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Den 6 december 1989 går en beväpnad man in på det tekniska universitetet École Polytechnique. 14 kvinnor mördas och dagen förvandlas till en mardröm. Nya avsnitt från P3 Dokumentär hittar du först i Sveriges Radio Play. På morgonen den 6 december 1989 ligger en blandning av stress och förväntan i luften inne på det tekniska universitetet École Polytechnique i Montréal. Studenterna är inne i slutspurten med terminens sista tentor och redovisningar. Samtidigt ser de fram emot helgens stora julfest. Men den här dagen kommer att förändra deras liv för alltid.Massmordet kommer att hyllas av incelsPå eftermiddagen kliver en 25-årig man in på universitetet bärandes en sopsäck med ett halvautomatiskt gevär. Efter nästan 20 minuter har han mördat 14 unga kvinnor. De flesta av dem var studenter, med drömmar om att bli ingenjörer. Tragedin skakar Kanada i grunden.Vid den här tiden är skolskjutningar ovanliga och det faktum att alla dödsoffer är kvinnor väcker frågor om gärningsmannens motiv. Drevs han av kvinnohat eller var han bara en galen skytt?Långt senare kommer kvinnomassakern och gärningsmannen att kopplas samman med senare incelmördare och deras idéer. Medverkande Nathalie Provost – dåvarande student på École Polytechnique.Stephane Guay – dåvarande student på École Polytechnique. Marie-Josée Leblond – dåvarande student, idag IT-direktör på ett teknik och telekombolag.Sylvie Haviernick – syster till studenten Maud Haviernick. Francine Pelletier – journalist och grundare av den feministiska tidskriften La Vie en Rose.Jacques Duchesneau – polischef i Montréal.Jean-Marc Dalphond – kusin till studenten Anne-Marie Edward. Lisa Kaati – forskare vid Institutionen för data- och systemvetenskap vid Stockholms universitet. En dokumentär av: Linda Jensen Kidane.Producent: Rosa Fernández. Dokumentären är producerad 2025.
On this episode: - Bishop LeBlond defeats Cameron to win their 3rd straight and continues their momentum heading into districts. Hear from coach Chad Thompson.- Mid-Buchanan Senior Molly Stanton signs her NLI to continue her soccer career at Lincoln Trail College. - Benton senior Andrea Simmons commits to continue her basketball career at Northwest.*Want to thank our year long sponsors Tolly & Associates, Little Caesars of St. Joseph, John Anderson Insurance, Meierhofer Funeral Home & Crematory, Musser Construction, HiHo Bar & Grill, Jayson & Mary Watkins, Matt & Jenni Busby, Michelle Cook Group, Russell Book & Bookball 365, The St. Joseph Mustangs, B's Tees, KT Logistics LLC., Hixson-Klein Funeral Home, James L. Griffith Law Firm of Maysville, Toby Prussman of Premier Land & Auction Group, Barnes Roofing, The St. Joseph School District, HK Quality Sheet Metal, Redman Farms of Maysville, Melissa Winn, Amber & Anthony Henke, Adams Bar & Grill, Green Hills Insurance LLC., Cintas, Thrive Family Chiropractic, IV Nutrition of St. Joseph, J.C's Hardwood Floors, Roth Kid Nation, Serve Link Home Care out of Trenton, Barnett's Floor Renewal LLC., Balloons D'Lux, B3 Renovations, Gabe Edgar, KC Flooring & Drywall, C&H Handyman Plumming, The Hamilton Bank member FDIC, Wompas Graphix & Embroidery of Liberty, The Tabor Family, Ellis Sheep Company of Maysville, Bank Northwest of Cameron, Akey's Catering & Event Rentals, Brown Bear of St. Joseph, Whitney Whitt Agency of Hamilton, Wolf Black Herefords, The KCI Basketball Podcast & Jacob Erdman - Shelter Insurance of Rock Port, Rob & Stacia Studer, Green Family Chiropractic , Annie & Noah Roseberry of Re/Max Professionals, Moseley Farms, Jake Anderson of Shelter Insurance & Bray Farms of Cameron.
On this episode:- Lafayette's Antonio Williams & St. Joe Christian's Logan Hubble put pen to paper to continue their sports careers. Hear from both as well as from their coaches.- Bishop LeBlond uses scoring from Multiple plates to down City & Conference rivals Benton. Hear from Golden Eagles coach Chad Thompson (Sound courtesy of News-Press Now's Calvin Silvers)- Wednesday Scoreboard *Want to thank our year long sponsors Tolly & Associates, Little Caesars of St. Joseph, John Anderson Insurance, Meierhofer Funeral Home & Crematory, Musser Construction, HiHo Bar & Grill, Jayson & Mary Watkins, Matt & Jenni Busby, Michelle Cook Group, Russell Book & Bookball 365, The St. Joseph Mustangs, B's Tees, KT Logistics LLC., Hixson-Klein Funeral Home, James L. Griffith Law Firm of Maysville, Toby Prussman of Premier Land & Auction Group, Barnes Roofing, The St. Joseph School District, HK Quality Sheet Metal, Redman Farms of Maysville, Melissa Winn, Amber & Anthony Henke, Adams Bar & Grill, Green Hills Insurance LLC., Cintas, Thrive Family Chiropractic, IV Nutrition of St. Joseph, J.C's Hardwood Floors, Roth Kid Nation, Serve Link Home Care out of Trenton, Barnett's Floor Renewal LLC., Balloons D'Lux, B3 Renovations, Gabe Edgar, KC Flooring & Drywall, C&H Handyman Plumming, The Hamilton Bank member FDIC, Wompas Graphix & Embroidery of Liberty, The Tabor Family, Ellis Sheep Company of Maysville, Bank Northwest of Cameron, Akey's Catering & Event Rentals, Brown Bear of St. Joseph, Whitney Whitt Agency of Hamilton, Wolf Black Herefords, The KCI Basketball Podcast & Jacob Erdman - Shelter Insurance of Rock Port, Rob & Stacia Studer, Green Family Chiropractic , Annie & Noah Roseberry of Re/Max Professionals, Moseley Farms & Jake Anderson of Shelter Insurance.
On this episode:- Maryville girls soccer stay perfect in MEC play with a road win at Bishop LeBlond. Hear from Spoofhound head coach Stephanie Ingram & Senior Jalea Price.- Wednesday Scores* Want to thank our year long sponsors Tolly & Associates, Little Caesars of St. Joseph, John Anderson Insurance, Meierhofer Funeral Home & Crematory, Musser Construction, HiHo Bar & Grill, Jayson & Mary Watkins, Matt & Jenni Busby, Michelle Cook Group, Russell Book & Bookball 365, The St. Joseph Mustangs, B's Tees, KT Logistics LLC., Hixson-Klein Funeral Home, James L. Griffith Law Firm of Maysville, Toby Prussman of Premier Land & Auction Group, Barnes Roofing, The St. Joseph School District, HK Quality Sheet Metal, Redman Farms of Maysville, Melissa Winn, Amber & Anthony Henke, Adams Bar & Grill, Green Hills Insurance LLC., Cintas, Thrive Family Chiropractic, IV Nutrition of St. Joseph, J.C's Hardwood Floors, Roth Kid Nation, Serve Link Home Care out of Trenton, Barnett's Floor Renewal LLC., Balloons D'Lux, B3 Renovations, Gabe Edgar, KC Flooring & Drywall, C&H Handyman Plumming, The Hamilton Bank member FDIC, Wompas Graphix & Embroidery of Liberty, The Tabor Family, Ellis Sheep Company of Maysville, Bank Northwest of Cameron, Akey's Catering & Event Rentals, Brown Bear of St. Joseph, Whitney Whitt Agency of Hamilton, Wolf Black Herefords, The KCI Basketball Podcast & Jacob Erdman - Shelter Insurance of Rock Port, Rob & Stacia Studer, Green Family Chiropractic , Annie & Noah Roseberry of Re/Max Professionals, Moseley Farms & Jake Anderson of Shelter Insurance.
Brian Leblond shares from his personal experience, the need to learn to trust the Lord at all times.
On this episode:- Taylor Dickens Game Winning Goal in the 2nd overtime sends Central Girls Soccer to 4-0 on the season beating Bishop LeBlond. Hear from Coach Christi Shaffer & Sophmore Taylor Dickens.- Wednesday Scoreboard Want to also thank our year long sponsors as well including Tolly & Associates, Little Caesars of St. Joseph, John Anderson Insurance, Meierhofer Funeral Home & Crematory, Musser Construction, HiHo Bar & Grill, Jayson & Mary Watkins, Matt & Jenni Busby, Michelle Cook Group, Russell Book & Bookball 365, The St. Joseph Mustangs, B's Tees, KT Logistics LLC., Hixson-Klein Funeral Home, James L. Griffith Law Firm of Maysville, Toby Prussman of Premier Land & Auction Group, Barnes Roofing, The St. Joseph School District, HK Quality Sheet Metal, Redman Farms of Maysville, Melissa Winn, Amber & Anthony Henke, Adams Bar & Grill, Green Hills Insurance LLC., Cintas, Thrive Family Chiropractic, IV Nutrition of St. Joseph, J.C's Hardwood Floors, Roth Kid Nation, Serve Link Home Care out of Trenton, Barnett's Floor Renewal LLC., Balloons D'Lux, B3 Renovations, Gabe Edgar, KC Flooring & Drywall, C&H Handyman Plumming, The Hamilton Bank member FDIC, Wompas Graphix & Embroidery of Liberty, The Tabor Family, Ellis Sheep Company of Maysville, Bank Northwest of Cameron, Akey's Catering & Event Rentals, Brown Bear of St. Joseph, Whitney Whitt Agency of Hamilton, Wolf Black Herefords, The KCI Basketball Podcast & Jacob Erdman - Shelter Insurance of Rock Port, Rob & Stacia Studer, Green Family Chiropractic & Annie & Noah Roseberry of Re/Max Professionals.
