Showing posts with label affects. Show all posts
Showing posts with label affects. Show all posts

Monday, 19 August 2013

First evidence that spaceflight affects community-level behavior of bacteria

Main Category: Infectious Diseases / Bacteria / Viruses
Article Date: 19 Aug 2013 - 0:00 PDT Current ratings for:
First evidence that spaceflight affects community-level behavior of bacteria
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When astronauts launch into space, a microbial entourage follows. And the sheer number of these followers would give celebrities on Twitter a run for their money. The estimate is that normal, healthy adults have ten times as many microbial cells as human cells within their bodies; countless more populate the environment around us. Although invisible to the naked eye, microorganisms - some friend, some foe - are found practically everywhere.

Microorganisms like bacteria often are found attached to surfaces living in communities known as biofilms. Bacteria within biofilms are protected by a slimy matrix that they secrete. Skip brushing your teeth tomorrow morning and you may personally experience what a biofilm feels like.

One of NASA's goals is to minimize the health risks associated with extended spaceflight, so it is critical that methods for preventing and treating spaceflight-induced illnesses be developed before astronauts embark upon long-duration space missions. It is important for NASA to learn how bacterial communities that play roles in human health and disease are affected by spaceflight.

In two NASA-funded studies - Micro-2 and Micro-2A - biofilms made by the bacteria Pseudomonas aeruginosa were cultured on Earth and aboard space shuttle Atlantis in 2010 and 2011 to determine the impact of microgravity on their behavior. P. aeruginosa is an opportunistic human pathogen that is commonly used for biofilm studies. The research team compared the biofilms grown aboard the International Space Station bound space shuttle with those grown on the ground. The study results show for the first time that spaceflight changes the behavior of bacterial communities.

Although most bacterial biofilms are harmless, some threaten human health and safety. Biofilms can exhibit increased resistance to the immune system's defenses or treatment with antibiotics. They also can damage vital equipment aboard spacecraft by corroding surfaces or clogging air and water purification systems that provide life support for astronauts. Biofilms cause similar problems on Earth.

"Biofilms were rampant on the Mir space station and continue to be a challenge on the International Space Station, but we still don't really know what role gravity plays in their growth and development," said Cynthia Collins, Ph.D., principal investigator for the study and assistant professor in the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering at the Center for Biotechnology and Interdisciplinary Studies at the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, N.Y. "Before we start sending astronauts to Mars or embarking on other long-term spaceflight missions, we need to be as certain as possible that we have eliminated or significantly reduced the risk that biofilms pose to the human crew and their equipment."

In 2010 and 2011, during the STS-132 and STS-135 missions aboard space shuttle Atlantis, astronauts in space and scientists on Earth performed nearly simultaneous parallel experiments; both teams cultured samples of P. aeruginosa bacteria using conditions that encouraged biofilm formation.

Identical hardware designed for growing cells during spaceflight were used for both the flight and ground studies. According to Collins, "artificial urine was chosen as a growth medium because it is a physiologically relevant environment for the study of biofilms formed both inside and outside the human body."

Biofilms were cultured inside specialized fluid processing apparatus composed of glass tubes divided into chambers. The researchers loaded each tube with a membrane that provided a surface on which the bacteria could grow; the artificial urine was used for the bacteria's nourishment. Samples of P. aeruginosa were loaded into separate chambers within each tube.

The prepared tubes were placed in groups of eight inside another specialized device called a group activation pack (GAP) - designed to activate all of the bacterial cultures at once. The research team prepared identical sets of GAPs for the concurrent spaceflight and ground experiments.

Astronauts aboard the shuttle initiated the flight experiments by operating the GAPs and introducing the bacteria to the artificial urine medium. Scientists on Earth performed the same operations with the control group of GAPs at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida. After activation, the GAPs were housed in incubators on Earth and aboard the shuttle to maintain temperatures appropriate for bacterial growth.

