Monday, October 31, 2011

HBT: Rangers have pieces coming back

It won?t make them feel much better tonight and replacing the team?s ace for a second straight offseason would be a tall order, but Rangers fans should take some solace in the fact that C.J. Wilson is their only significant free agent.

Wilson, who earned $7 million in his final year of arbitration, figures to be the second-most sought after starting pitcher on the market behind CC Sabathia. He struggled in the postseason again, but Wilson threw 223 innings with a 2.94 ERA and 206 strikeouts in the regular season and is a relatively young free agent at age 30.

Replacing him would obviously be tough, but the Rangers? only other free agent regulars are 40-year-old middle reliever Darren Oliver and third-stringer catcher Matt Treanor. Everyone else is either under contract or arbitration eligible, although they may look to make some moves involving, say, Yorvit Torrealba and Koji Uehara. Or maybe shop Michael Young and the $32 million remaining on his deal around the league again.

Regardless of what happens with Wilson this Rangers team is without question set up to make another deep run next season. Nolan Ryan somehow gets all the credit, but the team?s actual general manager, Jon Daniels, has done a very good job building a deep, talented roster. It?ll be interesting to see how strongly their effort is to re-sign Wilson and how tempted they?ll be to shake things up for the sake of shaking things up.

Source: http://hardballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/10/29/c-j-wilson-is-the-rangers-only-significant-free-agent/related/

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Sunday, October 30, 2011

Health Tip: Child Bites Can Lead to Infection (HealthDay)

(HealthDay News) -- Human bites, such as when an angry child bites another person, carry a risk of infection.

The American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons says warning signs of infection from a human bite include:

  • Heat surrounding the bite wound.
  • Swelling around the injury site.
  • Pain on or near the bite wound.
  • A bite wound that discharges pus.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/parenting/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/hsn/20111028/hl_hsn/healthtipchildbitescanleadtoinfection

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AUO's flexible e-paper to take on Stretch Armstrong in battle of the bendiest

There's nothing better than unplugging on a Sunday afternoon with a newspaper and a cup of Joe, which is exactly what AU Optronics hopes to facilitate with its 6-inch Rollable Organic TFT E-paper. We've heard rumblings about the foldable photovoltaic device before, but the company has finally delivered a working prototype that is completely solar powered and elastic enough to make even Gumby jealous. Made of organic TFTs, the SVGA e-paper has an amorphous silicon PV battery, which turns natural or indoor light into solar energy without requiring a power plug. The only downside? Unlike the dead tree variety, wrapping presents in this stuff is a no-go. Check out the extended PR after the break.

Continue reading AUO's flexible e-paper to take on Stretch Armstrong in battle of the bendiest

AUO's flexible e-paper to take on Stretch Armstrong in battle of the bendiest originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 28 Oct 2011 09:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/10/28/auos-flexible-e-paper-to-take-on-stretch-armstrong-in-battle-of/

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Saturday, October 29, 2011

'Moneyball' strains credibility, La Russa says

Cards manager says impact of advanced stats overblown

Image: La RussaGetty Images

Cardinals manager Tony La Russa isn't a big fan of "Moneyball." "(The movie) strains the credibility a bit,'' he says.

OPINION

By Tony DeMarco

NBCSports.com contributor

updated 7:31 p.m. ET Oct. 27, 2011

Tony DeMarco

ST. LOUIS - Not that he ever was a fan of the book or the concepts it preached, but Cardinals manager Tony La Russa spent the rainout night seeing the movie 'Moneyball'.

"Good acting,'' he said.

Otherwise, he's not a big fan:

"(The movie) strains the credibility a bit,'' La Russa said. "(The A's) won 20 in a row, qualify for the playoffs and go two up on the Yankees, and there wasn't anything in the movie except a brief (scene) about Miguel (Tejada) and Eric (Chavez), or the three starters (Mark Mulder, Tim Hudson, Barry Zito) or Billy Koch.

"That club was carried by those guys, who were signed and developed the old-fashioned way. But the movie was about a couple of trades and moving Scott (Hatteberg) to first (base). That part wasn't enjoyable because it's a nice story, but it is not accurate enough.''

And while the sabermetrics crowd may cringe, La Russa is sticking to his old-school philosophies when it comes to how the game should be played on the field.

"A lot of those (new) stats and tools, they're helpful when you prepare,'' La Russa said. "But they eliminate to a great degree the human element, which is a big part of every day that you play.

"Some of those stats about you don't bunt ? let me tell you something, (against) some of these (pitchers), you try to get three hits, and you're never going to score. And the better teams you play ? like in the playoffs ? you'd better find a way to advance the runner.

"Handling the bullpen, I can remember that the concept that there wasn't anything special about the ninth-inning pitcher. Well, the ninth is different. I don't know of any team now who hasn't gone back to the understanding that the ninth is different. (You have) your closer, and then you build around that.

"My opinion is that a lot of people ? not just fans, but owners ? gave (the Moneyball principles) way too much credibility as far as how you scout, how you develop, and then how you end up playing in the big leagues. It's a nice tool, but that's all it is. It's not as important as the human characteristic you have to think about all the time.''

? 2011 NBC Sports.com? Reprints

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Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/45069500/ns/sports-baseball/

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Friday, October 28, 2011

Higgins to win Irish presidency as rival concedes (AP)

DUBLIN ? Human rights activist and poet Michael D. Higgins headed for victory Friday in Ireland's presidential election as the Irish picked a left-wing idealist to be the new face of a debt-struck nation.

Higgins' main challenger, business guru and reality TV celebrity Sean Gallagher, conceded defeat in a telephone call to Higgins. Gallagher said he expected Higgins would be, as his own campaign slogan promised, "a president to be proud of."

Higgins, 70, was mobbed by well-wishers and journalists as he arrived at the Dublin Castle count center. Minutes later, electoral officials announced he had received 39.6 percent of all first-preference votes to take an unassailable lead atop the field of seven candidates.

"I'm very glad that it was so decisive. It will enable me to be a president for all of the people," Higgins said of his commanding share of votes from Thursday's election.

Final results are expected Saturday because of Ireland's complex voting system, which permits voters to rank candidates in order of preference. Several rounds of counting are required to transfer the votes of the least popular candidates to those still in contention. Analysts say this process will inevitably put Higgins above the 50 percent threshold needed to succeed Mary McAleese as Ireland's ceremonial head of state.

Gallagher received 28.5 percent of first-preference votes. Former Irish Republican Army commander Martin McGuinness came third with 13.7 percent. Gay Mitchell of the main government party, Fine Gael, came fourth with 6.4 percent, while gay rights activist David Norris finished with 6.2 percent.

