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Hayward, California Blood Testing Facilities

HGH Blood Testing Center By Labcorp Represents a LabCorp blood testing facility
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Hayward California Hormone Replacement Therapy Services

How to maintain and sustain good health is a topic at the forefront of practically every man and woman in America as they grow older. We go to the gym. We go on diet after diet. Americans take millions of vitamins and supplements every year in order to stay healthy and feel younger. One oft-overlooked topic regarding wellness and aging is Hormone Balance.

Hormone Imbalance is one of the leading causes of declining health and vitality among aging men and women. The goal of our Anti-Aging Hormone Clinic is to relieve the negative health symptoms associated with Hormone Imbalance through the use of Hormone Replacement Therapy treatments such as Testosterone Therapy, HGH Injections, and Sermorelin Acetate Therapy. With our help, we can improve your Hormone Balance and enhance your life!

Affordable Hormone Therapy in Hayward California

We are a Board Certified and Fully Licensed Hormone Provider, and our Hormone Doctors and Specialists have your best interests at heart. With just a simple phone call, you can be in touch with one of our caring Professional Endocrinologists. Our Clinic serves patients thirty years of age and older, and we have affiliate medical professionals located in Hayward and all over the state of California. If you feel that Hormone Deficiency has drained your ability to live a fruitful, happy, and productive life, our HRT Clinic may be able to help!

Hormone Deficiency Testing for Hayward Residents

At our HRT Clinic, we have spent our careers attempting to perfect the art of the identification and treatment of Hormone Imbalance and Deficiency. With us, there's no reason to leave your city to see a specialist or wait forever to learn what treatment options can benefit you. When you call us to set up an appointment, we will link you with a local California Physician that will work with us to reveal your Hormone needs.

With just a blood sample and a physical, we have all the medical data that we require to provide you with both a vividly detailed picture of your health status and whether HRT Treatment is viable for you as a patient! We can provide you with quality Hormone Therapy Products like Androderm Low-T Treatment or Nutropin HGH Therapy directly to your home for the best prices available!

Hayward Low-T Clinics of California

There are few conditions that impact male virility and desire quite like Testosterone Deficiency. Low-T plagues tens of thousands of men across the San Francisco metropolitan area, and only a fraction of those guys seek out treatment. Andropause is a real condition which deflates not only sexual prowess but undermines male health.

Men with Low-T are far more likely than the average male to experience diabetes, heart attack, stroke, and obesity, not to mention a variety of other potentially life threatening conditions. If you've noticed a slump in your sexual health, Testosterone Injections, Patches, or Low-T Creams may help bolster your libido and improve your health and energy levels!

HGH Therapy Prescriptions Hayward California

Much like Andropause and Menopause, Human Growth Hormone Deficiency often impairs the health and wellness of men and women during middle age. The older that you get, the less HGH that your body produces, leading to a metabolic insufficiency which reduces your body's functional capacity to repair, rebuild, and preserve wellness.

HGH Injection Therapy has found increasing popularity over the past generation as a means to mitigate Somatopause (Age-Related Growth Hormone Deficiency). If your low HGH Levels are suppressing your health, HGH Injection Therapy can reverse or mitigate many of the issues related to your Hormone Imbalance.

How to Identify Growth Hormone Deficiency

HGH is a powerful metabolic Hormone which controls the rate and frequency of cellular division. The body requires a steady supply of Growth Hormone each day to sustain wellness. Because of the important role that Growth Hormone plays in good health, the effects of its deficiency are widespread and chronic.

If you've experienced impaired healing, fatigue, extended bouts of common illnesses, loss of muscle mass, increased adipose fat tissue, or depression as you grow older, these symptoms may be related to your Deficiency. With our Comprehensive Metabolic Panel, we can reveal your underlying Hormone Imbalance and structure a Hormone Replacement Therapy Plan that meets your needs as a patient!

Hayward Sermorelin HRT Shots for Growth Hormone Deficiency

While HGH Shots do a fantastic job at reclaiming Hormone Balance for those with Human Growth Hormone Deficiency, Sermorelin Acetate may soon overcome HGH Injections in popularity as a means to treat Somatopause. Sermorelin enhances and encourages the endogenous release of Human Growth Hormone by the Pituitary Gland, allowing the human body to produce exactly the level of HGH that it needs to enable Hormone Balance. If you are interested in Sermorelin Shots, we offer affordable HGH Therapy Plans featuring Sermorelin Acetate!

