Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Jacob Sullum Debates Mandatory Liability Insurance for Gun - Reason

Yesterday on on?HuffPost?Live,?I discussed proposals for requiring gun owners to buy liability insurance with Don Taylor, an associate professor of public policy at Duke University, and Michael Barry, vice president of media relations at the Insurance Information Institute. As with the HuffPost?Live debate about universal background checks a few weeks ago, none of the guests was all that enthusiastic about this gun control policy, which is basically a tax in disguise. Even the host, Josh Zepps, who did his best to play devil's advocate, ended up saying it did not seem like a good idea to him. You can watch the exchange here or below.

Source: http://reason.com/blog/2013/02/26/jacob-sullum-debates-mandatory-insurance

Hagel swears in as defense chief after bruising confirmation battle (reuters)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/287797503?client_source=feed&format=rss

32 Myanmar nationals rescued at sea off Sri Lanka

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP) ? Sri Lanka's navy says it has rescued 32 Myanmar nationals whose wooden vessel began sinking while making a perilous journey to Australia.

A navy statement says the rescue was made about 250 nautical miles off the island's eastern coast on Saturday. Those rescued are being treated for acute dehydration.

The group comprising 31 adult males and a boy had been at sea without food for 21 days when the navy rescued them after being informed by a local fishing boat.

Survivors have told local newspapers that there were 130 passengers at the beginning of the journey and 98 died on the way and their bodies were dumped to sea.

They said they were planning to go to Australia after their attempt to enter Malaysia failed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/32-myanmar-nationals-rescued-sea-off-sri-lanka-002254957.html

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

3D-Printing Pen, The 3Doodler, Reaches Kickstarter Funding Goal In Hours

6bd9c4b21565ef618416ddaac1125dbe_large3D printing can be complex or, if the 3Doodler is any indication, wildly simple. Built by a team of toy designers, the 3Doodler is a pen with a simple plastic extruder at the tip. When you press a button, a thin string of plastic comes out and almost instantly hardens. You can use the pen to draw plastic pictures or, with a little plastic, even build three-dimensional objects.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/QJkmrcKe2rM/

Sony likely to unveil new PlayStation Wednesday

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Source: http://www.statesmanjournal.com/article/20130218/LIFE/302180001/1059

Kansas? Smothering Defense Leads to Blowout Win Over Texas

John Rieger-USA Today Sports

There is nothing harder in basketball then to score on a great defensive team.? Some teams are able to just pressure the ball and every player off the ball without allowing any dribble penetration or anyone to get open.? It?s frustrating to play against, but when your playing great defense it becomes contagious.

Kansas played that type of defense against their rival, Texas.? You want to talk about smother defense, Kansas let up just 47 points and only 15 of them came in the first half.? Those 47 points came on 22% shooting and 10% shooting from behind the arc.? That is just hard nose lock-down defense and the Longhorns had no answer.

It helps when you have Jeff Withey down low to erase any opportunity the opposing team gets in the paint.? Withey in fact, set the Big 12 Conference record for blocked shots last night as he recorded a below average, two blocked shots.? He was able to grab 4 steals though to make up for his ?lack? of blocked shots.

The Jayhawks recorded 10 steals in total, but if they can contest shots like they did last night, no one is going to beat them.? Their speed and quickness allows them to close out on shooters and help on the drive without letting up uncontested shots.? They are playing against Division 1 basketball players, but that doesn?t mean they knock down contested jump shots and that was proven last night.

Kansas lost three straight games before winning their last two mostly because of their lack of offense, but they have gotten back on track more because their improved defense then improved offense.

?

Source: http://www.rantsports.com/ncaa-basketball/2013/02/17/kansas-smothering-defense-leads-to-blowout-win-over-texas/

Meine-brautkleider.com Has Started Its Wedding Dress Promotion To Expand Its Business In Europe

(PRWEB) February 18, 2013

Recently, Meine-brautkleider.com has started its wedding dress promotion to expand its business in Europe. According to Henry Gariepy, CEO of the company, the promotion is valid from February 15 to March 15, 2013, and all customers can get a discount when checking out, up to 60% off.

All the wedding dresses from the company feature a variety of meticulous details, such as rhinestones, pearl beading and lace paneling. People can find many hot designs on its website, like empire waist wedding dresses, princess wedding dresses and lace wedding dresses, and so on. The company has committed to satisfactory shopping experience to each customer.

In addition, the company is selling more than 3000 different kinds of wedding dresses, bridesmaid dresses, cocktail dresses, and other special-occasion dresses in different colors and styles. Clients can find their favorite dresses easily by browsing through the catalog online.

Henry Gariepy adds, ?Our designs complement your figure and provide you with the confidence of exquisite appeal, allowing you to relax, knowing that you look your absolute best. Choosing one of our wedding dresses, bridesmaid dresses, evening dresses or prom gowns will demonstrate your love for beauty and comfort as you enhance your natural shape.?

About Meine-brautkleider.com
Meine-brautkleider is a sub-brand of MB-Shop, which is a leading wedding dress company. The company?s main products include wedding dresses, bridesmaid dresses, evening dresses, and other related accessories. They aim to provide people with better fashion products at cost-effective prices.

For more information, please visit: http://www.meine-brautkleider.com.de


Source: http://www.prweb.com/releases/2013/2/prweb10441373.htm

Deadly new virus is well adapted to infect humans, study finds

LONDON (Reuters) - A new virus that emerged in the Middle East last year and has killed five people is well adapted to infecting humans but could potentially be treated with drugs that boost the immune system, scientists said on Tuesday.

The virus, called novel coronavirus or NCoV, is from the same family as the common cold and as SARS, or Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome. There have been 12 confirmed cases worldwide - including in Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Britain - and five patients have died.

In one of the first published studies about NCoV, which was unknown in humans until it was identified in September 2012, researchers said it could penetrate the lining of passageways in the lungs and evade the immune system as easily as a cold virus can.

This shows it "grows very efficiently" in human cells and suggests it is well-equipped for infecting humans, said Volker Thiel of the Institute of Immunobiology at Kantonal Hospital in Switzerland, who led the study.

NCoV was identified when the World Health Organisation issued an international alert in September saying a completely new virus had infected a Qatari man in Britain who had recently been in Saudi Arabia.

Coronaviruses are a family of viruses that includes those that cause the common cold as well as the one that caused SARS - which emerged in China in 2002 and killed about a 10th of the 8,000 people it infected worldwide.

Symptoms of both NCoV and SARS include severe respiratory illness, fever, coughing and breathing difficulties. Of the 12 cases confirmed so far, four were in Britain, one was a Qatari patient in Germany, two were in Jordan and five in Saudi Arabia.

POSSIBLE TREATMENT

Scientists are not sure where the virus comes from, but say one possibility is it came from animals. Experts at Britain's Health Protection Agency say preliminary scientific analysis suggests its closest relatives are bat coronaviruses.

What is also unclear is what the true prevalence of the virus is - since it is possible that the 12 cases seen so far are the most severe, and there may be more people who have contracted the virus with milder symptoms so are not picked up.

"We don't know whether the cases (so far) are the tip of the iceberg, or whether many more people are infected without showing severe symptoms," said Thiel, who worked with a team of scientists from the Netherlands, Switzerland, Germany and Denmark. "We don't have enough cases to have a full picture of the variety of symptoms."

Thiel said that although the virus may have jumped from animals to humans very recently, his research showed it was just as well adapted to infecting the human respiratory tract as other coronaviruses like SARS and the common cold viruses.

The study, published in mBio, an online journal of the American Society for Microbiology, also found that NCoV was susceptible to treatment with interferons, medicines that boost the immune system and which are also successfully used to treat other viral diseases like Hepatitis C.