Joie de partager avec vous une nouvelle série dans la chaîne Où est le beau ? > celle des replays de certains intervenants et conversations capturés à l'occasion des Rencards du beau, l'évènement que je coproduis avec PLENDI by Vinci Construction et Mathilde Dion Rabier.PLENDI by Vinci Construction est une entreprise générale spécialisée dans les projets très haut de gamme : les palaces parisiens BVLGARI, Mandarin Oriental ou George V, les boutiques telles que Cartier ou Dior et, bien sûr, du résidentiel privé…Pas besoin de nouvelles données sur l'état de la planète > pour savoir que le domaine de la construction, de l'architecture et de l'architecture d'intérieur est appelé à s'adapter.Désormais la question, c'est : où est-ce qu'on peut atterrir ? Qu'est-ce qu'on fait ?Depuis 2022, 10 Rencards du beau ont été organisés et ont permis de réunir plus de 200 professionnels du luxe qui souhaitent réfléchir sur comment faire mieux demain.LRDB, c'est faire naître l'envie de faire un peu moins mal que le secteur.Il s'agit de matinées confidentielles dédiées aux architectes et aux acteurs du bâtiment, où nous écoutons des pionniers d'un beau qui questionne le monde et inspire.Nous en sommes à notre 3ᵉ résidence. Après avoir été accueillis chez RDAI et Franklin Azzi, nous sommes actuellement en résidence au studio Chloé Nègre.Chaque session accueille 2 intervenants :Un acteur hors champ de l'architecture et du design, mais qui vient justement nous nourrir avec ses ailleurs.Un acteur du sérail, que je sélectionne pour son engagement, sa vision, son travail.===
Brian interviews Patrick Leblond. Patrick is a CIGI senior fellow and an expert on economic governance and policy. He is an associate professor and holder of the CN-Paul M. Tellier Chair on Business and Public Policy at the University of Ottawa. Yesterday we asked: Can Ukraine trust America anymore? Today we discuss tariffs, trade wars, NATO, the arctic and lots more. Patrick's recent article stated: “It should now be clear to Canadians that we face an existential threat from a United States that has gone full MAGA. In response, Canada must go full GIGA! Giga, of course, means “giant” in Greek, and that's the size of the effort needed to protect Canada.” Patrick LeBlond asks: Can Canada Trust America?
The Sub 8 and Sub 14 Clubs adds another member. At the BU Valentine Invite, Emmanuel Leblond ran 7:57 to move to 4th in D3 History.He shares insights on the mental and physical preparation required for high-pressure races, the transition from cross country to indoor track, and the importance of community among D3 athletes. In this conversation, Emmanuel Leblond discusses the challenges of balancing a mechanical engineering major with his rigorous running schedule. He shares insights on the evolution of running technology, including the impact of nutrition and gear on performance. Emmanuel reflects on his decision to choose Division III athletics, emphasizing the benefits of individual championships and team dynamics. He also expresses his aspirations for future competitions, including representing France at the U23 level.How to Support D3 Glory Days:ShirtsTHE NEWSLETTER!D3 Glory Days Venmo.We launched a Patreon!Subscribe and leave us a review on Apple PodcastsInstagram,Twitter andStrava.
Episode 301Guests: Yangzom Brauen & Katherine LeblondFilm: Mola: A Tibetan Tale of Love and LossFestival: South by Southwest Film Festival---This week on Salt Lake Dirt, I'm thrilled to talk about the poignant documentary Mola: A Tibetan Tale of Love and Loss. Yangzom Brauen (filmmaker) and Katherine Leblond (producer) join me to share the heartfelt journey of creating a film that captures the life of a Tibetan nun and the deep bonds of family amidst the backdrop of cultural displacement.Yangzom recounts how the project began as a personal endeavor to document her grandmother's life, leading to a profound exploration of identity, love, and loss. We discuss the challenges and triumphs of filming intimate family moments while navigating the complexities of documentary storytelling.Katherine shares her passion for the project and the emotional connection she felt to the narrative, highlighting the universal themes of acceptance and the human experience that resonate throughout the film. Together, they reflect on the significance of their upcoming premiere at the prestigious South by Southwest Film Festival and the impact they hope the film will have on audiences.This is a conversation filled with warmth, vulnerability, and inspiration. Don't miss it!Kyler---Episode Links: Film Website Follow Mola on Instagram South by Southwest Film Festival
On this episode:- Lafayette boys rebound from Tuesdays loss to Benton and snaps Bishop LeBlond's 19 game winning streak. Hear from Irish coach Kevin Bristol, Senior Antonio Williams & Sophomore Jodell Redman. - Missouri Western women rallies late but falls to No. 5 Pitt State while the men suffer their 3rd straight defeat.- Northwest women get back to .500 on the season while the men suffer a heartbreaking last second loss to Missouri Southern. - Grundy County Junior Kinsley Allnut & Trenton Senior Mirena King achieve big time milestones this week - Thursday Scoreboard *This episode is sponsored by Tolly & Associates, Little Caesars of St. Joseph, John Anderson Insurance, Meierhofer Funeral Home & Crematory, Musser Construction, HiHo Bar & Grill, Jayson & Mary Watkins, Matt & Jenni Busby, Michelle Cook Group, Russell Book & Bookball 365, The St. Joseph Mustangs, B's Tees, KT Logistics LLC., Hixson-Klein Funeral Home, James L. Griffith Law Firm of Maysville, Toby Prussman of Premier Land & Auction Group, Barnes Roofing, The St. Joseph School District, HK Quality Sheet Metal, Redman Farms of Maysville, Melissa Winn, Amber & Anthony Henke, Adams Bar & Grill, Green Hills Insurance LLC., Cintas, Thrive Family Chiropractic, IV Nutrition of St. Joseph, J.C's Hardwood Floors, Roth Kid Nation, Serve Link Home Care out of Trenton, Barnett's Floor Renewal LLC., Balloons D'Lux, B3 Renovations, Gabe Edgar, KC Flooring & Drywall, C&H Handyman Plumming, The Hamilton Bank member FDIC, Wompas Graphix & Embroidery of Liberty, The Tabor Family, Ellis Sheep Company of Maysville, Bank Northwest of Cameron, Akey's Catering & Event Rentals and Brown Bear of St. Joseph.
