Category Archives: Embryology

Ovation Fertility Presenting "One Embryo-One Baby" Success; Advances in Cryopreservation at Annual Bioanalysts … – Benzinga

Ovation Fertility is presenting at this week's annual AAB/CRB conference on how embryo biopsy, preimplantation genetic screening and advances in cryopreservation have led to a more efficient and effective path to pregnancy for patients undergoing in vitro fertilization (IVF) treatment.

LOS ANGELES, CA (PRWEB) May 19, 2017

Ovation Fertility scientists' work is being showcased at the annual meeting and educational conference of the American Association of Bioanalysts (AAB) and the College of Reproductive Biology (CRB) today and Saturday (May 19-20) at the Galleria Hotel in Houston. The conference reinforces AAB's commitment to excellence in clinical laboratory services and regulations.

"We are pleased to share industry-recognized, pioneering IVF research performed by Ovation Fertility and to provide continuing education to clinical and medical laboratory professionals across the nation," says Nate Snyder, CEO, Ovation Fertility. "Attendees benefit from learning about the successes brought about by the collaborative mindshare of Ovation Fertility IVF and genetics labs, working in tandem with our partner physician practices."

Mitchel C. Schiewe, Ph.D., HCLD, who directs Ovation Fertility's IVF lab in Newport Beach, notes that by working together across its network of experts, Ovation Fertility developed reproductive technology solutions that make achieving pregnancy through IVF more effective, affordable and financially accessible.

Ovation Fertility IVF Labs, Partner Practices Join Forces

The two abstracts being presented at the conference show research performed by Ovation Fertility in conjunction its partner physician practices.

1. "Striving for One Embryo-One Baby: How the Integration of Vitrification and Preimplantation Genetic Screening (PGS) Technologies Has Impacted Society"

Technical Supervisor Shane Zozula of Ovation Fertility Newport Beach is presenting a poster based on Ovation Fertility's founding philosophy to achieve successful pregnancy one healthy baby at a time. Although advanced embryo culturing has led to favorable pregnancy results using fresh embryo transfers, they often were the result of multiple embryo transfers, resulting in high-risk pregnancies with twins and triplets. Through elective vitrification and the adoption of blastocyst biopsy/PGS, Ovation Fertility has improved the quality of patient care by transferring fewer embryos, reducing miscarriages and increasing healthy singleton live births.

The findings were produced collaboratively by researchers at Ovation Fertility labs in Newport Beach and Las Vegas, Southern California Center for Reproductive Medicine, and The Fertility Center of Las Vegas. They include Shane Zozula; John Whitney; Robert E. Anderson, M.D.; and Schiewe. Forest Garner provided study design and statistics support.

2. "Comparative Human Blastocyst Repeat Vitrification (rVTF): Effect of Device Type (Cryolock versus microSecure) by Solution Used (DMSO/EG versus Glycerol/EG) on Post-warming Viability"

Vitrification of human embryos has evolved into a highly reliable and efficient process in many assisted reproductive-technology laboratories worldwide. Over the past several years, Schiewe has strived to better understand the physical and chemical relationships of vitrification treatments by using a revitrification model to define tolerance thresholds for post-warming survival/viability. At the AAB/CRB conference, embryologist RaeAnne vanTol is making the oral presentation showing the resiliency of human blastocysts to various cryopreservation agents and devices. The subset of data being presented is part of a larger collaborative study between Ovation Fertility labs in Newport Beach and Nashville that will be presented at the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology annual conference in July.

Additional authors include Shane Zozula, Kelley Waggoner and Schiewe, all of Ovation Fertility Newport Beach.

Collaboration Leads to Success

According to Snyder, "We are proud of the collaborative efforts among Ovation Fertility labs and partner practices. The greatest advances in reproductive medicine result from the collective knowledge and shared experience of fertility professionals, working as a cohesive team rather than as individuals. The research presented by Ovation Fertility in Houston will benefit all patients who are considering using IVF to build their families."

About Ovation Fertility Ovation Fertility Founded in 2015 by a coalition of thought-leading reproductive endocrinologists and scientists, Ovation Fertility is a national fertility service provider offering a suite of state-of-the-art assisted reproductive technology services to aspiring parents, including embryology, andrology and genetic testing as part of the in vitro fertilization process. Ovation Fertility partners with physicians who are committed to reducing the average cost of a live birth through IVF by advancing industry standards in fertility treatment. For more information, visit http://www.ovationfertility.com.