This opens up a possible mode of treatment in the event of a large-scale outbreak, the scientists said.

Thiel said that with the future of the virus uncertain, it was vital for laboratories and specialists around the world to cooperate swiftly to find out more about where it came from, how widespread it was, and how infectious it might be.

"So far it looks like the virus is well contained, so in that sense I don't see any reason for increased fear," he said.

(Editing by Pravin Char)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/deadly-virus-well-adapted-infect-humans-study-finds-050937445.html

Sunday, February 17, 2013

Video: Post Show Thoughts: The Hagel Nomination Fight

A Second Take on Meeting the Press: From an up-close look at Rachel Maddow's sneakers to an in-depth look at Jon Krakauer's latest book ? it's all fair game in our "Meet the Press: Take Two" web extra. Log on Sundays to see David Gregory's post-show conversations with leading newsmakers, authors and roundtable guests. Videos are available on-demand by 12 p.m. ET on Sundays.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/id/3032608/vp/50839722#50839722

Video: Pistorius? slain girlfriend: ?I?m gonna miss you?



>>> the family of disgraced olympic track star, oscar pistorius , is denying charges that he murdered his girlfriend. this morning, we are learning more about her from her own words. michelle kosinski is in pretoria, south africa , where he is being held.

>> reporter: reeva steenkamp's reality show aired here last night, to many, too painful to watch. many are quoting police sources saying she was shot through the bathroom door of his home. his family speaking out strongly refuting that this was murder.

>> you literally fall in love with jamaica. you fall in love with being in love with love. it is love everywhere.

>> reporter: this is reeva steenkamp living her dream.

>> i don't have any regrets. i don't have any bitterness. i take home with me so many amazing memories and things that are in here and that are in here that i'll treasure forever. i think the way that you got asked, not just your journey in life, the way you act when you make your exit is so important, you made an impact in a positive way or a negative way. at the jail, his pistorius father and uncle visited. his uncle spoke.

>> we are in shock about this beautiful girl we have gotten to know well and deeply. they had plans together. oscar was happy in his private life than he seemed in a long time. oscar, as you can imagine, is also numb with shock and grief. we have no doubt here there is no substance for litigation and that the state's own case, including its own forensic evidence strongly refutes any possibility of a premedicated murder or murder as such.

>> reporter: unconfirmed details of what allegedly happened valentine's day morning swarm in the press here. newspapers are now publishing what they say are reeva's notes from a speech she was said to give at a school that day. i was in an abusive relationship, she wrote, from the time before she dated pistorius. i lost a lot of self-worth. it took some serious soul searching to remind myself of this value in this world.

>> just always be true to yourself. i'm going to miss you all so much. i love you very, very much.

>> reporter: remember, police have been pretty dismissive of suggestions that this might have been mistaken identity or self-defense. there were reports of what sounded like shouting coming from the home earlier that night. lester.

Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/50839019/

Saturday, February 16, 2013

New Yorkers react to mayor's plastic foam ban push

A girl has a doughnut and a beverage, served in a foam cup, at a Dunkin' Donuts in New York Thursday, Feb. 14, 2013. New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who has taken on smoking, sugary drinks and salt, talked about banning food packaging made from polystyrene foam from stores and restaurants in his annual State of the City address on Thursday. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

A girl has a doughnut and a beverage, served in a foam cup, at a Dunkin' Donuts in New York Thursday, Feb. 14, 2013. New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who has taken on smoking, sugary drinks and salt, talked about banning food packaging made from polystyrene foam from stores and restaurants in his annual State of the City address on Thursday. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

A McDonald's breakfast is arranged for an illustration Thursday, Feb. 14, 2013 at a McDonald's restaurant in New York. The pancakes and sausage are served on a foam tray and coffee is served in a foam cup. New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who has taken on smoking, sugary drinks and salt, talked about banning food packaging made from polystyrene foam from stores and restaurants in his annual State of the City address on Thursday. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

A McDonald's breakfast is arranged for an illustration Thursday, Feb. 14, 2013 at a McDonald's restaurant in New York. The pancakes and sausage are served on a foam tray and coffee is served in a foam cup. New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who has taken on smoking, sugary drinks and salt, talked about banning food packaging made from polystyrene foam from stores and restaurants in his annual State of the City address on Thursday. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

Coffee served in a foam cup is held for an illustration Thursday, Feb. 14, 2013 at a McDonald's restaurant in New York. New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who has taken on smoking, sugary drinks and salt, talked about banning food packaging made from polystyrene foam from stores and restaurants in his annual State of the City address on Thursday. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

A bag of foam cups are for sale in New York Thursday, Feb. 14, 2013. New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who has taken on smoking, sugary drinks and salt, talked about banning food packaging made from polystyrene foam from stores and restaurants in his annual State of the City address on Thursday. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

(AP) ? Barely 24 hours after Mayor Michael Bloomberg proposed an all-out ban on plastic foam food containers in the city and already New Yorkers are asking: So what do we use instead?

Bloomberg's announcement Thursday left consumers and food vendors big and small wondering what a city free of plastic foam might look like.

Polystyrene foam containers have long been used by street vendors and takeout restaurants as a cheap way to keep in the heat ? and sauces ? of meals sold to on-the-go customers.

Paul Gopaul, 29, owner of the popular Midtown food truck Faith's Halal Food, said a ban on foam containers would force him to switch to more expensive aluminum ones.

Gopaul estimated he uses 500 plastic foam food containers a week, which he buys in packs of 175 containers that sell for $15 at a Queens supplier. The aluminum containers of equal size run about $5 more per pack, he said.

"Right now it's a lot of regulations, but if that's what it takes to keep us out here, then we got to do it," he said.

The mayor's proposal is not an original idea. A number of cities on the West Coast, including San Francisco, have enacted such legislation. Some states have partial or industry-specific bans of the material's use. In Maine, for example, bait can't be sold in polystyrene foam plastic.

In Seattle, the City Council enacted a plastic foam containers ban and the response there has been largely muted.

Although commonly referred to as Styrofoam, that brand of polystyrene foam isn't used in food packaging, according to its manufacturer, Dow Chemical Co.

Plastic foam cups that keep drinks hot would also be on the chopping block if Bloomberg's citywide ban becomes law. That means Dunkin' Donuts, which has about 480 store locations throughout the five boroughs, would be in a bind. The company said it uses paper cups at its stores in four U.S. cities that have polystyrene bans.

"A polystyrene ban will not eliminate waste or increase recycling; It will simply replace one type of trash with another," Dunkin' Donuts said in a statement.

Avid Dunkin' Donuts coffee drinker Charles Smith, 45, said he's sympathetic to the environmental concerns of polystyrene foam, but Bloomberg's latest initiative misses the point.

"I think there are a lot of things in New York that are bad for the environment, like cars and buses," said Smith, who works in the security field. "True New Yorkers just want their coffee."

The proposed plastic foam ban is the latest in a series of public health initiatives launched by the mayor in his 11-year tenure. Others include banning trans fats from restaurant meals, forcing chain eateries to post calorie counts on menus and limiting the size of some sugary drinks.

Bloomberg, speaking Friday morning on WOR radio, touted both the environmental and economic benefits of banning polystyrene foam.

"Styrofoam, or polystyrene, does not degrade with time. It's just there forever," he said. "And it's not good for you, and it costs us a lot of money. And the stores ? most stores have already gone away from it."

Other food containers made from certain types of plastics and paper products are recyclable and already widely used, a mayor's spokeswoman added.

The mayor's proposal would have to be drafted into legislation and passed by the City Council before becoming law.

