Wednesday, May 15, 2013

The Promise And Limitations Of Telemedicine

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NEAL CONAN, HOST:

This is TALK OF THE NATION. I'm Neal Conan, in Washington. The doctor will see you now, words we've all heard many times, but more and more now doctors see their patients over a video link. For years telemedicine has allowed doctors to treat patients anywhere, but as technology improves, new applications arise.

Mobile robots allow doctors to monitor hospital patients from afar, and that neurologist you've been waiting months to get an appointment, well now you don't have to fly across the country. Armed with a laptop, a Skype account and an Internet connection, you can consult a burn specialist therapist or a general practitioner from your living room.

Doctors, patients, tell us about your experience with telemedicine, 800-989-8255. Email talk@npr.org. You can also join the conversation on our website. That's at npr.org. Click on TALK OF THE NATION. Later in the program, genocide in the case of former Guatemalan dictator Rios Montt. But first the 21st-century exam room.

And Dr. Ray Dorsey joins us here in Studio 42. He's the director of the Movement Disorders Division and neurology telemedicine at Johns Hopkins Medicine. Good to have you with us today. Thanks for coming in.

RAY DORSEY: Thank you very much for having me.

CONAN: And I know you've been using telemedicine to treat Parkinson's patients for some time now. What does that allow you to do that you can't do in your office?

DORSEY: Well, telemedicine allows us to see anyone anywhere. We started doing this approximately six years ago with Tony Joseph at the Presbyterian Nursing Home in Upstate New York, and there they had about 50 residents who resided 150 miles from us, at the University of Rochester. And he asked us would we be willing to see his residents remotely via telemedicine, and we said sure.

CONAN: And is it just as good as seeing them in person?

DORSEY: There are certain things you can't replicate that you can do in person. You know, the human touch is very powerful. And certainly there's portions of an examination that we can't do remotely, that we can do in person. But we have found that through our experience and through randomized controlled trials that providing care to patients remotely in nursing homes and later in their - directly in their homes is: One, feasible; two, generates clinical outcomes that are comparable to those in person; and three, offers tremendous value to patients.

CONAN: What about diagnosis? You'd think that's pretty difficult.

DORSEY: Well, for Parkinson's disease, Dr. Parkinson described people walking in the park in London two centuries ago. He actually never physically examined any of his patients except for two. We say that if Dr. Parkinson can diagnose people walking in the park in 1817, we should be able to diagnose people remotely in 2013.

CONAN: And as the technology improves, does that give you more access to more people?

DORSEY: Absolutely. Right now we at Johns Hopkins offer free, one-time consultations to anyone with Parkinson's disease residing in five states. So we can certainly reach out to patients across the country and provide care to them that previously to them might be in inaccessible.

CONAN: Five states? Why five states?

DORSEY: I'm only licensed in five states, and currently state licensing laws, which are one barrier to broader adoption of telemedicine, require you to be licensed in the state where the patient is physically located at the time services are provided.

CONAN: But they could come to your office in Baltimore.

DORSEY: Yeah, so a patient from West Virginia often does come to see us in Baltimore, but I can't see them in West Virginia.

CONAN: That's a little strange. There's also, as I understand it, some insurance implications.

DORSEY: Yeah, so Medicare currently doesn't reimburse for care provided in the home via telemedicine. For us at Johns Hopkins, Medicare will reimburse us about $200 for a patient who comes into the hospital, into one of our hospital-based clinics, about $100 to one of our suburban clinics and zero dollars if we see the patient in their home.

CONAN: Zero?

DORSEY: Zero.

CONAN: Is there any way you can address that?

DORSEY: Well, Dr. Karen Edison has worked hard to expand Medicare reimbursement, which is available for certain services via telemedicine. But right now it's not. We're hoping that patients, listeners will help us in our battle to expand reimbursement to enable people anywhere to receive the care that they need.

CONAN: Well, we'd like to hear from people who've received treatment over telemedicine or through telemedicine, and from doctors, as well, about their experiences. Give us a call, 800-989-8255. Email talk@npr.org. And Doctor, could you just take us through a typical day?

DORSEY: For a visit?

CONAN: Yeah.

DORSEY: So right now if a patient call us, we email them the video conferencing link, it's a secure link. It's HIPPA compliant. My research...

CONAN: That's the privacy law.

DORSEY: Exactly, that's the privacy law. My research assistant walks them through the installation of the software on their computer, much like downloading Skype, does a test connection to make sure that the audio and visual works. And then I do a regular history just as I would do on clinic and then a focused neurological exam and the address any concerns that they have, then provide recommendations both to them and to a local physician via a letter.

CONAN: And because if they need medication, you can prescribe that as well because you're licensed in that state.

DORSEY: Yes - yes.

(LAUGHTER)

CONAN: That gets into that other part of it. And how many - I assume this enables you actually to see more patients a day than you might otherwise.

DORSEY: It's a little bit more efficient for the clinician once you get familiar with it. What it really does is not so much focus on the efficiency of the clinician, it focuses on providing access to people who previously didn't have access. At your outset, you had a patient who was talking about driving six hours to see their endocrinologist. Rather than the patient now coming to the doctor, the doctor can now come to the patient.

CONAN: And obviously some Parkinson's patients are pretty limited in what they can do.

DORSEY: Yes, I mean patients right now are limited by what we call the three D's: distance, disability and the distribution of doctors. And technology such as Web-based video conferencing can overcome those.

CONAN: How many of your colleagues use this?

DORSEY: You know, adoption has been limited in the United States, predominately because of licensure and reimbursement. In Canada, where there aren't these restrictions on reimbursement and licensure, telemedicine is used widely. And in fact in the United States in many different circumstances, telemedicine is used widely for veterans, for those in the military and even for prisoners.

CONAN: Even for prisoners?

DORSEY: Yes, so if you're in California, and you have HIV, you're very likely receiving your care from an infectious disease specialist remotely because you can imagine the transportation costs are considerable for both getting a physician into a prison or prisoner into a clinic. And we say if we - if this mode of providing care is good enough for prisoners, is good enough for veterans, is good enough for those in the military, why isn't it good enough for people in the civilian population.

CONAN: Did you start out in your career with telemedicine?

DORSEY: No, we're just - we just said yes to an unsolicited call from someone who was looking for help.

CONAN: So is there a story that illustrates the difference for you?

DORSEY: I guess one patient who's almost our spokesperson for it is a patient who resides outside this community in New Hartford, New York. And she said to us that for her, she was finally able to get access to the care that she couldn't need because of one, her condition, and two of where she lived.

CONAN: Let's get some callers in on the conversation, 800-989-8255. Email us, talk@npr.org. Our guest Dr. Ray Dorsey, associate professor of neurology, director of the Movement Disorders Division and neurology telemedicine at Johns Hopkins Medicine. And we'll start with Tina, and Tina's on the line with us from Denver.

