November 24, 2015

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Golden State Warriors Are First Team To Begin NBA Season 16-0

The defending champion Golden State Warriors set the record for best start in NBA history at 16-0, as Stephen Curry had 24 points and nine assists in a 111-77 rout of the Los Angeles Lakers on Tuesday night.

With their coach sidelined, the Warriors surpassed the 15-0 starts by the Washington Capitols of 1948-49 and 1993-94 Houston Rockets.

Confetti streamed down when the final buzzer sounded and Golden State’s players barely celebrated.

Kobe Bryant shot 1 of 14 for just four points, matching the worst-shooting performance of his career in a game where he had at least one basket. The Lakers dropped to 2-12 with the second-worst record in the NBA.

Draymond Green added 18 points, seven rebounds and five assists as the Warriors extended their franchise-record home winning streak to 27 games with coach Steve Kerr watching from behind the scenes while recovering from complications following two back surgeries.

Interim Luke Walton is leading the way, and it might have been a little sweeter to set the record against the Lakers franchise he helped win two titles.

Golden State became the sixth team in NBA history to win 20 consecutive regular-season games, a streak dating to last season. The Suns have the next shot at stopping this incredible start when the Warriors visit Phoenix on Friday night.

Curry only had to play 30 minutes, taking a seat for good with 6.5 seconds remaining in the third to huge cheers from a sellout crowd of 19,596 that was really closer to 20,000 with all the standing-room only tickets sold.

Bryant went 1 for 7 from 3-point range in 25 minutes as Los Angeles lost its fourth in a row and eighth in nine.

He also finished 1 for 14 last season against San Antonio, according to STATS.

Klay Thompson had 11 points but missed his first seven shots and, as has been the case in a handful of these wins, the Warriors took a few minutes to get rolling — and then they were off and running.

Golden State missed five of its first six shots before Curry’s 3-pointer from the left wing at 8:28. The Warriors knocked down five of their first 12 from long range to build a 27-9 lead with 1:41 left in the opening period.

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Blue Origin Announces Successful Launch, Landing Of Rocket

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Commercial space startup Blue Origin announced Tuesday the successful launch and landing of one of its rockets. NPR explores what the success means for space travel.

Transcript

ARI SHAPIRO, HOST:

Big news this week in commercial space travel. And to tell us all about it, NPR science correspondent Geoff Brumfiel is here. Hey, Geoff.

GEOFF BRUMFIEL, BYLINE: Hey there.

SHAPIRO: What exactly happened this week?

BRUMFIEL: So yesterday afternoon, a rocket built by this company Blue Origin, which is owned by Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, took off from a field in Texas. The rocket traveled more than three times the speed of sound, got up to 62 miles above the Earth, which is technically the boundary to outer space. And then – this is the really cool part – this giant rocket stage fell back to Earth. But instead of just crashing into the ground, it fired its rockets.

(SOUNDBITE OF ROCKET FIRING)

BRUMFIEL: So the rocket fires its engines and sort of hovers like a UFO and then gently sets down on Earth.

SHAPIRO: This was so secret people didn’t even know the launch was happening. And it sounds like the big news is not the takeoff but the landing. Why is the landing so important?

BRUMFIEL: The point here is reusability. So right now, when you have one of these giant rockets taking off from Cape Canaveral, or, you know, from Kazakhstan if it’s Russian, basically the rocket goes firing off into space and then the vast majority of it, the first stage, just breaks off and goes clump back down onto the ground or into the ocean.

SHAPIRO: That’s Geoff making the sound of a rocket hitting the ground.

BRUMFIEL: Yeah, exactly. But if you could land that first stage, you could potentially use it again. And that’s exactly what billionaire Jeff Bezos told CNN he wants to do. Here he is.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

JEFF BEZOS: This is the first of what will be many test flights. We’re going to – over the next couple of years, we’re going to fly this vehicle many, many times.

BRUMFIEL: And if they can fly the same rocket many, many times, they could potentially dramatically cut the cost of space travel. So space could get a whole lot cheaper.

SHAPIRO: Does this mean that in our lifetimes people will be able to take tourist trips to space affordably?