Hayward California Information

The city of Hayward is one of the many suburbs of San Francisco California. The city is an important travel corridor which is linked to the San Francisco Peninsula by the San Mateo Bridge. Hayward is referred to as the Heart of the Bay because of its extensive shoreline on the San Francisco Bay. Cities near Hayward include Union City, Pleasanton, Castro Valley, and San Leandro. Hayward has long been a manufacturing presence in California, historically in the areas of salt mining and canned foods. In the mid-20th century, Hayward was the largest producer of salt in the world.

Today, manufacturing is still at the heart of the local economy, buoyed by companies like PepsiCo, Gillig, and Annabelle Candy. Hayward has also found increasing promise as an extension of nearby Silicon Valley as the tech industry has become a powerful player in job production for the city, hosting companies such as Siemens Building Tech, Pentagon Technologies, and Impax Laboratories. Other job creators in Hayward are Saint Rose Hospital, Marelich Mechanical, Berkeley Farms, and Bay Cities Auto. Hayward is home to both Chabot College and Cal State East Bay. Among the neighborhoods of Hayward are Glen Eden, Eden Shores, Whitman, Longwood, Fairway Park, Tennyson, Southgate, and Jackson Triangle.

All About Hayward, California Geographic Area

Hayward (play /ËnheɪwÉord/; formerly, Haywards, Haywards Station, and Haywood) is a city located in the East Bay in Alameda County, California. With a population of 144,186, Hayward is the sixth largest city in the San Francisco Bay Area and the third largest in Alameda County. Hayward was ranked as the 37th most populous municipality in California. It is included in the San Francisco-Oakland-Fremont Metropolitan Statistical Area by the US Census. It is located primarily between Castro Valley and Union City, and lies at the eastern terminus of the San Mateo-Hayward Bridge. The city was devastated early in its history by the namesake 1868 Hayward earthquake. From the early 20th century until the beginning of the 1980s, Hayward's economy was dominated by its (now defunct) food canning industry.

Human habitation of the greater East Bay, including Hayward, dates from at least 4000 B.C.E.. The most recent pre-European inhabitants of the Hayward area were the Native American Ohlone people.

In the 19th century, the land that is now Hayward became part of Rancho San Lorenzo, a Spanish land grant to Guillermo Castro in 1841. The site of his home was on the former El Camino Viejo, or Castro Street (now Mission Boulevard) between C and D Streets, but the structure was severely damaged in the 1868 Hayward earthquake, with the Hayward Fault running directly under its location. Most of the city's structures were destroyed in the earthquake, the last major earthquake on the fault. In 1930, that site was chosen for the construction of the City Hall, which served the city until 1969.

Hayward was originally known as "Hayward's," then as "Haywood," later as "Haywards," and eventually as "Hayward." There is some disagreement as to how it was named. Most historians believe it was named for William Dutton Hayward, who opened a hotel there in 1852. The US Geologic Survey Geographic Names Information System states the city was named after Alvinza Hayward, a millionaire from the California Gold Rush. Regardless of which Hayward the area was named for, because a post office cannot be named after a living person, it is believed that the name was changed to "Haywood" when the post office was first established. The first post office opened in 1860.

Castro emigrated to Chile with most of his family in 1864, after he lost his land in a card game. His name survives in the community of Castro Valley, located in the valley next to Hayward, which Castro used to pasture his cattle. The ranch was split up and sold to various locals, William Hayward among them. William Hayward's fortunes took a turn for the grander when he constructed a resort hotel, which eventually grew to a hundred rooms. The surrounding area came to be called "Hayward's" after the hotel.

William Hayward eventually became the road commissioner for Alameda County. He used his authority to influence the construction of roads in his own favor. He was also an Alameda County supervisor. In 1876, a town was chartered by the State of California under the name of "Haywards". The name of the post office was then able to change because of the loss of the apostrophe before the "s." This change occurred in 1880. It remained "Haywards" until 1910 when the "s" was officially dropped. William Hayward died in 1891.