TINA: Hi Neal, thank you. I'm calling because my company, Apprende(ph) Interpreting, is located all throughout Colorado. And we provide medical interpreting for limited English proficient patients, whether it's American Sign Language or (unintelligible) languages, which is - so we have interpreters at their computer terminal, and at another location at a clinic, we have the doctor with the patient, who they can't communicate because of the English language barrier.

CONAN: So communications technology enables you to make maximum use of interpreters.

TINA: Exactly, where it may be a remote area, a mountainous region, and otherwise it would be cost prohibitive to send an interpreter in person. Or maybe the quality of interpreting would be reduced if they used a telephonic interpreter. We can provide so that they can see the interpreter, the insurer can see the patient, the doctor, where they're pointing, that kind of thing.

CONAN: Because you can obviously - it's a lot easier to interpret if you can see what's going on.

TINA: That's the argument. In many cases that is the case.

CONAN: That's interesting, thanks very much. I hadn't thought about that. Have you ever used an interpreter, Doctor?

DORSEY: We haven't, but Tina points out that really this opens a door to providing services that we previously couldn't. We have done three-way calls where we've done physician to patient, and the caregiver's in a third remote location. You can also start thinking about bringing additional services to the patient, therapist exercise, other physicians, other clinicians to the patient.

CONAN: We have our challenges using Skype here at NPR, live radio we've often heard the line go down. I assume you have your difficulties, as well.

DORSEY: Yeah, it's not perfect. It's not as user-friendly as, you know, you can just push one button and be connected. To date we've yet to fail to make a connection to the patient. We've come closer, and we've had to use the phone, supplemented by video, but the technology is only going to get better and only going to be easier to use.

CONAN: Let's see if we can get another caller in. This is John(ph), and John's on the line with us from Flint, Michigan.

JOHN: Hi.

CONAN: Hi, go ahead, please.

JOHN: I'm a family physician. I just - I've been using telemedicine for close to 30 years. I worked with the Navy for a long time, and we typically were oversubscribed in our clinic, and we'd often have patients who would call in with their problems. So I would do a lot of triage, not with anything fancy like video, but we would go through a lot of the questions.

Interestingly enough, there's some studies that show that most of what you hear in the doctor's office is quickly forgotten, whereas if you do something from home, you can write it down and remember a lot more of what's said.

CONAN: People don't take notebooks into their doctor's office.

JOHN: Well, most don't. Some do. But some of those patients we like to avoid - just kidding.

(LAUGHTER)

JOHN: But actually the ones that do really well are sometimes my elderly patients who don't hear as well. They may have telephone assist devices, allowing them to hear more of what I'm saying. They're less nervous when they're at home.

CONAN: Because if you're wearing a headset, effectively headphones, you can actually hear better. You can turn it up if you're not hearing too well.

JOHN: Exactly, exactly. They remember to ask the questions they needed to ask. If they don't have their pill bottles with them, all they have to do is go to the kitchen. I find I get a lot more information. I get a lot more interaction with my patients, and I even open them up to email so they can email me first, tell me what's going on, and then I can call them back.

CONAN: Email, well, Dr. Dorsey, that's not strictly telemedicine, but is that part of your arsenal, as well?

DORSEY: We haven't used email much in our telemedicine applications. There's some restrictions, again, around privacy and security that prevent its broader adoption.

JOHN: Absolutely. It should be password-protected.

DORSEY: But the caller points out that patients are much more relaxed. You as a clinician get a lot more history. You lose something in the examination, but you gain much more. You see what their social circumstances are. You see other family members. You get a sense of their socioeconomic status. Patients are more relaxed.

One of my patients wrote I like the interaction being personal despite the 3,000-mile distance. It felt somehow protected by the veil of technology, which enabled the exchange to be more honest.

CONAN: John, has there been a circumstance where you wished wait a minute, you need to come in, I need to see you in person?

JOHN: Oh that's easy. We can always work that out. The biggest problem is I worked as a teacher in residency programs. One of the problems is our clinics are almost always oversubscribed. It's very hard to get patients in for visits. So we can work something out right there on the phone as far as working them into the schedule.

CONAN: And that avoids that - somehow the schedule, once the patient gets to the doctor's office, never seems to be on time.

JOHN: That's correct. This saves a lot of that.

CONAN: Well thanks very much, John, appreciate the phone call.

JOHN: Appreciate you taking it.

CONAN: We want to - if you met with your doctor or patient through telemedicine, we'd like to hear about your experience, 800-989-8255 is our phone number. You can also send us an email, don't worry about the privacy laws. The address is talk@npr.org. We'll have more with Dr. Dorsey in just a minute. Stay with us. I'm Neal Conan. It's the TALK OF THE NATION from NPR News.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

CONAN: This is TALK OF THE NATION. I'm Neal Conan. Areas that are considered by many to be less desirable to live in - inner cities, especially rural areas - have a hard time attracting and retaining doctors. Primary care physicians are especially scarce. So the sick and injured have to travel long distances and endure long stretches in waiting rooms for appointments, if they can find doctors at all.

There are a number of ideas about how to fix that problem: get new doctors in through medical schools with less debt, entice physicians to underserved areas with business and quality-of-life incentives. And telemedicine, too, can help alleviate cost, inconvenience and wait times for doctors and patients alike.

If you've used telemedicine, either as a doctor or a patient, call and tell us about your experience and about the limitations, if any, 800-989-8255. Email us, talk@npr.org. Dr. Ray Dorsey of Johns Hopkins is our guest. Joining us now by phone from Columbia, Missouri, is Dr. Karen Edison. She's a dermatologist and medical director of the Missouri Telehealth Network at the University of Missouri. Good to have you with us today.

KAREN EDISON: Thank you.

CONAN: And how does telemedicine address the problems of rural communities?

EDISON: Telemedicine addresses the needs of rural communities by helping to provide access to a whole variety of different types of health care providers that those patients need. We've been doing telehealth - we call it telehealth. We used to call it telemedicine, but it's a little broader than just medicine - we've been doing telehealth since 1994 all throughout rural, underserved Missouri.

We have over 200 units in 62 different counties, and we've had over 70 different health care providers use it in the last year from 30 different specialties, and we've provided about 25,000 visits over the entire network last year.

CONAN: And what has changed as technology's changed?

EDISON: Well, technology has gotten better, it's more reliable, and it's certainly become more affordable. When I first started doing telemedicine, it was quite expensive, and you had to have big, fancy video conferencing equipment. And now telemedicine is moving more toward the tablet environment or more toward the computer environment, where people can see their health care providers from wherever they are, not just their home communities but even their homes or, you know, on their iPhone.

That's where we're going. That's the future. It's about taking health care to people right where they are.

