in 2022.

“Newest edition to my home, Ms Buttons,” Garrison wrote on Instagram Feb. 28, alongside photos of the cat. “She’s 9 years old and was on the line for euthanasia but my savior complex couldn’t suffice. #crazycatlady”

For more details on the Brown family, keep reading.

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Science

Frequent Intense Chilly Spells are Brought on by International Warming – Watts Up With That?

Essay by Eric Worrall

First published JoNova; According to Oxford researcher Beatriz Monge-Sanz, brutal winter weather the USA, Britain and Europe have experienced recently were exacerbated by global warming.

Global warming may be behind an increase in the frequency and intensity of cold spells

Published: March 5, 2024 5.25am AEDT
Beatriz Monge-Sanz
Senior Researcher, Department of Physics, University of Oxford

One less obvious consequence of global warming is also getting growing attention from scientists: a potential increase in the intensity and frequency of winter cold snaps in the northern hemisphere.

Weather phenomena like the Beast from the East in winter 2018, the cold spell of Arctic air that reached as far South as Texas in February 2021, or the storm that left Madrid and Athens unusually covered in snow for days in early 2021 are becoming more common.

Some of the mechanisms that lead to their occurrence are strengthened by global warming. Key climate mechanisms, like exchanges of energy and air masses between different altitude ranges in the atmosphere, are evolving in ways expected to cause an increase in both the intensity and duration of cold snaps. These link to the behaviour of a region in the high atmosphere called the stratosphere.

Global warming makes extreme weather more extreme, and scientific studies are starting to provide proof that this also applies to extreme winter cold spells. Developing the best possible modelling tools is essential to predict the evolution of extreme weather events in the coming years so that we can be better prepared for them.

Read more: https://theconversation.com/global-warming-may-be-behind-an-increase-in-the-frequency-and-intensity-of-cold-spells-223153

What can I say? CO2 truly is the magic molecule. Hot or cold, if you don’t like the weather, CO2 is to blame.

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Sport

What’s lifeless cash? Largest NFL hits ever by participant, workforce

When Russell Wilson is officially released by the Broncos at the start of the NFL league year March 13, the team will take an $85 million hit in dead money against its salary cap over the next two seasons. Why? Because Wilson will have been cut before he even started the five-year extension he signed in 2022, a few months after he was traded from the Seahawks.

Since a significant portion of that extension included guaranteed money, the Broncos are now faced with the biggest dead money charge in league history. In fact, the $85 million hit is larger than the next two closest combined, according to Roster Management System. Denver is expected to spread out the hit over two years– using a post-June 1 designation — with $35.4 million on its cap in 2024 and $49.6 million on its cap in 2025. Those numbers will rank first and fourth when looking at player dead cap charges by year.

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As the NFL salary cap has risen over the past decade — it’s at a record $255.4 million per team in 2024, up 13.6% over last year — teams have gotten more comfortable with taking big dead cap charges to get rid of onerous contracts. All of the top 20 charges have come since 2019, when the Steelers took a $21.1 million hit by trading wide receiver Antonio Brown to the Raiders.

What, exactly, is a dead money charge? And which other contracts produced the highest charges ever?

What is a dead money charge?

Here’s the definition, via ESPN national reporter Dan Graziano:

“A dead money charge is a charge on an NFL team’s salary cap for a player who is no longer on the roster. It represents any remaining signing bonus proration that was not accounted for prior to the player’s release or trade. It is not a cash payment but rather a cap charge resulting from the the rule that allows teams to prorate a signing bonus evenly over as many as five years. If a player is released prior to the end of those five years, all remaining signing bonus proration accelerates onto the team’s salary cap for the current year.”

Heading into the offseason, each team is allowed to designate two players as post-June 1 releases, which means the franchise can spread out the money of the charge over two years. Here’s more on how it works.

What are the largest dead money charges ever?

Wilson actually makes the top 20 three times when looking at charges by year. That’s because the Seahawks took a $26 million hit when they traded him to the Broncos.

