Orissa: CPI demands shifting of POSCO project

Bhubaneshwar, May 21 (ANI): Rejecting the Orissa Government’s formula of excluding 300 acres of private land from the proposed POSCO project site area near Paradip, the Communist Party of India (CPI) on Friday demanded that the entire site be shifted elsewhere.

Addressing the media CPI General Secretary A B Bardhan demanded an official statement on overall impact of the project on the state.

“Giving up only 300 acres of private land is a ridiculous idea. This cannot be a solution. We want the whole project to be shifted from the area identified near Paradip,” Bardhan said.

Bardhan termed his meeting with Orissa Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik as “very disappointing.”

On Thursday evening, Bardhan held a meeting with Patnaik along with state CPI leaders.

Bardhan said since over 4000 acres of land is needed for the plant, leaving out only 300 acres private land in Dhinkia village is meaningless.

He demanded to shift the project location elsewhere in Jagatsinghpur District or in areas bordering Puri District where displacement of people would be less.

“The government should realize that it is not just a piece of land but involves livelihood of the people depending on fertile land and betel vines for generations,” Bardhan said adding “Forest dwellers in the area cannot be uprooted in an illegal manner without holding proper village meetings.”

“Though it is billed as India””s biggest FDI capable of creating jobs, government must publish details about its cost in terms of loss of land, minerals, water and its adverse impact on poor people,” he added.

Describing Patnaik’s proposal for talks between protesters and Revenue Divisional Commissioner (RDC) as opening of a small window, Bardhan said any attempt to acquire land or conduct survey for the proposed 12mtpa steel plant pending discussion would be opposed tooth and nail.

He also demanded to withdraw charges against over 800 anti-Posco agitators. (ANI)

Sibal to table Higher Education Reforms Bill in Parliament today

New Delhi, May 3 (ANI): Union Human Resource and Development (HRD) Minister Kapil Sibal is expected to table four bills in Parliament today, including one on permitting the entry of foreign universities to the country.

The other bills expected to be introduced in Parliament are linked to the checking of malpractices by educational institutions, setting up of a national accreditation agency and having specialised educational tribunals to adjudicate disputes in campuses.

The Cabinet had on March 15 cleared the Foreign Educational Institutions (Regulation of Entry and Operations) Bill, which seeks to allow the entry and operation of foreign universities in the country.

The major provisions of the bill are conditions like Rs. 50 crore as corpus fund to be deposited by the aspiring institute to be allowed to operate.

Each institute will have to be registered with the University Grants Commission (UGC) or any regulatory body in place at the time of registration.

The bill has a provision under which the government can reject an application of a university if it feels that the venture will have an adverse impact on national security.

Provisions of Section 25 of the Companies Act will be applicable to foreign institutes, under which they cannot take the profit back, but will have to spend the amount for further expansion of the institutions here.

Sibal will also introduce Prohibition of Unfair Practices in Technical Educational Institutions, Medical Educational Institutions and University Bill, which was approved by the Cabinet in March.

The bill seeks to consider such practices as criminal or civil offences depending on the nature of the crime.

He will also put forward the Educational Tribunal Bill, which provides for the setting up of tribunals to settle all types of disputes, including any type of malpractice or harassment of students.

The National Accreditation Regulatory Authority for Higher Educational Institutions Bill will also be introduced. (ANI)

Pakistan distances itself from arrest of Indian ‘mole’

Islamabad, Apr 28 (ANI): Pakistan on Wednesday distanced itself from the alleged spy ring, in which an Indian diplomat has been arrested.

Islamabad said it was for New Delhi to probe the issue as it involves an Indian national.

Interacting with media, Pakistan Foreign Office spokesperson Abdul Basit said it was India’s internal matter and he hoped this would not overshadow expected talks between the Prime Ministers of India and Pakistan at the ongoing South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) Summit in Bhutan.

“This is India”s internal issue, I don”t think this will have any bearing on SAARC activities. I do not know, we are hearing all these stories through the media so I would not like to comment on the basis of media reports,” Basit said.

Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi said that whatever he was hearing about the issue was through the media and not through official channel.

Secondly, he said, she was an Indian diplomat, and there was no reason for Pakistan to comment on it.

