Dr. Michael H. Gold Inducted into The International Order of Fantastic Professionals
EDMONTON, ALBERTA, CANADA, June 7, 2025 / EINPresswire.com / -- The International Order of Fantastic Professionals is proud to announce that Dr. Michael H. Gold, a board-certified dermatologist, internationally recognized researcher, and founder of multiple leading dermatologic institutions, has been officially inducted into the IOFP and awarded the Global Leader in Dermatologic Advancement 2025. IOFP celebrates Dr. Gold's distinguished career, spanning over three decades. His groundbreaking contributions to dermatologic science, cosmetic medicine, and global education have elevated the field of aesthetic dermatology worldwide.
Since founding Gold Skin Care Center and its affiliated organizations in Nashville, Tennessee, in 1990, Dr. Gold has overseen the development and implementation of cutting-edge technologies and procedures in dermatologic and aesthetic medicine. Through the Tennessee Clinical Research Center, he has led pivotal FDA Phase II-IV trials, directly influencing the future of dermatologic treatments and product innovation. Beyond his clinical work, Dr. Gold is a committed educator and author, having written over 500 scientific articles, contributed to 40 textbook chapters, and served as editor-in-chief for multiple international dermatology journals. He is also the co-founder of SCALE, DASIL, and the 5-Continent Congress conferences, which have become pillars in the global dermatology and aesthetics communities.
' Dr. Michael Gold's depth of expertise and extraordinary commitment to global education and innovation are unparalleled,' said Dr. Allen Lycka, founder and CEO of the International Order of Fantastic Professionals. 'We look forward to watching the continued change his leadership inspires in others around the world.'
About the International Order of Fantastic Professionals (IOFP):
The International Order of Fantastic Professionals (IOFP) is a prestigious global community of forward-thinking leaders committed to innovation, collaboration, and making a meaningful difference. Representing a diverse range of industries, IOFP members are recognized for their excellence and for delivering innovative solutions to today's most pressing challenges. Learn more at www.fantasticprofessionals.com.
For media inquiries and more information on IOFP initiatives, contact:
Tami McCalla, Director of Operations
Email: [email protected]
Dr. Allen Lycka
Dr. Allen Lycka Prof Corp
email us here
Legal Disclaimer:
EIN Presswire provides this news content 'as is' without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the author above.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Associated Press
6 hours ago
- Associated Press
FROM THE ALZHEIMER'S ASSOCIATION INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE 2025: DECADES-OLD LEAD POLLUTION LINKED TO MEMORY PROBLEMS IN OLDER ADULTS, STUDY FINDS
Key Takeaways TORONTO, July 27, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Historic lead levels from the era of leaded gasoline may be contributing to cognitive issues 50 years later, suggests research reported for the first time at the Alzheimer's Association International Conference ® 2025 (AAIC®), in Toronto and online. Americans are about 20% more likely to experience memory problems if they lived in areas with high levels of atmospheric lead between 1960 and 1974, according to the analysis of more than 600,000 adults 65 and older. ' Research suggests half the U.S. population — more than 170 million people — were exposed to high lead levels in early childhood. This research sheds more light on the toxicity of lead related to brain health in older adults today,' said Maria C. Carrillo, Ph.D., Alzheimer's Association chief science officer and medical affairs lead. 'Other studies reported at AAIC 2025 suggest that (a) lead exposure at any point in life may cause cognitive problems, (b) it may be more likely to affect certain populations and reflect disparities, and (c) there is a biological connection between lead exposure and Alzheimer's.' Historic levels of lead air pollution are associated with memory problems 50 years later In a first-of-its-kind study, researchers examined how exposure to airborne lead from 1960-1974 — when leaded gasoline use was at its highest — may affect brain health later in life. They determined that older adults who grew up in areas with moderate to extremely high historical atmospheric lead levels (HALL) were about 20% more likely to report memory problems as adults 50 years later. The researchers calculated the average HALL by area and linked it to self-reported memory problems from the American Community Survey from 2012-2017 (368,208 people) and 2018-2021 (276,476 people). They didn't analyze the source of the lead but believe that the higher the density of automobile traffic, such as in urban areas, the higher the atmospheric lead. Factoring in both time periods, the researchers determined that 17-22% of people living in areas with moderate, high or extremely high atmospheric lead reported memory issues. 