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US CEO slaying suspect charged with murder as 'act of terrorism'Robert W. Baird Upgrades Bright Horizons Family Solutions (NYSE:BFAM) to “Outperform”
Was_FG Seibert 41, 9:01. Drive: 7 plays, 17 yards, 2:24. Key Play: Daniels 16 run on 3rd-and-12. Washington 3, Dallas 0. Dal_FG Aubrey 46, :03. Drive: 3 plays, 58 yards, 00:42. Key Plays: Igbinoghene 0 interception return to Dallas 31; Rush 41 pass to Brooks. Dallas 3, Washington 3. Was_Daniels 17 run (kick failed), 9:53. Drive: 11 plays, 60 yards, 5:07. Key Plays: Ekeler 2 run on 3rd-and-1; Daniels 14 pass to N.Brown; Daniels 5 run on 3rd-and-3; McNichols 13 run. Washington 9, Dallas 3. Dal_Tolbert 6 pass from Rush (Aubrey kick), 4:47. Drive: 9 plays, 80 yards, 5:13. Key Plays: Turpin kick return to Dallas 20; Rush 16 pass to Tolbert; Rush 18 pass to Spann-Ford. Dallas 10, Washington 9. Dal_FG Aubrey 48, 8:11. Drive: 6 plays, 20 yards, 3:06. Key Plays: Rush 10 pass to Dowdle; Rush 10 pass to Luepke on 3rd-and-14. Dallas 13, Washington 9. Dal_Schoonmaker 22 pass from Rush (Aubrey kick), 5:23. Drive: 5 plays, 44 yards, 2:47. Dallas 20, Washington 9. Was_Ertz 4 pass from Daniels (Daniels run), 3:06. Drive: 10 plays, 69 yards, 2:14. Key Plays: Ekeler kick return to Washington 31; Daniels 11 pass to N.Brown; Daniels 19 pass to N.Brown; Daniels 20 pass to D.Brown. Dallas 20, Washington 17. Dal_Turpin 99 kickoff return (Aubrey kick), 2:49. Drive: 1 play, 0 yards, 00:13. Dallas 27, Washington 17. Was_FG Seibert 51, 1:39. Drive: 7 plays, 37 yards, 1:10. Key Plays: Daniels 23 run; Daniels 13 pass to Ertz. Dallas 27, Washington 20. Was_McLaurin 86 pass from Daniels (kick failed), :33. Drive: 1 play, 86 yards, 00:12. Dallas 27, Washington 26. Dal_J.Thomas 43 kickoff return (Aubrey kick), :14. Drive: 1 play, 0 yards, 00:07. Dallas 34, Washington 26. RUSHING_Dallas, Dowdle 19-86, Elliott 3-6, Lamb 1-1, Rush 4-1, Lance 1-(minus 3). Washington, Daniels 7-74, McNichols 3-22, Ekeler 9-22, D.Brown 1-14, Robinson 5-13. PASSING_Dallas, Rush 24-32-0-247. Washington, Daniels 25-38-2-274. RECEIVING_Dallas, Lamb 10-67, Schoonmaker 3-55, Dowdle 3-12, Spann-Ford 2-24, Tolbert 2-22, Brooks 1-41, Luepke 1-10, Mingo 1-8, Turpin 1-8. Washington, N.Brown 6-71, Ertz 6-38, McLaurin 5-102, D.Brown 2-22, Ekeler 2-1, Bates 1-13, Robinson 1-11, McCaffrey 1-8, Zaccheaus 1-8. PUNT RETURNS_Dallas, Turpin 1-(minus 2). Washington, Zaccheaus 1-19. KICKOFF RETURNS_Dallas, Turpin 4-179, J.Thomas 1-43. Washington, Ekeler 3-101. TACKLES-ASSISTS-SACKS_Dallas, Butler 10-2-1, Kendricks 4-6-0, Parsons 4-4-2, Bland 3-3-0, Lewis 3-3-0, Hooker 2-2-0, Wilson 2-2-0, Odighizuwa 2-1-0, J.Thomas 2-1-0, Overshown 1-2-1, M.Smith 1-2-0, Mukuamu 1-0-0, Golston 0-1-0. Washington, Luvu 5-3-0, Wagner 5-3-0, St-Juste 5-1-0, Martin 2-4-0, Sainristil 2-4-0, Igbinoghene 2-2-0, Chinn 2-1-0, Armstrong 2-0-0, Day 1-4-0, Payne 1-3-1, Newton 1-3-0, Ferrell 1-2-0, Fowler 1-2-0, Butler 1-1-0, M.Davis 1-1-0, Jean-Baptiste 1-1-0. INTERCEPTIONS_Dallas, Golston 1-18, Mukuamu 1-5. Washington, None. MISSED FIELD GOALS_Dallas, Aubrey 42, Aubrey 35. Washington, Seibert 51. OFFICIALS_Referee Tra Blake, Ump Carl Paganelli, HL Patrick Turner, LJ Tom Eaton, FJ Mearl Robinson, SJ Don Willard, BJ Grantis Bell, Replay Tyler Cerimeli.
