Latest news with #therapy
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
This TikToker with depression shares what her day-to-day looks like — and it's not what you may think
TikToker Sam Souder makes a living sharing fashion and lifestyle content online — but she's also using her platform to talk about mental health. Peppered right alongside her outfit of the day and product review videos are Souder's 'day in my life with depression' TikToks, in which Souder shows how she manages her life while living with depression. The quick videos, set to Audrey Hobert's pop song 'Sue me,' show Souder going about her day: waking up late in the morning, taking her medication and getting work done even as she quietly struggles with symptoms like procrastination, exhaustion and executive functioning issues. The 27-year-old New Jersey-based creator was diagnosed with depression, anxiety and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) when she was in high school and has been in therapy for more than 10 years. But to the outside world, Souder may not appear like she's struggling at all — which is why the influencer tells Yahoo it's so important for her to be transparent about the reality of her mental health. "I thought it was a fun and lighthearted way to introduce the topic,' Souder told Yahoo. 'I feel very privileged that I'm able to do influencing and these kinds of things. Sometimes it's hard to talk about mental health without sounding like you're complaining — there is a very fine line, and I'm so grateful for everything I've been able to do because of this job. This is one way I've been able to express how my day-to-day or my feelings unfold without being on a soapbox." Souder said that she's been struggling with her mental health more than usual recently, which has made her job as a full-time influencer more challenging — but has also given her a window to explore what her real life is like, as opposed to only sharing the highlight reel. That means using TikTok to show when she was unable to get out of bed for hours or even sharing a video of her messy bedroom that she felt too overwhelmed to clean. "It just didn't feel organic or right to come on here and, like, do my makeup and post outfits and try to act like everything was normal, when really, the depression I was having — and am still having — affects a lot of my thoughts and my day-to-day life,' Souder explained. 'Since I'm a lifestyle influencer and I post about what I do every day, it just made sense to start sharing that part of my life more organically — like without makeup on, still in bed, those kinds of things.' The feedback to these videos has been 'very, very positive,' Souder said. Her TikTok followers comment things on her videos like, 'Thank you for being so transparent,' and, 'I've been struggling hard with my depression for months now. Big win for you getting out of the house! Haven't been out from mine in a minute lol.' 'People were just like, 'I'm right there with you,' and said it helped them feel a little less alone,' Souder said of her comments. 'Because the thing about depression — it's a very, very lonely condition.' Saba Harouni Lurie, a licensed marriage and family therapist, told Yahoo that Souder's depression videos are a reprieve from social media content that 'makes it really hard to feel good about yourself.' Typically, Lurie said, what you're seeing on social media is 'a very curated version of someone's life.' You're viewing their highlight reel of when they're out with friends or on a beautiful, luxurious vacation. Ordinarily, Lurie pointed out, you're not privy to the other parts of someone on social media's life — like 'where they're in bed and they're having a hard time waking up in the morning, or when they're feeling insecure or unsure about themselves.' 'If we're seeing these curated versions, it can be really easy to slip into thought patterns of, well, I'm not experiencing life like that. I'm not feeling that way about myself,' Lurie explained. But while Souder may make some of this aspirational content, she's also showing both sides of her life. And Souder's videos can also help people recognize how depression and other mental health conditions can manifest in ways that go beyond what we might find typical. 'What I appreciate about the videos and the greater conversations that are happening is that they're opening the door to how we conceptualize depression,' Lurie said. 'For a long while, we were counting on external observations to know if somebody was depressed — if they're not able to get out of bed, if they're not eating, they're overeating, certainly suicidality. Now, there's room to acknowledge that depression can look many different ways.' Erin Bowman, a licensed clinical professional counselor, told Yahoo that social media conversations like the one Souder is sparking can also help people recognize that they may be experiencing some mental health difficulties. 'There can be this sense of, like, 'Oh no, that's not me. Like, I'm still able to go to work, I'm still able to, like, do X, Y, Z things,'' Bowman said. This is especially true for people who have so-called 'high-functioning' mental health struggles, where they're able to keep up with work or their social lives. And, Bowman noted, many women, as well as people socialized as women, struggle to recognize depression in themselves because they're taught to 'put a smile on' — even if, under the surface, they know they are having a 'really hard time.' As for Souder, she is just glad her videos are resonating. 'If I can help somebody else by sharing what I'm going through, then it makes it all worthwhile,' she said.