After the microgravity samples returned to Earth, the researchers determined the thickness of the biofilms, the number of living cells and the volume of biofilm per area on the membranes. Additionally, they used a microscopy technique that allowed them to capture high-resolution images at different depths within the biofilms, revealing details of their three-dimensional structures.

What the scientists found was that the P. aeruginosa biofilms grown in space contained more cells, more mass and were thicker than the control biofilms grown on Earth. When they viewed the microscopy images of the space-grown biofilms, the researchers saw a unique, previously unobserved structure consisting of a dense mat-like "canopy" structure supported above the membrane by "columns." The Earth grown biofilms were uniformly dense, flat structures. These results provide the first evidence that spaceflight affects community-level behavior of bacteria.

Microbes experience "low shear" conditions in microgravity that resemble conditions inside the human body, but are difficult to study. According to Collins, "Beyond its importance for astronauts and future space explorers, this research also could lead to novel methods for preventing and treating human disease on Earth. Examining the effects of spaceflight on biofilm formation can provide new insights into how different factors, such as gravity, fluid dynamics and nutrient availability affect biofilm formation on Earth. Additionally, the research findings one day could help inform new, innovative approaches for curbing the spread of infections in hospitals."

NASA's Space Biology Program funded the Micro-2 and Micro-2A investigations. Related space biology research continues aboard the space station, including recently selected studies that are planned for future launch to the orbiting laboratory.

Wherever we go, microbial communities will faithfully follow, making this evidence of the effects of spaceflight on bacterial physiology relevant to human health. That bacterial biofilms exhibit different behavior in space versus on Earth is critical information as NASA strives to keep astronauts healthy and safe during future long-duration space missions

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
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Saturday, 17 August 2013

Spouse in pain? Love affects sleep, study shows

Featured Article
Academic Journal
Main Category: Pain / Anesthetics
Also Included In: Sleep / Sleep Disorders / Insomnia;  Bones / Orthopedics
Article Date: 17 Aug 2013 - 0:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Spouse in pain? Love affects sleep, study shows
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Spouses who have a close relationship share many things - material and non-material, highs and lows. And when one spouse experiences chronic pain, it can have a ripple effect for the other spouse, affecting sleep and even increasing risks for health problems, say researchers from Penn State University.

A study recently published in the journal PAIN analyzed relationships in which one spouse experienced chronic knee pain. The researchers said they chose knee pain because it oftentimes causes difficulties staying comfortable in bed at night for many patients.

As a result, the team was able to study the effects on the other spouse's slumber.

The researchers, led by Dr. Lynn Martire, had 138 knee osteoarthritis (OA) patients and their spouses complete interviews and 22-day diaries. The subjects were all at least 50 years of age, lived with their partners and were either in long-term relationships or married.

Results from the study showed that the greater a patient's knee pain was at the end of the day, the worse quality of sleep their spouse experienced that night.

By contrast, the researchers noticed that the quality of sleep the spouse experienced did not equate to greater pain for the patient the following day.

So it appears that spouses who have pain are not affected by their partner's lack of sleep, even though the reverse is true.

The effects that the patients' pain had on spousal sleep were not a result of their own disturbances in sleep, the researchers said.

Dr. Martire noted that "spouses whose sleep is compromised may be less able to respond empathically to patients' symptoms and need for support," potentially also putting them at risk for "physical and psychiatric problems."

The researchers predicted that closer relationships would yield stronger results, and they were correct. They found that, with spouses who had a closer relationship, patient pain resulted in "less refreshing sleep for spouses."

The family experts warn that a groggy morning may not be the only effect on the spouses.

Dr. Lynn Martire said:

"Compromised sleep caused by exposure to a loved one's suffering may be one pathway to spousal caregivers' increased risk for health problems, including cardiovascular disease.

Our findings suggest that assessing the extent to which partners are closely involved in each other's lives would help to identify spouses who are especially at risk for being affected by patient symptoms and in need of strategies for maintaining their own health and well-being."

