Tuesday, February 13, 2018

Youtube daily report Feb 13 2018

Baby shark, doo doo, doo doo doo doo

Baby shark, doo doo, doo doo doo doo

Baby shark, doo doo, doo doo doo doo

Baby shark

Mama Shark, doo doo, doo doo doo doo

Mama Shark, doo doo, doo doo doo doo

Mama Shark

Daddy Shark, doo doo, doo doo doo doo

Daddy Shark, doo doo, doo doo doo doo

Daddy Shark, doo doo, doo doo doo doo

Daddy Shark

Grandma Shark, doo doo, doo doo doo doo

Grandma Shark, doo doo, doo doo doo doo

Grandma Shark, doo doo, doo doo doo doo

Grandma Shark

Grandpa Shark, doo doo, doo doo doo doo

Grandpa Shark, doo doo, doo doo doo doo

Grandpa Shark, doo doo, doo doo doo doo

Grandpa Shark

Let's go hunt, doo doo, doo doo doo doo

Let's go hunt, doo doo, doo doo doo doo

Let's go hunt, doo doo, doo doo doo doo

Let's go hunt,

Run away doo doo, doo doo doo doo

Run away doo doo, doo doo doo doo

Run away doo doo, doo doo doo doo

Run away

Safe at last doo doo, doo doo doo doo

Safe at last doo doo, doo doo doo doo

Safe at last doo doo, doo doo doo doo

Safet at last

It's the end doo doo, doo doo doo doo

It's the end doo doo, doo doo doo doo

It's the end doo doo, doo doo doo doo

It's the end

For more infomation >> Baby Shark Dance | หนูยิ้มหนูแย้มเต้นเบบี้ชาร์ค | PINKFONG Songs for Children - Duration: 1:47.

-------------------------------------------

Mommore Large Nylon Diaper Bag - Duration: 5:14.

For more infomation >> Mommore Large Nylon Diaper Bag - Duration: 5:14.

-------------------------------------------

Joylific Monthly Milestone Blanket - Review - Duration: 3:11.

For more infomation >> Joylific Monthly Milestone Blanket - Review - Duration: 3:11.

-------------------------------------------

Mercedes-Benz S-Klasse S 500 4MATIC L AMG Line | B & O Sound | Memory | COMAND - Duration: 0:43.

For more infomation >> Mercedes-Benz S-Klasse S 500 4MATIC L AMG Line | B & O Sound | Memory | COMAND - Duration: 0:43.

-------------------------------------------

Mercedes-Benz S-Klasse S 500 Cabriolet AMG Line | Designo - Duration: 1:02.

For more infomation >> Mercedes-Benz S-Klasse S 500 Cabriolet AMG Line | Designo - Duration: 1:02.

-------------------------------------------

Suzuki S-Cross 1.6 High Executive AllGrip | Automaat | Pano Dak | Navigatie | rijklaarprijs | - Duration: 1:02.

For more infomation >> Suzuki S-Cross 1.6 High Executive AllGrip | Automaat | Pano Dak | Navigatie | rijklaarprijs | - Duration: 1:02.

-------------------------------------------

Mercedes-Benz S-Klasse S500 automaat,bj.93,grijs,leder,64301 km.nieuwstaat,nieuwe APK,jongtimer,yong - Duration: 1:00.

For more infomation >> Mercedes-Benz S-Klasse S500 automaat,bj.93,grijs,leder,64301 km.nieuwstaat,nieuwe APK,jongtimer,yong - Duration: 1:00.

-------------------------------------------

Stars Who Are Fools for Their Fans - IU sub Spa/Eng - Duration: 5:24.

As many already know, when she releasedher 3rd mini album, Good Day, in 2010

she became the Korea's sisterwith her 3 octave performance

only 2 years after her debut

To keep you entertaining, I'll will be on stage,in your phone, ear phone, and more.

She expends her self not only on stageas a singer but on screen as an actor

Her fame increased undoubtedly

Many may think the scale of her fans' giftfor her is incredibly big but on the contrary,

Do not give me whatI just asked for.

Meaning, I already have so much of it.I really do and I collect them

but please give me that right.

She rejected gifts from fansand protected their wallets

Instead of expensive gifts, her fans sendsher snack and coffee trucks

That became a huge strength.

Her fans followed after IU,who's known to donate for good causes

That wasn't enough

I never imagined this.

In 2014, when Heo Jiwomn spokehighly of IU on a show,

her fans sent him snacksto thank him

Her fans showed their supportin their unique ways

IU must feel so proud

I know how much it means thananyone so I want to thank you.

IU herself showed her massivelove to her fans

I took a peek already.

First, IU is known to givegift to her fans

Especially, last December, for her fanswho are waiting for her in the cold,

she ordered 500 hamburgers

Starting few years ago, I prepared smallevents every September 18th

On her debut anniversaries, she gives awaytransportation cards, bracelet, polaroid,

t shirts and more

That's not all

For past 6 years whenever she travelsoverseas, she purchased famous treats

What does this have to dowith her love for her fans?

I came here to buy treats for my Korean fansbut my Hong Kong fans wanted some too.

They're so cute. I apologized to them.This is my wrong doing. I can't play favors.

Here. Share.

She wasn't buying them for herself buther fans waiting for her at the airport

It always feels good after an encore, to know thereare fans still wanting to hear my voice.

Her love for fans is so huge, she exceeds the usualconcert of two hours to perform encore stages

and ends her concert after 4 hours

In midst of all

My minor fans, let's go home.

It's so dangerous at night and theconcert hall is located in a quiet area so...

We're fine!

It's not fine.

Your parents are waiting for you.

She sends her minor fans home earlyto their parents waiting at home

Is that for me? What is it? A letter?Thank you so much!

The bigger thing happened in 2012

When she herd the male fan who always tookpictures of her enlisted in the army

she invited him to her concert right awayalong with her picture and a hand written letter

She is a fan geek

IU's fans must be really happy

Thank you for letting IU shine bright.

IU, who always thought of her fanssince her debut, the fan geek,

ranks 1st on The List

For more infomation >> Stars Who Are Fools for Their Fans - IU sub Spa/Eng - Duration: 5:24.

-------------------------------------------

Ford Kuga 2.5 T 20V 5 cyl. Automaat Titanium + Navi + Pan. dak + Leder + Nieuwstaat - Duration: 1:01.

For more infomation >> Ford Kuga 2.5 T 20V 5 cyl. Automaat Titanium + Navi + Pan. dak + Leder + Nieuwstaat - Duration: 1:01.

-------------------------------------------

Claudio Baglioni NON dona il compenso di Sanremo: la bufala sul web | M.C.G.S - Duration: 4:08.

For more infomation >> Claudio Baglioni NON dona il compenso di Sanremo: la bufala sul web | M.C.G.S - Duration: 4:08.

-------------------------------------------

Testament de Johnny Hally­day : le gros coup de gueule contre Laeti­cia de Domi­nique Besne­hard - Duration: 2:56.

For more infomation >> Testament de Johnny Hally­day : le gros coup de gueule contre Laeti­cia de Domi­nique Besne­hard - Duration: 2:56.

-------------------------------------------

Apenas umas Lives xD - Duration: 1:10:02.

For more infomation >> Apenas umas Lives xD - Duration: 1:10:02.

-------------------------------------------

The County Seat Discussing Medical Care In Rural Utah - Duration: 28:51.

Hello everybody welcome to The County Seat

today I'm your host Chad Booth. Johnny breaks

a finger and you have to make a decision? Do

we go to the doctor or not? Seem obvious

doesn't it, but when you live in rural Utah and

you are a 2-hour drive away from any medical

treatment you think differently. That is the

subject today the shortage of medical care in

rural Utah and we will start with the Basics.

My dad was a country doctor, who moved from

a small Illinois town where he grew up, to an

even smaller one to practice medicine. It was

hard work, but he loved it, and so did all of my

brothers and sisters.

Growing up in a town of 800 people on a farm,

we had horses, jeeps, motorcycles, room to run,

fish to catch and trees to climb. There was so

much to do, we didn't have time to get in

trouble. It paid off because 5 of my 6 brothers

became rural doctors and surgeons themselves,

and most of my sisters have made careers in

rural medicine as well.

So why is it so hard to get and keep rural

doctors today?

Well here

are five things to consider: In The Basics.

1.The very culture of rural communities

tends to play down the advantages of rural

life and instead focuses on the challenges.

I'm sure you've heard it, I did ..."You don't

want to stay here, there is no future, go off

to the city and find your fortune" and so

kids do. Because we don't talk about the

positive things that make us want to live

rurally, our children place little value on the

good things of rural life,

In fact, rural communities often have

better luck recruiting people from the city

who want to escape the urban pressure

they felt growing up.

2.Number 2 is also cultural, but it is the one

students discover in medical schools. Most

all schools tend to celebrate and elevate

the specialty practice, it is like joining the

ranks of the elite. Few medical school

graduates find any prestige in "family

medicine" and often they are lured or

forced toward the higher earnings, not

realizing that there are costs that go with it.

3.Another obstacle to the hometown hero

returning to set up a rural practice is the

spouse factor. A student from Panguitch

gets into a mentoring program at SUU,

learns how to be a good medical student,

crosses the hurdle into med school and

comes out ready to practice. But in the 8

years of living in the city they likely have

gotten married and grown accustomed to

the perks of city life, while not having a

clear idea of the blessings found in rural

living. Nothing like an unhappy spouse to

put the kybosh on plans for a rural practice.

Which is exactly what happened to my one

brother, who now practices in the big city.

4.Another factor graduates face when

seeking the practice of rural medicine is

simply how to practice it. Doctoring in a

small town is very different than in the big

city, and they don't teach that at med

school.

5.But the single biggest obstacle to retaining

a rural doctor in Utah's remote

communities is the debt! Currently,

doctors entering a family practice for the

first time, are carrying an average of

$300,000 of educational debt, limiting

where a person can choose to practice

medicine

When my dad graduated, his entire

education cost $50,000, and the GI bill paid

all of it.

This one fact alone explains why urban areas

have about 90 doctors for every 100,000

patients, but in rural America it barely tops 65.

And specifically, there are communities right

here in Utah where if you need to see a doctor,

you have a 2 hour drive in front of you, not just

a two hour wait. That means that a lot of sick

people, don't get proper medical attention.