For the original version on PRWeb visit: http://www.prweb.com/releases/2017/05/prweb14354320.htm

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Ovation Fertility Presenting "One Embryo-One Baby" Success; Advances in Cryopreservation at Annual Bioanalysts ... - Benzinga

Study sheds light on how different families relate to each other following open embryo adoption – News-Medical.net

May 19, 2017

EXPERTS at the University of Huddersfield are researching the emergence of a new style of family creation that sees couples "adopt" embryos and, after the child is born, remain in contact with the donors and in many cases develop a special relationship with them.

Some of the couples who have experienced the system - so far available only in the USA and New Zealand - have given highly positive responses to the UK-based research team.

One comment from a recipient who had made contact with an embryo donor was: "Not only were we given our daughter, but a whole family too - two families actually, or one big family."

The researchers are Dr Lucy Frith, who is Reader in Bioethics at the University of Liverpool; University of Huddersfield Professor Emeritus Eric Blyth, an authority on social work who has a long track record of research into infertility treatments; and University of Huddersfield senior lecturer Dr Steve Lui, who has a background working and researching in the field of embryology.

The team has been examining the policies of the Snowflakes Embryo Adoption Program, operated in the USA by the organization Nightlight Christian Adoptions. In 1997, when it discovered that thousands of human embryos were being stored in fertility clinics, this group began to connect couples who had stored embryos that they did not plan to use themselves with couples who could not conceive and it encourages them to remain in contact.

The pairings have resulted in the birth of over 500 babies, and a number of the children have met the women and men whose genetic material they carry, and their full genetic siblings living in donor families. This summer, many of them will attend an event celebrating the 20th anniversary of the scheme.

In the UK, children who are born as the result of egg, sperm and embryo donation have the right, once they reach 18, to ask the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority to disclose the identity of their biological parents.

Therefore, the Snowflakes Embryo Adoption Program in the USA proved to be a valuable research opportunity for the UK researchers. They hope to continue the project - monitoring developments as the children who resulted from adopted embryos become older. Their current findings have been reported in a new article.

Titled Family building using embryo adoption: relationships and contact arrangements between provider and recipient families, it appears in the leading journal Human Reproduction.

The Snowflakes organization offered its clients the opportunity to participate in the research, conducted by email. The article describes study participants' responses and the statistical data that it yielded. Phase Two of the project provided participants in the embryo adoption program with the opportunity to give their appraisal of the scheme and several comments from both recipient and donor couples are relayed in the article. They include:

To be able to have an open adoption so our children could know each other and we could watch our biological children grow up; that option was priceless for us.

It is extremely important to us that some kind of contact is maintained with the adopting family. We would like our own children to know of their distant siblings, and, if possible, develop a relationship with them.

We want [child] to have a positive sense of identity. We want her to know her story and history (as complete as possible). Understanding her history and where she comes from will help her to understand who she is.

We are all family now. No other questions or decisions are needed. They are great folks and the girls are sisters which is what is most important to me.

In their conclusion, the article's authors acknowledge that: "The use of embryos provided by a third party for family building is a contested form of reproductive technology. A conditional program of embryo donation, such as that which operates in New Zealand and of which Snowflakes is an example, is even more contentious and couching embryo donation as adoption has caused controversy".

But they add that "conditional or embryo adoption programs could provide an alternative to an anonymous, clinic-based model and give those who have unused embryos the opportunity to choose who they wish to donate to and if they wish to have and maintain contact in the longer term".

Dr Steve Lui, one of the researchers, said that an open adoption system could prove to be better. It enables children to learn about genetic factors that could be important for medical reason.

"Also, the issue of 'where do I come from?' is very important for the child in the long term. If you are open about it, then it won't come as a shock at a later point in their life."

Professor Blyth added: "Our study sheds light on how different families that become connected to each other following open embryo donation/adoption relate to each other. This is likely to become a more common pattern of family relations as policies and practices regarding gamete and embryo donation embrace increased transparency."

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Study sheds light on how different families relate to each other following open embryo adoption - News-Medical.net

Using genomics to fight deadly parasitic disease – UNM Newsroom

An international team of researchers, led by University of New Mexico Associate Professor Coenraad Adema, is now one step closer to eliminating a deadly parasitic disease responsible for killing hundreds of thousands of people around the world every year.

The research article, Whole genome analysis of a schistosomiasis-transmitting freshwater snail, published in Nature Communications this week, gives the scientific community an in-depth look of the sequenced genome of Biomphalaria glabrata, a tropical Rams Horn snail.