Politico
16 hours ago
- Business
- Politico
5 questions for Rep. Ro Khanna
With help from Aaron Mak Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) has been one of the more nuanced Democratic critics of the tech sector during President Donald Trump's second administration. Khanna, whose district covers Silicon Valley, continues to talk up the promise of the sector even as he criticizes tech luminaries like Elon Musk and David Sacks, who he's known for years, for cozying up (before, in Musk's case, a very public breakup) to the president. Musk actually wrote a testimonial for a 2012 book by Khanna, who worked in the Commerce Department during the Obama administration at the time. Khanna speaks with us about how the government needs to think about bolstering career paths in a world dominated by artificial intelligence, and how the tech ecosystem is laden with companies using AI as a buzzword. The following has been edited for length and clarity. What's one underrated big idea? Biotechnology integration with AI has not gotten the attention it should. An AI's use in being able to discover new patterns with proteins and identify new possibilities for gene therapy and drugs is extraordinary, and there's a possibility for exponential advances in medicine over this next decade. What's a technology that you think is overhyped? There's a lot of business plans for startups now that have the word AI in them. It's almost like to get funding, you need to do something AI, and like the time of startups during the .com boom, many of those companies aren't making substantive contributions and will be weeded out. But there are a lot of companies doing substantive things with AI that will thrive. But, you know, it's become trendy to describe almost every company in Silicon Valley as an AI company. What could the government be doing regarding technology that it isn't? We need to make sure every kid in America has an understanding of AI and can use the tools of AI for their jobs. Whether someone is going to be a nurse, an electrician, a writer, a health care worker, they're going to need to use the basic AI tools and technology. Proficiency needs to be as common as reading and writing in our schools. We also need to think about what a job strategy looks like in AI, especially for young Americans. College graduates between the ages of 21 and 29 have a 15 percent unemployment rate. [We need to think] about what path there will be for young lawyers and young health care professionals, young college graduates with AI. The government needs to really think about the opportunities that are going to exist for those jobs and how to create them. What book most shaped your conception of the future? Right now, I'm reading 'Abundance,' about building more and building faster in America, and that outcome is a common aspiration that I think many Americans share. What has surprised you the most this year with regards to tech? The rapidness with which AI models are progressing. The rapidness with which they're being adopted in certain industries and the concern of jobs for, particularly young college graduates, and the concern about how we're going to address the economic prospects in a digital world. Moolenaar goes on offense After introducing a bill virtually banning federal use of AI linked to foreign adversaries earlier this week, House China Chair John Moolenaar is now urging the Trump administration to implement specific measures to constrain China's influence in the AI sector. In a Friday letter to Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, Moolenaar (R-Mich.) pushed eight recommendations for guardrails to strengthen the U.S.'s strategic position in its AI race with China. The recommendations include recruiting allies to keep China away from AI supply chains and implementing stricter security requirements for overseas data centers. Moolenaar has been mounting a campaign to promote an 'America First AI Policy,' which he describes in his letter as 'protect[ing] our lead in artificial intelligence and prevent[ing] the People's Republic of China (PRC) from co-opting the global AI ecosystem.' Moolenaar, in an interview with DFD earlier this month, stressed the importance of preventing chip smuggling and warned of China using AI for surveillance and propaganda. Scientific 'refugees' flee the U.S. The first cadre of American researchers are taking advantage of France's €15 million bid to recruit disaffected scientists. POLITICO Europe's Victor Goury-Laffont reported on Thursday that eight applicants are in the final stages of joining Aix-Marseille University's Safe Place for Science program in France, which will hire 20 U.S. academics who feel 'threatened in their research.' Nearly 300 people have applied. Many of the final applicants have not publicly disclosed their identities, but they include two researchers studying climate change and one studying judicial systems, as well as a biological anthropologist. Northern Illinois University history professor Brian Sandberg, one of the applicants whose research includes climate change during the Little Ice Age period from roughly the 16th to 19th centuries, told POLITICO, 'The entire system of research and the entire education in the United States is really under attack.' France and the European Union have started initiatives to attract U.S. academic talent as President Donald Trump has moved to cut billions of dollars in federal research funding across the country. In response to the administration's actions, Aix-Marseille University President Eric Berton and former French President François Hollande have called for the creation of a new 'scientific refugee' status that would extend immigration support to academics. post of the day THE FUTURE IN 5 LINKS Stay in touch with the whole team: Aaron Mak (amak@ Mohar Chatterjee (mchatterjee@ Steve Heuser (sheuser@ Nate Robson (nrobson@ and Daniella Cheslow (dcheslow@


