ResMed to Report Third Quarter Fiscal 2022 Earnings on April 28, 2022

SAN DIEGO, April 07, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — ResMed (NYSE: RMD, ASX: RMD) today announced it plans to release financial and operational results for the third quarter of fiscal year 2022 on Thursday, April 28, 2022, after the New York Stock Exchange closes. Following the release, ResMed management will host a webcast to discuss these results. Other forward-looking and material information may also be discussed during this webcast.

Earnings webcast details:

Location: http://investor.resmed.com
Date: Thursday, April 28, 2022
Time: 1:30 p.m. PDT / 4:30 p.m. EDT
International: London, Thursday, April 28, 9:30 p.m. BST
Sydney, Friday, April 29, 6:30 a.m. AEST

Please note that ResMed does not use outside phone lines to access the earnings call.

A replay of the earnings webcast will be accessible on ResMed’s website and available approximately two hours after the webcast. In addition, a phone replay will be available approximately two hours after the webcast and will be accessible from April 28 until May 12 at:

U.S.: +1 877.660.6853
International: +1 201.612.7415
Conference ID: 13727876

About ResMed
At ResMed (NYSE: RMD, ASX: RMD) we pioneer innovative solutions that treat and keep people out of the hospital, empowering them to live healthier, higher-quality lives. Our digital health technologies and cloud-connected medical devices transform care for people with sleep apnea, COPD, and other chronic diseases. Our comprehensive out-of-hospital software platforms support the professionals and caregivers who help people stay healthy in the home or care setting of their choice. By enabling better care, we improve quality of life, reduce the impact of chronic disease, and lower costs for consumers and healthcare systems in more than 140 countries. To learn more, visit ResMed.com and follow @ResMed.

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Delphix ทำการแต่งตั้งผู้บริหารคนใหม่เพื่อเร่งการเติบโตของบริษัท

บริษัท DevOps Test Data Management ทำการขยายฐานการจัดการด้วยผู้เชี่ยวชาญในอุตสาหกรรมเพื่อรองรับและสนับสนุนสำหรับการเติบโตในระยะต่อไป

เรดวูดซิตี้, แคลิฟอร์เนีย, April 08, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Delphix ผู้นำในอุตสาหกรรม DevOps Test Data Management (TDM) ประกาศแต่งตั้ง Tammi Warfield เป็นประธานเจ้าหน้าที่บริหารและดูแลลูกค้าและ Alex Hesterberg เป็นประธานเจ้าหน้าที่ฝ่ายกลยุทธ์

“เรารู้สึกตื่นเต้นกับระดับความเป็นผู้นำที่ทั้ง Tammi และ Alex ได้แสดงออกมาให้เห็น ทั้งต่อลูกค้า คู่ค้าและทีมงานของเรา” Steven Chung ประธานของ Delphix กล่าว “พวกเขามีประวัติการเติบโตด้วยการจ้างคนเก่ง ปรับปรุงประสิทธิภาพการทำงานและสร้างคติพจน์ที่ดีที่มีต่อคุณค่าของลูกค้า Tammi และ Alex ยังนำประสบการณ์จากบริษัทมหาชนมาสู่ทีมผู้บริหารของเราในขณะที่เรากำลังขยายแผนงานไปทั่วโลก”

ในฐานะประธานเจ้าหน้าที่บริหารและดูแลลูกค้า Tammi เป็นทั้งผู้ริเริ่ม ให้บริการอย่างมืออาชีพ มองเห็นถึงความสำเร็จของลูกค้าและให้การสนับสนุน Delphix ทั่วโลกด้วยความมุ่งมั่นที่จะสร้างและมอบประสบการณ์ที่ดีที่สุดให้กับลูกค้าผ่านทุกขั้นตอนของวงจรการตัดสินใจของผู้บริโภค Tammi เข้าร่วมกับ Delphix จาก Microsoft ซึ่งเธอดำรงตำแหน่งรองประธานฝ่าย Worldwide Customer Success for the Business Applications Group ซึ่งเป็นแผนกที่มีมูลค่าหลายพันล้านเหรียญสหรัฐฯ ก่อนที่จะมาร่วมงานกับ Microsoft เธอช่วยให้ลูกค้าประสบความสำเร็จมามากมายและมีบทบาทเป็นผู้นำด้านการให้บริการที่ BMC Software อีกด้วย

