July 24, 2016

No Image

Gladiator Hulk, A Wandering Superman, And More Stuff You Might Have Missed From Comic-Con Day 3

Saturday is typically the day for all of the major movie studios at Comic-Con International to unveil their most-anticipated upcoming projects, and that trend continued this year with a pretty long list of projects and cast members being introduced, re-introduced, and otherwise hyped-up in a big way.

Both Marvel Studios and Warner Bros. Pictures had big days in San Diego’s famous Hall H event space, releasing the first footage from Spider-Man: Homecoming and Justice League, respectively, among other superhero-friendly films. But that wasn’t the only cool news coming out of the convention, of course.

Here are some other things you might have missed amid all of the Marvel and WB superhero movie buzz:

Hulk Goes Gladiator With Thor: Ragnarok Props

We got a few more details about the upcoming Thor: Ragnarok during Marvel’s Hall H panel, but the studio also revealed quite a bit about the film with some of the props it unveiled on the show floor. Fans got an up-close look at the gladiator armor Hulk will wear in the film, offering some confirmation that at least some of the movie’s storyline will draw from the popular Planet Hulk comics storyline that had the green behemoth playing out his own version of the Spartacus story on a far-off planet.

Star Trek Gets A Classic / Kelvin Crossover in Comics

Star Trek Beyond and the newly titled Star Trek: Discovery television series aren’t the only big projects happening in the Star Trek universe these days, as there’s a fan-friendly crossover also taking place in comics. During the “Star Trek Comics” panel, IDW Publishing shared some details about its “Altered Encounters” storyline, which has the crews of the classic Star Trek series and movies switching places with the crew from the rebooted (a.k.a. Kelvin) timeline. The first issue of the two-part story hit shelves right before the convention, and the second arrives next month. After that story wraps up, the series will begin telling stories set after the events of Star Trek Beyond.

The X-Men Spinoff Legion Looks All Kinds Of Crazy

Marvel’s annual “Cup o’ Joe” panel served up the first look at Legion, the upcoming television series that’s a joint production of Marvel Television and FX Productions and follows a character with some pretty significant ties to the X-Men universe – in the comics, at least. The series casts Downton Abbey actor Dan Stevens as David Haller, a powerful, telepathic mutant who’s the son of Charles Xavier in the comics but may or may not be so in the television series. (The studios are playing coy about the show’s relationship – if any at all – to the X-Men or Marvel movies.) No matter what the connection is, the first trailer for the eight-episode first season (which debuts in 2017) is pretty darn trippy.

[embedded content]

Mystery Science Theater 3000 Lands at Netflix

The celebrated comedy series that skewers low-budget genre movies is coming back, and it’s headed to Netflix. The streaming service announced during Comic-Con that it acquired the rights to a new season of MST3K that brings back much of the series’ original cast and creative team, as well as a few new additions (including Patton Oswalt and Felicia Day). Fans can expect to see more ridiculous jokes about even more ridiculous movies in the Kickstarter-funded return of the series, which doesn’t have a premiere date yet.

Vulture Confirmed For Spider-Man: Homecoming, But Not Identified

We got our first look at Spider-Man: Homecoming during Marvel’s aforementioned Hall H panel, and while some concept art revealed during the panel seemed to confirm that Vulture will indeed be a – if not the – villain in the film, Michael Keaton’s name was conspicuously absent from any casting discussion that occurred. Let the speculation continue, Spidey fans!

Henry Cavill Walked The Show Floor, Surprised Will Smith

It’s becoming a Comic-Con tradition for celebrities to don masks and walk the show floor, taking pictures with fans who don’t realize they’re posing with the actors who play some of their favorite heroes and villains. The latest star to do so is Superman himself, Henry Cavill, who posted a video of himself donning a Guy Fawkes mask (a la V for Vendetta) and wandering the show floor. He eventually makes his way to the Suicide Squad autograph line, taking a picture with Will Smith before revealing his true identity. Smith’s reaction? Priceless.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

IOC Decides Against Blanket Ban On Russian Olympic Athletes

Individual sports federations will decide whether each Russian athlete can compete in the Olympics, stopping short of banning the entire Russian delegation from competing due to a doping scandal.

Transcript

MICHEL MARTIN, HOST:

The International Olympic Committee said today that it will not ban all Russian athletes from competing at next month’s games in Rio. The decision comes after an independent investigation found that the Russian government has been systematically helping its athletes cheat with performance-enhancing drugs. NPR’s Corey Flintoff reports from Moscow.