Elsewhere, Matt Ryan cost the Falcons $40.5 million on their 2022 cap when they traded the quarterback to the Colts, and the Packers took on a $40.3 million hit when they dealt quarterback Aaron Rodgers to the Jets in 2023.

Here’s the top 20, via Roster Management System:

Highest Dead Money Charges, By Year

Which teams have carried the most dead money?

Here are the five teams that have carried the most dead money on their cap in a single season, each of which has come since 2022:

1. Chicago Bears, 2022

Dead money: $91.8 million
Biggest cap charge: Khalil Mack, $24 million

2. Atlanta Falcons, 2022

Dead money: $87.6 million
Biggest cap charge: Matt Ryan, $40.5 million

3. Houston Texans, 2022

Dead money: $81.3 million
Biggest cap charge: Deshaun Watson, $16.2 million

4. Los Angeles Rams, 2023

Dead money: $79.6 million
Biggest cap charge: Allen Robinson II, $21.4 million

5. Tampa Bay Buccaneers, 2023

Dead money: $79.6 million
Biggest cap charge: Tom Brady, $35.1 million

Where can I find more NFL coverage from ESPN?

Check out ESPN’s NFL coverage, including breaking news, in-depth analysis, features, mock drafts, free agency predictions, fantasy football content and more.

Categories
Health

Medicare ought to negotiate costs for 50 medication every year

President Joe Biden speaks during an event at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland, Dec. 14, 2023.

Chris Kleponis | Bloomberg | Getty Images

President Joe Biden on Wednesday said the federal Medicare program should negotiate prices for at least 50 prescription drugs each year, up from the current target of 20 medicines. 

That’s one of several new health-care policy proposals that Biden will outline during his State of the Union address Thursday, according to a fact sheet released by the White House on Wednesday. Many of those efforts aim to expand parts of the Inflation Reduction Act that are geared toward making medicines more affordable for seniors and could take a bite out of the pharmaceutical industry’s profits.

“Medicare should not be limited to negotiating just 20 drugs per year. Instead, the President is proposing that Medicare be able to negotiate prices for the major drugs that seniors rely on, like those used for treating heart disease, cancer, and diabetes,” the fact sheet read.

Biden has made lowering U.S. drug prices a key pillar of his health-care agenda and reelection platform for 2024. But the fate of his new proposals will be in the hands of a divided Congress, making it highly uncertain whether they will pass into law. 

The president’s call to raise the number of drugs eligible for negotiations with Medicare will likely face the fiercest blowback from the pharmaceutical industry.

The Biden administration is already in a bitter legal fight with several drugmakers over the talks. The administration clinched early wins in two separate cases over the matter this year, but the industry is aiming to escalate the issue to the Supreme Court. 

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services kicked off the negotiation process last fall when it unveiled the first 10 drugs that are subject to price talks with Medicare. The negotiations for those medications end this fall, with new prices going into effect in 2026. 

After the initial round of talks, Medicare can negotiate prices for another 15 drugs that will go into effect in 2027 and an additional 15 beyond that to take effect in 2028. Under the current structure, the number rises to 20 negotiated medications a year starting in 2029.

Last year, Biden indicated that he wanted more drugs to be subject to negotiations. Wednesday is the first time his administration has specified a higher target number.  

The change will “not only save taxpayers billions of dollars, but more importantly, it will save lives and give seniors critical breathing room that they need,” said Neera Tanden, who serves as the president’s domestic policy advisor, during a call with reporters Wednesday.

The president’s budget cuts federal spending by $200 billion, the White House fact sheet noted. That could increase the number of drugs that Medicare could select for negotiation and bring more medicines to the negotiation process sooner.

The White House did not disclose whether the number of drugs would gradually rise to 50 after several years under the proposal, or if that new number would apply starting in 2029. A senior administration official told reporters Wednesday that the president looks forward to working with Congress on the details of the proposal.

“We have built a system that we are confident is working and will deliver lower prices for the American people, and we believe we can scale that up,” the administration official said.

