Payday Lending’s Final Days? Not by a Long Shot, Reports AboutPaydayLoan.com

LOS ANGELES, July 23 /PRNewswire/ — AboutPaydayLoan.com – Many payday lenders are concerned over the forthcoming consequences brought upon by the financial bill that was passed by the Senate and signed by the President yesterday. Their concerns regard new regulations on the payday loan industry by the federal government. Many payday loan lenders, such as Payday Loan Trust, believe these regulations are too restrictive and hand too much power to the respective payday loan State. These new regulations will be counterproductive to payday loan business operations, as it will hurt their business and may result in downsizing. In the long run, a new wave of layoffs and shutdown businesses from the payday loan sector will go on to hurt the struggling economy even more.

A recent payday loan article from The Huffington Post claims that the new financial bill will put an end to payday lending because it enables banks to compete against payday lenders for short term high interest loans. According to the article, “If banks want to grow in the future, they will have to adapt their business models to serve the credit-challenged population.” In the same article they go on to say that 1/3 of the US population is at high credit risk: lending out money to high risk borrowers will only put banks at more risk.

The fact of the matter is, big banks will never be able to compete with short term lenders so long as they are attached to Wall Street. A payday loan of $100 could cost banks a lot more than a payday lender simply because of banks’ operating costs. Take into consideration bank business costs and overhead, their employees, and their executives salaries and bonuses, banks will not be able to be profitable on short term loans.

The new financial overhaul is here to put caps and limits on all types of short term loans, including payday and title loans, and to curb predatory lending. It is simply a wrong and naive analysis to think that this bill is going to shift the short term lending industry from payday loan lenders to bigger lending institutions like banks.

In addition, studies show that many Americans have lost faith in our banking system because they see it as a direct correlation to the downfall of the US economy. They will continue to fear hidden fees tacked on by banks even if the new bill forces them to, according to the article from The Huffington Post, “advertise their fee structures as clearly as a McDonald’s menu.” Americans are smart people and they know it was big banks and Wall Street that failed America back in 2008, not payday lenders.

Consumer Reports magazine said on Wednesday that Apple iPhone 4 owners can eliminate reception problems by enclosing their phones in the “Bumper” case Apple sells.

July 15 (Reuters) – One of China’s leading newspapers slammed Zijin Mining Group on Thursday for its poor handling of a poisonous leak at a copper mine, as the company said it would cooperate with regulators in an investigation.

Zijin (2899.HK) (601899.SS) suspended trading of its shares on Monday after news broke about the spill of wastewater containing acidic copper from its Zijinshan Copper Mine, into the Ting river in the southeastern province of Fujian.

But the contamination began much earlier, on the afternoon of July 3, and the public was initially kept in the dark about the spill, which went on for nearly 24 hours.

Communist Party mouthpiece the People’s Daily said the company explained that it did not report the accident earlier as “they thought it was just as small matter”.

“How can a company like Zijin Mining, which is an industry with a high risk of pollution, not take a ‘small problem’ seriously?” the newspaper said in a commentary.

“In industries with a high risk of pollution, small problems are the hidden dangers that lead to large accidents, and you can’t ever just count on your luck,” it added.

The company said it it would fully cooperate in a probe into the spill after receiving a notice from the Fujian Regulatory Bureau of the China Securities Regulatory Commission regarding the incident. It gave no other details.

Thousands of fish — a total 1.89 million kg — were killed by the 9,100 cubic metres of waste water that escaped from a mine containment tank, according to state media reports. [ID:nTOE66D075]

Though water from the river has been declared safe to drink, the 60,000 people affected by the spill are still wary, because the river is a chemical blue colour and smells unpleasant.

Villagers are now drawing their water from wells, but worry even those may be polluted. The firm has halted production and said it would compensate fish farmers for their losses.

The Chinese government has become increasingly worried about public anger at environmental problems, especially pollution.

“Mass incidents” — or riots and protests — sparked by environmental problems have been rising at a rate of 30 percent per year, according to China’s environmental protection minister.

Earlier this week more than 1,000 people threw rocks at police and blocked roads in southern China in protest at pollution from a plant owned by one of the country’s largest private aluminium producers. [ID:nTOE66E022]. (Reporting by Donny Kwok in Hong Kong and Ben Blanchard in Beijing; Editing by Sugita Katyal)

China newspaper slams mining firm after spill

(Reuters) – One of China’s leading newspapers slammed a major mining firm Thursday for its poor handling of a poisonous leak at a copper mine, as the company said it would cooperate with regulators in an investigation.

Zijin Mining Group suspended trading of its shares on Monday after news broke about the spill of wastewater containing acidic copper from its Zijinshan Copper Mine, into the Ting river in the southeastern province of Fujian.

But the contamination began much earlier, on the afternoon of July 3, and the public was initially kept in the dark about the spill, which went on for nearly 24 hours.

Communist Party mouthpiece the People’s Daily said the company explained that it did not report the accident earlier as “they thought it was just as small matter.”

“How can a company like Zijin Mining, which is an industry with a high risk of pollution, not take a ‘small problem’ seriously?” the newspaper said in a commentary.

“In industries with a high risk of pollution, small problems are the hidden dangers that lead to large accidents, and you can’t ever just count on your luck,” it added.

The company said it would fully cooperate in a probe into the spill after receiving a notice from the Fujian Regulatory Bureau of the China Securities Regulatory Commission regarding the incident. It gave no other details.