ในฐานะประธานเจ้าหน้าที่ฝ่ายกลยุทธ์คนใหม่ของ Delphix Alex Hesterberg เป็นผู้นำพันธมิตรเชิงกลยุทธ์ OEMs ช่องทาง โซลูชั่นและทีมวิศวกรรมระบบที่ช่วยสนับสนุนนวัตกรรมเทคโนโลยีของบริษัท การพัฒนาองค์กรและความพยายามในการเข้าสู่ตลาดของบริษัท ก่อนที่จะร่วมงานกับ Delphix Alex ดำรงตำแหน่งประธานเจ้าหน้าที่ฝ่ายลูกค้าสัมพันธ์ของบริษัท Turbonomic ซึ่งเขาได้ทำการปรับขนาดฟังก์ชั่นก่อนและหลังการขายในระหว่างขั้นตอนสำคัญก่อนที่บริษัท IBM จะเข้าซื้อกิจการในราคามากกว่า 1.5 พันล้านเหรียญสหรัฐฯ ก่อนหน้าที่จะร่วมงานกับ Turbonomic Alex เคยทำหน้าที่เกี่ยวกับความสำเร็จของลูกค้าในระดับผู้บริหาร งานก่อนการขายและบทบาทในงานบริการที่ Pure Storage (IPO ในปี 2558) Sailthru (ถูกซื้อกิจการโดย CM Group) และ Riverbed Technology (IPO ในปี 2549)

เกี่ยวกับ Delphix
Delphix เป็นผู้นำในระบบอุตสาหกรรมการจัดเก็บข้อมูลการทดสอบ DevOps

ธุรกิจจำเป็นต้องเปลี่ยนรูปแบบการส่งแอปพลิเคชันแต่พยายามที่จะปรับความเร็วให้สมดุลกับการรักษาความปลอดภัยของข้อมูลและการปฏิบัติตามข้อกำหนด แพลตฟอร์มข้อมูล DevOps ของเรามีการทำให้ระบบรักษาข้อมูลเป็นอัตโนมัติ ขณะที่มีการปรับใช้ข้อมูลทดสอบอย่างรวดเร็วเพื่อร่นระยะเวลาการเปิดตัวแอปพลิเคชัน ด้วย Delphix ลูกค้าสามารถปรับปรุงแอปพลิเคชันให้ทันสมัย ปรับใช้ multi-cloud บรรลุ CI/CD ทั้งยังสามารถกู้คืนข้อมูลจากเหตุการณ์การหยุดทำงานอย่างไม่คาดฝัน เช่น ransomware เร็วขึ้นสูงสุดถึง 2 เท่า

บริษัทชั้นนำ เช่น Choice Hotels, Banco Carrefour และ Fannie Mae ต่างก็ใช้ Delphix เพื่อเร่งกระบวนการเปลี่ยนแปลงทางดิจิตัลและเปิดใช้งานตัวจัดการข้อมูลที่ไม่น่าไว้วางใจ สามารถเยี่ยมชมเราได้ที่ www.delphix.com. ติดตามเราผ่านทาง LinkedInTwitter และ Facebook.

ติดต่อ:

Orlando de Bruce
รองประธานการตลาดองค์กรและแบรนด์องค์กร
Orlando.Debruce@delphix.com

US Drug Overdose Deaths Soar

As the U.S. tries to emerge from the hardships of the COVID-19 pandemic, health experts and law enforcement officials are concerned about another health crisis: a sharp rise in the number of drug related overdoses attributed to fentanyl and other synthetic opioids.

The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) issued a bulletin earlier this week to federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies warning of a nationwide spike in fentanyl-related mass-overdose events.

Already this year, numerous mass overdose events have resulted in dozens of overdoses and deaths,” said DEA Administrator Anne Milgram in an email statement to VOA.

Fentanyl-related mass overdose events are characterized as three or more overdoses occurring close in time and at the same location.

In February, five people died in an apartment outside Denver from overdoses of fentanyl mixed with cocaine. In another case, five West Point Military Academy cadets survived after overdosing on fentanyl-laced cocaine while on spring break in Florida last month. At least seven American cities have seen an increase in drug-related overdoses resulting in 29 deaths, according to the DEA.

“Drug traffickers are driving addiction, and increasing their profits, by mixing fentanyl with other illicit drugs. Tragically, many overdose victims have no idea they are ingesting deadly fentanyl, until it’s too late,” said Milgram.

Law enforcement officials believe the problem has grown worse since the government released figures last year indicating more than 105,000 Americans died of drug overdoses in the 12-month period ending in October 2021. Sixty-six percent of those deaths were related to synthetic opioids like fentanyl according to estimates from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“This is a very historic time. We have never had the amount of death and destruction than we are seeing now,” said Dr. Rahul Gupta, director of the White House office of National Drug Control Policy, last month.

Health officials say powerful synthetic opioids such as fentanyl can be up to 100 times more potent than morphine. Researchers say taking just two milligrams of fentanyl can kill a person.

U.S. law enforcement agencies seized nearly 10 million fentanyl pills last year, according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse. There have also been numerous news reports of large seizures by state and local police in the last two months.

“Fentanyl has flooded the market across the country,” said Dr. Nora Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, speaking on CNBC. “It has contaminated other drugs such as heroin, many illicit drugs including illicit prescription medication.

Overdose deaths were already increasing in the months preceding the COVID-19 outbreak in 2020. But the latest data show a sharp rise during the pandemic. Last year, the United States suffered more fentanyl-related deaths than gun- and automobile-related deaths combined.

Minority drug overdoses soar

The rise in opioid related overdoses has impacted many communities. Opioid deaths among African Americans and other minority groups continue to rise. U.S. researchers found overdose deaths jumped nearly 49% among Black people in the United States from 2019 to 2020, compared with a 26% increase among white people. Overdose deaths among Native Americans and Alaska Natives were 31% higher than among white adults, according to research from UCLA’s David Geffen School of Medicine.

Law enforcement groups note that, compared to other drugs, fentanyl is inexpensive, with one pill costing just a few dollars. The price makes it a popular drug among low-income minority groups.

“We know the COVID-19 pandemic hit Black Americans especially hard, and that the risk of a drug overdose is strongly linked to many of the damaging financial, health and social effects of the pandemic that were disproportionately borne by Black people,” said Linda Richter, vice president for prevention research at the Partnership to End Addiction.

“Even before the pandemic, Black Americans had less access to the resources and support that prevent and treat addiction, and reverse a drug overdose,” Richter said in an interview with HealthDay News.

Causes of the drug crisis

A variety of factors have contributed to America’s growing opioid crisis. Law enforcement agencies point to an increasing flow of illicit drugs and fentanyl smuggled through the southern border with Mexico.

The chemicals used to make the synthetic opioid are being shipped largely from China to Mexico, where huge quantities of illicit fentanyl are produced in labs before being smuggled into the U.S.

Strong law enforcement efforts to crack down on the abuse of prescription opioids like oxycodone are believed to have shifted demand to heroin and fentanyl. The growing availability of those drugs helped fuel higher usage — and addiction — rates among Americans.

The U.S. Department of Justice filed about 2,700 cases in 2021 involving crimes related to the distribution of fentanyl and other synthetic drugs, up nearly tenfold from 2017.

“Fentanyl poisonings are at an all-time high,” said Sheriff Mike Milstead of Minnehaha County, South Dakota. “These are not isolated incidents. These are happening in every state and every county in America, leaving behind grieving families. Let us be clear, these poisonings are part of a strategic maneuver by drug cartels, and it must be stopped.”

Some Republican officials have been critical of the federal government’s efforts to stop fentanyl from entering the country through the porous U.S.-Mexico border.

