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Artificial intelligence: Humans ensure real value
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Today s surgery marks the end of a year-long search for a kidney for the beloved vocational agriculture teacher. He ll no longer be sitting on the sidelines from what he said is the most important things to him - his wife Courtney and his students at Tri-Valley.
With immense community support over the last year on a popular Facebook page and from the school district including a colleague who will be his organ donor they re banking on faith to get through the transplant and subsequent recovery. I thought, we re going to have hundreds of people praying for us (today), Brian said. Then I thought about it some more, and really, we ll have thousands of people praying.
Schenectady woman sentenced in social security theft case; Took $96K in mom s benefits after mother s death
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1:39
WBFO Reporter Emyle Watkins interviews Dr. Brian Clemency about a new NIH-funded COVID-19 treatment study at the University at Buffalo.
In simple terms, this means if you tested positive in the last week, you could be eligible to be part of a national study involving drugs that may treat mild to moderate COVID.
Dr. Brian Clemency, a professor of emergency medicine at UB, says researchers want to know how effective certain treatments, specifically monoclonal antibodies, might be in treating the disease. What’s unique about this study, is that you don’t have to be high risk for COVID to participate. The study opens the door to patients who wouldn’t traditionally get these medications, to see how well they work.
Fellow Tri-Valley employee answers Brian Merce s prayers
God told Betsy Ritchie she was a match after months of prayer
Or rather, the match found him.
Brian Merce, who teaches agricultural studies, was diagnosed with kidney disease four years ago. It s since progressed to stage 5, and last year he quickly learned he d need a living donor.
His donor is Tri-Valley coworker Betsy Ritchie, a speech pathologist at Dresden Elementary. She visited him after school this week to reveal the good news.
But it came as a complete surprise to Brian and his wife Courtney, who had been urged to drive to the school that afternoon. They had no idea this woman whom they didn t know had been planning for months to become Brian s donor.
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