CONAN: Wherever that may be, and a lot of patients have problems with mobility.

EDISON: That's correct. Many people can't leave their home communities for health care for a variety of reasons. You've mentioned many of them in your introduction. You know, it costs money to drive places and, you know, gas costs money, time off work, time out of school. Telehealth is also an economic development engine for rural communities.

If I see a patient over telehealth, and I diagnose a condition that requires a blood test or maybe an imaging test, or if I prescribe medication, those tests are done in the local community typically, and those medication prescriptions are refilled in the local pharmacy.

CONAN: Oh I see, so they're not enriching labs or radiology departments in the big city, they're doing it right there at home.

EDISON: That's right.

CONAN: And are there limitations? Are there things that can't be done?

EDISON: Well, that's always a question that comes up, and I used to say, you know, is seeing a patient in dermatology over telemedicine the same as seeing that patient in person. It's not just the same, but it's just a little different. And for many of my patients, it's not, you know, 100 percent versus 99 percent, it might be 99 percent versus nothing, if you follow my logic.

CONAN: Yeah.

EDISON: So it's not just that it's not exactly the same, but it's care for those patients where they may not have gotten care otherwise.

CONAN: We were also talking with our guest, Dr. Dorsey, about the problems of reimbursement, particularly in Medicare. Is this being - is this - you're just doing it one state there, Missouri. Is that a problem there, too?

EDISON: Well, Medicare pays the same as if we saw that patient in person if the patient is in a rural underserved area. And the federal government calls that a non-metropolitan statistical area. If that patient is in a community health center or a critical access hospital in that rural area, they pay the professional fee just as if we saw that patient in person.

Our Medicaid program, our state-based Medicaid program, also pays the same as if we saw that patient in person. And most of our private payers, our private insurance companies, now pay just the same as if we saw that patient in person.

And I always say any question you have about how telemedicine works, the answer is almost always is it works just like it does in person. The only difference is you're using technology to bridge distance.

CONAN: There was just a big telemedicine conference in Austin. I wonder: What did you find out there that surprised you?

EDISON: Well, I hadn't been for a couple of years. I used to go to the American Telemedicine Association meeting every year, and I was on the board for a long time. I took a little break from it, and I went back this year, so I was in Austin last week. And I was quite frankly blown away by the explosion of interest in telemedicine.

We had all the big companies there. We had folks there from all over the world. China was well-represented. The Taiwanese were very well-represented. Telemedicine, we believe, is the future of health care. And that telemedicine takes on a lot of different, a lot of different programs. It's not just using video conferencing to connect. It can also mean connecting to people in their homes with remote monitoring and telehome care so that their chronic diseases can be monitored on an everyday basis rather than just coming into the office every month.

CONAN: Here's an email question that has some aspects of that that I wanted to ask you about, this from James(ph) in Massachusetts: The Home Care Alliance of Massachusetts is advocating for Mass Health, a state Medicaid program, reimbursement of telehealth used by home health agencies.

Many agencies part of our association use telehealth already because it improves their quality and efficiency. They use wireless weight scales, blood oximeter, blood pressure cuffs, et cetera, and depending on their condition. So in other words you can collect data over these same circuits.

EDISON: Right.

CONAN: Do you use that as well?

EDISON: Yes, so we do a lot of telehome care and remote monitoring here in Missouri. One of our large home health agencies in the southwest part of the state is probably the leader in that area. One of the challenges, of course, is the inter-operability of the health information systems. So as health information technology matures, and the companies become more inter-operable, they can talk to each other and transmit information easily.

You know, as that gets - as that whole industry matures, this is going to get easier and easier so that instead of the home health agency monitoring those patients, actually the patients - patient-centered health care home or medical home, their actual health providers would be monitoring those patients on a daily basis.

CONAN: Well Dr. Edison, I wanted to thank you for your time today. We know you ducked out of a meeting to speak with us. We appreciate it.

EDISON: Thank you, it was a pleasure.

CONAN: Dr. Karen Edison is medical director of the Missouri Telehealth Network and joined us by phone from Columbia, Missouri. And let's see if we can get another caller in on the conversation. Let's go to Ed(ph), Ed's on with us from Catonsville in Maryland.

ED: Yeah, this is Ed Flattery(ph). My son was severely injured in a terrible truck crash two and a half years ago and had a traumatic brain injury. And in fact, Dr. Dorsey, he goes to Kennedy Krieger Institute, which you should know very well.

CONAN: He's nodding, yes.

ED: He - Matthew uses what's called a hand tutor, and it's a glove. It's an electronic glove that he wears, and he plays computer games with this device. And his therapist is in Israel, where this device was invented. And Matthew plays computer games using different fingers or using his wrist, abduction movement, even his elbow and his shoulder, and he plays computer games.

JOHN: And Alan(ph) in Israel sees us on Skype. We can see him, and he is reading all of the input. He sees exactly the same thing on his computer as Matthew and I see on ours in Catonsville.

CONAN: Oh, so he's seeing the same readouts from the computer games, so he can tell how well your son is doing?

JOHN: Yeah, and he encourages him and, you know, applauds him and, you know, kind of keeps him on task. And the thing about Skype is he can see if Matthew's doing compensating movements with his shoulders, for instance, in order to get the computer to respond, instead of using his wrists.

CONAN: I see. So you have to use your wrists to get those aliens over on the left side of the screen, and not his shoulder.

ED: That's - exactly.

(LAUGHTER)

CONAN: That's pretty good.

ED: Well, exactly right. I mean - and physical therapists know about compensation all the time. I mean, if you are taking batting practice and you're starting to get tired, you start to compensate by using other muscles, and so your swing starts to deteriorate. Well, it's the same thing with kids in therapy. So I - and this - when Matthew left Kennedy Krieger inpatient care, he could move his left index finger. And now he's talking. He's walking, you know, in a walker a little bit, and he's using his left hand, mostly.

And we're still working on that right hand, but he's beginning to use it more to assist in, you know, other activities. So, I mean, now, this company even has a way for us to do these therapies at home by ourselves, and they get the readout. So they can see compliance, you know, are we complying with the regimen. They can see are - are his - if his degree of motion's getting better or not. And so I can't lie to Alan about whether we did our therapy.

(LAUGHTER)

CONAN: Ed, thanks very much. We wish your son...

ED: Sure.

CONAN: ...the best of luck and continued improvement.

ED: OK. Thank you. Bye, now.

CONAN: And, Dr. Dorsey, when you hear stories like that - I mean, I know this is not your field, specifically, but you may want to evangelize a little for telemedicine.

DORSEY: Sure. So in the 19th century, medicine developed anesthetics, which led us - enabled us to operate on the inoperable. In the 20th century, we developed antibiotics, which let us cure the incurable. In the 21st century, we have telecommunications technology, which lets us reach the unreachable. And now, we're reaching people that were previously not able to be reached, but we're reaching them in ways that we previously couldn't even imagine.