To help staff rural clinics there are state and

federal programs which will agree to pay a

significant part of a student's loan balance in

exchange for a commitment to practice for at

least two years in a rural setting. Generally it

amounts to about 20% of their student loans. It

does not however help the practitioner

understand the nuances of a rural practice

That is why there is an effort to also create

mentoring programs to expose medical

students early on to the unique nature of rural

medicine.

None of these programs will solve the shortage

of rural practitioners overnight, but that is

where our discussion will begin today, when

Chad comes back. For the County Seat, I'm Ria

Rossi Booth

Welcome back to The County Seat we are

talking today about the challenges today of

rural medicine shortage of doctors and what we

can do about it. The discussion today is about

what we can do about it and what we are doing

about it. Joining us for our conversation are

people who certainly know if the programs are

working we have Rebecca Powell who is a

senior medical student at the Univ of Utah

School of Medicine and we also have the Dean

of the School of Medicine Dr. Wayne

Samuelson. Doctor and Doctor do you like that

are in place right now to try and steer students

rurally to a medical practice and then back to

the rural community and I guess you have been

involved in 3 of them.

Yes, in my college years I went to Southern Utah

University I am originally from Utah a little town

called Ivan's outside of St. George for those

who are familiar with Washington County and I

went to SUU and there they have a program

called the rural health scholars program this

program is a framework for undergraduate

students who want to pursue graduate health

related education whether it be dental,

optometry nursing and in my case medical

school to become a physician and so that is

what I joined and being at Southern Utah

University which is a regional school in southern

Utah a lot of my volunteer experience was in

communities even smaller than where I grew up

example of an opportunity I had through rural

health scholars during college. My goal and

number one choice was to come to University

of Utah medical school for my medical degree I

was accepted and I achieved it and a few

months from graduating I graduate in May

after 4 years at the school and one of my goals

once I was there was to make sure I could

maximize my time in rural settings to maximize

my learning and maximize what I want to do

which is eventually a rural practice for myself

and so one of those ways I did that is during my

third year of med school which we call our

clinical they take us from the classroom and

start rotating us to the different departments of

the hospital during my family medicine rotation

I actually requested to go to Blanding Utah and

This is a program that U Med is involved in is

getting students specifically into rural settings

in the rotations as part of their practicum so to

speak.

Yes, that is correct. The family medicine

rotation is it mostly takes place now and one of

the things we are working on now we are trying

to broaden that experience to more

communities in other primary care specialties.

Some not just family medicine but also internal

medicine, pediatrics wherever we can find spots

for them to have that experience in

underserved or rural community.

working to solve that rift of people going to

medical school and ending up practicing in a

rural community?

We think it's a start but only a start and one of

the good things about the rural healthy scholars

program at SUU is that it recognizes that there

is more than just physician care that is

important to rural and underserved areas and

so that experience prepares students for a wide

variety of positions and healthcare not just to

be physicians but also to practice another

ancillary areas and some people start in that

program and think they want to become a

physician and decide they want to be

something else which is also very valuable. But

of Utah where we can make some end roads

and so we are actively seeking now to bring

physicians or with hospital administrators or

people from other parts of the state in

participation on our admissions committee to

help us identify students in different parts of

the state who really belong in medical school

and have them participate in the decision.

How young can you start figuring that out? Do

you start that at High School level do you start

at college level? When did you figure it out?

that I belonged to as a medical student at the

Univ. of Utah is called URAP, that stands for

Utah rural outreach program and what that

organization does it that it organizes medical

students generally 1st and 2nd years who have

the time in between their courses to go during

their winter and spring breaks and they actually

travel to rural high schools in Utah and they talk

not just medical school but just any sort of

medical training beyond high school talking to

these kids who maybe have never considered

that I'm going to be the first student in my

family to graduate high school never even

considered college but if I want to be a

physician or a nurse I'm going to have to go to

college and here are some kids UROP takes any

programs where they tutor and they call them

these pipeline programs they tutor in the

underserved and under developed schools in

the Salt Lake areas and beyond the idea being

that you really can't compete to go to medical

school unless you can do well in college. You

cannot perform well in college unless you have

some basic skills that get your through high

school. A lot of young people don't dare to

dream that they can do this and we are trying

Historically do you think there has been or is

there any anecdotal evidence of this actually

working where if you are pooling people from

Ivans and pulling them into a program that they

are more likely to actually return to a rural

practice even after the lure of the spouse affect

and all the glitter and glamour of specialty

practice and all that there appear to be a couple

influences on the eventual choices for

physicians where they want to live and work. A

big drive is where you actually did your

residency program and so residency is what you

do after medical school that is called training

and that is what gets you your license we get

the degree here but they all have to go on and

train to some specialty usually for a period of 3-

5-7 years that is a big draw where you finish

that up because you have been working with

physicians and that community and that area

and they tend to like you and offer you

positions. The other big draw is if you had a

conversation and you both are more than

welcome to answer is that this is all well and

good but how many residencies can you do at

Panguitch hospital.

Yes, that is exactly the point, you cannot. Utah

has a shortage of residencies and as we bring

more and more people into medical school we

are pretty much guaranteeing that they are all

going to leave and not come back unless we

give them a reason to come back. We are not

going to be able to get the number of

residencies in Utah and certainly not one in

Panguitch just for population reasons that will

leave those graduates wanting to stay there so

we have to create other reasons for them to

come back to Utah and that is what we are

trying to do.

The way we do that is during my four years of

medical school education there are certain

rotations that are set I will rotate through

surgery I will rotate through family medicine

and pediatrics so then I can decide can I see

myself as Pediatrician, can I see myself as a

Surgeon. But there is another question, can you

see yourself as a rural physician and if you have

never had any experiences as a rural physician

having preceptors or making those connections

or actually being there on the ground boots on

the ground learning from those practitioners

how can you comfortably say this is something

or someplace I want to go.

That is really it. One of the attractions of

practicing medicine in an urban center you have

ancillary help you your pharmacists your

dietician your physical therapist your

occupational therapist people just down the

hall that is not always the case and so another

big part of our initiative is creating the same

sort of training opportunities or learning

opportunities in the other health professions so

reimbursement program that I believe is state,

federal and the hospitals chip in that will pay

like $60,000 for a 2 year contract to go back and

spend 2 years filling that gap rurally, so if you go

and you fill that gap how much culture shock is

there at the end without some of these other

trainings to get them to think about to stay.

more than just forcing people back with the

incentive of getting your debts paid because

they just started the clock what we are hoping

to do is create relationships, good feelings and

hopefully bring the other health care

professions along with us so someone can go

practice in a rural community or an

underserved community feel like they are

practicing state of art medicine with colleagues

who will help them do that delivering care to a

community that is very appreciative and the

impact of that is that is a great place to live and

I want my family to come here I want to stay

there that is what we are hoping for we have

seen it work in other states.

Do the communities need to pay more

attention to the kids that are coming though on

their rotations?

They really try one of the problems is that we at

the medical school have not facilitated that and

we are trying to change that right now working

more with the communities and like I say

getting the right students into the medical

school that is why we are actively soliciting

people from the communities that we are trying

to put students to participate with the medical

admissions committee and DR. Chan has been

very inviting and worked very hard to get those

kind of people in and it makes things difficult

because you have to do things over Skype or

teleconference but he has done that I think the

committee the admissions process and the

school are all benefiting from that.

I would imagine if you were in Fillmore and

somebody brought you cookies while on a

rotation you might be tempted to say this is not

a bad gig.

Anecdotally I worked very hard when I was

down in Blanding in my family medicine

rotation not only because I wanted to learn but

because I wanted to prove myself on that

rotation because it was something I was looking

at doing and they said as I left we love you and

if some day you want to return to our

community we would love to have you and in

whatever capacity it is because at that time I

had not decided on my program. Along those

lines most people their favorite genre of music

is whatever they had when they were teenagers

during those formative years growing up and

learning who you are I feel like during my

formative years during my medical training

which is when I was in medical school and prior

to that in college I definitely was influenced by

those people who had a passion for rural

medicine and that was instilled in me and I'm

going to continue that forward and be very

happy with that.

My own anecdote as a subspecialist

moonlighting in the ER one weekend a month in

a very small rural community at the end of that

time when I finished my fellowship and

accepted a faculty position at Duke Univ my

dream of dreams the people in that community

gave me a going way party and they said if you

ever change your mind about being a specialists

you want to come back here and be our

internists we would love to have you. That was

a very tough decision to make.

movie the Color Purple it was filmed in that

town and did not change anything for the movie

it was really a small and underserved

community they really struggled in a lot ways

but beautiful wonderful people. Even touched

the heart of a hard core subspecialists myself.

Thank you both so much for being part of this

conversation when we come back we will take a

look at a doctor that is starting a program that

is called Direct Care that actually fits a model of

filling in the gaps in some of these small rural

communities. We will be right back with The

County Seat.

Welcome back to The County Seat as we are

looking at the problem of rural health care we

will have to look outside the box because we

haven't found any answers inside the box. We

recently had an opportunity to interview and

Doctor in Kansas City who practices his entire

practice of medicine outside the box and its

working for him and he believes it will work for

rural medicine as well.

Doug Nunamaker:

if it takes 11 years to train someone and two

years to make quit. You can't keep up with that.

There's no system that can keep up with that

kind of mass exodus the previous mentality of

physicians was medicine was everything. And

you know nothing else superseded that.

Josh Umbehr:

we like to say in a lot of ways we haven't

changed anything. The practice of family

medicine is the same but in other ways. We've

changed everything by changing the business

model where an insurance free practice that

charges a monthly membership for full access to

care. But by doing that we remove 90% of the

headache. The hassle the inefficiency so that

the patient's now can get quality, affordable care

the doctors can focus on the patient's and

provide procedures and medicines and lab tests.

The discount it truly makes medicine, affordable

and accessible again.

What we gain in efficiency. We also gain in profit

by being able to cut 90% of our overhead we

can charge the patient's a fair amount and still

retain more of that are doctors on average make

30% more than the local family physicians in this

area, so it's actually more profitable for a doctor

to be in this model, providing very affordable

very accessible care and I think that's what

business does well competing things that don't

make sense but we get a better, faster, cheaper

product and higher-quality through good

business in all sorts of areas of our lives.