Thousands of fish — a total 1.9 million kg (4.2 million lb) — were killed by the 9,100 cubic meters (321,400 cu ft) of waste water that escaped from a mine containment tank, according to state media reports.

Though water from the river has been declared safe to drink, the 60,000 people affected by the spill are still wary, because the river is a chemical blue color and smells unpleasant.

Villagers are now drawing their water from wells, but worry even those may be polluted. The firm has halted production and said it would compensate fish farmers for their losses.

China has been battling to control the damage to its environment caused by more than three decades of breakneck economic growth, from acid rain to desertification.

The China Daily Thursday cited a survey in the booming southern province of Guangdong as saying 40 percent of its soil was contaminated by heavy metals, partly caused by the more than 3,000 mines operating there.

The government has also become increasingly worried about public anger at environmental problems, especially pollution.

“Mass incidents” — or riots and protests — sparked by environmental problems have been rising at a rate of 30 percent per year, according to China’s environmental protection minister.

Earlier this week more than 1,000 people threw rocks at police and blocked roads in southern China in protest at pollution from a plant owned by one of the country’s largest private aluminum producers.

(Reporting by Donny Kwok in Hong Kong and Ben Blanchard in Beijing; Editing by Alex Richardson)

China newspaper slams mining firm after spill

BEIJING/HONG KONG, July 15 (Reuters) – One of China’s leading newspapers slammed a major mining firm on Thursday for its poor handling of a poisonous leak at a copper mine, as the company said it would cooperate with regulators in an investigation.

Zijin Mining Group (2899.HK) (601899.SS) suspended trading of its shares on Monday after news broke about the spill of wastewater containing acidic copper from its Zijinshan Copper Mine, into the Ting river in the southeastern province of Fujian.

But the contamination began much earlier, on the afternoon of July 3, and the public was initially kept in the dark about the spill, which went on for nearly 24 hours.

Communist Party mouthpiece the People’s Daily said the company explained that it did not report the accident earlier as “they thought it was just as small matter”.

“How can a company like Zijin Mining, which is an industry with a high risk of pollution, not take a ‘small problem’ seriously?” the newspaper said in a commentary.

“In industries with a high risk of pollution, small problems are the hidden dangers that lead to large accidents, and you can’t ever just count on your luck,” it added.

The company said it it would fully cooperate in a probe into the spill after receiving a notice from the Fujian Regulatory Bureau of the China Securities Regulatory Commission regarding the incident. It gave no other details.

Thousands of fish — a total 1.9 million kg (4.2 million lb) — were killed by the 9,100 cubic metres (321,400 cu ft) of waste water that escaped from a mine containment tank, according to state media reports. [ID:nTOE66D075]

Though water from the river has been declared safe to drink, the 60,000 people affected by the spill are still wary, because the river is a chemical blue colour and smells unpleasant.

Villagers are now drawing their water from wells, but worry even those may be polluted. The firm has halted production and said it would compensate fish farmers for their losses.

China has been battling to control the damage to its environment caused by more than three decades of breakneck economic growth, from acid rain to desertification.

The China Daily on Thursday cited a survey in the booming southern province of Guangdong as saying 40 percent of its soil was contaminated by heavy metals, partly caused by the more than 3,000 mines operating there.

The government has also become increasingly worried about public anger at environmental problems, especially pollution.

“Mass incidents” — or riots and protests — sparked by environmental problems have been rising at a rate of 30 percent per year, according to China’s environmental protection minister.

Earlier this week more than 1,000 people threw rocks at police and blocked roads in southern China in protest at pollution from a plant owned by one of the country’s largest private aluminium producers. [ID:nTOE66E022] (Reporting by Donny Kwok in Hong Kong and Ben Blanchard in Beijing; Editing by Alex Richardson)

UPDATE 1-China newspaper slams mining firm after spillUPDATE 1-China newspaper slams mining firm after spill

July 15 (Reuters) – One of China’s leading newspapers slammed Zijin Mining Group on Thursday for its poor handling of a poisonous leak at a copper mine, as the company said it would cooperate with regulators in an investigation.

Zijin (2899.HK) (601899.SS) suspended trading of its shares on Monday after news broke about the spill of wastewater containing acidic copper from its Zijinshan Copper Mine, into the Ting river in the southeastern province of Fujian.

But the contamination began much earlier, on the afternoon of July 3, and the public was initially kept in the dark about the spill, which went on for nearly 24 hours.

Communist Party mouthpiece the People’s Daily said the company explained that it did not report the accident earlier as “they thought it was just as small matter”.

“How can a company like Zijin Mining, which is an industry with a high risk of pollution, not take a ‘small problem’ seriously?” the newspaper said in a commentary.

“In industries with a high risk of pollution, small problems are the hidden dangers that lead to large accidents, and you can’t ever just count on your luck,” it added.

The company said it it would fully cooperate in a probe into the spill after receiving a notice from the Fujian Regulatory Bureau of the China Securities Regulatory Commission regarding the incident. It gave no other details.

Thousands of fish — a total 1.89 million kg — were killed by the 9,100 cubic metres of waste water that escaped from a mine containment tank, according to state media reports. [ID:nTOE66D075]

Though water from the river has been declared safe to drink, the 60,000 people affected by the spill are still wary, because the river is a chemical blue colour and smells unpleasant.

Villagers are now drawing their water from wells, but worry even those may be polluted. The firm has halted production and said it would compensate fish farmers for their losses.

