Having a child with autism doesn’t put stress on parents” marriage: Study

Washington, May 20 (ANI): A new study has debunked the myth that having a child with autism can put stress on the parents” marriage.

The study by researchers from Kennedy Krieger Institute in Baltimore found that a child”s autism has no effect on the family structure.

Brian Freedman, lead author of the study and clinical director of the Center for Autism and Related Disorders at Kennedy Krieger Institute, found that 64 percent of children with an autism spectrum disorder (ASD) belong to a family with two married biological or adoptive parents, compared with 65 percent of children who do not have an ASD.

“In the work I”ve done with children with autism, I”ve come across many couples who quote this 80 percent divorce rate to me. They don”t know what the future holds for their child, and feel a sense of hopelessness about the future of their marriage as well – almost like getting a diagnosis of autism and a diagnosis of divorce at the same time,” he said.

Researchers sought to examine the incidence more scientifically. Using data from the 2007 National Survey of Children”s Health*, they examined a nationally representative sample of 77,911 children, ages 3 to 17.

Freedman said that their studies found that families with autistic children reported more stress than say, mothers with growing children or children who had other disabilities like Down syndrome.

“While there are indeed stressors in parenting a child with autism, it doesn”t necessarily result in the family breaking up more often than would occur in another family,” said Dr. Freedman. “And as someone who works with a team of health care professionals to treat and provide support for families of children with autism, it”s important for us to make sure our patients” parents know that, and for our fellow clinicians to provide reliable, evidence-based information about the divorce rate among this population as well.”

“I would hope this research drives home the importance of providing support to these families, and letting them know that their relationships can survive these stressors,” he said. “We should continue to provide training for parents so that they can work through the stressors in their relationship to keep their family together and have a successful marriage.”

Results of the study will be presented in Philadelphia at the International Meeting for Autism Research. (ANI)

Fidesz wins Hungary election with strong mandate

(Reuters) – Viktor Orban declared a sweeping victory for his center-right Fidesz party Sunday and told supporters that leading Hungary as prime minister would be the biggest task of his life.

World

All the opinion polls had pointed to a Fidesz victory, and the weight of expectation to act quickly to put Hungary back on a track of sustainable growth after near financial collapse will be immense, from Hungarians and investors alike.

Fidesz pushed the ruling Socialists to a distant second, ahead of the far-right Jobbik party, but it was still not immediately clear whether Fidesz would win the two thirds majority in parliament it needs push through vital reforms.

A second round of voting will be held on April 25 when the remaining 121 seats will be decided.

Economists say Orban, 46, will need to implement deep reforms to reduce the local government sector and make the health care and education systems more efficient.

“On this splendid day Hungarians have expressed that Hungary is united, Hungary has power, is able to do great things, it wants, jobs, order and safety, Hungarians have shown to the world that it’s again good to be Hungarian,” he told 2,000 cheering supporters in central Budapest.

He said Hungarians had “defeated hopelessness,” adding: “I feel it with all my nerves and know it deep in my heart that I face the biggest task of my life. I will need all the Hungarian people to solve that.”

Fidesz, which last ruled between 1998 and 2002, campaigned on cutting taxes, creating jobs and supporting local businesses to boost to Hungary’s ailing economy.

“We have been waiting for this for eight years; no, for 22 years, since Fidesz was founded,” Magdolna Karbacz, 44, an entrepreneur from the western city of Szekesfehervar said at Fidesz headquarters in downtown Budapest.

The Socialist government led by technocrat Gordon Bajnai since April 2009 made painful budget cuts to rein in the deficit under a deal led by the International Monetary Fund, which provided emergency financing for Hungary amid a crisis in 2008.

The country’s economy contracted by 6.3 percent last year, while unemployment is running at 11.4 percent — the highest since 1994 — which has further increased public discontent.

TWO-THIRDS MAJORITY?

Fidesz secured 206 out of 386 parliamentary seats, the National Election Committee said on its website based on numbers on individual constituencies and party list votes. The Socialists gained 28 seats, ahead of the far-right Jobbik party which had 26 seats in the first round.

Green liberal LMP is the fourth party which passed the threshold to get into parliament, and secured 5 seats.