Doug Nunamaker:

I can't imagine going back to seeing more

patients a day then you're able it's akin to

making a mechanic fix 10 too many cars per day

somebody's going to get in a wreck. That's what

it is and in medicine, you can only truly take care

of so many people today. And if you do more

than that, then some of those people aren't

getting the care.

Josh Umbehr:

if it's bad for the patient's it's bad for the doctors

and that is what is driving doctors away from

rural medicine. They feel like they need to be

part of a giant system to play this giant

paperwork game this model streamlines that

whole process. I think that we've tried to do

higher and higher volumes and we've got less

and less value in return. The standard Dr. will

have 3000 patients and see 30 or 40 a day and

in our model the doctors are limited to about 600

patients and see five or six a day. So that we

can do same-day appointments. Almost all the

time and we can do hour-long appointments if

need be but we can also be available for phone

text e-mail to make health care accessible

without the patient needing to come to the office

we have more time to focus on the patient. So

I'd like to think we make fewer mistakes we have

less paperwork less distraction depending on

the study. You can look a doctor spending

between 22 and 65% of their day on the

computer doing paperwork or electronic filing.

That's just a whole chunk of time the doctor isn't

focused on the patient.

Doug Nunamaker:

I certainly enjoy this allot better than what the

alternative is. We even have people in

residencies or graduating medical students and

they spend time with us and they say do I really

have to do three years of an insurance type

practice you know, learning that?

Josh Umbehr:

the rural doctor has patient's who need care. I

grew up in a town of 900 and myself. One doctor

can manage that whole town very well in a direct

care model just with a simple redesign the same

medicine the same labs the same doctors

different payment model to make these things fit.

Gives you a lot to think about doesn't it? Let's

take stock of the things we have covered. We

have identified the basics at the beginning of

the show about what the shortages were

caused by in medicine. We have looked at the

things the schools and government have done

to improve it as far as the subsides and

programs and we looked at one Doctor who has

thought outside the box and come up with a

different way to approach medicine that might

work in rural Utah. Sounds promising but there

are still things that we may want to consider,

and we will get to that in my 2 cents worth in

just a minute.

Welcome back to The County Seat we have

looked at the issues of shortage of medical care

in rural Utah today here is my 2 cents worth on

that subject. The sad truth is that we have

allowed medical culture to cost too much to

work in a dispersed population base. It costs

too much to get an education you have to do

too much to avoid being sued. Our culture

makes you need too much because success is

measured by how much you make not by how

well you serve. And finally, we as consumers

expect too much of the insurance medical

complex and no longer ask how much we are

being charged for a drug or a service, yet we are

still paying for it with our premiums and our

taxes. I once asked my doctor how much it

would costs to get a procedure done that he

was recommending he could not answer the

question. By removing that direct link between

doctor and patient as to the costs of treatment

it becomes far too easy for prices to sky rocket

because the person paying premiums as well as

the doctor prescribing are disconnected from

knowing the cost of treatment. We have to

move back to a place where patient and doctor

are aware of and talking about how much care

costs. I believe that awareness along with the

things that we talked about today will start to

bring things back in line again and provide the

long-term fix to access to care. Thanks for

watching today you can see the extended

discussion with our guests on our YouTube

channel along with a full interview with Dr.

Umber we invite you to follow our social media

for midweek updates and we will see you next

week on The County Seat.

For more infomation >> The County Seat Discussing Medical Care In Rural Utah - Duration: 28:51.

-------------------------------------------

American Vs. Japanese: Cheesecake - Duration: 4:19.

- (screams) It's so fluffy, oh my God!

(upbeat music)

Hey guys I'm Brenda, I'm a tasty producer

and today we will be comparing American

versus Japanese cheesecakes.

Now I'll be taking care of the classic

creamy cheesecake that you guys all know really well.

- And I'm Alvin, and I'll be making

the jiggly Japanese cheesecake because I think it's such a

unique twist on cheesecake that you

probably seen online and it's so cool.

I'm gonna show you exactly how it's done.

- Okay let's start this American cheesecake.

So to make the base, you get your graham crackers,

and you smash until they turn into this.

The reason why I begin with the crust is that

it has to be baked twice.

Once by itself, and then with the cheesecake mix.

So while this is baking, you can just go ahead

and get started with your cheesecake mix.

I'm not gonna run all my ingredients at once.

What I'm actually doing is starting

with the sugar and the cream cheese.

I also have all my ingredients at room temperature.

All of this will make it easier to avoid lumps,

and will help me combine everything perfectly.

Let's go back in time to this recipe Alvin filled before,

which happens to inspire my recipe.

Look at the way it comes in.

The texture that it appears to have, it's just beautiful.

(upbeat music)

- Let's cook this Japanese cheesecake.

So the process is very different

than a traditional cheesecake,

this starts with making a liquid cheesecake mixture

of cream cheese, milk, butter and sugar.

And once that gets all nice and smooth,

that gets folded into egg yolks

and that becomes this sort of like creamy,

liquidish kind of batter,

and that sort of your cheesecake base.

When I went to Japan to work with the Taste of Japan team,

we had our eyes set on this jiggly cheesecake

that had been like a viral trender on there

for a really long time.

It was just as amazing as it looked.

It's a very light, fluffy, soft cheesecake

that's very airy, it's like a cloud.

So it's like almost you're making a meringue,

and then you sort of fold the meringue

back in to that cheesecake batter.

The funny thing is that you could eat the entire cheesecake

because 80% of this is air.

When we were in Japan, it was not uncommon to see

someone buying a whole cheesecake for themselves

and finishing it on their walk to work.

You need to bake it in a water bath.

So what that does, it creates like a nice steam barrier

around the cake, so the cake will never get too hot

because the water will take excess heat away from it.

- [Brenda] This is one of my favorite parts Alvin

because you're pretty much unveiling this mythical creature.

It looks super impressive,

you know it's gonna be very fluffy.

- [Alvin] You know those Tempurpedic commercials,

this is like memory foam for my hand.

(upbeat music)

- Let's taste it.

- Let's do it. - Alright.

- This cake right here, is creamy, and it melts,

it's not too dense.

- Your cheesecake, at least in my opinion,

in terms of texture is superb.

This thing is super fluffy.

Which one's your winner and why.

- It will probably be the Japanese one.

When I want something in a dessert,

I want something that isn't too heavy

so I can take more than one bite.

- I'm gonna go for the Japanese version.

Yes, this is easier to make,

but it seems a little more adventurous

to go for this one, and the texture, the fluffiness,

and the jiggling is just like out of this world.

In a taste test, one out of three,

said that they would go for your cheesecake.

I asked people on Instagram, right there.

69% on yours.

- 31% on this one so.

- There you go.

- The crowd and the internet have spoken.

Brenda, that's raw egg.

- [Brenda] It's still delicious.

(jazz music)

For more infomation >> American Vs. Japanese: Cheesecake - Duration: 4:19.

-------------------------------------------

Laura Smet et David Hally­day déshé­ri­tés : Laeti­cia Hally­day exprime son « écœu­re­ment » - Duration: 3:22.

For more infomation >> Laura Smet et David Hally­day déshé­ri­tés : Laeti­cia Hally­day exprime son « écœu­re­ment » - Duration: 3:22.

-------------------------------------------

【SFM Overwatch Animation】D.Valentine Day's Special - Duration: 4:52.

Darling you got to let me know

Should I stay or should I go?

If you say that you are mine

I'll be here until the end of time

So you got to let me know

Should I stay or should I go?

It's always tease, tease, tease

You're happy when I'm on my knees

One day it's fine and next it's black

So if you want me off your back

Well, come on and let me know

Should I stay or should I go?

Should I stay or should I go now?

Should I stay or should I go now?

If I go, there will be trouble

And if I stay it will be double

So come on and let me know

This indecision's bugging me

If you don't want me, set me free

Exactly whom I'm supposed to be

Don't you know which clothes even fit me?

Come on and let me know

Should I cool it or should I blow?

Split

Should I stay or should I go now?

Should I stay or should I go now?

If I go there will be trouble

And if I stay it will be double

So ya gotta let me know

Should I cool it or should I blow?

Should I stay or should I go now?

If I go there will be trouble

And if I stay it will be double

So ya gotta let me know

Should I stay or should I go?

For more infomation >> 【SFM Overwatch Animation】D.Valentine Day's Special - Duration: 4:52.

-------------------------------------------

La chose géniale qui arrive à votre corps quand vous touchez votre palais avec votre langue... - Duration: 6:16.

For more infomation >> La chose géniale qui arrive à votre corps quand vous touchez votre palais avec votre langue... - Duration: 6:16.

-------------------------------------------

Diffuser World Aroma Ace Essential Oil Diffuser Review - Duration: 7:07.

Today we're going to talk about diffusers! One of the things that people

ask me a lot when they first start out it's about kind of diffuser to get

it's really a personal choice so I thought I would do a series on oil

diffuser reviews because I definitely have some favorites definitely have some

that are questionable. today we're going to talk about the aroma ace diffuser

this is like to the higher end of diffusers a link below, diffuser world is

where I got this and I had to pay for it myself but I

have an affiliate link now one of the things I have heard about this diffuser

is that it just uses too much oil uses way too much oil and I'm just really

unsure because it has a dial where you can set it to run for anywhere between 5

and 20 minutes solid and then you can set it to rest for anywhere between 5

and 20 minutes solid so it's just curious about like how can it use that

much oil if you can like turn it on as much as you can turn it off well let me

tell you it can use some oil it can be a great thing it can also be not so great

thing when I got this I imagined that I would turn it on in the kitchen kind of

dining great area room of my house and just have it set on for two minutes off

for 20 on for two off for 20 because one of the things that they found about this

is that essential oil particles can be found in the air up to 70 minutes after

it's turned off so I was thinking and turn it on for a little while and then

turn it off and you know then turn it back on so one of the things that I

really wanted this for is because there is no water with this machine you have

this little guide it's like a little thing that used to onto the top of your

essential oils so get your essential oil bottle and I don't know if you know that

check but you know you can just like twist the cap in the little white part

will come out so that you don't get your fingernail stuck up underneath there and

then you screw this thing on nice and tight and then this hooks onto here so

the difference between this traditional water diffuser is this is

what's called agonizing so that air actually goes over the surface of the

oils create smaller particles and then shoots those up into the air one of the

other things I do like about this diffuser is that it comes with it like

it plugs into a timer in the wall and the timer comes with it and so you can

turn on at like 6:00 p.m. when you get home from work and have it automatically

shut off whatever time you want when you go to bed you know whatever conversely

you can turn it on when you go to bed and then have it shut off when you wake

up in the morning or a couple hours after you go back so you can set the

timer on the wall to have it powered on at certain times and the new consent the

time running device to have it go on and off a lot of people also saw that it was