Among the other policy proposals are measures to cap Medicare copayments at $2 for common generic drugs and to extend the $2,000 cap on out-of-pocket drug costs beyond Medicare to all private plans.

Biden also wants to expand another provision of the Inflation Reduction Act that requires drugmakers to pay rebates to Medicare when their drug prices rise faster than inflation. The president wants that policy to apply to commercial drugs, not just medicines sold to Medicare.

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Technology

Dutch authorities created process drive to maintain ASML in Netherlands

The Dutch government has reportedly launched a secret task force to keep chip giant ASML in the Netherlands.

Dubbed “Operation Beethoven,” the task force was formed to allay ASML’s fears about the local business climate, according to De Telegraaf.

Citing anonymous sources, the Dutch newspaper said the company was considering an expansion outside the Netherlands. France was mooted as a potential destination.

Such a move would leave a deep impact. ASML is Europe’s most valuable tech company. It’s also the world’s only manufacturer of EUV lithography machines, which are essential to producing the most advanced computer chips.

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These unique capabilities have pushed ASML into the chip war between China and the US. Under recent government orders, the company was forced to curb shipments of its machines to China.

The new task force addresses another challenge, which has an entirely different political component.

ASML’s search for talent

ASML has neither confirmed nor denied that it’s considering a relocation, but the company has raised concerns about conditions in the Netherlands.

One involves a plan to phase out tax credits for ex-pats. Another stems from restrictions on immigration, which would tighten under the plans of far-right leader Geert Wilders, who sealed a shock election win last year.

ASML warns that the rules will block access to top talent.

“Ultimately, we can only grow this company if there are enough qualified people,” Peter Wennink, the company’s CEO, told RTL in January.

“We prefer to do that here, but if we cannot get those people here, we will get those people in Eastern Europe or in Asia or in the United States.”

According to De Telegraaf, Operation Beethoven was formed to address these concerns. Although the Dutch government has yet to acknowledge the task force’s existence, it has revealed that “intensive” talks with ASML are underway.

Micky Adriaansens, the country’s economic affairs minister, told Reuters that she was meeting Wennink on Wednesday.

“I don’t know if they would leave,” she said. “They want to grow. And they want to grow in such an amount, it puts a pressure on our infrastructure.

“That’s why we’re talking to them very intensively. Because we want to understand, is it something we can solve?”

The current talks could provide a momentous answer.

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Science

Juno Measures How A lot Oxygen is Being Produced by Europa

If the periodic table listed the elements in order of their importance to life, then oxygen might bully its way to the top. Without oxygen, Earth’s complex life likely would not exist. So when scientists detect oxygen on another world, they turn their attention to it.

During Juno’s ambitious mission to the Jovian system, it performed some flybys and observations of some of the Jovian moons. One of those moons, Europa, is a prime target in the search for life because of its subsurface ocean. It became an even more important target when scientists realized that the icy moon was producing oxygen.

We can’t see it with our organic eyes, but Europa’s surface is under bombardment. Not by rocky objects, which do strike occasionally, but by energetic particles. Europa is in a perilous position so close to giant Jupiter, and the planet makes its presence known.

Jupiter’s enormously powerful magnetic field sends a constant stream of charged particles at Europa. The much smaller moon has no defence. When those particles strike Europa’s icy surface, they split water molecules apart and produce hydrogen and oxygen.

“Europa is like an ice ball slowly losing its water in a flowing stream. Except, in this case, the stream is a fluid of ionized particles swept around Jupiter by its extraordinary magnetic field,” said JADE scientist Jamey Szalay from Princeton University in New Jersey. “When these ionized particles impact Europa, they break up the water-ice molecule by molecule on the surface to produce hydrogen and oxygen. In a way, the entire ice shell is being continuously eroded by waves of charged particles washing up upon it.”

Szalay is the lead author of new research published in Nature Astronomy. The research is “Oxygen production from dissociation of Europa’s water-ice surface.”