'Our study may help us understand the pathways that contribute to some people developing dementia and Alzheimer's disease,' said Eric Brown, M.D., MSc, FRCPC, lead author of the study, associate scientist and associate chief of geriatric psychiatry at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Toronto. Lead was originally added to gasoline to increase performance until researchers determined it posed serious risks to health and the environment. The more than 20-year-long phase-out of leaded gas began in 1975 when all new cars sold in the U.S. were required to have catalytic converters. 'When I was a child in 1976, our blood carried 15 times more lead than children's blood today,' said Esme Fuller-Thomson, Ph.D., senior author of the study and a professor at the University of Toronto's Factor-Ientash Faculty of Social Work and director of the Institute for Life Course and Aging. 'An astonishing 88% of us had levels higher than 10 micrograms per deciliter, which are now considered dangerously high.' While the risk of atmospheric lead has decreased, other sources of exposure remain, such as old lead paint and pipes. Those who have been exposed to atmospheric lead should focus on reducing other risk factors for dementia, including high blood pressure, smoking and social isolation, said Brown. Living near lead-polluting sites may affect memory Another study reported at AAIC found that older adults who live about three miles from a lead-releasing facility — such as glass, ready-mixed concrete or computer and electronics manufacturers — are more likely to have memory and thinking problems than those who live farther away. This research, which focused on a racially and ethnically diverse group of older adults, reinforces concerns about the long-term cognitive impact of environmental lead exposure, especially in communities already facing health disparities. Researchers assessed 2,379 patients (average age ~74 years) from two studies: the Kaiser Health Aging and Diverse Life Experienced study (KHANDLE, 1,638 patients) of a diverse group of Kaiser Permanente insurance plan members who live in northern California, and the Study of Healthy Aging in African Americans (STAR, 741 patients) study of Black adults age 50 and older who live in the San Francisco and Sacramento areas. They evaluated the participants' proximity to the nearest lead-releasing facility and compared the distance to participants' Neuropsychological Assessment Scales results at baseline and two years later. Compared to two years earlier, the KHANDLE participants who lived within 5 km (just over three miles) of a lead-releasing facility scored 0.15 times lower on verbal episodic memory tests (recall of personal experiences), and 0.07 times lower on overall cognitive ability compared to those living farther away. Every 5 km farther a participant lived from a lead-releasing facility was associated with 5% higher memory scores two years later. Among STAR group participants living within 5 km of a lead-releasing facility, researchers observed a 0.20 times lower score on semantic memory (general knowledge) two years later, compared to those who lived farther away. 'Our results indicate that lead exposure in adulthood could contribute to worse cognitive performance within a few years,' said Kathryn Conlon, Ph.D., MPH, senior author and associate professor of environmental epidemiology, School of Medicine, University of California, Davis. 'Despite tremendous progress on lead abatement, studies have shown there is no safe level of exposure, and half of U.S. children have detectable levels of lead in their blood. Additionally, there are regions and neighborhoods that have more exposure.' According to Conlon, there were 7,507 lead-releasing facilities in the U.S. in 2023. To reduce exposure, Conlon said people living near lead-producing facilities should keep their homes clean to avoid the accumulation of lead-contaminated dust, remove their shoes when coming inside, and place dust mats inside and outside to avoid tracking lead-contaminated dust indoors. Use the Environmental Protection Agency's TRI Toxics Tracker to identify lead-releasing facilities near you. Study reveals how lead exposure may set the stage for Alzheimer's Even low levels of lead exposure can create permanent changes in brain cells, including increased buildup of abnormal tau and amyloid beta, which are proteins associated with Alzheimer's, suggests a third study reported at AAIC 2025. The researchers exposed human brain cells to lead concentrations of zero, 15 and 50 parts per billion (ppb), simulating the kind of lead exposure people might experience through contaminated water or air. The EPA's action level for lead in drinking water is 15 ppb. They ran molecular, genetic, biochemical and functional tests on the cells and determined that (a) the 15-ppb and 50-ppb lead-exposed neurons were more electrically active (suggesting early dysfunction) than those that had no exposure, (b) energy-producing cells were damaged, and (c) there was an increase in tau and amyloid beta. Even after the lead was removed, the cells remained primed for damage, responding more severely to additional stressors such as tau. 