City Council Speaker Christine Quinn supports it. But a similar proposal has stalled in the City Council in recent years.

Industry groups have already begun to prepare for a bill to surface.

"As the legislative process moves forward, we hope that all parties listen to small businesses like restaurants and take into account how it'll affect them," said Andrew Moesel, spokesman for the city restaurant association.

The American Chemistry Council also noted that polystyrene foam products are cheaper, which could end up saving tax dollars for government agencies that buy them.

Marina Pena, 40, a school counselor from Washington Heights, said she'd prefer to be more eco-friendly, but it's not her decision.

"If I had an option, I'd bring my own containers or get it served on something else, but this is all they give you," said Pena, who bought lunch served in a plastic foam container from a Manhattan food cart. "I know it's bad for the environment. I know you can't recycle it."

Fish Yu, a part-time manager of the popular Chinese restaurant Ollie's on 42nd Street, said his restaurant uses at least 150 plastic foam containers a day.

He said being forced to use alternatives to plastic foam would likely be more expensive.

"If they say so, we'll have to charge it to the customers," he said.

___

Associated Press writers Jennifer Peltz in New York and Manuel Valdes in Seattle contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-02-15-Plastic%20Foam%20Containers/id-a42106fd6bae4d6e8ef1b415f9b3eb62

Skype Video Messages launches for Mac, iPhone, and Android (hands-on)

Microsoft is launching a new Video Messages feature for Skype this week. The company has been working on the feature for a number of months, having previously revealed it a little early, and it debuts on iOS, Android, and Mac. Designed for online and offline messaging, Video Messages lets Skype users send up to three minutes of video to each other. Although it won't initially be available for Windows users, those using the Skype for Windows or Skype for Windows Phone will receive the messages with a link to view them online.

The feature works on Android and iOS by using the font facing camera, with an option to switch to the rear. You can send up to three minutes of video to users who are either online or offline and the video will be delivered in the chat part of Skype. The Mac client is very much the same, but there's an optional to download the video messages you receive. It's certainly no Vine rival as the feature doesn't let you record in loops, but Skype tells us that it's an early beta still in testing.

"We?re pleased that there?s interest for Video Messaging to come to Skype for Windows and Skype for Windows 8," says a Skype spokesperson in response to Windows availability. "We?ll let you know when we expand the service to the platform." We tested the feature out on all available platforms and it seems to sync the video messages just as you'd expect. If you want to download the messages on the Mac side, they're available in MP4 format. The Video Messages feature is available to all US and UK Skype users initially, with a rollout to other countries expected in the future.

Source: http://www.theverge.com/2013/2/15/3991770/skype-video-messages-mac-ios-android-hands-on

Friday, February 15, 2013

Meteorite falls in Russian Urals

(AP) ? Fragments of at least one meteorite fell in the Chelyabinsk region some 1,500 kilometers (930 miles) east of Moscow, causing flashes in the morning sky and sharp explosions, Russian officials said Friday.

The office of the governor of the region in the Ural Mountains said in a statement that many calls about injuries and damage to buildings had been received. But there were no immediate confirmed figures or specific reports on damage.

Reports conflicted on the event: A spokeswoman for Russia's Emergency Ministry, Irina Rossius, told The Associated Press that there was a meteor shower, but another ministry spokeswoman, Elena Smirnikh, was quoted by the Interfax news agency as saying it was a single meteorite.

The ministry said some fragments fell near the town of Satka, about 200 kilometers (120 miles) from the regional capital city of Chelyabinsk.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-02-15-EU-Russia-Meteorite/id-1cf5a1cd81494cb2961daa3084304d96

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Legal theorist Ronald Dworkin dies at age 81 - ABA Journal

Legal theorist Ronald Dworkin has died at the age of 81.

The cause of death was leukemia, report the Associated Press, the New York Times and the New York University School of Law, where Dworkin was a faculty member. He was also emeritus professor at University College London.

The Times describes Dworkin as ?a legal philosopher and public intellectual of bracingly liberal views who insisted that morality is the touchstone of constitutional interpretation.? NYU says Dworkin was ?a brilliant conversationalist with a clear point of view and purpose? who helped transform the law school. His landmark text is Taking Rights Seriously, according to NYU and the Legal Theory Blog.

The Atlantic Wire also has coverage, with links to several obituaries. The story has this quote from Dworkin in the New York Review of Books: "In my own view, someone who leads a boring, conventional life without close friendships or challenges or achievements, marking time to his grave, has not had a good life, even if he thinks he has and even if he has thoroughly enjoyed the life he has had."

Hat tip to How Appealing. Updated at 11:40 a.m. to include information from the Atlantic Wire.

Source: http://www.abajournal.com/news/article/legal_theorist_ronald_dworkin_dies_at_age_81/

This week's tech. mag: Apple's iWatch and wearable tech

While the iWatch is still firmly in the rumour phase, tech. magazine rounds up all the speculation, from the best reporting to the most ridiculous conjecture, and even features a 360 degree interactive artist's impression of what Apple's time piece might look like.

This issue is packed with fantastic interactive features, and aside being the first readers to get hands-on with Apple's latest and greatest, there's also a fully interactive review of the new Nokia Lumia 620 and a video of Landsat 8, the Google Earth-powering satellite that blasted off this week.

Beyond the Xbox

This week's tech. also has special reports on Microsoft's plans for the Xbox beyond gaming, how Intel plans to monitor your family while they watch TV and Mailbox, the app which over a million people have waited in line to try.

Don't miss out on this week's tech fight, as we put Alicia Keys and Will.i.am up against each other for the title of the most cringeworthy celebrity endorsement.

Finally, there are hot reviews of Windows 8 hybrids, and round-up all the best things to download, play, watch and do this week, including funding a mad-cap scheme to build an actual Death Star.

Download the tech. magazine today from Apple Newsstand and get the first five issues absolutely free. What are you waiting for?

Source: http://www.techradar.com/news/computing/apple/this-weeks-tech-mag-apples-iwatch-and-wearable-tech-1131327?src=rss&attr=all

State of the Union highlights

President Obama delivered the first State of the Union address of his second term Feb. 12, during which he emphasized a strong middle class as the engine of future economic growth.

President Barack Obama stands between Vice President Joe Biden and House Speaker John Boehner as he gives his State of the Union address. AP Photo/Charles Dharapak, Pool.

Obama stressed that smarter government would be more effective than bigger government in repairing debt and unemployment, and promised to invest in clean energy, education and manufacturing without raising the deficit. Obama?s speech set an optimistic tone, predicting bipartisan cooperation and forward-looking initiatives.

The President opened with an allusion to John F. Kennedy?s inaugural address 51 years ago, which reached across the partisan line.

?The Constitution makes us not rivals for power but partners for progress,? he said. ?It is my task to report the State of the Union, to improve it is the task of us all.?

The United States is more than halfway towards its goal of reducing the deficit by $4.5 trillion. The country will finish the job by making modest reforms to Medicare, eliminating tax deductions for the wealthy and refusing to cut entitlement programs, he said.

While bipartisan tax reform is vital, Obama maintained that it would not be the only method of change in his second term.

?Deficit reduction alone is not an economic plan,? he said.

The President contended that creating an attractive market for jobs and industry should be the country?s first priority. He proposed reducing job outsourcing and bringing manufacturing back to America, and suggested the minimum wage correlate with the cost of living, effectively lifting full time workers above the poverty line. Stronger families are the impetus to progress and foreign power, he said.

But the best ideas must accompany the best products in the job market, he said. The race to combat climate change and prioritize renewable energy sources should be met with the same vigor as the Space Race in the forties, Obama said.