The Chinese government has become increasingly worried about public anger at environmental problems, especially pollution.

“Mass incidents” — or riots and protests — sparked by environmental problems have been rising at a rate of 30 percent per year, according to China’s environmental protection minister.

Earlier this week more than 1,000 people threw rocks at police and blocked roads in southern China in protest at pollution from a plant owned by one of the country’s largest private aluminium producers. [ID:nTOE66E022]. (Reporting by Donny Kwok in Hong Kong and Ben Blanchard in Beijing; Editing by Sugita Katyal)

New U.S. guideline would expand bone density testing

(Reuters Health) – Under a new set of guidelines proposed by an influential U.S. panel, more women would be eligible for bone density tests to detect the bone-thinning disease osteoporosis.

The draft guidelines by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF), sponsored by the U.S. government’s Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, call for all women to be screened for osteoporosis starting at age 65. Women who are deemed to have higher risks could start earlier, at any age.

The group’s last guidelines, in 2002, had the same recommendations for all women 65 and older, but said that high-risk women should not begin screening until age 60. The new draft is based on a review of evidence, published in the Annals of Internal Medicine, since the previous guidelines were issued.

About 10 million people in the U.S. over the age of 50 have osteoporosis, according to the National Institutes of Health, most of them women. More than three times as many women are at risk of the disease.

The disease, which typically begins after menopause, increases the risk of broken bones, the most dangerous of which are broken hips, and may cost the health care system as much as $18 billion per year.

It’s unclear how many additional women will now fit the screening criteria, task force chair Dr. Ned Calonge told Reuters Health. “The good news,” he said, is that it’s the minority of women between 50 and 64 who will be at high risk.

“What physicians should do is not pull out the DXA machine,” Calonge said, referring to the device usually used for bone mineral density tests, “but calculate clinical risk factors” in women under 65.

Such scans cost a few hundred dollars each, with DXA machines costing up to $85,000.

Ultrasound, which is cheaper and does not involve radiation, has also been shown to effectively predict fractures, and is also commonly used. However, most diagnostic criteria refer to DXA measurements.

In the new draft, the USPSTF does not recommend testing men for the disease, saying there is not enough evidence to show a benefit. The National Institutes of Health estimates that about 2 million men in the U.S. have osteoporosis, accounting for about one fifth of cases overall.

For women, the draft guidelines are similar to those of the American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, and also to those of the National Osteoporosis Foundation.

The osteoporosis organization recommends all women be screened starting at age 65, and that doctors use World Health Organization criteria – also used by the USPSTF – to determine if a woman is at higher risk before 65. Such criteria take into account other health conditions, a history of broken bones, and drugs people are taking.

The foundation does, however, recommend that all men be screened starting at the age of 70.

That difference just reflects “different ways of dealing with uncertainty,” Calonge said. “Men do get osteoporosis and osteoporotic fractures. But we don’t feel there’s enough evidence.”

Dr. Mone Zaidi, an osteoporosis researcher at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York, said that while the new draft guidelines are a step in the right direction because they broaden screening criteria, and are appropriate for men, they do not go far enough.

“What we really need to do is capture women much earlier than menopause,” Zaidi, professor of medicine and director of Mount Sinai’s Bone Program, told Reuters Health. “A woman starts losing bone at a maximal rate within two years of menopause.”

Zaidi cited advances in treatment since the USPSTF’s 2002 guidelines. Osteoporosis is typically treated with drugs called bisphosphonates such as Fosamax, Boniva, Reclast, and Actonel.

Such drugs have come under scrutiny by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for increasing the risk of heart disease and certain fractures, but the FDA has said it found no such links after reviewing the data.

Evista is also used to treat osteoporosis, although it has been shown to increase the risk of blood clots, according to the USPSTF. Estrogen, which is also sometimes prescribed to prevent fractures, can increase the risk of stroke, heart disease, and breast cancer.

Still, given the availability of safe treatments, “it doesn’t make any clinical or common sense to me to wait until they’ve lost enough to be at a high enough risk or qualify under the old osteoporosis criteria,” Zaidi said.

“In the field, if you go and talk to any ob-gyn, they do a bone density test at menopause,” Zaidi said. “The task force is far behind.”

Calonge, who works at the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment in Denver, acknowledged that doctors go beyond the evidence in practice all the time.

“From the standpoint of being a clinician, I understand that,” he said. “I think it’s important to know what the evidence supports, and know when you’re exceeding the evidence, and that’s a good time for a frank discussion with your patients.”

SEEKING FEEDBACK

The release of these draft guidelines mark a change in how the USPSTF will put forth its recommendations, Calonge told Reuters Health. In the past, they simply released final versions of their recommendations, but they have been quietly working on ways to release drafts for public comment, before the guidelines were final.

For one month, the draft will be available for comment on the group’s website here. Based on the feedback, the group may change its recommendations.

“We’ve decided that since the miscommunication and the reaction to the breast cancer screening guidelines, that we wanted to accelerate the process,” Calonge said, referring to mammography recommendations released last November that were met with controversy.

The 2002 osteoporosis screening recommendations remain in force until the new ones are finalized, Calonge said. “We’re not recommending clinicians use this recommendation until final release.”

SOURCE: www.annals.org Annals of Internal Medicine, July 5, 2010.

Brain patterns may be signs of mental illness risk

LONDON, July 5 (Reuters) – British scientists believe they have found specific patterns of brain activity in children and young people which could be signs or “markers” of those who will later go on to develop mental illnesses such as schizophrenia.