Sequencing and characterizing the genome of this snail has given us a lot of information into its biology, said Adema, who is also part of UNMs Center for Evolutionary and Theoretical Immunology (CETI) that has played a pivotal role in this project. It has informed us on animal evolution and supports the drive to minimize the impact of infectious disease on global health.

This snail, which lives only in tropical climates, plays a significant role in the lifecycle of a parasitic disease called schistosomiasis, also known as snail fever or bilharzia. The parasite infects the snail early on its life, essentially taking over the snails body, impacting its reproductive and metabolic processes. Once fully developed, the parasite leaves the snail, later infecting a human host through contact in water.

After malaria, this is the worst parasitic disease on the planet. So, being able to do work that may help improve global human health outcomesis a very important motivation for my research. Dr. Coen Adema, Dept. of Biology

According to Adema, if researchers can better understand how the snail/parasite interaction works, they may be able to stop it altogether, cutting the snail out of the parasites lifecycle. And, because the snail is a critical part of the organisms development; without it, the parasite cannot fully mature and infect humans.

Understanding the animals genetic makeup is a critical component in being able to understand these interactions something that is now possible thanks to this international team of researchers and support from the National Human Genome Research Institute of NIH for the sequencing effort.

Understanding the snails genome gives us many avenues to cut the snail out of this parasites lifecycle, Adema said. Which one day may lead to the elimination of this disease."

Schistosomiasis is a chronic parasitic disease. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), more than 66 million people were reported to have been treated for the disease in 2015, with another 218 million people requiring preventative treatment. On top of that, nearly a quarter of a million people die from snail fever every year, just in sub-Saharan Africa.

The disease is also extremely easy to contract, which is part of the reason why it impacts so many people. Once the parasite leaves its host snail, its able live in a body of water before breaking through skin to infect a human body. In Africa for example, simply putting your hand in the Nile River can lead to infection. The WHO hopes to eliminate snail fever by 2025 a goal that is made increasingly more likely because of this investigation led by UNM.

After malaria, this is the worst parasitic disease on the planet, said Adema. So, being able to do work that may help improve global human health outcomes it is a very important motivation for my research.

More than 100 researchers from 50 institutions around the world are a part of this study and latest publication a testament to how significant and wide-reaching this disease and its overall impact is. The international expertise in parasitology and invertebrate biology at UNM is underscored by important contributions of nearly a dozen different faculty, graduate students and research scientists from the Biology Department that are also part of this effort.

Adema says several of his international colleagues are already exploring new, different ways to use the snails genome to fight the disease. And while the parasite and corresponding illness are the main target of this research, there is also much more to learn from the genome.

This is an important contribution to better understanding infectious disease, he said. It also gives us information on regulation of gene expression, comparative immunology, embryology, general biology of snails, animal evolution and many other things."

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Using genomics to fight deadly parasitic disease - UNM Newsroom

Ovation Fertility Presenting One Embryo-One Baby Success … – PR Web (press release)

We are pleased to share industry-recognized, pioneering IVF research performed by Ovation Fertility and to provide continuing education to clinical and medical laboratory professionals across the nation. Nate Snyder, CEO, Ovation Fertility

LOS ANGELES, CA (PRWEB) May 19, 2017

Ovation Fertility scientists work is being showcased at the annual meeting and educational conference of the American Association of Bioanalysts (AAB) and the College of Reproductive Biology (CRB) today and Saturday (May 19-20) at the Galleria Hotel in Houston. The conference reinforces AABs commitment to excellence in clinical laboratory services and regulations.

We are pleased to share industry-recognized, pioneering IVF research performed by Ovation Fertility and to provide continuing education to clinical and medical laboratory professionals across the nation, says Nate Snyder, CEO, Ovation Fertility. Attendees benefit from learning about the successes brought about by the collaborative mindshare of Ovation Fertility IVF and genetics labs, working in tandem with our partner physician practices.

Mitchel C. Schiewe, Ph.D., HCLD, who directs Ovation Fertilitys IVF lab in Newport Beach, notes that by working together across its network of experts, Ovation Fertility developed reproductive technology solutions that make achieving pregnancy through IVF more effective, affordable and financially accessible.

Ovation Fertility IVF Labs, Partner Practices Join Forces

The two abstracts being presented at the conference show research performed by Ovation Fertility in conjunction its partner physician practices.