Hayward grew steadily throughout the late 19th century, with an economy based on agriculture and tourism. Important crops were tomatoes, peaches, cherries, and apricots. Chicken and pigeon raising also played important roles in the economy. A rail line between Oakland and San Jose, the South Pacific Coast Railroad, was established, but was destroyed in 1868 earthquake. The anarchist periodical Land and Liberty was published in Hayward from 1914 ae1915.

During the 1930s, the Harry Rowell Rodeo Ranch, now within the bounds of Castro Valley, drew rodeo cowboys from across the continent, and western movie actors such as Slim Pickens and others from Hollywood.

Prior to World War II, Hayward had a high concentration of Japanese Americans, who were subject to the Japanese-American internment during the war. The war brought an economic and population boom to the area, as factories opened to manufacture war material. Many of the workers stayed after the end of the war. Two suburban tract housing pioneers, Oliver Rousseau and David D. Bohannon, were prominent builders of postwar housing in the Hayward area.

Mount Eden was a former city that was incorporated into Hayward in the 1950s, at the same time as Schafer Park.

Russell City was a former unincorporated community. It existed from 1853 until 1964. It is now the location of an industrial park, and the future site of the Russell City Energy Center, a 691 megawatt natural gas-fired power plant, under construction by Calpine.

Stokes Landing, Hayward Heath and Eden Landing were communities now within Hayward city limits.

According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 63.7 square miles (165 km2). 45.3 square miles (117 km2) of it is land and 18.4 square miles (48 km2) of it (28.90%) is water. The Hayward Fault Zone runs through much of Hayward, including the downtown area. The United States Geologic Survey has stated that there is an "increasing likelihood" of a major earthquake on this fault zone, with potentially serious resulting damage. Hayward has a Mediterranean climate, and contains microclimates, both of which are features of the greater Bay Area. San Lorenzo Creek runs through the city. Hayward borders on a large number of municipalities and communities. The cities bordering on Hayward are San Leandro, Union City, Fremont and Pleasanton. The census designated places bordering on Hayward are Castro Valley, San Lorenzo, Cherryland, Sunol and Fairview.

The 2010 United States Census reported that Hayward had a population of 144,186. The population density was 2,261.8 people per square mile (873.3/km ²). The census determined racial and ethnic makeup of Hayward was 49,309 (34.2%) White, 17,099 (11.9%) African American, 1,396 (1.0%) Native American, 31,666 (22.0%) Asian (10.4% Filipino, 3.9% Chinese, 3.0% Indian, 2.7% Vietnamese, 0.5% Japanese, 0.5% Korean, 0.2% Cambodian, 0.1% Pakistani), 4,535 (3.1%) Pacific Islander, 30,004 (20.8%) from other races, and 10,177 (7.1%) from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 58,730 persons (40.7%), giving Hayward an aggregate Hispanic/Latino plurality population as categorized by census determined racial and ethnic groups. 30.2% of Hayward's population is Mexican, 2.5% Salvadoran, 1.5% Puerto Rican, 1.2% Nicaraguan, 1.0% Honduran, 0.5% Peruvian, and 0.2% Cuban. Hayward is the second most diverse city in the state by Census figures. It has been ranked nationwide as highly diverse, in combination with Oakland and Fremont.

The Census reported that 141,462 people (98.1% of the population) lived in households, 1,954 (1.4%) lived in non-institutionalized group quarters, and 770 (0.5%) were institutionalized.

There were 45,365 households, out of which 18,284 (40.3%) had children under the age of 18 living in them, 21,720 (47.9%) were opposite-sex married couples living together, 7,495 (16.5%) had a female householder with no husband present, 3,344 (7.4%) had a male householder with no wife present. There were 3,037 (6.7%) unmarried opposite-sex partnerships, and 421 (0.9%) same-sex married couples or partnerships. 9,359 households (20.6%) were made up of individuals and 3,193 (7.0%) had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 3.12 persons. There were 32,559 families (71.8% of all households); the average family size was 3.60 persons.