"I'm very happy to be an Irishman under the presidency of Michael D. Higgins," said Norris, who was the campaign's initial leader but saw his chances ruined by revelations that he had written letters to Israel seeking clemency for a former partner who had been convicted of raping a 15-year-old Palestinian boy.

Norris lauded Higgins as a political maverick and social liberal who would "speak out on behalf of the marginalized."

Higgins is widely known in Ireland simply as "Michael D," befitting his status as one of the country's most liked and instantly recognized politicians. He stands just 5 foot 4, his elfin features complimented with a much-parodied high voice infused with his rural County Clare roots.

Higgins, a former University College Galway lecturer in sociology and politics, is credited as an intellectual heavyweight of Irish politics with three published collections of poetry to his credit and a four-decade record of promoting homegrown arts, literature, film and the native Gaelic language. Unlike other English-only candidates and most of the nation, Higgins spoke the native Irish tongue fluently on the campaign trail.

He also has traveled the world defending left-wing human rights cases. He is one of Ireland's most ardent critics of U.S. foreign policy, particularly in Central America, Iraq and Afghanistan, and of Israel's policies versus the Palestinians.

His socialism came to the fore on the campaign trail as he condemned the get-rich-quick excesses of Ireland's lost Celtic Tiger boom economy, arguing its narcissism and greed left the country mired in debt and unemployment.

Gallagher, an entrepreneur and the star judge on a business-talent TV competition called "Dragon's Den," last week seemed on course to an unlikely victory as he pledged to lead Ireland back to prosperity.

He had a 15-point lead in opinion polls versus Higgins until Monday ? when his image imploded during the campaign's last live TV debate.

McGuinness presented evidence that Gallagher had served as a "bagman," a collector of undocumented cash donations, from businessmen to Fianna Fail. Voters in February expelled Fianna Fail from office after the long-dominant party was blamed for leading Ireland to the brink of bankruptcy and an international bailout.

Gallagher, who ran as an independent and downplayed his Fianna Fail background, stumbled as he tried to explain the circumstances of one donation he allegedly collected from a border fuel smuggler. Analysts said that admission linked Gallagher fatally in voters' minds to Fianna Fail's poor ethical record.

Higgins' campaign team seized on their candidate's own reputation for honesty and integrity as a point of contrast. Full-page newspaper ads on election day claimed that the "D" in Higgins' name stood for democracy and decency. It actually stands for Daniel.

A survey published Friday by Irish pollsters RedC said it telephoned 1,100 citizens Thursday after they had cast their ballots and detected a massive flight from Gallagher in the campaign's dying days.

About 38 percent said they had decided whom to support only following that TV debate. Some 28 percent said they had switched support in the past week ? and 58 percent of those said they had dumped Gallagher in favor of Higgins.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111028/ap_on_re_eu/eu_ireland_presidential_election

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World stocks up on European rescue deal for Greece (AP)

BANGKOK ? World stock markets climbed again Friday, continuing to be buoyed by a European deal aimed at slashing Greece's massive debt and preventing the crisis from engulfing "too big to bailout" countries such as Italy.

Oil prices lingered above $93 per barrel and the dollar gained against the euro but slipped against the yen.

European shares were higher in early trading. Britain's FTSE 100 rose 0.1 percent to 5,720.79. Germany's DAX gained 0.9 percent to 6,394.05 and France's CAC-40 added 0.6 percent at 3,390.09.

But the euphoria began to wear off on Wall Street, which appeared headed for a lower opening. Dow Jones industrial futures fell 0.4 percent to 12,123 and S&P 500 futures were 0.4 percent lower at 1,278.10.

Asian stocks posted a second day of gains on the European news.

Japan's Nikkei 225 index jumped 1.4 percent to close at 9,050.47, its highest close since Sept. 1. Hong Kong's Hang Seng gained 1.7 percent to 20,01924 and South Korea's Kospi rose 0.4 percent to 1,929.48.

Australia's S&P/ASX 200 gained 0.1 percent to 4,353.30 and the Shanghai Composite Index added 1.6 percent to 2,473.41. Benchmarks in Singapore, Taiwan, Indonesia and Thailand were also higher.

After two years of unsuccessful attempts to address the continent's debt problems, European leaders unveiled a deal Thursday aimed at preventing the Greek government's inability to pay its debt from escalating into another financial crisis like the one that followed the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008.

Banks are being asked to take 50 percent losses on the Greek bonds they hold. Europe will also strengthen a financial rescue fund to protect the region's banks that will also be used to insure some potential losses on the debt of weak eurozone economies like Italy, which is considered too big to bail out.

But some analysts cautioned that Europe was still at risk, since mapping out the rescue plan was simple, compared to the complex and costly task of implementing it.

"I think there is euphoria of Europe finally solving its problems. But the question is, how do you finance the financial stability fund? Who is supposed to pay for it? That is left blank," said Francis Lun, a Hong Kong-based analyst.

"For the moment, Greece will not go under. That is all we know. But the commercial banks will take a big hit," Lun said. "That will really kill them."

But renewed confidence in Europe helped fuel a surge on Wall Street that also boosted stocks in Asia, as did signs of stronger U.S. economic growth and corporate earnings.

Japanese steel makers Nippon Steel Corp. rose 3.4 percent and Kobe Steel Ltd. gained 4.7 percent. Heavy equipment maker Komatsu Ltd. jumped 5.6 percent.

South Korean industrial shares also rose. Steel giant POSCO gained 1.6 percent while Hyundai Heavy Industries, the country's leading shipbuilder, gained 0.7 percent.

Chinese property shares continued to climb on speculation that China might relax its inflation-fighting measures that have drained liquidity out of the financial markets. Hong Kong-listed Poly Real Estate Group added 4.4 percent and China Vanke Co. Ltd. jumped 7.3 percent.

The U.S. government reported that the American economy grew at a 2.5 percent annual rate from July through September on stronger consumer spending and business investment. That was nearly double the 1.3 percent growth in the previous quarter.

The Dow Jones industrial average soared 2.9 percent to 12,208.55 ? its largest jump since Aug. 11. The S&P 500 rose 3.7 percent to 1,284.59. The Nasdaq composite leaped up 3.3 percent to 2,738.63.

Benchmark crude for December delivery was down 79 cents at $93.20 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract rose $3.76, or 4.2 percent, to settle at $93.96 in New York on Thursday.

Brent crude was down 33 cents at $111.75 a barrel on the ICE Futures Exchange in London.