Research published in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society in 2010 found that people caring for a spouse with dementia were more likely to develop it themselves.

Other research in the same year, however, reported positive elements to caring for a loved one.

Written by Marie Ellis


Copyright: Medical News Today
Not to be reproduced without permission of Medical News Today Visit our pain / anesthetics section for the latest news on this subject.

The impact of daily arthritis pain on spouse sleep Lynn M. Martire, et al., PAIN, published online 15 August 2013.

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Thursday, 15 August 2013

Ovarian reserve affects early menopause after cancer treatment and young, female cancer survivors' quality of life long after treatment

Main Category: Ovarian Cancer
Also Included In: Fertility
Article Date: 14 Aug 2013 - 1:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Ovarian reserve affects early menopause after cancer treatment and young, female cancer survivors' quality of life long after treatment
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A new study led by a University of Colorado Cancer Center member recently published in the journal reveals that in young, female cancer survivors, quality of life is significantly impaired long after treatment. The study compared 59 cancer survivors to 66 healthy controls and found that, as expected, cancer survivors showed higher stress and anxiety than the general population. Of note, survivors reported particular stress around the issues of sexual problems, physical pain and fatigue. The study also measured hormone levels reflecting woman's number of eggs, and showed that among young, female cancer survivors, those with reassuring fertility status were likely to report higher quality of life once treatment ends.

"What it came down to was a woman's opinion of her own fertility status after cancer treatment," says Laxmi Kondapalli, MD, MSCE, director of the CU Cancer Center Oncofertility Program.

See, there was one intervening step between normal ovarian reserve and quality of life: the regularity of a woman's menstrual cycle after undergoing chemotherapy and/or radiation treatment for cancer. All women lose a certain number of eggs during these treatments, but those with higher baseline reserve are more likely to withstand the treatment with their overall fertility unaffected. Women with lower ovarian reserve at baseline are more likely to have impaired fertility after treatment.

"But it wasn't the lab and ultrasound markers of ovarian reserve alone that affected quality of life," Kondapalli says. "It was a woman's opinion of her fertility status based on her menstrual cycle that had the most impact on quality of life."

Following cancer treatment, many women think that if they maintain regular menstrual cycles, their fertility is preserved, and that if their menstrual cycles become irregular, then they are likely infertile due to treatment.

"This isn't necessarily the case, because we are finding that menstrual cyclicity is a poor predictor of fertility status in these young, female cancer survivors," Kondapalli says. "Survivors may be falsely reassured if they resume normal periods, or they may be unnecessarily stressed if they don't get regular periods after cancer treatment."

According to Kondapalli, women with high ovarian reserve are less likely to experience symptoms of early menopause after cancer treatment. And it is these symptoms that go on to influence young patients' quality of life.

"I think what our study demonstrates is that clearly there are many components that impact a survivor's quality of life after cancer treatment. Although objective markers of ovarian reserve play an important role, a woman's perception of her own fertility status was more influential in her overall quality of life," Kondapalli says.

Understanding the different factors involved with quality of life in this population may help identify ways to manage late effects of treatment and improve comprehensive survivorship care.

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
Visit our ovarian cancer section for the latest news on this subject.

Supported by NIH T32 HD007440 and NIH 5K12HD001271-12

Quality of life in female cancer survivors: is it related to ovarian reserve?

Laxmi A. Kondapalli, Katherine E. Dillon, Mary D. Sammel… in Quality of Life Research (2013)

University of Colorado Denver

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University of Colorado Denver. (2013, August 14). "Ovarian reserve affects early menopause after cancer treatment and young, female cancer survivors' quality of life long after treatment." Medical News Today. Retrieved from
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/264749.php.

