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  • Sean M. Healey & AMG Center for ALS Awards 2025 Gupta Family Endowed Prize for Innovation in ALS Care to the ALS Residence Initiative

    Sean M. Healey & AMG Center for ALS Awards 2025 Gupta Family Endowed Prize for Innovation in ALS Care to the ALS Residence Initiative

    The Sean M. Healey & AMG Center for ALS is pleased to announce that the ALS Residence Initiative (ALSRI) was awarded the 2025 Gupta Family Endowed Prize for Innovation in ALS Care. Merit Cudkowicz, MD, MSC, Director of the Healey & AMG Center for ALS, presented the prize to Steve Saling, CEO of ALSRI, and Barry Berman, CEO of Chelsea Jewish Lifecare, at the 24th Annual NEALS Consortium Meeting.

    The Gupta Family Endowed Prize is a global prize awarded to a nominated team who has developed promising new approaches to improving care for people with ALS. The goal of this prize is to encourage idea sharing, innovation, and forward thinking on scalable ongoing projects that have directly improved ALS patient care.

    The selection committee awarded the 2025 Gupta Family Endowed Prize to the ALSRI because of their work in creating the first fully accessible, tech-enabled ALS residence model. This innovation demonstrates ALSRI’s commitment to initiating ground-breaking new approaches that lead to exceptional care for individuals living with ALS.

    The 2025 Gupta Prize is announced

    In partnership with Chelsea Jewish Lifecare, ALSRI designed and built the award-winning Leonard Florence Center for Living (LFCL), containing the Steve Saling ALS Residence. Saling envisioned building a place where people with ALS could live safely with autonomy and real quality of life. The residence features private suites, a deli, a café, landscaped outdoor areas, and most critically, cutting-edge environmental control systems. Using eye-tracking and other assistive technology, residents can independently open doors, control lighting, communicate, and even drive their wheelchairs – all without needing physical movement. Steve’s motto is, “Until medicine proves otherwise, technology IS the cure,” and the ALSRI has transformed lives with technology.

    “While we honor and respect the incredible research to treat and cure ALS being done across the country and the world, the ALS Residences at the Leonard Florence Center for Living have set out to demonstrate that until medicine proves otherwise, technology and compassionate skilled care are the cure,” says Steve. “Thank you to the Gupta family, the Sean M. Healey & AMG Center for ALS at Mass General, and the Northeast ALS Consortium for recognizing our efforts.”

    “The ALSRI has already made a significant impact on the ALS community and will continue to do so by expanding their model to other cities across the country,” says Dr. Cudkowicz. “We are proud to award the ALSRI with this prize and look forward to seeing them continue to pioneer new approaches. I am grateful to the Gupta family for supporting this work.”

    To learn more about the Gupta Family Prize and previous winners, please visit this page. For more information about the Sean M. Healey and AMG Center for ALS, please visit our website.

    Background on ALS

    Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is the most prevalent adult-onset progressive motor neuron disease, affecting approximately 30,000 people in the U.S. and an estimated 500,000 people worldwide. ALS causes the progressive degeneration of motor neurons, resulting in muscle weakness and atrophy. There is an urgent need to understand the biology of ALS and to develop effective therapies.

    About the Sean M. Healey & AMG Center for ALS at Mass General

    At the Sean M. Healey & AMG Center for ALS at Mass General, we are committed to bringing together a global network of scientists, physicians, nurses, foundations, federal agencies, and people living with ALS, their loved ones, and caregivers to accelerate the pace of ALS therapy discovery and development.

    Launched in November 2018, the Healey & AMG Center, under the leadership of Merit Cudkowicz, MD and a Science Advisory Council of international experts, is reimagining how to develop and test the most promising therapies to treat the disease, identify cures and ultimately prevent it.

    With many clinical trials and lab-based research studies in progress right now, we are ushering in a new phase of ALS treatment and care. Together, we will find the cures.

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  • Why has Alex Dunne left McLaren – and what next for the Irishman eyeing an F1 seat?

    Why has Alex Dunne left McLaren – and what next for the Irishman eyeing an F1 seat?

    Since Go-karting, 19-year-old Alex Dunne has finished every racing season he’s contested with no certainty there would ever be another.

    It’s a pressure felt by many in motorsport at this time of year, when the remaining races dwindle and…

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  • NEW THREE-PART SERIES ‘BIGFOOT TOOK HER’ REINVESTIGATES ONE OF HISTORY’S STRANGEST MISSING PERSONS CASES

    NEW THREE-PART SERIES ‘BIGFOOT TOOK HER’ REINVESTIGATES ONE OF HISTORY’S STRANGEST MISSING PERSONS CASES

    When teenager Theresa Bier mysteriously vanished in California’s Sierra National Forest in 1987, a surprising suspect emerged: Bigfoot. Now, investigator Jessica Chobot and 29-year LAPD veteran Robert Collier reopen one of the most bizarre…

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  • Did Harry Styles’ Shows Prep Him for the Berlin Marathon?

    Did Harry Styles’ Shows Prep Him for the Berlin Marathon?

    Harry Styles is known for his high-energy performances, from his early days with One Direction to his most recent nearly two-year-long Love On tour.