In currencies, the euro softened to $1.4178 from $1.4216 late Thursday in New York. The dollar slipped to 75.82 yen from 75.94 yen. The greenback hit a new record low against the yen the previous day, sinking to 75.63 yen at one point.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111028/ap_on_bi_ge/world_markets

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Thursday, October 27, 2011

Liviu Ciulei Dead: Romanian Film, Theater Director Was 88

BUCHAREST, Romania ? Liviu Ciulei, a Romanian film and theater director whose career spanned 50 years and included a top award at the Cannes Film Festival, has died. He was 88.

Ciulei ? who also served as the artistic director of the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis and taught at universities in New York ? died on Monday night at a hospital in Munich, the German city where he lived, said Romanian actor Ion Caramitru.

"An era has died! A genius had died!" said Caramitru, who heads Romania's UNITER theater union. "Without Liviu Ciulei, there would be no Romanian theater."

No cause of death was given.

As an actor, director and set designer, Ciulei was the most influential figure of Romanian theater and film in a generation. He won the Palme d'Or award at Cannes in 1965 for the film "The Forest of the Hanged," and he made more than 20 movies, both as an actor and a director.

Romanian President Traian Basescu paid homage to Ciulei on Tuesday, saying he belonged to an "elite generation" that created a "valuable and original" drama school, both in Romania and abroad. He called Ciulei's artistic vision "classic and modern, extremely clear and contemporary."

Ciulei studied theater and architecture in Bucharest and began his acting career in 1946 as the character Puck in "A Midsummer Night's Dream." He began to direct in 1957.

For 10 years he was artistic director at Bucharest's prestigious Bulandra Theater.

From 1980 to 1985, he held the same position at the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis. In 1982, the theater received a Tony Award for its outstanding contribution to the American Theater. Ciulei drew national and international attention to the theater and its productions, the organization says on its website.

After that, Ciulei taught at Columbia University and New York University.

He is survived by his son, Thomas Ciulei, and wife, Helga Reiter-Ciulei.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/10/25/liviu-ciulei-dead_n_1030643.html

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Total Recall: Antonio Banderas' Best Movies

We count down the best-reviewed work of the Puss in Boots star.

Antonio Banderas

To a lot of American filmgoers, Antonio Banderas is the suave Latin heartthrob who came out of nowhere in the 1990s to star in some hits (Desperado, Evita, The Mask of Zorro) and some big misses (Assassins, Never Talk to Strangers, Play It to the Bone). But as film buffs know, Banderas is more than just the guy who co-starred in the worst-reviewed movie of the aughts. He's built up an admirably diverse filmography over the last 30 years, and with two movies -- his reunion with Pedro Almod?var, The Skin I Live In, and this weekend's Shrek spinoff, Puss in Boots -- now playing in theaters, we decided this would be the perfect time to revisit some of the many critical highlights from his career. ?Es tiempo para la Retirada Total!


76%

Frida is absolutely Salma Hayek's showcase, but for her Oscar-nominated turn in the central role of the Frida Kahlo biopic, director Julie Taymor surrounded Hayek with an impressive array of talented supporting players, including Alfred Molina, Edward Norton, Geoffrey Rush, Ashley Judd, and -- as Kahlo's fellow artist David Alfaro Siqueiros -- Antonio Banderas. It all adds up to a film that is, in the words of Susan Stark of the Detroit News, "Passionate, provocative, hilarious, tragic and just dizzyingly beautiful to behold."


77%

A year after making his English-language debut in The Mambo Kings, Banderas took a supporting role in a much more high-profile film: Jonathan Demme's Philadelphia, which used its gaudy pedigree and a marquee cast led by Tom Hanks and Denzel Washington to break box-office taboos surrounding homosexuality, HIV, and AIDS. Hanks earned an Academy Award for his performance, one of two Oscars won by the film, and audiences turned out to the tune of more than $205 million in worldwide grosses. "It's less like a film by Demme than the best of Frank Capra," observed Rita Kempley for the Washington Post. "It is not just canny, corny and blatantly patriotic, but compassionate, compelling and emotionally devastating."


80%

Warner Bros. wanted Ray Liotta for the role -- and even after director Arne Glimcher successfully fought to cast Banderas in his English-language debut, he had to learn his lines phonetically. But 1992's The Mambo Kings ultimately proved to be the international breakthrough Banderas had been working toward for a decade, and for good reason -- his character's tragic tale underscores the film's story of musical passion and brotherly love, and his performance more than held its own with co-star Armand Assante's. "In some ways this story is as old as the movies," admitted Roger Ebert, "but The Mambo Kings is so filled with energy, passion and heedless vitality that it seems new, anyway."


82%

By the 1990s, the masked bandit Zorro had appeared in countless books, serials, TV shows, and more than a dozen feature-length films -- but it wasn't until Antonio Banderas signed on for The Mask of Zorro that the character was actually portrayed by a Spanish actor. (And yes, even then, he took over for the original Zorro -- played in the film by Anthony Hopkins.) Rebooting such a venerable (some would say "tired") character might have seemed like a recipe for disaster, but Mask swashbuckled its way to a $250 million worldwide gross and reaped praise from critics like the BBC's Almar Haflidason, who enthused, "There are no clever ground-breaking effects, just lashings of good clean fun with desperately devilish baddies, and good guys so fantastic, so clever and witty, that they make you want to weep with pleasure."


89%

Banderas and Pedro Almod?var reunited for their fourth film in 1988, and the result proved an international breakthrough for both men. While it didn't inspire quite as much critical adoration as their earlier outings, Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown still offered plenty of vintage Almod?var, starting with a plot that revolves around tainted gazpacho, Shiite terrorists, and the all-consuming love between an actress (Carmen Maura) and her on-again, off-again boyfriend (Fernando Guill?n). "Women on the Verge is even wackier than [Almodovar's] other films," observed Chris Hicks of the Deseret News. "It also just happens to be more universal."

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1923823/news/1923823/

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Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Meg Wolff: A Super-Suick, Plant-Based Meal: Good & Plenty Polenta (Wheat-, Gluten- & Oil-Free) (Huffington post)

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, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/152380117?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Study shows why underrepresented men should be included in binge eating research

Study shows why underrepresented men should be included in binge eating research [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 26-Oct-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Ben Norman
Lifesciencenews@wiley.com
44-012-437-70375
Wiley-Blackwell

Amount of men seeking treatment lower than estimated number of sufferers

Binge eating is a disorder which affects both men and women, yet men remain underrepresented in research. A new study published in the International Journal of Eating Disorders has found that the medical impact of the disorder is just as damaging to men as it is to women, yet research has shown that the number of men seeking treatment is far lower than the estimated number of sufferers.

"Binge eating is closely linked to obesity and excessive weight gain as well as the onset of hypertension, diabetes and psychiatric disorders such as depression," said lead author Dr Ruth R. Striegel from Wesleyan University, Connecticut. "However most of the evidence about the impact of binge eating is based on female samples, as the majority of studies into eating disorders recruit women."