The city's age demographics were 35,379 people (24.5%) under the age of 18, 16,064 people (11.1%) aged 18 to 24, 44,005 people (30.5%) aged 25 to 44, 34,096 people (23.6%) aged 45 to 64, and 14,642 people (10.2%) who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 33.5 years. For every 100 females there were 97.4 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 95.7 males.

There were 48,296 housing units at an average density of 757.6 per square mile (292.5/km ²), of which 23,935 (52.8%) were owner-occupied, and 21,430 (47.2%) were occupied by renters. The homeowner vacancy rate was 2.3%; the rental vacancy rate was 6.6%. 75,039 people (52.0% of the population) lived in owner-occupied housing units and 66,423 people (46.1%) lived in rental housing units.

As of the 2000 Census, there were 140,030 people, 44,804 households, and 31,945 families in the city. The population density was 1,219.6/km ² (3,158.6/mi ²). There were 45,922 housing units at an average density of 400.0/km ² (1,035.8/mi ²). The racial and ethnic makeup of the city was 42.95% White, 10.98% Black or African American, 0.84% Native American, 18.98% Asian, 1.91% Pacific Islander, 16.81% from other races, and 7.52% from two or more races. 34.17% of the population was Hispanic or Latino of any race.

There were 44,804 households out of which 37.0% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 50.3% were married couples living together, 14.5% had a female householder with no husband present, and 28.7% were non-families. 20.9% of all households are made up of individuals and 7.3% had someone living alone who is 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 3.08 and the average family size was 3.58.

The population profiled by age was 26.8% under the age of 18, 10.9% from 18 to 24, 33.4% from 25 to 44, 18.8% from 45 to 64, and 10.2% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 32 years. For every 100 females there were 98.5 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 96.3 males.

The median income for a household in the city was $51,177, and the median income for a family was $54,712. Males had a median income of $37,711 versus $31,481 for females. The per capita income for the city was $19,695. 10.0% of the population and 7.2% of families were below the poverty line. Out of the total population, 11.7% of those under the age of 18 and 7.2% of those 65 and older were living below the poverty line.

Hayward's current mayor is Michael Sweeney, reelected to the office in 2010. His term expires in 2014. He served on the City Council starting in 1982, was reelected in 1986, and elected mayor for the first time in 1990. His current period holding the office dates from his 2006 election. He has an MA in political science from California State University, Hayward and is the executive director of Spectrum Community Services, a nonprofit social service organization in Hayward.

City council and other government meetings are cablecast on cable TV channel KHRT-TV.

The city created the Hayward Public Art Program, to create murals to beautify the city and combat graffiti, and has commissioned numerous murals throughout the city. The program won a League of California Cities Helen Putnam Award of Excellence in 2011.

The city received an "AA", and an "AA+" rating for its general obligations, from the Fitch Group in 2012.

Southland Mall is the largest shopping center in Hayward. It houses the department stores Sears and Macy's, and other retailers. In addition to a Target store at the Skywest Commons mall, the city's major retailers include Home Depot and Office Depot. A Costco Business Center is located there. The first La PiR±ata opened in Hayward in 1983, and is now a local chain of seven restaurants, which produces their own brand of tequila in Ameca, Jalisco, Mexico.

Hayward has a large number of manufacturing businesses and corporate headquarters, including high-tech companies, and is considered part of a northern extension of Silicon Valley.

The economy of Hayward in the first half of the twentieth century was based largely on the Hunt Brothers Cannery. The cannery was opened in Hayward in 1895 by brothers William and Joseph Hunt, who were fruit packers originally from Sebastopol, California. The Hunts initially packed local fruit, including cherries, peaches, and apricots, then added tomatoes, which became the mainstay of their business. At its height in the 1960s and 1970s, Hunt's operated three canneries in Hayward, at A, B, and C Streets; an adjacent can-making company; a pickling factory; and a glass manufacturing plant. From the 1890s until its closure in 1981, Hunt's employed a large percentage of the local population. The air around Hayward was permeated by the smell of tomatoes for three months of each year, during the canning season. The canneries closed in 1981, as there were no longer enough produce fields or fruit orchards near the cannery to make it economically viable. Much of the production was moved to the Sacramento Valley. The location of the former canneries is marked by a historic water tower with the Hayward logo. A housing development now occupies much of the former cannery site.