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Monday, 5 August 2013

Oxytocin affects men and women differently in social contexts

Main Category: Endocrinology
Also Included In: Public Health
Article Date: 02 Aug 2013 - 1:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Oxytocin affects men and women differently in social contexts
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"The Love Hormone", Oxytocin affects men and women differently in social contexts- in men it improves the ability to identify competitive relationships whereas in women it facilitates the ability to identify kinship. "These findings are in agreement with previous studies on the social differences between the sexes: women tend to be more communal and familial in their behavior, whereas men are more inclined to be competitive and striving to improve their social status", said Prof. Simone Shamay-Tsoory from the Dept. of Psychology at the University of Haifa who led the research.

The hormone Oxytocin is released in our bodies in various social situations, and it is better known as "The Love Hormone" since our bodies release it at high concentrations during positive social interactions such as falling in love, experiencing an orgasm or giving birth and breastfeeding. In her previous researches, Prof. Shamay-Tsoory discovered that the hormone is also released in our body during negative social interactions such as jealousy or gloating.

In the current study, conducted with the help of research students Meytal Fischer-Shofty and Yechiel Levkovitz, researchers tried to find out what effect Oxytocin would have on women's and men's accurate perception of social interactions. 62 men and women aged 20-37 years participated in the current research. Half of the participants received an intranasal dose of Oxytocin while the other half received a placebo. After a week, the groups switched with participants undergoing the same procedure with the other substance (i.e. Placebo or Oxytocin).

Following treatment, video clips showing various social interactions were screened. Participants were asked to analyze the relationships presented in the clips by answering questions that focused mainly on indentifying relationships of kinship, intimacy and competition. Participants were expected to base their answers, among other things, on gestures, body language and facial expressions expressed by the individuals in the clips.

The results showed that Oxytocin improved the ability of all the participants to better interpret social interactions in general. When the researchers examined the differences between the sexes they discovered that following treatment with Oxytocin, men's ability to correctly interpret competitive relationships improved, whereas in women it was the ability to correctly identify kinship that improved. Surprisingly, researchers discovered that "The Love Hormone" doesn't help women or men to better identify intimate situations. According to them, since the ability to correctly identify intimate situations was substantially low among all participants in the study, there is evidence to say that correctly identifying an intimate relationship between two people is intricate and complicated.

"Our results coincide with the theory that claims the social-behavioral differences between men and women are caused by a combination of cultural as well as biological factors that are mainly hormonal", concluded Prof. Shamay-Tsoory.

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
Visit our endocrinology section for the latest news on this subject. Please use one of the following formats to cite this article in your essay, paper or report:

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University of Haifa. "Oxytocin affects men and women differently in social contexts." Medical News Today. MediLexicon, Intl., 2 Aug. 2013. Web.
3 Aug. 2013. APA

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'Oxytocin affects men and women differently in social contexts'

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Wild type genetic background affects outcome even for diseases with a simple genetic basis

Main Category: Genetics
Article Date: 05 Aug 2013 - 0:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Wild type genetic background affects outcome even for diseases with a simple genetic basis
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If two women have the same genetic mutation that puts them at higher-than-average risk for a disease such as breast cancer, why does only one develop the disease?

In the current issue of PLOS Genetics, Michigan State University genetic scientists have begun to understand how the rest of the genome interacts with such mutations to cause the differences we see among individuals.

"It's been known for a while that genetic mutations can modify each other's effects," said Ian Dworkin, MSU associate professor of zoology and co-author of the paper. "And we also know that the subtle differences in an individual's genome - what scientists call wild type genetic background - also affects how mutations are manifested."

Dworkin and Sudarshan Chari, zoology doctoral student and the paper's lead author, wanted to know how common it was for wild type genetic background to alter the way genetic mutations interact with each other. This is the first time that it's been examined in a systematic manner, Dworkin added.

Using the fruit fly genome, the researchers found that wild type genetic background affected the outcomes of interactions between genetic mutations about 75 percent of the time. This could have huge implications in how scientists construct genetic networks - maps of how genes interact with each other.