pretty loud the noise doesn't bother me at all my husband does not want it on

his side of the bed he's like put it across the room once you put your oil in

there the full bottle up well that's not a full bottle of oil but put a bottle of

oil in there and I'm gonna put my rest time at 20 minutes I'm gonna put my

runtime at 5 and then there's this little output button and the output

button you can go from very low to quite a bit so there is a lot of steam coming

out of this right now and it smells like eliminating hair like really strong

actually it smells kind of nice but you can also hear that sound it has like a

more vibrating sound than a traditional water diffuser so I know that a lot of

places are using these in industrial spaces and I think that's really smart

one of the things that I learned about this is that I don't like it in a small

space it's just too much I also thought that I would keep it in

in an area of the great room but then it's like it's just too much right next

to a chair so I think the best thing to do is put this on like a hutch or

someplace a little bit out of the way because it's gonna really fill up the

room but I don't want it blowing in my face having said that the reason that

I'm really glad that I got this diffuser is because it puts out so much more oil

than a regular water diffuser and I don't know a few weeks ago Scott got

sick I popped a bottle up on the garden this I put it in her room and the next

day he woke up feeling so much better so as much as they don't wanna blast people

when they're sitting in my kitchen chatting with me it was really great to

be able to blast him when he needed some immune support what I buy it again it's

on the expensive end of diffusers and absolutely I think it's a great thing to

have around your house especially for when someone's not feeling good or when

you have like a large party or a lot of people going in and out of the house and

you want to keep a good like positive energy vibe in the house you can diffuse

some citrus oils having this that that I wouldn't probably buy $50 blends of oils

to diffuse in this because you're gonna go through a lot fast I think I was

averaging about one bottle 115 ml bottle of oil every 5 to 7 days depending on

how long I had it on and that was running it from 8:00 in the morning

until 8:00 at night just because I'm home during the day and I wanted to just

melt it during the day so I mean that's pretty heavy usage but that's still a

lot of oil considering the fact that with a water diffuser you can go through

maybe 15 drops a day but I will say that this smell is also so much stronger than

a water diffuser that it's really comparing this to a water diffuser is

like apples and oranges they just don't match up I think it's worth having it in

your house the other thing that's really cool about

this diffuser from diffuser world is this all of these little accent colors

they come in like a variety of different colors you can get black and white you

can get silver this is the bronze and when you buy this diffuser it comes with

a couple of these different um bottle topper connector things so that you can

mix up your blends ahead of time if you want to blend oils together and keep

them ready that's it I would totally buy this again but it's not my go-to

end-all-be-all diffuser unless someone's sick and then this is gonna be the first

thing I grab I hope that helps you I'll be doing a lot more videos on diffusers

just because I have a lot about diffusers actually and letting you know

kind of what I think of them so if you thought this video was helpful make sure

to give me a thumbs up below share it with your friends if you're interested

in getting me aroma ace diffuser I have an affiliate link below thank you so

much for watching I'll see you in the next video ciao

For more infomation >> Diffuser World Aroma Ace Essential Oil Diffuser Review - Duration: 7:07.

-------------------------------------------

Audi A4 2.0 TFSI 190pk Sport Pro Line S tronic | Elek. Achterklep - Duration: 1:00.

For more infomation >> Audi A4 2.0 TFSI 190pk Sport Pro Line S tronic | Elek. Achterklep - Duration: 1:00.

-------------------------------------------

Les préservatifs #001 - Duration: 5:09.

For more infomation >> Les préservatifs #001 - Duration: 5:09.

-------------------------------------------

8 symptômes d'un dérèglement hormonal que l'on ignore peut-être | Santé 24.7 - Duration: 8:30.

For more infomation >> 8 symptômes d'un dérèglement hormonal que l'on ignore peut-être | Santé 24.7 - Duration: 8:30.

-------------------------------------------

Brotrippers Episode 5: You Just Got Ferg'd - Duration: 4:16.

♫...♫

-Three, two, one!

[Drinks Chugging]

♫...♫

[Ferg Singing] ♫ Take one down and pass it around... ♫

[Singing Trailing Off] -Ninety..fou... ninety-seven bottles

-Why aren't you guys singing?

♫...♫

[Drinks Chugging]

♫...♫

-Three. - Three! F..Four!

♫...♫

[Drinks Chugging]

♫...♫

[Heavy Beathing]

♫...♫

[Snickering]

[All Laughing]

- Awww, come on.

[All Laughing]

- Like cheese puffs much, buddy?

[All Laughing]

(Dusty) - Seriously, fellas. Do you feel that?

- Feel what? I don't feel anything.

- Oh, baby!

- What're you lookin' at? I don't feel anything!

- Oh, oooooo! Come on, you don't feel it?

- You don't feel it? y

- I don't feel anything!

- Ooooooooo!

- Yes! Ahhhhhh!

- It's the giant fork, let's go!!!

- Cause we're here!

- We're here!

[All Talking Over Each Other]

♪ Angelic Music ♪

- It's more beautiful than I ever thought it would be.

♪ Angelic Music ♪

♪ Angelic Music ♪ (Cam) - It's okay, man. Just let it out.

♪ Angelic Music ♪

(Jake) - Welp. I'm bored. (Cam) - Yeah, I'm out, too.

[Mumbling] - Hold this.

[Camera Shutter Repeatedly]

[Car Doors Closing]

[Car Engine Cranking] (Cam) - Well that seems like something we should probably address, Dusty.

- I'm no expert, but shouldn't the car be making some kind of noise, Dusty.

(Ferg) - So nobody wants to go get pancakes?

(Cam) - It's finally happening.

(Jake) - Well, well, well! Look who forgot to turn the lights off!

(Ferg) - Never thought I'd see the day...

- Look, it's an honest mistake, okay?

(Cam) - Yeah, but who made it?

(Ferg) - Guys, give Dusty a break. - Thanks, man.

- Just like he should have given the lights a break! Oh! You just got Ferg'd

- Oh, "haha", yeah. In my defense, we obviously needed a new battery, anyway.

- Alright, let's just find a place close by that ...

- You mean, like that close by? Because that O'Reilly seems very close...

♪ Angelic O'Reilly Auto Parts Jingle ♪

(Jake) - It's like they have parts for your car, wherever you are...

- Dude, they are everywhere...

[Seductive Music]

[Seductive Music] SuperStart Batteries offer proven technology.

[Seductive Music] Improved starting reliability and extended service life, provide unmatched performance for today's vehicles.

[Seductive Music] SuperStart Batteries. Starting power, starting performance, starting reliability.

[Pickle Squelches]

[Seductive Music]

[Car Doors Opening]

[Car Doors Closing]

- Alright, fingers crossed here. Ready?

[Engine Turns Over]

- Oh, yeah! There's that SuperStart reliability!

(Jake) - Hey guys, you know what's not reliable? Dusty with interior lighting.

[Laughter]

(Cam) - You realize we're not gonna let you live this down, like ever?

- It doesn't change the fact though that you guys wouldn't last a day without me. You know why? Cause I'm the only one who knows anything about cars...

(Cam) - For real though guys, where are we going to next?

- Hey, I read that the world's largest spoon is in Romania.

- Guys, I don't think we can drive to Rome from here.

♫...♫

For more infomation >> Brotrippers Episode 5: You Just Got Ferg'd - Duration: 4:16.

-------------------------------------------

【SFM Overwatch Animation】D.Valentine Day's Special - Duration: 4:52.

Darling you got to let me know

Should I stay or should I go?

If you say that you are mine

I'll be here until the end of time

So you got to let me know

Should I stay or should I go?

It's always tease, tease, tease

You're happy when I'm on my knees

One day it's fine and next it's black

So if you want me off your back

Well, come on and let me know

Should I stay or should I go?

Should I stay or should I go now?

Should I stay or should I go now?

If I go, there will be trouble

And if I stay it will be double

So come on and let me know

This indecision's bugging me

If you don't want me, set me free

Exactly whom I'm supposed to be

Don't you know which clothes even fit me?

Come on and let me know

Should I cool it or should I blow?

Split

Should I stay or should I go now?

Should I stay or should I go now?

If I go there will be trouble

And if I stay it will be double

So ya gotta let me know

Should I cool it or should I blow?

Should I stay or should I go now?

If I go there will be trouble

And if I stay it will be double

So ya gotta let me know

Should I stay or should I go?

For more infomation >> 【SFM Overwatch Animation】D.Valentine Day's Special - Duration: 4:52.

-------------------------------------------

Mercedes-Benz B-Klasse B 180 d Automaat Business Solution Plus - Duration: 0:43.

For more infomation >> Mercedes-Benz B-Klasse B 180 d Automaat Business Solution Plus - Duration: 0:43.

-------------------------------------------

Mercedes-Benz E-Klasse E 350 d Limousine Automaat Avantgarde - Duration: 0:56.

For more infomation >> Mercedes-Benz E-Klasse E 350 d Limousine Automaat Avantgarde - Duration: 0:56.

-------------------------------------------

Mercedes-Benz E-Klasse E 200 d Estate Automaat Business Solution AMG - Duration: 1:00.

For more infomation >> Mercedes-Benz E-Klasse E 200 d Estate Automaat Business Solution AMG - Duration: 1:00.

-------------------------------------------

Mercedes-Benz GLE-Klasse GLE 350 d 4MATIC Automaat AMG Sport Edition - Duration: 0:58.

For more infomation >> Mercedes-Benz GLE-Klasse GLE 350 d 4MATIC Automaat AMG Sport Edition - Duration: 0:58.

-------------------------------------------

Testament de Johnny Hally­day : le gros coup de gueule contre Laeti­cia de Domi­nique Besne­hard - Duration: 2:56.

For more infomation >> Testament de Johnny Hally­day : le gros coup de gueule contre Laeti­cia de Domi­nique Besne­hard - Duration: 2:56.

-------------------------------------------

Avisos (Recrutamento+Pedidos) - Duration: 2:01.

For more infomation >> Avisos (Recrutamento+Pedidos) - Duration: 2:01.

