Oz women under constant pressure to be ‘yummy mummies’

Melbourne, Sept 16 (ANI): The hype created by celebrity yummy mummies like Angelina Jolie and Jessica Alba has put women under pressure to lose weight quickly after giving birth, reveals a new Australian study.

The study conducted by Deakin University showed that more than one in four women are “usually or always dissatisfied” with their post-baby body.

Researcher Lucia Bongiorno said that the hype created by celebrity yummy mummies has also contributed to an unrealistic ideal.

“People are obsessed with celebrity babies and celebrity pregnancies,” the Courier Mail quoted her as saying.

“Babies have become a must-have sort of item,” she added.

Although the study involving 346 mothers of infants aged 1-12 months compare themselves with their peers with babies and child-free friends, they felt the most pressure to lose post-baby weight from the media.

Moreover, some fathers also pressured their partners not to gain too much weight while pregnant and to lose it quickly after giving birth.

Bongiorno said while mums compared themselves most to peers, their peers were also likely to be influenced by the same media images.

“Both mothers and their peers with new babies, when confronted by media pictures of celebrity mothers such as Bec Hewitt, are saying ‘I’ve got to look like that’,” she said.

“But celebrity mothers typically have nannies and personal trainers … the average mother doesn’t. So such an expectation is unfair on themselves,” she added.

The study will be presented at the Australian Psychological Society conference in Darwin. (ANI)

Satyam pulls out of Oz university development project

Melbourne, Sep 11 (ANI): Mahindra Satyam has pulled out of a 75 million dollars software development project at Deakin University that was set to create 2000 jobs in Geelong, Victoria.

The company’s president of corporate affairs, Sujit Baksi, informed the state government of its intention in a letter to IT minister John Lenders.

According to the Geelong Advertiser, Baksi wrote: “The need to concentrate on an extensive internal restructuring program of our business precludes Mahindra Satyam from embarking on expansion projects of this kind.

“While Mahindra Satyam is disappointed that it cannot proceed with the centre, it reaffirms its commitment to future expansion in Victoria when circumstances allow.”

A Satyam Australia spokeswoman confirmed that the project had been cancelled, The Australian reports.

According to the report, Baksi committed to Mahindra Satyam paying back the undisclosed cash grant to the Brumby Government, which the company was given to lure it to Geelong.

In July the new owner of Satyam, Tech Mahindra, said it was committed to the project and was investigating its viability.

The future of the Geelong project, occupying 10ha at Deakin University, came into question after Satyam founder and chairman B. Ramalinga Raju admitted to a one billion dollars accounting scandal in January. (ANI)

Tech Mahindra seeks end to eight-year World Bank ban on Satyam Computer Services

Sydney, July 2 (ANI): Tech Mahindra, the new owner of the troubled Indian IT services firm Satyam, has officially written to the World Bank seeking an end to the eight-year ban against Satyam Computer Services for allegedly providing improper benefits to bank staff.

The company has rebranded itself as Mahindra Satyam.

“We wrote to the bank a few weeks ago. We don’t expect an immediate response as these things take time but we disagree with the claims they’ve made,” Australian IT quoted Tech Mahindra executive vice-chairman Vineet Nayyar, as saying in Sydney.

Satyam was blacklisted last September and a month later was forced to deny reports that its contractors had installed spy software on World Bank computers.

Tech Mahindra also said that it remains committed to developing a 75 million dollar IT facility in Geelong and will continue to service Telstra despite losing a 30 million dollar-plus contract.

Nayyar reaffirmed the company’s commitment in talks with Victorian Innovation Minister Gavin Jennings this week.

“We’re committed to the project (but) we’ve got due diligence in place. The goal is to complete the project but we need to investigate how much investment is needed,” Nayyar said.

The Geelong project was announced more than a year ago with Satyam as the main financial backer, in partnership with the Victorian government, the City of Greater Geelong and Deakin.

The software hub was to create 2000 jobs, a welcome reprieve for a region afflicted by automotive industry job losses.