COREY FLINTOFF, BYLINE: IOC President Thomas Bach said the decision holds Russian athletes accountable for their government’s sports doping program.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

THOMAS BACH: We have set the bar to the limit by establishing a number of very strict criteria, which every Russian athlete will have to fulfill.

FLINTOFF: But at the same time, Bach said the plan allows for individual justice for athletes who haven’t used drugs. The IOC said the decisions about which athletes can participate will be made by the international federations for each sport. The International Association of Athletics Federations has already decided to ban all Russian track and field competitors.

Others, like the federation for swimming, may decide that Russian athletes with no record of doping violations can compete. The IOC also banned any Russian athletes who’ve ever been suspended for doping violations. The decision disappointed many anti-doping officials who’d been calling for a ban on Russia’s entire team.

Travis Tygart, the head of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, said the International Olympic Committee had refused to take decisive leadership. The decision generally pleased Russia’s sports minister, who said he believed about 80 percent of the Russian team can meet the criteria that the IOC laid out. With just 12 days remaining before the games begin in Rio, the question now is whether the international sports federations can make their decisions on Russian athletes in time for them to compete. Corey Flintoff, NPR News, Moscow.

Copyright © 2016 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

Verizon Reportedly Prepares To Buy Yahoo For $4.8 Billion

The Yahoo sign at the company's headquarters in Sunnyvale, Calif.

Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP

Yahoo has found a buyer for its core Internet business: the nation’s largest telecom provider, Verizon Communications. The two companies are set to announce a $4.8-billion deal on Monday, according to Bloomberg.

For Yahoo, this ends the final act of one of the longest-running Internet companies. Founded in 1994, it survived the dot-com boom; the company now has the third most popular search engine in the United States, trailing behind Google and Bing.

Aside from the search, Yahoo also has finance, news, mail and other specialty verticals as well as the blogging site Tumblr and photo site Flickr.

Yahoo’s biggest value, however, has rested in its stakes in the Chinese online retail giant Alibaba and in Yahoo Japan — and those will remain with Yahoo. The deal also could spell an end of the tenure of Yahoo’s high-profile CEO Marissa Mayer.

For Verizon, this is the latest purchase in its push to refashion itself into a digital conglomerate of various mobile, Internet, video and advertising services. Last year, the telecom company bought AOL for $4.4 billion, acquiring its content sites, including the Huffington Post and TechCrunch, as well as ad targeting technology.

A merger with AOL’s assets may add heft to Yahoo’s Internet real estate. As NPR’s Laura Sydell has reported, Yahoo’s share of worldwide digital ad revenues is around $2.6 billion, according to eMarketer, but that’s 1.5 percent of the online ad market — it pales in comparison to Google and Facebook, which control about 40 percent.

As Bloomberg puts it, “Yahoo got fat over the years as it navigated the rapidly changing industry in a sprawling effort to be all things to all people — from search to shopping to news outlet to blogging hub.” And that means high spending on acquisitions and recruiting to make up for decline in ad revenue.

Apart from Verizon, other bidders for Yahoo’s Internet business were said to include AT&T, buyout firms and Quicken Loans founder Dan Gilbert.

The details of Verizon’s deal did not specify the value of the “!” at the end of “Yahoo!”

[embedded content]

The unforgettable Yahoo! yodel jingle.

YouTube

Let’s block ads! (Why?)


No Image

Should Doctors Game The Transplant Wait List To Help Their Patients?

A chronic shortage of donor hearts places doctors in an ethical dilemma.

A chronic shortage of donor hearts places doctors in an ethical dilemma. Hero Images/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption Hero Images/Getty Images

Imagine your heart can no longer pump enough blood to your vital organs. Even minimal exercise tires you out, and you’re often short of breath when lying flat. Your lungs are accumulating fluid. Your kidneys and liver are impaired.

You’ve been hospitalized and started on an intravenous drug that improves your heart’s ability to contract. It has helped, but it is not a long-term solution. You need a new heart.

You’re a good candidate, but there is a problem: a chronic shortage of donor hearts. In 2014, for example, about 6,950 Americans were approved for heart transplants, but only about 2,250 donor hearts became available. You need to move higher up on the list.

I’m your doctor. I want to help you get you a heart. But I face an ethical dilemma: Do I ramp up your medical treatment, even beyond what I consider necessary, to bump you higher on the list?

Aiming for Status 1A

The United Network for Organ Sharing, or UNOS, has established criteria to make sure that donor hearts go to patients with the most severe disease. These criteria are based on which treatments a doctor has prescribed, on the assumption that they’re a good indication of how critical the illness is.