Pakistan Foreign Secretary Salman Bashir said he hoped the arrest of the Indian diplomat would not have an adverse impact on SAARC deliberations in Thimphu. (ANI)

IPL scandal: India may end up being real loser

Mumbai, Apr.27 (ANI): The Indian Premier League (IPL) may be the biggest and brashest tournament cricket has ever seen, but the alleged behind the scenes financial irregularities may end up seeing India as the real loser, a report in The Times has claimed.

According to the report, India has 1.2 billion people, many of them crazy about cricket. Most are growing wealthier and the number who can afford to buy satellite TV subscriptions and replica shirts is growing.

More than that, for many Indians, the IPL is an emblem of their aspirations and proof of how the epicenter of the global economy is shifting East.

It is also a symbol of what they believe India is destined to become: a true global power.

In short, the IPL was an icon of a “New India” – one that was supposed to have shed the corruption, nepotism, cronyism and political patronage of the past.

As the confetti settles on this year’s competition, however, the question is whether it is too big to fail.

The suspension of Lalit Modi, the IPL’s fast talking creator and chief administrator, just minutes after the Chennai Super Kings vanquished the Mumbai Indians in an IPL final over allegations of money laundering, match-fixing, illegal betting, team auction manipulation, political corruption and multi-million dollar kickbacks, is likely to have a huge adverse impact.

Modi has been given 15 days to answer allegations of financial impropriety. His suspension may have set the stage for a messy dissection of the scandal in which the IPL has been mired for the past fortnight.

Modi has challenged the BCCI to justify its reasons for sacking him, suggesting that they are scared to face the truth.

There is no doubt that the scandal has rocked India to its core.

The resignation of Deputy Foreign Minister Shashi Tharoor a fortnight ago was a reminder of how cricket in the country is riddled with political patronage and worse.

Tharoor, a favourite of Sonia Gandhi, was forced to step down when it emerged that a business consortium he had advised had given a 10-million-pound stake in a new IPL side to a woman widely reported to be his girlfriend.

Having sacrificed Tharoor, the Government went out for revenge, unleashing its tax inspectors on anybody with an association with the IPL.

The real target, however, has appeared to be Modi, who triggered the Tharoor scandal through a leak on the Twitter website. (ANI)

10 years for Stern Hu

A Chinese court has sentenced Australian Rio Tinto executive Stern Hu to 10 years in prison for corruption and industrial espionage.

Hu and three Chinese staff, who were tried last week in Shanghai, were convicted of accepting bribes totalling about $14 million and stealing trade secrets.

Hu, the head of the Anglo-Australian miner’s Shanghai office, was sentenced to 10 years in prison.

His Chinese colleagues – Wang Yong, Ge Minqiang and Liu Caikui – were given jail terms of 14, eight and seven years, respectively.

Australian Foreign Minister Stephen Smith described the penalty handed to Hu as “tough”.

“Whilst we don’t condone bribery in any way, I think the sentence by any measure is harsh,” he said.

“It’s a tough sentence by Australian standards. I’m advised that so far as Chinese sentencing practice is concerned, it is within the ambit or within the range.”

But he says the case will not affect relations between the two countries.

“Whilst this has been a very sensitive, a very important and very difficult consular case, I don’t believe that what’s occurred today will have an adverse impact on our own relationship. We continue to have a strong economic and broader relationship with China,” he said.

Mr Smith says it is too early to tell if Hu will be allowed to serve some of his sentence in Australia.

Australia and China have drawn up a prisoner transfer agreement, but it is yet to be ratified.

Mr Smith says until an agreement is signed it is unclear whether Hu would be eligible to be transferred, or if he would even want to return to Australia.

“He may or may not want to engage in such a possible transfer depending upon his family and his family circumstances.” he said.

In a statement, Rio Tinto said it would terminate the employment of the four staff members.

“We have been informed of the clear evidence presented in court that showed beyond doubt that the four convicted employees accepted bribes,” Rio Tinto Iron Ore chief Sam Walsh said.

“By doing this they engaged in deplorable behaviour that is totally at odds with our strong ethical culture.

“In accordance with our policies we will terminate their employment.”

The judge presiding over the case, Liu Xin, said the four men had seriously damaged the competitive interests of Chinese steel companies.

He said their actions forced Chinese steel companies into an unfavourable position in price negotiations and this led to the collapse in iron ore price negotiations in 2009.

But the judge’s harshest comments related to their obtaining the commercial secrets of Chinese steel companies for the benefit of Rio Tinto.