Researchers from Nottingham University, who presented their study at the Forum for European Neuroscience in Amsterdam, said the patterns suggest it may be possible in future to identify those at risk of becoming ill before they develop symptoms.

“If we can identify people who are at particularly high risk of developing schizophrenia, perhaps using neurocognitive brain markers, then we might be able to reduce that risk and also help them to function better,” said Dr Maddie Groom, who worked on the study and gave a briefing to reporters in London.

“If we give them a better start, they may encounter the illness in a more positive way and not get quite so ill.”

Hundreds of millions of people worldwide are affected by mental, behavioural and neurological illnesses such as schizophrenia, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), depression, epilepsy and dementia.

Many people who go on to develop diverse mental health problems will have a history of behavioural problems going back to childhood, but experts say the problem with finding them at that stage is that differences then are often extremely subtle.

In one study, Groom and her colleagues investigated looked at the healthy siblings of people with schizophrenia, who also have a very slightly increased risk of developing schizophrenia compared with the general population.

Using brain imaging to read activity levels, the scientists asked the siblings to perform task which involved playing an alien-zapping computer game in which they needed to respond quickly, and crucially, halt the urge to respond if the wrong kind of alien popped up. The task was called a “go, no-go” task.

“When we measured the brain activity of the siblings of people with schizophrenia, their brain activity was reduced at the time when they needed to pay attention to the stimulus, and when they needed to inhibit their response,” Groom explained.

She said this suggested the subtle differences in brain activity may act as a risk marker for the disorder.

In a second study, scientists compared brain activity of children with ADHD — a mental disorder that affects between 8 and 12 percent of children, and 4 percent of adults worldwide.

The researchers used the same “go, no-go” task in various scenarios, including when the children were taking their medication, Ritalin, and when they were not, and then using an additional system of rewards and penalties.

Millions of people take ADHD drugs including Novartis (NOVN.VX) Ritalin, which is known generically as methylphenidate, and Shire Plc’s (SHP.L) Adderall and Vyvanse. In the United States alone, 2008 sales for these drugs was about $4.8 billion, according to data from IMS Health.

Groom’s results showed that children who were taking medication, and children given an incentive, performed better than those who had neither medicines nor incentives.

This suggests, Groom said, that doctors may be able to find new ways to treat children with ADHD using a combination of behavioural strategies and drugs. (Editing by Jon Boyle)

Factbox: Highlights of U.S. financial regulation reform bill

It must now win approval in each chamber before it can go to President Barack Obama to be signed into law.

Here is a brief look at the bill’s main provisions:

SWAPS PUSH-OUT: Wall Street firms that dominate the $615-trillion over-the-counter derivatives market would have to spin off dealing operations in some swaps, but could keep many swaps in-house, including derivatives to hedge their own risk.

Much OTC derivatives trading would be redirected through more accountable channels such as exchanges and clearinghouses. Many OTC contracts end-users could carry on as before.

VOLCKER RULE: A new rule would bar proprietary trading by banks for their own accounts unrelated to customers; limit the growth of the biggest banks; and curb banks’ involvement in private equity and hedge funds, except for small investments allowed by a loophole added to the rule late in debate.

Some big banks’ profits would be pinched by both the Volcker rule and the Lincoln swaps plan, with a few Wall Street giants potentially facing structural changes.

WALL ST ‘DEATH PANEL’: Aiming to prevent massive bailouts like AIG’s and disastrous bankruptcies like Lehman Brothers’, the bill calls for a new government “orderly liquidation” process for financial firms on the verge of collapse.

Authorities could seize and liquidate them, with costs covered by sales of assets and fees on other firms if needed.

CONSUMER WATCHDOG: Protection of financial consumers would be enhanced by increased government regulation.

The bill would set up a new bureau in the Federal Reserve to regulate mortgages and credit cards. The watchdog has sharp teeth, but couldn’t bite car dealers, who won an exemption.

THE BIG PICTURE: A new council of federal regulators would try to monitor the entire financial forest, not just the trees. High-risk firms could be singled out for stricter policing.

BEHIND THE HEDGE: Private equity and hedge funds would have to register with regulators and open their books to scrutiny. Not so for venture capital funds, which would be exempt.

INSURANCE COPS: The first federal monitor for state-policed insurers would be formed. It’s not federal regulation — yet.

BANK CUSHIONS: Banks would have to set aside more capital to ride out tough times, but will get several years to comply.

FED SCRUTINY: The Fed’s emergency lending during the crisis would be reviewed, but not its decisions on interest rates.

DEBIT CARDS: Fees charged on debit card transactions would be reduced — a victory for retailers over the banks.

(Reporting by Kevin Drawbaugh, Rachelle Younglai, Kim Dixon, Andy Sullivan, Roberta Rampton and Charles Abbott, editing by Anthony Boadle)

Here come the insect collectors

Mumbai, June 6 — The Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) has trained 28 officers to comb every nook and corner of the city for mosquito larvae. They are called insect collectors.

This exercise is done every year before monsoon to identify areas where varieties of mosquitoes that spread malaria are found in large numbers so that these areas can be fogged.The target is the anopheles mosquito that causes malaria.

“If we find more mosquitoes of the anopheles variety in an area then we will focus on fogging and anti-larvaecidal activity there,” said an officer from the BMC’s Insecticide department. A total of 85,435 cases of malaria were recorded in the state in 2009 of which 39,659 cases were recorded in Mumbai.