Une interview de Melody Leblond, illustratrice et autrice de jeux de société, une illustrautrice !N'hésitez pas à venir discuter sur Discord des émissions et de jeux !https://discord.gg/TQJsbBzdJxHébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
On this episode:- Bishop LeBlond boys win their 1st LeBlond Tournament title since 2008. We recap the Golden Eagles big win and the whole Day 3.- Monday Scores - Former Riverside Cyclone Taylor Weishaar wins the MIAA Women's Basketball Athlete of the Week. *This episode is sponsored by Tolly & Associates, Little Caesars of St. Joseph, John Anderson Insurance, Meierhofer Funeral Home & Crematory, Musser Construction, HiHo Bar & Grill, Jayson & Mary Watkins, Matt & Jenni Busby, Michelle Cook Group, Russell Book & Bookball 365, The St. Joseph Mustangs, B's Tees, KT Logistics LLC., Hixson-Klein Funeral Home, James L. Griffith Law Firm of Maysville, Toby Prussman of Premier Land & Auction Group, Barnes Roofing, The St. Joseph School District, HK Quality Sheet Metal, Redman Farms of Maysville, Melissa Winn, Amber & Anthony Henke, Adams Bar & Grill, Green Hills Insurance LLC., Cintas, Thrive Family Chiropractic, IV Nutrition of St. Joseph, J.C's Hardwood Floors, Roth Kid Nation, Serve Link Home Care out of Trenton, Barnett's Floor Renewal LLC., Balloons D'Lux, B3 Renovations, Gabe Edgar, KC Flooring & Drywall, C&H Handyman Plumming, The Hamilton Bank member FDIC, Wompas Graphix & Embroidery of Liberty, Tabor Family, Ellis Sheep Company of Maysville & Bank Northwest of Hamilton. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/cliffnotespod/support
On this episode:- We recap Day 2 of the Bishop LeBlond Holiday Tournament.- Benton Boys & Lafayette Girls win Tournament titles in Neosho- Benton girls break the Jefferson City Tournament records for points in a game - Saturdays scores *This episode is sponsored by Tolly & Associates, Little Caesars of St. Joseph, John Anderson Insurance, Meierhofer Funeral Home & Crematory, Musser Construction, HiHo Bar & Grill, Jayson & Mary Watkins, Matt & Jenni Busby, Michelle Cook Group, Russell Book & Bookball 365, The St. Joseph Mustangs, B's Tees, KT Logistics LLC., Hixson-Klein Funeral Home, James L. Griffith Law Firm of Maysville, Toby Prussman of Premier Land & Auction Group, Barnes Roofing, The St. Joseph School District, HK Quality Sheet Metal, Redman Farms of Maysville, Melissa Winn, Amber & Anthony Henke, Adams Bar & Grill, Green Hills Insurance LLC., Cintas, Thrive Family Chiropractic, IV Nutrition of St. Joseph, J.C's Hardwood Floors, Roth Kid Nation, Serve Link Home Care out of Trenton, Barnett's Floor Renewal LLC., Balloons D'Lux, B3 Renovations, Gabe Edgar, KC Flooring & Drywall, C&H Handyman Plumming, The Hamilton Bank member FDIC, Wompas Graphix & Embroidery of Liberty and the Tabor Family. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/cliffnotespod/support
On this episode:- We recap Day 1 of the Bishop LeBlond Holiday Tournament.- Friday Scoreboard *This episode is sponsored by Tolly & Associates, Little Caesars of St. Joseph, John Anderson Insurance, Meierhofer Funeral Home & Crematory, Musser Construction, HiHo Bar & Grill, Jayson & Mary Watkins, Matt & Jenni Busby, Michelle Cook Group, Russell Book & Bookball 365, The St. Joseph Mustangs, B's Tees, KT Logistics LLC., Hixson-Klein Funeral Home, James L. Griffith Law Firm of Maysville, Toby Prussman of Premier Land & Auction Group, Barnes Roofing, The St. Joseph School District, HK Quality Sheet Metal, Redman Farms of Maysville, Melissa Winn, Amber & Anthony Henke, Adams Bar & Grill, Green Hills Insurance LLC., Cintas, Thrive Family Chiropractic, IV Nutrition of St. Joseph, J.C's Hardwood Floors, Roth Kid Nation, Serve Link Home Care out of Trenton, Barnett's Floor Renewal LLC., Balloons D'Lux, B3 Renovations, Gabe Edgar, KC Flooring & Drywall, C&H Handyman Plumming, The Hamilton Bank member FDIC, Wompas Graphix & Embroidery of Liberty and the Tabor Family. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/cliffnotespod/support
On this Episode:- Bishop LeBlond boys hang on to survive a stiff test from Nodaway Valley while the Thunder girls controlled their game from Whistle to Whistle.- Friday Scoreboard *This episode is sponsored by Tolly & Associates, Little Caesars of St. Joseph, John Anderson Insurance, Meierhofer Funeral Home & Crematory, Musser Construction, HiHo Bar & Grill, Jayson & Mary Watkins, Matt & Jenni Busby, Michelle Cook Group, Russell Book & Bookball 365, The St. Joseph Mustangs, B's Tees, KT Logistics LLC., Hixson-Klein Funeral Home, James L. Griffith Law Firm of Maysville, Toby Prussman of Premier Land & Auction Group, Barnes Roofing, The St. Joseph School District, HK Quality Sheet Metal, Redman Farms of Maysville, Melissa Winn, Amber & Anthony Henke, Adams Bar & Grill, Green Hills Insurance LLC., Cintas, Thrive Family Chiropractic, IV Nutrition of St. Joseph, J.C's Hardwood Floors, Roth Kid Nation, Serve Link Home Care out of Trenton, Barnett's Floor Renewal LLC., Balloons D'Lux, B3 Renovations, Gabe Edgar, KC Flooring & Drywall, C&H Handyman Plumming, The Hamilton Bank member FDIC and Wompas Graphix & Embroidery of Liberty. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/cliffnotespod/support
On this episode: - Bishop LeBlond sees their season end at the hands of the defending state champs - Penney advances to their 1st state championship game in 8 years - Blair Oaks edges out Maryville with 2 4th quarter scores - Benedictine pulls a road upset in the NAIA Football Playoffs - Northwest WBB run their winning streak to 6 games *This episode is sponsored by Tolly & Associates, Little Caesars of St. Joseph, John Anderson Insurance, Meierhofer Funeral Home & Crematory, Musser Construction, HiHo Bar & Grill, Jayson & Mary Watkins, Matt & Jenni Busby, Michelle Cook Group, Russell Book & Bookball 365, The St. Joseph Mustangs, B's Tees, KT Logistics LLC., Hixson-Klein Funeral Home, James L. Griffith Law Firm of Maysville, Toby Prussman of Premier Land & Auction Group, Barnes Roofing, The St. Joseph School District, HK Quality Sheet Metal, Redman Farms of Maysville, Melissa Winn, Amber & Anthony Henke, Adams Bar & Grill, Green Hills Insurance LLC., Cintas, Thrive Family Chiropractic, IV Nutrition of St. Joseph, J.C's Hardwood Floors, Roth Kid Nation, Serve Link Home Care out of Trenton, Barnett's Floor Renewal LLC., Balloons D'Lux and B3 Renovations. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/cliffnotespod/support
Dans la première partie de cet épisode, enregistré en direct Au Gîte des Oies, Mick et J-W s'aventurent dans un cadre idyllique pour explorer le concept du développement durable. Ils accueillent Joël Leblond, conseiller au centre de biométhanisation de la ville de Québec, et Simon-Pierre Savard-Tremblay, député de l'agglomération Saint-Hyacinthe-Bagot. Ensemble, ils discutent des enjeux environnementaux actuels, des solutions innovantes pour un avenir plus durable et des initiatives concrètes qui prennent forme à travers le Québec.Un merci tout spécial à notre commanditaire principal, Tessier - Fabricant de serres!
On this episode: - Bishop LeBlond Volleyball take 2nd Place at state - LeBlond Soccer falls short in District title game - State Cross Country Day 2 Results - Northwest Football wins 11th straight vs rival Missouri Western - Northwest women knock off No. 1 ranked Minnesota State - Western women rout Augustana to send the Griffons & Ashton Feldhaus to 2-0 - and more * This episode is sponsored by Tolly & Associates, Little Caesars of St. Joseph, John Anderson Insurance, Meierhofer Funeral Home & Crematory, Musser Construction, HiHo Bar & Grill, Jayson & Mary Watkins, Matt & Jenni Busby, Michelle Cook Group, Russell Book & Bookball 365, The St. Joseph Mustangs, B's Tees, KT Logistics LLC., Hixson-Klein Funeral Home, James L. Griffith Law Firm of Maysville, Toby Prussman of Premier Land & Auction Group, Barnes Roofing, The St. Joseph School District, HK Quality Sheet Metal, Redman Farms of Maysville, Melissa Winn, Amber & Anthony Henke, Adams Bar & Grill, Green Hills Insurance LLC., Cintas, Thrive Family Chiropractic, IV Nutrition of St. Joseph, J.C's Hardwood Floors, Roth Kid Nation & Serve Link Home Care out of Trenton. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/cliffnotespod/support
On this episode: - Bishop LeBlond Volleyball is on their way to the Class 2 State Championship - Multiple local Cross Country runners medal in today's Class 1 Championships - District Football continues with District Championships coming next friday - Missouri Western women's basketball give new coach Ashton Feldhaus her 1st career win. - Northwet women continue 2 week gauntlet with win over MSU Moorhead - Missouri Western men win while Northwest Falls in Matt Keely's Debut in the Hillyard Tip-off Classic - Plus we run down a JAMPACKED Saturday Schedule *This episode is sponsored by Tolly & Associates, Little Caesars of St. Joseph, John Anderson Insurance, Meierhofer Funeral Home & Crematory, Musser Construction, HiHo Bar & Grill, Jayson & Mary Watkins, Matt & Jenni Busby, Michelle Cook Group, Russell Book & Bookball 365, The St. Joseph Mustangs, B's Tees, KT Logistics LLC., Hixson-Klein Funeral Home, James L. Griffith Law Firm of Maysville, Toby Prussman of Premier Land & Auction Group, Barnes Roofing, The St. Joseph School District, HK Quality Sheet Metal, Redman Farms of Maysville, Melissa Winn, Amber & Anthony Henke, Adams Bar & Grill, Green Hills Insurance LLC., Cintas, Thrive Family Chiropractic, IV Nutrition of St. Joseph, J.C's Hardwood Floors, Roth Kid Nation & Serve Link Home Care out of Trenton --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/cliffnotespod/support