'These findings help explain how lead exposure, especially in early life or from occupational and environmental sources, might leave a lasting molecular imprint on the brain making it more vulnerable to age-related diseases like Alzheimer's,' said Junkai Xie, Ph.D., lead author of the study and post-doctoral research associate in chemical engineering at Purdue University. 'Our results show that lead exposure isn't just a short-term concern; it may set the stage for cognitive problems decades later.' About the Alzheimer's Association International Conference® (AAIC®) The Alzheimer's Association International Conference (AAIC) is the world's largest gathering of researchers from around the world focused on Alzheimer's and other dementias. As a part of the Alzheimer's Association's research program, AAIC serves as a catalyst for generating new knowledge about dementia and fostering a vital, collegial research community. AAIC 2025 home page: AAIC 2025 newsroom: AAIC 2025 hashtag: #AAIC25 About the Alzheimer's Association® The Alzheimer's Association is a worldwide voluntary health organization dedicated to Alzheimer's care, support and research. Our mission is to lead the way to end Alzheimer's and all other dementia — by accelerating global research, driving risk reduction and early detection, and maximizing quality care and support. Our vision is a world without Alzheimer's and all other dementia®. Visit or call 800.272.3900. View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Alzheimer's Association


New York Times
9 hours ago
- New York Times
Smoke From Canadian Wildfires Wafts Over New York City
Officials warned that smoke-filled air would blanket the New York City area on Sunday, creating unhealthy conditions for some, as soot and ash from Canadian wildfires drifted across the border. The air quality health advisory, issued on Saturday, will expire on Sunday night, the National Weather Service said. On Saturday, parts of the city reached 136 on the Air Quality Index, according to IQAir, a Swiss air quality monitoring company, briefly making it one of the cities in the United States with the worst air quality. Parts of Massachusetts and New Jersey were also under air quality advisories on Saturday. The index in New York City was predicted to reach a maximum of 120 on Sunday, putting it in the classification of 'unhealthy for sensitive groups,' according to the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation. The index could reach 135 in the Upper Hudson Valley and 120 on Long Island. Maps: Tracking Air Quality and Smoke From Wildfires in Canada and the U.S. See maps of where smoke is traveling and how harmful the air has become. The Weather Service advised vulnerable groups, which includes young children and those who have respiratory ailments, to take precautions like limiting strenuous outdoor activity. An index reading of below 50 is considered good. A reading of above 150 means the air is considered 'unhealthy,' and the ill effects might be felt more widely by healthy people. For weeks, smoke from wildfires in Canada has been drifting across the border to the United States during its annual fire season, which usually runs from March to October. Wildfires are a common cause of extended periods of unhealthy air, and fine particles of soot, ash and dust can billow high in the air and be blown for hundreds of miles by prevailing winds. The drifting smoke from Canada's fires has become a growing issue in the United States in recent years. In 2023, wildfires burned more land in Canada than ever before, and created smoke so intense that it turned the skies over New York City a frightening shade of orange. Experts have warned that climate change was turning environments like Canada's forests into a tinderbox. This year, smoke from Canada's wildfires has again drifted south across the U.S. border, inflaming diplomatic relations. This month, six Republican lawmakers wrote to Canada's ambassador to the United States, demanding to know the Canadian government's plan for tackling the wildfires and accusing it of lax forest management. The premier of Manitoba Province in Western Canada, where wildfires have been particularly bad, blasted the letter, accusing the U.S. lawmakers of 'trying to trivialize and make hay out of a wildfire season where we've lost lives in our province.'
