Nyxoah Announces Participation in the Piper Sandler 33rd Annual Virtual Healthcare Conference

Nyxoah Announces Participation in the Piper Sandler 33rd Annual Virtual Healthcare Conference

Mont-Saint-Guibert, Belgium. – November 12, 2021, 10:30 pm CET / 4:30 pm ET – Nyxoah SA (Euronext Brussels/Nasdaq: NYXH) (“Nyxoah” or the “Company”), a medical technology company focused on the development and commercialization of innovative solutions to treat Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA), today announced that Olivier Taelman, Chief Executive Officer, will participate at the Piper Sandler 33rd Annual Virtual Healthcare Conference on from November 22 to December 2, 2021.

A webcast of the Company’s fireside chat will be available on the Company’s investor relations website at https://investors.nyxoah.com/

Nyxoah is participating in investor 1×1 meetings, which can be requested through Piper Sandler.

About Nyxoah
Nyxoah is a medical technology company focused on the development and commercialization of innovative solutions to treat Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA). Nyxoah’s lead solution is the Genio® system, a patient-centered, leadless and battery-free hypoglossal neurostimulation therapy for OSA, the world’s most common sleep disordered breathing condition that is associated with increased mortality risk and cardiovascular comorbidities. Nyxoah is driven by the vision that OSA patients should enjoy restful nights and feel enabled to live their life to its fullest.

Following the successful completion of the BLAST OSA study, the Genio® system received its European CE Mark in 2019. Nyxoah completed two successful IPOs: on Euronext in September 2020 and NASDAQ in July 2021. Following the positive outcomes of the BETTER SLEEP study, Nyxoah received CE-Mark indication approval to treat Complete Concentric Collapse (CCC) patients, currently contraindicated in competitors’ therapy. Additionally, the Company is currently conducting the DREAM IDE pivotal study for FDA and US commercialization approval.

For more information, please visit http://www.nyxoah.com/

Caution – CE marked since 2019. Investigational device in the United States. Limited by U.S. federal law to investigational use in the United States.

Contacts:
Nyxoah
Jeremy Feffer, VP IR and Corporate Communications
jeremy.feffer@nyxoah.com
+1 917 749 1494

Gilmartin Group
Vivian Cervantes
IR@nyxoah.com

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Highest Award for Sustainable Environmental Projects Presented at COP26 Climate Summit

The Energy Globe World Award winners were announced

Energy Globe

VIENNA, Nov. 12, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — In an extremely exciting ceremony, the Energy Globe Foundation announced the world winners in the five categories: Earth, Fire, Water, Air and Youth on November 8. A total of almost 3,000 implemented environmental projects from 187 countries participated in this private initiative from Austria. For the first time in the 22-year history of the Energy Globe, there were five instead of three nominees in each of the five categories. This was decided by the international jury, chaired by Maneka Gandhi, due to the large number of innovative and outstanding projects submitted.

In the Fire category, which showed as the main goal how to produce and use energy without emissions, there were three winners. The wave power plant “UNI WAVE200 KING ISLAND WAVE ENERGY PROJECT” from Australia, which produces green electricity around the clock; the power plant “SUN TO LIQUID” from Spain, which produces liquid fuel from solar energy, and the project “ELECTRIC THERMAL ENERGY STORAGE” from Germany, where green surplus electricity is stored thermally and can be converted back into electricity at any time using generators.

In the Air category, the goal was to avoid emissions or to make released CO2 harmless through storage. Two winners demonstrated solutions for the international shipping industry, where more than 1 billion tons of CO2 are released annually. The winning project “NORSEPOWER ROTOR SAILS” from Finland shows how wind power can be used to reduce emissions. The winning project “BEHYDRO HYDROGEN DUAL-FUEL ENGINE” from Belgium uses green hydrogen for this purpose.

In the Earth category, the focus was on sustainable buildings and environmentally friendly agriculture. The winning project “ECO FOOD DEHYDRATORS” from Egypt shows how fruit can be preserved by a simple drying process, thus avoiding harvest losses of around 50%.

The Water category showed projects on how to provide clean drinking water in developing countries and how to use water efficiently in agriculture. The winning project “WATERSHARED BANK” comes from Bolivia, where around 10,000 landowners keep an area of 400,000 hectares fertile by means of “water factories”.

The Youth category was also very exciting. The objective was to involve children and young people in the implementation of sustainable projects. The winning project “PLASTIC WASTE RECYCLING IN HAU GIANG” from Vietnam shows how school children are motivated to collect separate waste, which is then purchased by recycling companies. The proceeds are used to support the children’s education.