I mean, to hear the story that he's receiving care from a therapist in an entirely new - entirely different country with entirely novel technologies and making a difference for his children is just incredible.

CONAN: I don't even want to ask about the licensing problems there. Anyway, this email from Ellen: I have a rare neuromuscular disorder. There are a few specialists who treat my disorder in the country. I see a specialist three hours from me three times per year. My husband and I have been hesitant to move, even when a better job has been available elsewhere, because we want to be within easy access to his care. I look forward to the day when we can consult with him remotely, as does my doctor, who sees patients from all over the country and recognizes the inconvenience for them. He's waiting for precedents to be set before he attempts it. Again, this is another field.

DORSEY: Well, no, this is for rare orphan indications, or for people who have devastating neurological or medical disorders, telemedicine is often the only way that individuals can receive care and to be able - and to say that we can't provide care to people with rare neuromuscular disorders because of licensing laws seems to be counter to the interests of patients. And as we go forward and with the aging of baby boomers, people are having to make decisions about where they live based on their proximity to medical centers.

You know, telemedicine enables people to - patients to live wherever they want to live in the future, and feel - and have that freedom to do so and still be able to connect - be connected to their physicians.

CONAN: We're talking about the improvement in communications and improvements in telemedicine. You're listening to TALK OF THE NATION, from NPR News. And let me reintroduce our guest, is Dr. Ray Dorsey, associate professor of neurology, director of the movement disorders division and neurology telemedicine at Johns Hopkins Medicine. And let's see if we can get another caller in. This is Walt, and Walt's with us from northwest Arkansas.

WALT: Good afternoon.

CONAN: Afternoon.

WALT: I just wanted to add one comment, for any potential skeptics out there. I work in professional aviation, corporate airline aviation. And in our field, this sort of technology has actually been a mature technology for about 10 years. Most airliners and a lot of corporate aircraft are equipped with a - with what they call a doctor in a box. It's a pod that can be connected to a passenger that's having a problem. The ones I've seen where they would put on a glove and they set up a video camera in the seat, and they can downlink to a trauma center in Phoenix and begin diagnosing the patient in-flight.

And it's my understanding they use these on the order of dozens of times a year in the major airlines, and in some cases have even been able to, you know, divert an aircraft to a more appropriate emergency landing field based on the diagnosis of the patient en route. And so I say it's worked very, very well there for a long time. It's an accepted technology, and it would seem that if it can work in flight for an emergency medicine scenario, that it should probably be pretty deployable elsewhere.

CONAN: And this is all data-link, I assume.

WALT: All satellite data-link, I believe. There may be some other methods now, but I think generally, it travels - the data travels over the same channels as the aircraft's communications.

CONAN: Any prospect of getting video involved in that?

WALT: I think most of them involved video. The one unit that I've seen demoed a couple of times is - essentially sets up in the seat either in front of, or next to the patient. And it has essentially a video conferencing module on top of it, so the doctor can see and speak to the patient. He can get the vitals in real time, and depending on who else is on board, can even begin to administer care, you know, through a remote set of hands, if necessary. And it's my understanding it's led to a lot of saves.

CONAN: All right, Dr. Dorsey, of course, this is applied to emergency responses on the ground, as well, to first responders and to EMTs.

DORSEY: Yes. You know, in Alaska, this is widely used where there's a large geographical separation between patients and physicians. As Walt indicated, if it can be applied in airlines, it certainly can be applied on the ground.

CONAN: Walt, thanks very much.

WALT: Thanks, Guys.

CONAN: Here's an email from Barbara in Walla Walla: I'm a telereader for the VA, a specially trained and certified eye doctor reviewing eye photos from over 20 different sites throughout Alaska, Washington, Idaho and Oregon. I "see" - quote, unquote - 50 patients per day who have diabetes, and we're monitoring them to detect diabetic retinopathy at its earliest stages, well before vision loss can occur. The VA has been doing this since 2001, very successfully. So that is another use of this, well, communications technology to, I guess, force multiplier, as the military might call it.

DORSEY: Yes. And the VA now has a requirement that half of its beneficiaries seem to be using Teleheatlh in some capacity by 2014.

CONAN: And this from Dusty in Panama City: I used Teleheatlh as a VA patient in San Diego. I live in the Imperial Valley. My psychiatrist was in San Diego, about an hour and a half or two hours away. So I would go to the local VA clinic and have my appointments with her through video monitors. I loved it. I wouldn't have been able to see her otherwise, and she was amazing. Of course, psychotherapy psychiatry, another field in which this could be useful.

DORSEY: Absolutely.

CONAN: Well, Dr. Dorsey, thank you very much for your time today. We appreciate it.

DORSEY: My pleasure.

CONAN: Dr. Ray Dorsey joined us here in Studio 42. He's down from Baltimore, where he's director of the Movement Disorders Division and Neurology Telemedicine at Johns Hopkins Medicine. Coming up, former dictator Rios Montt of Guatemala got 80 years for genocide and crimes against humanity. We'll learn why that's being called an historic verdict after a short break. Stay with us. I'm Neal Conan. It's the TALK OF THE NATION, from NPR News.

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Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/05/14/183950898/the-promise-and-limitations-of-telemedicine?ft=1&f=1007

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Monday, May 13, 2013

Laura Sanko out of Invicta bout due to pregnancy

After winning her Invicta debut with a rear-naked choke, Laura Sanko was scheduled to fight on Invicta's July card. She had to pull out of her atomweight (105 lb.) bout. It wasn't an injury that knocked her off the card. She can't fight because she's pregnant.

Sanko said she's about two and a half months along, so she will be well into her second trimester when the fights take place on July 13. Recent fights have been called off because of cuts, dehydration and injuries of every sort. It's nice to see a fight called for a good reason.

Female fighters have to submit proof of a negative pregnancy test before fights to get licensed. As an extra precaution, Invicta, an all-female promotion, does additional testing. Sanko found out with enough time that Invicta did find a replacement. Cassie Robb will fight Livia Von Pletterberg in Sanko's place.

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/mma-cagewriter/laura-sanko-invicta-bout-due-pregnancy-192506630.html

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PFT: Jaworski offers Tebow job with Arena's Soul

Chip KellyAP

Earlier today, we noticed a stream of tweets from writers covering the open portion of Monday?s first OTA practice for the Eagles under coach Chip Kelly.? Many were pointing out the music blaring while the players put in work.

The folks at CrossingBroad.com have listed the entire 24-tune soundtrack, giving the zealous Eagles fans the recipe for the ultimate iPod playlist.