Yahoo
14 hours ago
- Yahoo
Province, city too slow to secure housing for people living in encampments, North Point Douglas residents say
Dozens of people have found homes through the Manitoba government's plan to end chronic homelessness since January, but one man living in a Winnipeg homeless encampment says many vulnerable people are waiting too long for a roof over their heads and the supports they need. Marcus Daniels-Francis, 26, has been living in a riverbank encampment near the North Point Douglas neighbourhood for the past two months. He says he's known about four or five people who have found housing through the provincial Your Way Home strategy. The province says 59 people have been placed into housing since the strategy was introduced in January. About 90 per cent of people have moved into social or affordable housing, with 10 per cent going to private, market-rate housing. In a statement to CBC News on Saturday Housing and Homelessness Minister Bernadette Smith, who is the MLA for Point Douglas, said the government is working with the city and Main Street Project to "move people from tents into housing with wraparound supports." Smith said all 59 people are still housed. "From what I've seen, the government definitely has been helping people out, getting people off the encampments. But they aren't helping enough people yet," Daniels-Francis said. "It's a slow pace," he said. Daniels-Francis, who is a member of Long Plain First Nation, said he will be moving into his own apartment on Aug. 1, without help from the provincial program. He said he is enrolled in school and will be studying to become a welder. He said he will also be undergoing treatment for alcohol addiction. He said ongoing support for addictions and mental health should be a key part of the government's strategy, otherwise people will fall into the same patterns — as he has in the past —of getting and losing housing. "It'll be nice. I'll be able to cook my own food. I'll be able to sleep when I want to go to sleep, wake up when I want to wake up," Daniels-Francis said, adding it can be difficult to sleep in the encampment due to loud fights and other noise from his neighbours. North Point Douglas resident Howard Warren said he has been struggling to sleep for two weeks as noise from a nearby encampment has kept him up at night. He said it's the "seventh summer of absolute chaos" living in his neighbourhood. Despite feeling encouraged that the province's strategy has found housing for some, Warren said it's not helping people fast enough and "we have to do more." "We want the best for them … we're very sympathetic to the situation," he said. Over the past few summers, Warren said he has been woken by a man trying to enter his home at 2 a.m., had property stolen, and even had a gun pointed at his head after trying to provide water to a woman on the riverbank. Last week, he wrote a letter to Mayor Scott Gillingham and city council asking for help. "This is such a regular, ongoing daily, nightly occurrence ... When you reach the end of your tether, you kind of snap. I thought I really need to address this in a different way than it has been so far," Warren said. In his letter, he questioned what he calls the outreach approach of Main Street Project, a local non-profit organization that received an exclusive contract from the city to handle all outreach calls at Winnipeg encampments earlier this month. Warren wondered why outreach group St. Boniface Street Links was cut off from municipal funding. The city had previously split outreach funding between Main Street Project, St. Boniface Street Links, and Resource Assistance for Youth. Warren previously spoke to CBC News in May after he said he witnessed Main Street Project workers set up an encampment along the riverbank in his community. "Following the 'human-rights approach,' as Main Street Project puts it, I don't see that as alleviating either the suffering and misery of the unhoused folks or the communities that are greatly affected by it," Warren said. Earlier this month, Coun. Cindy Gilroy tabled a motion to ban encampments from some public places like parks and pools. This week, Coun. Jeff Browaty said he would like to see tents barred beside major roadways as well. Mynarski Coun. Ross Eadie, whose ward includes the North Point Douglas neighbourhood, responded to Warren's letter on Friday in a document viewed by CBC News. Eadie wrote that he will allocate funding to St. Boniface Street Links and the city should do the same. "I am making the decision right here to use up the rest of the Mynarski Ward Community fund balance for this organization to deal with encampments in the Mynarski Ward. I shouldn't have to as other needs in my ward need this money, but my residents have spoken," Eadie wrote. Warren told CBC News he was "extremely encouraged" by Eadie's response and planned to write back thanking his councillor. He was also encouraged that Manitoba's Your Way Home strategy had housed 59 people since January. But at less than 10 people housed per month over the last six months, Warren said the province must pick up the pace. "It just fundamentally sounds like they could be adopting more of a model to get people in houses and get people the help they need, they desperately need," Warren said. "I know it takes a big ship a long time to turn, but it's seven straight summers of this and it's going throughout the winter now too."