At least 180 people died due to malaria in Mumbai in 2009. Since June 1, there have been 275 suspected cases of malaria and two people have died of the illness.

The samples these insect collectors gather will be tested at a laboratory created on the fourth floor of the BMC headquarters at Crawford Market. Chief Insecticide Officer Dr Arun Bamne said that this exercise will help the BMC focus on areas with more larvae of the anopheles variety.

“If samples from a particular area are of the anopheles kind, then the fogging activity will be increased in that area,” Bamne said. BMC officials said this study will help the civic body find out if the strain has become resistant to the chemical used for fogging and changes can be made to make the exercise more effective.

The state government will provide these insect collectors with specialised kits in a month. These officers have to cover 10 spots every day.

Five of these are among the nine high-risk zones identified by the BMC and five are random spots. The high-risk spots have been identified on the basis of high incidence of positive malaria cases and areas where construction activity, and hence stagnant water, is more.

New hope for patients at high risk of recurrences of heart disease

Washington, May 20 (ANI): Canadian researchers have confirmed the potential of a medication to reduce inflammation in patients with atherosclerosis.

The results of the clinical study, directed by Dr. Jean-Claude Tardif of the Montreal Heart Institute (MHI), have appeared in the journal Circulation Cardiovascular Imaging.

The promising findings of this study on VIA-2291 – a medication developed by Via Pharmaceuticals, a San Francisco-based biotechnology firm – relate to its capacity to effectively reduce inflammation, which can contribute to the formation and progression of atherosclerosis plaque and infarct.

Dr. Tardif said: “Up to now, standard treatments for patients with acute coronary syndrome (unstable angina and infarct) have not specifically reduced inflammation, an important component of atherosclerosis. However, research in recent years has allowed us to determine that the presence of inflammation significantly increases the risk of recurrence among these patients. The clinical study was conducted with about 200 patients, and the findings we””re publishing show that VIA-2291 may finally offer the solution we need to target and reduce inflammation. In fact, these newly published data strongly support the evaluation of VIA-2291 in larger outcome trials.”

The Montreal Heart Institute””s Research Centre directed the study in several hospitals in Canada and the United States as well as analysed all of the data, including data collected by CAT scans of coronary arteries.

Dr. Tardif added: “The publication of this new study attests once again to the excellence of the entire team at the Montreal Heart Institute””s Research Centre. While we””re clearly satisfied with the findings obtained with VIA-2291, we””re even more thrilled at the prospect of taking a big step toward more effective and personalized prevention of cardiovascular disease.” (ANI)

No end in sight to Thai government- Red Shirts standoff in bloody Bangkok

Bangkok, May 18 (ANI): The standoff between Thai security forces and Red Shirt protestors continued with the government firmly refusing to recall troops or hold further talks until the rally ended.

The breakdown of the negotiations was the last straw for the government, and it has been amassing massive army reinforcements to flush out the remaining protestors.

Incidentally, most of the angry young men whose angst had thus far spearheaded the protests have left the disputed site and only old people, women and children remain.

The government had issued a deadline of 3 pm for the protestors to vacate the area on Monday which resulted in the departure of many young protestors, but some stayed back.

The establishment’s original plans to advance into the area have now been deferred amidst fears about the possibility of an extremely high casualty count if they proceed.

Gen Anupong, chief of the Royal Thai Army, did not want the security forces to be hastily deployed as he was concerned about the risk of casualties among troops and protesters, the Bangkok Post reports.

“When we”re ready, we”ll reach our final goal at the Ratchaprasong intersection. But right now, there”s still a high risk of lots of casualties,” a CRES source said.

Meanwhile Red Shirt leader Natthawut Saikua is still hoping for a resumption of peace talks.

“Mr Abhisit should not rule out potential talks based on the fact that the earlier rounds failed,” he said. “Even though this may take time, I believe it”s better than letting the killings continue.”

He has also said he won’t be clearing the rally site in a hurry and is hopeful of a positive response to a request the UDD had sent to the UN for them to step in and mediate in the negotiations.

Former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra has also joined the UDD in their call for UN intervention.

Korbsak Sabhavasu, secretary-general to the prime minister, made it clear the renewed negotiations would never come about until the demonstrators dispersed, the paper said.

“Negotiations can happen if the protest stops and its leaders surrender. But if this does not happen, they [the UDD leaders] should tell the mobs to stop the rioting and the burning of the city and tyres. As Mr Natthawut said he could issue orders, does this mean that he ordered the mobs to create violence?” Mr Korbsak said. (ANI)

High-dose vitamin D tied to increased fall risk among older women

Washington, May 12 (ANI): Older women receiving an annual large dose of vitamin D may have an increased risk of falls and fractures, says a new study.

According to the research in the May 12 issue of JAMA, women age 70 years or older who received a single annual high dose of vitamin D had a higher rate of falls and fractures compared to women who received placebo.

The results of studies investigating the effects of cholecalciferol (vitamin D) supplementation on falls and fractures have been incon­sistent, with some meta-analyses indicating a reduced fracture risk, while others have concluded that vitamin D supplementation is ineffective, or may in­crease the risk of fracture. For individuals attempting to modify their risk of falls or fractures via vitamin D, adherence to daily supplementation is typically poor, according to background information in the article.