From AC/DC?s Thunderstruck to Van Halen?s Panama to Duran Duran?s Hungry Like The Wolf to 2Pac?s California Love to Haddaway?s What Is Love? to the current Icona Pop hit I Love It, there?s an apparent method to Kelly?s evident madness.

?There?s a lot of science behind it but I?ve got 12 minutes left in this thing so I can?t really get into the details of it but there?s some science behind it,? Kelly told reporters after practice.? ?We?ve used it for a while.?

Kelly said that his penchant for up-tempo practices started long ago, at the lower levels of college football.

?It started when we were at New Hampshire and then as I moved to Oregon, it was a little different when I was a coordinator and then changed a little bit more when I became the head coach,? Kelly said.? ?We want to be efficient in our time, we don?t want to be on the field for a long time, want to maximize the time we?re on the field, and obviously you see us go from tempo periods to teach periods, there?s a rhyme or reason to what we?re doing, time on task versus time teaching, and I think there?s a good balance of that.? We want to get them in and get them out.? But we also have to get a certain amount of work in.?

But it?s not non-stop action.? Kelly explained that the goal is to simulate real football.

?Obviously we know we can?t practice full speed for the entire time we?re out there, so it?s got to be short bursts, but the game of football is short bursts,? Kelly said.? ?It?s really an anaerobic sport when you look at it, because you?re going hard for five to six seconds and then you?re taking a break, and that?s what we?re trying to get accomplished with these guys.?

Through it all, the music will be playing.? It?s a phenomenon that is spreading through the NFL, and if/when teams like the Jaguars and Eagles have success with it, it will spread even more.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/05/13/ron-jaworski-offers-tebow-a-job-with-the-philadelphia-soul/related/

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With #HonorYourMom, Samahope Wants To Fund Medical Treatments For Women In Need Around The World

http://www.sundancechannel.com/blog/2013/02/isabella-rossellini-celebrates-motherhood-with-mammasThis Sunday, there's a lot you can do for Mother's Day. San Francisco-based startup Samahope hopes that funds often reserved for chocolate delivery might be used to finance medical treatments for women in need around the world. Its #HonorYourMom project is soliciting donations for medical treatments for women along with tweet-length anecdotes about participants' own parents' uniqueness.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/EAYcJJJhw2c/

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Five Woot Execs Check Out, As Daily Deals Site Feels The Strain Under Owner Amazon

Image (1) woot.GIF for post 380128Woot, the daily deals site that Amazon bought in 2010 for $110 million, built a reputation for its "pile 'em high, sell 'em cheap" business model for shifting goods. Now, the company is facing up to a shift of a different kind: that of its own talent. In the last week, TechCrunch has learned that five six key employees are parting ways with the company.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/Qa43VqqusW4/

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Sunday, May 12, 2013

Why hasn't everything been annihilated yet? Pear-shaped atomic nuclei could hold answer.

Why are you currently reading this on your screen, instead of having had all your atoms completely obliterated at the dawn of time? A pear-shaped nucleus might explain.?

By Eoin O'Carroll,?Staff / May 9, 2013

A graphical representation of the pear-shaped nucleus of an exotic atom. The shape of the nucleus could give clues to why the universe contains more matter than antimatter.

Liam Gaffney and Peter Butler, University of Liverpool

Enlarge

The Standard Model of particle physics is a thing of beauty. Developed over by generations of the world's smartest minds, it can predict, with astonishing precision, accuracy, and simplicity, the behavior and interactions of almost every known form of matter and energy.?

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It does, however, fall short in a few key areas. For instance, according to the Standard Model, we shouldn't exist right now.

That's because, according to the Standard Model, for every bit of matter that popped into existence with the Big Bang, there should have been a corresponding bit of antimatter, which is just like regular matter except that it has an opposite electric charge and quantum spin.

Matter and antimatter don't mix well. When the two touch, they annihilate each other in a flash of radiation and other subatomic particles. According to the Standard Model, that's what should have happened an instant after the Big Bang, leaving behind a universe that would best be described as very boring.

It seems that this didn't happen. So instead, physicists suspect that at the dawn of the universe there was just a hair more matter than antimatter. Perhaps, for every billion antimatter atoms, there were a billion and one matter atoms. So after the two annihilated each other, there was some matter left behind, which now takes the form all the stars, planets, shopping malls, and you, among other things.?

Nobody knows why the matter atoms outnumbered the antimatter atoms at the beginning of the universe. Physicists call this imbalance Charge Parity violation, and it's a big problem for the Standard Model.?

But now a team of physicists might have an explanation. Using particle accelerators at CERN, Europe's nuclear physics lab near Geneva, Switzerland, the scientists fired a beam of high-energy protons at a chunk of uranium carbide. Smashing protons into uranium at high speed is a terrific way to make all sorts of exotic isotopes. As the current edition of Nature reports, researchers found that the nuclei of two of these isotopes, radium 224 and radon 220, have distinct pear shapes.

Most atomic nuclei are shaped like rugby balls, so a lopsided nucleus is big news.

"The pear shape is special," said?University of Michigan physicist Tim Chupp, who participated in the study, in a press release. "It means the neutrons and protons, which compose the nucleus, are in slightly different places along an internal axis."

Researchers believe that the nuclear forces that produced the asymmetry in the nucleus also produced an asymmetry in the amounts of matter and antimatter created by the Big Bang.?

"It turns out that the same forces that could produce enough matter could also subtly change the shape of atoms," said University of Liverpool particle physicist and study co-author Peter Butler in a Nature podcast.

So what does this mean for the Standard Model? It all hinges on something called the electric dipole moment, or EDM, a state in which the center of positive charge of an atom lies at a different point than its center of negative charge. According to the Standard Model, an EDM would be too small to measure with current technologies. But competing theories that account for the matter/antimatter imbalance also predict much stronger EDMs. And if these EDMs exist, pear-shaped atomic nuclei would be a likely place to find them.?

If the Standard Model is supplanted, it does not mean that physics has finally arrived at the answer to why we're here. But this measurement could at least help explain why we're not not here.?