Generally, that’s a fair assumption. Except that the system itself creates a perverse incentive.

It works like this: Your place on the waiting list for hearts depends on your “status.” If you weren’t getting that IV drug, you’d be considered “Status 2,” and your median wait time for a heart would be 630 days. Not good.

You’re on the IV drug, though, so you’re considered “Status 1.” But “Status 1” is divided into two more categories: If you’re on a low dose of the IV drug, you’re classified as “1B,” cutting your median wait to 301 days. That’s where you are now. Better, but still not great.

But if you were in an intensive care unit, receiving a high dose of your IV drug, and you had a catheter placed in your pulmonary artery to monitor cardiac performance, you would be “Status 1A.” Your median wait would drop to 110 days.

So you’re unlikely to get a heart anytime soon unless you can be listed as 1A. And in your case, if you weren’t up for a transplant, there would be no call to implant a pulmonary-artery catheter; it’s uncomfortable (it is inserted through your neck or under your collarbone) and carries a risk of infection. There would also be no call to raise your dose of the IV drug that’s helping your heart contract; when used long term, higher doses can increase the risk of sudden cardiac death.

But I have to balance these risks against the danger of your having to wait three times as long for a transplant if you remain 1B. That means spending an additional 291 days on the waiting list, during which your condition may deteriorate. You may end up needing a mechanical pump or an artificial heart, both of which would entail major cardiac surgery and potentially serious complications. And you may die.

When I take all that into account, the risks of keeping you waiting at 1B seem higher than the risks of placing a pulmonary-artery catheter and raising the dose of your IV medication to make you 1A.

This is the system I have to navigate.

So, as your doctor, even though these measures aren’t medically indicated, do I admit you to intensive care, insert a pulmonary-artery catheter and increase your medication to qualify you for 1A status? And if I do, is it ethical?

The transplant list is a zero-sum game

The American Medical Association, in a statement on the allocation of limited medical resources, asserts that “a physician has a duty to do all that he or she can for the benefit of the individual patient.”

And dishonesty on behalf of others can be virtuous. Ludvik Wolski, a Roman Catholic priest in Otwock, Poland, forged certificates of baptism to save the lives of Jewish children during the Nazi occupation.

If I adjust your treatment to help you get a donor heart, I might be tempted to believe I’m acting similarly.

But there is an important difference between Wolski’s situation and mine: His actions had no adverse consequences for other Jewish children in the community.

In contrast, if I increase your odds, I decrease another patient’s — because the transplant list, with its vast excess of prospective recipients over donors, is functionally a zero-sum game. If I’ve bettered your chances at someone else’s expense, I’ve provided no overall benefit.

So I might be inclined to resist overtreating you here — if I can be confident that other doctors are resisting as well.

And there’s the rub: If I have reason to believe that other doctors are escalating care to move their patients up on the list, then I may be putting you at a disadvantage by refusing to do the same.

And I do have reason to believe that. I’ve read a 2013 editorial in the Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation commenting on how invasive treatments are being overused in patients on the transplant list. And a commentary this year in the same journal noted that when the criteria for transplant status changed, medical practice evolved in step with them.

So my personal integrity ends up being in direct conflict with my responsibility as your advocate.

In the big picture, this system increases the number of medically unnecessary treatments, thereby driving up both cost and complication risk.

And perhaps worst of all: When “gaming the system” goes from being an aberration to a standard strategy — when, as the authors of the new commentary write, “treating to the priority is almost as fundamental as studying to the test” — then dishonesty becomes normal.

This cannot be good.

New rules

The United Network for Organ Sharing is now considering a new system for allocating donor hearts that has many more priority stratifications.

Among the new criteria proposed for determining a patient’s waitlist status are measures that are far more aggressive than pulmonary-artery catheters and IV drugs. They include procedures such as the insertion of an intra-aortic balloon pump, which helps the heart generate more blood flow, or the use of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, which provides a heart-lung bypass outside the body.

Under the new criteria, we should be better able to select patients with the most severe disease.

But that’s what we thought about the original criteria. And the new proposed criteria, too, are “gameable,” so that doctors might feel pressured to take more extreme steps to improve their patient’s chances. Some transplant doctors are already expressing concerns about the potential use of intra-aortic balloon pumps that will allow patients to walk about while waiting for transplants.

The same perverse incentive to escalate care will remain — and so will the ethical dilemma it creates.

Matthew Movsesian, a cardiologist, is a professor at the University of Utah School of Medicine in the Division of Cardiovascular Disease. This essay was first published by NPR member station WBUR.

Let’s block ads! (Why?)