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bubble shooter pet - https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.pandakidgame.bubbleshooterpetraccoon. Midtown New York City has countless tourist attractions. Now, there are about 22 more. Ilya Naymushin/Rueters <br><br>The INSIDER Summary:<br><br>• A family of raccoons living in Central Park is NYC's latest tourist attraction.<br>• Tourists feed the raccoons and snap selfies. <br>• The chief of education and wildlife for New York City parks advises against feeding or approaching them. <br><br> A family of wild raccoons is one of the newest selfie opportunities in Manhattan's Central Park. An estimated 22 raccoons live in the southern end of the park by "The Pond" and gather food from shutter-happy tourists. <br><br>Every evening, the raccoons emerge and prowl the path leading to 59th Street, waiting for visitors to leave them food in exchange for a photo or video. <br><br>According to a report from the New York Times, the animals in the park are well-fed. On a recent night, the raccoons were given "organic gummy bears...potato chips; and a piece of a hot dog." The raccoons are occasionally fed stale bagels from a local bakery. <br><br>i almost pet a raccoon in central park today and my brain said "DONT DO IT" but my heart said "NEW FRIEND" <br><br>— n a o m i (@naomicalhoun) September 28, 2016
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LONDON, July 26 (Reuters) - GlaxoSmithKline is swimming against the tide by getting out of treatments for rare diseases at a time when rivals like Sanofi and Shire see the field as a rich seam for profits.<br><br>If you have any kind of questions relating to where and ways to use bubble shooter pet, you could call us at our own web site. Successful medicines for rare conditions are potentially very lucrative, since prices frequently run into hundreds of thousands of dollars, but patient numbers can be extremely low.<br><br>New GSK Chief Executive Emma Walmsley announced the strategic review and potential divestment of rare diseases on Wednesday as part of a wide-ranging drive to streamline pharmaceutical operations.<br><br>It follows a less than impressive experience for GSK in the field, including the fact that its pioneering gene therapy Strimvelis only secured its first commercial patient in March, 10 months after it was approved for sale in Europe in May 2016.<br><br>Since then a second patient has also been treated and two more are lined up to receive the therapy commercially, a spokesman said.<br><br>Strimvelis, which GSK developed with Italian scientists, is designed for a tiny number of children with ADA Severe Combined Immune Deficiency (ADA-SCID). SCID is sometimes known as "bubble baby" disease, since those born with it have immune systems so weak they must live in germ-free environments.<br><br>The new treatment became the first life-saving gene therapy for children when it was approved last year, marking a step forward for the emerging technology to fix faulty genes.<br><br>Walmsley said GSK was not giving up on gene and cell therapy entirely. Research will be focused in future in areas with larger potential patient numbers, including oncology. (Reporting by Ben Hirschler; Editing by Adrian Croft)

Revision as of 10:54, 9 December 2017

LONDON, July 26 (Reuters) - GlaxoSmithKline is swimming against the tide by getting out of treatments for rare diseases at a time when rivals like Sanofi and Shire see the field as a rich seam for profits.

If you have any kind of questions relating to where and ways to use bubble shooter pet, you could call us at our own web site. Successful medicines for rare conditions are potentially very lucrative, since prices frequently run into hundreds of thousands of dollars, but patient numbers can be extremely low.

New GSK Chief Executive Emma Walmsley announced the strategic review and potential divestment of rare diseases on Wednesday as part of a wide-ranging drive to streamline pharmaceutical operations.

It follows a less than impressive experience for GSK in the field, including the fact that its pioneering gene therapy Strimvelis only secured its first commercial patient in March, 10 months after it was approved for sale in Europe in May 2016.

Since then a second patient has also been treated and two more are lined up to receive the therapy commercially, a spokesman said.

Strimvelis, which GSK developed with Italian scientists, is designed for a tiny number of children with ADA Severe Combined Immune Deficiency (ADA-SCID). SCID is sometimes known as "bubble baby" disease, since those born with it have immune systems so weak they must live in germ-free environments.

The new treatment became the first life-saving gene therapy for children when it was approved last year, marking a step forward for the emerging technology to fix faulty genes.

Walmsley said GSK was not giving up on gene and cell therapy entirely. Research will be focused in future in areas with larger potential patient numbers, including oncology. (Reporting by Ben Hirschler; Editing by Adrian Croft)