In order to prove that the U.S. is the best place to do business, the President said it?s imperative to attract private capital to upgrade our technology and put people to work on urgent repairs such as structurally deficient bridges.

The President then transitioned to education and immigration, which he claims are the next steps in job reform and economic stability. He proposed a new challenge to redesign high schools to better equip graduates in the fields of engineering and science. He also urged Congress to pass comprehensive immigration reform, which would strengthen border security and require background checks.

Regarding the war in Afghanistan, Obama promised the return of all American troops by the end of 2014. For a safe future abroad, he claimed that an agreement was in the works for training and equipping Afghan forces as well as combating terrorism abroad.

?We don?t need to occupy other nations,? he said. ?Instead, we need to help countries provide for their own security, and help allies who take the fight to terrorists.?

Continuing to discuss foreign policy, Obama criticized North Korea and Iran for harnessing the power of nuclear weapons, demanding adiplomatic agreement with the coalition of countries that stands against their efforts. He also said that the United States will maintain a steadfast relationship with Isreal, fight for an AIDS-free generation and support transatlantic trade and partnership.

Obama then addressed the issue of gun control to the crowd, some of whom wore green ribbons to acknowledge the recent elementary school shooting in Newtown, Connecticut. He suggested background checks, laws to prevent the reselling of guns to criminals and the removal of weapons of war and ammunition magazines.

In his call for stricter gun control laws, the President alluded to 15-year-old Hadiya Pendleton, who was shot and killed from gang violence crossfire in a Chicago park after coming home from the inaugural parade. He said that Pendleton?s family, and the families of Oak Creek, Tuscon, Blacksburg, Newtown and Aurora, deserved a vote in Congress on gun control.

Desiline Victor, a 102 year old from North Miami, received a standing ovation for her inspiring story at the voting polls this past election.

?When she arrived at her polling place, she was told the wait to vote might be six hours,? Obama said of Victor. ?Hour after hour, a throng of people stayed in line in support of her, and erupted in cheers when she finally put on a sticker that read ?I Voted.??

Obama concluded his speech by holding to the idea that although we are different in career choices and ideologies, we all hold the same title of ?citizen.? This title, he said, affirms the idea that we share rights and obligations with the future generations of America.

?It remains the task of us all, as citizens of these United States, to be the authors of the next great chapter in our American story,? Obama said.

Source: http://www.theblackandwhite.net/2013/02/13/state-of-the-union-highlights/

[Gossip] Julie Henderson Heats Up the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue in Her Bikinis


Advertisement
[Gossip] Julie Henderson Heats Up the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue in Her Bikinis
Posted by AJ Grey?on 02.13.2013

Julie shows off her sexy body...

Here is Julie Henderson's sexy bod in the pages of the 2013 Sports Illustrated Swimsuit edition:

Credit: Sports Illustrated

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Source: http://www.411mania.com/movies/news/273349

Health News - Halo of prostate cancer cells holds key to diagnosing ...

Men thought to have prostate cancer could receive a more accurate diagnosis thanks to a simple genetic test, research has shown.

The procedure will help identify cancer that is missed in routine check-ups, and will save patients undergoing repeated invasive investigations that carry a risk of infection.

Scientists from the Universities of Edinburgh and St Andrews, who led the research, say the improved test works by recognising the "halo" of cells that form around a prostate tumour.

These cells, which can appear healthy under a microscope, contain silenced genes that turn off the cell's natural protection against tumour growth.
The study was carried out by Dr Grant Stewart, a Clinical Lecturer in Urology at the University of Edinburgh with David Harrison, who is now Professor of Pathology at the University of St Andrews.
The researchers say that by identifying genetic changes in these halo cells, they can tell that a patient is more likely to have a tumour, even if their tissue sample shows no cancerous cells.

Dr Stewart commented, ?Prostate cancer is the most common cancer for men in the UK ? although it can be challenging to diagnose as these tumours are not easily seen on scans. Our work shows that there is a more precise way of detecting these cancers. This new test helps us to see the ripple effect of a tumour so that even if the cells we examine aren't cancerous, we can tell there might be a tumour nearby."

More than one in ten men tested for prostate cancer receives an inconclusive result and has to have a second biopsy ? which can be painful and carries a risk of serious infection.

This is often because the first tissue sample taken is clear, while their blood test reveals high levels of the PSA protein ? prostate-specific antigen ? which is associated with prostate cancer.

The team examined prostate tissue from some 500 men who had undergone a prostate check-up and received inconclusive results.

The new test correctly identified hidden tumours in seven out of 10 cases ? without the need for a second biopsy.

The test was also 90 per cent effective in showing which patients did not have prostate cancer. It provided peace of mind to those without the disease, and prevented two-thirds of men from undergoing a second, unnecessary biopsy.

The test ? developed in partnership with diagnostics firm MDxHealth ? is now available in the US. The team hopes to work with the NHS to introduce it into routine prostate checks in the UK.

Professor Harrison, who is also Director of Laboratory Medicine for NHS Lothian, commented, "Accurate and timely diagnosis is the most important part of the patient journey in cancer. Anything that can reliably reduce that period of uncertainty before effective treatment begins is to be welcomed."

This study was supported by NHS Lothian and funded by the Chief Scientist Office.

ENDS

Note to Editors

A case study is available upon request.

Professor David Harrison is available for interview on 01334 464826 or email [email?protected]

Dr Grant Stewart is available for interview via Anna Borthwick at the University of Edinburgh?s Press and PR Office on 0131 650 6514; 07791 355 886 or email [email?protected]

Source: http://www.healthcanal.com/cancers/36134-Halo-prostate-cancer-cells-holds-key-diagnosing-disease.html

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

UK cost agency says "no" to Novartis blood cancer drug Jakavi

LONDON (Reuters) - A new drug from Novartis for myelofibrosis, a rare blood cancer, is not worth using on the state health service, Britain's healthcare cost watchdog said on Wednesday.

The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) said it had issued new draft guidance not recommending Jakavi because it could not be considered a cost-effective use of resources.

The drug costs 3,600 pounds ($5,600) for a 60-tablet pack, corresponding to an annual cost of approximately 43,200 pounds per patient.

Jakavi, which was licensed from Incyte, was given a marketing authorization in Europe last August.

Industry analysts expect it to have annual worldwide sales of around $1.5 billion by 2017, according to consensus forecasts compiled by Thomson Reuters Pharma.

The NICE draft guidance is now out for consultation, ahead of a final decision on the medicine expected in June.

(Reporting by Ben Hirschler; Editing by Greg Mahlich)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/uk-cost-agency-says-no-novartis-blood-cancer-002448136--sector.html

Free Medical Marketing eBooks

As we get ready to release our newest?free?eBook about?managing your online reputation, we thought it would be helpful to share some of our other?free?eBooks. ?The?MDWebPro Team?has gathered some of the best industry resources on social media marketing, email marketing, and healthcare web design, so you can have all the?information at your fingertips.

If you have any additional thoughts or have a suggest on future eBook topics, leave a comment below, send us a message on Twitter?@MDWebPro, let us know on?Facebook, or on?Google +.? We?d love to hear from you!

ebooksmall

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Email Medical Marketing eBook

Email Marketing is still one of the top methods for building brand loyalty online and keeping people coming back to your site.? But an effective email marketing campaign must be setup correctly so you don?t just become part of the noise.? Grab a copy of our free ebook and start seeing results from your email marketing.

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Healthcare Web Design EbookHealthcare Web Design eBook

There is no doubt that patients are scouring the Internet looking for medical information on procedures and potential providers.? Even your current patients are likely searching for your web site when they need a mailing address or phone number.