"It may be that some crucial portions of genetic networks are missing," he said. "It also seems that network descriptions are more fluid than we thought."

Fruit flies have been called humans with wings, genetically speaking, due to their similarities. By focusing on wings and a genetic mutation that alters them, the researchers demonstrated the influence of wild type genetic background was actually quite common.

The broader implication for humans is that even for diseases with a simple genetic basis, variation in the genome may matter for both understanding and treatment, Dworkin said.

This new insight explains how, in an example like breast cancer, every woman's genetic background is likely influencing how the mutation is expressed, causing different disease outcomes. The research also may help explain why some people benefit from a specific treatment for a disease, while others get no benefits or become resistant to a drug after a short time.

It's likely that most diseases with a suspected genetic component, such as cancer, asthma or Parkinson's, involve reactions between more than one set of genes. For Dworkin and Chari, the next step is to tease apart the intricacies of what's happening.

"Is it just the two pairs of genes that are interacting?" Dworkin asked. "Or is it that the two genes are interacting and then many other genes are modifying that reaction? This will help us understand how much complexity is involved."

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
Visit our genetics section for the latest news on this subject.

The research is funded by the National Science Foundation grant number MCB 0922344.

Michigan State University

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Tuesday, 30 July 2013

Our perception affects how damaging we deem willful acts to be

Main Category: Psychology / Psychiatry
Article Date: 30 Jul 2013 - 1:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Our perception affects how damaging we deem willful acts to be
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How harmful we perceive an act to be depends on whether we see the act as intentional, reveals new research published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.

The new research shows that people significantly overestimate the monetary cost of intentional harm, even when they are given a financial incentive to be accurate.

"The law already recognizes intentional harm as more wrong than unintentional harm," explain researchers Daniel Ames and Susan Fiske of Princeton University. "But it assumes that people can assess compensatory damages - what it would cost to make a person 'whole' again - independently of punitive damages."

According to Ames and Fiske, the new research suggests that this separation may not be psychologically plausible:

"These studies suggest that people might not only penalize intentional harm more, but actually perceive it as intrinsically more damaging."

In their first experiment, Ames and Fiske asked participants to read a vignette about a profit-sharing company in which the CEO made a poor financial investment and cost his employees part of their paycheck.

Participants who were informed that the CEO made a poor investment intentionally - so that employees would work harder for profits in the future - perceived the paycheck cut as more damaging to employees and their families than participants who were told the CEO simply made an investment mistake, despite the fact that the employees suffered the same exact financial loss in each scenario.

Participants were motivated to "build a case" against the CEO who caused intentional harm, so they exaggerated how much harm had been done, Ames and Fiske explain.

In two additional studies, participants read about a town that was faced with a crippling water shortage, and were asked the estimate the sum of monetary damages caused by the drought as they appeared in quick succession on a computer screen (e.g. $80 to replace lost medical supplies, $600 worth of crop loss).

Participants who thought that a drought caused the shortage estimated the amount of damages accurately - within about $100. But those who were told that a man intentionally diverted the water estimated way over the mark - about $2,200 dollars more. This bias persisted even when people were given a financial incentive to be accurate.

The finding may have legal implications, indicating that the notions of compensatory and punitive damages are inextricably intertwined for most people. Even when participants were explicitly required to simply add up the sum of the numbers they just saw (compensatory damages) in one space, and give a separate estimate for punitive damages in another space, they still over-estimated the sum of the compensatory damages - the amount of harm that actually occurred - when they believed that the harm was intentional.

The researchers believe that the findings also have implications for policy-related judgments, given that preventing harms almost always involves a tradeoff among limited resources:

"Every wrong that is righted leaves another wrong left unchecked," Ames and Fiske note.

"Policymakers sometimes over-allocate resources to harms that feel highly intentional - like preventing murders and terrorist attacks - even when data suggest that humanitarian interests might be better served by dedicating some of those resources to other causes, like global warming and malnutrition."