Satyam’s local chief, Venki Prathivadi, said Telstra was still a customer despite reports that TELCO had severed all ties.

“We had a five-year contract with Telstra from 2003 and we fully served it. Telstra put out a request for proposals and we made it to the short list,” Prathivadi said.

Satyam still has contracts worth 135 million dollars with Qantas and 12 million dollars with Suncorp. (ANI)

Tech Mahindra to complete Satyam’s 75-mn dollars Australian project

Melbourne, July 1 (ANI): Tech Mahindra, the new owner of troubled Indian IT services firm Satyam, has for the first time confirmed its continued commitment to a 75 million dollars software development project in Geelong, Australia.

There were grave concerns that the project would be axed after Satyam Computer Services founder and chairman, B. Ramalinga Raju, admitted to a one billion dollar accounting fraud in January.

Tech Mahindra executive vice-chairman Vineet Nayyar said construction of the 10ha development on Deakin University grounds would begin as soon as discussions with the Victorian government were complete and the company is determined to complete the project.

However, he warned that certain aspects of the initial agreement, including funding, could change.

“We’re committed to the project … we’ve got due diligence in place,” said Nayyar, who is currently visiting Australia.

“The goal is to complete the project but we need to investigate how much investment is needed,” The Australian quoted him, as saying.

The Geelong project was announced more than a year ago with Satyam as its main financial backer in partnership with the Victorian state government, the City of Greater Geelong and Deakin.

The software hub promises to create 2000 jobs, a much-needed boost for the region in the wake of industry retrenchments. (ANI)

Satyam Australia chief quits

Melbourne, May 27 (ANI): The E head of Satyam Computer Services in Australia, Deepak Nangia, has resigned.

Nangia told The Australian he left the company around three weeks ago to pursue other opportunities.

During his seven-year tenure, Nangia built Satyam Australia into a 200 million dollar company, securing blue chip clients such as Telstra, National Australia Bank and Qantas.

However, the actions of Satyam founder and chairman B. Ramalinga Raju, who admitted to over-inflating the value of the company’s cash and bank balances by more than one billion American dollars hurt its reputation and bottom line.

A Satyam spokeswoman said Nangia’s successor will be named soon.

Like many of his counterparts in other countries, Nangia has been battling to retain Satyam’s clientele.

However some clients, including Telstra and NAB, have either decided to cut all ties or reduce their engagement with the Indian firm.

Satyam’s bid to build a 75 million dollar, 10 hectare software facility at Deakin University in Geelong remains in limbo more than a year after it was first trumpeted.

Late last year, Nangia said that Satyam employed around 1000 people locally, with an additional 700 workers in India servicing Australian customers.

Despite being acquired by Tech Mahindra, Satyam’s finances are still in bad shape, with revenue on a downward spiral. (ANI)

Traditional toys are healthiest way of stimulating imagination: Experts

Melbourne, May 19 (ANI): Childhood development experts have stated that playing with traditional toys and games is the best way to stimulate the imagination and support learning in a child.

Dr Jon Jureidini, a child psychiatrist at the University of Adelaide, shared his concern about the shift towards electronic toys and computer games, which stop a child from being creative.

“The role of the child in play becomes more reactive,” the Courier Mail quoted him as saying.

“Much more of the content is going to be generated by the computer than would be the case if a child was playing with a doll’s house . . .

“The danger is that children aren’t having as much stimulation to their imagination and creativity.

“Playing through some distressing event helps children to come to terms with it and feel less bullied by their scary memories.

“There’s the working-through aspect and also the communication aspect,” Dr Jureidini, who uses play in therapy, said.

His thoughts on the subject were echoed by Deakin University Associate Professor Karen Stagnitti, who said imaginative play has also been shown to expand children’s vocabulary, comprehension and social skills.

Teacher Alison Woodcock said some children had to be taught how to play.

“The children are very confident on the computers these days,” she said.