BRUMFIEL: So that’s exactly what this company Blue Origin’s hoping to do. So on top of this rocket that they can reuse they’re going to put a capsule. And when they get up to the edge of space, the capsule’s going to pop off the top of the rocket. It’ll float in space for about four minutes, give people a great view and then it’s going to come back down. It’ll open some parachutes and land gently so it doesn’t rely on this rocket landing system. If that works, then potentially, yeah, people could at least get a taste of space. And further down the road maybe it could get cheap enough that you could actually go into orbit.

SHAPIRO: Geoff, this launch and landing was a success. Before this, there were a lot of pretty spectacular failures. So does this now mean problem solved, everybody’s got it figured out?

BRUMFIEL: Well, right, I think that’s a really good point. So, you know, this was a big success for Blue Origin, but earlier this year, they did have a failure where the rocket stage actually crashed. SpaceX, which is a rival company, has tried this several times. And their rocket stages have crashed and actually exploded. So I think it’s important to remember this isn’t a proven technology yet and we probably have a ways to go before this is going to happen.

SHAPIRO: That’s NPR’s Geoff Brumfiel. Thanks, Geoff.

BRUMFIEL: Thank you.

Copyright © 2015 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

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Worried About The Flu Shot? Let's Separate Fact From Fiction

A nurse prepares an injection of the influenza vaccine at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston in 2013.

A nurse prepares an injection of the influenza vaccine at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston in 2013. Brian Snyder/Reuters/Landov hide caption

toggle caption Brian Snyder/Reuters/Landov

Every year before influenza itself arrives to circulate, misinformation and misconceptions about the flu vaccine begin circulating. Some of these contain a grain of truth but end up distorted, like a whispered secret in the Telephone game.

But if you’re looking for an excuse not to get the flu vaccine, last year’s numbers of its effectiveness would seem a convincing argument on their own. By all measures, last season’s flu vaccine flopped, clocking in at about 23 percent effectiveness in preventing lab-confirmed influenza infections.

But that’s not the whole story, said Lisa Grohskopf, a medical officer in the influenza division of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“Twenty-three is better than zero, but the 23 percent was overall. If you were one of the people who got an influenza B strain, it was closer to 60 percent,” she said. “Even if it’s not going to work against one virus very well, there are other viruses circulating.”

Each year’s flu vaccine contains three (trivalent) or four (quadrivalent) strains of the flu, selected in February by the World Health Organization and then endorsed by the Food and Drug Administration, as the ones experts expect will circulate in the coming flu season. They choose one H1N1 strain, one H3N2 strain and one B virus strain, either from the Yamagata lineage or the Victoria lineage. Quadrivalent vaccines contain a B strain from each lineage.

“Viruses in the Yamagata lineage or in the Victoria lineage are different enough that there’s not a lot of cross-protection,” Grohskopf said. “So if, say, we have a vaccine that contains a Yamagata family virus one season and it ends up being a predominantly Victoria season, we might not get very good protection against B strains.”

But sometimes the experts’ predictions are off the mark, and sometimes a strain they select mutates before the season arrives. Last year, the H3N2 strain they chose was a poor match, and that strain dominated the season, though B viruses became more common toward the end, Grohskopf said. Adjustments were made in the vaccine for the H3N2 virus this year.

“There’s definitely reason to be hopeful that it’s going to be better this year, but it’s a little too early to tell,” Grohskopf said. “Flu seasons can be very variable in terms of how fast they take off, but right now activity is still fairly light.”

The flu vaccine options this year haven’t changed much from last year, with two exceptions. The recombinant flu vaccine, made without the virus and without eggs, is now approved for all adults age 18 and older (instead of just those ages 18 to 49). And the intradermal vaccine, a low-dose vaccine that uses a shorter needle and injects only into the skin, is now available as a quadrivalent vaccine instead of just trivalent.

The CDC does not recommend any one vaccine over another. “We really just think it’s important that people get vaccinated, and depending on where you are, you may not be able to get a particular product,” Grohskopf said. “We don’t want to hunt for one thing and then not get vaccinated until it’s too late and flu is already peaking for the season.”

