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  • Chelsea vs. Paris Saint-Germain: How to watch, stream Club World Cup final

    Chelsea vs. Paris Saint-Germain: How to watch, stream Club World Cup final

    European powerhouses Chelsea (England) and Paris Saint-Germain (France) clash Sunday in the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup final, determining the champion of the prestigious tournament.

    How to watch & stream

    When

    Where

    • MetLife Stadium | East Rutherford, New Jersey

    This summer’s expanded Club World Cup began with 32 teams from six confederations, and two of the sport’s most recognizable sides are left vying for the trophy.

    The also match features the FIFA Club World Cup Halftime Show headlined by musical artists J Balvin, Doja Cat and Tems.

    Club World Cup tickets: Chelsea vs. PSG

    • Group D runner-up: 2W-1L-0D (6 points)
    • Round of 16: 4-1 win vs. Benfica
    • Quarterfinal: 2-1 win vs. Palmeiras
    • Semifinal: 2-0 win vs. Fluminense

    Chelsea rolled to a 2-0 semifinal win over Fluminense, courtesy of a João Pedro brace against his boyhood club.

    The Brazilian striker was recently acquired from fellow English Premier League side Brighton & Hove Albion. He joins an attack led by midfielder Cole Palmer, who posted 29 goal contributions (16g/13a) last season.

    The Blues are chasing their second-ever Club World Cup title, having won the competition in 2021. Should head coach Enzo Maresca’s side prevail, it would mark their second trophy in six weeks after winning the UEFA Conference League in May.

    • Group B winner: 2W-1L-0D (6 points)
    • Round of 16: 4-0 win vs. Inter Miami CF
    • Quarterfinal: 2-0 vs. Bayern Munich
    • Semifinal: 4-0 win vs. Real Madrid

    PSG are one game away from yet another title, having won Ligue 1 and the UEFA Champions League during the 2024-25 campaign. They were also crowned Coupe de France and Trophée des Champions winners.

    Head coach Luis Enrique’s side has outscored their opponents 10-0 in the knockout stages, most recently rolling to a 4-0 semifinal victory over LaLiga giants Real Madrid. Fabián Ruiz netted a brace alongside goals from Ousmane Dembélé and Gonçalo Ramos.

    This is PSG’s first-ever Club World Cup final appearance.


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  • How a British comedy star surprisingly helped shape Torvill and Dean’s iconic Olympic Boléro routine

    How a British comedy star surprisingly helped shape Torvill and Dean’s iconic Olympic Boléro routine

    The origins of Torvill and Dean’s Boléro routine

    A 180-switch in the music’s tempo, led to the choice of Maurice Ravel’s Boléro, for Olympic season.

    The change of pace and tone saw the emergence of a mesmerising routine that featured a Romeo and Juliet-style storyline, complete with billowing floaty costumes worn by the pair, unusual for the time, with the music building to a pulsating crescendo and a tragic end.

    The drama imbued in the routine came at a time when Crawford himself had also changed his typical role, rehearsing the haunting role of the masked Erik in The Phantom of the Opera.

    Playing a disfigured musical genius who haunts the Paris Opera House, obsessed by the young soprano Christine, Crawford won multiple accolades for the heavyweight role, including an Olivier Award and Tony Award in his three-and-a-half-year run.

    Working alongside Torvill and Dean and coach Calloway, perhaps it’s no surprise the quartet came up with the similarly powerful and sensual Boléro routine at this time.

    Crawford helped the pair act out the skate, with Torvill confirming his role in an interview with local Nottingham magazine LeftLion in 2014: “Michael was wonderful to work with and he taught so much about expressing emotions while on the ice and putting on a performance, while moving at speed.”

    “We worked with Michael from 1981,” revealed Dean, “and he helped us to create our 1984 Olympic routines. He was right there with our trainer when we were at the 1984 Winter Olympics in Sarajevo and was a huge support to us.”

    The commentator perfectly captured the drama of the history-making performance at the Zetra Olympic Hall in which 8,500 spectators, with 24 million people watching on British TV, saw the pair win Olympic gold.

    “Jayne Torvill and Christopher Dean from Great Britain have just delivered the most amazing free dance that’s ever been seen.