1. Striving for One Embryo-One Baby: How the Integration of Vitrification and Preimplantation Genetic Screening (PGS) Technologies Has Impacted Society

Technical Supervisor Shane Zozula of Ovation Fertility Newport Beach is presenting a poster based on Ovation Fertilitys founding philosophy to achieve successful pregnancy one healthy baby at a time. Although advanced embryo culturing has led to favorable pregnancy results using fresh embryo transfers, they often were the result of multiple embryo transfers, resulting in high-risk pregnancies with twins and triplets. Through elective vitrification and the adoption of blastocyst biopsy/PGS, Ovation Fertility has improved the quality of patient care by transferring fewer embryos, reducing miscarriages and increasing healthy singleton live births.

The findings were produced collaboratively by researchers at Ovation Fertility labs in Newport Beach and Las Vegas, Southern California Center for Reproductive Medicine, and The Fertility Center of Las Vegas. They include Shane Zozula; John Whitney; Robert E. Anderson, M.D.; and Schiewe. Forest Garner provided study design and statistics support.

2. Comparative Human Blastocyst Repeat Vitrification (rVTF): Effect of Device Type (Cryolock versus microSecure) by Solution Used (DMSO/EG versus Glycerol/EG) on Post-warming Viability

Vitrification of human embryos has evolved into a highly reliable and efficient process in many assisted reproductive-technology laboratories worldwide. Over the past several years, Schiewe has strived to better understand the physical and chemical relationships of vitrification treatments by using a revitrification model to define tolerance thresholds for post-warming survival/viability. At the AAB/CRB conference, embryologist RaeAnne vanTol is making the oral presentation showing the resiliency of human blastocysts to various cryopreservation agents and devices. The subset of data being presented is part of a larger collaborative study between Ovation Fertility labs in Newport Beach and Nashville that will be presented at the European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology annual conference in July.

Additional authors include Shane Zozula, Kelley Waggoner and Schiewe, all of Ovation Fertility Newport Beach.

Collaboration Leads to Success

According to Snyder, We are proud of the collaborative efforts among Ovation Fertility labs and partner practices. The greatest advances in reproductive medicine result from the collective knowledge and shared experience of fertility professionals, working as a cohesive team rather than as individuals. The research presented by Ovation Fertility in Houston will benefit all patients who are considering using IVF to build their families.

About Ovation Fertility Ovation Fertility Founded in 2015 by a coalition of thought-leading reproductive endocrinologists and scientists, Ovation Fertility is a national fertility service provider offering a suite of state-of-the-art assisted reproductive technology services to aspiring parents, including embryology, andrology and genetic testing as part of the in vitro fertilization process. Ovation Fertility partners with physicians who are committed to reducing the average cost of a live birth through IVF by advancing industry standards in fertility treatment. For more information, visit http://www.ovationfertility.com.

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Ovation Fertility Presenting One Embryo-One Baby Success ... - PR Web (press release)

Human genome editing with CRISPR-Cas9: South African legal perspective – Lexology (registration)

Background

CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing has been a topical subject since the Chinese research group led by Junjiu Huang at Sun Yat-sen University in Guangzhou used this technology to eliminate the human -globulin (HBB) gene from the germline of a non-viable human embryo. Naturally occurring mutations in HBB cause the blood disorder -thalassaemia, which can be fatal. The group's research article was rejected by both Nature and Science on ethical grounds and was eventually published in the journal Protein and Cell. Subsequently, in a groundbreaking decision, regulatory approval for a research study using CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing in viable human embryo cells was provided in the United Kingdom by the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority to Kathy Niakan's team at the Francis Crick Institute.

Despite the obvious potential benefits of this technology for the development of therapeutic treatment of otherwise incurable genetic and other diseases, ethical concerns over its therapeutic use are being debated around the globe. The biggest, but not the only, concerns over the use of this technology as a therapy are the possible off-target mutations that might arise during the use of the editing method, which would then be passed on to the patient's progeny.

In South Africa, gene editing techniques have and are being used in therapeutic research studies with adult human cells. However, the ethical concerns around somatic gene editing therapy are less controversial than with germline therapy. Any possible adverse effects in somatic cells would affect only the patient in question, and the treatment's risks can be assessed and weighed against the potential benefits. Conversely, germline mutations are transferred to all progeny cells and would be passed on to subsequent generations of children and form part of the human gene pool.