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/f4AN65fLv3A/Why-hasn-t-everything-been-annihilated-yet-Pear-shaped-atomic-nuclei-could-hold-answer

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Goodell on gays in NFL: Toleration is not enough

Goodell on gay players in NFL: It will be accepted, not just tolerated - CBSSports.com Woods/Kuchar/Snedeker ","synopsis":"Players Champ.: Round 2","photo":{"width":"231","seq_no":"1","content_id":"22225522","href":"$IMAGE_SERVER/u/photos/golf/img22225522.jpg","height":"130"},"href":"http://pgatour.cbssports.com/live/","title":"Watch: Players Championship"},"headlines":[{"href":"http://pgatour.cbssports.com/live/","content":"Watch LIVE: Players Championship, Round 2"},{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/golf/players/playerpage/132075","content":"Follow: Phil Mickelson's scorecard, Round 2"},{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/golf/players/playerpage/401357","content":"Follow: Lee Westwood's scorecard, Round 2"},{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/golf/story/22224941/great-debut-for-castro-woods-solid-at-players-championship","content":"Great debut for Castro, Woods solid at Players"},{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/golf/blog/eye-on-golf/22224414/rory-mcilroy-shoots-first-round-66-near-top-of-leaderboard","content":"McIlroy in line to make first cut at TPC Sawgrass"},{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/golf/blog/eye-on-golf/22224321/roberto-castro-ties-course-record-with-63-leads-players-championship","content":"Castro ties TPC Sawgrass course record with 63"},{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/golf/story/22225210/singhs-suit-draws-little-public-reaction-at-tpc","content":"Singh's suit draws little public reaction at TPC"}]},"nfl":{"minicover":{"body":" Ndamukong Suh, Tony Romo, Reggie Bush and Jay Cutler are big names, but they top Mike Freeman's list of overrated NFL players. 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Carolina, N. Carolina to open '15 in Charlotte"},{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/collegefootball/blog/jeremy-fowler/22225505/iowa-northern-illinois-scheduling-2018-2020-series","content":"Iowa, N. Illinois to play at Kinnick in 2018, 2020"}]},"olympics":{"minicover":{"body":" What was your favorite part of London? Phelps? Gabby? It's your last Olympic moment till the Winter Games convene in Sochi, Russia ... Feb. 7 ... 2014. 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cruise to series win over Minnesota"},{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/nhl/blog/eye-on-hockey/22225548/nhl-awards-crosby-ovechkin-tavares-finalists-for-hart-trophy","content":"Crosby, Ovechkin, Tavares finalists for NHL MVP"},{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/nhl/blog/eye-on-hockey/22225534/bill-daly-on-olympics-proceeding-under-assumpion-nhl-will-take-part","content":"Daly: NHL still aiming to participate in '14 Olympics"},{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/nhl/gametracker/recap/NHL_20130509_OTT@MON/senators-knock-out-canadiens-with-61-win-in-game-5","content":"Senators knock out Canadiens with 6-1 win "}]},"extras":{"collegefootball":{"links":[{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/collegefootball/blog/eye-on-college-football","content":"Eye on College Football"},{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/collegefootball/recruiting/signing-day-central","content":"Signing Day Central"},{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/collegefootball/features/writers/expert/picks","content":"Expert 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This is Andy Murray's year. 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And we've got a potential Top 10 with pics and videos from their high school days - including stud Jadeveon Clowney from South Pointe (Rock Hill, S.C.).","synopsis":"The countdown to the 2014 NFL Draft has begun. And we've got a potential Top 10 with pics and videos from their high school days - including stud Jadeveon Clowney from South Pointe (Rock Hill, S.C.).","photo":{"href":"http://images.maxpreps.com/includes/images/cbssportsmenu/130124232728405836.jpg"},"href":"http://t.maxpreps.com/14wgwMO","title":"10 for '14"},"headlines":[{"href":"http://www.maxpreps.com/news/l-tAPJAkZkqTycSxV0vQ8A/high-school-football-programs-with-the-most-wins-since-2008.htm","content":"Most football wins since 2008"},{"href":"http://www.maxpreps.com/news/Y8Hp3Tk-7E2Qz_olt07TxQ/aria-ottmueller-strives-in-pole-vault-despite-being-legally-blind.htm","content":"Blind pole vaulter qualifies in Arizona"},{"href":"http://www.maxpreps.com/news/G7KG8LhMJ0C6X3M3oxo43g/nba-playoff-players-in-high-school-(slideshow).htm","content":"NBA playoff players in high school"},{"href":"http://www.maxpreps.com/news/-v_v7fM8W0Koyks5liANuQ/mitchmash--cancer-patient-nathan-mccarty-uses-make-a-wish-to-renovate-his-schools-baseball-field.htm","content":"Cancer patient's wish: Renovate field"},{"href":"http://www.maxpreps.com/news/KuQDGQK_G0iCOwTNyYQcOg/looking-at-2014-nfl-draft-stars-when-they-were-in-high-school.htm","content":"2014 NFL Draft stars in high school"},{"href":"http://www.maxpreps.com/news/yw26BRF370GoQgeaLy0iPQ/2013-nfl-draft-vignette--matt-barkley-in-high-school.htm","content":"2013 NFL Draft vignette: Matt Barkley"}]},"nba":{"minicover":{"body":" With Derrick Rose's teammates battling through a rash of maladies, Gregg Doyel wonders how Rose can look them in the eye while continuing to sit out games. Story ","synopsis":"Doyel: Rose's rep wilting","photo":{"width":"231","seq_no":"1","content_id":"22224357","href":"$IMAGE_SERVER/u/photos/basketball/nba/img22224357.jpg","height":"130"},"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/nba/story/22224363/roses-rep-as-a-teammate-wilts-with-each-game-that-he-sits-out","title":"Rose's rep wilting"},"headlines":[{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/nba/story/22224363/roses-rep-as-a-teammate-wilts-with-each-game-that-he-sits-out","content":"Doyel: Rose's rep as a teammate is wilting"},{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/nba/blog/eye-on-basketball/22224672/luol-deng-says-hes-lost-15-pounds-and-played-through-a-torn-wrist","content":"Deng says he's lost 15 pounds due to his illness"},{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/nba/blog/eye-on-basketball/22206993/amare-stoudemire-likely-to-return-for-game-3","content":"Stoudemire likely to return to Knicks for Game 3"},{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/nba/story/22225587/pelicans-gordon-after-ankle-surgery-expects-summer-return","content":"Pelicans point guard Gordon has left ankle surgery"},{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/nba/blog/eye-on-basketball/22225107/report-nets-interested-in-lionel-hollins-if-not-retained-by-grizzlies","content":"Nets reportedly want Hollins if Grizzlies let him go"},{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/nba/blog/eye-on-basketball/22224905/lakers-pau-gasol-undergoes-knee-procedure-out-12-weeks","content":"Lakers' Gasol has knee procedure, out 12 weeks"},{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/nba/blog/eye-on-basketball/22225604/report-timberwolves-interested-in-oj-mayo-as-free-agent","content":"Report: Wolves eyeing Mavs' Mayo in free agency"}]},"college basketball":{"minicover":{"body":" Eric Musselman is a two-time NBA coach yet he's at a second-tier Pac-12 program as an assistant. Gary Parrish says Musselman wants to see where it leads. Story ","synopsis":"Parrish: Musselman stays ready","photo":{"width":"231","seq_no":"1","content_id":"22224948","href":"$IMAGE_SERVER/u/photos/basketball/college/img22224948.jpg","height":"130"},"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/collegebasketball/blog/eye-on-college-basketball/22224650/eric-musselman-former-nba-head-coach-now-focused-on-college","title":"Musselman's options open"},"headlines":[{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/collegebasketball/blog/eye-on-college-basketball/22224650/eric-musselman-former-nba-head-coach-now-focused-on-college","content":"Parrish: Musselman keeps options open"},{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/collegebasketball/blog/eye-on-college-basketball/22225331/three-long-beach-state-players-likely-gone-from-program","content":"3 Long Beach St. players 'likely' to be dismissed"},{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/collegebasketball/blog/eye-on-college-basketball/22224838/vcu-picks-up-florida-state-transfer-terrance-shannon","content":"VCU picks up FSU injury-plagued transfer Shannon "},{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/collegebasketball/blog/eye-on-college-basketball/22224600/ncaa-rules-changes-will-tweak-blockcharge-call-monitor-reviews","content":"NCAA rules changes will tweak block/charge call"},{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/collegebasketball/blog/eye-on-college-basketball/22224555/rick-pitino-to-be-featured-on-bottle-of-makers-mark","content":"Pitino to be featured on bottle of Maker's Mark"},{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/collegebasketball/blog/eye-on-college-basketball/22217833/davidson-joining-the-atlantic-10-for-201415-season","content":"Davidson joining Atlantic 10 for 2014-15 season"},{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/general/blog/eye-on-sports/22217938/michigans-mandatory-10-year-dissociation-from-chris-webber-ends","content":"Michigan's 10-year dissociation from Weber ends"}]},"fantasy news":{"minicover":{"body":" Scott Kazmir turned back the clock on Thursday. Will it last? Our Fantasy Baseball Today team answers your questions heading into the weekend. LIVE, noon ET ","synopsis":"Scott Kazmir turned back the clock on Thursday. Will it last? Our Fantasy Baseball Today team answers your questions heading into the weekend.","photo":{"width":"320","seq_no":"0","content_id":"22225606","href":"$IMAGE_SERVER/u/photos/fantasy/baseball/img22225606.jpg","height":"180"},"href":"http://fantasynews.cbssports.com/fantasybaseballtoday","title":"LIVE advice, noon ET"},"headlines":[{"href":null,"content":null}]},"autoracing":{"minicover":{"body":" Champ Brad Keselowski won't be in the Sprint Unlimited as the new rule allows only the previous year's polesitters in the old 'Shootout.' Should more drivers be included? Pete Pistone says let them earn their way in. Poll Position ","synopsis":"Poll Position: 'Shootout' rule perfect","photo":{"width":"231","seq_no":"1","content_id":"21516471","href":"$IMAGE_SERVER/u/photos/racing/auto/img21516471.jpg","height":"130"},"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/nascar/story/21516448/poll-position-should-more-drivers-be-in-the-sprint-unlimited","title":"'Shootout' rule right on"},"headlines":[{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/nascar/story/21516448/poll-position-should-more-drivers-be-in-the-sprint-unlimited","content":"Poll Position: Should more drivers be in Sprint Unlimited?"},{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/nascar/story/21533416/waltrip-to-enter-daytona-500-with-swan-racing","content":"Waltrip to enter Daytona 500 with Swan Racing"},{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/nascar/blog/eye-on-nascar/21527202/daytona-testing-set-to-begin","content":"Preseason Thunder test set to roll at Daytona"},{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/nascar/blog/eye-on-nascar/21511518/dover-returns-to-friday-qualifying","content":"Dover to return to Friday qualifying for Sprint Cup"},{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/nascar/blog/eye-on-nascar/21511496/new-name-for-daytona-shootout","content":"Shootout changes its name to Sprint Unlimited"},{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/nascar/blog/eye-on-nascar/21494998/clint-bowyer-and-michael-waltrip-to-compete-in-24-hours-of-daytona","content":"Bowyer, Waltrip to race in 24 Hours of Daytona"},{"href":"http://www.cbssports.com/nascar/blog/eye-on-nascar/21494901/jeff-gordon-set-for-i-get-that-a-lot-on-cbs","content":"Gordon set for special of CBS' 'I Get That a Lot'"}]}}; if (globalNav && navContentJson) {globalNav.init(navContentJson);} CBSi.globalNav = globalNav; });