In this explainer episode, we've asked Mathilde Leblond, Senior Design Researcher for the Generation Study at Genomics England, to answer some frequently asked questions that we received from parents who we engaged with for the design of the study. You can hear more information about Generation Study via the study's official website and in our previous podcast episodes: How has design research shaped the Generation Study? Which conditions will we look for initially in the Generation Study? You can also find a series of short videos explaining some of the common terms you might encounter about genomics on our YouTube channel. If you've got any questions, or have any other topics you'd like us to explain, feel free to contact us on info@genomicsengland.co.uk. You can download the transcript or read it below. Naimah: You may have heard about the Generation Study. This research study led by Genomics England in partnership with NHS England will sequence the whole genomes of a hundred thousand newborn babies and will look for more than 200 rare conditions that could be treated in the NHS in early childhood. The study seeks to improve how we diagnose and treat rare genetic conditions to enable babies and families to have better outcomes. Today I'm joined by Mathilde Leblond, who leads design research for the Generation Study, and will be answering some of the frequently asked questions that we receive from parents who we engaged with for the design of the study — the same questions that expectant parents at participating hospitals might have before deciding if they want to take part. So first of all, Mathilde, can you tell me a little bit more about your role? Mathilde: Hello. So, I'm a design researcher. My role is to support my colleagues, understand our users deeply so that we can create experiences that are as positive and seamless as possible. So today we'll talk about the parents who are the ones invited to take part in the Generation Study, but our users also include the midwives who are approaching them and taking blood samples. The clinical scientists who are interpreting the results and the specialist paediatricians will be contacting the parents if a condition is suspected, and even many more users actually. So, we did a lot of research prior to launching to shape the Generation Study, and now that we're live, we continue doing more to keep improving the experience. Naimah: Okay, so can you give us a bit of background? How did you engage with parents in this study? Mathilde: Yeah, so today we've involved over 150 pregnant and recent parents in our co-design sessions. And these sessions were slightly different each time with different topics and exercises, but generally we spend around 90 minutes with one parent. And we asked them to bring someone who helped them make decisions about their baby during their pregnancy. So that meant that we had their mums, their sisters, their husbands, their wives and friends as well, taking part and discussing the Generation Study with us. During that time with them, we would test our materials. We listened out to what's important to them and what they asked about, and we got them to show us what would work better for them so that we could then shape the materials around that. Naimah: So you can find out a bit more about why it's important to involve users in co-design in our podcast ‘How has design research helped shape the Generation Study?', which is available on our website. So, we have a list of frequently asked questions from some of the parents, and I wanted to post some of them to you today, Mathilde. So first of all, one of the questions was, why should my baby take part in this study? Mathilde: Yeah, I mean, that's really the key questions that all parents are asking themselves before they even spend any time finding out more about the Generation Study. And our materials do reflect that. So what tends to matter most to the parents we spoke to, is that there's a small chance that their baby may benefit directly from taking part because if a condition is suspected, they'll be invited for further specialised tests within the NHS, and they could receive treatment much sooner than if we had waited for the symptoms to develop and for a diagnosis to come, which can sometimes take years for some rare conditions. But for a large majority of the babies, 99%, they will have no condition suspected and so their involvement really is more altruistic. Taking part means that their parents agree to share the baby's healthcare records on an ongoing basis and their genome with researchers who can then look at this together with information from thousands of other babies and patients to help improve our understanding of genes and health. So taking part in the Generation Study also means that you might help uncover some life-changing early treatments for babies in the future. And finally, something that's super important to us is that people from Black, Asian and other minority ethnic communities have historically been underrepresented in this type of research. So, we're working hard to make the Generation Study as inclusive as possible to help genetic testing and treatments be improved for everybody in the future. So, there's many reasons to take part in the Generation Study. Naimah: You mentioned the word altruistic there. Can you tell me what that means? Mathilde: Yeah, so that's really to help society. They may not get benefits within their own lives or within their own family, but somebody somewhere will benefit from it in the future. And that's what altruistic means. Naimah: Thank you. So, some parents might also ask, will this test tell me every illness that my baby might have now and in the future? Mathilde: No. So first of all, we're still learning a lot about how genes work, how the environment affects them, and there's also many conditions that we still don't understand very well. So those are not in. Of the conditions that we do understand quite well. We did a big piece of public engagement in 2022 to try and decide which ones to include as part of the screening. And while some parents told us that they would want to know every single thing in advance, a lot of parents were worried about how much it would raise their anxiety to find out about a potentially incurable condition at such a fragile and beautiful moment when you have a new baby. So, for this reason and many other reasons, we've decided to proceed really cautiously so that the conditions that we'll be testing for have been chosen to reflect 4 key principles. And you can find them on the website. But the main gist is that we'll only be looking for conditions that normally start in childhood, first few years of life. So, nothing around Alzheimer's, nothing around breast cancer, for instance. And another principle is that there's has to be already existing pathways within the NHS so that the babies can be seen and treated quickly. So, we're only including those conditions that start in childhood, and something can be done about them early on. Naimah: You can also listen to our podcast on our website 'Which conditions will we look for initially in the Generation study?' to find out more about the list of 200 conditions, which we'll look for in the study and how this may change over the course of time as new evidence emerges. So, another common theme with the parents was that they are aware that the NHS is already under a lot of pressure, and they asked if my baby is flagged for more testing, will I really be able to get the support I need from the NHS in time? Mathilde: Yeah, that's a question that we've heard a lot actually, and it really makes sense considering the media coverage that's coming out daily, and that's been really in the papers for months now about how stretched the NHS is. We've worked really closely with the NHS to ensure that all the babies that have a condition suspected as part of the Generation Study can be seen as soon as possible. So, our team has been in touch with specialists from across the country to understand how ready they are to take in those babies, to run confirmatory tests and potentially start treating them sooner. So, it's been really key for us to make sure that we're not flagging up a baby for more testing and they just have to wait for months before they can get extra tests and attention. And that's so important for us to get right. In the long term, we hope that screening could actually relieve some pressure from the NHS if we can get babies to the correct doctor earlier on while their health is still good. Naimah: Some parents might also ask, this research sounds very new. Is my baby going to be a Guinea pig? Mathilde: Those two words, Guinea pig, came up again and again in almost every single session that I've had with parents, it was almost a freaky coincidence. I find that most parents use this wording to mean, will we inject anything into their baby or give them any medication that has not been tested and approved? And the answer to this is no. What does happen is that when a baby's born after the birth, we need to take a few drops of blood so that we can create their genome, their DNA, and normally we'll take a bit from their umbilical cords, and that is happening in most of the birth at the moment of the participants. But if for any reason we couldn't take that, maybe it was a complex labour, there was some emergency. The parents are asked a bit later if they would allow for a bit of blood to be collected using the heel prick methods. And that's a method that's been used in the babies in the UK within 5 days of birth for many, many years. And it looks for 9 conditions, as a current NHS test. So that's definitely safe. And usually when parents find out that that's all there is to it, they feel a lot more comfortable. A little disclaimer here because we mentioned the 5-day heel prick, while we use a similar method to get the blood, if we couldn't get blood from the umbilical cords, it's important to see that this is a different test, it's a proven test within the NHS which says many lives. So, parents who choose to take part in the Generation Study are very much encouraged to also agree to the day 5 newborn screen screening. With all of that being said, this is a new research study and there are some uncertainties. Most of them revolve around how quickly we can process the results, how will parents and the NHS react to receiving these results so early, but also will this be inclusive for everybody? And might we inadvertently create more inequities? We're actively listening to sites now that we have opened and we have a survey that our participants can fill out, and we're working with UCL to help evaluate the impact of the Generation Study in an unbiased way. Naimah: Okay. And another frequently asked question, if you have my baby's DNA, does that mean that you can clone them? Mathilde: Cloning comes up regularly in our interviews with parents, though sometimes I found that people can feel a little bit silly asking about it, but actually it's a quite big topic that's top of mind when we talk about DNA and genomes. Not least because of how much it comes up in sci-fi, it's just everywhere. So first of all, about cloning, it's important to remember that it's completely illegal, but it also has a whole host of other ethical concerns, which we don't take lightly at all here at Genomics England. So, the research that our study will support will be firmly within the bands of law and ethics and will only focus on discovering answers to questions that could help the health and wellbeing of babies, and really all of us in the future. No cloning involved. Naimah: Okay. And then the final question, how can I take part in the study? Mathilde: We've already opened in over 10 hospitals in England, which we are very excited about and we're actively working on opening more. You can visit our website, www.generationstudy.co.uk, to see an up-to-date list of hospitals which are currently taking part, and to read more about what taking part entails. Then you can contact your local research team to log your interest if you're planning on giving birth in one of our partner hospitals, and they'll be in touch to let you know about the next steps. Naimah: That was Mathilde Leblond answering some of the frequently asked questions from parents that we have engaged with for this study. If you've got any questions or you'd like to hear more, please contact us at ge-newborns@genomicsengland.co.uk, or you could find out more on the Generation Study website www.generationstudy.co.uk. Thank you for listening.