One of Juno’s instruments is JADE, the Jovian Auroral Distributions Experiment. JADE can detect and measure ions and electrons, primarily in Jupiter’s aurora and magnetosphere regions. In September of 2022, Juno came to within 354 km (220 miles) of Europa. During that flyby, JADE measured the hydrogen and oxygen ions created by the particles bombarding the moon.

Scientists have known about the bombardment and the hydrogen and oxygen since the days of the Galileo mission. But Juno’s updated instruments are providing new insights into the phenomenon.

“Back when NASA’s Galileo mission flew by Europa, it opened our eyes to the complex and dynamic interaction Europa has with its environment. Juno brought a new capability to directly measure the composition of charged particles shed from Europa’s atmosphere, and we couldn’t wait to further peek behind the curtain of this exciting water world,” said Szalay. “But what we didn’t realize is that Juno’s observations would give us such a tight constraint on the amount of oxygen produced in Europa’s icy surface.”

Knowing oxygen is being produced and knowing how much are two different things. It’s possible that some of this oxygen is making its way back down through the ice into the warm, salty ocean that probably exists there. If enough oxygen makes its way into the water, it’s one more factor in favour of life.

An unending stream of charged particles from Jupiter strikes Europa’s icy surface, splitting frozen water molecules into oxygen and hydrogen molecules. This has been going on for billions of years. If some of that oxygen has worked its way into the moon’s subsurface ocean, then it boosts the chances that life could exist there. NASA/JPL-Caltech/SWRI/PU

This new research is refining scientists’ understanding of how much oxygen is being produced on Europa. While previous research into Europa’s oxygen was based on models, these results are based on Juno’s measurements.

“Europa’s atmospheric composition had never been directly sampled, and model-derived oxygen production estimates ranged over several orders of magnitude,” the authors write in their research. “Here, we report direct observations of H2+ and O2+ pickup ions from the dissociation of Europa’s water-ice surface and confirm these species are primary atmospheric constituents.”

Previous research arrived at disparate estimates of the icy moon’s oxygen production. Some said only a few kilograms of oxygen are produced per second, while others range as high as 1000 kilograms per second. But thanks to Juno’s direct sampling, this research puts the amount of oxygen produced on Europa at 12 kg (26 lbs) per second.

Quantifying the amount of oxygen produced is a critical part of understanding the moon and its environment. It’s also a critical part of understanding the moon’s potential habitability. But for the oxygen to do any life-enabling work, it has to find its way through the ice into the ocean. Does it?

When charged particles strike Europa’s surface, they split water molecules apart. The lighter hydrogen floats away into space, but the oxygen stays behind. If the oxygen somehow makes its way to the ocean, it could provide chemical energy for microbial life. Image Credit: NASA

When the particles dissociate the water molecules into hydrogen and oxygen, the hydrogen is so light that it escapes Europa’s gravity. But the oxygen is heavier. It sticks around and forms part of Europa’s thin, tenuous atmosphere, making it one of only a handful of Solar System moons to have an atmosphere and one of an even smaller number of worlds with oxygen.

Multiple studies show that the released oxygen doesn’t all remain in the atmosphere. Research published in 2022 shows that oxygen can make it through the ice and down into the ocean. It’s all because of the moon’s ‘chaos terrain.’

Image of Europa’s ice shell, taken by the Galileo spacecraft, of fractured “chaos terrain.” In this terrain, cracks, ridges, and plains are all jumbled together. Scientists think that this terrain allows surface oxygen to penetrate the ice and make its way into the subsurface ocean. Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

Europa’s chaos terrain covers about one-quarter of the moon’s surface. Its exact cause is uncertain but is likely related to heating and melting taking place underneath it. The chaos terrain might sit over the top of lakes of melted brine contained in the moon’s icy shell. These lakes aren’t directly connected to the ocean but can drain into them.

Some of these lakes may be only 3 km (1.9 miles) below the surface, according to the 2022 research. The authors say that the surface oxygen can mix with the water in these lakes, which then drains into the ocean. If that’s the case, then the ocean may contain enough oxygen to support microbial life.