Bird flu has seen a resurgence in the U.S. this year, with California leading the pack. Since the Department of Agriculture detected the virus in dairy herds in March , more than 50 people have tested positive for it , with 34 reported cases in California alone. Last month, a Californian became the first child in the U.S. confirmed to have the virus. In the nearly three decades since H5N1 was first isolated in commercial geese in Guangdong, China, likely spread from migratory wild birds, it has infected more than 890 people — and killed more than 460 — in 24 countries . Since 2022, millions of egg-laying chickens have been exposed to, infected with and culled or killed by H5N1 in the U.S. What stands out this year is how widespread the infection has been among dairy cows, which are spreading it to farmworkers — the group that accounts for most of the human cases so far. The virus has been kept somewhat at bay. Although it has mutated to infect humans and about 50 other types of mammals , like an ill-fitting key it still faces challenges to entering human bodies. People have contracted it primarily from direct contact with infected animals , for example by getting milk on their hands at a farm and then touching their eyes , so the case numbers remain modest and disease symptoms in the U.S. generally mild. But as we have seen with other influenza strains , the virus continues to evolve. There have been reports of humans being infected without a clear animal contact . A research paper this month reported that H5N1 is now just one mutation away from attaching more easily to human cells, possibly enabling sustained human-to-human transmission — which could mean more people getting infected and becoming seriously ill, disrupting school, work and our everyday lives. There is no guarantee that a major human outbreak or pandemic will happen soon. Finding a single mutation in a lab that can facilitate more human infections does not guarantee that this threat will play out in the real world. But the more transmissions that occur, as is happening now among poultry and dairy cows in the U.S., the higher the likelihood that some of these mutations will appear by chance and take off. A teenager in Canada’s British Columbia with a mutated form of H5N1 became critically ill; such mutations could lead to more streamlined entry into human airways, making people sicker. It is also significant that H5N1 has now infected at least one U.S. pig . Pigs, which contain receptors for both avian and human influenzas, can get simultaneously infected with both, exchange genes and create a novel strain that can more easily infect humans. This is what likely happened with the 1918 flu pandemic and again with swine flu in 2009 . In addition, there have been four influenza pandemics since the early 20th century, following the 1918 pandemic that killed an estimated 50 million people. All of them had origins in avian influenza. So it increasingly looks like the question is not whether H5N1 will cause a widespread outbreak in humans, but when. The consequences could be severe: As was the case during the early days of COVID, our immune system is not experienced with fighting this novel pathogen, and it increases the chance of more serious disease such as pneumonia and cardiac and brain complications for all ages. Although human cases in the U.S. have been relatively mild, about half of the people who have contracted H5N1 globally have died. At this crossroads, the U.S. can choose either of two scenarios. The first is that we do everything right. We could continue to improve the timely surveillance of animals and raw milk — batches of which have been recalled for potential bird flu risk — to better identify infected herds and understand the true magnitude and dynamics of infection. This step will allow us to prepare for an emergency outbreak and know whether any of our interventions, such as employee vaccination programs or biosecurity measures to isolate animals, are working. The Department of Agriculture recently announced that it will test raw milk samples in six states, some of which have identified infected dairy herds and some of which have not. This could provide a glimpse of how extensive the outbreak really is. More states should be included in monitoring, and we still need to test farmworkers and their close contacts more systematically. Hospitals and clinics should move to centralize and share H5N1 data. Our federal government can prioritize and incentivize scientific discovery of rapid diagnostics, new vaccines and therapeutics. The current supply of H5N1 vaccines is small , but the government can expand its production and consider offering them to farmworkers who request them. We then need to develop a playbook for implementing and disseminating these technologies to the most at-risk populations locally and globally. If we’ve learned anything from COVID, elected officials, federal agencies, public health and healthcare workers have to deliver clear and consistent messaging with empathy. If we take those steps, a major bird flu outbreak does not have to become another pandemic. The other option is to go the direction the incoming federal government seems poised to support: Shrink public health dollars and expertise at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and other federal entities , cut investments in infectious disease research , stymie the use of evidence-based vaccines, therapeutics and diagnostic tests , and support drinking raw milk . The choice is ours, and only one route promises more suffering for our families and loved ones. Peter Chin-Hong is a professor of medicine and an infectious disease specialist at UC San Francisco. @PCH_SF
