Each Organization to Commit $25M for a Combined $50M to Uncover Drivers of Heart Disease

·         Novel Research Model to Tap Best and Brightest Minds from Various Disciplines

ORLANDO, Florida, November 8, 2015 – The American Heart Association (AHA) and Google Life Sciences have announced a joint commitment to form a research collaboration that will bring new, unconventional thinking to one of the longstanding challenges of cardiovascular disease. Each organization will invest $25 million for a total of $50 million over roughly five years to support novel strategies to understand, prevent, and reverse coronary heart disease and its consequences, such as heart failure and sudden cardiac death.

Cardiovascular diseases are the number one cause of death globally, accounting annually for approximately 17 million deaths, or about one of every three deaths.  Coronary heart disease itself is responsible for more than 7 million deaths annually. But the root causes of this disease continue to be explored and a concerted effort, combining technology and medicine, could help. Because traditional research funding models, which are often incremental and piecemeal, make it difficult to study a multifaceted subject that plays out over many years, AHA and Google Life Sciences have committed to a bold new approach: a $50 million investment in one research team, which will be tasked with developing a richer, deeper understanding of cardiovascular disease.

This marks the largest one-time research investment in AHA's history. In early 2016, a Joint Leadership Group made up of individuals from AHA and Google Life Sciences will select a team leader to run this effort. This team leader, who may be a cardiologist but could come from any background or area of expertise, will receive the full $50 million in funding over roughly five years to design a program, assemble a cross-functional group of investigators, and lead all efforts towards further finding new causes and drivers of coronary heart disease. The team will have support across many important areas, including clinical research, engineering, and data analysis, as well as ongoing strategic counsel, oversight and access to resources from the Joint Leadership Group.

"With its devastating human impact on countless generations of families, cardiovascular disease, and in particular coronary heart disease remains the greatest and deadliest global health challenge we face today," said American Heart Association CEO Nancy Brown. "By working together, AHA and Google Life Sciences will be able to serve as the catalyst for change and transformation in reducing the impact of coronary heart disease on people's lives and alleviating this global burden.  Just imagine if we could reverse coronary artery disease and restore the healthy heart muscle it destroys or, even better, prevent the whole process from beginning in the first place!"

Technology has a critical role to play. The collaboration will provide the scientific community with channels to technical capabilities and insights offered by Google Life Sciences. With the unique opportunity to access such resources, the collaboration will expand research pathways and empower researchers to conceptualize and test new approaches. AHA, the nation's authority on cardiovascular disease will contribute its vast scientific and medical resources, resulting in the application of a unique blend of technical and scientific knowledge to the search for new cardiovascular solutions.

"This is a fundamentally different kind of model for funding innovation," said Andy Conrad, CEO of Google Life Sciences. "The team leader will be able to bring together clinicians, engineers, designers, basic researchers and other experts to think in new ways about the causes of coronary heart disease. We're already imagining the possibilities when a team like that has access to the full resources of both Google Life Sciences and the AHA -- and we can't wait to see what they discover."

More information about the structure of the collaborative will be released as it's developed in coming months.

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About the American Heart Association
The American Heart Association is devoted to saving people from heart disease and stroke - America's No. 1 and No. 5 killers. We team with millions of volunteers to fund innovative research, fight for stronger public health policies, and provide lifesaving tools and information to prevent and treat these diseases. The Dallas-based association is the nation's oldest and largest voluntary organization dedicated to fighting heart disease and stroke. To learn more or to get involved, call 1-800-AHA-USA1, visit heart.org or call any of our offices around the country. Follow us on Facebook and Twitter.

About the life sciences team at Google

The life sciences team at Google is focused on helping to move health care from reactive to proactive.  Combining expertise from the fields of biology, chemistry, physics, medicine, electrical engineering and computer science, we're developing new technology tools for physicians that can integrate easily into daily life and help transform the detection, prevention, and management of disease. Current projects in development include a smart contact lens with miniaturized glucose sensor; a collaboration to develop new kinds of continuous glucose monitors, a nanodiagnostics platform to help with early detection of disease; cardiac and activity sensors, and Liftware utensils for people with tremor. The life sciences team graduated from Google[x] and is now in the process of becoming a standalone Alphabet company.