Source: http://feeds.cbssports.com/click.phdo?i=d9a666d4add38766294c23b3dab5e3e7

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Saturday, May 11, 2013

NASA Curiosity rover team selects second drilling target on NASA

May 10, 2013 ? The team operating NASA's Curiosity Mars rover has selected a second target rock for drilling and sampling. The rover will set course to the drilling location in coming days.

This second drilling target, called "Cumberland," lies about nine feet (2.75 meters) west of the rock where Curiosity's drill first touched Martian stone in February. Curiosity took the first rock sample ever collected on Mars from that rock, called "John Klein." The rover found evidence of an ancient environment favorable for microbial life. Both rocks are flat, with pale veins and a bumpy surface. They are embedded in a layer of rock on the floor of a shallow depression called "Yellowknife Bay."

This second drilling is intended to confirm results from the first drilling, which indicated the chemistry of the first powdered sample from John Klein was much less oxidizing than that of a soil sample the rover scooped up before it began drilling.

"We know there is some cross-contamination from the previous sample each time," said Dawn Sumner, a long-term planner for Curiosity's science team at the University of California at Davis. "For the Cumberland sample, we expect to have most of that cross-contamination come from a similar rock, rather than from very different soil."

Although Cumberland and John Klein are very similar, Cumberland appears to have more of the erosion-resistant granules that cause the surface bumps. The bumps are concretions, or clumps of minerals, which formed when water soaked the rock long ago. Analysis of a sample containing more material from these concretions could provide information about the variability within the rock layer that includes both John Klein and Cumberland.

Mission engineers at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., recently finished upgrading Curiosity's operating software following a four-week break. The rover continued monitoring the Martian atmosphere during the break, but the team did not send any new commands because Mars and the sun were positioned in such a way the sun could have blocked or corrupted commands sent from Earth.

Curiosity is about nine months into a two-year prime mission since landing inside Gale Crater on Mars in August 2012. After the second rock drilling in Yellowknife Bay and a few other investigations nearby, the rover will drive toward the base of Mount Sharp, a 3-mile-tall (5-kilometers) layered mountain inside the crater.

JPL, a division of the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, manages the Mars Science Laboratory Project, of which Curiosity is the centerpiece, for NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington.

For more information about the mission, visit: http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/msl , http://www.nasa.gov/msl and http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/msl . To follow the mission on Facebook and Twitter visit: http://www.facebook.com/marscuriosity and http://www.twitter.com/marscuriosity .

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/bpkXhxBWQX0/130510193306.htm

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Costa Mesa Police Officer and Father killed after Drunk Driving and ...