The Guardian
a day ago
- Sport
- The Guardian
‘It helped me be free': Madison Keys on therapy, Donald Trump and her husband as coach
Before she won her first grand slam tournament at the Australian Open in January, Madison Keys had spent more than a year talking to a therapist about her life rather than just her tennis career. 'When I'd gone to see sports psychologists in the past it had been a little tunnel-focused on routines and big moments on the court,' she says on a sleepy Sunday afternoon in London. 'So being able to talk to someone about broader life philosophies helped me get to the root of why I was feeling that way instead of just being uber-focused on decisive moments in a match.' The 30-year-old American, who is ready for another tilt at Wimbledon, remembers some of the wayward suggestions that specialist sports psychiatrists would advise her to follow at crucial stages of a match. 'It would be, like: 'Make sure you look at your strings and do this specific thing and that'll just help the nerves go away.'' Keys pauses when I ask if it was hard to open up to a stranger about her deeper and usually more hidden emotions during a therapy session. 'I don't know if I would say that was hard,' she replies. 'It was more that I was actually trying to be honest with myself about what I felt. There were a lot of instances where I would say something and I was surprised that's actually how I felt. Those are the kind of things that live in the back of your head you don't ever really pay attention to.' She still talks to the same therapist and says: 'One of the biggest things I've learned about myself is that, because of our sport, and our constant striving to be better, there's always something else [to do]. Sometimes you don't really take a moment to acknowledge how you feel or think about what's going on inside. You just put your head down and keep going into the next thing. At some point that catches up with you and so it was really important for me to learn how to actually just sit and be introspective and figure out what I was feeling and why. And then just being OK with that and not immediately trying to fix it and make it go away.' The best tennis players are so consumed by their careers, and life on tour, that it often seems as if their true selves, as people, are forgotten. Did Keys become better at separating her personal identity from her tennis-playing persona? 'I was able to do it more but there are times when it feels like you've figured it out and things are great only for you to find it's not so simple. The hardest part about focusing on your mental health is that you've never done it [completely]. It's never box-checked off so it's something I'll have to continue to be conscious of, because it's easy to fall into bad habits.' Keys faced a difficult draw in Melbourne and had to win five three-set matches, beating four opponents in the top 10, including the world No 2, Iga Swiatek, in an epic semi-final and the world No 1, Aryna Sabalenka, in the final. She survived a match point against Swiatek and was pushed to the brink by Sabalenka before winning 7-5 in the third set. 'I was most proud of how I took every round just as that round,' Keys says. 'I was so focused and never got ahead of myself. Playing all these hard matches against top players really allowed me to focus and keep persevering. The fact that I played so many three-setters and was able to hold the trophy at the end of the two weeks was amazing.' Eight years had passed since her only previous grand slam final when, at the 2017 US Open, she was crushed 6-3, 6-0 by her friend Sloane Stephens. The pressure of the occasion had been too much against Stephens and, in Melbourne, Keys said: 'I've obviously thought of that match endlessly for the past eight years.' So did her recent therapy sessions help in those clutch moments of her first grand slam victory? 'It helped me be a lot more free and have a clear mind in the moment,' Keys confirms. 'I was able to force myself to be a little braver in those moments instead of being careful and tentative, and just go for it. It got to the point where a lot of the time you'd rather be brave. Maybe things don't go exactly how you want but you did them on your terms and you feel you have no regrets, versus if you're a little tentative or trying to be careful and it doesn't work out. That's when you really have regret.' That regret had also been felt acutely in the semi-finals of the 2023 US Open. Keys led Sabalenka 6-0, 5-3 but, rather than maintaining her positivity, she became passive and hesitant and lost the match on successive tie-breaks. 'I don't know if that was the exact moment, but obviously it was a tough loss,' Keys says of what prompted her to seek therapy. 'Being in that position and not to be able to cross a line was definitely a kind of final reminder that: 'Oh yes, maybe there's something that we can work on.'' Keys also switched from using a Wilson racket to the larger Yonex and she tweaked her serve, but she admits that, apart from working on her mind, the most positive change in the last two years has been the appointment of her husband, Bjorn Fratangelo, as her coach. 'I was struggling when I asked him to help me out,' Keys recalls of the June 2023 move. 'At the time it was supposed to be short-term but then we immediately had success. I think the biggest hurdle for him was being comfortable in telling me what to do. That took time to get used to but, now, we're finding our stride.' Fratangelo was a former player who briefly cracked the world top 100 in 2016, but what are his best attributes as a coach? 'He's really great at analysing what's going on [in a match] and he does it so quickly. Coupled with the fact that we obviously know each other very well and know how to communicate, he's able to see some things that I'm not seeing on the court. He then communicates in a way that I can actually do it.' Keys says that as a couple, away from the court, 'we do a pretty good job of balancing things. When we're home, we're very much home and tennis is off. Home is home and work is work. Sometimes it's harder to do than say but, for the most part, we've done a good job.' In the French Open this month Keys looked on course for the semi-finals when she won the first set against Coco Gauff. But she crumbled in the third set of an error-strewn match and her fellow American went on to beat Sabalenka in another dramatic final in Paris. 'I was able to watch the last set,' Keys says, 'and it's so amazing for Coco. I thought I could have won our match but nearly beating someone doesn't actually count.' Keys laughs and then says of Gauff: 'She's playing some great tennis and her clay season was phenomenal. It's obviously disappointing to be so close and then lose to the eventual champion. But at the same time it gives you a lot of confidence.' Sign up to The Recap The best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend's action after newsletter promotion Wimbledon is next and it is a tournament where she has reached two quarter-finals. In 2015 she beat Petra Kvitova and Venus Williams before losing to Serena Williams while, eight years later, she lost to Sabalenka in the quarters. Last year was even more painful when, in the fourth round, she was 5-2 up in the third set and two points from victory against Jasmine Paolini. 'I then tore my hamstring,' Keys says with a grimace. She retired at 5-5 and Paolini went on to make the final. 'Hopefully this is the year I make it past the quarters because Wimbledon has always been something that I dreamed of. It has this aura which means that, I think, for all tennis players it's the tournament.' It's hard to believe that Keys, a teenage prodigy, has been playing professionally since she was 14. 'I feel every one of those past 16 years,' she says with a groaning kind of laugh. Staying in Chelsea for a change, Keys reveals: 'I wish I could say I'll be doing some sightseeing but I'd be lying if I feel like that actually might happen. But it's been nice to see a different part of London. I'm notorious for being stuck at Wimbledon all the years I've been here, so it's fun just to be in another part of the city.' What would she most like to do in London? 'When I'm in a big city I've always really loved doing that touristy bus thing where you can kind of see everything in one trip. If I have an afternoon off that would be the one thing I'd love to do – just hop on a bus and see all of the sights at least once.' Kindness Wins is the non-profit foundation Keys set up in 2020 and its very name offers insight into her character and philosophy of life. 'It means a lot to me,' she says, 'because tennis has brought so much into my life and it's opened so many doors for me. I felt it was important to also give kids that opportunity because tennis teaches so many important life lessons. It helps kids learn those in a way where they can be competitive but also a good sport. 'So I wanted to make sure that I did whatever I could to make tennis more accessible for as many people that wanted to play it. Tennis also gives so many opportunities to go to college and meet new people – but it's obviously a really expensive sport. So we try to help.' The world seems short of kindness right now so how does she feel as an American living under Donald Trump? 'It's definitely a tough time and it's hard to balance where you want to be informed and know what's going on but, at the same time, it's crazy. Sometimes it's hard to shut it off enough that you don't pull your hair out but also not being oblivious to what's going on and the realities of everything. It's definitely difficult at the moment.' Keys smiles ruefully when I say that there are just three and a half more years of Trump's presidency to survive. 'I know. After a few months I was like: 'Oh it's only been a few weeks!'' At least the first month of Trump's return to the Oval Office also marked her victory at the Australian Open. Keys grins more broadly when I ask if the reality of winning her first grand slam lived up to the dream she had pursued for so long. 'It was great,' she says with another pealing laugh. 'Being able to do it with that group of people around me was really special. So, yes, it was just pretty great.'


The Independent
a day ago
- The Independent
Demand for fear of flying therapy spikes after Air India disaster
A therapy course designed to help people conquer their fear of flying has seen a huge spike in demand after over 200 people lost their lives in the recent Air India flight crash in Ahmedabad. The disaster that occurred moments after take-off two weeks ago, has since prompted a substantial rise in enquiries for the programme. Retired Air Force officer Dinesh K., 55, runs Cockpit Vista, India's sole "fear of flying solutions" centre, located in Bengaluru. His $500 course, which combines flight simulation with counselling, has received more than 100 enquiries since the crash, a stark contrast to its previous average of about ten a month. Dinesh explains his approach to overcoming aerophobia: "Fear of flying is typically to do with things happening on an aeroplane - the sounds, motion, vibrations ... exposure therapy is the only solution." During a tour of his facility, he demonstrated how cockpit controls relate to movements that often unnerve passengers. The centre is equipped with simulators for both Boeing and Cessna planes, allowing participants to experience landings and take-offs from a pilot's perspective. This immersive experience aims to help individuals understand that not every vibration or sound during a flight signals danger, thereby alleviating their anxieties. WhatsApp messages Dinesh received, and shared with Reuters, showed individuals complaining about "losing confidence" after the crash, while others said it was "too hard on the brain". A chilling 59-second CCTV clip showing the crash of the Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner, which killed 260 people, has been widely shared on social media and TV channels since the 12 June accident, which aviation and mental health experts said had led to an unusually high number of counselling requests. Some travellers are becoming more choosy in selecting their airline and aircraft - Boeing or Airbus - while others are so anxious they are taking more drastic steps by rescheduling or cancelling their air travel plans altogether. "I am filtering on the basis of not having to fly a Boeing ... I'm bloody terrified currently, and I don't want to get back on a flight," said London-based Indian marketing consultant Nidhi Bhatia, 25, who flew to Mumbai in an Air India Boeing 777 plane a day before the Ahmedabad crash. Unlike India, Western countries have many more formal setups to help people tackle their fear of flying, in its most intense form known as aerophobia, as fatal crashes often spike worries among travellers across the world. Days after an American Airlines plane collided with a helicopter in Washington, killing more than 60 people, a survey of 1,000 U.S. consumers by research firm Prodege found 55 per cent of travellers had higher anxiety, while 38 per cent had reconsidered or cancelled travel plans. Google Trends data shows searches for the term "flying fear" in India hit "peak popularity" a day after the Air India crash, and the phrase was still being widely searched. Flying is typically seen as a safe mode of transport, and crashes during takeoff are especially rare. The International Civil Aviation Organisation said there were 1.87 accidents per million departures in 2023, its most recent annual air safety report. Of the nine hull loss accidents without fatalities recorded in 2024, only two occurred on take off, according to Airbus' website. The airport CCTV recording from Ahmedabad shows the Air India plane rose to a height of 650 feet (198.12 m) after it took off, but suddenly lost altitude, crashing in a fireball into a nearby building - all within 60 seconds. The disturbing footage was a key cause of the panic among Indian travellers, five mental health experts said. People were seeking help because they had developed insomnia or become obsessed with flight updates, they said. Others were scared of letting their loved ones travel on planes, complaining of "debilitating anxiety" for their relatives in transit "to an extent where they have been unable to focus on their daily chores" because they are constantly checking messages to see if they have landed, said psychologist Pankti Gohel. In Bengaluru, the $500 Cockpit Vista course is spread over 14 hours and led by Dinesh, who oversaw ground operations during the undeclared 1999 Kargil war between India and Pakistan and retired as an Air Force wing commander in 2014. He also offers to accompany worried clients on the first flights they take after completing the course. Since the crash, many travellers fear travelling with Air India and are seeking alternative airlines, according to Jaya Tours, a mid-sized booking agency in Mumbai. Taken over by the Tata Group from the Indian government in 2022, Air India continues to face criticism for poor service and an outdated fleet. This year, the airline was also warned about flying three Airbus planes which lacked mandatory inspection checks on escape slides. The Indian Association of Tour Operators, which represents more than 1,600 agents, said overall flight bookings dropped by 15-20 per cent soon after the Air India crash, while 30-40 per cent of booked tickets were also cancelled. "We are getting very unusual questions about aircraft type. Earlier passengers didn't really care about what kind of aircraft it is," said the group's president, Ravi Gosain.


Malaysian Reserve
a day ago
- Business
- Malaysian Reserve
ProBio Opens Flagship U.S. Plasmid & Viral Vector Manufacturing Facility in Hopewell, New Jersey to Advance Cell and Gene Therapy
HOPEWELL, N.J., June 27, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — ProBio, a global contract development and manufacturing organization (CDMO) specializing in cell and gene therapy, today announced the opening of its flagship Cell and Gene Therapy Center of Excellence at the Princeton West Innovation Campus in Hopewell, New Jersey. The 128,000 sq ft GMP facility is purpose-built for manufacturing high-quality plasmid DNA and viral vectors, including adeno-associated virus (AAV) and lentiviral vector (LVV) platforms, reflecting ProBio's dedication to accelerating the delivery of transformative medicines. The celebration included an open house event featuring a guided site tour, ribbon-cutting ceremony, and a keynote address by Donavon Decker, the first person in the world to receive gene therapy for any form of muscular dystrophy in 1999. Decker shared his experience from that landmark trial at Ohio State University—led by Dr. Jerry Mendell—and spoke movingly about how state-of-the-art facilities like ProBio's Hopewell site help translate scientific advances into real patient outcomes. The ribbon-cutting ceremony featured remarks from prominent leaders: Debbie Hart, CEO of BioNJ; Courtney Peters–Manning, Mayor of Hopewell Township; John Coelho of the New Jersey Economic Development Authority (NJEDA); Michael Vreeland, Site Head of ProBio Hopewell; Allen Guo, CEO of ProBio; and Frank Zhang, Founder of GenScript and Chairman of Legend Biotech. Mayor Courtney Peters-Manning welcomed the company warmly, stating: 'Hopewell Township is a wonderful place to live and work, and we are thrilled to welcome ProBio to our community, where they will make cutting-edge, life-changing therapies, in addition to creating high-skilled jobs.' John Coelho of NJEDA emphasized the strategic significance of the opening: 'The opening of ProBio, a state-of-the-art fully integrated end-to-end Contract Development and Manufacturing Organization, will be a significant enhancement to the cell and gene biologics development and biomanufacturing ecosystem, anchoring New Jersey as a leader in the field. The potential to support production for global clinical trial registrations and close proximity to leading precision medical centers will enable faster access of breakthrough medicines to patients.' Built to meet the most rigorous GMP standards, the Hopewell site is equipped to support clinical-stage development, process-development and scale-up for cell and gene therapy programs. This capability solidifies New Jersey's position as a leader in biopharmaceutical manufacturing. During the open house, guests toured advanced GMP suites and production lines, and engaged with ProBio's scientific and operations teams as well as industry, academic, and government partners. 'This is not just a new facility. It is a beacon of hope for patients waiting for cures,' said Allen Guo, CEO of ProBio. 'Opening the Hopewell center is a milestone in ProBio's global expansion and underscores our mission to support biopharma innovators with high-quality, responsive manufacturing solutions.' Bringing over 110 high-skilled jobs to New Jersey, ProBio's Hopewell facility continues to expand its capabilities. GMP AAV manufacturing is set to launch by Q3 2025, with GMP LVV services to follow in Q1 2026—enabling support for a broader range of therapeutic candidates from early proof-of-concept through clinical readiness, all within one integrated site. Located in the heart of New Jersey's rapidly expanding innovation corridor, ProBio's Hopewell facility serves as the company's North American hub, designed to support and complement its broader operations across North America and Europe. This strategic investment aligns with efforts to strengthen transatlantic biomanufacturing capacity and resilience—positioning the site to meet growing demand for advanced therapeutic production across both continents. For more information about ProBio and its full suite of development and manufacturing services, please visit ABOUT PROBIO ProBio is a global leader in advancing the development and manufacturing of next generation biologics and advanced therapies for the biotech and pharmaceutical industries. As a fully integrated end-to-end Contract Development and Manufacturing Organization (CDMO), ProBio partners with its clients to optimize drug development, accelerate time-to-market, and provide comprehensive life-cycle support. Through a collaborative, risk-sharing approach, ProBio offers flexible licensing and co-development options for new therapeutics, enabling partners to effectively navigate the complexities of human disease with adaptable, cutting-edge therapeutic approaches. To learn more about ProBio services, please visit CUSTOMIZED CDMO SOLUTIONS. DEVELOPED FASTER. DELIVERED BETTER. Media Contact:Alvin Jogasuria Head of Marketing, Americas and Europe[email protected]