The Generation Study is a research initiative aiming to explore the use of whole genome sequencing in newborns, to screen for more than 200 rare genetic conditions. This study will recruit 100,000 babies across England, and you can learn more about the Generation Study via the study's official website. Design research has played a vital role in shaping the Generation Study. Parents, NHS staff, and the public have been involved from the start, providing input through public dialogues and usability testing to guide the development of the study. In this episode, our guests discuss the use of design research in the Generation Study, and the importance of designing a robust and inclusive consent process, focusing on building trust and engaging diverse communities. They also discuss how the design of study materials such as posters, videos, and written content was shaped by community feedback. Our host, Öznur Özkurt, Director of design and research at Genomics England is joined by Mathilde Leblond, Senior Design Researcher at Genomics England, Rebecca Middleton, a rare condition patient, and Chair of the recruitment working group of the Generation Study and Sandra Igwe, CEO/founder of The Motherhood Group. "It's not enough to just ask people afterwards. It's also not enough to engage just at the beginning and then stop listening once we're live, once it gets hairy and a bit difficult. So, we are very excited to find out all the things that we hadn't considered before we launched, and just continue to learn." You can hear more information about Generation Study in our previous podcast episodes too: Genomics 101 with David Bick - What is the Generation Study? Which conditions will we look for initially in the Generation Study? With Vivienne Parry and David Bick You can read the transcript below, or download it here: https://www.genomicsengland.co.uk/assets/documents/Podcast-transcripts/How-has-design-research-shaped-the-Generation-Study.docx Öznur: Welcome to Behind the Genes. Sandra: Every community's different and every patient is different as well, and so that may require different focuses or different formats, or different messages for different groups. And so we like to have people with lived experience from the community representing that, and also driving the uptake of consent as well. But failing to engage diverse voices can lead to perpetuating inequalities in access and uptake, so it's really important to have representation because the lack of it in research can overlook communities' specific concerns and needs. Öznur: My name's Öznur Özkurt and I'm the director of design and research at Genomics England. On today's episode, I'm joined by Mathilde Leblonde, senior design researcher at Genomics England, Rebecca Middleton, and Sandra Igwe, CEO and founder of the Motherhood Group. Today we'll be discussing how design research was used in the Generation Study by involving participant and users' voices to address ethical considerations, implementation and consent. If you enjoy today's episode, we'd love your support. Please like, share and rate us on wherever you listen to your podcasts. So, before we dive into our questions, would our guests like to briefly introduce yourselves to our listeners? Sandra, let's start with you. Sandra: Hi everyone, I'm Sandra Igwe and I'm the founder and chief exec at the Motherhood Group. The Motherhood Group is a social enterprise that supports black mothers, birthing people in their pregnancy and beyond. Öznur: Great to have you on the podcast, Sandra. Rebecca? Rebecca: Hi everyone, I'm Rebecca, I'm a rare condition patient, and I also have the pleasure of chairing the recruitment working group of the Generation Study. Öznur: Fantastic, thank you, Rebecca. And over to you, Mathilde. Mathilde: Hi, I'm Mathilde. I'm leading design research on the Generation Study, and I have had the pleasure of working with Sandra and Rebecca and many others, trying to shape the processes and materials of recruitment and consent in the Generation Study. Öznur: Fantastic, thank you. Mathilde, let's start with our first question. What is the Generation Study? Mathilde: Sure. So, whole genome sequencing is a technology that's improving. We're finding new ways of using that, and there's interest globally to explore the use of this technology to screen for rare genetic conditions in babies, so that we can treat them earlier on, so they're not having two different departments trying to figure out what's wrong with them. And because we can look for hundreds of conditions with whole genome sequencing, it's really much more efficient, and we're able to look at these rare conditions, so it's really exciting. There's still a lot of questions about implementing this operationally within the NHS, and so the Generation Study is aiming to explore this. We're going to be aiming to recruit 100,000 babies across England to take part in this, and they will be staying on the Generation Study for 16 years, or until they withdraw, so that we can see how their health develops, and really understand how genes affect their health. Öznur: Thanks Mathilde. And if you'd like to learn more about the Generation Study, you can listen to our previous Genomics 101 podcast called What is the Generation Study, and Which Conditions Will We Look for Initially in the Generation Study. Mathilde, can you briefly outline for us what we mean by design research? Mathilde: So, design research is a design and research methodology, which involves users from scoping through iteration. So, even back when we didn't know this would be called the Generation Study and we weren't even sure of the boundaries of that, we were involving parents, NHS staff and other users of the service to try and understand what it might be. And later down the line it went all the way through to iterations once we started having materials and a better idea of what it could be like (inaudible 0:04:18) with users outside of the company to understand what their needs are, what would work well for them, and how we can shape the whole service to do things better. Öznur: And how have we implemented design research in the Generation Study? Mathilde: Yep, so we've also done a lot of engagement, which was bringing public views in the form of public dialogues, so understanding which conditions should be looked for, what principles should be guiding that work, but also we've been involving users in regular rounds of codesign and usability testing to understand what works and what doesn't work. It's been around 105 people now that have taken part, and it's only going to be growing. Involving users has been shown to improve the implementation of interventions in the healthcare context, so we really hope that this will help the Generation Study when it launches. And regular rounds of codesign have had to be balanced with ethics, operations, feasibility, but I'm proud to say that user perspectives have been central to the decisions of the programme throughout. Öznur: That's fantastic to hear. I'm going to come to Rebecca and ask, why is it important for us to be guided by the patients and the participants? Rebecca: It's absolutely central, and the public dialogue that really underpinned this, which started in 2020, the messages from that have really come through to the whole codesign process of the project. The public consultation really told us that people were genuinely keen about the project, but wanted to ensure that they were part of the process, and that coproduction really began from day one. This is a new world leading project. This has not been done before, so we needed a whole new approach to how we produced and how we designed this with patients and with parents, and that's exactly what we've done. And why we have done it is because we know ultimately it leads to trust within the project, within the research study, which is essential, as I say, ‘cos this is a world first. But it also leads to better consent, a better pathway through the study, a better results pathway as well, and all the way through, ensuring that expectations are managed, that there is transparency, and people are fully informed and can make the right decision for themselves and for their baby. Öznur: Thank you. And would you like to add something, Sandra? Sandra: Yeah, so I know from my community that we represent black mothers and black ethnic minority patients and participants, and we have very unique lived experiences that many research may not be privy to or just do not understand. And so engaging with patients from the community ensures that research is grounded in real authentic community needs and priorities. And also involving women like myself and those from my community, it can really help to identify and overcome barriers to inclusion or getting mums involved. I know I always hear, you know, “Sandra, black mothers are so hard to reach, they don't really get involved in research.” Well, if you include those from the community to lead in the research or support in engagement, you will have a lot more uptake, and it leads to more accessible inclusive research, which of course everyone really, really desires to have more of. And then also participants from the community can flag issues and suggest solutions that researchers may miss, because it's not knowledge, it's experience. It's, you know, having someone go through the experiences without necessarily studying it, but again lived experience to me, it's more crucial than any other experience that you could possibly have. Öznur: 100 percent, lived experience is really, really crucial for us to make the services that we're making really speak to the actual context of our users. Thank you for that. And Rebecca, how has this process been different to the 100,000 Genomes Project? What was your experience? Rebecca: I was consented onto the 100,000 Genomes Project back in 2015, and I can remember that experience very vividly, on a cold, wet December afternoon, going off to meet my genetic counsellor, and receiving the consent form for the 100,000 Genomes Project, which was very much like War & Peace. Scratching my head at the time, going, “Gosh, I'm going to have to (inaudible 0:08:54) to go through this.” And then going home that evening and sitting on the sofa, and, you know, considering myself an educated woman, just realising I had so many questions. I really didn't understand it, and I needed somebody to help me unpack this, and translate it. And I'm pleased to say that our consent process and our recruitment process is very different to this, which is a fantastic thing. And what's really key about the lessons that we have learnt from the 100,000 Genomes Project is that, to really build trust in a research programme and a new research programme, you need to manage expectations, and that's wrapped up in building trust around the programme as well. And with the 100,000 Genomes Programme, there have been challenges and issues around that expectation management, and some expectations weren't managed. And even now nearly ten years on, we are still feeling the effects of that, and patients and families are still feeling hurt because of that. So, we have learnt from that and therefore we have designed a process with patients and with parents. We know that no two experiences are the same, that we have to ensure that we remain flexible, and we have to ensure that we are addressing any misconceptions, any misunderstandings. Perception and reality have to be treated the same. We have to understand how people are understanding genomics, because outside of pockets, genomics is not a standard NHS piece of healthcare. So, people come to this study with different assumptions, and we have to learn to go beyond them. We have to understand what their health literacy needs are, and how we can help manage that, how we can help translate, so that nobody is stuck at home on a cold, wet December evening, scratching their head, going, “Well, I don't know what this actually means.” We are ensuring that the NHS professionals and everybody involved in the pathway is fully aware of how to explain the project, explain the risks, explain the benefits, and be fully transparent. And we know what the risks and the benefits are that need to be addressed because we've asked parents and