Kerrie M. Sanders, Ph.D., of the University of Melbourne, Geelong, Australia and colleagues conducted a study to examine whether high-dose cho­lecalciferol (500,000 IU) given orally once a year to older women would reduce falls and fractures. The vitamin D was given in a single, high-dose to address low adherence and to be a prac­tical intervention easily translated to clinical practice. The trial included 2,256 community-dwelling women, ages 70 years or older, considered to be at high risk of fracture, who were recruited from June 2003 to June 2005 and were randomly assigned to receive 500,000 IU of cholecalciferol or placebo each autumn to winter for 3 to 5 years. The study concluded in 2008.

The trial participants had a total of 5,404 falls over the study period, with 74 percent of 837 women in the vitamin D group and 68 percent of 769 women in the placebo group having at least 1 fall. Analysis indicated women in the annual high-dose vitamin D group experienced 15 percent more falls. Women in the vitamin D group had 171 fractures vs. 135 in the placebo group, with 26 percent more fractures for participants in the vitamin D group, who also had a 31 percent higher incidence of falls in the first 3 months following dosing.

“This is the first study to demon­strate increased risk of falls associated with any vitamin D intervention and the second study to demonstrate an in­creased fracture risk associated with annual high-dose vitamin D therapy in elderly women. Our study used the largest total annual dose of vitamin D (500,000 IU) reported in any large ran­domized controlled trial, raising the possibility that the adverse outcome is dose-related. The opposing outcomes of 2 studies that used the same total annual dose (300,000 IU intramuscularly) suggest that the dosing regimen (i.e., 4 monthly vs. annually) rather than the total dose might determine the out­come,” the authors write.

“This line of reasoning is sup­ported by the temporal risk pattern that we observed and the fact that harm has not been reported in the numerous studies that have used more frequent dosing. Thus, it is reasonable to specu­late that high serum levels of vitamin D or metabolites resulting from the large annual dose, subsequent de­crease in the levels, or both might be causal. Furthermore, because the lev­els of 25-hydroxycholecalciferol dem­onstrated in this study could occur with other recommended dosing regi­mens, the outcome of this study sug­gests that safety of high-dose vitamin D supplementation warrants further study.” (ANI)

The Pill could put women off sex

Washington, May 4 (ANI): Researchers have found a link between using hormonal contraception and Female Sexual Dysfunction (FSD), a condition most often caused by a lack of desire.

The study of female German medical students has been published in The Journal of Sexual Medicine.

Interestingly, women taking non-hormonal contraceptives were at lowest risk for FSD, more than women not using any contraceptive, the study said.

“Sexual problems can have a negative impact on both quality of life and emotional well-being, regardless of age,” said researcher Dr. Lisa-Maria Wallwiener of the University of Heidelberg, Germany. “FSD is a very common disorder, with an estimated prevalence of about two in five women having at least one sexual dysfunction, and the most common complaint appearing to be low desire.”

“The causes of FSD are multifunctional and in recent years the possible role of hormonal contraception has been discussed,” said fellow researchers Drs. Christian and Markus Wallwiener, University of Tuebingen, Germany. “Women tend to be aware that sexual dysfunction is often influenced by various factors such as stress and relationships, but our study has shown it might also be influenced by exogenous hormone application.”

1,086 women were included in the study, who completed questionnaires designed to identify problems with sexual function, as well as other lifestyle factors including desire for children, pregnancy and whether they were smokers. 87.4 percent had used contraceptives in the last 6 months, and 97.3 percent had been sexually active within the last four weeks.

To analyse the effect of contraception on sexual function, women using multiple forms of contraception or who had not been sexually active within the last four weeks were excluded, leaving 1046 participants. Of this figure, 32.4 percent were considered at risk for FSD: 5.8 percent at high risk for hypoactive sexual desire disorder, 1 percent for arousal disorder, 1.2 percent for decreased lubrication, 8.7 percent for orgasm disorder, 2.6 percent for satisfaction problems, and 1.1 percent for pain.

“In future research it would be interesting to see if there is a difference between the dosage of estrogen and the various synthetic progestins used in hormonal contraceptives in terms of an impact on female sexual function,” added study researcher Dr. Harald Seeger, also of University of Tuebingen, Germany. (ANI)

Vladimir Putin nominated for hip-hop award

London, April 16 (ANI): Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has been nominated for a music award honouring his contributions to hip-hop and rap.

Muz TV, which is Russia’s answer to MTV, nominated Putin, 57, for its “Event of the Year” award for his bizarre appearance last November on the televised final of a rap “battle for respect”.

The nomination is something of a surprise, since at the time Putin looked awkward and stood motionless among a crowd of teenagers as they writhed to a noisy rap song.

At another point, as a hip-hop groove played in the background, Putin delivered a speech that mixed teenage street slang with observations on the hip hop scene – about which he apparently knew little.

Critics dismissed the move as a cynical ploy to boost his already stellar ratings but Putin denied that, saying he wanted to reach out to young people to warn them of the dangers of drugs and vodka.

“It would be impossible to perform so-called low risk break dancing and still less high risk break dancing while on drugs,” the Telegraph quoted him as telling his teenage audience, without apparent irony.

The awards ceremony will take place in Moscow later this month, though it is unclear whether Putin will attend or indeed win. (ANI)

Area Health suspends Leeton surgery

Surgery at the Leeton District Hospital in the New South Wales Riverina has been suspended for three months with no guarantee it will resume.

The Greater Southern Area Health Service says it has temporarily suspended surgery at Leeton District Hospital from today to identify possible changes to surgical services to ensure they are appropriate.