As so few studies have included men there is concern that men may be reluctant to seek treatment, or health care providers may be less likely detect a disorder in a male patient, because eating disorders are widely seen as female problems. Health services report that the number of men who receive treatment for binge eating is well below what would be expected based on estimates of prevalence.

Dr Striegel's team used cross-sectional data from a sample of 21743 men and 24608 women who participated in a health risk self-assessment screening. The team analyzed any differences within the group for obesity, hypertension, dyslipidemia, diabetes, depression and work productivity impairment.

The team found that out the 46351 people questioned 1630 men and 2754 women were found to binge eat, defined as experiencing at last one binge episode in the past month. The impact on clinical and mental health as a result of binge eating was found to be comparable between men and women.

This study also indicated that binge eating has an impact on work productively in both men and women, suggesting the need for employers to recognize binge eating as a damaging health risk behavior alongside stress or depression.

"The underrepresentation of men in binge eating research does not reflect lower levels of impairment in men versus women," concluded Striegel. "Efforts are needed to raise awareness of the clinical implications of binge eating for men so they can seek appropriate screening and treatment."

###



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Study shows why underrepresented men should be included in binge eating research [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 26-Oct-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Ben Norman
Lifesciencenews@wiley.com
44-012-437-70375
Wiley-Blackwell

Amount of men seeking treatment lower than estimated number of sufferers

Binge eating is a disorder which affects both men and women, yet men remain underrepresented in research. A new study published in the International Journal of Eating Disorders has found that the medical impact of the disorder is just as damaging to men as it is to women, yet research has shown that the number of men seeking treatment is far lower than the estimated number of sufferers.

"Binge eating is closely linked to obesity and excessive weight gain as well as the onset of hypertension, diabetes and psychiatric disorders such as depression," said lead author Dr Ruth R. Striegel from Wesleyan University, Connecticut. "However most of the evidence about the impact of binge eating is based on female samples, as the majority of studies into eating disorders recruit women."

As so few studies have included men there is concern that men may be reluctant to seek treatment, or health care providers may be less likely detect a disorder in a male patient, because eating disorders are widely seen as female problems. Health services report that the number of men who receive treatment for binge eating is well below what would be expected based on estimates of prevalence.

Dr Striegel's team used cross-sectional data from a sample of 21743 men and 24608 women who participated in a health risk self-assessment screening. The team analyzed any differences within the group for obesity, hypertension, dyslipidemia, diabetes, depression and work productivity impairment.

The team found that out the 46351 people questioned 1630 men and 2754 women were found to binge eat, defined as experiencing at last one binge episode in the past month. The impact on clinical and mental health as a result of binge eating was found to be comparable between men and women.

This study also indicated that binge eating has an impact on work productively in both men and women, suggesting the need for employers to recognize binge eating as a damaging health risk behavior alongside stress or depression.

"The underrepresentation of men in binge eating research does not reflect lower levels of impairment in men versus women," concluded Striegel. "Efforts are needed to raise awareness of the clinical implications of binge eating for men so they can seek appropriate screening and treatment."

###



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-10/w-ssw102411.php

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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Iranians Upset Over Google Reader Changes

google-reader-logo2Last week, Google announced an impending update?to its neglected online RSS reader, Google Reader. The service is soon getting a cosmetic overhaul and will see its current social features removed in favor of deeper integration with Google+. Although many TechCrunch commenters lamented alongside me about the forthcoming disappearance of our favorite "human curators," when I asked the same question on Google+, the outcome was decidedly different: no one really cares. Except, it appears, Iranians. According to a blog post now making its way around the Web, Google Reader served the Iranian community as a way to get uncensored, unfiltered news outside of government control. And now, that may be over.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/Z2-XX-JAlOI/

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Prosecution rests in Michael Jackson doctor trial (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) ? Prosecutors rested their case against Michael Jackson's doctor on Monday after nearly four weeks of testimony and evidence against the man accused of involuntary manslaughter in the pop star's 2009 death.

The final witness to testify for prosecutors in the trial of Dr. Conrad Murray was Dr. Steven Shafer, who has been a key witness for prosecutors, telling the jury that Murray should never have given Jackson the powerful anesthetic propofol as a sleep aid at the singer's mansion.

Murray has admitted to giving Jackson propofol, the key drug that caused the "Thriller" singer's overdose, but defense attorneys have argued that Jackson gave himself an extra, fatal dose of the drug when Murray was absent.

Murray's attorneys are expected to call their first witness to the stand on Monday. They have told Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor they would like to finish presenting their case on Thursday.

Murray, who has pleaded not guilty to the charge of involuntary manslaughter, faces a maximum of four years in prison if convicted.

(Editing by Bob Tourtellotte and Bill Trott)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111024/en_nm/us_michaeljackson

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Winless Colts sink farther in 62-7 loss to Saints (AP)

NEW ORLEANS ? Curtis Painter didn't look ready for the ball on a botched snap that set up the first of many scores for the New Orleans Saints.

Few of Painter's Indianapolis Colts teammates seemed ready to play, either.

The Colts were no match for Drew Brees and the Saints, giving up as many points as any team since the AFL-NFL merger in 1970 in a 62-7 loss to New Orleans on Sunday night.

"We just didn't play near well enough," Painter said. "We made a few too many mistakes in the beginning, and any time you're playing a team as good as them, they're going to make you pay. We just kind of got off to a rough start and you've got to credit them.

"Obviously, we need to work on some things. We are just going to have to keep working to get it straight."

Painter was only 9 of 17 for 67 yards and had an interception returned 42 yards for a touchdown by Leigh Torrence.

Running back Joseph Addai tried to return from a nagging hamstring injury but lasted only two series. His replacement, Delone Carter, carried 10 times for 89 yards and Indianapolis' long TD, but also fumbled.

For the seventh game this season, Colts star quarterback Peyton Manning was forced to watch because of a neck injury that has sidelined him all season.

As hard as it had to be for Manning to be a spectator in his return to his native New Orleans, it had to be even harder to see his team's mistake-prone performance. These Colts looked more like the bumbling Saints of old that his father, Archie, starred for three decades ago.

The winless Colts (0-7) are now guaranteed to have fewer than 10 victories in a season for the first time in nine years, and at this rate might not win many games at all.

The Colts had three turnovers, including two in the first quarter, and each led to a Saints touchdown.

"Honestly, I don't think we showed up to play," receiver Austin Collie said. "Our mindset could have been a whole lot better."

Drew Brees completed 31 of 35 passes for 325 yards and five touchdowns, and the Saints set a franchise record for points and victory margin.