FORT MYERS, Fla. (AP) — Dallion Johnson scored 25 points and made seven 3-pointers to help FGCU defeat CSU Bakersfield 74-54 on Friday. Johnson went 9 of 14 from the field for the Eagles (1-4). Zavian McLean scored 12 points, going 4 of 9 from the floor, including 1 for 5 from 3-point range, and 3 for 4 from the line. Jevin Muniz went 3 of 10 from the field (2 for 5 from 3-point range) to finish with 10 points, while adding eight rebounds. Marvin McGhee led the Roadrunners (3-2) in scoring, finishing with 15 points. Fidelis Okereke added 10 points. The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar .
‘World at dawn of third nuclear age’, armed forces chief warnsOpenAI and military defense technology company Anduril Industries said Wednesday that they would work together to use artificial intelligence for "national security missions." The ChatGPT-maker and Anduril will focus on improving defenses against drone attacks, the companies said in a joint release.
Claire Danahy will play in the biggest field hockey game of her life Friday (3 p.m.) in Ann Arbor, Mich. And the Chelmsford native is a major reason UMass will face second-seeded Northwestern in a NCAA Tournament semifinal. The former Chelmsford High star and UMass defeated UConn, 2-1, and then Harvard, 1-0, on a goal by Danahy. She pocketed the game-winning goal from just inside the shooting circle to make it 1-0 with 2:42 left in the third. The graduate student leads the Minutemen with 29 points on the strength of eight goals and 13 assists. The team’s second highest scorer has 22 points. In 91 career games and 84 starts, Danahy has compiled 20-18-58 totals. Danahy was named one of the UMass Student-Athletes of the Week. She has started all 22 games this season and figures to play a critical role against Northwestern. The UMass roster features players from eight countries. Also on the team is another former Chelmsford High standout, sophomore Remore Serra. This will be the fifth semifinal appearance by UMass, but the program’s first since 1992. Interim Boston Bruins head coach Joe Sacco got his coaching start in Lowell. Two years removed from a 738-game National Hockey League playing career, Sacco was named an assistant coach with the Lowell Lock Monsters prior to the 2005-06 season. He served under head coach Tom Rowe and coached such players as Chelmsford native Keith Aucoin and Johnny Boychuk, who went on to star with the Bruins. It was unusual for someone without coaching experience to start at the American Hockey League level, but by all accounts Sacco was a quick learner. Shirley resident Arthur Bernardino continues to find the back of the net for the New England Revolution Academy. Last Saturday, Revolution Academy teams went a combined 4-0-1 at Oakwood SC. The U-14s earned a 6-0 victory on the road led by Bernardino, who tallied two goals. The Fitchburg State men’s basketball team dropped a tough 59-58 decision to the Beacons of UMass Boston in non-conference action in Fitchburg. The Beacons grabbed a 10-5 edge on a layup from junior Xavier McKenzie (Lowell) before the Falcons trimmed the deficit to 10-9. UMass Boston received a game-high 20 points, four rebounds, three steals and one block from McKenzie. WWE NXT TV is coming to the Lowell Memorial Auditorium on Tuesday, Dec. 17 at 6:30 p.m. Tickets are on sale at lowellauditorium.com or by calling 1-800-657-8774. The card is subject to change, but potentially making the trip to Lowell will be several NXT stars, including Trick Williams, Roxanne Perez, Tony D’Angelo, Fallon Henley, Ethan Page and Kelani Jordan. Tickets start at $42. Five Saint Michael’s College women’s soccer players recently qualified for College Sports Communicators NCAA Division II Academic All-District honors, including junior Faith Kosiba (Dunstable/Groton-Dunstable Regional). Kosiba started 17 of her 18 games this fall, contributing five goals and three assists. A double major in health science and education studies, Kosiba holds a 3.83 GPA. Twenty-three members of No. 10/11 nationally ranked Endicott received Conference of New England postseason honors, including defensive lineman Michael Canney, a Dracut resident named to the first team. Selected to the second team was wide receiver Shane Aylward of Tewksbury. Elsewhere, seven Plymouth State University players earned Massachusetts State Collegiate Athletic Conference postseason recognition, including quarterback Braden Lynn of Littleton, who was named to the second team.India News Today Live Updates on December 18, 2024 : Delhi metro services to remain affected on these route for over a week: Check details