A professional and polished website has become a ?must have? if you plan to grow your practice.? Check out our cliffsnotes ebook so you can be in the know on the latest in web design and marketing trends.? We cover everything from design and usability to search engine optimization.

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Inbound Marketing for Plastic SurgeonsMedical Inbound Marketing eBook

Technology is making traditional (outbound) marketing such as cold-calling, print advertising, T.V. advertising, junk mail, non-solicited email and trade shows less effective and more expensive. On the other hand Inbound Marketing is marketing focused on?getting found by customers. Learn how to attract highly qualified customers to your business like a magnet instead of interrupting people with various forms of outbound marketing.

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Plastic Surgery Email MarketingPlastic Surgery Email Marketing eBook

Email Marketing is still one of the top methods for building brand loyalty online and keeping people coming back to your site.? But an effective email marketing campaign must be setup correctly so you don?t just become part of the noise.? Grab a copy of our free ebook and start seeing results from your email marketing.

?

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Social Media eBook for Healthcare Healthcare Social Media Marketing eBook

More and more medical professionals recognize their need to embrace new channels of communication with prospects and patients. They understand that social media involves much more than Angry Birds and music. They see these channels as powerful tools by which they can quickly and efficiently share information and create and sustain professional relationships and collaborations.? 2.0 Doctors recognize the rules of interaction with patients and prospects are rapidly changing. They know the future is now.

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Related Posts:

About stuart@ds6.net
Stuart Wainstock is a former educator who has taught overseas and in the United States. Stuart began blogging while living overseas as a means to communicate with family and friends back home. He is a contributing author to the MDWebPro blog. Stuart is an avid follower of technology, and their constantly changing trends. He also enjoys discovering new and excited music, as well as photography. You can follow Stuart on Twitter @stuartwainstock,@MDWebPro and Google+

Source: http://mdwebpro.com/2013/02/12/free-medical-marketing-ebooks/

Sierra Club Pens Letter To President Obama

In anticipation of Tuesday night?s State of the Union address, the Sierra Club penned the following letter to President Obama, signed by 30 celebrity activists and environmental leaders:

Dear President Barack Obama,

Your legacy as 44th president of the United States rests ?rmly on your leadership on climate disruption. Only the president has the power to lead an effort on the scale and with the urgency we need to phase out fossil fuels and lead America, and the world, in a clean energy revolution.

WE SUPPORT YOUR DEMONSTRATING THE STRONGEST RESOLVE IN FIGHTING THE CLIMATE CRISIS ON EVERY FRONT.

The letter, signed by Edward Norton, Morgan Freeman, Yoko Ono and others, is one of many efforts to draw attention to climate change in the days leading up to the February 17 Forward on Climate Rally. The rally, which will take place in Washington, D.C. just days after Obama's speech, is "expected to be the largest climate rally in U.S. history," says Robert Redford.

According to Sierra Club Executive Director and HuffPost Blogger Michael Brune, the timing is not coincidental. ?We're also on the cusp of a clean energy revolution that will transform our nation, slash carbon pollution, and turn this climate disaster around,? Brune wrote. ?We need President Obama to commit to that fight with all the ambition and determination he can bring.?

Yet addressing climate change may not be an easy task for Obama. In a New York Times op-ed, David Leonhardt discusses how the climate issue is reaching a pivotal moment, and the president needs to bring fresh policy to the table in order to satiate those on either end of the spectrum. Climate change has becoming a polarizing issue between environmentalists and economists, Leonhardt says. Yet he goes on to note that ?the strongest economic argument for an aggressive response to climate change is not the much trumpeted windfall of green jobs. It?s the fact that the economy won?t function very well in a world full of droughts, hurricanes and heat waves.?

Watch the State of the Union speech tomorrow night at 9pm to see if the president addresses climate change policy, and click here to find out more about the Forward on Climate Rally.

Also on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/11/sierra-club-climate-change-letter_n_2664126.html?utm_hp_ref=celebrity&ir=Celebrity

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Utah couple ends legal fight over child's adoption - Salt Lake Tribune

(Al Hartmann | Tribune file photo) Terry Achane and his nearly 2-year-old daughter, Teleah, on Jan. 25, 2013. Achane was united with his daughter, who placed for adoption at birth without his knowledge or consent. A 4th District Court judge made it official during a hearing in Provo.

A Utah couple are ending their fight to overturn a judge?s ruling that sent a toddler placed at birth for adoption back to her father.

On Monday, Jared and Kristi Frei asked the Utah Supreme Court to voluntarily dismiss their appeal, saying the continued legal battle wasn?t worth the potential psychological damage the 2-year-old girl might experience if her custody continued to shift.

?

Frei family statement

?After considerable thought and reflection under heart-wrenching circumstances, the Freis have decided not to pursue their appeal of this contested adoption. Although the Freis remain convinced that the district court committed significant legal errors in this case, they believe that it would be best for the child to drop their appeal now that she has been transferred into the custody of Mr. Achane. The Freis are committed to working with Mr. Achane to assist the child in making a successful transition. Because the Freis love the child deeply and want her to succeed in life, they are willing to put her needs before their own hopes and desires and would rather drop the appeal than risk the child suffering potential psychological and emotional consequences resulting from her either not making a successful transition or transitioning to caregivers multiple times in this critical stage of her development.?

Terry Achane, currently stationed at Fort Jackson in South Carolina, received custody of his daughter Teleah on Jan. 25. The court was to hear the Freis? appeal in March.

The dismissal motion, filed by the Freis? attorney Lance Rich, states that the couple believes 4th District Judge Darold McDade made "serious errors" in giving Achane custody of his daughter, who was placed for adoption without her father?s knowledge or consent.

But the only way they could "ultimately prevail" would be if it were beyond dispute that Teleah did not successfully transition to her father.

Rich issued a statement on behalf of the Freis on Monday that said they had decided not to pursue the appeal of the contested adoption "after considerable thought and reflection under heart-wrenching circumstances."

"The Freis are committed to working with Mr. Achane to assist the child in making a successful transition," the statement said. "Because the Freis love the child deeply and want her to succeed in life, they are willing to put her needs before their own hopes and desires and would rather drop the appeal than risk the child suffering potential psychological and emotional consequences resulting from her either not making a successful transition or transitioning to caregivers multiple times in this critical stage of her development."

Achane, 31, and his then-wife Tira Bland were living in Texas when she conceived Teleah, who was due in mid-March 2011. Achane, an Army drill sergeant, received a job transfer to South Carolina that winter and left Texas in mid-January to set up a home. Ten days later, Bland decided to place their baby for adoption and traveled to Utah to give birth. She claimed her husband had abandoned her and had no interest in their child.

The Adoption Center of Choice placed the baby, born on March 1, 2011, with the Freis. Achane was initially unable to reach his wife and did not learn what had happened until June 2011. He immediately contacted the agency and demanded the return of his daughter, which was refused. In November, McDade ruled Achane?s parental rights had been violated, dismissed the adoption and ordered the child?s return to her father. At that point, the Freis appealed.