“We need to help them develop skills in creative play,” she added. (ANI)

Over-eating, not poor exercise, to blame for obesity

Washington, May 9 (ANI): Over-eating, not decreased levels of physical activity, is to be blamed of the rise of obesity in the US, claims a new study.

The research that uses an innovative approach to study the relative contributions of food and exercise habits to the development of the obesity epidemic has concluded that the rise in obesity in the United States since the 1970s was virtually all due to increased energy intake.

A study, which examined the question of the proportional contributions to the obesity epidemic by combining metabolic relationships, the laws of thermodynamics, epidemiological data and agricultural data, has been presented at the European Congress on Obesity.

“There have been a lot of assumptions that both reduced physical activity and increased energy intake have been major drivers of the obesity epidemic. Until now, nobody has proposed how to quantify their relative contributions to the rise in obesity since the 1970s. This study demonstrates that the weight gain in the American population seems to be virtually all explained by eating more calories. It appears that changes in physical activity played a minimal role,” said the study’s leader, Professor Boyd Swinburn, chair of population health and director of the World Health Organization Collaborating Centre for Obesity Prevention at Deakin University in Australia.

The scientists started by testing 1,399 adults and 963 children to determine how many calories their bodies burn in total under free-living conditions. The test is the most accurate measure of total calorie burning in real-life situations.

Once they had determined each person’s calorie burning rate, Swinburn and his colleagues were able to calculate how much adults needed to eat in order to maintain a stable weight and how much children needed to eat in order to maintain a normal growth curve.

They then worked out how much Americans were actually eating, using national food supply data (the amount of food produced and imported, minus the amount exported, thrown away and used for animals or other non-human uses) from the 1970s and the early 2000s.

The researchers used their findings to predict how much weight they would expect Americans to have gained over the 30-year period studied if food intake were the only influence. They used data from a nationally representative survey (NHANES) that recorded the weight of Americans in the 1970s and early 2000s to determine the actual weight gain over that period.

“If the actual weight increase was the same as what we predicted, that meant that food intake was virtually entirely responsible. If it wasn’t, that meant changes in physical activity also played a role,” Swinburn said.

“If the actual weight gain was higher than predicted, that would suggest that a decrease in physical activity played a role,” the expert added.

The researchers found that in children, the predicted and actual weight increase matched exactly, indicating that the increases in energy intake alone over the 30 years studied could explain the weight increase.

“For adults, we predicted that they would be 10.8 kg heavier, but in fact they were 8.6 kg heavier. That suggests that excess food intake still explains the weight gain, but that there may have been increases in physical activity over the 30 years that have blunted what would otherwise have been a higher weight gain,” Swinburn said. (ANI)

Lap bands found to be cheapest weight-loss method

Melbourne, Feb 26 (ANI): Forget about diets, exercise and other weight-loss methods, for LAP band surgery is a cheaper way to fight obesity and diabetes, according to a new study.

The first of its kind Victorian study by Monash and Deakin universities has found that gastric banding can also provide more healthy years to highly obese patients, while saving the system thousands of dollars in ongoing costs.

The findings come in line with calls by doctors for weight-loss surgery to be subsidised.

Deakin University researcher Catherine Keating claimed that the immediate surgical outlay offset years of associated health costs.

“Our research shows that it costs less to treat type-2 diabetes early through gastric banding surgery than to allow the same person to live their life with the disease and face ongoing escalating treatment costs,” The Herald sun quoted her as saying.

She added: “Most importantly, these patients could enjoy a dramatic improvement in their quality of life because early treatment using gastric banding surgery results in remission of diabetes for many patients.”

For the study, the researchers followed 60 obese patients for two years and found that the lifetime health care costs of gastric banding was 98,900 dollars, as compared with 101,400 dollars losing weight through conventional methods.

Also, the researchers highlighted that patients who had the immediate benefit of lap band surgery gained an additional 11.4 years of type-2 diabetes-free life, while those relying on conventional weight loss to beat the disease benefitted for only 2.1 years.

