Paving to be Complete this Week on Route 51

(South Heights, Pa.) South heights Borough  Manager Roberta Jones said Monday morning that the paving portion of Route 51 in the borough should be completed this week. Ms. Jones said police are asking drivers to observe the 35 mile an hour speed limit that is posted. New drains  were also placed along the roadway where needed. PennDOT  paved the roadway beginning on Pennsylvania Avenue in Monaca.

END OF WATCH, A RIDE TO REMEMBER 2021 VISITED AMBRIDGE AND ALIQUIPPA

(Aliquippa, Pa. ) Ambridge  and Aliquippa Police Departments  were visited   by the travelling police memorial  ‘BEYOND THE CALL OF DUTY , A RIDE TO REMEMBER  2020 on Saturday. The Spokane, Washington -based group consisted of 6 motorcyclists , a 43 and 28 inch trailer, Ambridge wass their first stop to honor the late Acting Police Chief Mark Romutis who died as a result of COVID-19  on Sunday, April 12, 2020 Aliquippa’s Acting Police Chief Robert W. Sealock suffered a severe asthma attack while in pursuit of a suspect on March 26, 2020, and never recovered and died in a Pittsburgh hospital on Saturday, April 11, 2020.

The group has 58 more stops  in the next 18 days to honor the fallen and will return to Spokane, Washington on August 18.  A spokesperson said they  will have travelled 84 days, through 46 states, visiting 200  police departments  to honor 339  listed in the line of duty 2020.

I-79 Restrictions Continue Monday in Lawrence County

Pittsburgh, PA – PennDOT District 11 is announcing lane and shoulder restrictions on I-79 in Plain Grove Township, Lawrence County, will continue Monday, August 2 weather permitting.

Lane and shoulder restrictions will occur in both directions on I-79 between the Slippery Rock (Exit 105) interchange and Mercer County weekdays from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. through late August. Crews from Bruce & Merrilees Electric will conduct CCTV camera installation work.

Please use caution when traveling through the area.

Motorists can check conditions on more than 40,000 roadway miles by visiting www.511PA.com. 511PA, which is free and available 24 hours a day, provides traffic delay warnings, weather forecasts, traffic speed information and access to more than 1,000 traffic cameras.

511PA is also available through a smartphone application for iPhone and Android devices, by calling 5-1-1, or by following regional Twitter alerts accessible on the 511PA website

50-Year-Old Man Suffers Fatal Injuries in Butler County Motorcycle Accident

(Fairview Twp., Pa.) Pa State Police in Butler are reporting that they responded to a one vehicle accident Friday Night around 7 PM on Kittanning Pike near Pine Road in Fairview Twp. Butler County.
Troopers state via release that 50-year-old Brian Keller of Greensburg Pa was driving his 2006 Harley Davidson Dyna Glide motorcycle north on Kittanning Pike when he lost control of the bike, struck a ditch and then a car wash sign on the right side of the road.
Keller was transported to UPMC Presbyterian Hospital in critical condition where he died from his injuries.

I-376 Beaver Valley Expressway Lane Restrictions Next Week in Hopewell

Pittsburgh, PA – PennDOT District 11 is announcing lane restrictions on I-376 (Beaver Valley Expressway) in Hopewell Township, Beaver County, will occur Monday through Friday, August 2-6 weather permitting.

Single-lane restrictions will occur in both directions of I-376 under the Mill Street Bridge at the Aliquippa (Exit 45) interchange from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. each day.  PennDOT crews will conduct concrete removal work.

Motorists can check conditions on more than 40,000 roadway miles, including color-coded winter conditions on 2,900 miles, by visiting www.511PA.com. 511PA, which is free and available 24 hours a day, provides traffic delay warnings, weather forecasts, traffic speed information, and access to more than 1,000 traffic cameras.

511PA is also available through a smartphone application for iPhone and Android devices, by calling 5-1-1, or by following regional twitter alerts accessible on the 511PA website.

Route 68 Lane Restriction Starts Monday in Industry

Pittsburgh, PA – PennDOT District 11 is announcing a lane restriction on Route 68 (Midland Beaver Road) in Industry Borough, Beaver County, will start Monday, August 2 weather permitting.

A single-lane restriction controlled by flaggers will occur on Route 68 between the Shippingport Bridge and Shell Street. Crews will conduct debris removal from a culvert from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. weekdays through Monday, August 9. Crews from Michael Facchiano Contracting, Inc. will conduct the work.