patients as well. So, we know the challenges and we're trying to address them head on, and that's essential. It's essential in building trust, and that's one of the key learnings from the 100,000 Genomes Project. And it has been brilliant to be involved in this project and really kind of learn from that past experience, but move forward in such a unique and fresh way that really will have benefit to those new parents. Öznur: Thank you, Rebecca. And we have been talking about the consent process in the context of newborns, and we know that, while consent given for newborn screening is really high in the UK, parents often leave this conversation relatively uninformed. Sandra, can you tell us a little bit about what you think the risks of not designing this consent moment appropriately might be? Sandra: I guess not designing appropriately can break down trust. So, I think engaging in a variety of parents in this research and design is crucial for trust. And that's a topic that's come up many times in our community is that they believe that there is a lack of trust between research practitioners and this wider system as a whole, and the community of marginalised patients, parents, mothers. So, I think it's really important that communities have this. But also researchers must make the effort to meet parents where they are at, not just physically but also conceptually, as well as emotionally. So, hosting conversations in familiar, comfortable community spaces is essential. We had our session in our hub, our community hub, and mothers were really familiar with the space and with each other as well. And so partnering with local grassroots organisations and leaders to create inroads is so beneficial, and I can hand on say that when you connect with the community, you've already done the first step in building trust. And consent conversations should be guided by what matters most to each parent within each community, ‘cos every community's different and every patient is different as well, and so that may require different focuses or different formats, or different messengers for different groups. And so we like to have people with lived experience from the community representing that, and also driving the uptake of consent as well. But failing to engage diverse voices can lead to perpetuating inequalities in access and uptake, so it's really important to have representation because the lack of it in research can overlook communities' specific concerns and needs. Öznur: Absolutely, and that inclusion is really important for the study. Is there anything you'd like to add, Mathilde? Mathilde: Yes. When we talk about consent, oftentimes we think about that one moment, the moment of conversation with a clinician, and signing on the dotted line, and I think what we have done here in the Generation Study is to consider recruitment from the very first time that they hear about the Generation Study all the way down to that moment. And it's been really important because, yes, the moment of consent - you know, during pregnancy, you've got a lot of information coming in, a lot of different priorities, so you may be a little bit all over the place and not understand specific things, or not have the time to really spend thinking and understanding jargon, etc. And that presents a big risk because, when you may receive results, there may be confusion. There may be a loss of trust if there's media coverage that talks about the Generation Study in a way different from what you had understood it. So, these are some of the risks that we're trying to avoid. But the big risk is also, as Sandra has said, the risk of not engaging a wide variety of parents, not just in the moment of consent but the whole process. So, if we're thinking about where we're using the word genomic and how are we using that, this is a word that's actually really scary for a lot of people. And we might be very proud of the cutting edge technology that we're using, but actually it can sound very science-y and almost sci-fi to people. So to us, the moment of consent is really from the first time that you hear about the Generation Study, you start creating a mental model about what that means, all the way down to the consent moment, when the samples are taken, the results and beyond. It's really been looking at this whole journey holistically. Öznur: And that language point is a really interesting one. I know that the study is obviously being communicated to the public through posters, leaflets, websites, which speak to how the study works, you know, the conditions we test for, and the benefits and risks of joining. There's a lot of language. There's written words in there, there's audiovisual content, videos, images. How did we inform what type of content is needed to communicate the depth of the study? Mathilde: I think the example of the introduction video is a really good one, and I want to discuss this a bit with Sandra, because actually it was quite a crucial turning point. We tested the video several times in user research before and after the Motherhood Group workshop, but the thoughts that her community gave us really helped change the tone of this video from something very professional to a conversation between parents raising questions. I wonder, Sandra, if you remember what your community's feedback had been, and if you can talk a little bit about that. Sandra: Yes. So, the mothers from our community at the Motherhood Group definitely gave lots and lots of feedback that the initial posters didn't really resonate with mothers from our community. They said that the visuals and the language felt a little bit generic and also too clinical, and it didn't speak directly to our community. They also expressed that seeing more black parents and more black families represented signals for us too as well – so, seeing people like look like us in the posters and the media would have allowed a lot more uptake. So, narratives and videos featuring real people that looked like members of our community, they expressed that would go a lot further. And also it made them feel a lot more relevant, and again it goes back to the notion of having more trust and feeling less abstract, but more like an authentic way of engaging or directly communicating with our community. They also appreciated the effort to be more upfront, but the risk and also the downside, not just selling only the positives. You know, members from our community were saying they wanted to know the real deal. And also our community have been misled in the past. You have to understand that. The history kind of shows that there has been a breakdown in trust, and so transparency, they shared, was really, really key to rebuilding that trust, as well as materials that are culturally tailored and designed for different formats for our community. Mathilde: It's really exciting how much this feedback has pushed all of us in the team and the designers – pushed us to think about how to talk about the Generation Study, what narratives to use, what tone of voice, but also you'll see on the posters there's space there to have photos of several different family types and people of different backgrounds. It's not just one photo. And there's also some very small tweaks, it seems like, but it actually has a very big impact, about what it is that you're trying to say and what people understand in a split second when they're seeing that. Öznur: Absolutely, and that open dialogue is definitely key to keeping on bringing those perspectives in, and keeping updating and moving the language of the study as well. Obviously, the study will keep being shaped. I'm curious about how will design research continue to shape the Generation Study going forward. Mathilde: Yep, so we will have an iterative process, where we're still listening to the sides as they're launching to hear what are the questions that are being raised, what are some of the challenges that they're facing. At the same time, we have a survey that parents will be able to fill in, and we have an evaluation partner, UCL, who is doing an independent review of how well all of this is landing, and evaluating the work that we've been doing to see is it really hitting all of these points, and what we may need to be iterating or changing as we learn. Rebecca: I should also point out that the recruitment working group is very much in the background, but we are still very much alive, and we will come back to look at those first pieces of feedback and to look at what the experiences have been, and how we can learn and how we can help kind of shape what comes next. Because it's critically important that we have this always learning philosophy. It's critically important that now, you know, the rocket has launched, how will it land, and we don't know until we've actually had that feedback. So, we can plan and absolutely plan to the nth degree, but actually how it exists out there in the real world, we won't know until the project goes live and that feedback comes through. And that's what we're also really excited about is to actually learn those first lessons and see how we can support going forward, and see what needs a tweak here, a change there. And again, it's that dialogue that started with the public dialogue back in 2020, and here we are in 2024 and that dialogue will still continue, and we are still listening and we are still learning. Öznur: Thanks Rebecca. I'd like us to reflect on the importance of continuous learning. What's the importance of continuous learning in this project? I'll start with Sandra. Sandra: Continuous learning to me and my community really means listening to the voices that are often seldom heard. It means trusting and placing trust in the community to be a part of or lead or be involved in research, changes that affect our community. It also means actively and proactively working to rebuild that trust, because there's been a lack of trust from the community, and that means transparency. It also means honesty, and it also means continuous involvement as well. There's no point in involving us at the end of a study for our feedback, but at the very start to show that you are trying to be authentic. Rebecca: Ultimately, genomics is the science of people. Genomics is people, so we have to keep talking to the very people that we are looking to try and support, help, care for, and ultimately impact them and their families as well. So, I completely agree with Sandra, continuous learning, it's a continuous dialogue, and understanding how our opinions differ, how our opinions may shape and grow as the general conversation about genomics continues as well in the public discourse. So, we have to understand and we have to stay sort of on our feet, that this is a dynamic conversation, therefore we need to change and we need to remain flexible as well. And if we keep our ears open and if we keep our minds open, then we will continue to build that trust, and we will continue to ensure that we have a robust study that will ultimately fulfil its research aims. Öznur: Thank you. And Mathilde? Mathilde: I think there's only so much that we could really cover in theory before we launched, and now, you know, it's going to go out into the world, and there's many things that we couldn't have predicted that will happen. We have that humility to understand that. And what's super important going forward is that we have a team there to keep kind of staying on our toes, listening to what's happening, to make sure that we respond to that, so that, as Sandra said, it's not enough to just ask people afterwards. It's also not enough to engage just at the beginning and then stop listening once we're live, once it gets hairy and a bit difficult. So, we are very excited to find out all the things that we hadn't considered before we launched, and just continue to learn. Oznur: We will wrap up there. Thank you to our guests, Rebecca Middleton, Sandra Igwe and Mathilde Leblonde for joining me today as we discussed the use of design research in the Generation Study. If you'd like to hear more episodes like this, please subscribe to Behind the Genes on your favourite podcast app. I've been your host, Öznur Özkurt. This podcast was edited by Bill Griffin at Ventoux Digital, and produced by Naimah Callachand.