Ray Farrugia a patient who dropped from 122kg to 81kg through lap banding, said: “It’s been brilliant. I was a happy fat guy, I never had any worries about my weight. But I could not run 50m without being out of breath. Now I can go for 5km.

“I would never have considered the surgery because it was such a big cost, but if it was subsidised people would undertake it.” (ANI)

ANZ Bank reviews Satyam links

Melbourne, Jan.12 (ANI): In the wake of Hyderabad-based Satyam Computer Services’ billion dollar corporate scandal, the management of ANZ Bank has announced that it will reviewing its links with the firm.

ANZ Bank has around 100 Satyam contractors who support IT projects. The bank’s Indian subsidiary which employs under 2000 people, primarily uses these contractors.

Last week, the bank told its employees that it would develop a contingency plan, while admitting that its relationship with Satyam was “modest”.

“The relationship involves a number of Satyam staff who support development and testing on information technology projects. This means there is no effect at all on ANZ’s day to day IT operations,” David Cartwright, ANZ operations, technology and shared services group managing director, said.

“(As) for the technology development projects that Satyam contract staff are supporting, we are currently assessing key person dependences and developing a plan for how we manage through the situation,” Cartwright said.

“While there is some work to do on this, it’s clear that we will be able to take the issues at Satyam in our stride and largely get on with business as usual given the depth of our own IT resources and our relationships with a range of IT vendors globally.”

Unlike other blue-chip companies such as National Australia Bank, Telstra and Qantas, ANZ doesn’t have any long-term contracts with Satyam.

Meanwhile, a majority of local customers are assessing their contractual obligations with Satyam.

A multi-million-dollar software facility being built on Deakin University’s campus in Geelong is also under a cloud as the future of Satyam remains uncertain.

Satyam’s world came to a crushing halt when the company’s founder and chairman B. Ramalinga Raju admitted to over-inflating the value of cash and bank balances by 1.44 billion dollars. (ANI)

Corporate Australia’s push to export IT jobs to India in disarray after Satyam fraud

Melbourne, Jan 9 (ANI): Corporate Australia’s push to export IT jobs to India is in disarray following a 1.84 billion dollars fraud involving one of the world’s key outsourcing companies.

Telstra, Qantas, Coles, NAB and Suncorp are among scores of Australian companies affected by the scandal, the Herald Sun reports.

Apart from its Australian clients, Satyam provides outsourcing services for the giant Citigroup and Japan”s Nissan Motor Corp among other big corporates.

Telstra employs Satyam as one of its four major IT contractors. Spokesman Martin Barr said the telco was actively reviewing the arrangement and planned to cut the number of contractors to two.

NAB has outsourced at least 500 positions to India after engaging Satyam and other providers over the past three years.

NAB spokeswoman Kerrina Lawrence said the bank was monitoring events and was reviewing the arrangement with Satyam.

A team of Satyam IT consultants from India was deployed last year to work on a technology project at Medibank Private”s headquarters in Melbourne.

Medibank spokesman James Connors told said yesterday that there were contingency plans in place if the Satyam staff needed to be flown back to India.

Wesfarmers subsidiary Coles also has Satyam staff working at its Melbourne head office.

The fraud, involving Hyderabad-based Satyam Computer Services, also throws into doubt plans for a 75 million dollars software laboratory at Deakin University’s Geelong campus.

The laboratory, a joint venture between Satyam, Deakin and the State Government, was slated to create 2000 jobs and inject an annual 175 million dollars into the Victorian economy within the next decade.

Satyam Australia, which employs about 1700 local staff, has headquarters in Melbourne, but calls yesterday were answered by a recorded message.

Shares in the Mumbai and New York-listed business crashed after company chairman B Ramalinga Raju confessed to falsifying the earnings and assets of India”s fourth-largest software and outsourcing services provider.

Raju’s criminal activities surfaced when shareholders blocked his bid to sell two companies to Satyam in order to plug a 50.4 billion rupees hole in the company’s balance sheet. (ANI)