Patentability considerations

A number of patent applications relating to the use of CRISPR-Cas9 technology have been filed in South Africa by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the Broad Institute and the President and Fellows of Harvard College, among others. None have yet proceeded to grant.

The Patents Act (57/1978) does not preclude patenting of germline editing technology for human gametes or the products of such methods. However, certain inventions of this type may fall within the provisions of the Patents Act relating to offensive or immoral behaviour and may therefore be considered to be unpatentable. Since there is no substantive examination of patent applications in South Africa at present, it is questionable whether the registrar will ever refuse an application on such a ground. Another possible course of action for a third party wanting to challenge such a patent would be for it to apply for revocation of the patent once granted. One of the Patent Act's grounds for revocation of a granted patent is that it should not have been granted as it pertains to unpatentable subject matter. These provisions all hinge on a question of morality and whether the invention would generally be considered immoral by either the registrar or the courts, and such a consideration has yet to be made.

Legislative considerations

Obtaining a granted patent is not a guarantee that the patented technology may be freely used. The National Health Act (61/2004) and its regulations in particular, the Regulations relating to Control of Use of Blood, Blood Products, Tissue and Gametes in Humans, which were promulgated in 2012 regulate the removal and use of tissue, blood, blood products and gametes from living persons. The use of such materials in techniques involving germline editing, although not specifically referenced, would also be regulated by the National Health Act.

At present, removal of any such materials, apart from gametes, requires written consent from the subject if he or she is over the age of 18 or from the subject's parent or guardian if he or she is under the age of 18. In the case of gametes, such material may be removed only if the subject is over the age of 18 or ministerial approval is obtained. Additionally, the National Health Act places restrictions on the reproductive cloning of human beings which would be part of the process where germline editing is used on a viable human embryo.

The National Health Act prohibits the manipulation of genetic material of human gametes, zygotes or embryos and activities such as nuclear transfer or embryo splitting for the purpose of the reproductive cloning of a human being. The minister of health may permit research on stem cells and zygotes which are younger than 14 days old, on a written application for research purposes, so long as the applicant undertakes to document the research and the donor's prior written consent is obtained.

Any person who fails to comply with the National Health Act regulations will be guilty of an offence and liable on conviction to a fine, 10 years' imprisonment or both.

Comment

Members of the scientific community have argued for a moratorium to be called on human germline editing and the US National Institute of Health (NIH) has banned NIH-funded research into the genomic editing of human embryos. However, other members of the scientific community have argued that it is unethical to withhold technology that might be used to treat otherwise incurable diseases.

At present, the modification of a human embryo's germline for therapeutic purposes culminating in the reproduction of a human being is prohibited in South Africa. Germline editing for research purposes might be permitted, but would require conditional ministerial approval.

For further information on this topic please contact Joanne van Harmelen at ENSafrica by telephone (+27 21 410 2500) or email (jvanharmelen@ensafrica.com). The ENSafrica website can be accessed at http://www.ensafrica.com.

This article was first published by the International Law Office, a premium online legal update service for major companies and law firms worldwide.Register for a free subscription.

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Human genome editing with CRISPR-Cas9: South African legal perspective - Lexology (registration)

‘Consistent Life Ethic’ needed to change attitudes on abortion – Crux: Covering all things Catholic

[Editors Note: Aimee Murphy is the Executive Director and one of the founders of Rehumanize International, the leading Consistent Life Ethic magazine. The mission statement includes her words, We must realize that the most important issue of our day is the neglect of the dignity of human life. Those on all sides of the political spectrum, and from all angles of belief and religion should be able to put down their arms and join together on these issues. She spoke to Charles Camosy about her work.]

Camosy: You recently changed the name of your organization from Life Matters Journal to Rehumanize International. What does the name-change tell us about the organization you lead?

Murphy: When we founded this organization, back in 2011, we thought it would be a simple side-project for our team members: A magazine published quarterly to share ideas about human life and dignity in the larger context of the Consistent Life Ethic. I dont think any of us anticipated it growing to become what it is now.

When re-evaluating our mission and vision statements earlier this year, we understood that we are so much more than a magazine, and we have been for a long time. So we wanted to adopt a name that was active: A verb that would demonstrate the thing most central to who we are and what we do as an organization.

We settled on Rehumanize International. We believe that this new name speaks to the thing at our core: The inherent and immutable dignity and worth of every single human being.

In a cultural climate and society that so often dehumanizes fellow members of our human family in the name of autonomy or the common good or justice, we must be voices that rehumanize our fellow human beings and seek to restore to each and every human the respect, value, and protection that should be common sense.