All nominees, who offer solutions in various fields, can be found at www.energyglobe.info, as well as the top celebrities from all five continents who participated in the award ceremony.

Energy Globe shows once again great and innovative environmental projects from all over the world and how through an active cooperation of consumers, business and politics, future generations will certainly find a future worth living.

Press Contact:
Mr. Wolfgang Neumann
contact@energyglobe.info


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Image 1: Energy Globe

Energy Globe World Awards

This content was issued through the press release distribution service at Newswire.com.

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Some 930 personnel secure Indonesia Badminton Festival bubble scheme

The event involves more than 250 athletes from 26 countries.

Nusa Dua, Bali Some 930 joint personnel of the military, police, and National Disaster Mitigation Agency (BNPB) were deployed to maintain security and enforce health protocols at the 2021 Indonesia Badminton Festival (IBF) in Nusa Dua, Bali.

The 2021 Indonesia Badminton Festival features the three tournaments of Indonesia Masters, Indonesia Open, and BWF World Tour Finals scheduled from November 16 to December 5, 2021.

Head of Public’s Behavior Change of the National COVID-19 Handling Task Force, Sonny Harry B. Harmadi, stated at a press conference here on Saturday that the personnel were assigned to three layers of the “bubble scheme” of the event.

“Some 30 personnel are deployed for the first layer that is located at the lodging, comprising five BNPB officers and 25 hotel security officers,” he stated.

Source: Antara News

IBF bubble can be blueprint for international competitions: task force

Nusa Dua, Bali The bubble system implemented at the Indonesia Badminton Festival (IBF) 2021 in Bali can be a fresh template for other international sports events, the COVID-19 Task Force has said.

In the Nusa Dua area on Saturday, Head of Behavioral Change at the COVID-19 Handling Task Force Sonny Harry B. Harmadi assured that the bubble system implemented for the IBF this year is different from the one used in the National Sports Week (PON) recently held in Papua Province.

“It is a stricter, full bubble system, unlike the PON Papua, which was a semi-bubble. In Papua, athletes and participants could still leave the hotel, but that is not allowed here,” Harmadi informed.

According to him, this is the first time a full bubble system is being implemented in Indonesia. In the future, other protocols will refer to it, he affirmed.

The bubble system implementation for IBF 2021 has gone through a detailed review process so the level of security is higher, he assured. This has been done because IBF will be attended by athletes from abroad, while PON only hosted domestic athletes, he said.

Source: Antara News

WHO Chief: ‘Scandal’ of COVID Vaccine Disparity Must Stop

The head of the World Health Organization said Friday that every day, six times more COVID-19 boosters are administered than primary doses in low-income countries.

WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus also said in a press briefing that countries with the highest vaccine coverage “continue to stockpile more vaccines,” while “low-income countries continue to wait” for the shots.

“This is a scandal that must stop now,” Tedros said about the global vaccine disparity.

The WHO chief offered other stark realities of the COVID pandemic, including that, “Almost 2 million cases of COVID-19 were reported in Europe last week, the most in a single week in that region since the pandemic started” and that “the almost 27,000 COVID deaths reported in Europe last week represented more than half of all COVID-19 deaths globally last week.”

Tedros said COVAX, the vaccine-sharing scheme designed to provide COVID-19 vaccines to low- and middle-income countries, could help to alleviate the vaccine disparity, but it needs at least 550 million shots to achieve its goal of vaccinating 40% of every country’s population by the end of the year.

The WHO director general said the COVID vaccine crisis is not the only vaccine crisis the world is facing.

“A new report by WHO and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows that more than 22 million infants missed their first dose of measles vaccine last year,” the WHO leader said, “marking the largest increase in two decades.”

Tedros also noted that Sunday is World Diabetes Day, and this year marks the 100th anniversary of the discovery of insulin, an essential medication for diabetics.

“The scientists who first discovered insulin a century ago refused to profit from their discovery and sold the patent for just $1,” the WHO chief said. “Unfortunately, that gesture of solidarity has been overtaken by a multibillion-dollar business that has created vast access gaps.”

One in every 2 people who need insulin for Type 2 diabetes does not get it, according to Tedros.

“A new WHO report finds that high prices, low availability of human insulin, a market dominated by three companies, and weak health systems are the main barriers to universal access,” Tedros said. “WHO is working with countries and manufacturers to increase access to insulin for everyone who needs it.”