"I was real proud of how we played, how we handled the week of practice," said Saints coach Sean Payton, standing on crutches after the game because of a broken left leg. "We spent a lot of time during the week just talking about us beginning to play our best football, because we really felt while we were 4-2, we hadn't done that."

Payton had called offensive plays from the sidelines since he took his first head coaching job with New Orleans in 2006, but that changed after he was caught up in a tackle along the sideline during a loss at Tampa Bay last week and was injured. Payton had surgery last Monday and didn't attend a practice until Thursday.

Sitting high up in the Superdome for the game against the Colts, he had to like what he saw down below, where offensive coordinator Pete Carmichael Jr. called plays for the first time.

Brees had two touchdown passes to Marques Colston and one to Darren Sproles in the first quarter. His fourth and fifth touchdown tosses went to second-year tight end Jimmy Graham in the third quarter.

It seemed the Saints (5-2) could do whatever they wanted, also rushing for 236 yards.

Colts safety Antoine Bethea called his unit's performance "embarrassing."

"We just can't do that," he said. "I mean, 62 points against us?"

The Saints' point total tied the most in a game by any team since the AFL merged with the NFL in 1970.

The Saints previous franchise high for points in a game was 51 on three occasions and their largest previous victory margin was 42 over Denver in 1988.

"We had a great game plan. We played with a lot of confidence. Pete did a phenomenal job," Brees said. "It was just our night, one of those games that doesn't come along too often. ... We needed a win like this, especially after the past week and everything we've gone through."

Colston had seven catches for 98 yards.

Brees wasn't intercepted before he was replaced by Chase Daniel late in the third quarter, a move that prevented New Orleans' starting quarterback from extending his NFL record of four straight games with at least 350 yards passing.

Mark Ingram rushed for 91 yards on 18 carries but limped to the locker room early in the fourth quarter with what Payton said was a heel injury, adding that X-rays were negative. Sproles carried 12 times for 88 yards, including a 16-yard touchdown.

The Saints had 557 yards and a team-record 36 first downs.

"That team played better than we did in every area and we just got whooped across the board," Colts coach Jim Caldwell said. "It's one of those things that once you don't do the little things right, there is a lot of bad things that happen to you. Obviously, I have to take responsibility for our team and the way that they played."

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111024/ap_on_sp_fo_ga_su/fbn_colts

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Monday, October 24, 2011

Emiten emergencia para dos municipios de Tabasco por lluvias

Portada ? HOY TE RECOMENDAMOS LEER:

M?xico, 22 Oct. (Notimex).- La Coordinaci?n General de Protecci?n Civil de la Secretar?a de Gobernaci?n emiti? una Declaratoria de Emergencia para los municipios de Huimanguillo y Centro, Tabasco, afectados por las inundaciones provocadas por las lluvias registradas del 14 al 17 de octubre.

En un comunicado, la Secretar?a de Gobernaci?n inform? que con esta acci?n se activan los recursos del Fondo Revolvente del Fondo de Desastres Naturales (Fonden).

Se?al? que a partir de esta declaratoria, solicitada por el gobierno estatal, las autoridades contar?n con recursos para atender las necesidades alimenticias, de abrigo y de salud de la poblaci?n afectada.

Informaci?n relacionada

Source: http://www.elarsenal.net/2011/10/22/emiten-emergencia-para-dos-municipios-de-tabasco-por-lluvias/

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Blaze at NY landmark building hurts 8 firefighters

A fire at a New York City landmark building has injured eight firefighters.

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Dozens of fire trucks and 100 firefighters were on the street near the 40-story Equitable Building in Manhattan on Friday.

The property is listed as a National Historic Landmark because of its significance as the headquarters of "one of the insurance industry's earliest leaders."

The building's website lists the state attorney general's office and the Bank of New York as tenants.

Firefighters broke windows of the building before getting the fire under control.

The fire was on the 28th floor of the building, which is next to the park where Occupy Wall Street demonstrators have been protesting corporate greed. The fire department says there doesn't appear to be any connection between the fire and the protest.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/44996236/ns/us_news/

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The Impact of the iPod (Mashable)

"With iPod, Apple has invented a whole new category of digital music player that lets you put your entire music collection in your pocket and listen to it wherever you go," said Steve Jobs as the first iPod launched in 2001. "With iPod, listening to music will never be the same again." Thanks to the iPod's far-reaching impact over the last decade, you could argue that the consumer electronics industry has never been the same again.

[More from Mashable: Top 12 Mashable Infographics]

On the tenth anniversary of the iPod's debut we take a look at just how influential Apple's portable digital music player has been. Take a look at our analysis, complete with comment from experts. Have your say in the comments below.


1. Transforming the Consumer Electronics Industry


[More from Mashable: 10 Retro Games for the Modern Mobile]

"The iPod truly ushered in the era of portable digital consumer electronics, much as the Walkman did for analog audio," states Jordan Selburn, principal analyst of consumer electronics at IHS-iSuppli.

In just 10 years the iPod has been so influential that the word has come to represent a portable digital music player in the same way "Hoover" dominates the vacuum cleaner market. Apple wasn't the first to introduce such a device, so why has the iPod brand dominated all others?

"The iPod wasn't the first MP3 player out there -- before it came out I'd used models from Rio for my runs -- but it took the shortcomings inherent in the existing products in the market and improved on them," explains Jonathan Seff, executive editor, MacWorld.

"It held much more music than a typical MP3 player, and its use of FireWire meant transfer speeds much faster than the slow 12Mbps USB everyone else was using," Seff continues. "Plus the combo of hardware and software (iTunes) made it easier to use than much of what else was out there. And in very little time, the iPod took over the digital music player section of the market."

Apple has had something like 70% market share for years now. There are still competing products (minus the Microsoft Zune, which was recently killed off), but the others are fighting over a pretty small sliver of the pie."

Leander Kahney, editor of Cult of Mac and author of The Cult of iPod, sees the iPod's primary impact in terms of the "connected device."

"Gadgets are no longer stand-alone products," Kahney says, "they connect to a range of software and online services. Think Internet TVs, stereos like Sonos, handheld gaming devices, GPS bike computers, in-car stereos, high-end watches, Internet radios, even printers -- the list goes on and on -- and the iPod was the first to do that.

"In terms of connected devices, Selburn sees the iPod as essential tool for hooking consumers to content. He says the device "ignited the idea of ubiquitous access to content," an influence that can now be seen across all areas of consumer electronics.

"The era of the connected consumer, ignited by the iPod, is now coming to fruition. In the very near future, consumers will truly have access to all of their content anywhere they are, and on a wide range of devices spanning from home theaters and large screens to media tablets and smartphones and, of course, their iPods."