This figure from the 2022 research helps explain how oxygen could make it through the ice and into Europa’s ocean. Some of the O2 is released into the moon’s atmosphere, but most of it returns to the icy regolith and is trapped in bubbles. The bubbles are the dominant near-surface reservoir for oxidants. Over thousands of years, the bubbles can make their way down to the ocean. Image Credit: Hesse et al. 2022.

“Our research puts this process into the realm of the possible,” said the lead author of the 2022 research. “It provides a solution to what is considered one of the outstanding problems of the habitability of the Europa subsurface ocean.”

We don’t know if this process takes place on Europa yet. But the oxygen has to go somewhere, so the whole idea is very intriguing.

These new findings are all a result of Juno’s extended mission. The extended mission sent Juno through Europa’s torus, the ring-shaped cloud of ions around the moon so that JADE could take these important measurements.

This figure from the research illustrates Juno’s path through Europa’s torus during the spacecraft’s extended mission. The inset diagram shows how charged particles split H2O molecules into hydrogen and oxygen. The hydrogen escapes into space, but the heavier oxygen sinks back to the surface. Image Credit: Szalay et al. 2024.

“Our ability to fly close to the Galilean satellites during our extended mission allowed us to start tackling a breadth of science, including some unique opportunities to contribute to the investigation of Europa’s habitability,” said Scott Bolton, Juno’s principal investigator from the Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio. “And we’re not done yet. More moon flybys and the first exploration of Jupiter’s close ring and polar atmosphere are yet to come.”

Juno will keep gathering data until its extended mission ends in 2025 or until the spacecraft stops functioning. The extreme radiation at Jupiter is slowly eroding the spacecraft’s electronics, though they’re inside a protective titanium vault.

The Europa Clipper will be the next mission to the Jovian system. It’s focused on Europa and should tell us more about the moon’s oxygen and potential habitability when it reaches the system in 2030.

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Entertainment

Michelle Williams Jokes About Feeling Unrecognizable In Uber Advert

Whew! Roomies, Michelle Williams tapped into an always-viral topic when she appeared in a new commercial this past weekend.

Anybody familiar with the Destiny’s Child era knows that Michelle was a group member and often CARRIED a note! But her girl group counterparts, Beyoncé and Kelly Rowland, seem to be in the spotlight more often.

What Michelle Williams Said In New Commerical

In the new Uber One commercial, Michelle Williams joked about being “unrecognizable” despite her contributions to one of the best-selling girl groups!

The commercial opens with Michelle sitting on a bench in a park. A woman beside her shows no signs of recognizing her while eating a fruit bowl. Speaking to herself, Williams blurts out:

“You know what is disappointing? I was in one of the most iconic girl groups, and no one recognizes me,” THEE Michelle Williams joked.

In the next scene, she appears excited when someone yells, “Michelle.” But she quickly realizes the man calling out “Michelle” is chasing his dog of the same name.

In the next beat, the woman beside her finally asks, “Are you Michelle Williams?” Again, the singer appears excited, only for the woman to say, “Dropped your wallet,” and hand over a purse.

Disappointed (c’mon acting chops), Williams comments, “At least my Uber One savings don’t disappoint,” and the commercial ends.

Peep the hilarious ad below.

Michelle Stands By Her Commerical While Speaking To Fans

On Monday (March 4), Williams commented further on her participation in the video and the script. She appeared to be in good spirits about the end results, according to her Instagram post.

“I get to be in on the jokes. Certain jokes y’all know I don’t care too much about, especially 24 years later. There are just certain things I don’t care about anymore,” Michelle said.

Michelle Williams added that the commercial was “a cool way to be like ‘The joke ain’t on me, it’s really on you.’” In her words, the project was “so much fun.”

See her full reaction below.

While Michelle is finding humor in “unrecognizable” jokes, her Destiny’s Child sister Kelly recently had to check some radio hosts for overshadowing her non-DC work.

Kelly politely asked the hosts to make her interview about her amid questions about Beyoncé’s country music direction and Destiny’s Child. She had visited the station to promote her new Netflix film ‘Mea Culpa,’ days before its release.