Davenport, Oct. 15, 2015 – People should continue to jump in quickly to give CPR, using breaths if they've been trained in CPR and employing mobile technology to speed up the rescue of cardiac arrest victims, according to the American Heart Association's 2015 Guidelines Update for Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) and Emergency Cardiovascular Care (ECC).

The latest American Heart Association guidelines, published today in Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association, highlight how quick action, proper training, use of technology and coordinated efforts can increase survival from cardiac arrest.  A leading cause of death in the United States, cardiac arrest is caused when the heart suddenly stops, usually due to an electrical malfunction in the heart that causes an irregular heartbeat and disrupts blood flow through the body. Survival depends on immediate CPR and other actions starting with bystanders. That's why the American Heart Association has been training people in CPR, first aid and advanced life support all around the world.

More than 326,000 people experience cardiac arrest outside of a hospital each year and about 90 percent of them die, often because bystanders don't know how to start CPR or are afraid they'll do something wrong. The 2015 guidelines say high-quality CPR training for both bystanders and healthcare providers will help them feel more confident to act and provide better CPR to cardiac arrest victims. This guidelines update, which is intended to evolve CPR training, also recommends that all bystanders should act quickly and use mobile phones to alert dispatchers, with the ultimate goal of having immediate CPR given to all victims of cardiac arrest.

The AHA guidelines, which are based off the latest resuscitation research, have been published since 1966 to provide science-based recommendations for treating cardiovascular emergencies - particularly cardiac arrest in adults, children, infants and newborns. This 2015 update confirms known CPR recommendations with several quality enhancements to help save even more lives, including a range for the rate and depth of chest compressions during CPR. The last update to the guidelines was in 2010.

Key points from the 2015 Guidelines Update provides bystanders, dispatchers and communities with practical guidance to improve the effectiveness of their teamwork:

·         Untrained bystanders should still call 911 and provide Hands-Only CPR, or CPR without breaths, pushing hard and fast in the center of the chest to the rate of 100-120 compressions per minute. However, if the bystander is trained in CPR and can perform breaths, he or she should add breaths in a 30:2 compressions-to-breaths ratio.

·         Bystanders should use mobile phones to immediately call 911, placing the phones on speaker, so the dispatcher can help bystanders check for breathing, get the precise location and provide instructions for performing CPR.

·         Dispatchers should be trained to help bystanders check for breathing and recognize cardiac arrest. Dispatchers should also be aware that brief generalized seizures may be an early sign of cardiac arrest.

·         Mobile dispatch systems that notify potential rescuers of a nearby presumed cardiac arrest can improve the rate of bystander CPR and shorten the time to first chest compressions.  Communities may want to consider this service to improve the chain of survival.

Improving Healthcare's Systems of Care

Inside hospitals, CPR training is foundational to the lifesaving care healthcare systems provide, considering about 200,000 cardiac arrests occur in hospitals annually. Yet, research shows resuscitation skills can decline within a few months - far before the two-year current evaluation standard. Frequent training ensures hospitals are continuously evaluating how to deliver patients the highest quality of emergency cardiovascular care.

"The 2015 update calls for integrated systems of care that participate in continuous quality improvement and that provide a common framework for both community and healthcare-based resuscitation systems," said Clifton Callaway, M.D., Ph.D., chair of the AHA's Emergency Cardiovascular Care committee and professor of emergency medicine at the University of Pittsburgh. "We must create a culture of action that benefits the entire community in which it operates, inside and outside the hospital setting."

In addition to a strengthened systems of care, the guidelines recommendations for healthcare professionals are:

·         Upper limits of recommended heart rate and compression depth have been added, based on new data suggesting that excessive compression rate and depth are less effective. Rescuers should perform chest compressions at a rate of 100 to 120 per minute and to a depth of at least 2 inches, avoiding excessive depths greater than 2.4 inches.