According to Ames and Fiske, the new findings suggest a potential psychological mechanism for this phenomenon:

"Intentional harms might receive more funding and attention, not just because of political imperatives and moral reactionism, but also because intent magnifies the perceived harms themselves," they explain.

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
Visit our psychology / psychiatry section for the latest news on this subject.

This research was supported by a National Science Foundation Research Fellowship.

Association for Psychological Science

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'Our perception affects how damaging we deem willful acts to be'

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View the original article here

Our perception affects how damaging we deem willful acts to be

Main Category: Psychology / Psychiatry
Article Date: 30 Jul 2013 - 1:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Our perception affects how damaging we deem willful acts to be
not yet ratednot yet rated

How harmful we perceive an act to be depends on whether we see the act as intentional, reveals new research published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.

The new research shows that people significantly overestimate the monetary cost of intentional harm, even when they are given a financial incentive to be accurate.

"The law already recognizes intentional harm as more wrong than unintentional harm," explain researchers Daniel Ames and Susan Fiske of Princeton University. "But it assumes that people can assess compensatory damages - what it would cost to make a person 'whole' again - independently of punitive damages."

According to Ames and Fiske, the new research suggests that this separation may not be psychologically plausible:

"These studies suggest that people might not only penalize intentional harm more, but actually perceive it as intrinsically more damaging."

In their first experiment, Ames and Fiske asked participants to read a vignette about a profit-sharing company in which the CEO made a poor financial investment and cost his employees part of their paycheck.

Participants who were informed that the CEO made a poor investment intentionally - so that employees would work harder for profits in the future - perceived the paycheck cut as more damaging to employees and their families than participants who were told the CEO simply made an investment mistake, despite the fact that the employees suffered the same exact financial loss in each scenario.

Participants were motivated to "build a case" against the CEO who caused intentional harm, so they exaggerated how much harm had been done, Ames and Fiske explain.

In two additional studies, participants read about a town that was faced with a crippling water shortage, and were asked the estimate the sum of monetary damages caused by the drought as they appeared in quick succession on a computer screen (e.g. $80 to replace lost medical supplies, $600 worth of crop loss).

Participants who thought that a drought caused the shortage estimated the amount of damages accurately - within about $100. But those who were told that a man intentionally diverted the water estimated way over the mark - about $2,200 dollars more. This bias persisted even when people were given a financial incentive to be accurate.

The finding may have legal implications, indicating that the notions of compensatory and punitive damages are inextricably intertwined for most people. Even when participants were explicitly required to simply add up the sum of the numbers they just saw (compensatory damages) in one space, and give a separate estimate for punitive damages in another space, they still over-estimated the sum of the compensatory damages - the amount of harm that actually occurred - when they believed that the harm was intentional.

The researchers believe that the findings also have implications for policy-related judgments, given that preventing harms almost always involves a tradeoff among limited resources:

"Every wrong that is righted leaves another wrong left unchecked," Ames and Fiske note.

"Policymakers sometimes over-allocate resources to harms that feel highly intentional - like preventing murders and terrorist attacks - even when data suggest that humanitarian interests might be better served by dedicating some of those resources to other causes, like global warming and malnutrition."

According to Ames and Fiske, the new findings suggest a potential psychological mechanism for this phenomenon:

"Intentional harms might receive more funding and attention, not just because of political imperatives and moral reactionism, but also because intent magnifies the perceived harms themselves," they explain.

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
Visit our psychology / psychiatry section for the latest news on this subject.

This research was supported by a National Science Foundation Research Fellowship.

Association for Psychological Science

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Association for Psychological Science. "Our perception affects how damaging we deem willful acts to be." Medical News Today. MediLexicon, Intl., 30 Jul. 2013. Web.
30 Jul. 2013. APA

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'Our perception affects how damaging we deem willful acts to be'

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All opinions are moderated before being included (to stop spam). We reserve the right to amend opinions where we deem necessary.

Contact Our News Editors

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