This mission does not only reach within our borders, but stretches to all, regardless of nationality.

We believe that this new name shares our non-partisan, non-sectarian perspective that welcomes all in a movement of radical inclusivity in a short, simple way.

When we understand that all of the major political parties participate in certain forms of dehumanization, and that this belief in human dignity is based in a common-sense respect for our shared humanity, it makes sense that Rehumanize International would stand for being inclusive not only in whose rights we seek to protect, but also in whom we work with to achieve that goal.

So this falls along the lines of the Consistent Ethic of Life approach?

Certainly. Our whole underlying philosophy is the inherent dignity of every human being, from conception to natural death.

As such, we oppose all forms of aggressive violence: Abortion, unjust war, torture, euthanasia, embryonic stem cell research, capital punishment, human trafficking, abuse, and the list could go on You asked if its the Consistent Life Ethic approach, however, I wouldnt just call it an approach: We believe it because it is true.

We firmly believe that every human being has intrinsic worth and that every human being deserves protections both in the culture and in the law against all forms of violence.

Yes, this perspective is especially effective at planting seeds and changing hearts and minds, but it is not a mere approach it is the truth, and the truth, on its own, should be attractive.

You promoted these ideas at both the Republican and Democratic national conventions. Any stories to share?

Im sure we could fill a book with all of the interesting stories from our times at the RNC and DNC. We were interviewed by Reuters, Vox, Playboy, Catholic News Agency, Jezebel, Mother Jones, Roll Call, and The New York Times. But I will share one story with you in particular.

There was a man attending some of the protests outside the DNC. He aligned himself as a Democrat, but was dissatisfied with the status quo in the party.

He was very curious about our signs with the Politics Kills design on them and stopped me to talk. First he was curious, then once he found out we were pro-life, he was angry. He went off about how its not even alive and its not a human being.

I gave him one of my pamphlets on why Democrats should embrace the Consistent Life Ethic and showed him the citations on it that discuss prenatal developmental biology and embryology. After about half an hour, he brought up rape as a reason to keep abortion legal.

I shared with him my story of how I became pro-life; how I was raped at 16 and months later thought I was pregnant by my rapist, no less how my rapist had threatened to kill me if I didnt have an abortion how I had realized that I couldnt be like my rapist and use violence against those who were inconvenient or smaller than I and how I rejected abortion as an option.

After hearing my story, this man confessed through watery eyes and with a choke in his voice that he had pressured his high school girlfriend to have an abortion. I gave him my condolences and we stood quiet for a moment. I gave him the URL for AbortionChangesYou.com, in hopes that he might find the healing he so obviously needed.

We resumed talking about resources that are needed to make abortion unthinkable, and we wrapped up the conversation after I reminded him that all acts of violence are contrary to human rights. He said that he was so grateful that we talked, that I had given him so much to think about, that our holistic pro-life witness was what he hoped to see in the future. And I asked if we could hug as we parted. We did.

I thanked him, and I ran through pouring rain a half mile to take shelter. It was such a powerful experience of human connection and planting deeply rooted seeds of a consistent ethic and watering those seeds with compassion. I will never forget that gentleman in fact, I think of him often.

I hope that he sought and received healing. I hope that he sees both the logic and compassion of our position: one which is rooted wholly in the unchangeable dignity of every member of our human family.

One of the most significant aspects of Rehumanize International is your radical welcome to LGBT pro-lifers, folks who may find it more difficult to engage with other pro-life communities.

When I became pro-life at 16, I was already out as queer. I was an atheist at the time. I was already a feminist.

I had a hard time feeling at home in the pro-life movement, which was so often associated with the Religious Right. So when I became more active in college, I wanted to make sure that any space for which I had responsibility in the movement would be welcoming to all.

When I founded Rehumanize International (then Life Matters Journal), one of my highest priorities was creating an organization with whom I would have felt at home when I was 16, coming into the pro-life movement.

At the time I thought it was both a common sense and a radical departure from the norm of the pro-life movement.

Now, looking back on it, I can see how this radical inclusivity fits perfectly with our mission: Not only do we have a radical sense of inclusion in the humans whose rights we strive to protect, but we also are radically inclusive within the ranks of our movement.

It is every human standing for the rights of every human. Indeed if you want to bring an end to abortion (or any form of violence), you need to have everyone on board. You could outlaw abortion with just the Religious Right, perhaps, but you couldnt abolish it altogether in the culture without every single one of us understanding the inherent dignity of all.