India News | PM to Inaugurate ICA Global Cooperative Conference on MondayThis report is from today's CNBC Daily Open, our international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. Like what you see? You can subscribe here . 24/7 San Diego news stream: Watch NBC 7 free wherever you are French government topples after no confidence vote France's government has been toppled in a vote of no confidence on Wednesday. A total of 331 lawmakers from both the leftwing New Popular Front alliance and the far-right National Rally supported a no-confidence motion in the country's lower house, far exceeding the 288 votes needed to pass the motion. This means Prime Minister Michel Barnier will be forced to tender his resignation. Impeachment motion filed against South Korea's president South Korea's President Yoon Suk Yeol is reportedly facing an impeachment vote on Dec. 7 after the country's parliament formally introduced a motion to impeach him over his shock announcement — and subsequent reversal — of martial law. The motion needs eight lawmakers from Yoon's party to cross the aisle for achieving the two-thirds supermajority needed for the impeachment. Bitcoin crosses $100,000 The price of bitcoin soared past the $100,000 benchmark for the first time ever on Thursday. The flagship cryptocurrency rose as high as $103,844.05, and was last higher about 4.5% at $103,338.4, according to Coin Metrics. The move came hours after U.S. President-elect Donald Trump announced plans to nominate Paul Atkins , who's known for his pro-crypto stance, as chair of the Securities and Exchange Commission. U.S. markets hit fresh records All three major U.S. indexes closed at record highs Wednesday, with tech shares leading the charge following strong reports from Salesforce and Marvell Technology. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 0.69% and closed above the 45,000 mark for the first time, at 45,014.04. The S&P 500 rose 0.61% and the Nasdaq Composite added 1.3% to end at 6,086.49 and 19,735.12 respectively. Asian markets were mixed , with Hong Kong leading losses and down 1%. [PRO] UBS and others think it's time to short the dollar The U.S. dollar has surged since September, but some financial institutions are suggesting investors should bet against further strength in the greenback. Investment bank UBS, for instance, has warned investors not to chase the dollar's recent gains. Money Report Shell and Equinor to create Britain's largest independent oil and gas company in joint venture British regulators approve $19 billion Vodafone-Three mobile merger It was the summer of 2016. Protests were being held at Ewha Womans University, one of Seoul's most prestigious universities and the country's top women's college, over the school administration's plan to introduce a new degree program. Their protests would set off a series of events leading to the impeachment and removal of then South Korean President Park Geun-hye in March 2017. Eight years later, another South Korean president is on the verge of impeachment. But unlike 2016, the backlash from the South Korean public and lawmakers was swift this time. Articles of impeachment have been introduced by opposition parties against President Yoon Seok Yeol barely 48 hours after his martial law flip-flop and subsequent reversal of martial law. Just hours following the announcement, South Koreans saw scenes of parliamentary staffers attempting to bar armed troops from the country's parliament using fire extinguishers; protesters clashing with police; and even a livestreamed video of opposition party leader Lee Jae-myung climbing over a parliament fence to reach the National Assembly. Given the political chaos, is South Korea still investible? Jonathan Garner, chief Asia and EM equity strategist at Morgan Stanley, told CNBC that even if one keeps aside the turmoil in the government, South Korea's economy is "not that well positioned in a global economic slowdown," and that the semiconductor and auto sectors, which are key industries in the country, are facing a potential downturn worldwide. However, others were more upbeat. "New reports are now suggesting that Yoon will be impeached or resign fairly quickly, which might help investors further draw a line under the affair," said Thomas Mathews, head of markets for Asia Pacific at Capital Economics. Mathews also added that impeachments are not unfamiliar to South Korea – and that equities fared quite well during Park's impeachment in 2016, despite numerous protest rallies in Seoul and other parts of the country. Also on CNBC Impeachments are not new to South Korea — and its markets U.S. stocks start December chilly; Korea stocks tumble on political chaos U.S. stocks began December chilly, but will probably warm up soon
AFC standouts meet when Herbert, Chargers host Jackson's Ravens on Monday nightTrump's tariff threat a grim reminder of turbulent trade in first administration
Will Utah State or Boise State forfeit vs. San Jose State in the Mountain West semifinals?