Hear from Maryville Boys Soccer coach Matt Stoecklein after the Spoofhounds 4-0 win over Bishop LeBlond. *This episode is sponsored by Tolly & Associates, Little Caesars of St. Joseph, John Anderson Insurance, Meierhofer Funeral Home & Crematory, Musser Construction, HiHo Bar & Grill, Jayson & Mary Watkins, Matt & Jenni Busby, Michelle Cook Group, Russell Book & Bookball 365, The St. Joseph Mustangs, B's Tees, KT Logistics LLC., Hixson-Klein Funeral Home, James L. Griffith Law Firm of Maysville, Toby Prussman of Premier Land & Auction Group, Barnes Roofing, The St. Joseph School District, HK Quality Sheet Metal, Redman Farms of Maysville, Melissa Winn, Amber & Anthony Henke, Adams Bar & Grill, Green Hills Insurance LLC., Cintas, Thrive Family Chiropractic, IV Nutrition of St. Joseph & J.C's Hardwood Floors. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/cliffnotespod/support
We hear from Bishop LeBlond Volleyball coach Kimberly Huss after her teams 3-0 win over East Buchanan and number 500 of her career. *These episodes are sponsored by Tolly & Associates, Little Caesars of St. Joseph, John Anderson Insurance, Meierhofer Funeral Home & Crematory, Musser Construction, HiHo Bar & Grill, Jayson & Mary Watkins, Matt & Jenni Busby, Michelle Cook Group, Russell Book & Bookball 365, The St. Joseph Mustangs, B's Tees, KT Logistics LLC., Hixson-Klein Funeral Home, James L. Griffith Law Firm of Maysville, Toby Prussman of Premier Land & Auction Group, Barnes Roofing, The St. Joseph School District, HK Quality Sheet Metal, Redman Farms of Maysville, Melissa Winn, Amber & Anthony Henke, Adams Bar & Grill, Green Hills Insurance LLC., Cintas, Thrive Family Chiropractic, IV Nutrition of St. Joseph & J.C's Hardwood Floors. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/cliffnotespod/support
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On this episode: - Bishop LeBlond Volleyball defeats Savannah in a key MEC and area matchup - Tuesdays scores *This episode is sponsored by Tolly & Associates, Little Caesars of St. Joseph, John Anderson Insurance, Meierhofer Funeral Home & Crematory, Musser Construction, HiHo Bar & Grill, Jayson & Mary Watkins, Matt & Jenni Busby, Michelle Cook Group, Russell Book & Bookball 365, The St. Joseph Mustangs, B's Tees, KT Logistics LLC., Hixson-Klein Funeral Home, James L. Griffith Law Firm of Maysville, Toby Prussman of Premier Land & Auction Group, Barnes Roofing, The St. Joseph School District, HK Quality Sheet Metal, Redman Farms of Maysville, Melissa Winn, Amber & Anthony Henke, Adams Bar & Grill, Green Hills Insurance LLC., Cintas, Thrive Family Chiropractic & IV Nutrition of St. Joseph. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/cliffnotespod/support
On this episode: - Chillicothe Volleyball avenges a championship game loss in their own tournament to hand Bishop LeBlond their 1st loss of the season. - Thursday Scoreboard - A St. Joseph coach receives a lifetime achievement award from the Missouri Basketball Coaches Asssociation - Week 4 High School Football Schedule *This episode is sponsored by Tolly & Associates, Little Caesars of St. Joseph, John Anderson Insurance, Meierhofer Funeral Home & Crematory, Musser Construction, HiHo Bar & Grill, Jayson & Mary Watkins, Matt & Jenni Busby, Michelle Cook Group, Russell Book & Bookball 365, The St. Joseph Mustangs, B's Tees, KT Logistics LLC., Hixson-Klein Funeral Home, James L. Griffith Law Firm of Maysville, Toby Prussman of Premier Land & Auction Group, Barnes Roofing, The St. Joseph School District, HK Quality Sheet Metal, Redman Farms of Maysville, Melissa Winn, Amber & Anthony Henke, Adams Bar & Grill, Green Hills Insurance LLC. and Cintas. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/cliffnotespod/support
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J'ai eu le plaisir de discuter avec Simon Leblond, co-fondateur et PDG @ SmartD Technologies. Simon est un entrepreneur avec 20 ans d'expérience entrepreneuriale dans la mise sur le marché de technologies disruptives dans tous les secteurs. SmartD Technologies développe des variateurs de fréquence (VFD) pour le contrôle de moteurs. Leur variateur de fréquence Clean Power VFD peut augmenter l'efficacité des moteurs, réduire l'usure des équipements, économiser de l'énergie et réduire les coûts pour les entreprises de nombreux secteurs, notamment les infrastructures, les services publics, l'agriculture, les mines, les transports, entre autres. C'est un marché adressable énorme avec des gains en efficacité énergétique significatifs. En plus, Simon est un entrepreneur chevronné avec énormément d'expérience. Il a participé au lancement de trois entreprises, a introduit de nombreuses technologies sur le marché, et mentoré des entrepreneurs.
Dans cet épisode je reçois Claire Leblond-Faure, la fondatrice de Debongout, une boutique déco qui propose du neuf et du chiné. Sur le site on trouve donc des meubles vintage mais aussi des collections imaginées par Claire et son équipe. Une excellente idée qui répond aux tendances actuelles : aujourd'hui dans sa déco, on mélange le neuf, l'ancien, le design, l'artisanat et tout cela pour se créer une déco unique, qui nous ressemble et qu'on ne retrouvera pas chez le voisin...Dans cet épisode on parle de bon gout, puisque c'est son nom :)de sa façon de travailler avec les brocanteurs de l'importance de la seconde main dans notre société de consommationdes meubles vintage à chiner absolument de la fabrication de ses collections propresde l'intérêt d'avoir une boutique quand on a un site qui cartonnede l'échec de sa 1ère expériencede sa vie de mum preneuse (Claire a 3 enfants qui ont entre 5 et 1 ans)de ses projets de Kate Middleton du Club Med car c'est au Club Med de la Rosière que nous avons enregistré cet épisode, plus précisément dans l'espace Exclusive collection qui sont des suites premium, la gamme luxe du Club Med. Je les remercie encore pour cette belle invitationTrès bonne écoute !
Elliott Murphy took time to talk to the media after signing his letter of intent with Arizona. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/cliffnotespod/support
On this episode: - SJ Christian defeats Bishop LeBlond 26-20 in the 8-Man District 5 Semi-Finals. Hear from Lions Coach Troy Schenk and Junior Peyton Hausman. - We run down all the Week 11 scores and give you district championship scenarios. - Bishop LeBlond Volleyball looks for their 1st ever State Championship - Class 1 & 2 State Cross Country meets produce local 2 State Champions and multiple medalists. - and we preview the saturday schedule This episode is brought to you by Tolly & Associates, Little Caesars of St. Joseph, John Anderson Insurance, Meierhoffer Funeral Home & Crematory, Miljavac Electric, Musser Construction, Greg Kastner Voice of the Bishop LeBlond Golden Eagles and St. Joseph Mustangs, Brett & Angie Losson, Travis & Amber DeBord, Jayson & Mary Watkins, Matt & Jenni Busby, Bryan & Rebecca Vierthaler, Freudenthal Primary Care, Michelle Cook Group, Russell Book & Bookball 365, B's Tee's and Embroidery, Janelle Glidewell, Lightstar Financial, KT Logistics, LLC., Hixson-Klein Funeral Home, James L. Griffin Law Firm of Maysville, Toby Prussman of Premier Land & Auction Group, Barnes Roofing, The St. Joseph School District, Patrick Lile Insurance, Cintas, Hi-Ho Bar & Grill & HK Quality Sheet Metal, Redman Farms in Maysville, Rob & Stacia Studer, Jeff & Michelle Zeit, Melissa Winn, Gabe Edgar & Daisy Frisch, NMLS 224215. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/cliffnotespod/support
Hear from Golden Eagle runners Jon Eckstein, Nick Garvey, Zach Crook, Dylan Marmaud and Parker Marmaud ahead of this weekends MSHSAA Class 2 State Cross Country Meet. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/cliffnotespod/support
On this episode: - We recap Bishop LeBlond Volleyball's huge win over East Buchanan. Hear from Golden Eagle coach Kim Huss and Sophmore Rilyn Conard. - A run down of our Monday scoreboard - State Football Rankings were released Monday. We tell you where local teams ended up. - And a Missouri Western defender's big game lands him an MIAA football Player of the Week honor. *This episode is brought to you by Tolly & Associates, Little Caesars of St. Joseph, John Anderson Insurance, Meierhoffer Funeral Home & Crematory, Miljavac Electric, Musser Construction, Greg Kastner Voice of the Bishop LeBlond Golden Eagles and St. Joseph Mustangs, Brett & Angie Losson, Travis & Amber DeBord, Jayson & Mary Watkins, Matt & Jenni Busby, Bryan & Rebecca Vierthaler, Freudenthal Primary Care, Michelle Cook Group, Russell Book & Bookball 365, B's Tee's and Embroidery, Janelle Glidewell, Lightstar Financial, KT Logistics, LLC., Hixson-Klein Funeral Home, James L. Griffin Law Firm of Maysville, Toby Prussman of Premier Land & Auction Group, Barnes Roofing, The St. Joseph School District, Patrick Lile Insurance, Cintas and Hi-Ho Bar & Grill. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/cliffnotespod/support
Hear from LeBlond coach Kim Huss after the Golden Eagles Jamboree Victory. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/cliffnotespod/support
Hear from LeBlond Senior Maddie Sego after her team's Jamboree victory. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/cliffnotespod/support
On this episode: - Weather cuts short the Mustangs 2nd game of the season as the team explodes for 11 runs in a 3 inning victory over the Kansas City Monarchs. - Father Tolton uses a goal in the 28th minute to defeat Bishop LeBlond in the Class 1 Girls Soccer Semi-Final. *Wanna thank our sponsors Don Tolly & Tolly & Associates, Inc - American Family Insurance, Barnes Roofing, Adam's Bar & Grill, Dave & Jen Schoeberl, Rob & Stacia Ann Studer, Patrick Lile, Little Caesars of St. Joseph, The Hi-Ho Bar & Grill, Weaver Overhead Door, Scott Hudson from ReeceNichols Ide Capital Realty, Chad and Kae Lewis, Miljavac Electric, Erin & Josh Perry, Janelle Glidewell of Lightstar Financial, J.C's Hardwood Floors, Ingles Plumbing & Excavating LLC., Musser Construction, Hixson-Klein Funeral Home LLC., KT Logistics LLC, Cutting Edge Commercial Cleaning, Preferred Lightning Protection, Inc., Heath Dudley and The Saint Joseph Basketball Academy, Jayson & Mary Watkins, Matt & Jenni Busby, Bryan & Rebecca Vierthaler, Freudenthal Primary Care, Michelle Cook Group and Russell Book & BookBall 365. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/cliffnotespod/support
Former West End resident Herbert Winston lived with his family in Richmond Village (now The Arts Apartments of Music Hall) from the mid-sixties to mid-seventies. During his brief time in the neighborhood, he attended St. Joseph Catholic School, and frequented LeBlond's Boy's Club, which was close by in Over the Rhine.If you or someone you know lived or spent a significant amount of time in the West End, please consider sharing your story. Call 513-369-6900 or email westend@cincinnatilibrary.org for more information.