A Costa Mesa Police Officer was killed after colliding into a freeway pillar while under the influence of alcohol and texting on his cell phone. The 57-year-old police officer, Detective Mike Delgadillo, was driving on the 55 freeway, approaching the overpass on Bristol Street, when he lost control of his vehicle and crashed into a concrete structure.

Delgadillo had been drinking while off-duty at Mi Casa and Skosh Monahan?s in Costa Mesa on the evening of March 6th. His blood-alcohol content was measured at .14, almost twice the legal limit of .08. At the same time, he was driving distracted while using a cell phone. Both of these factors are said to have contributed to the accident. After the crash, he was immediately rushed to Western Medical Center in Santa Ana, and died a few hours later in the emergency room.

?This tragedy is a harsh reminder to us all that being safe is about more than just knowing the law, it?s about knowing?why?the rules are set in place.?

Delgadillo was considered a modest and hardworking member of the force, and was on good terms with everyone in the department. He was a police officer for over 30 years, and was a father of four children.

This tragedy is a harsh reminder to us all that being safe is about more than just knowing the law, it?s about knowing?why?the rules are set in place. No matter how old, wise, experienced you are, or whether the restaurant/bar is close to where you live, drunk driving and/or using a cell phone while driving is dangerous. Being cautious on the road is not an action you take to keep yourself protected?most?of the time, because all it takes is one mistake to lead to devastating loss. As we mourn for the Delgadillo family following this tragedy, other citizens should be reminded to stay responsible when on the road. Your actions not only affect yourself, but also your family, your passengers, and other people on the road.

At Bergener & Associates, we sympathize with those that have been injured or killed in drunk driving or distracted driving accidents. We have personally dealt with hundreds of such cases, and we are keenly aware that as a victim, sometimes you have no idea where to turn. Come to us for answer. You are entitled to collect money for the damages you have incurred, and civil trials exist to provide a financial remedy to persons that have been wronged.

When an accident happens when you least expect it, speak to someone who will protect your interests. Call us today at 1-800-881-2021 or visit our website at?http://www.bergenerlaw.com/.

Source: http://blog.bergenerlaw.com/2013/05/10/costa-mesa-police-officer-and-father-killed-after-drunk-driving-and-texting/

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Costa Mesa Police Officer and Father killed after Drunk Driving and ...

A Costa Mesa Police Officer was killed after colliding into a freeway pillar while under the influence of alcohol and texting on his cell phone. The 57-year-old police officer, Detective Mike Delgadillo, was driving on the 55 freeway, approaching the overpass on Bristol Street, when he lost control of his vehicle and crashed into a concrete structure.

Delgadillo had been drinking while off-duty at Mi Casa and Skosh Monahan?s in Costa Mesa on the evening of March 6th. His blood-alcohol content was measured at .14, almost twice the legal limit of .08. At the same time, he was driving distracted while using a cell phone. Both of these factors are said to have contributed to the accident. After the crash, he was immediately rushed to Western Medical Center in Santa Ana, and died a few hours later in the emergency room.

?This tragedy is a harsh reminder to us all that being safe is about more than just knowing the law, it?s about knowing?why?the rules are set in place.?

Delgadillo was considered a modest and hardworking member of the force, and was on good terms with everyone in the department. He was a police officer for over 30 years, and was a father of four children.

This tragedy is a harsh reminder to us all that being safe is about more than just knowing the law, it?s about knowing?why?the rules are set in place. No matter how old, wise, experienced you are, or whether the restaurant/bar is close to where you live, drunk driving and/or using a cell phone while driving is dangerous. Being cautious on the road is not an action you take to keep yourself protected?most?of the time, because all it takes is one mistake to lead to devastating loss. As we mourn for the Delgadillo family following this tragedy, other citizens should be reminded to stay responsible when on the road. Your actions not only affect yourself, but also your family, your passengers, and other people on the road.

At Bergener & Associates, we sympathize with those that have been injured or killed in drunk driving or distracted driving accidents. We have personally dealt with hundreds of such cases, and we are keenly aware that as a victim, sometimes you have no idea where to turn. Come to us for answer. You are entitled to collect money for the damages you have incurred, and civil trials exist to provide a financial remedy to persons that have been wronged.

When an accident happens when you least expect it, speak to someone who will protect your interests. Call us today at 1-800-881-2021 or visit our website at?http://www.bergenerlaw.com/.

Source: http://blog.bergenerlaw.com/2013/05/10/costa-mesa-police-officer-and-father-killed-after-drunk-driving-and-texting/

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Friday, May 10, 2013

Small helicopter crashes in downtown Honolulu

HONOLULU (AP) ? A small helicopter lost power and came crashing down on a busy downtown Honolulu street Wednesday afternoon, but no one was seriously injured, authorities said.

"It's a pretty miraculous situation that no one was badly hurt by this," said Capt. Terry Seelig, a spokesman for the Honolulu Fire Department. "This is a pretty busy area."

The helicopter was on a photography flight when it lost power, forcing a crash landing on Fort Street, which is home to a large apartment complex and Hawaii Pacific University. The area is usually full of university students and downtown office workers, and has a lot of vehicle and pedestrian traffic.

The chopper ended up along a curb, badly damaging a parked car, Seelig said. A fire station is also on that street, so firefighters who heard the crash ran out to help.

The pilot, Julia Link, told KITV everything seemed normal until all of the sudden it got quiet and the engine quit. Repeatedly training for this type of scenario helped her bring the helicopter to the ground, she said.

"First I thought it was a joke and then, I was like 'Oh my God, this is for real," said the 30-year-old.

She was grateful the problems developed when the aircraft ? which she said was brand new ? was 3,000 feet above ground as that gave her a lot of time to plan their descent.

Link said she's glad everyone walked away alive and no one was seriously hurt.

The 71-year-old male passenger was treated at the scene for minor injuries to his head, Honolulu Emergency Services spokeswoman Shayne Enright said.

The chopper was operated by Mauna Loa Helicopters. Representatives of the company couldn't immediately be reached for comment.

Preliminary information indicates the Robinson R22 Beta had an engine failure, said Allen Kenitzer, spokesman for the Federal Aviation Administration.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/small-helicopter-crashes-downtown-honolulu-020945901.html

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Google Working On High-Resolution Nexus 7 For I/O Reveal, Android Notebooks Later This Year, Analyst Says

google-ioGoogle's I/O developer conference is happening next week in San Francisco, and one of the big questions around what we'll see there includes hardware. Now KGI securities analyst Mingchi Kuo (via 9to5Google), who unlike other analysts actually has a good track record of predicting things accurately, has let slip that one big reveal will be an updated Nexus 7 tablet, with a 1920 x 1200 7-inch display, a 5 megapixel camera and a new sleek, light design for the same $199 price point as the current version.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/IKdwNRTtUSI/

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