Public service changes need more than new letterhead to make a differenceBOSSCAT Recognized for Excellence, Innovation and Growth with Prestigious 2024 Contractor/Rehab Company of the Year Award at the Third Annual IMN SFR Industry Awards Event in Scottsdale, AZ on December 2, 2024 . CHARLESTON, S.C. , Dec. 17, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- BOSSCAT TM Home Services and Technologies, a leading provider of home technology, improvement and repair solutions, announced today that it has been awarded the prestigious IMN 2024 Contractor/Rehab Company of the Year Award at the third annual Industry Award Ceremony. The award recognizes the company's commitment to customer-centered innovation, excellence in service delivery, cost effectiveness and focus on client satisfaction. Javascript is required for you to be able to read premium content. Please enable it in your browser settings.Boosting India's Space Sector: IIFCL's Call for Easier Financing
Unlikely battleground California plays key role -- again -- in setting US House's political balanceIf you drive a car, you all know the seatbelt chime: the obnoxious tone that sounds if you drive without your seatbelt buckled. This writer won't tell you what to do, but it's always a good idea to buckle up when you're behind the wheel. That being said, the decision to do that -- and how you're warned when you don't -- should be up to you and the car manufacturers. But government? Nah. They have a horde of unelected bureaucrats just itching to create more rules. Like this: Requiring seatbelt warning chimes for all car seats is a significant change to existing law My copy of the Constitution says only Congress can make or change federal law Unelected bureaucrats get away with this, but only because Congress and the Supreme Court have let them https://t.co/TUcSgPSsDa More from The Washington Times : The Department of Transportation’s National Highway Traffic Safety Administration finalized a rule Monday that will require all car seats to adopt the “ding, ding, ding” safety belt chimes with warning lights that have long reminded drivers to buckle up. The amendment to Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard No. 208 will require automakers to add front passenger seat warnings to all new cars, trucks, buses — except for school buses — and multipurpose passenger vehicles starting in September 2026. Manufacturers must add the warning system to the rear seats of vehicles beginning in September 2027. So all new vehicles will get more expensive. Also, many cars and car seats attach to a latch system that often bypasses the seatbelt. So drivers will have to still engage the seatbelt to put a carseat in the back. Or if you put luggage or groceries or drive for Uber, this will change how you operate. The weight of goods can trigger the warning. Government doesn't think of this. Adds more cost to every car thanks to some unelected bureaucrat and their rules. Wheee! Which is why Lee is correct. Only Congress should make these rules. And even then, they shouldn't. Here's a problem. When you load groceries or other items in the back seat, the sensors will assume there is a passenger, and then chime away unless you lock the seat belts. Government is stupid. As we said: government is stupid. A seatbelt chime requires a weight sensor. That increases the cost and adds electronics to all seats. Then you put heavy boxes on your seat and the chime goes off. This writer used to carry a bag with medical supplies and a laptop for work. THAT would trigger the front seat weight sensor. This one won’t last. Once people get completely fed up with having to fasten the seat belt so that groceries on the back seat don’t set off an irritating warning beep, it will be the fastest regulation to disappear. The regulations won't disappear. They rarely do. But people will find a way to disable the alarm. The seat belt law was always about a reason to pull someone over when they were doing nothing wrong. It's not up to the government to force safety on people and fining them for noncompliance. I wear mine pretty religiously because I can think for myself. However, if people don't... This. This is a huge issue. The constant requirements for new features in cars drives up the cost of vehicles for Americans. https://t.co/NGX2k9P887 The bureaucrats don't care. To them, more expensive cars that price some people out of the market is a feature, not a bug. This is exactly how government overreach works. No, this particular case is not detrimental to the future of society. But you have to ask yourself. How could this power over me be used negatively before you just hand away your rights and freedom piece by piece. https://t.co/3yFrBW30or And this is why you don't give them an inch, cause they'll take a mile. A big reason why car insurance