Source: Voice of America

Climate Change Rocks Agricultural Commodity Market

Agricultural commodities such as coffee, cotton and wheat faced sharp price swings this year as output was hit by extreme weather sparked partly by climate change.

According to analysts, volatile weather conditions and temperatures have adversely impacted crop growth, harvest and supply in key exporters.

“The weather has certainly created tightness in the (agricultural) markets,” Sucden analyst Geordie Wilkes told AFP.

That has stoked prices of soft commodities at a time when global inflation is already soaring due to the post-pandemic demand recovery and supply-chain snarl-ups.

Climate change is under the spotlight as global powers at the two-week COP26 summit in Glasgow attempt to reach agreement to slow the pace of global warming.

Droughts and frost

Brazil, the world’s biggest coffee producer and a major player in corn, was gripped in April by a severe drought, which sent prices briefly spiking on supply woes.

Just three months later in July, the South American giant suffered harsh frosts that pushed coffee prices to multi-year peaks.

Arabica coffee topped $2 a pound — the highest since 2014 — and still remains close to this level.

Elsewhere, southwestern Canada and the northern plains in the United States faced a prolonged springtime drought that damaged wheat production.

Wheat prices were ignited and still remain close to historic highs, with soft wheat trading at $300 per tonne on Euronext.

Greater extremes

Experts forecast the frequency of extreme weather events such as droughts, wildfires, floods and typhoons will simply accelerate.

“The frequency of extreme weather events seen over (recent) years leads us to believe that these events will likely happen more often in the future and therefore agricultural commodity prices will remain elevated,” Rabobank analyst Carlos Mera told AFP.

Wilkes agreed that the outlook was gloomy for soft commodity growers as weather patterns become “more volatile, more extreme.”

Climate change, coupled with Amazon deforestation, was “changing weather patterns and increasing” the frequency of such extreme weather events, he noted.

Volatility can also occur when investors find it difficult to anticipate prevailing weather conditions in key production areas.

Market swings are likewise amplified by the uneven distribution of crops around the world — and the dependency on one country for certain crops, as is the case with arabica coffee in Brazil.

Arabica, for example, is prone to volatility “because this is mainly grown on the highlands, where weather can fluctuate more strongly and crop losses can be more severe,” said Commerzbank analyst Carsten Fritsch.

Brazil is also impacted by the El Nino phenomenon, a warming of surface ocean waters in the eastern Pacific that occurs every two to seven years and causes droughts in some areas and flooding in others.

Domino effect

Added to the picture, some agricultural commodities face a “domino effect” of indirect consequences due to harsh weather conditions elsewhere.

For example, hurricanes in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico caused major damage to oil facilities in the summer, sparking a drop in crude supply and a rebound in oil prices.

That prompted higher sugar prices because the commodity is used in the production of ethanol — a cheaper version of gasoline, or petrol.

The cotton market meanwhile bounced because higher oil prices make it more expensive to produce synthetic fibers.

Cotton prices currently stand at their highest levels for more than a decade.

Source: Voice of America

Eye on smart city tag, Kupang launches innovative programs

Kupang, East Nusa Tenggara The Kupang city government, East Nusa Tenggara, has launched several innovative programs in a bid to transform Kupang into a smart city.

“The Kupang city government continues to make various innovations to realize Kupang as a smart city in many aspects of service,” Deputy Mayor Hermanus Man said in Kupang on Saturday.

As part of this commitment, the Kupang city government has prepared a number of programs to develop Kupang as a smart city, he informed.

According to Man, the programs include an application, ‘Si Hebat’, that encourages people to save fuel oil.

‘Si Hebat’ is an integrated information system application that provides e-vouchers for saving fuel, he said. It is a digital transformation initiative for reducing the use of fuel oil in Kupang city government’s vehicles, he added.

“This application can cut the budget for the Kupang government office’s fuel needs. Everyone knows that it can spend hundreds of millions on fuel,” he explained.

The application can save a lot of money because it can be monitored properly, he added.

Source: Antara News

Explainer: Conservatorships and How Britney Spears Was Freed

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA — A judge has freed Britney Spears from the conservatorship that controlled her life and money for nearly 14 years.

Here’s a look at how conservatorships operate, what’s unusual about hers, and how calls from her and her fans to #FreeBritney eventually worked.

How do conservatorships work?

When a person is considered to have a severely diminished mental capacity, a court can step in and grant someone the power to make financial decisions and major life choices for them.