2. An Influential Design


The iPod's design is iconic. Design museums around the world display iPods proudly. Apple's senior vice president of industrial design, Jonathan Ive, has earned multiple awards and accolades.

"One of the major reasons for the iPod's success is its unique design, which is simple and aesthetically appealing, making use of high-quality materials like stainless steel," says Dr. Peter Zec, CEO and intellectual and creative head of red dot. "The Apple Industrial Design Team, led by Jonathan Ive, focuses on strict and sustainable design politics: The first iPod fitted perfectly into Apple's product family of that time -- just like the latest models do, which pick up today's unibody design of the iMac or MacBook Pro.

"The simplicity of the iPod's design speaks for itself: There are no unnecessary buttons or wheels, just one single element to navigate intuitively through the product's entire music library.

"When the first iPod was put into the market in 2001, it was a breakthrough and changed portable music from scratch, continues Zec. "There are only few products that shaped the lifestyle of a generation, found its way into popular culture and became the archetype of an entire product group like this.

It's not just the iPod's hardware that has been influential. Apple's user interface and experience also had an enormous impact on the market.

"The iPod had an enormous effect on the UI/UX of consumer electronics, completely changing the game from the day it was launched," says Joshua Porter, interface designer and director of UX at HubSpot.

Porter says the iPod's simple interface was optimized for music playing. The "fun" scrollwheel let users easily move through large lists of music, and the device's pocket-sized ergonomics had rounded corners and was generally comfortable to use.

"I would say that, in general, the addictive nature of all of these pieces created an amazing user experience that just wasn't possible with anything else on the market," concludes Porter. "Apple was the first company to truly think of the overarching activity of purchasing, organizing, and listening to music -- and designing their ecosystem to make that activity pleasurable -- a good experience from beginning to end."

Even the iPod's headphones were strategically designed. "The white headphones were interesting at first, but it was quickly realized that they were an amazing advertisement for iPods," says Porter. "I even heard stories of people switching to black headphones because thieves were targeting the white ones!"


3. The Changing Music Industry


Over the last 10 years, the iPod's companion software, iTunes, has evolved from a simple music management application to a multi-billion dollar online store, with agreements with all the major record labels.

"Without easy-to-use software such as iTunes, the iPod would be as useless as most of the other players on the market," says Patrik Wikstr?m, author of The Music Industry - Music in the Cloud.

"In the early days of the iPod and iTunes, Apple was considered by the industry to be part of 'the digital problem' and to encourage piracy," continues Wikstr?m. The industry argued (probably correctly) that most music on peoples' iPods was illegal. The iPod and iTunes was a cog in the global piracy machinery and probably contributed to the shrinking CD sales rather than anything else. It was not until 2003 when iTunes Music Store was launched when the industry started to believe that Apple was going to save them all. It was indeed an important step when Apple was able to convince all the major labels to license their music to iTunes."

Wikstr?m says one could argue that iTunes has been more a hindrance to the industry than a help. Despite the billions of sales using the platform, the music industry has still suffered over the past decade. Did the dominant iTunes business model blind the industry to alternatives?

"iTunes prolonged the industry's dependence on the old model, and made them believe that it actually might be possible just to shift from CD to MP3, just as they had done in the past when they moved from vinyl to tape to CD," says Wikstr?m. "This is just speculation, but perhaps the most important impact on the music industry is that iTunes delayed the shift from a retail model based on control to what we now start to see emerge as various kinds of cloud-based retail models, such as Spotify and its peers."

Futurist Gerd Leonhard, author of The Future of Content and co-author of The Future of Music: Manifesto for the Digital Music Revolution also sees iTunes playing a part in the decline of the music industry.

"The genius of the iPod was (and still is, with the iPhone) that, while the music industry actually believed that it had found a good (i.e., closed and controlled) way to extract money from otherwise freeloading consumers, the iTunes/iPod/iPhone ecosystem became the dominant hardware solution for the consumption of free music."


4. The Accessories Market


Hundred of companies have created viable businesses on the back of the iPod. The iPeripherals marketplace is vast -- and arguably unique -- in its sheer scale and variety of products.

Evan Stein, the director of marketing for SDI Technologies' iHome brand (the manufacturer of the first iPod clock radio) says the iPod changed consumers' expectations.

"The iPod is a worldwide cultural phenomenon whose cross-media functionality (e.g. music, photos, video, etc.) has redefined what people could ever expect from an electronic device, and has created a new multi-million dollar industry of supporting accessories."

From speakers and headphones to in-car kits, covers, cases and skins, to novelty iProducts, the relationship between the iPod (and later iPhone) and the accessory market is self-propagating. The more iPods Apple sells, the larger the market for accessories. The larger the amount of accessories, the more likely people are to buy into the iPod ecosystem.

Griffin Technology has been described as one of the first companies to realize the commercial potential of the iPod, introducing its first iPod accessory just a year after the MP3 player launched.

"The abundance of devices that work with the iPod has opened the door for accessory manufacturers worldwide, and without it, the mobile accessory industry wouldn't be what it is today," says president of Griffin, Mark Rowan.


5. Changing Consumer Perceptions of Apple


The iPod has had an enormous impact on the average consumer's opinion of Apple. "Pre-iPod, Apple was primarily a computer company," says Jordan Selburn.

"The Macintosh, despite increasing popularity with the introduction of the iMac, was still a niche product," continues Selburn. "The success of the Macintosh computers can be attributed to the company's focus on the consumer rather than on raw technology (a critical success factor that seems to still elude many companies). The iPod brought that philosophy to the consumer electronics market and, as a result,...consumers now see Apple as a company where technology just works, and you don't need a Ph.D. to listen to a song."

Leander Kahney believes it was the iPod that solidified Apple's mainstream appeal. "Before the iPod, Apple had a reputation for making nice but expensive computers...But as the iPod became cheaper and more popular, so more and more consumers were introduced to the Apple brand. Someone who got an iPod for Christmas would wander into the Apple Store and start checking out the other products. Next thing you know, they've replaced their old PC with a MacBook. Then they buy an iPhone, then an iPad. So the iPod has a tremendous 'halo effect' -- the halo from the iPod shines a light on Apple's other products. It took a while, but Apple these days is thoroughly mainstream."

Jonathan Seff, who also notes the "halo effect," suggests the real breakthrough came when Apple first launched an iPod that worked with a Windows PC, and then when it introduced iTunes for Windows.

"When the iPod starting supporting Windows PCs, it opened Apple up to a whole new world of people who would never have considered buying anything from Apple. It took Apple from being a computer company for Mac users to a consumer electronics company for the masses. That led to the iPhone and the iPad, both of which are huge cross-platform products."


In Conclusion


Ten years later it's hard to believe we're talking about the massive impact of a pocket-sized, $399 gadget, especially considering consumer reaction to the device was initially lukewarm.