RELATED: Focus On Me! Watch Kelly Rowland Set Radio Hosts Straight Over Beyoncé & Destiny’s Child Questions (Video)

Kelly is fed up 🤣 https://t.co/w2ouwb5nqG

— TheShadeRoom (@TheShadeRoom) February 21, 2024

Categories
Health

Novo Nordisk’s Ozempic cuts threat of kidney illness development

This picture taken on October 23, 2023, shows Ozempic medication boxes, an injectable antidiabetic drug, in a pharmacy in Riedisheim in eastern France.

Sebastien Bozon | Afp | Getty Images

Novo Nordisk‘s blockbuster drug Ozempic cut the risk of kidney disease progression and related health complications in diabetic patients, according to initial late-stage trial results released Tuesday. 

Ozempic specifically lowered the risk of kidney disease progression and death from kidney or cardiovascular complications by 24% in diabetic patients with chronic kidney disease compared to a placebo. 

The results add to the growing evidence that the highly popular injection and similar drugs for weight loss have broader health benefits for patients beyond treating Type 2 diabetes and helping them shed pounds. Those treatments skyrocketed in popularity over the past year despite their mixed insurance coverage and hefty price tags.

Novo Nordisk said it will present full data from the study later this year. The company also noted that it would file for an expanded approval of Ozempic based on the data in both the U.S. and Europe.

Chronic kidney disease would be a big additional treatment opportunity for Ozempic. Roughly 40% of people with diabetes also have the condition. The disease involves a gradual loss of kidney function.

Notably, the Danish company ended the trial in October, a year earlier than expected, in response to positive results.

The trial, called FLOW, first started in 2019 and followed roughly 3,500 patients with diabetes and moderate to severe chronic kidney disease.

The data comes as Novo Nordisk faces increased competition from Eli Lilly and tries to win expanded insurance coverage for its separate weight loss injection Wegovy.

Last year, a late-stage trial on Wegovy showed that it cut the risk of heart attacks and strokes by 20%. 

Clarification: This story was updated to reflect trial information Novo Nordisk clarified from an earlier press release.

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Sport

Sources: Seahawks releasing safeties Jamal Adams, Quandre Diggs

  • Brady Henderson, ESPNMar 5, 2024, 02:27 PM ET

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      Brady Henderson is a reporter for NFL Nation at ESPN. Henderson covers the Seattle Seahawks. He joined ESPN in 2017 covering the team for Seattle Sports 710-AM. You can follow him via Twitter @BradyHenderson.

The Seattle Seahawks are releasing safeties Jamal Adams and Quandre Diggs, sources confirmed to ESPN on Tuesday.

The team also is expected to release tight end Will Dissly, according to sources.

Adams, a three-time Pro Bowl selection, was set to make a non-guaranteed $16.5 million in 2024 and count $26.9 million against the salary cap, untenable amounts for a player who has been unable to stay on the field or get to the quarterback since his stellar Seattle debut in 2020.

Adams’ release wipes the $16.5 million off the Seahawks’ books as well as the $17.5 million (also non-guaranteed) he was scheduled to make in 2025, the final year of his contract.

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The Seahawks will save $7.3 million against the 2024 cap by releasing Adams while taking on $19.6 million in dead money.

Releasing Diggs frees up $11 million of cap space, while Dissly’s release will free up $6.97 million, according to Spotrac.com.

Between three straight injury-shortened seasons, zero sacks in that span and the unwieldy price tag, it seemed as though Adams’ days in Seattle were numbered.

The Seahawks parted with two first-round picks to acquire Adams from the New York Jets in 2020 — one of the biggest swings of the John Schneider/Pete Carroll era — and then made him the NFL’s highest-paid safety a year later with a four-year, $70 million extension.

Adams made his third straight Pro Bowl during his debut season with the Seahawks while setting a record for defensive backs with 9.5 sacks, but Adams hasn’t recorded a single sack since then.