"We are extremely pleased that the Freis? have decided to drop their appeal to the Utah Supreme Court and to allow Teleah and her father an opportunity to move on with their lives together as they should have been allowed to do almost two years ago," said attorney Mark Wiser, who with his son Scott represented Terry Achane. "Legally speaking, it is probably a smart decision on their part to not allow the Supreme Court to rule on this case as it would have provided a very bad legal precedent that might have forced the Utah adoption industry to clean up their act of going behind fathers? backs to terminate their parental rights. This case was so important because it placed the focus on allowing parents to care for their children and not having others deny them their fundamental right to parent."

story continues below

brooke@sltrib.com

Twitter: @Brooke4Trib

Copyright 2013 The Salt Lake Tribune. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/news/55811476-78/achane-adoption-freis-child.html.csp

Monday, February 11, 2013

Economy to be Obama's focus in State of the Union

President Barack Obama gestures speaks during an Armed Forces Farewell Ceremony to honor outgoing Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, Friday, Feb. 8, 2013, at Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall in Arlington, Va. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

President Barack Obama gestures speaks during an Armed Forces Farewell Ceremony to honor outgoing Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, Friday, Feb. 8, 2013, at Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall in Arlington, Va. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

FILE ? In this Jan. 24, 2012, file photo President Barack Obama delivers his State of the Union address on Capitol Hill in Washington. Facing a nation still burdened by high unemployment, Obama will center his upcoming Feb. 12, 2013, State of the Union address on boosting job creation and economic growth, underscoring the degree to which the shaky economy threatens his ability to pursue other second-term priorities, including immigration reform and climate change. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File)

FILE ? In this Jan. 24, 2012, file photo President Barack Obama reaches out to shake hands after giving his State of the Union address on Capitol Hill in Washington. Obama will center his upcoming Feb. 12, 2013, State of the Union address on boosting job creation and economic growth, underscoring the degree to which the shaky economy threatens his ability to pursue other second-term priorities, including immigration reform and climate change. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File)

FILE ? In this Jan. 24, 2012, file photo President Barack Obama delivers his State of the Union address on Capitol Hill in Washington. Obama will center his upcoming Feb. 12, 2013, State of the Union address on boosting job creation and economic growth, underscoring the degree to which the shaky economy threatens his ability to pursue other second-term priorities, including immigration reform and climate change. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

(AP) ? President Barack Obama will focus his State of the Union address on boosting job creation and economic growth at a time of high unemployment, underscoring the degree to which the economy could threaten his ability to pursue second-term priorities such as gun control, immigration policy and climate change.

Obama also may use Tuesday's prime-time address before a joint session of Congress to announce the next steps for concluding the U.S.-led war in Afghanistan by the end of 2014.

Obama's State of the Union marks his second high-profile speech to the nation in about three weeks, after his inaugural address Jan. 21 that opened his second term. White House aides see the two speeches as complementary, with Tuesday's address aimed at providing specifics to back up some of the Inauguration Day's lofty liberal rhetoric.

The president previewed the address during a meeting Thursday with House Democrats and said he would speak "about making sure that we're focused on job creation here in the United States of America." Obama said he would try to accomplish that by calling for improvements in education, boosting clean energy production, and reducing the deficit in ways that don't burden the middle class, the poor or the elderly.

While those priorities may be cheered by some Democrats, they're certain to be met with skepticism or outright opposition from many congressional Republicans, especially in the GOP-controlled House. The parties are at odds over ways to reduce the deficit. Republicans favor spending cuts; Obama prefers a combination of spending cuts and increasing tax revenue.

The president said he would address taxes and looming across-the-board budget cuts, known as the sequester, in the speech. The White House and Congress have pushed back the automatic cuts once, and Obama wants to do it again in order to create an opening for a larger deficit reduction deal.

"I am prepared, eager and anxious to do a big deal, a big package that ends this governance by crisis where every two weeks or every two months or every six months we are threatening this hard-won recovery," he said last week.

The economy has rebounded significantly from the depths of the recession and has taken a back seat for Obama since he won re-election in November. He's instead focused on campaigns to overhaul the nation's patchwork immigration laws and enact stricter gun control measures following the massacre of 20 schoolchildren in Newtown, Conn., in December.

The president also raised expectations for action this year on climate change after devoting a significant amount of time to the issue in his address at the inauguration.

But the unemployment rate is persistently high at 7.9 percent, economic growth slowed last quarter and consumer confidence is falling, so the economy could upend Obama's plans to pursue a broader domestic agenda in his final four years in office.

Tony Fratto, who worked in the White House during President George W. Bush's second term, said Obama has to show the public that he's still focused on the economy before he can get their full support for his other proposals.

"We're not in a position where he can blame anybody else for the economy now," Fratto said, "Now it's his economy."

Obama is expected to use his address to press lawmakers to back his immigration overhaul, which includes a pathway to citizenship for 11 million illegal immigrants, and his gun control proposals, including universal background checks and a ban on assault weapons.

Voting rights groups expect the president to call for changes that would make it easier for people to vote.

"I think it's important to be able to do more than one thing at a time," said David Axelrod, who served as senior adviser in the White House and Obama's re-election campaign. "But the economy is an ongoing and significant challenge that you have to keep working on."

While the centerpiece of Obama's address is expected to be his domestic agenda, the president sees a chance to outline the next steps in bringing the protracted war in Afghanistan to an end. He's facing two pressing decisions: the size and scope of the U.S. military presence in Afghanistan after the war formally ends late next year, and the next phase of the troop drawdown this year.

More than 60,000 U.S. troops are in Afghanistan.

The president could update the public on cuts to the number of U.S. nuclear weapons, a priority for his administration. Vice President Joe Biden recently told a security conference in Germany that Obama probably would use the State of the Union to discuss "advancing a comprehensive nuclear agenda to strengthen the nonproliferation regime, reduce global stockpiles and secure nuclear materials."

White House allies are nudging Obama's team to move forward on a plan to expand education for children before they enter kindergarten. They are reminding Obama's political aides that female voters gave the president a second term, serving up a 10-point gender gap.

Obama carried 55 percent of female voters, many of whom are looking to the White House for their reward. While groups such as Latinos and gays have seen policy initiatives since Election Day, women's groups have not received the same kinds of rollouts.

Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, a rising Republican star and potential 2016 presidential candidate, will deliver the GOP response following Obama's address to Congress.

The president will follow up his speech with trips across the country to promote his calls for job creation. Stops are planned Wednesday in Asheville, N.C., and Thursday in Atlanta.

Obama's speechwriters started working on the speech shortly after the Nov. 6 election. The process is being led for the first time by Cody Keenan, who is taking over as the president's chief speechwriter.

___

Associated Press writers Philip Elliott, Robert Burns and Josh Lederman contributed to this report.

___

Follow Julie Pace at http://twitter.com/jpaceDC

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-02-09-US-State-of-Union/id-86c78dab76b847d483a6bc6626137ecf

BNZ YouMoney Online Revamp Targets Digital Native... | Stuff.co.nz

BNZ is targeting the increasingly valuable youth demographic of "digital natives" with a major overhaul of its internet banking offering.

The bank launched a new paid product this morning called 'YouMoney'.

Users can open or close as many accounts as they want, which appear on screen as customisable icons in a layout similar to smartphone apps.

Money can be dragged and dropped between the 'buckets', with the ability to set and monitor savings goals, make automatic transfers and graph spending.

The different accounts and saved payees can also be customised using stock photos or uploaded images as icons.

"Internet banking services were designed back in 1999, and they haven't really changed much," said BNZ's online strategy and business development manager Mike Byrne.

The new format was developed in conjunction with a focus group of customers in the 18-29 years target range.

Customers were asked to draw their money on a piece of paper. After a few "awkward silences" and "varying levels of artistic merit", Byrne said they all drew much the same thing.

That was the concept of pots of money, or compartments, each labelled with an individual purpose and linked by the flow of money between them.

The YouMoney product charges a flat fee of $5 a month which covers all transactions except withdrawing cash from another bank's ATM. The fee is waived for eligible tertiary students, apprentices and graduates, and is broadly in line with competitors.

Savings earn 3 per cent interest, also roughly in line with other lenders.