"Many people looked at the iPod when it came out and couldn't believe the price and the comparative lack of features," says Joshua Porter. "But once it became a hit, other companies had to redefine what great was in their own houses, but by then Apple was ahead of the game -- and still is."

Images courtesy of 37Prime, osaMu, EverJean, Robert S. Donovan, Peter Gerdes

This story originally published on Mashable here.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/applecomputer/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/mashable/20111023/tc_mashable/the_impact_of_the_ipod

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Sunday, October 23, 2011

Turkish forces kill 32 Kurdish militants: report (Reuters)

ISTANBUL (Reuters) ? Turkish troops killed 32 Kurdish militants in clashes in Cukurca Kazan valley, in Hakkari province in southeast Turkey, state-run television TRT reported on Saturday, in the third day of an offensive to avenge the deaths of 24 soldiers this week.

A total of 53 Kurdish militants have been killed so far in the operation, TRT reported without citing a source. The television channel did not provide a timeframe for the latest killings, adding that clashes continue in the area.

Turkish security officials estimated earlier in the week that their forces, numbering about 1,000 inside Iraq, had killed 21 fighters from the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK).

The Turkish military said it had deployed troops from 22 battalions for ground attacks in five different areas on either side of the border, and it had also launched air strikes.

Turkey's leaders have vowed revenge after one of the worst losses of life suffered by the army since the separatist insurgency began in 1984, when PKK guerrillas mounted a series of deadly night-time raids on army outposts in Turkey's mountainous southeast on Wednesday.

(Reporting by Seda Sezer)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111022/wl_nm/us_turkey_pkk

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Rams rule out QB Bradford for game against Cowboys (AP)

ST. LOUIS ? The St. Louis Rams have ruled out quarterback Sam Bradford for this week's game at Dallas.

Bradford has a high left ankle sprain and did not practice all week. He had been listed as questionable before Saturday, when the winless Rams also signed quarterback Tom Brandstater from the practice squad.

The Rams also waived wide receiver Nick Miller.

Bradford was hurt near the end of last week's loss at Green Bay.

A.J. Feeley will start against the Cowboys.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111022/ap_on_sp_fo_ne/fbn_rams_bradford_out

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Just Show Me: How to create a zip file in Windows 7 (Yahoo! News)

Welcome to?Just Show Me on Tecca TV, where we show you tips and tricks for getting the most out of the?gadgets in your life. In today's episode we'll show you how to zip up a file in Windows 7.

When you zip a file, you compress it and make it smaller. While the majority of hard drives are big enough these days that file size really doesn't matter for most people, when you have to send a file as en email attachment, the smaller the file size the better. After a file is zipped, it can be easily unzipped on any Windows or Mac computer.

For more episodes of Just Show Me, subscribe to Tecca TV's You Tube channel and check out all our Just Show Me episodes. If you have any topics you'd like to see us cover, just drop us a line in the comments.

This article originally appeared on Tecca

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_technews/20111021/tc_yblog_technews/just-show-me-how-to-create-a-zip-file-in-windows-7

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Spend the night in the world?s deepest underground hotel in Sweden (Yahoo! News)

Sala Silvermine in Sweden houses a hotel suite 509 ft. underground

In the next few years, extreme travelers could spend the night floating around in a space hotel. For now, what the Earth can offer will have to suffice. Thankfully, some options have the potential to satiate even the most adventurous ? take for example the deepest underground hotel suite in the world. Located in the old, 15th century Sala Silvermine in Sweden, the suite lies 509 ft. deep under the earth's surface.

The tunnels of Sala's mine were used to excavate for silver until 1908. Now, it houses a museum, a theater, two ornate dining rooms, and a hotel suite where two people can spend the night. Guests are first toured around the underground facilities so they know their way around, but ultimately left alone overnight ? attendants stay on ground level. If you're hit by the call of nature in the middle of the night, you'd have to go up to 165 ft. to access the nearest toilet; no bathroom exists within the mine. Phones, of course, do not work that deep underground.

Clearly, if you're claustrophobic, agoraphobic, or if you really just can't stand gloomy places, this hotel is not for you. But if you fancy a stay underground for whatever purpose you might have, you can spend a night in Sweden's Sala Silvermine suite for $580.

Sala Silvermine via Gizmag

This article was written by Mariella Moon and originally appeared on Tecca

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_technews/20111022/tc_yblog_technews/spend-the-night-in-the-worlds-deepest-underground-hotel-in-sweden

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Saturday, October 22, 2011

Acid Reflux Treatment for Babies Draws Criticism (LiveScience.com)

Use of medications to suppress stomach acid in infants has skyrocketed, but the trend is neither based in science nor beneficial to babies, a commentary suggests.

Advertising for acid reflux medications, misinterpretations of infants' normal responses and an over- medicalized culture are to blame, according to Dr. Eric Hassall, a pediatric gastroenterologist from Sutter Pacific Medical Foundation in San Francisco.

One large study of about 1 million infants revealed a 7-fold increase in prescriptions for proton-pump inhibitors (PPIs) for infants between 1999 and 2004, Hassall said. PPIs work by blocking the production of acid in the stomach (Prilosec, Prevacid and Nexium fall into this category).

That study also showed that prescriptions for one of the PPIs, made in a child-friendly liquid, rose 16-fold over the study period, and that PPIs were prescribed to approximately 0.5 percent of babies before they reached 1 year of age, with about half of those prescriptions coming before 4 months of age.

Spitting up and crying have "long been observed in otherwise healthy, thriving infants," with as many as 40 percent to 70 percent of infants spitting up on a daily basis, Hassall wrote. This reflux is normal, not gastrointestinal reflux disease (GERD).

But parents are bombarded with advertising, leading them to "blur the lines between normality and pathologies," Hassall wrote.

Hassall's commentary is published today (Oct. 20) in the Journal of Pediatrics.

Reasons for over-prescribing

The over-prescribing "owes a lot to advertising, specifically to use of the term 'acid reflux,'" Hassall wrote.

But spitting up is not due to an infant's inability to handle acid; hence, it is not acid reflux disease. Still, parents come into pediatricians' offices claiming that their child has acid reflux, and doctors willingly prescribe an acid-suppressing medicine, Hassall wrote.

Spitting up is due to large amount of food that an infant cannot hold; hence, it is normal and resolves on its own in at least 95 percent of infants, Hassall wrote. Yet crying and spitting up are increasingly "conflated into a diagnosis of GERD."

Excessive crying is all too easily interpreted as signifying stomach distress, but increased crying in the first three to five months is absolutely normal, he wrote. On rare occasions, an identifiable treatable cause, such as allergies to milk or diet, is the reason for excessive crying.