·         Targeted temperature management helps prevent brain degradation during post-cardiac arrest care. New evidence shows a wider range of temperatures are acceptable. Providers should select a temperature between 32-36 degrees Celsius and maintain it for at least 24 hours.

·         Healthcare providers are encouraged to simultaneously perform steps, like checking for breathing and pulse, in an effort to reduce the time to first chest compression.

·         There is insufficient evidence to routinely intubate newborns with poor breathing and muscle tone who have been born with meconium, infants' first feces, in their amniotic fluid.  Instead, the new recommendation is to begin CPR under a radiant warmer to get oxygen to the infant faster

For almost 50 years, the American Heart Association's CPR and ECC guidelines have been used to train millions in CPR, first aid and advanced cardiovascular care around the world. These guidelines are based on an international evaluation process that involved hundreds of resuscitation scientists and experts worldwide who evaluated thousands of peer-reviewed publications.

This year's update provides recommendations on the data where new evidence requires a systematic review, in part, due to a network of trainers who regularly implement the CPR and ECC guidelines and rely on the science to inform the most effective care.  To further make the guidelines practical and adaptable to many audiences, the AHA is providing this year's update in three forms: the full Guidelines Update, a Guidelines Highlights document summarizing key points, and a mobile-friendly, searchable website compendium of all the association's scientific findings. Learn more at 2015ECCguidelines.heart.org.

About the American Heart Association

The American Heart Association is devoted to saving people from cardiovascular disease and stroke - America's leading killers. We team with millions of volunteers to fund innovative research, fight for stronger public health policies, and provide lifesaving tools and information to prevent and treat these diseases. The Dallas-based association is the nation's oldest and largest voluntary organization dedicated to fighting heart disease and stroke. A leader in resuscitation science, the organization trains over 17 million people per year in CPR, first aid and advanced cardiovascular care around the world through programs and awareness campaigns. To learn more or join us, call 1-800-AHA-USA1 or any of our offices around the country, or visit heart.org.

Events slated across the country and include new, robust curriculum

 

DALLAS - September 8, 2015 - The American Heart Association (AHA) and the National Football League (NFL) have teamed up to launch a program that is designed to help promote physical activity and safe sport participation among youth.

The program, titled Back to Sports, is geared towards the parents and caregivers of upper elementary, middle and high school aged students who actively participate in sports or are considering it as an extra-curricular activity. Through an additional grant program that has been established, Back to Sports will engage with athletic trainers who will serve as expert facilitators to deliver sports safety information in up to 100 communities across the country this year.

The goal of Back to Sports is to increase awareness of the benefits of sports participation as a positive way for children to achieve the recommended 60 minutes or more of daily physical activity, while addressing key safety concerns including concussion awareness, heat and hydration, cardiac arrest and proper response and the prevention of pediatric overuse injuries. The program provides credible, easy-to-understand information and ongoing resources and education for parents and caregivers, teachers, coaches, youth sports leagues and others, which also includes information about nutrition and healthy snacks.

Content created for the toolkits uses the most relevant, evidence-based information to date.  The AHA, along with strategic alliance experts at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Korey Stringer Institute and the National Athletic Trainers' Association, were all involved in helping develop and review the content and curriculum that lies at the core of this program.

"The AHA is excited to work with the NFL on this important program," stated Kim Stitzel, Senior Vice President of Preventive Health Markets for the American Heart Association. "Participation in youth sports has certainly declined in recent years. We believe the Back to Sports education focus can help address safety concerns around youth sports and create more opportunities for youth to get physically active and develop positive life-long habits."

"Getting kids active and healthy continues to be a priority for the NFL and all 32 teams and making sure parents are educated about sports safety is a critical component of these efforts," said Charlotte Jones Anderson, chair of the NFL Foundation and executive vice president of the Dallas Cowboys. "The NFL Foundation is dedicated to improving the health and safety of sports and we are pleased to partner with American Heart Association to provide important resources to communities across the country through the Back to Sports program."