On tonights episode we run down the results of the final day of state golf. And we have a load of results from district soccer and baseball. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/cliffnotespod/support
In this episode, join Kevin as he sits down with Mary Leblond MSN, RN, CEN, CA-SANE, CP-SANE, FAEN—an experienced nurse with an extensive background in Emergency, Forensic nursing, and nursing education. With nearly 50 years of nursing under her belt, Mary brings a wealth of wisdom and knowledge to the conversation. Listen in as she reflects on pivotal moments that have shaped her nursing practice and shares the valuable insights from her remarkable journey. Don't miss out on this great episode. Stay connected with The Art of Emergency Nursing Podcast! Follow us on social media for updates, behind-the-scenes content, and engaging discussions. Facebook https://www.facebook.com/Art-of-Emergency-Nursing-276898616569046/ Youtube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJTnz4phtCTjojTIDJo2afA?view_as=subscriber Twitter @AoenPodcast Instagram https://www.instagram.com/artofemergencynursing/ To help out the show: Leave an honest review on iTunes. Your ratings and reviews really help the show and I read each one. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Google, and elsewhere.
Une histoire écrite par Benjamin Muller, illustrée par Rémi Leblond, parue aux éditions Hatier Jeunesse. Encore une histoire est raconté par Céline Kallmann, réalisation et musique Alexandre Ferreira, production Benjamin Muller. Générique : Vlad Gluschenko - Time / Alexandre Ferreira. Retrouvez Encore une histoire sur Instagram, Facebook et Twitter.
Hear from Bishop LeBlond Girls Coach Jackie Steltenpohl as well as from Senior's Tatum Studer, Shae Lewis and Katie Beam after their 45-23 win over New Haven to advance to their first state championship game since 1983. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/cliffnotespod/support
On this episode: - Both Platte Valley teams fall short in their quest for Class 1 State Championships. - We preview The Bishop LeBlond Girls and Plattsburg boys matchups for friday. - and we preview Lafayette boys quarterfinal matchup friday in Sedalia. *Wanna thank our sponsors Don Tolly & Tolly & Associates, Inc - American Family Insurance, Barnes Roofing, Adam's Bar & Grill, Dave & Jen Schoeberl, Rob & Stacia Ann Studer, Patrick Lile, Little Caesars of St. Joseph, The Hi-Ho Bar & Grill, Weaver Overhead Door, Scott Hudson from ReeceNichols Ide Capital Realty, Chad and Kae Lewis, Miljavac Electric, Erin & Josh Perry, Janelle Glidewell of Lightstar Financial, J.C's Hardwood Floors, Ingles Plumbing & Excavating LLC., Musser Construction, Hixson-Klein Funeral Home LLC., KT Logistics LLC, Cutting Edge Commercial Cleaning, Preferred Lightning Protection, Inc. and Heath Dudley and The Saint Joseph Basketball Academy. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/cliffnotespod/support
The Minnesota Iceman has been described as a male, human-like creature that is tall, hairy, with large hands and feet, and a flattened nose. Cryptozoologists Bernard Heuvelmans and Ivan Sanderson studied the specimen for 3 days and they believed it was the real deal. The Iceman was shown as an exhibit in a block of ice for several years. Could this be the "missing link" between man and Neanderthals? Or was it a hoax? That's for you to decide.Website: https://www.drinkingthecoolaid.com/RESOURCES: Bernard Heuvelmans | The Bigfoot Portal Ivan T. Sanderson | The Bigfoot Portal I Killed The Ape-Man Creature Of Whiteface (bigfootencounters.com) Neanderthal: The Strange Saga of the Minnesota Iceman: Heuvelmans, Bernard, LeBlond, Paul, Coleman, Loren: 9781938398612: Amazon.com: Books
Will, Drew, Ryder and Nick talk about all things hard enduro and what is coming up in the near future!
Todays guest is Pierre-Luc Leblond https://www.hockeydb.com/ihdb/stats/pdisplay.php?pid=73188Welcome to the 4th Line Voice #EnforcerBasedPodcasting presented by The Hockey Podcast NetworkJoin Darren, a lifelong hockey fan who dives deep into the often misunderstood role of the hockey enforcer. Guests include fellow fight fans and former players who share their unique stories and perspective on the highs and lows of playing and performing the tough-guy role.Episode 262#DraftKings promo code THPNIf you or someone you know has a gambling problem, crisis counseling and referral services can be accessed by calling 1-800- GAMBLER (1-800-426-2537) (IL/IN/LA/MI/NJ/PA/TN/WV/WY), 1-800- NEXT STEP (AZ), 1-800-522-4700 (CO/KS/NH), 888-789-7777/visit http://ccpg.org (CT), 1-800-BETS OFF (IA), 877-8-HOPENY/text HOPENY (467369) (NY), visit OPGR.org (OR), or 1-888-532-3500 (VA). 21+ (18+ NH/WY). Physically present in AZ/CO/CT/IL/IN/IA/KS/LA(select parishes)/MI/NH/NJ/ NY/OR/PA/TN/VA/WV/WY only. $200 in Free bets: New customers only. Min. $5 deposit. Min $5 bet. $200 issued as eight (8) $25 free bets. Bet must win. Ends 11/20/23 @ 11:59pm ET. Stepped Up SGP: 1 Token issued per eligible game. Opt in req. Min $1 bet. Max bet limits apply. Min. 3-leg. Each leg min. -300 odds, total bet +100 odds or longer. 10+ leg req. for 100% boost. Ends 1/8/23 @ 8pm ET. See eligibility & terms at sportsbook.draftkings.com/footballterms.Follow us on Twitter @4thlinevoice @hockeypodnet thehockeypodcastnetwork.com
Todays guest is Pierre-Luc Leblond https://www.hockeydb.com/ihdb/stats/pdisplay.php?pid=73188 Welcome to the 4th Line Voice #EnforcerBasedPodcasting presented by The Hockey Podcast Network Join Darren, a lifelong hockey fan who dives deep into the often misunderstood role of the hockey enforcer. Guests include fellow fight fans and former players who share their unique stories and perspective on the highs and lows of playing and performing the tough-guy role. Episode 262 #DraftKings promo code THPN If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, crisis counseling and referral services can be accessed by calling 1-800- GAMBLER (1-800-426-2537) (IL/IN/LA/MI/NJ/PA/TN/WV/WY), 1-800- NEXT STEP (AZ), 1-800-522-4700 (CO/KS/NH), 888-789-7777/visit http://ccpg.org (CT), 1-800-BETS OFF (IA), 877-8-HOPENY/text HOPENY (467369) (NY), visit OPGR.org (OR), or 1-888-532-3500 (VA). 21+ (18+ NH/WY). Physically present in AZ/CO/CT/IL/IN/IA/KS/LA(select parishes)/MI/NH/NJ/ NY/OR/PA/TN/VA/WV/WY only. $200 in Free bets: New customers only. Min. $5 deposit. Min $5 bet. $200 issued as eight (8) $25 free bets. Bet must win. Ends 11/20/23 @ 11:59pm ET. Stepped Up SGP: 1 Token issued per eligible game. Opt in req. Min $1 bet. Max bet limits apply. Min. 3-leg. Each leg min. -300 odds, total bet +100 odds or longer. 10+ leg req. for 100% boost. Ends 1/8/23 @ 8pm ET. See eligibility & terms at sportsbook.draftkings.com/footballterms. Follow us on Twitter @4thlinevoice @hockeypodnet thehockeypodcastnetwork.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices