
New Bentonville medical school welcomes first students
The big picture: The four-year medical school founded and funded by Walmart heir Alice Walton seeks to train future doctors in traditional medicine, but with an emphasis on holistic and preventive care involving mental, emotional and social health, nutrition and exercise.
The school also intends to emphasize humanities concepts like communication so students learn to listen to and communicate with their patients, dean and CEO Sharmila Makhija previously told Axios.
Driving the news: Wesley Walls of Polk Stanley Wilcox Architects and Simon David of New York-based Office of Strategy and Design, which provided landscape architecture services, gave a tour Friday of part of the building and its surrounding outdoor amenities on J Street in Bentonville.
The intrigue: The four-story, 154,000-square-foot building is designed to incorporate nature and wellness. It features sandstone, lots of large windows, several outdoor spaces where students can spend time together, a garden and surrounding trails.
A café with indoor and outdoor seating is open to students and will also open to the public in November. A trail connects the school to Walton's Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art.
There's also space throughout the interior where artwork can be displayed.
By the numbers: The school received more than 2,000 applications, spokesperson Wendy Echeverria told Axios. Less than 3% of applicants were accepted.
A third of the class is from Arkansas, while the rest are from 18 other states. These students and the next four cohorts after them will receive free tuition, the school announced in October.
More than 50 faculty members work at the school.
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Miami Herald
2 hours ago
- Miami Herald
Cancer patients in Haiti face death sentence due to distance, gangs, lack of resources
For four years Jean Fritz Dieu fought to stay alive, traveling by motorbike over rugged mountains and through gang-controlled streets to get treatment for an aggressive tumor. When the armed gangs took over the final open road, he used a barge on the bay to reach Haiti's capital. On Saturday, Dieu, known as 'Presnel' to family and friends, lost his years-long battle with cancer. He died in the neighboring Dominican Republic, where he had been receiving radiation treatment with the help of a South Florida-based charity, Flying High 4 Haiti. 'Presnel risked his life just to stay alive,' said Ines Lozano, a Miami resident and founder of Flying High 4 Haiti. 'He clung to hope, attending Mass every Sunday to pray for healing and give thanks to those who supported him. I hope we continue to dream of a future where all cancer patients in Haiti have access to essential treatments like radiotherapy. His legacy lives on through the compassion of all those who donated for his treatment.' While Dieu, 42, didn't survive his fight, his journey is serving as a stark reminder of the roadblocks and immense challenges Haitians with cancer and other chronic illnesses face amid the country's widespread gang violence and crumbling healthcare infrastructure. It's also underscoring the need for access to better care. While radiation therapy remans an important part of cancer treatment, there is not a single machine in Haiti, where the last clinic with a gamma radiation device closed more than 20 years ago. 'You should have one radiation machine for every 2 million inhabitants and you have 12 million people in Haiti and we don't even have one machine,' said Dr. Oriol Jn Baptiste, director of the SESHAD Services de Santé Haitiano-Dominicaine, in Santiago de los Caballeros in the northern Dominican Republic, where Dieu was being treated. 'A public health system in charge of a country cannot afford to not be thinking about the treatments for cancer.' Dieu was 38 and working at a school Flying High 4 Haiti supports in Ille-a-Vache, an island off Haiti's southwestern coast, when he first discovered he had a tumor. In the last few months, Haitians have not only seen the further collapse of their already fragile healthcare system, but for those with cancer, life-saving treatment has become even harder to obtain. In March, gangs attacked the city of Mirebalais, forcing the evacuation of the 35-bed University Hospital of Mirebalais. Haiti's most modern health facility, the hospital offered free cancer care and was featured in the Miami Herald's 2019 series 'Cancer in Haiti.' The series explored how deaths from preventable diseases like cervical cancer were growing due to limited early detection programs and a lack of radiation treatment. The series also explored the lack of public health priority to pediatric cancer cases. The attack on Mirebalais was among several on hospitals that has stopped 40% of health facilities in the capital from operating. Among them is the St. Francis de Sales Hospital, which treated hundreds of cancer patients annually. 'It has been very rough,' said Dr. Joseph Bernard, an oncologist who worked at the Catholic hospital and has since opened his own private cancer clinic, Clinique de Cancer St Francois de Sales, in the capital. Dr. Bernard was Dieu's doctor before he was forced to seek care in the Dominican Republic because the chemotherapy had run its course. Dr. Bernard said since the closure of Mirebalais and St. Francis, demand for care has gone up and many patients are at advanced stages. of the disease. In addition to having to pay for previously free care, patients from Mirebalais face another complication: The cancer specialist hasn't been able to get access to their charts. Then, there is the lack of treatment equipment. 'We still have limitations regarding radiation therapy,' Dr. Bernard said. In the past, patients had the possibility of traveling to the Dominican Republic or Cuba if they had the financial means. However both have become nearly impossible to get to because of medication shortages and a lack of direct flights in the case of Cuba, and border closures with the Dominican Republic. As a result, patients, including children in need of radiation therapy, have had difficulties getting humanitarian visas to seek treatment. 'I've been fighting for two years for a humanitarian visas for Haitians who need treatment; I've written to the Dominican consulate and they never answered me,' said Dr. Baptiste, who added he was working with Nos Petits Frères et Sœurs in Port-au-Prince, which offers the only juvenile cancer program in Haiti, to transfer cases to the Dominican Republic for radiation treatment before the border closed. In 2021, Dieu spent six months undergoing radiotherapy in the Dominican Republic for his cancer. He was doing well until a small tumor was detected behind the right ear, Dr. Bernard said. 'We tried to shrink it with chemo. It did not work. The tumor started to bleed a lot and it became very infected.' 'When cancer reoccurs, it's very aggressive,' said Dr. Bernard, noting that radiotherapy is one of the three main components of cancer care, which also includes surgery as well as chemo. 'In the end, he needed radiation therapy.' During a visit to the Dominican Republic, Lozano, who had arranged for Dieu's prior treatment with the help of Nuestros Pequeños Hermanos, a Catholic children's charity with programs in Latin America and the Caribbean, approached officials about getting a humanitarian visa for Dieu and his wife. It came a few weeks later. With Dieu too weak to make the journey by road, Lozanao arranged for him to fly from Les Cayes to Cap-Haïtien, the country's second largest city in the north. He then traveled to the border, where an ambulance transported him to the clinic in Santiago, three hours away. Radiation treatment is expensive and most of the patients never finish the course, said Baptiste, who noted that the stay in the Dominican Republic also adds up the costs. He determined that Dieu would need at least 33 rounds of radiotherapy over 10 weeks. The cost was $19,000, which Lozano had hoped to absorb with the help of a GoFundme effort that remains open. On Saturday, Dieu collapsed. It's unclear what went wrong, though he arrived for treatment needing six rounds of blood transfusions with his head severely infected. Dr. Bernard said most people don't realize the psychological toll Haiti's present gang crisis poses for cancer patients. 'There are a lot of things we really cannot evaluate, like the impact of stress, for example, on treatment outcomes' he said. 'These are things that are tough to evaluate but we need to consider them seriously.' In the case of Dieu, he faced a perilous journey trying to get to treatment in Haiti before he went to the Dominican Republic. What previously consisted of a boat ride from Ille-a-Vache and then a bus ride into the capital along a main highway suddenly became an arduous journey through gang tolls, shootouts and police blockades. After temporarily moving to Port-au-Prince to get to his treatments he sent a voice message one day, over the sound of gunfire, explaining that he could not get there because the capital had become a war zone. Lozano began to fear that if the cancer didn't kill Dieu the gangs would. She hired a driver to transport him overnight on the back of a motorbike. He made the seven-hour journey every 21 days to get to his chemo treatments. When traveling 5,000 feet high along a mountain range, no longer became an option this year after gangs seized control of the last open road in the hills above the capital in Kenscoff, Dieu, with his head wrapped in bandages, texted to say that he had found another way: via barge through the bay of Port-au-Prince. Dr. Bernard will be expanding his services next month to Les Cayes at the private Caramel Hospital. It will be the first oncology unit in the coastal southwestern city where many cancer patients from the south are diagnosed too late or not at all. 'Too many Haitian women are dying from cancers that are treatable, simply because there is no access to care in the south,' said Skyler Badenoch, who runs Hope for Haiti, a Naples-based nonprofit that provides health care access in southwest Haiti. 'Dr. Bernard's plan to open a cancer treatment facility in this region could be transformational. Together, we can bring early detection, treatment and dignity within reach, and ensure that where someone lives no longer determines whether they live.' Lozano says the expansion of cancer care to the south is good news. 'There are a large number of patients in the south who haven't been able to go chemo or anything, and they're dying,' she said, adding that Bernard's clinic opening will bring a lot of hope. 'In spite of all the problems that exist in Haiti, there's a lot of acts of hope that people don't know.' On Sunday, an ambulance, paid for by Lozano, transported Dieu's body in a casket back across the Haitian-Dominican border so. his four children could say goodbye. 'We had high hopes for a better outcome, but at least he died with dignity and receiving the kind of care every Haitian deserves,' said Lozano. 'That is his legacy. I hope that Presnel's battle serves as an example of the urgent need for radiotherapy in Haiti to save other lives.'