Getting vaccinated against flu is particularly important for several at-risk groups and people in frequent, close contact with those at-risk groups, Grohskopf said. The populations at the highest risk of serious complications from the flu include pregnant women, people age 50 and older and children under age 5, particularly under age 2, she said.

Anyone with a chronic medical condition, such as lung disease, heart disease, kidney disease, liver disease or a neurological condition also has a higher risk of serious complications with an influenza infection. Those at risk of infecting more vulnerable people include parents of young children, day care workers, teachers, caretakers of elderly individuals and anyone working in health care.

But the problem with limiting flu immunization to these groups, she said, is that the flu is a tricky bug — and unpredictable.

“While some people are definitely at higher risk for severe disease if they get the flu, sometimes even generally healthy, young people — older children, younger adults who are the most hardy folks if they don’t have any other chronic illnesses — can get really sick, hospitalized and even die, and we can’t really predict who those folks are going to be,” Grohskopf said. “The majority of people who get the flu are going to feel really crummy for a time and then recover without any problems.” But even those folks lose work time and risk spreading the disease to family members and others, she said.

Another monkey wrench this year is additional evidence, reported at Stat, that getting a flu shot every year might reduce its effectiveness in warding off the flu. This evidence isn’t entirely new, and scientists still don’t entirely understand it, but it also doesn’t mean that skipping the flu shot this year is wise if you got it last year.

In the meantime, for those who still haven’t gotten the vaccine this year, make sure it’s not because of one of the concerns below. As described in the links, each of these misconceptions is based on inaccurate information, a misunderstanding or an exaggeration.

Concern No. 1: Can getting the flu vaccine give you the flu or make you sick?

Fact: The flu shot can’t give you the flu

Concern No. 2: Do I really need to get the flu vaccine this year if I got it last year?

Fact: For now, a new flu shot each year is still recommended

Concern No. 3: Could getting the flu vaccine make it easier for me to catch viruses, pneumonia or other infectious diseases?

Fact: Flu vaccines reduce the risk of pneumonia and other illnesses

Concern No. 4: Isn’t the flu shot just a “one size fits all” approach that doesn’t make sense for everyone?

Fact: You have many flu vaccine options, including egg-free, virus-free, preservative-free, low-dose, high-dose and no-needle choices

Concern No. 5: Can the flu shot cause death?

Fact: There have been no confirmed deaths from the flu shot

Concern No. 6: Aren’t deaths from the flu exaggerated?

Fact: Deaths from influenza range from the lower thousands to tens of thousands each U.S. flu season

Concern No. 7: Aren’t the side effects of the flu shot worse than the flu?

Fact: Influenza is nearly always far worse than flu vaccine side effects

Concern No. 8: Don’t flu vaccines contain dangerous ingredients such as mercury, formaldehyde and antifreeze?

Fact: Flu shot ingredients do not pose a risk to most people

Concern No. 9: Shouldn’t pregnant women avoid the flu shot or only get the preservative-free shot? Could the flu vaccine cause miscarriages?

Fact: Pregnant women are a high-risk group particularly recommended to get the flu shot. Fact: The flu shot reduces miscarriage risk. Fact: Pregnant women can get any inactivated flu vaccine

Concern No. 10: Can flu vaccines cause Alzheimer’s disease?

Fact: There is no link between Alzheimer’s disease and the flu vaccine; flu vaccines protect older adults

Concern No. 11: Don’t pharmaceutical companies make a massive profit on flu vaccines?

Fact: Vaccines make up a tiny proportion of pharma profits. That makes it possible for them to continue making them in the event of a pandemic

Concern No. 12: Flu vaccines don’t really work, do they?

Fact: Flu vaccines reduce the risk of flu

Concern No. 13: But flu shots don’t work in children, do they?

Fact: Flu vaccines reduce children’s risk of flu

Concern No. 14: Can flu vaccines cause vascular or cardiovascular disorders?

Fact: Flu shots reduce the risk of heart attacks and stroke

Concern No. 15: Can vaccines can break through the blood-brain barrier of young children and hinder their development?

Fact: Flu vaccines have been found safe for children 6 months and older

Concern No. 16: Will the flu vaccine cause narcolepsy?