Back to Sports is an expansion of a nearly 10-year relationship between the American Heart Association and the National Football League to promote physical activity in youth. For more information on this new program visit heart.org/BackToSports.

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Davenport, July 20, 2015 - Women across Iowa and Illinois are joining together in the fight for their lives. Go Red For Women is the American Heart Association's national movement to end heart disease and stroke in women, and Karen Dahlstrom, Senior Associate Director of Admissions at Augustana College has recently been named Chair of the movement in the Quad Cities.

Dahlstrom is a native of Aledo, Illinois, but currently resides in Moline, Illinois.  Karen's husband Neil is the Manager of Corporate History and Records Services at John Deere.  In addition to her work with the AHA, Dahlstrom is also a volunteer with the United Way, Big Brothers Big Sisters, and the John Deere Classic.  Dahlstrom has been a member of the committee for the Go Red For Women Luncheon for 2 years, and most recently served as the head of the communications committee.

As the Chair of the 2015 Go Red For Women, Dahlstrom will work to raise awareness of heart disease and stroke, which kill more women than men each year.  Dahlstrom and the AHA will work together to teach women how the disease can be prevented through simple lifestyle changes.  This annual events draws more than 500 women passionate about ending heart disease and stroke, and aims to raise nearly $120,000 to support local efforts to improve women's health.  The American Heart Association is currently investing more than $10 million into research and education projects in the state of Iowa as part of their goal to reduce deaths from heart disease and stroke by 20% while improving the lives of all Americans by 20% by the year 2020.

The 12th annual Quad Cities Go Red For Women Luncheon takes place Wednesday November 4th, 2015 from 10:30 am - 1:00 pm at The River Center. For more information or to get involved in the Go Red For Women movement, contact the American Heart Association Davenport office at (563) 323-4321 or visit quadcitiesgoredforwomen.org.

 

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About the American Heart Association

The American Heart Association is devoted to saving people from heart disease and stroke - the two leading causes of death in the world. We team with millions of volunteers to fund innovative research, fight for stronger public health policies, and provide lifesaving tools and information to prevent and treat these diseases. The Dallas-based association is the nation's oldest and largest voluntary organization dedicated to fighting heart disease and stroke. The Midwest Affiliate serves an 11-state region: Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wisconsin. To learn more or to get involved, call (563) 323-4321or visit heart.org/easterniowa.  Follow us on Facebook and Twitter.


DAVENPORT, IA, November 15, 2010

The River Music Experience (RME) is proud to present nationally known folksinger, Danika Holmes, in concert on November 20, 2010 at 8:30 PM. The concert will be held at The Redstone Room located at 129 Main Street, Davenport, Iowa. Tickets are $7.00 and can be purchased at http://rivermusicexperience.eventquick.com/emmpublic/ or at the door.

Singer, songwriter and musician, Danika Holmes, is a specialty in the folk music world. Music critics agree that Danika is charming and energetic with a welcoming tone in her voice, which is as gentle as a breeze.

Currently, Danika's music is being broadcast on independent radio stations, blogs, and podcasts around the world. She performs regularly with her band, has opened for The Nadas, and her show was aired on Iowa Public Television and Radio. "Second Chances," Danika's debut album, was released in March of 2010. Shortly thereafter, a fan favorite, "Lock Me In Tonight," was made into Danika's first music video and was released in June 2010.

"Danika Holmes is a rising star in the heartland!" says Bill Sullivan of The Rock and Roll Report.

"She's a true American talent... I couldn't stop listening!" - Mike Wolfe of The History Channel's "American Pickers."

This will be Danika's second show at the Redstone Room, and is sure to be a sold out crowd.  Danika's passion for music, the influence of her parents, and life experiences have shaped her into the writer and artist she has become.

Danika Holmes is available for a phone or in-person interview.  Please contact Danika directly via her email @ danikaholmes@yahoo.com

For more information, please visit Danika's website at http://www.danikaholmes.com, or for MP3's, contact information, bio, etc., visit Danika's online press kit at http://www.sonicbids.com/epk/epk.aspx?epk_id=260156.

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