-------------------------------------------

La chose géniale qui arrive à votre corps quand vous touchez votre palais avec votre langue... - Duration: 6:16.

For more infomation >> La chose géniale qui arrive à votre corps quand vous touchez votre palais avec votre langue... - Duration: 6:16.

-------------------------------------------

La fatigue chronique et l'intoxication alimentaire par les chairs des poissons (Ciguatera) - Duration: 4:40.

For more infomation >> La fatigue chronique et l'intoxication alimentaire par les chairs des poissons (Ciguatera) - Duration: 4:40.

-------------------------------------------

Loredana Lecciso e Al Bano: il video mai visto della loro fuga d'amore - Duration: 3:50.

For more infomation >> Loredana Lecciso e Al Bano: il video mai visto della loro fuga d'amore - Duration: 3:50.

-------------------------------------------

7 Signes qui indiquent que vous avez un ulcère de l'estomac | Santé 24.7 - Duration: 6:18.

For more infomation >> 7 Signes qui indiquent que vous avez un ulcère de l'estomac | Santé 24.7 - Duration: 6:18.

-------------------------------------------

David Hally­day : Pourquoi il aurait pu ne pas contes­ter le testa­ment de son père - Duration: 2:45.

For more infomation >> David Hally­day : Pourquoi il aurait pu ne pas contes­ter le testa­ment de son père - Duration: 2:45.

-------------------------------------------

The County Seat Discussing Medical Care In Rural Utah - Duration: 28:51.

Hello everybody welcome to The County Seat

today I'm your host Chad Booth. Johnny breaks

a finger and you have to make a decision? Do

we go to the doctor or not? Seem obvious

doesn't it, but when you live in rural Utah and

you are a 2-hour drive away from any medical

treatment you think differently. That is the

subject today the shortage of medical care in

rural Utah and we will start with the Basics.

My dad was a country doctor, who moved from

a small Illinois town where he grew up, to an

even smaller one to practice medicine. It was

hard work, but he loved it, and so did all of my

brothers and sisters.

Growing up in a town of 800 people on a farm,

we had horses, jeeps, motorcycles, room to run,

fish to catch and trees to climb. There was so

much to do, we didn't have time to get in

trouble. It paid off because 5 of my 6 brothers

became rural doctors and surgeons themselves,

and most of my sisters have made careers in

rural medicine as well.

So why is it so hard to get and keep rural

doctors today?

Well here

are five things to consider: In The Basics.

1.The very culture of rural communities

tends to play down the advantages of rural

life and instead focuses on the challenges.

I'm sure you've heard it, I did ..."You don't

want to stay here, there is no future, go off

to the city and find your fortune" and so

kids do. Because we don't talk about the

positive things that make us want to live

rurally, our children place little value on the

good things of rural life,

In fact, rural communities often have

better luck recruiting people from the city

who want to escape the urban pressure

they felt growing up.

2.Number 2 is also cultural, but it is the one

students discover in medical schools. Most

all schools tend to celebrate and elevate

the specialty practice, it is like joining the

ranks of the elite. Few medical school

graduates find any prestige in "family

medicine" and often they are lured or

forced toward the higher earnings, not

realizing that there are costs that go with it.

3.Another obstacle to the hometown hero

returning to set up a rural practice is the

spouse factor. A student from Panguitch

gets into a mentoring program at SUU,

learns how to be a good medical student,

crosses the hurdle into med school and

comes out ready to practice. But in the 8

years of living in the city they likely have

gotten married and grown accustomed to

the perks of city life, while not having a

clear idea of the blessings found in rural

living. Nothing like an unhappy spouse to

put the kybosh on plans for a rural practice.

Which is exactly what happened to my one

brother, who now practices in the big city.

4.Another factor graduates face when

seeking the practice of rural medicine is

simply how to practice it. Doctoring in a

small town is very different than in the big

city, and they don't teach that at med

school.

5.But the single biggest obstacle to retaining

a rural doctor in Utah's remote

communities is the debt! Currently,

doctors entering a family practice for the

first time, are carrying an average of

$300,000 of educational debt, limiting

where a person can choose to practice

medicine

When my dad graduated, his entire

education cost $50,000, and the GI bill paid

all of it.

This one fact alone explains why urban areas

have about 90 doctors for every 100,000

patients, but in rural America it barely tops 65.

And specifically, there are communities right

here in Utah where if you need to see a doctor,

you have a 2 hour drive in front of you, not just

a two hour wait. That means that a lot of sick

people, don't get proper medical attention.

To help staff rural clinics there are state and

federal programs which will agree to pay a

significant part of a student's loan balance in

exchange for a commitment to practice for at

least two years in a rural setting. Generally it

amounts to about 20% of their student loans. It

does not however help the practitioner

understand the nuances of a rural practice

That is why there is an effort to also create

mentoring programs to expose medical

students early on to the unique nature of rural

medicine.

None of these programs will solve the shortage

of rural practitioners overnight, but that is

where our discussion will begin today, when

Chad comes back. For the County Seat, I'm Ria

Rossi Booth

Welcome back to The County Seat we are

talking today about the challenges today of

rural medicine shortage of doctors and what we

can do about it. The discussion today is about

what we can do about it and what we are doing

about it. Joining us for our conversation are

people who certainly know if the programs are

working we have Rebecca Powell who is a

senior medical student at the Univ of Utah

School of Medicine and we also have the Dean

of the School of Medicine Dr. Wayne

Samuelson. Doctor and Doctor do you like that

are in place right now to try and steer students

rurally to a medical practice and then back to

the rural community and I guess you have been

involved in 3 of them.

Yes, in my college years I went to Southern Utah

University I am originally from Utah a little town

called Ivan's outside of St. George for those

who are familiar with Washington County and I

went to SUU and there they have a program

called the rural health scholars program this

program is a framework for undergraduate

students who want to pursue graduate health

related education whether it be dental,

optometry nursing and in my case medical

school to become a physician and so that is

what I joined and being at Southern Utah

University which is a regional school in southern

Utah a lot of my volunteer experience was in

communities even smaller than where I grew up

example of an opportunity I had through rural

health scholars during college. My goal and

number one choice was to come to University

of Utah medical school for my medical degree I

was accepted and I achieved it and a few

months from graduating I graduate in May

after 4 years at the school and one of my goals

once I was there was to make sure I could

maximize my time in rural settings to maximize

my learning and maximize what I want to do

which is eventually a rural practice for myself

and so one of those ways I did that is during my

third year of med school which we call our

clinical they take us from the classroom and

start rotating us to the different departments of

the hospital during my family medicine rotation

I actually requested to go to Blanding Utah and

This is a program that U Med is involved in is

getting students specifically into rural settings

in the rotations as part of their practicum so to

speak.

Yes, that is correct. The family medicine

rotation is it mostly takes place now and one of

the things we are working on now we are trying

to broaden that experience to more

communities in other primary care specialties.

Some not just family medicine but also internal

medicine, pediatrics wherever we can find spots

for them to have that experience in

underserved or rural community.

working to solve that rift of people going to

medical school and ending up practicing in a

rural community?

We think it's a start but only a start and one of

the good things about the rural healthy scholars

program at SUU is that it recognizes that there

is more than just physician care that is

important to rural and underserved areas and

so that experience prepares students for a wide

variety of positions and healthcare not just to

be physicians but also to practice another

ancillary areas and some people start in that

program and think they want to become a

physician and decide they want to be

something else which is also very valuable. But

of Utah where we can make some end roads

and so we are actively seeking now to bring

physicians or with hospital administrators or

people from other parts of the state in

participation on our admissions committee to

help us identify students in different parts of

the state who really belong in medical school

and have them participate in the decision.

How young can you start figuring that out? Do

you start that at High School level do you start

at college level? When did you figure it out?

that I belonged to as a medical student at the

Univ. of Utah is called URAP, that stands for

Utah rural outreach program and what that

organization does it that it organizes medical

students generally 1st and 2nd years who have

the time in between their courses to go during

their winter and spring breaks and they actually

travel to rural high schools in Utah and they talk

not just medical school but just any sort of

medical training beyond high school talking to

these kids who maybe have never considered

that I'm going to be the first student in my

family to graduate high school never even

considered college but if I want to be a

physician or a nurse I'm going to have to go to

college and here are some kids UROP takes any

programs where they tutor and they call them

these pipeline programs they tutor in the

underserved and under developed schools in

the Salt Lake areas and beyond the idea being

that you really can't compete to go to medical

school unless you can do well in college. You

cannot perform well in college unless you have

some basic skills that get your through high

school. A lot of young people don't dare to

dream that they can do this and we are trying

Historically do you think there has been or is

there any anecdotal evidence of this actually

working where if you are pooling people from

Ivans and pulling them into a program that they

are more likely to actually return to a rural

practice even after the lure of the spouse affect

and all the glitter and glamour of specialty

practice and all that there appear to be a couple

influences on the eventual choices for

physicians where they want to live and work. A

big drive is where you actually did your

residency program and so residency is what you

do after medical school that is called training

and that is what gets you your license we get

the degree here but they all have to go on and

train to some specialty usually for a period of 3-

5-7 years that is a big draw where you finish

that up because you have been working with

physicians and that community and that area

and they tend to like you and offer you

positions. The other big draw is if you had a

conversation and you both are more than

welcome to answer is that this is all well and

good but how many residencies can you do at

Panguitch hospital.

Yes, that is exactly the point, you cannot. Utah

has a shortage of residencies and as we bring

more and more people into medical school we

are pretty much guaranteeing that they are all

going to leave and not come back unless we

give them a reason to come back. We are not

going to be able to get the number of

residencies in Utah and certainly not one in

Panguitch just for population reasons that will

leave those graduates wanting to stay there so

we have to create other reasons for them to

come back to Utah and that is what we are

trying to do.

The way we do that is during my four years of

medical school education there are certain

rotations that are set I will rotate through

surgery I will rotate through family medicine

and pediatrics so then I can decide can I see

myself as Pediatrician, can I see myself as a

Surgeon. But there is another question, can you

see yourself as a rural physician and if you have

never had any experiences as a rural physician

having preceptors or making those connections

or actually being there on the ground boots on

the ground learning from those practitioners

how can you comfortably say this is something

or someplace I want to go.