Ineffective treatment, potential harm

There is no science that backs using proton pump inhibitors for infants, but there is "GERD mania," according to Hassall. The largest clinical trial in infants found that a proton pump inhibitor was no better than placebo.

There is danger in reducing normal acid secretion. "Gastric acid is an early line of defense against infection and important for absorption of certain nutrients," Hassall wrote. A slew of health problems are more common in people who've taken acid-suppressing medications, including acute gastroenteritis, ?one type of pneumonia and food allergies. Infants might be at risk these illnesses just because they took a proton-pump inhibitor, he wrote.

PPIs could also cause nutritional deficiencies, which are especially worrisome when kids are growing and developing, Hassall wrote.

Another source of harm is misinformation. Hassall criticized a website that advises using doses "far in excess of the doses published in pediatric clinical studies." Parents do not realize that infants metabolize these medicines much more slowly than older kids do, so smaller doses are safer.

Diagnostic testing for GERD in infants is only warranted if symptoms are severe and do not go away, he wrote.

Remedies

To reduce the overuse of acid-suppressing medications, one place to start would be in stopping the routine use of words, such as GERD and acid reflux, in referring to infants. "These symptoms and signs are just "life," not a disease, and as such do not warrant drug therapy," Hassall wrote.

"I am just as guilty as the mothers, who come in distraught by crying and spitting up," Dr. Beth Tarini, a pediatrician at the University of Michigan, told MyHealthNewsDaily. "This is something that has been medicalized, and we need to tell parents that this is just an unfortunate bump in the road."

Reassurance is key, Tarini said, but she doubts pediatricians will be able to stem demand for the medications. With kids' cough medicines, and the over-treating of ear infections, she said it took the FDA to stop it.

"We may need the FDA to put the final nail on this one, too," she said.

Pass it on: Babies may be treated with acid reflux drugs they don't need, which might raise their risk for nutritional deficiencies or allergies.

This story was provided by MyHealthNewsDaily, a sister site to LiveScience. Follow MyHealthNewsDaily on Twitter @Facebook.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/health/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20111020/sc_livescience/acidrefluxtreatmentforbabiesdrawscriticism

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Gadhafi's death resonates with Lockerbie relatives

Britain's Prime Minister, David Cameron, makes a statement outside his London residence No.10 Downing Street, about the death of Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi in Libya Thursday Oct. 20, 2011. "Today is a day to remember all of Gadhafi's victims," Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron said, referring to those in Libya and also the 270 victims _ mainly British and American _ killed in the 1988 Pan Am bombing over Lockerbie, in Scotland. "We should also remember the many, many people who died at the hands of this brutal dictator and his regime," Cameron said, pledging assistance to Libya's leaders as they form a new government. (AP Photo/PA, Stefan Rousseau) UNITED KINGDOM OUT NO SALES NO ARCHIVE

Britain's Prime Minister, David Cameron, makes a statement outside his London residence No.10 Downing Street, about the death of Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi in Libya Thursday Oct. 20, 2011. "Today is a day to remember all of Gadhafi's victims," Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron said, referring to those in Libya and also the 270 victims _ mainly British and American _ killed in the 1988 Pan Am bombing over Lockerbie, in Scotland. "We should also remember the many, many people who died at the hands of this brutal dictator and his regime," Cameron said, pledging assistance to Libya's leaders as they form a new government. (AP Photo/PA, Stefan Rousseau) UNITED KINGDOM OUT NO SALES NO ARCHIVE

(AP) ? Susan Cohen had been waiting for this day since her daughter was blown out of the sky by a terrorist bomb in 1988, allegedly at the behest of Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi.

Thursday morning, she got the news: Gadhafi was dead. And she planned to keep a promise that she had made long ago.

"I'm just going to go out and buy an expensive bottle of champagne to celebrate," she said.

Pan Am Flight 103 from London to New York exploded over Lockerbie, Scotland, on Dec. 21, 1988, killing all 259 people on board and 11 people on the ground. Many victims were Americans from New Jersey and New York flying home for the holidays.

The U.S. government implicated Gadhafi's regime, and a Libyan intelligence agent, Abdel Basset Ali al-Megrahi, was convicted as the mastermind.

He was released from British captivity in 2009 on humanitarian grounds because he was supposedly near death. But the fact that he remains alive two years later remains a concern to U.S. officials and relatives of the victims.

Kara Weipz, whose 20-year-old brother, Richard Monetti, was aboard the flight, said she was stunned to hear of the dictator's death. She was feeling "relief, knowing he can't hurt and torture anyone else. For 20-some years, I never thought this day would come. The world is a better and safer place today."

Her father, Bob Monetti, said there's still a lot of information that relatives need to know.

"There are a number of people who were involved in the bombing who have not been arrested or captured," he said.

Weipz said Gadhafi's death still doesn't end the Lockerbie story.

"Ultimately, the one thing I hope is he had evidence on him," she said. "All the families really want to know the truth of how this happened. That has been our motto since 1988, and it remains our motto in 2011."

In London, British Prime Minister David Cameron pledged assistance to Libya's leaders as they work to form a new government.

"Today is a day to remember all of Gadhafi's victims," he said. "We should also remember the many, many people who died at the hands of this brutal dictator and his regime."

Bert Ammerman, whose brother, Tom, died in the bombing, praised President Barack Obama with the military action that resulted in the death of Gadhafi, as well as that of Osama Bin Laden.

"He eliminated bin Laden; he's now eliminated Gadhafi. That's the right way to go," he said. "We never again should occupy these countries; we should use our technology, our intelligence and work through an allied group like NATO. And if we do that we will eliminate, I think, future areas of state-sponsored terrorism."

Cohen said she spent an anxious morning devouring news reports that initially hinted ? but could not confirm ? that Gadhafi was dead.

"This was sort of like Dracula: Is Dracula really dead?" she asked. "It's great now that we know. I didn't want him to go to a trial. When you have a tyrant, a monster like him, we're all better off with him dead. Now there can be no illusion of him ever returning to power."

News of Gadhafi's death was met joyously by members of Southern California's small Libyan-American community. Most will not return to Libya, but all have friends or relatives there.

"Every family that I know is happy. We were calling each other at 4:30 this morning ... congratulating each other," said Idris Traina, president of the Libyan-American Association of Southern California.

___

Parry reported from Point Pleasant, New Jersey. Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Shawn Marsh and Larry Rosenthal in Trenton, Robert Jablon in Los Angeles and David Stringer in London.

___

Wayne Parry can be reached at http://twitter.com/WayneParryAC.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2011-10-20-Libya-Lockerbie%20Families/id-13daf1f89ea3440cb0b10bcc3ee3a0d8

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