    But recently, the 31-year-old singer made headlines for another reason: He finished the…

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  • The Delta Aurigid meteor shower 2025 peaks tonight in the light of a waning gibbous moon

    The Delta Aurigid meteor shower 2025 peaks tonight in the light of a waning gibbous moon

    The little-known Delta Aurigid meteor shower peaks tonight, but you’ll need luck on your side if you’re to catch one of these swift shooting stars in mid-October’s moon-drenched skies!

    Delta Aurigid meteors appear each year as Earth careens…

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  • Vitreous hemorrhage after micropulse transscleral cyclophotocoagulatio

    Vitreous hemorrhage after micropulse transscleral cyclophotocoagulatio

    Introduction

    Traditional transscleral diode cyclophotocoagulation (TSCPC), or continuous wave transscleral diode cyclophotocoagulation (CW-TSCPC), has been widely utilized since its production during the end of the past century. In this…

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  • CDC Expands Access to COVID Shots for Pregnant Women – MedPage Today

    1. CDC Expands Access to COVID Shots for Pregnant Women  MedPage Today
    2. CDC signs off on fall Covid shots. It may not be easy to get one, depending on where you live.  NBC News
    3. ACIP revises vaccine recommendations  wtwco.com
    4. What Parents Should Know…

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  • Ubisoft Reportedly Canceled ‘Assassin’s Creed’ Ex-Slave Game, Argued ‘Country Too Unstable’

    Ubisoft Reportedly Canceled ‘Assassin’s Creed’ Ex-Slave Game, Argued ‘Country Too Unstable’

    A would-be Assassin’s Creed game set in the Reconstruction era and focused on a former slave was reportedly called off in 2024 after Ubisoft deemed it “too political in a country too unstable,” per a source quoted in a new piece from Kotaku

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  • Nacelle Opens Up Star Trek Wave Two Action Figure Line Pre-Sale

    Nacelle Opens Up Star Trek Wave Two Action Figure Line Pre-Sale

    “This is one of the biggest weeks we’ve had since launching the line,” said Nacelle CEO Brian Volk-Weiss. “Between the pre-sale, long-awaited updates, and new reveals — we wanted to give collectors everything they’ve been waiting for, and…

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  • Exclusive: Bill Gates, PAHO consider ways to bring weight-loss drugs to lower-income countries 

    Exclusive: Bill Gates, PAHO consider ways to bring weight-loss drugs to lower-income countries 

    • Gates Foundation and PAHO aim to make weight-loss drugs affordable
    • Obesity still not a priority for Gates Foundation, focus remains on major killers
    • PAHO’s pooled procurement scheme could lower weight-loss drug prices for member states

    LONDON, Oct 10 (Reuters) – The Gates Foundation and the Pan American Health Organization are both working on ways to make weight-loss drugs like Novo Nordisk’s Wegovy and Eli Lilly’s Mounjaro more accessible in lower-income countries, the global health groups told Reuters.

    In separate interviews, Microsoft founder Bill Gates and PAHO director Dr Jarbas Barbosa said for the first time that their organizations were each seeking strategies to remedy the unequal availability of the highly effective but expensive treatments.

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    About 70% of the roughly one billion people with obesity live in low and middle-income countries which may struggle to meet the costs of tackling the epidemic and associated health problems like diabetes and heart disease.

    In response to a question about the treatments, Gates said his Foundation would take any drug that was effective in high-income countries “and figure out how to make it super, super cheap so that it can get to everyone in the world”.

    For example, it is currently working with Indian drug manufacturer Hetero to help bring cheaper copies of a new HIV prevention drug to the market in lower-income countries for $40 a year.

    LOW-COST COPIES

    From next year, the active ingredient in Novo Nordisk’s blockbuster Wegovy drug, semaglutide, comes off patent in countries including China and India. Generic manufacturers are already working on low-cost copies.

    The brand-name weight-loss drugs are primarily sold in wealthier countries, where prescriptions cost hundreds of dollars per month.

    The Gates Foundation could also potentially support clinical trials to test how these medicines affect different populations and provide the data needed to broaden access, Gates said.

    Any entry into obesity would represent a new arena for the Gates Foundation, which remains focused on fighting the deadliest diseases in low-income countries, like malaria, opens new tab.

    Obesity’s role in chronic illness has created a new urgency around addressing rising global rates, although it is still not the biggest problem facing most of the countries where the Foundation operates, Gates said.

    The World Health Organization estimates that the economic costs of overweight and obesity will reach $3 trillion by 2030 if nothing is done to contain it.

    WHO recommended in draft guidelines this year using weight-loss drugs as an obesity treatment for adults, but criticized their manufacturers over cost and lack of availability.

    Its Americas arm, PAHO, manages a fund that helps push down medicine prices by guaranteeing bulk orders on behalf of its 35 member states.

    Using the fund, which is financed by the member states, is an option for weight-loss drugs, Barbosa told Reuters. He said it could also help manufacturers clear regulatory requirements rather than applying in each country for approval.

    “We are starting the conversation,” he said, adding that PAHO is developing recommendations for how best to use the drugs and plans to speak to Novo, Lilly and generic drugmakers within the next couple of weeks.

    Eli Lilly (LLY.N), opens new tab declined to comment. Novo Nordisk (NOVOb.CO), opens new tab said in a statement that it recognised the “unmet need” for its treatments.

    “We are deeply committed to serving patients around the world,” the Danish company said.

    Editing by Michele Gershberg and Catherine Evans

    Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles., opens new tab

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