In Texas, National Guard units were deployed to the border region with a mission that includes stopping the flow of fentanyl from Mexico. State leaders are also calling for tougher penalties for convicted drug dealers. “This is not a fentanyl overdose, this is poisoning by fentanyl, which we want to make a murder crime in the state of Texas,” said Governor Greg Abbott at a news conference last month.

More government funding

The Biden administration has stressed treatment and prevention and proposed $42.5 billion in federal spending to address the ongoing opioid crisis.

The proposal released last month includes $21.1 billion for the Department of Health and Human Services to support prevention and treatment efforts. It would increase funding for interdiction efforts as well as addiction treatment centers in rural areas.

If approved by Congress, $80 million would be set aside for helping children impacted by the opioid crisis.

“This budget supports the Biden administration’s ongoing work to expand access to evidence-based treatment,” said Dr. Gupta, the White House official. “We want to further reduce the flow of illicit drugs like fentanyl from entering our communities and prevent overdoses.”

Source: Voice of America

UN: Aging Supertanker Off Yemen at ‘Imminent Risk’ of Spilling Oil

The United Nations warned Friday that an old, neglected oil tanker carrying more than a million barrels of oil is a ticking “time bomb” at “imminent risk” of a major spill off the coast of Yemen that could cost $20 billion to clean up.

“If it were to happen, the spill would unleash a massive ecological and humanitarian catastrophe centered on a country already decimated by more than seven years of war,” U.N. Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator for Yemen David Gressly told reporters. “The environmental damage could affect states across the Red Sea. The economic impact of disrupted shipping would be felt across the region.”

The FSO Safer is one more casualty in the war between the Saudi-backed government of Yemeni President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi and Iranian-supported Houthi rebels.

U.N. officials have been seeking access to the vessel for more than three years to assess its safety, do light repairs and eventually tow it to a safe port to remove the oil. But Houthi rebels controlling the area have repeatedly reneged on promises to allow that to happen.

The tanker has had no maintenance since 2015 because of the war and only a skeleton crew is aboard the vessel. Gressly says the vessel is now beyond repair.

The United Nations warned Friday that an old, neglected oil tanker carrying more than a million barrels of oil is a ticking “time bomb” at “imminent risk” of a major spill off the coast of Yemen that could cost $20 billion to clean up.

“If it were to happen, the spill would unleash a massive ecological and humanitarian catastrophe centered on a country already decimated by more than seven years of war,” U.N. Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator for Yemen David Gressly told reporters. “The environmental damage could affect states across the Red Sea. The economic impact of disrupted shipping would be felt across the region.”

The FSO Safer is one more casualty in the war between the Saudi-backed government of Yemeni President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi and Iranian-supported Houthi rebels.

U.N. officials have been seeking access to the vessel for more than three years to assess its safety, do light repairs and eventually tow it to a safe port to remove the oil. But Houthi rebels controlling the area have repeatedly reneged on promises to allow that to happen.

The tanker has had no maintenance since 2015 because of the war and only a skeleton crew is aboard the vessel. Gressly says the vessel is now beyond repair.

Source: Voice of America

Laos-China Railway increases trains for Lao New Year Festival

The Laos-China Railway (LCR) Co., Ltd has decided to increase the number of trains operated on the Laos-China railway to meet travel demand during the celebration of Lao New Year B.E. 2565, between April 12 and 17.

The additional multiple electric unit (EMU) train will be coded C86/5 and operated for five stations of the Laos-China railway including Vientiane, Phonhong, Vangvieng, Luang Prabang, and Meuang Xay.

According to China State Railway Group, as of Apr 3, the Laos-China Railway has been operated for four months carrying over 2.25 million passengers.

The railway has also transported over 1.31 million tons of cargo to and from more than 10 countries including China, Laos, Thailand, Malaysia, and Cambodia promoting international trade connectivity in the region as well as the development of Laos-China economic corridor.