Analysts said ahead of the results that if Fidesz won 53-55 percent of party list votes and 120-130 seats in individual constituencies in the first round, it stands a strong chance of securing two-thirds of the seats.

“The Socialists and Jobbik are below 20 percent. This means that Fidesz has a good chance to garner two-thirds of parliament seats even if it will lose some seats in the second round,” said Attila Juhasz, analyst at Political Capital after the results.

Orban was the prime minister heading the last Fidesz government and many supporters hope his government will restore Hungary’s national pride.

“Fundamentally, this country needs a renewal in its soul and in its morals. This elections can help achieving that if the (new) leaders will represent that,” said Peter Buki, 37.

Analysts said Fidesz’ strong victory was expected to have a neutral or slightly positive impact on financial markets and the forint Monday as the election result had been expected.

“I expect moderate strengthening of the forint and a drop in government bond yields tomorrow … Global developments like Greek news and U.S. economic figures are also supportive,” said analyst Gergely Suppan of Takarekbank.

(Additional reporting by Sandor Peto and Marton Dunai; Writing by Krisztina Than; Editing by Alison Williams)

UPDATE 8-Fidesz wins Hungary election with strong mandate

BUDAPEST, April 11 (Reuters) – Viktor Orban declared a sweeping victory for his centre-right Fidesz party on Sunday and told supporters that leading Hungary as prime minister would be the biggest task of his life.

All the opinion polls had pointed to a Fidesz victory, and the weight of expectation to act quickly to put Hungary back on a track of sustainable growth after near financial collapse will be immense, from Hungarians and investors alike.

Fidesz pushed the ruling Socialists to a distant second, ahead of the far-right Jobbik party, but it was still not immediately clear whether Fidesz would win the two thirds majority in parliament it needs push through vital reforms.

A second round of voting will be held on April 25 when the remaining 121 seats will be decided.

Economists say Orban, 46, will need to implement deep reforms to reduce the local government sector and make the health care and education systems more efficient.

<^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

For a full menu of stories, click on [nLDE63107B]

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>

“On this splendid day Hungarians have expressed that Hungary is united, Hungary has power, is able to do great things, it wants, jobs, order and safety, Hungarians have shown to the world that it’s again good to be Hungarian,” he told 2,000 cheering supporters in central Budapest.

He said Hungarians had “defeated hopelessness”, adding: “I feel it with all my nerves and know it deep in my heart that I face the biggest task of my life. I will need all the Hungarian people to solve that.”

Fidesz, which last ruled between 1998 and 2002, campaigned on cutting taxes, creating jobs and supporting local businesses to boost to Hungary’s ailing economy.

“We have been waiting for this for eight years; no, for 22 years, since Fidesz was founded,” Magdolna Karbacz, 44, an entrepreneur from the western city of Szekesfehervar said at Fidesz headquarters in downtown Budapest.

The Socialist government led by technocrat Gordon Bajnai since April 2009 made painful budget cuts to rein in the deficit under a deal led by the International Monetary Fund, which provided emergency financing for Hungary amid a crisis in 2008.

The country’s economy contracted by 6.3 percent last year, while unemployment is running at 11.4 percent — the highest since 1994 — which has further increased public discontent.

TWO-THIRDS MAJORITY?

Fidesz secured 206 out of 386 parliamentary seats, the National Election Committee said on its website based on numbers on individual constituencies and party list votes. The Socialists gained 28 seats, ahead of the far-right Jobbik party which had 26 seats in the first round.

Green liberal LMP is the fourth party which passed the threshold to get into parliament, and secured 5 seats.

Analysts said ahead of the results that if Fidesz won 53-55 percent of party list votes and 120-130 seats in individual constituencies in the first round, it stands a strong chance of securing two-thirds of the seats.

“The Socialists and Jobbik are below 20 percent. This means that Fidesz has a good chance to garner two-thirds of parliament seats even if it will lose some seats in the second round,” said Attila Juhasz, analyst at Political Capital after the results.

Orban was the prime minister heading the last Fidesz government and many supporters hope his government will restore Hungary’s national pride.

“Fundamentally, this country needs a renewal in its soul and in its morals. This elections can help achieving that if the (new) leaders will represent that,” said Peter Buki, 37.