Diggs was acquired in a 2019 trade with the Detroit Lions. He was selected to three straight Pro Bowls (2020-22) with the Seahawks and had 18 interceptions in his time with the Seahawks.

He posted a career-best 95 tackles last season and had 324 in 72 games with the Seahawks.

Dissly, Seattle’s 2018 fourth-round draft pick, had 127 catches for 1,421 yards and 13 touchdowns in his six seasons with the team.

After missing only two games in his first three seasons with the Jets, Adams couldn’t stay healthy in Seattle. He missed four games in 2020 with a groin strain and needed surgeries the following offseason to repair a torn left shoulder labrum as well as two broken fingers on his left hand.

That was the start of an injury trend Adams was unable to shake. He missed the final five games of 2021 after re-tearing his labrum, which required a second shoulder surgery the following offseason. He had another procedure to fuse the two fingers he had dislocated again.

In the first half of the 2022 opener, Adams tore the quadriceps tendon above his left knee, a devastating injury that sidelined him for the first three games of 2023 and slowed him all season until the Seahawks shut him down in December. Upon his return from the quad injury, Adams said he was in such a dark place after the injury that he briefly but legitimately considered retirement.

Adams’ first game back from that injury in Week 4 of last season was cut short by a first-quarter concussion, which led to an outburst by the safety against the unaffiliated neurotrauma consultant (UNC) who had examined him on the sideline. Adams apologized for that incident and wasn’t fined, though the NFL docked him $50,000 after another run-in with a UNC two weeks later.

Adams’ 2023 season was further marred by controversy when he disparaged an NFL reporter’s wife on X in December. After Adams allowed the go-ahead touchdown in loss to the Dallas Cowboys, the reporter — who had previously covered Adams in his Jets days — posted a clip of the play along with the caption, “Yikes.” Adams then found a picture of the reporter and his wife, posted it and included the same caption, “Yikes.”

That response drew a light admonishment from Carroll and no apology from Adams, who doubled down on his reasoning behind the post. On the field last season, Adams appeared in nine games, recording seven tackles for loss and two QB hits.

Over four years in Seattle, Adams missed 33 of a possible 67 regular-season games. He recorded 9.5 sacks (all in 2020), 19 quarterback hits, 22 tackles for loss, 11 passes defended and two interceptions.

The news was first reported by NFL Network.

Categories
Technology

How femtech is closing the gender hole in well being information

Historically, women’s health has taken a back seat to men’s — leaving a persistent gender gap in data, research, and clinical trials. A wave of femtech innovators may finally bring balance.

Among them is Elina Berglund Scherwitzl, co-founder and CEO of Natural Cycles, the world’s leading birth-control app.

“We need more companies focusing solely on women’s health and women’s issues because that’s what is going to make up for the gender gap in the end,” she tells TNW.

Berglund Scherwitzl is a Swedish particle physicist and entrepreneur. Notably, she was part of the team that won the Nobel Prize for the discovery of the Higgs Boson particle at CERN in 2013. In the same year, she co-founded Natural Cycles alongside her husband.

The move from physics to entrepreneurship wasn’t an easy decision, Berglund Scherwitz says. It all started when she was seeking an active, hormone-free contraceptive method for herself. She then realised that there was a “huge unmet need” for such a product worldwide.

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Elina Berglund ScherwitzlElina Berglund Scherwitzl. Credit: Natural Cycles

Natural Cycles is the only digital method of contraception cleared by both health product regulators in both the US and the EU and recognised as a medical device.

The company’s solution essentially helps women track their fertility by measuring their body temperature — which fluctuates during the menstrual cycle and rises during ovulation. Natural Cycles’ algorithm (initially developed by Berglund Scherwitz herself) analyses the temperature data to confirm and predict ovulation.

This way, users know when to use additional birth-control protection without needing to depend on hormone-based methods. Using the same process, users can also plan pregnancy.

The power of data in women’s health

“There’s definitely a gender gap when it comes to clinical studies and data in general,” Berglund Scherwitz says.

Studies show that such gaps expand across the entire data value chain: from understanding women’s health needs and diagnosing to collecting information on a national level, and translating insights into global studies.