When asked if Leeton could lose local surgery altogether, the director of medical services Doctor Joe McGirr said he could not pre-empt the outcome.

“It’s difficult to pre-empt the process that we’re going through, but we did indicate to the doctors that we would be working very closely with them,” he said

“They emphasised to us how important the theatre was for the services to the community, for services for obstetrics and obviously for their own recruiting and retaining doctors for the community and we’re very acutely aware of that so we need to address that concern.

“There are a range of issues that have been identified. A couple for example include the fact that at the moment there’s only one entry and exit to the theatre and that’s actually a fire issue. There’s also an issue with the size of the recovery room.”

The closure means Leeton residents will have to travel to Narrandera or Griffith for surgery for the next three months.

Dr McGirr says obstetrics services will continue at Leeton District Hospital for low-risk patients.

“We will make arrangements for patients who are in a high-risk category because there won’t be the availability of caesarean section cover at Leeton during this time, we’ll make arrangements for them to be referred to Griffith Hospital or indeed Narrandera hospital.”

The Leeton Shire Council says the decision to close the theatre came as a shock but it now agrees the closure is necessary.

The Mayor Paul Maytom says council received a briefing from the health service last week.

He expects the training and upgrade to improve health services for Leeton residents in future.

“I suppose the good thing about this is that we can be then satisfied after the three months or beyond – it may take longer than three months for the theatre to be upgraded – we’ll have the appropriate skills and facilities to suit our needs if we have that emergency happen in our town,” he said.

“There’s two aspects of it, one is the theatre itself needs an upgrade and the other one is that because I understand there’s not a lot of theatre or operations that are being done at Leeton hospital they need to up-skill the theatre nursing staff from Leeton hospital by taking them to Griffith or Narrandera Hospital.”

Pirates seize cargo ship off Seychelles

NAIROBI, April 11 (Reuters) – Pirates seized a Saint Vincent and the Grenadines flagged merchant ship off the coast of the Seychelles on Sunday, the EU naval force said.

A regional maritime body warned other vessels to avoid the area for the next two days as the weather was suitable for more hijackings.

“The … cargo ship MV Rak Afrikana has been hijacked this morning … approximately 280 nautical miles west of Seychelles,” EUNAVFOR said in a statement.

“The Rak Afrikana has currently stopped due to engine problems.”

Andrew Mwangura, head of the East African Seafarers’ Assistance Programme, said the ship had a crew of 23 Chinese.

EUNAVFOR said Seychelles’ Rak Afrikana Shipping Ltd owned the 7,561-dwt ship.

Gangs have seized dozens of ships in the Indian Ocean and Gulf of Aden over the last few years. Despite international naval patrols, pirate activity is predicted to rise in coming months as the weather improves.

Mwangura said ships should avoid the seas around where the Rak Afrikana was taken for the next two days.

“This area will remain high risk for the next 24-48 hours as weather conditions continue to be conducive to small boat operations,” he said in a statement.

Somali pirates have made millions of dollars in ransoms by hijacking ships off their anarchic country’s coast and have extended their range using mother ships, sometimes seized vessels, from which to launch attacks with smaller craft. (Reporting by George Obulutsa; Editing by Jon Hemming)

Pirates seize ship off Seychelles

NAIROBI, April 11 (Reuters) – Pirates on Sunday seized a merchant ship off the coast of the Seychelles, a regional maritime body said, and warned other vessels to avoid the area for the next two day as the weather was suitable for more hijackings.

Andrew Mwangura, head of the East African Seafarers’ Assistance Programme, said the vessel’s details inclcuding the number of its crew and nature of its cargo were yet to be determined.

“A merchant vessel reported being hijacked … approximately 250 nautical miles west of the Seychelles,” he said in a statement.

Over the last few years sea gangs have hijacked dozens of ships in the Indian Ocean and Gulf of Aden.

Despite international naval patrols, pirate activity is seen rising in coming months as the weather improves.

Mwangura said ships should avoid the seas around where the merchant vessel was taken for the next two days.

“This area will remain high risk for the next 24-48 hours as weather conditions continue to be conducive to small boat operations,” he said. (Reporting by George Obulutsa; Editing by Giles Elgood)

Rio hit by fresh landslide

A landslide has swept away dozens of houses near Rio de Janeiro, worsening a disaster caused by heavy rains that has killed at least 138 people around Brazil’s second-biggest city.

The heaviest rains in more than four decades that began on Monday triggered at least 180 mudslides that crushed shacks in hillside slums, causing most of the deaths, leaving 53 people missing and more than 3,200 homeless.

Hundreds of residents and rescuers scrambled to find buried victims after a hill gave way in Niteroi, which lies on the other side of a bay from Rio.

“We are very sad… It seems there were more than 40 houses,” said Jose Mocarzel, Niteroi’s public services secretary.

The Globo network reported that two bodies had already been pulled from the debris.

After flooding caused transportation chaos on Tuesday, the city famed for its beaches and Carnival slowly returned to normal on Wednesday, but heavy rain began falling again in the evening and forecasters warned of more to come.

Firemen covered in mud struggled for hours to rescue an eight-year-old boy who had called for help from the rubble of a collapsed house in one hillside slum, only to find that the child had died by the time they reached him.

“I promised his father I would get the boy out alive but I couldn’t,” tearful fireman Luis Carlos dos Santos said.

The mudslide in Rio’s historic Santa Teresa area killed at least 18 people, most of whom had been sleeping on Monday night when the hillside collapsed.