Analysts said Fidesz’ strong victory was expected to have a neutral or slightly positive impact on financial markets and the forint on Monday as the election result had been expected.

“I expect moderate strengthening of the forint EURHUF= and a drop in government bond yields tomorrow … Global developments like Greek news and U.S. economic figures are also supportive,” said analyst Gergely Suppan of Takarekbank. (Additional reporting by Sandor Peto and Marton Dunai; Writing by Krisztina Than; Editing by Alison Williams)

Hungary’s Orban declares victory, sees challenge

BUDAPEST, April 11 (Reuters) – Hungary’s next prime minister Viktor Orban declared election victory for his centre-right Fidesz and said Hungarians had voted on Sunday to “defeat hopelessness”.

Bonds

“Hungarians voted on Hungary and Hungary’s future. Today Hungary’s citizens have defeated hopelessness,” he told party supporters.

“I feel it with all my nerves and know it deep in my heart that I face the biggest task of my life. I will need all the Hungarian people to solve that.” (Reporting by Sandor Peto)

Callous Kasab asked to stop laughing or face Dara Singh

Mumbai, June 22 (ANI): The lone surviving gunman behind the Mumbai terror attacks, Ajmal Amir Kasab, has been reprimanded by lawyers for laughing during the court proceedings, and recently a lawyer asked him to be serious or else he would call Dara Singh.

Kasab is the gunman captured alive during the terrifying three days beginning November 26, 2008, when 10 men arrived in Mumbai by boat and attacked 10 sites, killing more than 170 people. His trial, on charges of terrorism, criminal conspiracy and waging war against the state, began two months ago.

He has drawn reprimands from the lawyers for laughing, although they have also nicknamed him “the short one” and occasionally joke with him.

On Thursday, when he was laughing at their banter, prosecutor Ujjwal Nikam turned to him and said: “Don’t laugh. Be serious. Otherwise I will call Dara Singh,” a reference to the legendary Indian wrestler often invoked by parents to keep their children quiet. Kasab laughed even more.

Last Monday, 27 photographs taken at the station on 26/11 were shown to the court, including a widely published image of a man identified as Kasab in cargo pants and a black T-shirt, toting a blue backpack and holding an AK-47, The Washington Post reported.

A police official said that Kasab hung his head low in court and that tears welled over. The judge asked him whether he was crying, but Kasab did not respond, just wiped his face. Nikam dismissed the reaction as “crocodile tears.”

“Kasab is a trained commando. No question of remorse. He plays the psychological game. He smiles, looks innocent or pretends to shed tears. These are tricks to get media sympathy,” he said.

Abbas Kazmi, Kasab’s attorney, said his client is becoming “increasingly gloomy” and has “a sense of hopelessness written all over his face.”

When the trial began in April, Kasab, speaking through his attorney, pleaded not guilty and sought to retract his confession, saying it was made under duress, the paper said.

The trial is conducted mostly in English and Marathi, the official language of Maharashtra state, neither of which Kasab knows well. He often looks bored or bewildered, but when witnesses recount the horrors of that November night, he appears to try hard to follow. (ANI)

Mandela: Obama’s inauguration recalls joy at his election in 1994

Mandela: Obama's inauguration recalls joy at his election in 1994 Johannesburg – Congratulating Barack Obama on his inauguration as the first black president of the United States Tuesday, iconic former South African president Nelson Mandela said the historic event reminded him of the excitement that surrounded his own election as his country’s first democratically-elected president.

In a letter handed to Obama shortly before his inauguration on Tuesday, anti-apartheid hero Mandela, 90, said: “There is a special excitement on our continent today, Mister President, in the knowledge that you have such strong personal ties with Africa, we share in that excitement and pride.”

“You will always be in our affection as a young man who dared to dream and to pursue that dream.”

Lamenting the sense of hopelessness that gripped many parts of the world in the face of conflict and persistent injustice, Mandela praised Obama for bringing “a new voice of hope.”

Obama’s inauguration reminded him of his own emotional swearing-in as South Africa’s first post-apartheid president in 1994 after spending 27 years in jail for resisting prejudice.

“People, not only in our country, but around the world, were inspired to believe that through common human effort, injustice can be overcome and that together a better life for all can be achieved,” he said. (dpa)