As a result, women are not only underdiagnosed compared to men, but they also spend 25% more of their lives in debilitating health, according to the World Economic Forum. When it comes to reproductive health in particular, conditions such as endometriosis, polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), and even menopause are severely under- or misdiagnosed.

“Our users get to know their bodies and understand what’s going on inside.

Securing sufficient data on female health is critical to restoring balance. “The woman’s body has been under-researched and out of focus for such a long time — and we need to catch up,” Berglund Scherwitz says.

One way data can contribute is by measuring the effectiveness of treatments. In the case of birth-control specifically, with a data-heavy, digital product like Natural Cycles, it’s possible to evaluate effectiveness “in real time and with a much more granular cost,” Berglund Scherwitz explains.

The company can directly assess and study the effect of its solution along different parameters, such as age, demographics, and country. That’s unlike traditional pharmaceutical methods, which do not have insights on how pills perform in real life after their release.

Another key benefit of the data is increasing awareness over the female body and health. “Our users get to know their bodies and understand what’s going on inside — and that’s something that they feel is very empowering,” Berglund Scherwitz says. She adds that this knowledge can also enable prevention, and provide insights on conditions including PCOS and menopause.

The need for data privacy

“Data privacy and sensitive data is a delicate thing to handle, but we must handle it properly to allow for the empowerment to happen,” Berglund Scherwitz says.

Period and fertility tracking apps have been on the rise over the past few years — and so have privacy concerns.

Numerous studies have scrutinised such apps for sharing sensitive menstrual and sexual activity with third parties — especially in the wake of the Roe v. Wade overturning in the US.

App users have also expressed concerns. In a poll by the UK’s data privacy regulator (ICO), more than half of respondents emphasised issues corresponding to data security, transparency over data use, and an increase in fertility-related advertising.

Berglund Scherwitz explains that transparency over how data is being used is a critical aspect of building consumer trust and protecting users.

Another aspect is establishing the right processes that ensure data protection.

For Natural Cycles this means using anonymised, unidentifiable data during clinical studies and operating on a need-to-know basis internally. Following the overturning of Roe v. Wade, the company also implemented an anonymous mode for users, which separates the fertility-related data from the personal information on the database.

“It’s also about the business model,” Berglund Scherwitz adds. “We’re a subscription-based app so we don’t need to monetise data.”

Combining data with AI

Berglund Scherwitz says she’s a firm believer in the power of AI, arguing that a combination of high-quality data with advanced algorithms will progress the future of health.

This combination is also showing tremendous potential in multiple healthcare applications, ranging from disease prediction to diagnosis and treatment.

Natural Cycles uses several machine learning algorithms, the main one being the fertility algorithm. This identifies the fertile window using temperature, optional LH (luteinising hormone) tests, and period data — providing personalised analysis.

To determine the start of the fertile window, the algorithm analyses past cycles, based on cycle length, length of the cycles phases, and average ovulation day. It then confirms ovulation using temperature data to pinpoint the window’s end.

The company claims a 93% effectiveness with typical use, which it says is equivalent to the birth-control pill and superior to condoms. It’s only outperformed by contraceptive implants and intrauterine devices (IUD).

Natural Cycles app On the right: non-fertile days are marked as green. On the right: daily temperature measurement. Credit: Natural Cycles

According to Berglund, the arrival of new technologies and startups in femtech has pushed the sector to an exciting new level.

For future entrepreneurs in the space, she has the following advice:

“Take proper clinical data, perform clinical studies, and follow the regulatory processes in place.And in that way, ensure that the product that reaches users is robust.”

Eline Berglund Scherwitz is speaking at this year’s TNW Conference on June 20-21 in Amsterdam! If you also want to experience the event (and say hi to our editorial team!), we’ve got something special for our loyal readers. Use the code TNWXMEDIA at checkout to get 30% off your business pass, investor pass or startup packages (Bootstrap & Scaleup). We’re also offering a 50% discount for the Women in Tech ticket.