Source: Lao News Agency

Vaccinating a Country against COVID-19

April 2 marks the one year anniversary of the launch of the Vaccinate Laos campaign – 365 days since the very first COVID-19 vaccination was administered to the Lao public.

Now as of March 28 2022, a total of 11,255,237 COVID-19 vaccines have been administered throughout all 18 provinces of the country (includes first, second dose and booster doses), meaning approximately 30,836 people are receiving their COVID-19 vaccination every single day through the support from the COVAX Facility.

Getting to where we now with COVID-19 vaccination has been a monumental undertaking and things in the beginning were quite different.

When the COVID-19 outbreak happened, all of our lives were virtually turned upside down. Facing a seemingly unknown threat, it appeared that we were ill-equipped to handle the virus during its initial phase. However, in less than a year, scientists were able to produce a vaccine against this previously unknown virus, offering us a critical tool against the pandemic but more importantly, a sense of hope.

For the Lao PDR, this sense of hope arrived on 20 March, 2021 with the first shipment of COVID-19 vaccines from the COVAX Facility – a partnership co-led by Gavi, CEPI and WHO, with UNICEF as a key delivery partner.

It consisted of 132,000 doses of the AstraZeneca/Oxford vaccine and its arrival represented a watershed moment in the Lao PDR’s COVID-19 response, highlighting how the world is in this crisis together – no one is safe until everyone is safe.

With the arrival of these vaccines, the Ministry of Health (MOH), WHO and UNICEF together launched the Vaccinate Laos campaign to encourage the public to get vaccinated against COVID-19 and achieve the ambitious goal of 70 per cent vaccination coverage for the Lao population by 2021. The campaign was publicly well-received and the first vaccine doses were administered in a mass vaccination session at the Mittaphab Hospital in Vientiane on April 2, 2021.

However, with the limited supply of vaccines available then, its use had to be carefully targeted. The Government developed the National Deployment and Vaccination Plan to help identify priority groups for vaccination based on their risk of exposure and likelihood of developing severe illness. These groups include frontline health workers, people who are 60 or above, those with underlying health conditions and workers at the country’s various points of entry, in quarantine centres and diplomatic staff. This first batch was administered to around 4,000 individuals belonging to these priority groups.

With this shipment of vaccines from COVAX, more vaccine supplies were soon delivered to Lao PDR throughout 2021 and early 2022, either directly from or through COVAX, or as direct bilateral support from partners, including Australia, Cambodia, China, the European Union, Finland, France, Greece, Japan, Malaysia, the Netherlands, Poland, Russia, Sweden, Vietnam, the United Kingdom and the United States. Countries like Canada, Germany, Korea, Luxembourg, and Switzerland have also been key supporters of COVAX and its delivery of vaccines to countries like the Lao PDR.

The vaccines donated were also of varying types with different storage and dose requirements, meaning each one of them required different strategies for deployment. For example, with the Johnson & Johnson (J&J) vaccine donated by the US through COVAX in July 2021, MOH was able to rapidly expand vaccination to more remote areas in other provinces, such as Champassak and Savannakhet, due to the J&J vaccine’s single dose requirement.

The year 2021 closed off with another milestone for the Vaccinate Laos campaign: in collaboration with popular Lao Singer Aluna Thavonsouk, MOH and UNICEF launched a song promoting COVID-19 vaccination on World Children’s Day 2021. The eponymously titled song “Vaccinate Laos” was an instant hit, being played almost every day during the daily briefing by MOH on the COVID-19 situation in Laos, reminding us that everyone can play a role in limiting the spread of COVID-19 in the country.

Now with 2022 well under way, the Government has made an even more ambitious target of vaccinating 87.25 per cent of the Lao population and has rolled out third COVID-19 booster shots, in addition to authorizing vaccination for children to ensure the safe reopening of schools.

Looking back, we have come far from where we started with the pandemic. Nevertheless, there is still more work to be done. COVID-19 is still very much with us and now with the looming threat of Omicron, vaccination remains as important than ever.

Each and every one of us still has a role to play in vaccinating Laos. Every one of us can be heroes.

Source: Lao News Agency