    “Innovative moves never seen before in ice dance before this couple came along, the first couple to have a sustained theme. They’ve shown us before but now they’ve shown us perfection.”

    The routine brought the house down, with Crawford leading the applause.

    Torvill and Dean would turn professional post-Olympic Games but returned to competition in time to claim Olympic bronze in Lillehammer, Norway a decade later.

    Since then, the pair have continued to skate professionally, with the final curtain call after 50 years of skating seeing them bow out this weekend.

    But as they take to the ice for the final time together, there will no doubt be a nod to that man Crawford, now living in New Zealand, and the role he played from the wings of their icy stage.

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  • India faces global criticism over Kashmir as UN resolutions continue to be ignored

    India faces global criticism over Kashmir as UN resolutions continue to be ignored





    India faces global criticism over Kashmir as UN resolutions continue to be ignored – Daily Times


































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  • Scientists Discover Potential Cure For Male Pattern Baldness – And It’s Been Inside Us All Along

    Scientists Discover Potential Cure For Male Pattern Baldness – And It’s Been Inside Us All Along

    Put down the rosemary oil and pause the red light therapy, research suggests the secret to curing male pattern baldness could lie in a sugar that occurs naturally in our bodies. 

    In a mouse model of testosterone-driven hair loss, the sugar, called 2-deoxy-D-ribose, stimulated hair regrowth just as effectively as existing treatment minoxidil – the active ingredient in Rogaine.

    Though commonly referred to as male pattern baldness, the condition, also known as hereditary-patterned baldness or androgenetic alopecia, affects women too. In fact, up to 40 percent of people experience it, making it the most common cause of hair loss worldwide. Symptoms typically begin in a person’s 20s and 30s, or after menopause. We still don’t know for sure what causes it, but it’s thought that a combination of genetics, hormones, and aging all play a part.

    Treatment options are currently limited, so breakthroughs like this one, even if they’re limited to mice for now, are very promising.

    “Male pattern baldness is such a common condition, affecting men all over the world, but at the moment there are only two FDA licensed drugs to treat it,” Professor Sheila MacNeil, Emeritus Professor of Tissue Engineering at the University of Sheffield, said in a statement. 

    “Our research suggests that the answer to treating hair loss might be as simple as using a naturally occurring deoxy ribose sugar to boost the blood supply to the hair follicles to encourage hair growth.”

    You might remember the name deoxyribose from science class – it’s the sugar that, along with phosphate, makes up the backbone of DNA. As a result, it plays an important role in DNA stability, replication, and repair. 

    The team were initially investigating its capacity to speed up wound healing by promoting blood vessel formation, before noticing that mice treated with the sugar had much faster hair regrowth.

    Pivoting to study its potential as a hair loss treatment, the researchers smeared a small dose of the sugar, in gel form, onto balding male mice. They also tested some mice using minoxidil, and some with both deoxyribose and minoxidil.

    Within weeks, minoxidil and the sugar gel promoted a similar level of hair regrowth (80 to 90 percent), however no significant benefit was observed by applying the two in combination.

    The scientists still don’t understand quite how the deoxyribose gel stimulates longer and thicker hair growth in mice, though they suggest it could have something to do with increased blood supply to the hair follicles. Because of this, it may also work on other causes of hair loss, such as chemotherapy-induced alopecia.

    It remains to be seen if the same effects can be replicated in humans, but if they can, this could prove an inexpensive alternative to the current treatment options for male pattern baldness.

    “This is a badly under-researched area, and hence new approaches are needed,” write the authors.

    “The research we have done is very much early stage, but the results are promising and warrant further investigation,” concluded MacNeil. “This could offer another approach to treating this condition which can affect men’s self-image and confidence.”

    The study is published in Frontiers in Pharmacology.

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  • Radar sees strange “plasma bubbles” over the pyramids of Egypt

    Radar sees strange “plasma bubbles” over the pyramids of Egypt

    A remote radar station on China’s Hainan Island has spotted an ionospheric disturbance hovering above the Pyramids of Giza, nearly 5,000 miles to the west.

    The sighting shows how far equatorial plasma bubble tracking has come, and it hints at new ways to protect the satellites and signals that knit the modern world together.

    Plasma bubbles and Chinese radar


    Lead author Lianhuan Hu of the Institute of Geology and Geophysics at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, heads the team that built the Low Latitude Long Range Ionospheric Radar, or LARID. 

    The phased‑array system designed by the researchers according to the study, fires high‑frequency pulses that bounce off the ionosphere, letting scientists map pockets of rarefied plasma far beyond the local horizon.

    During a geomagnetic storm in November of 2024, LARID recorded a bubble over Egypt while its antennas faced west, confirming a maximum detection range of about 5,965 miles.

    That span is more than three times the reach reported when the radar began test operations in early 2024, a gain achieved through software tweaks and better ionospheric modeling.

    Why plasma bubbles matter

    A plasma bubble is a cavern of depleted electrons that rises after sunset along Earth’s magnetic field lines, sometimes stretching hundreds of miles in diameter.

    Inside its rippling walls, radio scintillation disrupts GPS navigation, satellite TV, stock‑market time stamps, and even airline routes.

    “The walls of these equatorial plasma bubbles are where the communication and navigation signals are corrupted,” noted a NASA factsheet for the CINDI satellite mission.

    Because the bubbles flare up unpredictably, forecasters need real-time views that cover vast tropical oceans where ground sensors are scarce.

    How the radar reaches so far

    LARID transmits at 20 MHz, a sweet spot where the ionosphere refracts the beam back toward Earth instead of letting it escape to space.

    Each bounce, called a “hop,” extends the footprint; after one‑and‑a‑half hops, echoes can return from Africa or the central Pacific.

    For comparison, the high‑latitude SuperDARN radars, workhorses of auroral science, cover about 2,240 miles apiece, with a 2,237‑mile slant‑range limit.

    Hu’s radar system has 40 antennas, aimed both east and west, that can quickly shift their direction to scan a wide area of the sky in under a minute.

    LARID radar echoes

    The radar doesn’t observe plasma bubbles directly. Instead, it detects irregular echoes created by ionospheric scintillation, where signals scatter off unstable blobs of plasma at the edges of a bubble.

    To isolate these echoes from clutter or reflections off terrain, researchers look at Doppler shifts, signal width, and signal-to-noise ratios.

    The field-of-view of LARID during the extremely long-range experiment for EPB observation. The thick red and blue lines show the beams of LARID east and west radars, respectively. The green circles and black dots represent the locations of ionosondes and GNSS receivers used for validating the LARID observations, respectively. The black thick and dotted lines represent the dip equator and dip latitude of ±20°N, respectively. Credit: CAS
    The field-of-view of LARID during the extremely long-range experiment for EPB observation. The thick red and blue lines show the beams of LARID east and west radars, respectively. The green circles and black dots represent the locations of ionosondes and GNSS receivers used for validating the LARID observations, respectively. The black thick and dotted lines represent the dip equator and dip latitude of ±20°N, respectively. Click image to enlarge. Credit: CAS

    Fast‑moving echoes with broad spectral width and strong return strength signal active ionospheric disturbances.

    Plasma bubbles and space weather

    The Egyptian bubble appeared soon after the interplanetary magnetic field flipped southward, sparking a Kp 7 geomagnetic storm.

    That flip boosted eastward electric fields at dusk, lofting the equatorial F‑layer and priming conditions for the Rayleigh-Taylor instability that seeds bubbles.

    Ground GPS receivers in Africa registered sharp jumps in total electron content rate, an independent confirmation that the patch over Giza was real, not a radar artifact.

    In the same storm, LARID saw bubbles over the Pacific at sunset and again near Southeast Asia just before dawn, proving that one instrument can chase the nightly “space weather” tide across twelve time zones.

    Toward a global watch

    “The results provide meaningful insight for building a low latitude over‑the‑horizon radar network in future,” Hu and colleagues wrote, arguing that three or four such stations could survey the whole equatorial belt in real time.

    Placing sister arrays in Brazil, Indonesia, and West Africa would close today’s oceanic gaps and let operators reroute critical links before outages strike.

    Beyond civilian uses, militaries eye the data to shield over‑the‑horizon radars, HF communications, and encrypted satellite relays from sudden fades.

    Agencies that manage GNSS augmentation systems could feed bubble alerts into integrity monitors, trimming false alarms and keeping precision farming tractors or aircraft autoland systems online.

    What comes next

    Hu’s group is already experimenting with multi‑frequency sweeps that pinpoint bubble altitude, a metric vital for assimilating observations into physics‑based forecast models.

    They are also sharing echo maps with the international SuperDARN community to cross‑check mid‑latitude disturbances that spill out of the tropics.

    If funding aligns, a portable mini‑LARID may debut on Reunion Island in the Indian Ocean, extending coverage into a longitude sector notorious for sat‑nav dropouts during solar maximum.

    A successful trial there would cement the case for the global quartet and help stitch ionospheric weather into mainstream meteorology.

    The study is published in Geophysical Research Letters.

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  • Lean Diabetes: A Diagnosis of Exclusion

    Lean Diabetes: A Diagnosis of Exclusion

    CHICAGO – “Lean type 2 diabetes (T2D)” is a diagnosis of exclusion but is also a true entity affecting roughly 10%-20% of people with T2D.

    That was the message from Kristina Utzschneider, MD, associate professor of medicine at the University of Washington, Seattle, and director of the Diabetes Care Program at the Veterans Affairs Puget Sound, at the American Diabetes Association (ADA) 85th Scientific Sessions in a symposium about “nuanced” treatment of T2D.

    “Type 2 diabetes is a condition characterized by hyperglycemia due to insufficient insulin secretion typically occurring in the context of insulin resistance, after ruling out other potential causes of diabetes. I think that last phrase is key,” she said. “The first thing is to consider the differential diagnosis, especially if you’re seeing a lean patient, which is a little atypical. Could diabetes be due to something else?”

    Two of the most common alternative diagnoses are autoimmune (type 1 diabetes [T1D]) diabetes or a monogenic form called MODY. The former can be assessed by measuring autoantibodies (GAD, IA-2, or ZnT8), while the latter is characterized by onset younger than 35 years, a strong family history of diabetes, and negative autoantibodies. Other less common alternatives include the result of pancreatic damage, cystic fibrosis-related mitochondrial diabetes, Wolfram syndrome, or lipodystrophy, Utzschneider said.

    “In my clinical practice, with most of the lean patients who have come to me because they’re not doing well, I test them, and they’re type 1,” she told Medscape Medical News.

    However, she added, a sizable minority of people who actually do have T2D are lean, pointing to the heterogeneity of the condition. “Lean type 2 diabetes is not necessarily rare. Beta cell dysfunction and insulin resistance are key factors underlying T2D, with more of a beta cell insulin secretory defect in the lean T2D group, but some patients may still have significant insulin resistance that could be targeted.”

    Very little research has focused on that group, she noted. “It’s tough finding data, as most of the population with type 2 is not lean. In most of the big studies, especially about treatment, the average BMI is 33.”

    Also in the mix are people of Southeast Asian ethnicity, who typically develop T2D at a lower average BMI than people of other ethnicities.

    Session moderator Liana K. Billings, MD, director of the Diabetes and Obesity Research Program and the Personalized Medicine in Diabetes Program at NorthShore University HealthSystem, Skokie, Illinois, endorsed the recommendation that for any lean person diagnosed with diabetes, the first step is to check whether they have type 1 or a monogenic type.

    “Those tests are becoming more and more available, like the type 1 polygenic risk scores that can be used in helping to understand the genetic risk someone has for type 1 versus type 2 diabetes. It’s definitely a growing field where we’re trying to make sure that people with lean diabetes get the right diagnosis right out of the gate,” Billings said.

    “We’re trying to understand how people with lean type 2 may respond differently to medications, or what their prognosis is, and what factors may increase a person’s risk of having diabetes at a lean BMI vs a higher BMI,” she added.

    Lean and Insulin-Resistant

    According to the World Health Organization, classifications of “lean,” “overweight,” and “obesity” differ in people of Asian background from those of other ethnicities, with cutoffs of < 23, 23-27.4, and ≥ 27.5, respectively, vs < 25, 25-29.9, and ≥ 30 in people of other ethnicities.

    “Lean does not necessarily mean someone is insulin sensitive, although typically as BMI increases, insulin sensitivity decreases. A lean individual could potentially be somewhat insulin resistant. And vice versa, somebody who is obese is not necessarily insulin-resistant,” Utzschneider noted.

    According to data from the US CDC for 2021, approximately 10.2% of people with diagnosed diabetes have a BMI < 25, although that includes people with T1D. However, in contrast, Korean data for 2019-2020 show the proportion of people with diabetes who have a BMI of 18.5-22.9 is about 23.3%. “Think about this when you’re seeing patients in your clinic. If they have Asian ancestry, particularly South Asian ancestry, your threshold for considering [type 2 diabetes] is going to be higher.”

    Different Treatment by BMI? More Research Needed

    Very little data are available regarding the effects of T2D treatment in lean people specifically. However, one study evaluated 20 adults with T2D for < 6 years and BMI < 29 not on insulin who were put on a very low-calorie diet aiming for a 5% weight loss, then returned to a regular diet. Their BMIs and visceral and liver fat all declined. Glycemic control and fasting glucose declined as well, and 70% achieved T2D remission. Insulin sensitivity doubled, and beta cell function improved from baseline but did not reach the level of control. “They’re managing the diabetes with the weight loss and lifestyle, but the beta cell defect is still there,” Utzschneider said.

    As for medications, most studies haven’t shown a huge effect of BMI on A1c-lowering effectiveness, with a few exceptions. In the ADOPT study, rosiglitazone was more effective at lowering A1c than metformin among those with obesity. And in a precision medicine modeling study, DPP-4 inhibitors were less effective in people with BMI ≥ 30 or who were very insulin-resistant.

    In general, Utzschneider said, metformin is still the first-line option, and other glucose-lowering medications are worth trying, but those with lean T2D may require insulin sooner than those with higher BMIs. This can be assessed by measuring C-peptide, which reflects endogenous insulin secretion. It’s important to measure both glucose and C-peptide at the same time because if glucose is low, “the body will shut off insulin secretion, and you won’t be able to interpret the results,” she noted.

    There are no clinical practice guidelines for checking C-peptide in T2D, and no set cutoffs. Utzschneider considers a value of < 0.6 ng/mL to be low, likely requiring insulin, and a value of > 2.7 ng/mL to be high, indicating that the individual is still making insulin but is likely very insulin-resistant, so the treatment should focus on that.

    Caveats about C-peptide testing include the fact that the C-peptide assay isn’t standardized so there’s variability from lab to lab, it can be affected by renal clearance and certain medications, and the measure won’t be accurate in the setting of glucotoxicity. “This is an area we need more research and better guidelines on,” she said.

    Ongoing Research Is Digging Into T2D Heterogeneity

    Better subclassification of T2D and predictive models are also needed. In one recently published study, researchers from Exeter University, Exeter, England, devised a model for A1c lowering at 1 year, based on nine readily available clinical variables including baseline BMI to recommend the optimal drug class for that patient. “This is really exciting work,” said Utzschneider, who added that her team is collaborating with the Exeter group on further analyses.

    She is also participating in a research consortium funded by the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases called DEFINE-T2D with the goal of improving the classification of T2D by integrating multiple data types from large existing datasets and ultimately leading to improved treatment outcomes.

    Utzschneider reported receiving research funding from Eli Lilly and Company, Avid, and Amgen and consulting fees from Nevro Corp. Billings reported receiving research support or consultant fees or served on advisory panels for Bayer, Dexcom, Endogenex, Eli Lilly and Company, Novo Nordisk, Sanofi, Pfizer, and Xeris.

    Miriam E. Tucker is a freelance journalist based in the Washington, DC, area. She is a regular contributor to Medscape Medical News, with other work appearing in the Washington Post, NPR’s Shots blog, and Diatribe. She is on X @MiriamETucker and BlueSky @miriametucker.bsky.social.

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  • NDMA issues alert of severe rainfall, potential flooding across country till Thursday – RADIO PAKISTAN

    1. NDMA issues alert of severe rainfall, potential flooding across country till Thursday  RADIO PAKISTAN
    2. Heavy monsoon :More rains predicted in upper parts  Ptv.com.pk
    3. 11 killed as rains continue to batter Punjab, Balochistan  Dawn
    4. Flood fears mount as rains pound capital  The Express Tribune
    5. Three dead, 22 injured as heavy rains batter parts of Punjab  Dunya News

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  • Spotify Toasts Oasis’s Return With Exclusive Ways for Fans to Get Closer to the Music That Defined a Generation — Spotify

    Spotify Toasts Oasis’s Return With Exclusive Ways for Fans to Get Closer to the Music That Defined a Generation — Spotify

    This experience is available to millions of top Oasis listeners on Spotify in the U.K. and Ireland, and will come to the U.S., Mexico, Brazil, Japan, South Korea, and Australia to coincide with those legs of the tour. It’s our way of saying cheers to those superfans who’ve kept the flame alive—and to give them a new way to share their love of the band ahead of its historic return to the stage.

    Want more? Experience Oasis in all its glory by listening to This Is Oasis on Spotify. The Oasis Live ’25 tour stops in major cities worldwide this summer and autumn, and wraps November 25 in São Paulo, Brazil.

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  • New Research in JNCCN Offers Reassurance About Localized Prostate Cancer Prognosis

    New Research in JNCCN Offers Reassurance About Localized Prostate Cancer Prognosis

    A study out of Sweden finds that people diagnosed with localized prostate cancer are unlikely to die from the cancer if they are treated according to NCCN Guidelines.

    PLYMOUTH MEETING, Pa., July 10, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — New research in the July 2025 issue of JNCCN—Journal of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network finds that for people diagnosed with nonmetastatic low-risk prostate cancer later in life, and treated according to NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology (NCCN Guidelines®), 90% were likely to survive their cancer for their remaining life-expectancy. Of those with nonmetastatic higher-risk cancer and a longer life expectancy, that likelihood was still greater than 65%.

    The researchers studied 62,839 people diagnosed with non-metastatic prostate cancer in Sweden between the years 2000-2020. All were placed within a defined risk category, had a life expectancy of more than three years, and were treated according to evidence-based, expert consensus-driven recommendations from the NCCN Guidelines® for Prostate Cancer. Those with low- and intermediate-risk cancer were six times more likely to die of other causes than prostate cancer. Those with high-risk cancer were still twice as likely to die of other causes.

    “Our data support adherence to guideline recommendations for treatment of prostate cancer,” said lead researcher Pietro Scilipoti, MD, of Uppsala University in Sweden and IRCCS San Raffaele Hospital in Italy. “If guideline-recommended treatment is used, most people with prostate cancer will live for many years after diagnosis. That includes active surveillance as an excellent treatment strategy for appropriately selected people.”

    The Gleason score/Grade Group, clinical TNM stage, treatment data, and other information for the study came from the National Prostate Cancer Register (NPCR) of Sweden. Life expectancy at the time of diagnosis was calculated based on age and comorbidity. Date and cause of death were taken from the Cause of Death Register.

    “This study offers a big sigh of relief for many men facing a prostate cancer diagnosis,” commented Ahmad Shabsigh, MD, The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center – James Cancer Hospital and Solove Research Institute, Member of the NCCN Guidelines Panel for Prostate Cancer, who was not involved with this research. “It reveals that with NCCN Guidelines-recommended treatment, you’re significantly more likely to die from something else—up to six times more likely, in fact—even if your cancer is high-risk. This holds true even when looking at data from a different healthcare system, like Sweden’s. What’s truly striking is that for patients with low-risk prostate cancer, many of whom were on active surveillance, the 30-year mortality risk from the cancer itself was only about 11%. It really underscores the power of evidence-based treatment plans and the importance of focusing on a person’s overall health, not just their cancer.”

    To read the entire study, “Long-Term Outcomes After Guideline-Recommended Treatment of Men With Prostate Cancer,” visit JNCCN.org.

    The NCCN Guidelines for Prostate Cancer are now available in an interactive digital delivery format with advanced search capabilities. Learn more about the new NCCN Guidelines Navigator™ at NCCN.org/navigator.

    For people facing prostate cancer and their loved ones, NCCN offers two NCCN Guidelines for Patients® focused on this disease type, separated into Early and Advanced Stage. An independent study found them to be among the most trustworthy online resources for patients and caregivers, worldwide. They are available for free at NCCN.org/patientguidelines thanks to funding from the NCCN Foundation®.

    About JNCCN—Journal of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network
    More than 25,000 oncologists and other cancer care professionals across the United States read JNCCN—Journal of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network. This peer-reviewed, indexed medical journal provides the latest information about innovation in translational medicine, and scientific studies related to oncology health services research, including quality care and value, bioethics, comparative and cost effectiveness, public policy, and interventional research on supportive care and survivorship. JNCCN features updates on the NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology (NCCN Guidelines®), review articles elaborating on guidelines recommendations, health services research, and case reports highlighting molecular insights in patient care. JNCCN is published by Harborside/BroadcastMed. Visit JNCCN.org. To inquire if you are eligible for a FREE subscription to JNCCN, visit NCCN.org/jnccn/subscribe. Follow JNCCN at x.com/JNCCN.

    About the National Comprehensive Cancer Network
    The National Comprehensive Cancer Network® (NCCN®) is marking 30 years as a not-for-profit alliance of leading cancer centers devoted to patient care, research, and education. NCCN is dedicated to defining and advancing quality, effective, equitable, and accessible cancer care and prevention so all people can live better lives. The NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology (NCCN Guidelines®) provide transparent, evidence-based, expert consensus-driven recommendations for cancer treatment, prevention, and supportive services; they are the recognized standard for clinical direction and policy in cancer management and the most thorough and frequently-updated clinical practice guidelines available in any area of medicine. The NCCN Guidelines for Patients® provide expert cancer treatment information to inform and empower patients and caregivers, through support from the NCCN Foundation®. NCCN also advances continuing education, global initiatives, policy, and research collaboration and publication in oncology. Visit NCCN.org for more information.

    Media Contact:
    Rachel Darwin
    267-622-6624
    [email protected]

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  • UAE issues new exchange business regulations in fintech boost

    UAE issues new exchange business regulations in fintech boost

    Marie Chowdhry and Jessica White of Pinsent Masons were commenting as the country’s Central Bank introduces a series of new exchange business regulations, including the provision of currency exchange and money transfer services, domestic and cross-border remittances, salary processing and digital remittance services.

    Under the new rules, four licence categories have been introduced, including a new digital remittance licence that permits up to 100% foreign ownership. Paid-up capital requirements will also be increased up to AED 25 million (approx. US$6.8m).

    The Central Bank will also be given enhanced supervisory and inspection powers to decide whether a licence should be granted, to conduct ongoing supervision of licensed entities and individuals and, where necessary, impose sanctions for non-compliance.

    In line with international standards, the framework will also introduce new rules on governance, internal controls and risk management practices, as well as a stronger emphasis on anti-money laundering (AML) and countering the financing of terrorism (CFT) obligations.

    The regulations are also expected to boost transparency, reduce financial crime and lead to effective consumer protection policies and procedures.

    The rules will replace the Central Bank’s previous exchange business regulations that have been in place since 2014.

    Chowdhry said the new regulations would provide further reassurance of the benefits the country’s business climate could offer global fintech companies. “The introduction of a dedicated digital remittance licence, paired with 100% foreign ownership eligibility and an AED25 million capital requirement, signals a bold move by the UAE to attract serious, globally minded fintechs,” she said. “This opens the door for new entrants to establish a fully digital presence in a highly regulated and innovation friendly environment.”

    Compliance officers and in-house advisers will be required to align their operations to meet the new regulatory standards. This will involve assessing their eligibility for a licence under the new regulations, reviewing and updating compliance frameworks to ensure policies align with the requirements; educating their in-house teams on the new regulations, particularly in relation to capital adequacy, compliance, reporting and governance; and seeking expert guidance to interpret and implement the regulations effectively.

    The new regulations will also be particularly relevant to exchange houses and remittance providers operating in the UAE, said White. “For existing exchange houses, the new regulations require them to adapt to invest in stronger compliance infrastructure that takes into account the Central Bank’s enhanced supervisory powers, stricter AML/CFT obligations and new governance expectations.”

    These developments follow recent moves by the UAE to update its regulatory framework for digital assets and virtual assets activity rulebooks to enhance the country’s position as an attractive destination for fintech growth.

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