Rio Mayor Eduardo Paes urged people living in high-risk areas to stay away from their homes as the city braced for another night of rain.

Authorities say at least 10,000 houses are still at risk of collapse and the national government has sent security forces to help with rescue operations.

Death toll rises in Rio floods

Rescuers searched for flood and landslide survivors in south-eastern Brazil after the heaviest downpours in almost half a century left at least 113 people dead.

The state of Rio de Janeiro was in mourning as the extent of the disaster became clear and a third day of rains compounded the misery for 5,000 municipal employees trying to clear streets turned to mud.

The situation “is better than it was yesterday”, Rio de Janeiro mayor Eduardo Paes said, although he maintained the maximum alert level and urged people in high-risk areas to evacuate their homes.

“During the night, fortunately, there were no new landslides but the risk still exists,” he said.

Rain fell intermittently on Wednesday (local time) amid sunny spells, providing hope that the worst was over.

But the toll could rise further as dozens were reportedly still missing following the rains which displaced more than 1,400 people and destroyed scores of homes.

Emergency officials said most fatalities were in hillside slums around the city of Rio de Janeiro, where torrents of water have triggered devastating mudslides and scenes of chaos since Monday.

Dozens were killed in Rio itself but hardest hit was Niteroi, a city on the other side of the bay from the state capital where at least 54 people have died.

The flooding was so intense that authorities urged residents to remain indoors and not venture downtown where streets were impassable.

Some motorists abandoned their partially submerged cars, while others were stranded for hours inside stalled vehicles.

“All the major streets of the city are closed because of the floods,” Mr Paes said.

Mr Paes ordered schools in Rio closed on Wednesday for a second day in order to keep people off the streets, while state governor Sergio Cabral decreed three days of mourning.

The killer floods also wreaked havoc with air traffic, delaying most international flights in and out of Rio’s Antonio Carlos Jobim airport and forcing the cancellation of many domestic services.

In a neighbourhood close to the mountain where Rio’s iconic Christ the Redeemer statue is located, the local weather service said the recent rainfall was twice the amount normally registered for the month of April.

National weather service Inmet said Tuesday’s rainfall was the heaviest in 48 years.

Rio hit by fresh landslide; death toll at 138

A landslide swept away dozens of houses near Rio de Janeiro on Wednesday night, worsening a disaster caused by heavy rains that has killed at least 138 people around Brazil’s second-biggest city.

The heaviest rains in more than four decades that started on Monday triggered at least 180 mudslides that crushed shacks in hillside slums, causing most of the deaths, leaving 53 people missing and more than 3,200 homeless.

Hundreds of residents and rescuers scrambled to find buried victims late on Wednesday after a hill gave way in Niteroi, which lies on the other side of a bay from Rio.

“We are very sad … It seems there were more than 40 houses,” said Jose Mocarzel, Niteroi’s public services secretary.

The Globo network reported that two bodies had already been pulled from the debris.

After flooding caused transportation chaos on Tuesday, the city famed for its beaches and Carnival slowly returned to normal on Wednesday but heavy rain began falling again in the evening and forecasters warned of more to come.

Firemen covered in mud struggled for hours to rescue an 8-year-old boy who had called for help from the rubble of a collapsed house in one hillside slum, only to find that the child had died by the time they reached him.

“I promised his father I would get the boy out alive but I couldn’t,” tearful fireman Luis Carlos dos Santos said.

The mudslide in Rio’s historic Santa Teresa area killed at least 18 people, most of whom had been sleeping on Monday night when the hillside collapsed.

Rescue authorities said 138 people were confirmed dead in Rio state, while 135 were injured.

Rio Mayor Eduardo Paes urged people living in high-risk areas to stay away from their homes as the city braced for another night of rain.

Authorities say at least 10,000 houses are still at risk of collapse and the national government has sent security forces to help with rescue operations. Paes appealed to the federal government for 370 million reais ($208 million) in aid for emergency operations.

OLYMPIC CONCERNS

The transportation chaos renewed attention on Rio’s poor infrastructure as it prepares to host the soccer World Cup in 2014 and the Olympic Games in 2016.

The International Olympic Committee said in a statement it planned to have discussions with Rio officials once the situation returns to normal about how the disaster might affect preparations for the games.

“We remain confident that Rio will stage top-quality Games in 2016,” the statement said.

Niteroi was the worst affected area with more than 67 people dead, according to the fire service.

In one Niteroi slum, residents desperately searched for survivors in rubble left from 10 houses that collapsed from a mudslide, the Globo network reported.

“I lost my sister-in-law and a niece, and my nephew and brother-in-law are still missing,” nurse Samuel Franca, who managed to rescue his sister from the wreckage the day before, told Globo.

Traffic was moving again in most parts of Rio after nearly grinding to a halt on Tuesday, though Paes urged people to postpone meetings and avoid unnecessary trips. Schools remained shut for a second day.

Most of the damage was concentrated in the slums where about a fifth of Rio’s people live, often in precarious shacks that are vulnerable to heavy rains.

In January, at least 76 people died in flooding and mudslides in Brazil’s most populous states of Rio, Sao Paulo and Minas Gerais. Then, dozens of people were killed in a landslide at a beach resort between Rio and the port city of Santos.

(Additional reporting by Douglas Engle, Sergio Queiroz and Pedro Fonseca; writing by Brian Ellsworth; editing by Stuart Grudgings and Mohammad Zargham)