The bank said YouMoney will also be rolled out across smartphone and iPad apps in the near future.

- ? Fairfax NZ News

Source: http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/money/8292666/BNZ-online-revamp-chases-youth-market

Chuck Hagel's Confirmation Vote Is Set, No Matter What Lindsey Graham Says

Despite continuing objections from Republican holdouts, the Senate Armed Services Committee?will hold a panel discussion?and vote on Chuck Hagel's nomination to become the next Defense Secretary on Tuesday afternoon, Sen. Carl Levin announced today. If confirmed, the vote will go to the Senate later this week.

RELATED: The Truth About the Cinematic New Chuck Hagel Attack Ads

The committee was expected to vote on Hagel and bring his nomination to Senate last week, but objections from committee members Lindsey Graham and Jeff Sessions over Hagel's controversial comments persuaded Levin to delay the vote. We already know that Hagel will be confirmed if the vote makes it to the Senate floor, but it will be interesting to see if a tight vote in the initial round affects the larger confirmation decision. On Meet the Press Sunday,?Graham threatened to hold up the confirmation even further unless President Obama and his administration answer more questions about the Benghazi consulate attack ? though it remained unclear how, exactly, he would hold it up now that Levin has scheduled a vote.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/chuck-hagels-confirmation-vote-set-no-matter-lindsey-170947113.html

Sunday, February 10, 2013

Skin-Care Basics for Your New Baby - Health News and Views ...

curious infant Skin Care Basics for Your New Baby

SATURDAY, Feb. 9 (HealthDay News) ? Bathing a baby and caring for the newborn?s skin can intimidate new parents, an expert says.

Newborns are small, vulnerable and slippery when wet, and finding products marketed for their delicate skin can be a challenge, too, said Dr. Dawn Davis, a pediatric dermatologist at the Mayo Clinic Children?s Center in Rochester, Minn.

Writing in the January issue of the International Journal of Dermatology, Davis offered some advice for making bath time an enjoyable experience and for keeping a newborn?s skin clean and healthy.

Newborns are ready for their first bath about six hours after birth. A daily bath for a newborn is not recommended; a bath every other day is sufficient to keep their skin clean. When it is not a bath day, it?s safe to gently wipe the newborn?s face and skin with a damp washcloth. It?s also recommended to wipe the exterior of each eyelid from the inside to the outside corner, Davis said in a Mayo news release.

When giving a bath, it?s best to immerse a newborn?s entire body into a tub of water, excluding the head and neck. This helps them retain their heat during the bath. Be sure to support the baby while immersed and only a few inches of warm water is necessary for the bath, Davis advised. To prevent scalding, set the water heater thermostat to below 120 degrees Fahrenheit.

Newborn skin is susceptible to irritation and infection, so washing newborns with plain water is a good idea. If you do use products, select mild, neutral-pH cleansers without dyes or fragrances. Use products sparingly and rinse them off completely.

Change diapers every two to four hours or after a baby has soiled them. It?s best to use only tap water and soft cloths to clean this area, Davis said. If baby wipes are the only option, use hypoallergenic wipes without lanolin or alcohol. Periodically air-drying the area is advisable.

If a newborn develops diaper rash, use zinc oxide, a paste with neutral pH that provides a barrier between the baby?s skin and the acidic products of urine and stool. If the zinc oxide doesn?t clear up the rash, the newborn should be seen by a health care provider, Davis said.

More information

The American Academy of Pediatrics has more about baby bathing and skin care.

HEALTHDAY Web XSmall Skin Care Basics for Your New Baby

Source: http://news.health.com/2013/02/09/skin-care-basics-for-your-new-baby/

No one fix to slow hospital readmission epidemic

WASHINGTON (AP) ? More than 1 million Americans wind up back in the hospital only weeks after they left for reasons that could have been prevented ? a revolving door that for years has seemed impossible to slow.

Now Medicare has begun punishing hospitals with hefty fines if they have too many readmissions, and a top official says signs of improvement are beginning to emerge.

"We're at a very promising moment," Medicare deputy administrator Jonathan Blum told The Associated Press.

Nearly 1 in 5 Medicare patients is hospitalized again within a month of going home, and many of those return trips could have been avoided. But readmissions can happen at any age, not just with the over-65 crowd who are counted most closely.

Where you live makes a difference, according to new research that shows how much room for improvement there really is. In parts of Utah, your chances of being rehospitalized are much lower than in areas of New York or New Jersey, says a report being released this week from the Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care.

The AP teamed with the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation to explore, through the eyes of patients, the myriad roadblocks to recovery that make it so difficult to trim unneeded readmissions.

The hurdles start as patients walk out the door.

"Scared to go home," is what Eric Davis, 51, remembers most as he left a Washington hospital, newly diagnosed with a dangerous lung disease. His instructions: stop smoking. He didn't know how to use his inhaler or if it was safe to exercise, until a second hospitalization weeks later.

There is no single solution. But what's clear is that hospitals will have to reach well outside their own walls if they're to make a dent in readmissions.

Otherwise a slew of at-home difficulties ? confusion about what pills to take, no ride to the drugstore to fill prescriptions, not being able to get a post-hospital check-up in time to spot complications ? will keep sending people back.

"This is a team sport," says readmissions expert Dr. Eric Coleman of the University of Colorado in Denver. It requires "true community-wide engagement."

Pushed by those Medicare penalties, hospitals are getting the message.

"It's made hospitals go, 'Oh my gosh, just because they're outside my door doesn't mean I'm done,'" said nurse practitioner Jayne Mitchell of Oregon Health & Science University, who heads a new program to reduce readmissions of patients with heart failure.

In a pilot test, her hospital is sending special telemedicine monitors home with certain high-risk patients so that nurses can make a quick daily check of how these patients are faring in that first critical month.

Too often, families don't realize that many readmissions can be prevented.

In Fort Washington, Md., Reggie Stokes started asking questions after his 84-year-old stepmother was hospitalized four times in a row, for transfusions to treat a rare blood disorder. He found a specialist in another city who said a bigger dose of a common medication is all she needs.

The hospital "could have helped her and saved money" by doing that legwork, Stokes said. His advice: "You have got to go out and do research for yourself."

That's hard when you're feeling ill, said Lincoln Carter, 50, of New York, who didn't think his pneumonia was under control when the hospital discharged him.

But, Carter said, "I didn't even really know the questions to ask." Nor could he get to his regular doctor's office. When "you can't breathe, the last thing you want to do is sit on the subway." A few days later, he was back in the hospital.

Patients don't have to be powerless, and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation this week begins an effort called "Care About Your Care," which offers consumers tips to guard against unnecessary readmissions.

"Everyone has to understand their role in improving the quality of care, including families," said Dr. Risa Lavizzo-Mourey, the foundation's president. "This could be a time when we turn the corner."

___

Rehospitalizations are miserable for patients, and a huge cost ? more than $17 billion a year in avoidable Medicare bills alone ? for a nation struggling with the price of health care.

Make no mistake, not all readmissions are preventable. But many are, if patients are given the right information and outpatient support.

The new Dartmouth Atlas evaluated Medicare records for 2008 to 2010, the latest publicly available data, to check progress just before Medicare cracked down. In October, the government began fining more than 2,000 hospitals where too many patients with heart failure, pneumonia or a heart attack had to be readmitted in recent years.

"Change is hard and comes slowly," said Dartmouth's Dr. David Goodman, who led the work.

Of seniors hospitalized for nonsurgical reasons, 15.9 percent were readmitted within a month in 2010, barely budging from 16.2 percent in 2008. Surgery readmissions aren't quite as frequent ? 12.4 percent in 2010, compared with 12.7 percent in 2008. That's probably because the surgeon tends to provide some follow-up care.