Much of the Bay coastal territory of Hayward was turned into salt ponds, with Oliver Salt and Leslie Salt operating there. Much of this land has in recent years been returned to salt marshes. A 1983 image of the ponds appears on a 2012 US postage stamp. The Mervyns department store chain was headquartered in Hayward, until declaring bankruptcy in 2008. Etec Systems, Inc. operated in Hayward from 1970 until 2005, when it was closed by its parent company. AirLink Communications, a wireless service provider, operated in Hayward until its 2007 acquisition by Sierra Wireless. Osborne Computer Corporation operated a manufacturing facility in the 1980s. Former franchise computer retailer ComputerLand, and daisy wheel printer manufacturer Qume were headquartered there. The Holiday Bowl bowling alley operated in south Hayward for 47 years, closing in 2005. The Valle Vista roller skating rink operated for 44 years in south Hayward, closing in 2003. TML Studios, a recording studio owned by Tesla band member Troy Luccketta, where albums by Loudness, among others, were recorded, operated in Hayward. Franklin Ophthalmic Instruments was based in Hayward. Banchero's, a large Italian restaurant, operated from 1948 to 2012. The Ball Corporation operated an aluminum can factory (formerly owned by Reynolds Metals) up until 1998. The Mack Truck Company manufactured trucks through the 1970s.

According to the city's 2010 Comprehensive Annual Financial Report, the top employers in the city, representing 7% of total city employment, are:

ar indicates employers wholly located or headquartered in Hayward

Two businesses which had significant employment in fiscal year 2000 ae2001, Mervyns (2,000), and Pacific Bell (940), no longer operate in Hayward.

Downtown Hayward features include:

Hayward is served by Interstate 880 (also known as the Nimitz Freeway), State Route 92 (Jackson Street) and State Route 238 (Mission Boulevard/Foothill Boulevard). State Route 92 continues west as the San Mateo-Hayward Bridge. The intersection of 880 and 92 was reconstructed over a four year period, with completion of the project in October 2011. Mission Boulevard has been long known for chronic traffic congestion. Past proposals to convert Mission Boulevard to a freeway or build a 238 bypass have been controversial. One proposal, to build a freeway parallel to Mission Boulevard, extending a freeway south from 580 where it turns east towards Castro Valley, and connecting to Industrial Boulevard, had land purchased, but was cancelled after years of debate. The land is now scheduled for sale and zoning. Mission, Jackson and Foothill all converge at one congested intersection south of downtown, known historically as "Five Flags" for a line of flagpoles formerly located there. To alleviate congestion in the downtown area, the city is converting the A Street, Mission and Foothill triangle to one-way thoroughfares (counterclockwise), and is adding road improvements, landscaping, and telephone/cable undergrounding to Mission Boulevard south to Industrial Boulevard, and to Foothill Boulevard north to 580. The plan, the Route 238 Corridor Improvement Project, broke ground July 2010, with an expected completion date in 2013.

Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART), the regional rapid transit system, has two stations in Hayward: the Hayward station, in downtown; and the South Hayward station, near the Hayward-Union City border. BART operates a repair yard in Hayward. The AC Transit bus system, which provides bus service for Alameda County and Contra Costa County, operates in Hayward, and has a repair/training center located there. Amtrak, the national rail passenger system, provides daily service at its Hayward station for the Capitol Corridor train, which runs between San Jose in the South Bay, and Auburn in the Greater Sacramento area.

Hayward has a general aviation airport, the Hayward Executive Airport. The Hayward Air National Guard station was located at the airport in 1942, until being reassigned to Moffett Field in 1980[100]

Hayward maintains the Hayward Fire Department and Hayward Police Department. Hayward has two hospitals with emergency departments: St. Rose Hospital[101] (at risk of closure as of 2012)[102] and a Kaiser Permanente Medical Center (scheduled for closure and replacement by a San Leandro hospital in 2014).[103][104][105] Four cemeteries are located in Hayward: Chapel of the Chimes,[106] Mount Eden[107] Mount Saint Joseph Cemetery,[108] and Holy Sepulchre, the last two being Catholic cemeteries.[109] The Hayward Hall of Justice, a branch of the California Superior Court, is the largest full-service courthouse in Alameda County.[110] Horizon Services, which administers substance abuse recovery programs in Hayward and other locations in the Bay Area, operates out of Hayward. Hayward has its own water and wastewater system, but a small northern portion of the city's water is managed by the East Bay Municipal Utility District.[111]

Hayward is home to the main campus of California State University, East Bay, formerly known as California State University, Hayward.[112] It is a public university within the California State University system. Pioneer Amphitheatre is located there, and is host to public music festivals.