Fact: The U.S. seasonal flu vaccine does not cause narcolepsy.

Concern No. 17: Can the flu vaccine weaken your body’s immune response?

Fact: The flu vaccine prepares your immune system to fight influenza.

Concern No. 18: Can’t the flu vaccine cause nerve disorders such as Guillain-Barré syndrome?

Fact: Influenza is more likely than the flu shot to cause Guillain-Barré syndrome.

Concern No. 19: Can the flu vaccine make you walk backward or cause other neurological disorders like Bell’s palsy?

Fact: Neurological side effects linked to flu vaccination are extremely rare (see Concern No. 18), but influenza can cause neurological complications. Fact: The flu shot has not been shown to cause Bell’s palsy.

Concern No. 20: Don’t people recover quickly from flu since it’s not really that bad?

Fact: Influenza knocks most people down *hard*

Concern No. 21: Can people die from the flu even if they don’t have another underlying condition?

Fact: Otherwise healthy people DO die from the flu

Concern No. 22: Can people with egg allergies get the flu shot?

Fact: People with egg allergies can get a flu shot

Concern No. 23: Can’t I just take antibiotics if I get the flu?

Fact: Antibiotics can’t treat a viral infection

Concern No. 24: Since I got the flu last time I got a flu shot, that means it doesn’t really work for me personally, right?

Fact: The flu shot cannot guarantee you won’t get the flu, but it reduces the risk of catching it

Concern No. 25: But I don’t need the shot since I never get the flu, right?

Fact: You can’t predict whether you’ll get the flu

Concern No. 26: Can’t I protect myself from the flu by simply eating right and washing my hands regularly?

Fact: A good diet and good hygiene alone cannot prevent the flu

Concern No. 27: Won’t getting the flu simply make my immune system stronger?

Fact: The flu weakens your immune system while your body is fighting it and puts others at risk

Concern No. 28: If I get the flu, why won’t just staying home prevent me from infecting others?

Fact: You can transmit the flu without showing symptoms

Concern No. 29: Can having a new vaccine each year make influenza strains stronger?

Fact: There’s no evidence flu vaccines have a major effect on virus mutations

Concern No. 30: Isn’t the “stomach flu” the same thing as the flu?
Fact: The “stomach flu” is a generic term for gastrointestinal illnesses unrelated to influenza

Concern No. 31: Is there any point in getting a flu shot if I haven’t gotten one by now?

Fact: Getting the flu shot at any time during flu season will reduce your risk of getting the flu

Tara Haelle is a freelance health and science writer based in Peoria, Ill. She’s on Twitter: @tarahaelle

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Songs We Love: Baaba Maal, 'Fulani Rock'

Baaba Maal
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Baaba Maal Courtesy of the artist hide caption

toggle caption Courtesy of the artist

The Traveller cover.

The Traveller cover. Courtesy of the artist hide caption

toggle caption Courtesy of the artist

“Fulani Rock,” the opening track of Baaba Maal‘s newest album, The Traveller, is a conceptual declaration, one of those in-studio meetings of an African artist and European producer that can either go very wrong or very right. Thank goodness that here it’s very much the latter. Guided by the steady hand of Johan Hugo Karlberg, a London-based Swedish producer who’s spent much of the last decade attempting a more perfect fusion between the organic and electronic soul musics of the two continents (most famously as one half of The Very Best), “Fulani Rock” is a controlled tempest. It is also some of the most aggressive and Western-sounding music of the 62-year-old Senegalese legend’s career.

The song’s bed is made out of deeply distorted looped voices and steel guitars. And over them begins a chant, with a multi-tracked choir of Baaba Maals (some auto-tuned, some full-throated) intoning in Fulani while a squadron of djembe drums pounds away. And over the course of its nearly five minutes, the song does not let up: A crossfire hurricane of percussion, call-and-response vocals, and electric guitar leads the rumors of war. It’s one of those times when calling the song “Rock” seems both a creative intent and a reflection of its energy. In the song’s liner notes, Maal declares as much:

Language is a weapon. I’m not using it to destroy but to build bridges and bring people together.

The Traveller is out on Jan. 15 on Palm Recordings/Marathon Artists.

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