That is really it. One of the attractions of

practicing medicine in an urban center you have

ancillary help you your pharmacists your

dietician your physical therapist your

occupational therapist people just down the

hall that is not always the case and so another

big part of our initiative is creating the same

sort of training opportunities or learning

opportunities in the other health professions so

reimbursement program that I believe is state,

federal and the hospitals chip in that will pay

like $60,000 for a 2 year contract to go back and

spend 2 years filling that gap rurally, so if you go

and you fill that gap how much culture shock is

there at the end without some of these other

trainings to get them to think about to stay.

more than just forcing people back with the

incentive of getting your debts paid because

they just started the clock what we are hoping

to do is create relationships, good feelings and

hopefully bring the other health care

professions along with us so someone can go

practice in a rural community or an

underserved community feel like they are

practicing state of art medicine with colleagues

who will help them do that delivering care to a

community that is very appreciative and the

impact of that is that is a great place to live and

I want my family to come here I want to stay

there that is what we are hoping for we have

seen it work in other states.

Do the communities need to pay more

attention to the kids that are coming though on

their rotations?

They really try one of the problems is that we at

the medical school have not facilitated that and

we are trying to change that right now working

more with the communities and like I say

getting the right students into the medical

school that is why we are actively soliciting

people from the communities that we are trying

to put students to participate with the medical

admissions committee and DR. Chan has been

very inviting and worked very hard to get those

kind of people in and it makes things difficult

because you have to do things over Skype or

teleconference but he has done that I think the

committee the admissions process and the

school are all benefiting from that.

I would imagine if you were in Fillmore and

somebody brought you cookies while on a

rotation you might be tempted to say this is not

a bad gig.

Anecdotally I worked very hard when I was

down in Blanding in my family medicine

rotation not only because I wanted to learn but

because I wanted to prove myself on that

rotation because it was something I was looking

at doing and they said as I left we love you and

if some day you want to return to our

community we would love to have you and in

whatever capacity it is because at that time I

had not decided on my program. Along those

lines most people their favorite genre of music

is whatever they had when they were teenagers

during those formative years growing up and

learning who you are I feel like during my

formative years during my medical training

which is when I was in medical school and prior

to that in college I definitely was influenced by

those people who had a passion for rural

medicine and that was instilled in me and I'm

going to continue that forward and be very

happy with that.

My own anecdote as a subspecialist

moonlighting in the ER one weekend a month in

a very small rural community at the end of that

time when I finished my fellowship and

accepted a faculty position at Duke Univ my

dream of dreams the people in that community

gave me a going way party and they said if you

ever change your mind about being a specialists

you want to come back here and be our

internists we would love to have you. That was

a very tough decision to make.

movie the Color Purple it was filmed in that

town and did not change anything for the movie

it was really a small and underserved

community they really struggled in a lot ways

but beautiful wonderful people. Even touched

the heart of a hard core subspecialists myself.

Thank you both so much for being part of this

conversation when we come back we will take a

look at a doctor that is starting a program that

is called Direct Care that actually fits a model of

filling in the gaps in some of these small rural

communities. We will be right back with The

County Seat.

Welcome back to The County Seat as we are

looking at the problem of rural health care we

will have to look outside the box because we

haven't found any answers inside the box. We

recently had an opportunity to interview and

Doctor in Kansas City who practices his entire

practice of medicine outside the box and its

working for him and he believes it will work for

rural medicine as well.

Doug Nunamaker:

if it takes 11 years to train someone and two

years to make quit. You can't keep up with that.

There's no system that can keep up with that

kind of mass exodus the previous mentality of

physicians was medicine was everything. And

you know nothing else superseded that.

Josh Umbehr:

we like to say in a lot of ways we haven't

changed anything. The practice of family

medicine is the same but in other ways. We've

changed everything by changing the business

model where an insurance free practice that

charges a monthly membership for full access to

care. But by doing that we remove 90% of the

headache. The hassle the inefficiency so that

the patient's now can get quality, affordable care

the doctors can focus on the patient's and

provide procedures and medicines and lab tests.

The discount it truly makes medicine, affordable

and accessible again.

What we gain in efficiency. We also gain in profit

by being able to cut 90% of our overhead we

can charge the patient's a fair amount and still

retain more of that are doctors on average make

30% more than the local family physicians in this

area, so it's actually more profitable for a doctor

to be in this model, providing very affordable

very accessible care and I think that's what

business does well competing things that don't

make sense but we get a better, faster, cheaper

product and higher-quality through good

business in all sorts of areas of our lives.

Doug Nunamaker:

I can't imagine going back to seeing more

patients a day then you're able it's akin to

making a mechanic fix 10 too many cars per day

somebody's going to get in a wreck. That's what

it is and in medicine, you can only truly take care

of so many people today. And if you do more

than that, then some of those people aren't

getting the care.

Josh Umbehr:

if it's bad for the patient's it's bad for the doctors

and that is what is driving doctors away from

rural medicine. They feel like they need to be

part of a giant system to play this giant

paperwork game this model streamlines that

whole process. I think that we've tried to do

higher and higher volumes and we've got less

and less value in return. The standard Dr. will

have 3000 patients and see 30 or 40 a day and

in our model the doctors are limited to about 600

patients and see five or six a day. So that we

can do same-day appointments. Almost all the

time and we can do hour-long appointments if

need be but we can also be available for phone

text e-mail to make health care accessible

without the patient needing to come to the office

we have more time to focus on the patient. So

I'd like to think we make fewer mistakes we have

less paperwork less distraction depending on

the study. You can look a doctor spending

between 22 and 65% of their day on the

computer doing paperwork or electronic filing.

That's just a whole chunk of time the doctor isn't

focused on the patient.

Doug Nunamaker:

I certainly enjoy this allot better than what the

alternative is. We even have people in

residencies or graduating medical students and

they spend time with us and they say do I really

have to do three years of an insurance type

practice you know, learning that?

Josh Umbehr:

the rural doctor has patient's who need care. I

grew up in a town of 900 and myself. One doctor

can manage that whole town very well in a direct

care model just with a simple redesign the same

medicine the same labs the same doctors

different payment model to make these things fit.

Gives you a lot to think about doesn't it? Let's

take stock of the things we have covered. We

have identified the basics at the beginning of

the show about what the shortages were

caused by in medicine. We have looked at the

things the schools and government have done

to improve it as far as the subsides and

programs and we looked at one Doctor who has

thought outside the box and come up with a

different way to approach medicine that might

work in rural Utah. Sounds promising but there

are still things that we may want to consider,

and we will get to that in my 2 cents worth in

just a minute.

Welcome back to The County Seat we have

looked at the issues of shortage of medical care

in rural Utah today here is my 2 cents worth on

that subject. The sad truth is that we have

allowed medical culture to cost too much to

work in a dispersed population base. It costs

too much to get an education you have to do

too much to avoid being sued. Our culture

makes you need too much because success is

measured by how much you make not by how

well you serve. And finally, we as consumers

expect too much of the insurance medical

complex and no longer ask how much we are

being charged for a drug or a service, yet we are

still paying for it with our premiums and our

taxes. I once asked my doctor how much it

would costs to get a procedure done that he

was recommending he could not answer the

question. By removing that direct link between

doctor and patient as to the costs of treatment

it becomes far too easy for prices to sky rocket

because the person paying premiums as well as

the doctor prescribing are disconnected from

knowing the cost of treatment. We have to

move back to a place where patient and doctor

are aware of and talking about how much care

costs. I believe that awareness along with the

things that we talked about today will start to

bring things back in line again and provide the

long-term fix to access to care. Thanks for

watching today you can see the extended

discussion with our guests on our YouTube

channel along with a full interview with Dr.

Umber we invite you to follow our social media

for midweek updates and we will see you next

week on The County Seat.

For more infomation >> The County Seat Discussing Medical Care In Rural Utah - Duration: 28:51.

-------------------------------------------

郭雪芙開春收千萬 嬌顏擦地險毁容 - Duration: 2:49.

For more infomation >> 郭雪芙開春收千萬 嬌顏擦地險毁容 - Duration: 2:49.

-------------------------------------------

Les préservatifs #001 - Duration: 5:09.

For more infomation >> Les préservatifs #001 - Duration: 5:09.

-------------------------------------------

An Update on Mycobacterium Chimaera and Cardiac Surgery Infections [Hot Topic] - Duration: 19:28.

Hi, I'm Matt Binnicker, the Director of Clinical Virology and Vice-Chair of Practice in the

Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology at Mayo Clinic.

Currently an outbreak of Mycobacterium chimaera infections following cardiac surgery is occuring

worldwide.

The outbreak is associated with contaminated heater-cooler units used in the heart/lung

bypass procedure during surgery.

In this month's Hot Topic, my collegue Dr. Nancy Wengenack will provide you with an overview

of the global outbreak situation and discuss what's known regarding the source of the

infections.

In addition, she'll discuss the clinical features of disease and the recommended laboratory

tests that can assist with the diagnosis of Mycobacterium chimaera infections.

I hope you enjoy this month's Hot Topic and I want to personally thank you for allowing

Mayo Clinic the opportunity to partner in your patients' healthcare.

Thank you, Dr. Binnicker.

I want to thank Mayo Medical Laboratories for giving me this opportunity to speak with

you about the current global outbreak of Mycobacterium chimaera in cardiac surgery patients.

I have no disclosures relative to this presentation.

As you view this presentation, consider the following important points regarding testing:

How is the test going to be used in your practice?

When should the tests be used?

How will results impact patient management?

My objectives today are to discuss the global outbreak of Mycobacterium chimaera infections

following cardiac surgery, to describe current knowledge about the heater-cooler units implicated

as the cause of the outbreak, and to examine the laboratory diagnostics available for the

detection, identification, and susceptibility testing of Mycobacterium chimaera.

Let's begin by talking about the first case report on this topic.

In 2015, a group from Zurich, Switzerland, reported on a series of cases involving six

patients who had prosthetic valve endocarditis or vascular graft infections due to Mycobacterium

chimaera.

The first case in their institution dated back to a surgery performed in 2012, and the

reported period of latency for the six cases ranges from 1.5 to 3.6 years after surgery

was performed.

Mycobacterium chimaera was cultured from blood, cardiac tissue, and other surgical specimens

for all cases.

Mycobacterium chimaera was also cultured from heater-cooler units used for cardiac bypass

during the surgical procedure and from air samples in the surgical suite.