Hayward is the home of Chabot College, a community college in the Chabot-Las Positas Community College District.[113]

Hayward is served by the Hayward Unified School District (HUSD),[114] which operates three high schools, Mount Eden, Tennyson, and Hayward High. Additional high schools include the Eden Area Regional Occupational Program, the Leadership Public Schools-Hayward charter school (ranked #2 among charter schools statewide by a University of Southern California study[115]) and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation charter public high school, Impact Academy of Arts and Technology.[116] The New Haven Unified School District operates in Union City and South Hayward, with one high school, Conley-Caraballo, located in Hayward. The San Lorenzo Unified School District operates Royal Sunset High School within Hayward.[117] A large private high school, Moreau Catholic High School, is located in Hayward. Hayward is the recipient of a 2010 Promise Neighborhood grant from the United States Department of Education, through CSUEB.[118][119] The city has Everest and Heald College campuses.[120]

Hayward has four parks administered by the East Bay Regional Park District: the Don Castro Regional Recreation Area, Dry Creek Pioneer Regional Park, the Hayward Regional Shoreline, and Garin Regional Park. The Eden Landing Ecological Reserve is located at the Hayward shoreline, and includes 600 acres of salt ponds set to be converted to tidal wetlands.[122] Hayward is also home to the oldest Japanese garden in California designed along traditional lines. The 3.5 acre Japanese Gardens was dedicated in 1980.[123] The garden is administered by the Hayward Area Recreation and Park District (HARD), which operates a number of parks and facilities, primarily in Hayward, including the Skywest and Mission Hills golf courses, Kennedy Park, the Sulphur Creek Nature Center, the Hayward Shoreline Interpretive Center, and Memorial Park with the Hayward Plunge swim center.[124] HARD is the largest recreation district in California.[125] In addition to the two public golf courses, TPC Stonebrae, a private golf club, operates in Hayward. Hayward has been a Tree City USA since 1986.[126]

Hayward has two sites in the National Register of Historic Places: the Green Shutter Hotel and Eden Congregational Church. A third site, Meek Mansion, while not within city limits, is managed by HARD and the Hayward Area Historical Society. The three sites are also on the California Register of Historical Resources.[127] Agapius Honcharenko's Ukraina Ranch is the only California Historical Landmark in the city.[128]

Three newspapers of general circulation cover Hayward. Hayward has had since 1944 a daily newspaper, the Daily Review, published most recently by Bay Area News Group. The Tri-City Voice newspaper, based in Fremont and published twice weekly, covers Hayward as well as the Tri City area of Fremont, Newark, and Union City. It was founded in 2002.[129] The East Bay Express weekly newspaper, founded 1978, covers Hayward as part of its East Bay coverage. Local television stations, and AM and FM radio from Oakland and San Francisco reach Hayward, as do some stations from San Jose, Sacramento and Salinas. The city's cable TV carrier is Comcast. Chabot College's student radio station, KCRH, operates mostly within city limits.

The Bay Area Ambassadors amateur soccer team is based in Hayward. The All Pro Wrestling professional wrestling promotion and training school is based in Hayward, and performs shows there.[130] Hayward was briefly considered for the new home of the New York Giants baseball team in 1957, with San Francisco acquiring the team.[131]

People from Hayward who are strongly associated with the city include; founder William Dutton Hayward; and the Ukrainian patriot and Greek Orthodox priest Agapius Honcharenko, who created a farm whose location is now an historic landmark. High profile people from Hayward include football coach Bill Walsh, figure skater Kristi Yamaguchi, Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson, and Treasurer of the United States Rosa Gumataotao Rios. Charles Plummer, prior to becoming Alameda County Sheriff, was the Police Chief of Hayward.

Hayward is the sister city of:

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