Medicare's Blum told the AP that the government is closely tracking more recent, unpublished claims data that show readmissions are starting to drop. He wouldn't say by how much or whether that means fewer hospitals will face penalties next year when the maximum fines are scheduled to rise.

But by combining the penalties with other programs aimed at improving these transitions in care, "we have now changed the conversation," Blum said. "Two years ago, the response was, 'This is impossible.' Now it's, 'OK, let's figure out what works.'"

Hence interest in the geographic variation.

Some 18 percent of nonsurgical patients, the highest rate, are readmitted within a month in the New York City borough of the Bronx. Rates are nearly that high in Detroit, Lexington, Ky., and Worcester, Mass.

Yet the readmission rate in Ogden, Utah, is just 11.4 percent. Half a dozen other areas ? including Salt Lake City, Muskegon, Mich., and Bloomington, Ill. ? keep those rates below 13 percent.

For surgical patients, Bend, Ore., gets readmissions down to 7.6 percent.

Some studies suggest part of the variation is because certain hospitals care for sicker or poorer patients, especially in big cities. Yet Minneapolis, for example, has readmission rates just below the national average. Goodman said whether local doctors' stress outpatient care over hospitalization, and how many hospital beds an area has play big roles, too.

___

Readmissions don't always happen because the original ailment gets worse. It could be a new problem ? the pneumonia patient who's still weak and falls, breaking a hip.

Yale University researchers recently reported in the Journal of the American Medical Association that people face a period of overall vulnerability to illness right after a hospitalization, because of weakness, sleep deprivation, loss of appetite and side effects of new medications.

But ask returning patients what went wrong, and Coleman, the readmissions expert, said nonmedical challenges top the list.

New York's Montefiore Medical Center now sends uninsured patients home with two weeks' worth of medication so they don't have to hunt an affordable place to fill a prescription right away, said Dr. Ricardo Bello, a cardiac surgeon.

In the nation's capital, Dr. Kim Bullock recalled her frustration with a diabetic hospitalized nine times in one year in part because of transportation. He felt too lousy to ride two buses and the subway to the nearest Medicaid clinic for regular care.

"Start from their reality," said Bullock, an emergency room doctor and family physician. Without the right community connections, "they will just stumble along."

Another hurdle: The Dartmouth study found fewer than half of patients saw a primary care doctor within two weeks of leaving the hospital.

Barbara McCoy tried. A New York hospital lowered the 44-year-old diabetic's dangerously high blood sugar and told her to call her own doctor immediately about how to prevent a recurrence. But she couldn't get an appointment until the following month. A week later, McCoy's blood sugar soared again, and she raced back to the emergency room.

This time, the hospital pulled out the stops during a weeklong stay. A nutritionist offered intense diet advice. An endocrinologist changed her medications. She was taught how to safely adjust her own insulin.

"But they waited 'til it spiked again to do these things," McCoy said. "Why couldn't they have done all that the first time? I don't understand."

___

Online:

Care About Your Care: http://www.careaboutyourcare.org

Care Transitions: http://www.caretransitions.org

Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care: http://www.dartmouthatlas.org

EDITOR'S NOTE _ Aging America is a joint AP-APME project examining the aging of the baby boomers and the impact of that so-called silver tsunami on society.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/no-one-fix-slow-hospital-readmission-epidemic-132658351.html

WriteRoom (for Mac)


Starting up a high-end word-processor like Office 365's?Microsoft Word and Apple's Pages is like stepping into a candy store. On display for you to enjoy are toolbars, ribbons, and dialogs offering dozens of tasty-looking formatting features that let you choose color-coordinated fonts for headings and text, set custom page margins and line spacing, create multiple columns, draw pictures, and other high-tech delights. In contrast, when you start up WriteRoom ($9.95, direct), the pioneering minimal word-processor for OS X, you get a window and nothing else. Pages and Word give you a lot more.

The whole point of WriteRoom is that it gives you less. If you're a writer who wants to get well-written text on the page, and you don't want to be distracted by options that have nothing to do with the actual words you're writing, then less is more. The fewer visible options there are on screen, the more you can concentrate on your writing. WriteRoom makes concentrating easier than any other app I've tried.

Unlickable
When WriteRoom first arrived a few years ago, it was a surprise success in the Mac market. All other Mac apps were designed so that (as Steve Jobs said about the buttons in OS X) they looked so good "you'll want to lick them." WriteRoom, in contrast, made the Mac screen look like the text-only green-screen monochrome monitor that your parents bought for their PC in 1987. Compared to the programs that ran in that old green PC screen, WriteRoom has its many clever options hidden away. By default the latest version looks more like a piece of typing paper than a green-screen monitor, but it's still the least distracting writing environment I've used on a modern computer.

In fact, I'm writing this review in WriteRoom, concentrating on typewriter-style text that appears on a plain gray full-screen background, and it's a calming, Zen-like experience unlike anything else on a modern computer. I tested WriteRoom on a Mac; a separate version, which I haven't tried, is available for iOS devices.

Writing in WriteRoom
By default, WriteRoom creates files either in a bare window with a gray background using a monospaced (typewriter-style) font. A keystroke lets you switch between windowed and full-screen mode. The windowed mode displays a current word-count in the title bar. Full-screen displays a word count unobtrusively in the lower-left corner, but (again by default) hides the count while you're typing to avoid distraction.

You can customize the word count feature so that it displays any combination of line count, word count, character count, and the amount of time you've spent working on a document?or you can hide all these things. Other options let you turn on live spell-checking, grammar-correcting, and autocorrect. An option that's useful if you need to keep track of the time you spent on any writing job is one that keeps a spreadsheet that records the editing time of each writing session.

You can change the whole appearance of the screen by switching among what WriteRoom calls Themes. Some of these are supplied with the app, others downloadable from the vendor's site. Available themes include versions of the old green-screen (my favorite) and some silly themes that make the screen look like an ancient Commodore 128 or a piece of old linen. You can modify a theme merely by choosing a different screen font or by opening a customization menu. If you're willing to find or create the needed sound files, you can even assign sounds that will play when you type a letter, delete something, or press Enter.

By default, WriteRoom creates plain text files?no italics, no bold, no headlines, just words, saved in the standard .TXT format that any text-based application can open. If you want to apply bold, or italic, or any other formatting, you can open the .TXT file in another word processor, or you can use WriteRoom's option to convert your file to Rich-Text Format (RTF), which is readable by all word processors. In its RTF mode, WriteRoom can create tables and bulleted or numbered lists.

One minor annoyance is that if you want to convert an existing document from plain text to RTF format, WriteRoom creates a completely new, untitled RTF file containing the text of your original .TXT file and you have to save the new RTF file with a new name. I would have preferred this feature to work like Apple's TextEdit, which replaces the TXT file with an RTF file so you don't end up with two more separate documents as you do with WriteRoom (and, to be fair, with all other word-processing apps).

WriteRoom relies on the built-in powers of OS X to handle document formats. You can use WriteRoom to open Microsoft Word and other standard document files. An imported Word file will preserve basic formatting, and WriteRoom will edit it in RTF mode. Features like tables and lists are preserved, but not multiple columns. When I want to concentrate on the content of a Microsoft Word file, I sometimes open in it WriteRoom to get the job done.

Worth Trying
With its barebones feature set, WriteRoom isn't for everyone, but it's an app that's worth trying by every writer?and everyone in school or business whose writing would improve in a low-distraction environment. WriteRoom deserves its name: it provides room for writing that you can't find anywhere else.

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