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Alastair Campbell Gets Majority Vote! Mind Champion Of The Year 2009
Alastair Campbell has won Mind"s Champion of the Year Award for his significant contribution to raising awareness of mental health. He beat fellow nominee and chat show host Paul O"Grady, among other mental health campaigners, to the prestigious award announced yesterday evening.
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MUHC Researcher Awarded $500,000 To Study Pathogenesis Of Infectious Disease
The Burroughs Wellcome Fund (BWF) has announced the recipients of the 2009 Investigators in the Pathogenesis of Infectious Disease Award. MUHC researcher Dr. Maya Saleh was one of six recipients granted $500,000 over a 6-year period for her research proposal, "Regulation and molecular mechanisms of NLR-mediated innate immunity."
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Genetic Variation Associated With Survival Advantage In African Americans With HIV
From the start of the HIV epidemic, it appeared that some of the people who were infected with the virus were able to ward off the fatal effects of the disease longer than others. Recent studies have begun to unravel the cause of this phenomenon, and new research suggests that African Americans with the disease have a unique survival advantage if they have both a low white blood cell count (known as leukopenia) and a genetic variation that is found mainly in persons of African ancestry. This study was prepublished online on July 20, 2009, in Blood, the official journal of the American Society of Hematology.
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UNICEF: J8 Meets G8

Fourteen young people from countries attending the G8 called on their respective leaders to get tough with countries who don"t meet climate change targets and teachers whose standards slip. At the meeting, the J8 representatives presented these recommendations and others for the 14 leaders attending the G8. The young people were chosen by their peers to represent the UNICEF Junior 8 (J8). One young person represented each of the G8 countries and non-G8 countries invited to L"Aquila - Brazil, China, Egypt, India, Mexico and South Africa. In all there were 54 young delegates aged 14 to 17. The young people told the leaders they want high quality post- primary education for all children and a safe trip to school. "If I could ask the world"s leaders to prioritize one thing to help children, it would be education," said Sanjukta Pangi, 16. "I had to struggle to go to school. If I hadn"t convinced my father to let me continue going to school I would not be at the J8." Leaders were told to invest more in renewable energy and collectively sign a meaningful Copenhagen agreement that emphasizes participation of young people in climate change action. To help address the issue of development in Africa, they proposed a specific "End Poverty Bond" to underwrite new businesses. The young people expressed great concern about the impact of the financial crisis on their lives. "We did not create this crisis, but it will affect us the most and we resent it. We hope the leaders will listen to what we said and act now," said Emmanuella Louidsor, 17. To read more about J8 2009 globally, and read this year"s and previous declarations, please visit: http://www.j8summit.com/. The Junior 8 Summit aims to make sure the G8 and non-G8 leaders listen to young people"s voices when they make decisions that affect them. The 2009 session has been organized thanks to the collaboration between UNICEF and the Office of the Prime Minister, the Office of the Sherpa, the Department of Civil Protection, the Ministry of the Interior and the Departments of the Firefighters, Public Emergencies, Civil Defence and the Minister of Youth, the Ministry of Education and the City of Rome. The Italian Firefighters have been UNICEF Goodwill Ambassadors for over 20 years and will escort the young people during the J8 summit. UNICEF


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