That includes LGBTQIA+ folks, Democrats, Atheists, feminists. All of us.

This last point is actually double-sided, too. If we want to create a culture of life, that needs to include everyone. We cant degrade those of us who experience gender dysphoria or same-sex attraction and expect to create a culture where every life is valued.

We dont need to pick and choose whose lives we value and protect: Every single one of us has inherent worth. Every single one of us is worthy of protection.

My sense is you really have your finger on the pulse of the future of the pro-life movement. What do those of us who are from a different generation need to know?

The polling that has been done on Millennials reveals some pretty interesting stats.

Firstly, back when I was in college 6 years ago, we were the most pro-life generation yet. Currently, similar polling demonstrates that my generation is swaying back towards pro-choice in big numbers.

I believe this is related to the cultural blowback against the rise of Donald Trump, seeing from my own experiences with peers.

Secondly, we are the most politically unaffiliated generation yet: We are by and large sick and tired of the Republican/Democrat political paradigm that makes us choose between a lesser of two evils.

Thirdly, we have the highest rate of folks identifying as non-religious or of no faith. And related to the last question, a poll also shows that 20% of Millennials identify as LGBTQIA+: Thats a higher rate than ever before, and its not an insubstantial number.

All of these statistics demonstrate things that I have known from the inside of my own generation as personal experiences.

While many young people are pro-life, we are also politically unaffiliated, dissatisfied with the GOP slavishly dragging the pro-life movement behind it, skeptical of religion for religions sake, and many of us and our friends are queer. (I would venture to say, actually, that most of my close friends in the movement are in the LGBTQIA+ community not just allies.)

I think much of this points to something that is profoundly necessary: A radically inclusive, radically authentic, radically compassionate, radically consistent pro-life movement. When a generation is skeptical of ideology for ideologys sake, or affiliation for affiliations sake, they are seeking consistency, compassion, authenticity, inclusion.

Ive often noted to myself in conversation that the young folks I argue with crave this consistency, this authenticity: Even if they, themselves are inconsistent, they absolutely expect and demand their conversational opponents to be consistent. They are also more likely to admit when they see inconsistencies in their own positions and acknowledge their need to learn more and weigh the arguments.

I do believe that our team at Rehumanize International has what my generation is seeking in the face of such inconsistency and inauthenticity from the establishment voices from political parties, religions, and ideologies.

And I think its because, more than anything ideological or political or religious, we are dedicated to human rights and human dignity. Its because we have a human-centered philosophy that refuses to pick political sides or solely align with one religious background.

The Consistent Life Ethic is for everyone, because the rights, life, and dignity of each human being is our foundation.

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'Consistent Life Ethic' needed to change attitudes on abortion - Crux: Covering all things Catholic

Scientists Use Snail Genomics To Fight Deadly Parasitic Disease – IFLScience

An incredible international team of over 100 scientists has just completed a crucial step that might soon help fight a terrible parasitic disease known as schistosomiasis, which kills to up two hundred thousands people every year.

The team, led by researchers at the University of New Mexico, has completed an in-depth analysis of the genome of the tropical Rams Horn snail (Biomphalaria glabrata), which is crucial to the development of the parasite. This research, published in Nature Communication, might tell us how to take the snail out of the equation and stop the parasite before it can affect humans.

Sequencing and characterizing the genome of this snail has given us a lot of information into its biology, lead author Professor Coenraad Adema, from the University of New Mexico, said in a statement. It has informed us on animal evolution and supports the drive to minimize the impact of infectious disease on global health.

The parasite is a flat worm. It infects these freshwater snails at the beginning of its life cycle, and as it develops it takes over the snails reproductive system and metabolic processes. When it is fully developed, it leaves the snail but stays in the water. There it can survive, waiting, until it comes in contact with humans. Then it breakstheir skin and begins to reproduce.

Understanding the snails genome gives us many avenues to cut the snail out of this parasites lifecycle, which one day may lead to the elimination of this disease, Adema added.

After malaria, this is the worst parasitic disease on the planet. So, being able to do work that may help improve global human health outcomes it is a very important motivation for my research.

Schistosomiasis, also known as bilharzia or snail fever, affects the urinary tract and intestine of the people who become infected. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), in 2015, 66.5 million people were reported to have been treated for the disease. Snail fever is one of the neglected tropical diseases.