California law says a conservatorship, called a guardianship in some states, is justified for a “person who is unable to provide properly for his or her personal needs for physical health, food, clothing, or shelter,” or for someone who is “substantially unable to manage his or her own financial resources or resist fraud or undue influence.”

The conservator, as the appointee put in charge is called, may be a family member, a close friend or a court-appointed professional.

Several states have recently used the attention that Spears has brought to the issue to reform their conservatorship laws.

How does Spears’ work?

With a fortune of nearly $60 million comes secrecy, and the court closely guarded the inner workings of Spears’ conservatorship.

Some aspects have been revealed in documents. The conservatorship had the power to restrict her visitors. It arranged and oversaw visits with her two teenage sons, whose father has full custody. It took out restraining orders in her name to keep away interlopers deemed shady.

It had the power to make her medical decisions and her business deals. She said at a June hearing that she has been compelled to take medication against her will, has been kept from having an intrauterine device for birth control removed and has been required to undertake performances when she didn’t want to.

Spears also said she had been denied the right to get married or have another child, but she has since gotten engaged to longtime boyfriend Sam Asghari.

Who had power over Spears?

The ultimate power in the conservatorship fell to Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Brenda Penny. She used it on Friday to end it.

Before his suspension in September, her father James Spears had the lion’s share of day-to-day power over his daughter’s choices for 13 years. In 2019, he gave up the role of conservator over her life decisions, maintaining control only over her finances. His replacement, John Zabel, now has a few minimal administrative powers to move Britney Spears’ money around as power over it transitions back to her.

Jodi Montgomery, a court-appointed professional, acted as conservator over her personal matters from 2019 until Friday. Her agreement was key when the termination finally came.

Why did so many called to #FreeBritney?

Some fans objected to the conservatorship soon after it began. But the movement, and the #FreeBritney hashtag, truly took hold early in 2019, when some believed she was being forced into a mental health hospital against her will.

They pored over her social media posts to extract clues about her well-being and protested outside the courthouse at every hearing.

They were long dismissed by Spears’ father and others as conspiracy theorists, but in the end their power was undeniable.

They felt vindicated by two dramatic speeches she gave this summer, in which she confirmed many of their suspicions. They felt triumphant when her father was removed. And they felt truly jubilant when the conservatorship was terminated.

She was quick to give them credit, since first acknowledging in court filings in 2020 that they may have a point. “Good God I love my fans so much it’s crazy” she said on Twitter and Instagram after Friday’s ruling, along with video of the celebrations outside the courthouse and the new hashtag #FreedBritney.

Why was it imposed in the first place?

In 2007 and 2008, shortly after she became a mother, she began to have very public mental struggles, with media outlets obsessed over each moment. Hordes of paparazzi aggressively followed her every time she left her house, and she no longer seemed able to handle it.

She attacked one cameraman’s car with an umbrella. She shaved her own head at a salon. She lost custody of her children. When she refused to turn over her boys after a visit, she was hospitalized and put on a psychiatric hold. The conservatorship was put in place within days.

Why did it go on so long?

A conservatorship can always be dissolved by the court. But it’s rare that a person achieves their own release from one, as Britney Spears essentially did.

They can last decades because the circumstances that lead to them, like traumatic brain injury, Alzheimer’s, or dementia, are not things people just bounce back from.

Spears’ father and his attorneys justified the continued conservatorship by arguing that she was especially susceptible to people who seek to take advantage of her money and fame.

Normally a series of mental evaluations would take place before a conservatorship ended, but on Friday Penny said that with no one asking for any examinations, none would be required.

How does Spears feel about all of this?

For years it was largely a mystery. But allowed to speak publicly in court in June, she called the conservatorship “abusive” and “stupid” and says it does her “way more harm than good.”

And in her social media posts on Friday, she declared, “Best day ever … praise the Lord.”

What happens now?

Regaining her personal and financial powers after so many years will take some untangling. Montgomery, along with therapists and doctors, have created a care plan for the transition, and her attorney Mathew Rosengart says a financial safety net is in place too.

Rosengart has vowed to pursue an investigation of James’ Spears handling of the conservatorship even after it ends. He could take action in civil court, and has suggested he may even turn over his findings to law enforcement for consideration of criminal charges. James Spears has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing.

Britney Spears is likely to hire financial managers, assistants and attorneys to perform many of the same duties previously performed by the conservatorship. But their decisions will be subject to her approval, instead of vice-versa.

Source: Voice of America