Associated Press
3 hours ago
- Associated Press
Xtant Medical Partners With B2i Digital to Educate Investors on Its Orthobiologics Innovation and Market Opportunity
The Partnership Will Deliver Centralized, Investor-focused Content to Help Retail and Institutional Audiences Gain Insight Into Xtant's Orthobiologics Platform and Long-term Value Proposition NEW YORK, NY - July 28, 2025 ( NEWMEDIAWIRE ) - B2i Digital is pleased to announce that Xtant Medical Holdings (NYSE American: XTNT) has been named a B2i Digital Featured Company. Xtant is a global medical technology company that develops, manufactures, and markets a full-service portfolio of regenerative medicine products and related medical devices for orthopedic and neurosurgical specialists. The company's vertically integrated model allows it to offer a full-service product line that includes bone-healing grafts, growth-factor biologics, cellular allografts, synthetics, and amnion products. This integration, combined with a robust R&D pipeline that includes multiple next-generation biologics scheduled for launch through 2025, underpins its strategy for driving margin improvement and long-term, sustainable growth. 'We are pleased to showcase Xtant Medical to our investor community at this pivotal time in the company's expansion and evolution,' said David Shapiro, CEO of B2i Digital. 'With its vertically integrated platform covering all five major orthobiologic categories and a clear trajectory of revenue growth, the company presents a compelling story for investors interested in the medical technology sector. Xtant's established distribution network and robust product pipeline position it well within a multi-billion-dollar market.' Sean Browne, CEO of Xtant Medical, commented, 'Our partnership with B2i Digital will help us share our growth story and the value of our comprehensive biologics platform to the investment community. We are focused on execution and believe this collaboration will enhance our connection with current and prospective shareholders.' Xtant Medical has demonstrated strong business fundamentals, reporting fiscal year 2024 revenue of $117.5 million, a 29% year-over-year increase. The company has established significant market access through 450 integrated delivery network (IDN) contracts and a network of over 670 independent distributors, serving a $2.5 billion U.S. orthobiologics market within a $10.1 billion global spine market. About B2i Digital, Inc. B2i Digital, Inc. partners with investor conferences, public companies, and capital markets advisors through its Featured Conference, Featured Company, and Featured Expert programs. The firm leverages digital marketing technologies, a network of 1.3 million investors, and targeted introductions to connect key players in the markets. B2i Digital was founded in 2021 by David Shapiro, previously the Chief Marketing Officer and an investment banker at Maxim Group, LLC. David was also one of the founders of Maxim's investor awareness platform, B2i Digital Contact Information: David Shapiro Chief Executive Officer B2i Digital, Inc. 212.579.4844 Office [email protected] About Xtant Medical Holdings, Inc. Xtant Medical's mission of honoring the gift of donation so that our patients can live as full and complete a life as possible, is the driving force behind our company. Xtant Medical Holdings, Inc. ( ) is a global medical technology company focused on the design, development, and commercialization of a comprehensive portfolio of orthobiologics and spinal implant systems to facilitate spinal fusion in complex spine, deformity and degenerative procedures. Xtant people are dedicated and talented, operating with the highest integrity to serve our customers. Investor Contact Information: Kevin Gardner Managing Director LifeSci Advisors 646.889.1200 [email protected] View the original release on


CNN
6 hours ago
- CNN
SNAP changes, how to slow cognitive decline, topless visitors face fines: Catch up on the day's stories
👋 Welcome to 5 Things PM! It's not just a myth — you can actually die of a broken heart. A new study found that people who experience overwhelming grief are more likely to die in the 10 years after their bereavement than those who don't. Here's what else you might have missed during your busy day. President Donald Trump's megabill makes the largest cuts to food stamps in the program's 86-year history, jeopardizing assistance for more than 42 million people. Large chains like Walmart, Kroger and Dollar General can absorb the impact — but small, independent grocers will be hit hard. Lifestyle changes can slow the downturn for people in their 60s and 70s, researchers concluded after conducting a large clinical trial. Exercise, diet and socializing all play important roles. This is what you should know before getting started. A French resort town has started fining people who walk around topless or in their swimsuits anywhere other than on the beach. Some applauded the move, but others suggested there are more important things to worry about, such as crime. Josh Johnson has played for 14 different teams in the NFL — including the San Francisco 49ers four times, the Baltimore Ravens three times and three other teams twice. That all adds up to a record. It's a life of loneliness and resiliency. Facing a projected 3.8-foot sea level rise by 2100, this low-lying country is considering drastic action: a multibillion-dollar string of artificial islands that will double as a seawall. See what it could look like. GET '5 THINGS' IN YOUR INBOX If your day doesn't start until you're up to speed on the latest headlines, then let us introduce you to your new favorite morning fix. Sign up here for the '5 Things' newsletter. 👂 'It's a privilege': Sound recordist Juan Pablo Culasso — a blind conservationist — is preserving the rich audio tapestry of the Colombian wilderness. Through his work, he's helping to make nature accessible for everyone. A frustrated Trump gives more details on his relationship with Epstein, as the scandal follows him abroad Trump says there's 'real starvation' in Gaza, contradicting Netanyahu Shooting at Reno casino leaves multiple people injured, police say 🏖️ Picture perfect: There's no guarantee of hot weather during the summer in Britain, but people go to the beach regardless of the temperatures. Two new photography books explore how different the experience looks compared to other places. 🏎️ Who just became the first Black driver to win a major race on Indianapolis Motor Speedway's 2.5-mile oval?A. Wendell ScottB. Lewis HamiltonC. Bubba WallaceD. Rajah Caruth⬇️ Scroll down for the answer. 👋 We'll see you tomorrow.🧠 Quiz answer: C. Bubba Wallace survived a late rain delay and two overtimes to win the Brickyard 400.📧 Check out all of CNN's newsletters. Today's edition of 5 Things PM was edited and produced by CNN's Kimberly Richardson and Sarah Hutter.