Motorists should be prepared for changing traffic patterns. Please use caution when driving through the area.  Work zone safety is everyone’s responsibility.

Motorists can check conditions on more than 40,000 roadway miles, including color-coded winter conditions on 2,900 miles, by visiting www.511PA.com. 511PA, which is free and available 24 hours a day, provides traffic delay warnings, weather forecasts, traffic speed information, and access to more than 1,000 traffic cameras.

511PA is also available through a smartphone application for iPhone and Android devices, by calling 5-1-1, or by following regional twitter alerts accessible on the 511PA website.

Worker Pay Rises Strongly as Businesses Fight to Fill Jobs

Worker pay rises strongly as businesses fight to fill jobs
By CHRISTOPHER RUGABER AP Economics Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) — Wages and salaries rose at a healthy pace in the three months ended in June as employers competed to find enough workers to fill millions of available jobs. Pay increased 1% in the second quarter for workers employed by businesses, excluding government employees, the Labor Department said Friday. That’s down slightly from 1.1% in the first three months of the year but otherwise the second-highest reading in more than a decade.

Today is “Jimbo Covert Day” in Beaver County

(AP Photo)

(Beaver, Pa.) Today, July 30, 2021, is officially Jimbo Covert Day in Beaver County. Beaver County Commissioners Jack Manning, Daniel C. Camp III and Tony Amadio made a proclamation declaring today as “Jimbo” Covert Day in Beaver County.

Covert, will enter the NFL Hall of Fame as a member of the Centennial Class next Saturday along with Steelers Coach Bill Cowher, Steelers Safety Troy Polamalu, Donnie Shell and Alan Faneca.

Covert was a star football player and wrestler at Freedom High School in the late 1970s, hw starred at the University of Pittsburgh in the early 1980s. Were he was named an All-American twice.

Beaver County native Mike Ditka who was the head coach of the Chicago Bears drafted Covert sixth overall in the1983 NFL Draft.

Covert was a two-time first-team All-Pro who was part of a Bears team that won six division championships, and the 1985 Super Bowl Championship.

Allegheny Health Network Physicians Initiate Groundbreaking Clinical Trial Exploring Use of Deep Brain Stimulation to Treat Obesity

PITTSBURGH, PA – (July 30, 2021) – A team of physicians at Allegheny Health Network (AHN) has received FDA approval to begin the second phase of a groundbreaking clinical trial exploring   the efficacy of deep brain stimulation (DBS) in the management of morbid obesity. Leading the study is Donald Whiting, MD, chair of AHN’s Neurosciences Institute, Chief Medical Officer for AHN, and a pioneer in the use of DBS to treat a variety of debilitating neurological conditions.

DBS involves the use of electrodes and a neurostimulator device to deliver mild electrical stimulation that modulates the lateral hypothalamus (LHA) of the brain.  This small area of the brain regulates the balance between food intake and energy output, metabolism, lipid homeostasis and sugar levels, all of which work together to determine a person’s ‘weight setpoint.’

Obesity is a chronic condition that afflicts millions of people, involving an imbalance of food intake and energy expenditure.  Obese individuals receive higher reward signals in the brain from palatable, densely caloric foods, triggering a response not unlike drug addiction.

“This exaggerated cycle of hunger, satiation and reward opens the door to overeating patterns that manifest as a food addiction or food abuse that leads to obesity,” said Dr. Whiting. “By targeting the lateral hypothalamus with DBS, we’re modulating physiological and behavioral aspects of food consumption, with the goal of changing weight setpoints and better regulating energy balance.”

Under Dr. Whiting’s direction, three patients participated in a 2013 feasibility trial of DBS for obesity, and although not all of them succeeded in moving the needle on the scale, each experienced a decreased urge to eat, and most importantly, none experienced negative side effects from the treatment.

“We have known from our use of DBS for almost two decades to treat movement disorders such as Parkinson’s and essential tremor that the procedure is a safe and generally well-tolerated therapy,” said Dr. Whiting. “Although our initial obesity study was a small sample, we were encouraged by the results overall, and particularly for one of the participants who experienced and has maintained considerable weight loss.”

That participant, Pamela Beach of Morgantown, West Virginia has endured a lifelong struggle with her weight, starting when she was a baby. Born two months premature at a tiny three pounds, four ounces, the well-meaning extended family members with whom her parents shared a big farmhouse made sure she never went hungry. At six months old, she weighed 22 pounds, and from that point on, she was overweight.