is going up is that *every* part of a car now has electronics and software. Every fender bender now requires additional wiring for cameras and sensors. Windshields require computer calibration for lane detection technology. https://t.co/mui8Zk0V6W This, too. These things have far-reaching consequences.LOS ANGELES , Dec. 17, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Sports and recreational injuries send more than 3.5 million Americans to the hospital emergency room each year according to the National Safety Council. The problem is much greater in collegiate sports, where NCAA injury incident reports reached 1.3 million in 2022. Beyond soft tissue damage, these injuries include life-altering Anterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL) tears and Traumatic Brain Injuries. To reduce the occurrence and impact of sports-related injuries, CLR Neurosthenics today launched CLR Advantage TM , a groundbreaking solution that employs interactive software and a wearable, wireless sensor network to collect real-time neurophysiological data while athletes perform pre-programmed physical exercises, cognitive tests, reaction games and position drills. This data is then used to instantly generate reports that reveal hidden deficiencies, indicate player readiness, and guide training routines for injury prevention, performance optimization and rehabilitation. Designed by a team of leading sports neurophysiologists and biometric engineers, patent-pending CLR Advantage TM utilizes FDA-approved qEEG brain wave sensors and physiological monitors to capture a continuous stream of high-resolution data, including cortical power, heart rate, heart rate variability, respiration rate, trapezoidal tension, galvanic skin response and peripheral temperature. The solution then employs NASA technology to process biometric signals and report on neurophysiological capabilities, including brain connectivity, power, activation and symmetry during various physical tasks and mental exercises. CLR Advantage TM finally correlates event-marked physiologic data to reinforce neurologic observations. For example, data may indicate certain risk in an athlete that exhibits an elevated heart rate, neurologic asymmetry and qEEG inhibition during a single-leg balance exercise. CLR Advantage TM recently completed a two-year clinical trial with 177 NCAA Division I athletes at the University of Cincinnati . Performed in partnership with Select Medical at the University's Sports Medicine Department, the study compared the neurophysiological performance of healthy athletes with those suffering from ACL injuries. Results from the study, which continues to assess injured athletes through various stages of rehabilitation, were published in the International Journal of Sports Physical Therapy . To supplement ongoing research, CLR Advantage TM is currently employed by the NFL Professional Football Athletic Trainers Society (PFATS) to study ACL injury propensity through assessments that include a variety of dynamic force exercises. "For the first time, we now have a better understanding of exactly how the brain is impacted by an acute injury," said Robert Mangine, Senior Athletic Director of Sports Medicine at the University of Cincinnati and Residency Director for NovaCare Rehabilitation. "CLR Advantage TM allows us to look at brain activity as athletes progress through the rehabilitation, then use that data and musculoskeletal measures to determine a safe return to play." The Microsoft Azure cloud-powered CLR Advantage TM platform provides an end-to-end, HIPAA-compliant solution for operators to organize teams, create athlete profiles, schedule appointments, conduct assessments, monitor live biometric data, and generate comprehensive analytic reports. Offered on a subscription basis, the solution is available for demonstration at CLR Neurosthenics' Los Angeles Assessment Center. https://clradvantage.com/ For additional information contact: Mark O'Bryan (424) 256-7264 mark.obryan@clradvantage.com 1 https://publications.aap.org/pediatrics/article/144/5/e20192759/38190/Soccer-Injuries-in-Children-and-Adolescents 2 https://perma.cc/9EG6-6TBJ ; Robert L. Parisien et. al., Implementation of an Injury Prevention Program in NCAA Division I Athletics Reduces Injury-Related Health Care Costs. 9 Orthopedic J. of Sports Med. (2023). https://ijspt.org/task-driven-neurophysiological-qeeg-baseline-performance-capabilities-in-healthy-uninjured-division-i-college-athletes/ View original content to download multimedia: https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/clr-neurosthenics-launches-neurophysiological-assessment-platform-to-help-prevent-sports-injuries-optimize-performance-and-improve-rehabilitation-302334112.html SOURCE CLR Neurosthenics
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