Since the first case report, more than 100 cases of Mycobacterium chimaera infection

have been reported in Europe, the United States, and Australia.

All of the cases are reported from patients who have previously undergone cardiothoracic

surgery.

All of the cases involve the use of the Sorin Stockert 3T heater-cooler unit manufactured

in Germany.

In 2015, Sorin and another company merged to form a new company named LivaNova.

You will sometimes hear the heater-cooler unit referred to as the LivaNova Stockert

3T system.

Since there are more than 250,000 cardiothoracic surgical procedures performed annually in

the U.S. alone, and because the latency period for presenting with infection is so long,

there is concern that the number of cases detected so far is only the tip of the iceberg

for this event.

So, what is a heater-cooler unit and how is it used in cardiac surgeries?

Heater-cooler units are used during cardiac surgeries in conjunction with a heart-lung

bypass machine.

The heater-cooler unit does not have any direct contact with the patient or with patient blood.

The heater-cooler unit contains two water tanks and tubing.

One water tank uses warm water that through indirect thermal transfer, keeps the patient

warm during the surgical procedure often through the use of a warming blanket.

The second water tank contains cold water, which is used again indirectly to cool the

cardioplegia solution that slows or stops the patient's heart to allow the surgical

procedure to proceed.

The working hypothesis early in the outbreak investigation was that the heater-cool unit

was somehow responsible for introducing aerosolized bacteria into the surgical field.

Nontuberculous mycobacteria are environmental organisms found in soil and water throughout

the world.

They are commonly found in household and hospital plumbing, showers, water fountains, ice machines,

and any other area where water or water intrusion can be found, and they like to form biofilms,

which makes them resistant to cleaning and disinfection practices.

Nontuberculous mycobacteria are responsible for numerous reports of device-associated

and post-surgical infections and outbreaks.

Mycobacterium chimaera has been found in water from the Sorin 3T heater-cooler units used

in cardiac surgeries around the world.

How can this be?

Well, Mycobacterium chimaera has also been recovered from new, unused Sorin 3T heater-cooler

units stored at the manufacturing site in Germany and also from water samples taken

from the manufacturing site, implicating the manufacturing site as the source of the microbial

contamination in these heater-cooler units.

Sorin, or now LivaNova, as a company accounts for the manufacture of approximately 60% of

the heater-cooler units used in cardiac surgeries in the U.S., and it is a major supplier of

heater-cooler units for cardiac surgery units around the world.

So what do experts believe happened?

Well, it's thought that the contaminated heater-cooler units somehow aerosolized Mycobacterium

chimaera.

The photographs on this slide show a heater-cooler unit positioned in a surgical suite.

See the blue arrows in the photos for the position of the heater-cooler unit.

In the photographs on the top row, the exhaust of the heater-cooler unit is directed away

from the surgical field, and in the bottom row, the heater-cooler exhaust is directed

toward the surgical field.

In this study, the authors performed smoke testing of the airflow in the surgical suite

when the heater-cooler unit was turned on by placing a small smoke canister on the floor

just below the heater-cooler exhaust.

As you can see from the photographs, when the heater-cooler unit exhaust is directed

away from the surgical field, little smoke is seen in the area of the operating table,

but when the heater-cooler exhaust is directed toward the surgical field in the bottom row,

the smoke is blown in the direction of the operating table.

So, investigators believe that Mycobacterium chimaera was somehow aerosolized from the

contaminated heater-cooler unit and was able to contaminate the surgical field during the

procedure.

So what should be done now that this risk to patients who have previously had cardiac

surgeries has been identified?

Well, on June 1, 2016, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) advised hospitals to

determine a method for patient follow-up and establish patient surveillance in case of

potential exposure.

On October 13, 2016, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said that hospitals

are advised to notify patients who underwent open cardiac surgery involving a Stockert

3T heater-cooler unit that the device was potentially contaminated, possibly putting

patients at risk for a life-threatening infection.

Here at Mayo Clinic, more than 17,000 patients who underwent cardiac surgery at any of our

sites, whether in Minnesota, Florida, Arizona, or Wisconsin, within the past five years were

notified by certified letter of the recently discovered risk.

Nursing and physician resources were made available to patients and to their local physicians

in case patients or their health care providers had questions or concerns after patients received

the notification.

The risk of post-surgical infection appears to be low from the early CDC reports at about

1 in 100 patients to 1 in 1,000 patients, but patients may not experience any symptoms

for months to years after the surgery, so we may not yet have an accurate risk estimate.

The CDC currently reports a range of 3 months to 5 years post-surgery for the manifestation

of symptoms with the median time for onset of symptoms being 18 months.

Patients with Mycobacterium chimaera infections after cardiac surgery have a range of clinical

presentations, but the most common are cardiac manifestations including endocarditis, vascular

graft infection, and mycotic aneurysm.

Surgical site infections including mediastinitis and sternal wound infections are also common.

Other presentations have included abscess formation, bacteremia, osteomyelitis, ocular

infections, and granulomatous disease that mimics sarcoid.

General symptoms are fairly nonspecific and include fever, night sweats, unexplained weight

loss, fatigue, muscle aches, and shortness of breath.

One important point to remember is that it is not necessary to test asymptomatic patients

just because they have had previous cardiac surgery.

So what are hospitals doing to prevent any additional infections from occurring during

future cardiac surgeries?

Well, the exact site or sites of contamination within the heater-cooler units have not been

well-defined as yet.

You can see from the photographs of an open heater-cooler unit on the right side of the

slide that there are many nooks and crannies and water reservoirs where a biofilm may be

able to form and which would make decontamination difficult.

Indeed, attempts to decontaminate with a variety of agents have been successful in the short-term,

but ultimately, the attempts fail to eradicate the organism in the long-term suggesting that

inaccessible biofilm formation may be the problem.

Strict adherence to the manufacturer's decontamination protocols and replacement of internal tubing

and refurbishment of contaminated units is one possible response, but reliable decontamination

remains difficult to achieve.

Alternative strategies going forward include the use of heater-cooler units from other

manufacturers or LivaNova heater-cooler units manufactured after the dates pinpointed as

a concern for manufacturing site contamination.

In addition, some authors suggest that positioning of the Sorin 3T heater-cooler unit or any

heater-cooler unit outside of the operating suite and/or facing away from the surgical

field has been demonstrated to reduce particle counts and disruption of the surgical air

curtain.

This approach may require some construction as seen in the photos on the right side of

this slide where the heater cooler unit is positioned in a separate room with the tubing

run through specially constructed ports on the wall into the surgical suite.

You can see that care is needed to be taken so that the tubing doesn't become a tripping

hazard in the surgical suite.

In addition, just putting the heater-cooler unit in an adjoining room and running the

tubing through a cracked open doorway is not recommended since this does not prevent aerosols

generated by the heater-cooler unit from reaching the surgical field.

Let's talk a little bit about Mycobacterium chimaera.

Mycobacterium chimaera is a slowly growing nontuberculous mycobacterium that was first

proposed for species status by Enrico Tortoli.

Mycobacterium chimaera is a member of the Mycobacterium avium complex.

It was originally known as a genetic variant called "MAC-A" until Tortoli described

it as a distinct species in 2004.

Mycobacterium chimaera was the name selected since a chimera in Greek mythology is a mixture

of three different animals, with the head of a lion, the body of a goat, and the tail

of a serpent.

Similarly, Mycobacterium chimaera is a genetic mixture between different Mycobacterium avium

complex strains.

Mycobacterium chimaera was originally associated with pulmonary infections, but in the last

couple of years, M. chimaera has become well-known worldwide as a cause of post-surgical cardiac

infections associated with the use of contaminated heater-cooler units during surgery.

As I mentioned earlier, Mycobacterium chimaera is a member of the Mycobacterium avium complex,

and you can see from the list on this slide that there is now a large number of species

beyond Mycobacterium avium and Mycobacterium intracellulare that make up the M. avium complex.

They are all slowly-growing mycobacteria, and species identification can be tricky,

but it is now often necessary to go beyond the identification of Mycobacterium avium

complex because of the worldwide Mycobacterium chimaera event.

Things to note about some of the less well-known species in this complex are that Mycobacterium

avium subspecies hominissuis is not yet a validly recognized subspecies.

Also note that Mycobacterium marseillense is the M. avium complex species member, and

this can easily be confused with Mycobacterium massiliense, which is a member of the Mycobacterium

abscessus species complex.

M. marseillense is a slowly-growing mycobacterium while M. massiliense is a rapid-growing mycobacterium,

and this distinction becomes important when trying to choose the appropriate antibiotics

for patient care.

So let's talk for a few minutes about laboratory diagnostics for identification of Mycobacterium

chimaera.

Mycobacterium chimaera is a slowly-growing, non-pigmented, acid-fast mycobacterium.

Methods for the direct detection of Mycobacterium chimaera from patient specimens are not available

in clinical diagnostic laboratories, at least not at this time.

Ordering an acid-fast smear and mycobacterial culture to be performed on patient specimens

is the current recommendation for detection of Mycobacterium chimaera.

A positive acid-fast smear indicates that a Mycobacterium species is present, but it

is not possible to say which Mycobacterium species it is just from examining the acid-fast

smear.

As mentioned, Mycobacterium chimaera is a slow-growing mycobacterium, so cultures may

require 2 to 6 weeks of incubation before visible growth can be detected.

It should be noted that not all isolates of Mycobacterium chimaera are clinically significant.

Isolates from cardiac sources and other normally sterile sites are obviously concerning, but

M. avium complex is often isolated from respiratory specimens.

Mycobacterium avium complex in respiratory specimens can be a pathogen, or it can be

a commensal organism, or it can be a contaminant picked up from the environment.

In our experience, approximately one-third of Mycobacterium avium complex isolates from

respiratory specimens can be furthered identified to the species level as Mycobacterium chimaera.

So finding Mycobacterium chimaera in a respiratory specimen does not necessarily mean it is a

pathogen for that patient.

One common question that the laboratory receives surrounding this outbreak event is, "What

type of specimen should I submit if I suspect my patient may have an M. chimaera infection?"

Well, the appropriate types of samples to submit depend on the patient's clinical

presentation, and consultation with an infectious diseases specialist can be very helpful in

these cases.

Common samples that are submitted to the laboratory include blood, purulent drainage, and tissue.

Swabs are discouraged as specimens because they collect very little material, and often

times, it is difficult to get the material back out of the swab, even with flocked swabs.