“I was a chubby baby who grew into a chubby teenager,” she said. “As an adult I fell into the trap of trying every diet and program I could find, losing weight and gaining it all back and then some.” Bariatric surgery was unsuccessful for Beach—she regained all but about 40 pounds after the procedure. At her highest point, she was over 400 pounds, and along with the harmful effect it was having on her body, obesity was taking a toll on her emotionally, as well. “I never felt like I was good enough,” she said.

About the time she’d given up hope of ever achieving a healthy weight, Beach came across an item in the West Virginia University Hospital newsletter, where she was employed, that seemed to speak to her personally. Neurosurgeons from WVU and AHN were seeking obese individuals who met a strict set of criteria to participate in the clinical trial of deep brain stimulation for weight management. She applied and was selected to participate in the trial and began to prepare herself mentally for the procedure. “Naturally, I was scared, it’s brain surgery, after all,” she said. But she placed her trust in the team of surgeons who would be performing the procedure while she was sedated, yet awake and aware, as well as the nurse who would be holding her hand the entire time.

Following her surgery, Beach’s weight loss was sluggish, and somewhat disappointing, until she visited a metabolic clinic in Baton Rouge for fine tuning of the settings on her neurostimulator. “Afterward, it was like a switch had been flipped on,” she said. Her appetite diminished and she thought about food far less often. “The weight came off naturally, without having to think about it,” she said. Today, she weighs half as much as before her DBS procedure and she feels much better overall. Above all, she’s grateful for the opportunity to help advance DBS as a potential treatment for others who have faced the same struggle she has. “I believe that I survived my premature birth 62 years ago for a reason, and perhaps this was my reason,” she said.

While the goals of the current trial will be an extension of the first—namely, studying the procedure for safety and measuring its efficacy in increasing an individual’s metabolic rate—several modifications will be integrated into the process. For one, a new generation of DBS technology will be used that features major advancements over its predecessor. Additionally, lessons learned from the preliminary work include insight into the level of DBS energy output required to affect weight loss, so the DBS setting will be programmed to a higher level to achieve the optimal metabolic rate necessary to boost energy expenditure. As in the first trial, Dr. Whiting will be joined by fellow AHN neurosurgeon and DBS specialist Nestor Tomycz, MD.

The AHN study will enroll six male and female patients from 22 to 65 years old, who have a body mass index (BMI) of higher than 50, and who are at significant risk of morbidity and mortality due to obesity. They will also have undergone gastrointestinal bypass surgery without achieving sustainable results.

George Eid, MD, chair of the AHN Bariatric and Metabolic Institute and co-investigator for the trial suggests that the failure of gastric bypass to manage obesity may be a direct result of lack of attention to the underlying neurophysiologic basis of the disease.

“Feeding behavior involves a delicate interplay between a body’s need for food and the reward system that can powerfully motivate excessive eating in some individuals,” said Dr. Eid. “In some individuals, neural networks will fire after eating at a level comparable to that of a heroin addict.”

Obesity is one of the country’s most pressing public health concerns as it has been increasing by epidemic proportions. In 2020, the adult obesity rate in this country registered 42.4 percent, representing the first time the national rate has passed the 40 percent mark. Most alarming is the rate at which it is increasing—it has grown 26 percent since 2008.

The direct costs associated with obesity in U.S. represent up to 20 percent of the national health expenditure and the direct and indirect costs attributable to obesity are $209 and $66 billion, respectively, exceeding the economic impact related to cigarette smoking.

For those who have struggled with weight management throughout their lives, and face life-threatening issues associated with obesity, the more options we can provide to help them regain their health the better,” said Dr. Whiting.  “We have a long way to go in establishing DBS as one of those options, but we are very excited to be taking the next important step in assessing it’s potential.”

Dr. Whiting said the AHN study may also serve as a framework for future research on other health issues that involve some of the same neural pathways, such as drug and alcohol addiction.

President Biden Orders Tough New Vaccination Rules for Federal Workers

By ALEXANDRA JAFFE, RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR and JONATHAN LEMIRE Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Biden administration has announced sweeping new pandemic rules for federal workers and some contractors. It is requiring that any federal civilian worker who does not attest to being fully vaccinated will be subject to universal masking, weekly testing, physical distancing from other employees and restrictions on official travel. The guidelines are aimed at boosting vaccination rates among the millions of Americans who draw federal paychecks and to set an example for private employers around the country.  Biden said, “This is an American tragedy. People are dying who don’t have to die.”