He said they were given documents which were then emailed to senior Rio Tinto managers. He said this seriously damaged Chinese steel companies. which lost significant amounts of money to Rio Tinto.

The four defendants stood quietly throughout the sentencing.

Most of the proceedings of the trial were held behind closed doors and Australian diplomats were excluded from the hearings on the commercial secrets allegations.

Foreign reporters were allowed to watch the verdict hearing on closed-circuit television from a separate room.

Mr Smith said he was disappointed the court would not allow Australian officials access to the part of the trial dealing with commercial secrets.

“Serious unanswered questions [remain about] that part of the trial and that matter as far as Stern Hu is concerned, but also more generally and more widely the Australian business community and international business community,” he said.

“I think here China has missed a substantial opportunity. This was an opportunity for China to bring some clarity to the notion of commercial secrets.”

Implications for business

Opposition Foreign Affairs spokeswoman Julie Bishop, who expressed surprise at the length of Hu’s sentence, said the case would have major implications for Australian businesses operating in China.

“This is an issue of great concern to many companies from Australia and also from around the world doing business in China,” she said.

“The fact that there is very little detail available as to what constitutes a commercial secret and whether one could be in breach of Chinese laws will continue to create uncertainty for those doing business in China.”

Dr Malcolm Cook, East-Asia director at the Lowy Institute, said the verdict might make business more cautious about having major sensitive negotiations in China.

“The benchmark iron ore negotiations that were in Shanghai last year, at which time Stern Hu was arrested, this year are taking place outside China despite China being the largest buyer,” he told Reuters.

World watching

Prime Minister Kevin Rudd had said the world was watching the trial, which was widely seen as a test of the rule of law in China and sparked concerns about doing business in the world’s third-largest economy.

The four had pleaded guilty to taking money, and one had admitted to commercial espionage, but the accused had disputed aspects of the charges, their lawyers said.

A prosecutor had recommended that Hu be given a lenient sentence after he apologised to the court and to Rio, saying he took about $870,000 to help childhood friends in need, his lawyer Jin Chunqing said.

The four Rio employees were arrested last July during contentious iron-ore contract talks between top mining companies and the steel industry in China, the world’s largest consumer of the raw material. The talks collapsed.

A posting outside the Shanghai courthouse said Tan Yixin, an executive at China’s eighth-largest steel mill Shougang Corp who was detained last year after the Rio arrests, would appear in court later.

The notice gave no further details about the hearing.

At the three-day trial of the Rio employees, the court heard evidence that millions of yuan in bribes had been stuffed into bags and boxes for the accused, according to state media.

Hu took money from small private steel companies, which before the global financial crisis were locked out of buying iron ore from Rio because the mining giant prioritised large state-run steel companies, Mr Jin said.

Wang strongly objected to the bribery allegations, saying he simply borrowed the money from one of China’s richest men, Du Shuanghua, the National Business Daily reported.

Mr Du, the former head of Shandong-based Rizhao Iron and Steel group, has contradicted Wang’s account, saying he paid the Rio employee millions of dollars for preferential treatment, the newspaper said.

Musharraf’s ‘unofficial asylum’ in London raises stink among Muslims

London, Sep.10 (ANI): Former Pakistan President General Pervez Musharraf’s ‘unofficial asylum’ in London and the unprecedented privileges being received by him has come under the scanner, as a Labour peer has objected strongly against it.

Lord Ahmed of Rotherham has objected strongly to British Government’s decision to provide a security cover to Musharraf.

Lord Ahmed, in his letter to the Home Secretary, has said asked the government to discontinue Musharraf’s police protection as he believed his presence would stoke unrest within the Muslim community in the country.

“I think the Government needs to review Musharraf’s security. There are people within Britain who could do with those extra police officers rather than a man who can afford private body guards. I also believe that if he remains in this country then he is a threat to peace and public order,” The Times quoted Lord Ahmed, as saying.

He urged the authorities to stop spending money on protection by Scotland Yard for the exiled leader.

“It is evident from various newspaper reports that the British Pakistani and Kashmiri community is deeply disturbed and divided by Musharraf’s controversial campaign and the security provided by the Home Office for this purpose,” Lord Ahmed’s letter stated.

“I would strongly urge the Government to distance themselves from Musharraf and his political ambitions here as I firmly believe that any perceived promotion or assistance of his activities here may have an adverse impact on community cohesion within the United Kingdom,” it added.

However, he is yet to receive a reply of the letter.

Earlier, in a letter to Lord Ahmed, a borough councilor, Pervez Choudhry had informed that people, especially of the Muslim community are not happy with the Labour Party’s decision to allow Musharraf to stay in London.

“The people of Slough and in particular the Pakistani community are extremely upset and angry that local Labour Party officials took it upon themselves to invite General Musharraf to Slough,” Choudhry wrote.

Musharraf had visited Slough for the Pakistan Independence Day Celebrations.

“They used this day to furtively invite this man whose hands are drenched in the blood of innocent men, women and children in Pakistan. This is seen as a slap on the face of British Pakistanis and total disregard for democratic values in Britain,” Choudhry further added. (ANI)

Varanasi’s photo exhibition highlights environmental hazards

Varanasi (Uttar Pradesh), Aug 20(ANI): A photo exhibition highlighting the ill effects of global warming and pollution on wildlife and human beings was held at the holy city of Varanasi in Uttar Pradesh on Wednesday (August 19) on the occasion of World Photography Day. he objective of the event was to spread public awareness about the adverse impact on environment in the guise of ‘progress’ and sensitise them towards issues like pollution.

“Our wildlife is being adversely affected by the environment, global warming, depletion of the ozone layer, water pollution and air pollution. Both human beings and the wild life are gravely affected,” said U S Agarwal, the organiser of the photo exhibition.

Visitors found the exhibited photographs quite inspiring.

“We have learnt from this exhibition that we should take care of nature and animals. This exhibition is truly inspiring,” said Sudhir Singh, a visitor.

According to researchers, rising temperatures could wipe out more than half of the earth’s species in the next few centuries.

According to the UN Inter-governmental Panel on Climate Change, the average global temperatures are likely to rise by between 1.8 and 4 degrees Celsius by the end of the century, partly as a result of greenhouse gas emissions.

The upper end of the forecast rise would heat the earth close to the temperatures of 250 million years ago, when 95 percent of all animal and plant species became extinct. (ANI)

Spring agricultural fires can accelerate Arctic melting

Washington, May 27 (ANI): A research has found that agricultural fires during spring have an adverse impact on the melting Arctic, because the black carbon or soot produced by the fires can lead to accelerated melting of snow and ice.

The two-year international field campaign known as POLARCAT was conducted most intensively during two three-week periods last spring and summer and focused on the transport of pollutants into the Arctic from lower latitudes.

One surprise discovery was that large-scale agricultural burning in Russia, Kazakhstan, China, the US, Canada, and the Ukraine is having a much greater impact than previously thought.

A particular threat is posed by springtime burning – to remove crop residues for new planting or clear brush for grazing – because the black carbon or soot produced by the fires can lead to an increased melting of snow and ice.

Soot, which is produced through incomplete combustion of biomass and fossil fuels, may account for as much as 30 percent of Arctic warming to date, according to recent estimates.

Soot can warm the surrounding air and, when deposited on ice and snow, absorb solar energy and add to the melting process.

In addition to soot, other short-lived pollutants include ozone and methane.

Although global warming is largely the result of excess accumulation of carbon dioxide (CO2), the Arctic is highly sensitive to short-lived pollutants.

During the UNH workshop, a report by the Clean Air Task Force detailing some of the campaign’s findings on agricultural burning and transport to the Arctic will be officially released.

“Targeting these emissions offers a supplemental and parallel strategy to carbon dioxide reductions, with the advantage of a much faster temperature response, and the benefit of health risk reductions,” said Ellen Baum, senior scientist of the Clean Air Task Force.

“In addition, we have the know-how to control these pollutants today,” she added.

The report notes that during April, at the beginning portion of the field campaign in Northern Alaska, aircraft-based researchers were surprised to find 50 smoke plumes originating from fires in Eurasia more than 3,000 miles away.

Analysis of the plumes, combined with satellite images, revealed the smoke came from agricultural fires in Northern Kazakhstan-Southern Russia and from forest fires in Southern Siberia.

The emissions from fires far outweighed those from fossil fuels, the report states.

“These fires weren’t part of our standard predictions, they weren’t in our models,” said Daniel Jacob, a professor of atmospheric chemistry and environmental engineering at Harvard University. (ANI)

Mukherjee hopes Budget will be presented in due time

New Delhi, May 23 (ANI): Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee on Saturday expressed optimism that the government would be able to present the financial budget in due time.

“Indian economy is resilient, strong and we shall have to build up and come back to the growth track as early as possible. We will be able to, I hope, present the budget in due time so that uncertainties can be avoided and time of spending can be renewed,” Mukherjee said after getting the portfolio of Finance Ministry in the newly formed UPA Government.

Mukherjee will take charge of the office on Monday.

“We will address all major issues. Various efforts will be made to insulate the Indian economy from the adverse impact of financial meltdown”, he said.

Mukherjee had presented the vote-on-account in view of the general elections, after taking charge of the Finance Ministry in the previous UPA Government.

Meanwhile, earlier in the day, while briefing medias about the first meeting of the Union Cabinet, Home Minister P Chidambaram said the new government would strive to get the budget approved by Parliament by July 31, the day when the vote-on-account approved by the interim budget expires.

“We hope we will be able to pass the full Budget by July 31″, Chidambaram said, adding that in case the government was not able to get the Budget passed by then it would go in for another vote-on-account for a short period. (ANI)

Proposal for standstill commitment on protectionism

Geneva – An initiative was put forward Tuesday at the World Trade Organization to fight protectionism with a proposal asking countries to commit not to take any trade restricting measures to work their way out of the economic crisis. The standstill commitment, tabled by Hong Kong, would ask members to voluntarily refrain from any moves which would have an adverse impact or distorting effect on trade even if they did not violate WTO rules, officials with the agency said.

Many countries keep their tariffs or subsidy rates, for example, below the mandated ceilings agreed to in WTO treaties. As such, they have room to manoeuvre and put up barriers to trade without violating their commitments.

The officials said the proposal was met with the support of “many” WTO members at an informal meeting of the trade policy body.

The body was meeting to discuss the recent report by WTO Director General Pascal Lamy in which he said there was no indication of an imminent descent into “high intensity protectionism,” but warned of creeping measures being implemented by various countries.

Those incremental steps, he said, could “strangle” international trade.

Over 30 countries spoke during the session, including the United States which said that while it too was worried over protectionist measures, it felt the ones implemented so far have been more minimal than the WTO describes.

The US has been among the countries criticized for taking some trade restricting and distorting steps in recent months, including its bailouts for the auto-industry.

The WTO has predicted global trade will drop this year by 9 per cent, the most in over 60 years, due to the global economic downturn.(dpa)

Sickness certificates can lead to unemployment

Melbourne, Mar 27 (ANI): Doctors providing sickness certificates might be doing more harm than good for ailing people, according to a new study.

Dr Debra Dunstan of the University of New England in Armidale said that extended absence from work can put a relatively well person in long-term unemployment.

In the new study, Dunstan showed an alarming rise in sickness certification with a 70pct increase in requests in Australia, during the past nine years.

Doctors might think that they are doing a patient a favour by giving them extended work leave but the long-term worklessness might have an adverse impact on people’s health.

It can lead to people smoking 10 packets of cigarettes a day.

It is also “said to have more impact on life expectancy than killer diseases such as cardiovascular illness and cancer”.

Dunstan has raised concerns over people with common ailments such as musculoskeletal problems and mild to moderate mental health issues, who are receiving extended certified absences from work.

“The level of work disability attributed to commonly occurring conditions is on the rise,” ABC Online quoted Dunstan as saying.

After 12 weeks off work, the risk of becoming long-term unemployed rises dramatically.

By six months, a person on extended sick leave has only a 20pct chance of being in the workforce in five years’ time.

“Adults are meant to work,” she said.

“They get their social connectedness, a sense of identity and a sense of purpose from work,” she added.

With long-term unemployment people’s quality of life and physical and mental health also deteriorates. They are also at an increased risk of suicide.

Dunstan said for work-related mental health problems, such as stress and anxiety, absence from work is the wrong treatment. (ANI)

EU grants budget deficit reprieve to five member states

Brussels – Acknowledging the extraordinarily adverse impact of the economic downturn on European Union governments’ public accounts, the bloc’s executive in Brussels on Tuesday granted France, Britain and three other member states more time to correct their swelling budget deficits.

France, whose budget deficit to gross domestic product (GDP) ratio reached 3.4 per cent in 2008 and is set to hit 5.6 per cent this year, was given until 2012 to bring its deficit below the 3 per cent limit set by EU rules.

A similar deadline was set for Spain, whose budget deficit is en route to hitting 6 per cent this year.

Ireland, which is suffering a particularly harsh downturn, was given until 2013.

The commission was equally lenient with Britain – which is a not a member of the 16-member eurozone – giving it a 2013/14 deadline despite its deficit surging to nearly 10 per cent over the next 12 months.

But it proposed a tough deadline – 2010 – for Greece, whose budget deficit surged to 3.7 per cent last year.

“National budgetary positions in the EU and elsewhere have deteriorated considerably in the last year and are set to deteriorate further on account of the economic crisis we are living through and the discretionary measures rightly adopted by Member States to sustain demand and promote investment,” the EU executive in Brussels said in a statement.

“The deadlines proposed take account of the respective fiscal and macro-economic situations of the countries concerned,” it said.

EU governments are normally expected to correct their excessive deficits as soon as possible. (dpa)

Parental depression affects children adversely

Washington, Mar 7 (ANI): A new study from University of Gothenburg, Sweden has found that parental depression has an adverse impact on children.

Lead researcher Britt Hedman Ahlstrom has revealed that children take on an enormous amount of responsibility for the ill parent and for other family members.

Depression changes the relationship between a parent and his/her children, since they no longer communicate with each other as they used to.

Moreover, family interplay and reciprocity also decrease. As the depressed parent withdraws from the family, children feel they have been left to themselves.

They take responsibility for both the depressed parent, siblings and themselves, when they notice that the parent cannot cope.

“The toughest burden of responsibility that children take on is ensuring that the depressed parent doesn’t commit suicide,” said Hedman Ahlstrom, a registered nurse at University of Gothenburg, Sweden.

“So children take on an extremely heavy responsibility by monitoring and keeping an eye on the depressed parent,” she added.

For children, the parent’s depression means both a sense of responsibility and a feeling of loneliness. The feelings of responsibility and loneliness include a striving and yearning for reciprocity with the parent, and for things to return to a state of normality.

“Even if the depression goes away for a time, the family is never entirely free from anxiety over it coming back. This means that there is a prolonged period of suffering associated with depression,” Hedman Ahlstrom said.

Hedman Ahlstrom suggested that health services must help the whole family

Involving the entire family when a parent becomes ill is important, both for the children and the parents. It is essential to have a well-defined level of guaranteed care on how, when and from whom the families will get support.

Psychiatric healthcare personnel meet people suffering from depression at an early stage, and therefore have the opportunity to focus the care on the family, in order to together identify ways of helping the family get through the depression.

“We need a new approach within the health services, in which the focus is on the family’s own perspective when a parent is suffering from depression,” said Hedman Ahlstrom.

“It’s vital to be aware of the whole family’s needs in terms of help and support, and not just those of the person who is ill.

“It’s particularly important to be aware of the children’s situation,” she added. (ANI)

A third of Americans unable to sleep amid economic crisis

Washington, Mar 2 (ANI): Almost a third of Americans are unable to get a good night sleep amid the ongoing economic downturn, which can have an adverse impact on health and safety, say researchers.

The study conducted by National Sleep Foundation (NSF) has found striking disparities in the sleep patterns, health habits and quality of life.

The number of people reporting sleep problems has increased 13pct since 2001.

In the past eight years, the number of people who sleep less than six hours a night jumped from 13pct to 20pct, and those who reported sleeping eight hours or more dropped from 38pct to 28pct.

“It’s easy to understand why so many people are concerned over the economy and jobs, but sacrificing sleep is the wrong solution,” said David Cloud, CEO of the National Sleep Foundation.

“Sleep is essential for productivity and alertness and is a vital sign for one’s overall health,” he added.

Dr. Meir Kryger, Director of Research and Education at Gaylord Sleep Services, said: “With the economy worsening, we are seeing patients in our clinic who have told as that they would not be returning for treatment because they or other family members have lost their jobs, and they are concerned about costs.”

Kryger added: “Some patients have elected not to be treated for sleep apnea because they could not afford the co-pay for the equipment. These patients may wind up far sicker. Sleep disorders are often associated with other chronic diseases, like diabetes and hypertension, and they can add complexity and even accelerate each other if untreated.”

With credit cruch engulfing global economy, National Sleep Foundation encourages people to maintain good sleep, exercise and diet routines to help combat anxiety and improve health and productivity. (ANI)

Mental fatigue can lower physical endurance

Washington, Feb 24 (ANI): Researchers from Bangor University have found that mental fatigue can have an adverse impact on the physical performance of individuals.

They found that when participants performed a mentally fatiguing task prior to a difficult exercise test, they reached exhaustion more quickly than when they did the same exercise when mentally rested.

During the study, the team including Samuele M. Marcora, Walter Staiano and Victoria Manning also looked at the brain to find out why people with mental fatigue perceive exercise to be more difficult.

The 16 participants rode a stationary bicycle to exhaustion under two conditions: once when they were mentally fatigued and once when they were mentally rested.

The mental fatigue sessions began with a challenging 90-minute mental task that required close attention, memory, quick reaction and an ability to inhibit a response.

The study showed that participants stopped exercising 15 pct earlier, on average, when they were mentally fatigued.

The researchers speculate that the perception of effort occurs in the brain. Dr. Marcora said there may be two possibilities.

One that mental fatigue lowers the brain’s inhibition against quitting and the other that mentally fatigue affects dopamine, a brain chemical that plays a role in motivation and effort.

The team hopes that their research could provide a way to study chronic fatigue syndrome. People with chronic fatigue report they lack energy and experience “brain fog,” just like the mentally fatigued participants in this study.

It can have important implications to military personnel. They do physically demanding tasks after long period of vigilance. Vigilance produces mental fatigue.

The study will appear in the Journal of Applied Physiology. (ANI)

India in a better position than most despite global meltdown: Cabinet Secretary

New Delhi, Feb.21 (ANI): Cabinet Secretary K.M. Chandrashekhar on Saturday said that the global meltdown has not had as much of an adverse impact on India as it has had on other countries.

Speaking to ANI on the sidelines of a function at the Constitution Club here, Chandrashekhar said: “I don’t think there is any irrational pessimism, because there has been some amount of global concern all over. Lots of things are happening all over the world. But, I think India is in a better position compared to the other countries in the world.”

He said the Indian economy is showing some positive changes and encouraging signs, but cautiously added that it would take a few months to assess the impact of these signals.

“There are some very encouraging signs. So, these signs are there. But, how the economy evolves, that we’ll have to wait and see in the next few months. I’m very optimistic that certain very positive changes are taking place,” said Chandrashekhar.

Chandrashekhar also underscored the importance of the role of state governments in taking suitable action to ensure that various stimulus measures announced by the federal government are quickly translated into tangible activity at the ground level and ensure that they actually benefit the people.

Chandrashekhar said both states and the center would have to work in tandem to mutually reinforce and complement one another for stimulating the economy.

“A lot of activity has to take place in the states, particularly in terms of ensuring that there is greater lending by the banks in terms of ensuring that there is more spending. So these things will actually have to be energized by the states and really we hope that combined activity by the center and the states will deliver very strong results,” he said.

The Indian economy is expected to grow at least seven percent in fiscal 2009-10. The global downturn has pushed economic growth in India down to a six-year low of 7.1 percent estimated for the year to March, from over nine percent in the previous three years.

An interim budget presented by de facto Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee projected higher spending in the next fiscal year to shield the economy from a global slump and stem job losses.

Official data shows that the cement sector has grown 9.97 percent in December 2008. The year on year increase is Eleven percent. Steel, which had declined steadily through September, October and November last year has shown a recovery in December 2008 and January 2009 and has now touched the May 2008 figure of 22.86 metric tons when the sectoral growth rate was 4.1 percent.

Cement and steel are seen as key drivers with the construction sector seen to have a significant impact on the growth sentiment.

Similarly, the gloom over the automobile sector seems to be lifting, with the January 2009 figures in the passenger vehicles sector showing a 32 percent rise over December 2008 while the increase for commercial vehicles is 23 percent over a similar time frame.

The FMCG sector is also growing again.

The year on year growth is 26.4 percent for the quarter ended December 31, 2008. Food and beverages have also registered a record 28 percent growth in the quarter ended December 31, 2008. The growth in railway freight is up by seven percent in December 2008.

The Government feels its efforts to pump money into the rural economy and the public sector is paying off even though the export sector remains a worry due to a fall in orders.

Last month, the Centre met state chief secretaries and asked them to expedite implementation of infrastructure projects and to ensure that supplementary grants are spent within fiscal 2008-09.

Special emphasis was laid on increasing the pace of implementation of major projects and schemes.