A needle aspirate is preferred over a swab for the collection of drainage where possible.

Another question the lab commonly receives is, "Should we perform environmental culturing

of our heater-cooler units, or should we perform air sampling in the surgical suite?"

The answer to those questions is, "Probably not."

Again, you should consult with your local infection control specialist, but the literature

has already firmly established that Sorin 3T heater-cooler units manufactured prior

to September 2014 are likely to be contaminated with Mycobacterium chimaera, so there is little

point in performing cultures on additional heater-cooler units.

In addition, negative environmental cultures will not rule out Mycobacterium chimaera contamination

and do not negate the need to consider Mycobacterium chimaera infection in patients with prior

cardiac surgery and the appropriate clinical presentation.

Once a mycobacterial culture has grown, Mycobacterium chimaera can be identified using molecular

methods.

The Hologic/GenProbe nucleic acid hybridization probes for Mycobacterium avium complex and

Mycobacterium intracellulare will be positive but will not discriminate to the species level

for identification of Mycobacterium chimaera.

The Hain GenoType NTM-DR LineProbe assay can differentiate M. chimaera from other M. avium

complex members.

MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry as used out of the box does not discriminate between M. intracellulare

and M. chimaera, but a recent publication by Pranada, et al. in the Journal of Medical

Microbiology suggests that a software-based peak-finding algorithm may make species identification

possible.

Right now, the most reliable way to identify M. chimaera is through the use of DNA sequencing

where targets such as the 16S ribosomal RNA gene, the hsp65 gene, or the ITS region are

useful.

Mycobacterial blood cultures can be useful for detection of Mycobacterium chimaera bacteremia

in suspect patients, but the yield from performing multiple blood cultures is not fully known

at this time.

The general recommendation is to collect 1 to 3 blood cultures per patient, but you should

also consult your microbiology laboratory before collecting too many cultures on multiple

patients because there is limited capacity on FDA-cleared instruments for mycobacterial

blood cultures, and a bolus of samples could quickly overwhelm available capacity.

A big reason for the limited capacity is that mycobacterial blood cultures require prolonged

incubation times of up to 42 days.

Now, let's discuss the recommendations for antimicrobial susceptibility testing of M.

avium complex members such as M. chimaera.

M. avium complex members are generally susceptible to clarithromycin if the patient has not previously

had macrolide therapy.

The American Thoracic Society (ATS), the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA), and the

Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) recommend that clinically significant

isolates from patients on prior macrolide therapy should be tested.

Also recommended for testing are isolates from patients who develop bacteremia while

on macrolide therapy or who relapse while on macrolide therapy.

Initial isolates from clinically significant sources like blood or tissue can be tested

to establish baseline AST values.

Repeat AST can be done after 3 to 6 months of therapy if there is no improvement or if

the culture remains positive.

There are no CLSI interpretive breakpoints for drugs other than clarithromycin, but amikacin

breakpoints may be adopted by the CLSI in 2018.

Combination therapy with clarithromycin, rifabutin, and ethambutol is often used.

Amikacin can be added to that regimen for the first three months of therapy.

The ATS/IDSA guidelines suggest a minimum of 12 months of therapy for disseminated MAC

disease, but there has been little outcome data generated as yet for treatment of patients

with M. chimaera cardiac infections, so optimum therapy and the duration of therapy is still

evolving.

In summary, Mycobacterium chimaera is a nontuberculous mycobacteria that is currently the center

of a global outbreak event caused by the use of contaminated Sorin 3T heater-cooler units

in cardiac surgery.

Patient notification of possible exposure should follow CDC and FDA guidance.

The CDC website link is provided on this slide and is a good source of the most up-to-date

information on this ongoing event.

The CDC site also provides a very helpful toolkit to assist facilities with patient

notification.

Mycobacterium chimaera is a member of the Mycobacterium avium complex.

Identification to the species level and antimicrobial susceptibility testing of isolates should

be performed by a qualified laboratory for clinically significant isolates from patients,

particularly those who have previously undergone cardiac surgery.

For more infomation >> An Update on Mycobacterium Chimaera and Cardiac Surgery Infections [Hot Topic] - Duration: 19:28.

-------------------------------------------

A Little R&R | Super Mario Odyssey #16 - Duration: 22:04.

I have a license to use Nintendo's content in this video through the Nintendo Creators Program. This video is not sponsored or endorsed by Nintendo, but any advertising revenue from this video will be shared with Nintendo.

For more infomation >> A Little R&R | Super Mario Odyssey #16 - Duration: 22:04.

-------------------------------------------

Laura Smet attaquée sur les réseaux sociaux, David Hally­day vole au secours de sa demi-sœur - Duration: 3:16.

For more infomation >> Laura Smet attaquée sur les réseaux sociaux, David Hally­day vole au secours de sa demi-sœur - Duration: 3:16.

-------------------------------------------

Simplify Networking in a Hybr...

For more infomation >> Simplify Networking in a Hybr...

-------------------------------------------

Power Carved Ripple Bench | woodworking how to - Duration: 14:30.

hey guys we're Evan and Katelyn and today we are going to make a bench and

then power carve some texture into it Arbortech was nice enough to sponsor

this video and send us a bunch of really cool new tools to play with so

thank you Arbortech! we got our first taste of power carving while we were

hanging out with April Wilkerson and we definitely wanted to do it again

and we're making a bench because we have one right now in our entryway but it's

kind of embarrassing. it was an earlier project... and that's

all we need to say moving on so this new design it's gonna be a pretty simple

design because we really want the texture to be the start of the show

the bench is designed like a box without the bottom: four sides and a top. and to keep

a modern vibe we're using hairpin legs we definitely recommend doing some test

carving first to get a feel for the tool and not have to worry about your final piece.

that looks so artsy and cool. looks like you know what you're doing we're gonna try using some pecan

for the first time it has these really cool striations so hopefully that'll

look cool with the texture we're going for

time for a lazy planing! Will it fit? It will barely

we traced the first piece to get the right length for the sides of our bench

so in cutting the pecan yesterday we realized that this is a really hard wood

we just want to make sure we can carve the texture we want into it so we're going to

man way better no tear out nothing look at that. That's so good. Wanna try it? Yeah.

we lined up our top inside pieces before permanently attaching anything I think the grain

looks really nice over here matches up ah we marked where our pieces would join

together and all the spots to drill pocket holes

okay can you see my hands because I want to put text like glue and screw you can now

actually before we do that let's sand these flat

what do you want to do for dinner haha we just had lunch shh shh shh ah you want tacos?

so the pecan is a little warpy and it wasn't attaching at a 90-degree angle so

we're trying to remedy that with these big ol clamps. Big ol clamps, big ol clamps! we measured this space here

to get the right size for our end pieces

we try to always make our cuts as we go because with things like warpy wood

and non-professional woodworking skills things aren't always gonna fit together

the way you expect them to

yeah it's a tiny bit proud here tiny tiny bit but it looks really good

looks really good

pocket hole time

oh my gosh what if these are the table legs. what's going on? hi!

I think this is might be what we're waiting. have a good one! oh my gosh that's the legs I'm gonna be

so excited- it's the legs! sorry I got excited oh that's gonna look good it's gonna look really

good okay we'll figure out the legs later for now, pocket holes

I feel we're preparing a sandwich

sanding phase one low grit belt sander hit the raised areas

phase two high grit random orbit get a nice surface finish

phase three hand sand to take the edge off the corners. it's like it was never warpy

I see that you've upgraded your driver haha that's awesome

also I see that you needed to get a little bit more leverage. this is actually pretty good.

so at this point you have a perfectly acceptable bench

but the whole reason we built this is to do some power carving

so we're doing one last practice because we were nervous and I started doing it

and it was really tearing out and it's cuz I was going against the grain the

blade spins across so you wanted to be spinning across with the grain so we're

gonna try again with the grain all smooth without the grain without the

grain against the grain it's crazy so we're about to go into power carving

montage mode but we'll try to mix in some tips tip 1 instead of pushing hard

into the wood lightly pull the TURBO Plane towards you along the wood's surface

tip two place your cuts randomly so you don't accidentally form a pattern

I'm so glad that you're doing this though you're a lot better at it

you're better at being random mine just end up being in a line

tip three don't forget to carve all the way to the edges

is it really satisfying to do? It's like super satisfying

I thought it would take way longer to sand. I thought it'd take way longer.

it's like a really smooth starting finish

real quick we wanted to say thank you to our patreon supporters we're really

active on patreon and have exclusive videos pretty much every week Google

Hangouts and lots of oversharing so if you want to support us at patreon dot com

slash evan and katelyn it would help us make more videos and we'd be super

grateful thank you next we added a couple coats of shellac

shellac's pretty forgiving and we wanted something easy to work with for this texture

we usually use foam brushes and would recommend those over the bristled ones

shellac raises the grain so you have to stand it between coats it's it's it

actually feels horrible

it is hard to sand the texture without pressing too hard

one trick to get your coats even is to shine a flashlight on

the surface at a steep angle it'll show where it's too thick and what spots

you've missed thankfully the second coat barely required any sanding

you rub my shoulder, I rub the bench. hahaha

yeah like I wanna just come out here and fly my drone. I wanna come out here and eat goldfish

yeah we can come out here, eat goldfish, we can bring the bench again

thank you guys for watching we had a lot of fun on this one it definitely made us want to a) do more bigger projects like

like more furniture pieces and b) put this texture on everything so if you

guys have any ideas of furniture pieces that we can layer this texture on let us

know in the comments below plus I need more practice with this tool

I think when I was doing it I was just digging in and it was too aggressive and

and Katelyn was better at it it does so much of the work for you so you really

have to have like at least for this texture have a light hand go with the

grain have a light hand let the tool be the tool. let the tool- for our first time using it

it was really easy and it's fun it's kind of addicting if you want more

information on this project if you want to see what the original design was

gonna be oh yeah you can find that in our after-show at patreon dot com slash Evan and Katelyn

thanks for watching bye that was good only like 20 people thought we were

crazy out here yeah I apologize I have sneezed in your presence

furniture peaches we could add this texture to- furniture peaches! I was gonna plow through that was really bad

good job glue applicator good job glue brushes good job wood for being

receptive of this glue satisfying to the senses to touch that's not a weird thing to say

totally normal thing to say. on the internet

No comments:

Post a Comment