The research has an impact beyond disease prevention. Researchers are uncovering the full genome of more and more species, which is heralding a new and deeper understanding of the biological links between every organism on Earth.

This is an important contribution to better understanding infectious disease, he said. It also gives us information on regulation of gene expression, comparative immunology, embryology, general biology of snails, animal evolution, and many other things."

The WHO hopes to eliminate snail fever by 2025, and this research might give scientists the right tools to get rid of it once and for all.

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Scientists Use Snail Genomics To Fight Deadly Parasitic Disease - IFLScience

VERONICA GRAHAM: 4-H program focuses on Embryology 101 – Crestview News Bulletin

By Veronica Graham | Okaloosa County Extension Office

4-H has been very busy for the last couple of months and one of the programs responsible for this increase in activity is Embryology.

Embryology is the study of developmental cycles. The biological development in particular that 4-H-age children study is that of chickens.

Our 4-H Embryology Program is school enrichment based, meaning it focuses on in-classroom study. Each teacher participating in the program receives a complete equipment kit, which includes curriculum and a training seminar with a 4-H professional to kick off the program.

Fertilized eggs are then placed in the incubator and the program cycle begins.

The children in each classroom spend the next two weeks candling the eggs and observing the changes each chick goes through in preparation to enter the world.

The final week, also known as hatch week, is an eventful time. The teachers prepare the incubators and brooders for the coming chicks and the children are able to take responsibility in caring for the newborns through feeding and watering cycles.

On many occasions, the students are able to hold and interact with the chicks as well.

There are so many advantages to this program. Not only do the students learn a biology lesson at a young age, they also learn responsibility and compassion. They also are able to experience a little piece of where their food they eat comes from.

Eggs from the store have very little meaning and many times are misunderstood until a child watches a chick come from the same looking egg. Everything about what that egg is truly for comes into focus.

It is an amazing experience for both the children and the teachers to witness.

If you are a teacher or a principal in an elementary school in Okaloosa County and are interested in implementing this University of Florida funded program into your school next spring, please contact Veronica Graham at the Okaloosa County Extension Office at 689-5850 or graham.v@ufl.edu.

Veronica Graham is an agent at the University of Florida's Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences Extension office in Crestview.

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VERONICA GRAHAM: 4-H program focuses on Embryology 101 - Crestview News Bulletin

Searls, Dr. Robert L. – The Daily Progress

Dr. Robert L. Searls died on Saturday, May 6, 2017, in Charlottesville, Va. He was born in Madison, Wisconsin, the fifth of six children of Edward and Anne Searls. He graduated from the University of Wisconsin in 1953, and served in the U.S. Army for two years. In 1960, Robert received his doctorate in biochemistry from the University of California at Berkeley. He served as a post-doctoral fellow at Brandeis University in 1961 where he met and married his wife, Ellen Donovan of Arlington, Massachusetts. Robert did research in embryology and taught biology for four years at the University of Virginia and then for thirty years at Temple University in Philadelphia, Pa., retiring in 1998. Robert and Ellen returned to Charlottesville, Va. where they have spent the last 19 years. Robert is survived by his wife, Ellen to whom he was married for 55 years; his four children, Timothy, David, Paul, and Anne; six grandchildren and four siblings. He was a beloved husband, father, brother and grandfather. He was a spiritual man with a voracious love of reading, history, and music. He enjoyed fishing and sitting back reading a good book. He will be truly missed for the love, laughter and great knowledge he brought to all of our lives!!

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Searls, Dr. Robert L. - The Daily Progress

Egg hatching helps kids learn about life – KYStandard.com

Bardstown Primary School second graders have been learning about life with a hands-on embryology project. For the past few weeks, the students in Allen Bests class have observed eggs in an incubator and have used lights to watch how the embryos develop.

By Wednesday night, several of the eggs had hatched and the students came to school surprised to find fuzzy chicks in their place.

Its one day theyll never forget, Best said.

This is the second year Best has done the hatching project, and based on its success and student interest, he plans to continue in the future.

They need to learn about life and where life comes from, he said. And the project also teaches responsibility, incorporates science and has the potential to instill a greater respect for living things.

Hatching eggs is something many students across the county have taken part in over the years. In addition to the hatching, the students also participated in an egg nutrition class at the Nelson County Cooperative Extension Office. The Extension Office supplied the class with the equipment to hatch the eggs.

Best said once the chicks are a little older, in a few weeks, a local farmer will take them.

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Egg hatching helps kids learn about life - KYStandard.com