Chandrashekar reportedly discussed the impact of stimulus packages announced by the government earlier and problems being faced by implementing agencies in pursuing the projects and schemes.

The Planning Commission Secretary Subhash Pani presented an overview of the infrastructure schemes and programs of the government. Secretaries of related ministries also reported on schemes being taken up for implementation. (ANI)

Narcotics have irreversible effect on the mentally ill

Washington, Feb 6 (ANI): A new study has found that drugs can have an adverse impact on the brains of people suffering from mental illness.

According to Dr. Stephane Potvin of the Universite de Montreal affiliated Centre de recherche Fernand-Seguin at the Louis-H Lafontaine Hospital, nearly 33 to 50 percent of psychiatric patients also suffer from drug addiction.

The drug consumption leads to deterioration of cerebral structures.

“They become dependant more quickly and they tend to abuse drugs more easily. It is evident that drug use can worsen the symptoms of mental disease,” said Potvin.

“The odds that a mental disorder manifests itself in an individual can increase if he or she consumes drugs,” he added.

The study also showed that people suffering from mental illness, specifically schizophrenia, are more sensitive to the effects of drugs.

The findings were presented at the conference at the Louis-H Lafontaine Hospital this week. (ANI)

Too much screen time may put asthmatic kids at increased health risk

Washington, Feb 5 (ANI): Too much screen time can have an adverse impact on the health of urban children with asthma, according a new study.

The urban children with asthma engage in an average of an hour more of screen time daily.

“We know that both asthma and excessive screen time can be associated with other difficulties, including behaviour problems, difficulty with attention, poor school performance and obesity,” said Kelly M. Conn, M.P.H., of General Pediatrics at Golisano Children’s Hospital at Strong and lead author of the study.

During the study, the researchers surveyed parents of urban children with asthma in Rochester, NY, to better understand their screen time viewing habits.

The screen time includes TV watching and video tapes, playing video and computer games and using the Internet.

The study found that 74 percent of the 226 children whose parents were surveyed exceeded more than two hours of screen time per day. On average, these children with asthma watched 3.4 hours daily.

The widespread presence and popularity of screen time activities in children’s lives makes monitoring and setting limits for screen use very difficult. In addition, in an urban setting, safety concerns often limit a child’s ability to engage in activities outside of the home.

Even though the goals of asthma therapy are to quell asthmatic symptoms and prevent limitations with activities, about 63 percent of children used screen time when their asthma symptoms physically limited their activities.

Those children who used screens when they were having physically limiting symptoms used an average of 3.67 hours daily, which is more than half an hour extra daily than children who engaged in other non-physical activities such as resting, reading or colouring.

Children with asthma most likely watch a similar amount of screen time to all children, but children with asthma are more at risk for the health problems associated with too much screen time.

Conn suggests that parents of children with asthma can encourage a variety of alternate activities for their child, including reading, drawing and arts and crafts, or playing board games or puzzles.

In addition, if a child is experiencing limitation of activity due to their asthma, parents should speak with their child’s medical provider about ways to improve their asthma control.

“It is not unreasonable or uncommon for children to watch TV or play a video game when they are not feeling well or when they need to slow down their activity,” said Conn.

“For all children, it is important for parents to be aware of how much screen time their children have and the types of programs they are watching,” she added.

The study is published in Academic Pediatrics. (ANI)

Exercise does not increase osteoarthritis risk

Washington, Jan 28 (ANI): Regular exercise has no adverse impact on joints, says a new study.

Regular exercising is beneficial for weight control, disease management in cardiovascular disease and diabetes, and for improving psychological well being of an individual.

However, it has been claimed that it is potentially deleterious to one’s joints, in particular those of the lower extremities.

In a new study, the researchers from Boston, USA, and Ainring, Germany, reviewed existing studies on the relationship between regular exercise and osteoarthritis (OA).

They found that in the absence of existing joint injury there is no increased risk of OA from exercise.

“We found that in elite athletes where there was more likelihood of obtaining sports injuries, there was an increased risk of OA in the damaged joints, but in most people vigorous, low-impact exercise is beneficial for both it’s physical and mental benefits,” said lead researcher David Hunter MD PhD, New England Baptist Hospital.

“The largest modifiable risk factor for knee OA is body weight, such that each additional kilogram of body mass increases the compressive load over the knee by roughly 4kg,” he added.

The study is published in the Journal of Anatomy. (ANI)