FIFA bars Capello from players’ session with referee

London, May 23 (IANS) England manager Fabio Capello received a set-back after FIFA prevented him from arranging a special session between his players and referee Howard Webb ahead of the World Cup.

The Daily Telegraph reported that the England manager wanted Webb to go through the new rules and regulations with his players at their training camp, but the world governing body’s rules prevented it.

England’s players will now be briefed by an official FIFA delegate who will give them a presentation on rule changes, the most high-profile of which is that players will now be cautioned for feinting in the run-up while taking a penalty.

FIFA has strict rules on officials, after its integrity unit identified referees as the ‘weak link’ in the defence against match-fixing. But there was no question about the integrity of Webb or the motivation of the England camp in trying to set up the meeting.

According to reports, referees will be kept in isolation during the competition and security guards will be posted outside referees’ hotels and no direct outside calls will be allowed to their rooms.

Brazil 2002 veterans defend Dunga’s isolation plans

Midfielders Gilberto Silva and Kleberson, who won the World Cup with Brazil in 2002, have defended coach Dunga’s plans to keep the squad preparing for the 2010 finals isolated from fans and media.

The pair, speaking to reporters on Sunday, pointed out the differences between Dunga’s methods and those of 2002 title-winning coach Luiz Felipe Scolari.

While the so-called “Scolari Family” were free to move around at will and talk to reporters in their hotel at the South Korea/Japan finals, Dunga’s squad have been confined to their training base with a minimum of contact with media.

“They are different trainers, each has a work philosophy, Felipao (Big Phil) and Dunga, despite both being ‘gauchos’ (from the southern state of Rio Grande do Sul),” said Kleberson, overlooked for the 2006 finals.

Dunga’s policy of isolation is a reaction to the freedom the team had under Carlos Alberto Parreira in the countdown to the 2006 finals in Germany where Brazil were eliminated in the quarter-finals.

Fans have been barred from training sessions and Dunga sends just two players out per day to talk to reporters.

Gilberto, who was in the team that disappointed in Germany, said Dunga sought what was best for the squad.

‘NO BARRIER’

“I don’t see a barrier, if the journalists who are here today were accompanying another national team out there they’d have even greater difficulties to find news,” he said.

“We’re also experienced after what happened in 2006.”

Kleberson and Gilberto are among seven defensive midfielders in the squad. Dunga has been criticised for a lack of creative players but the pair said the team were ready to reach their objective, a sixth title.

“We’re already used to criticism in relation to the midfielders. The important thing when we go after our objectives is that it doesn’t matter who’s playing,” said Gilberto.

Asked about the absence of Ronaldinho and Santos’s Ganso, Kleberson said: “Brazil have excellent players, we know only 23 players can be called up. I worked hard to gain the coach’s confidence to be here.”

The squad have been based in Curitiba since Friday and began physical training on Sunday after having medical tests during the first two days.

They leave for South Africa on Wednesday with a stop in Brasilia where they will be received by President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

Brazil, who will be based in Johannesburg, face North Korea, Ivory Coast and Portugal in Group G at the finals starting on June 11.

(Writing by Rex Gowar in Buenos Aires; Editing by Sonia Oxley; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

Floodwaters cut off returning residents

Flooding has isolated another New South Wales far west community.

Water from the Culgoa River rose enough at the weekend to cut off the Weilmoringle Station and the nearly Wytaliba Aboriginal community.

The far west State Emergency Service’s operation controller, James McTavish, says about 25 people are cut off.

“They were subject to an evacuation order last week but over that period of time some people have come back into Wytaliba,” he said.

“But they are very well prepared and we have no concerns about their welfare during the period of isolation, which could be up to four weeks.”

Mr McTavish says the road west of Wanaaring has been reopened, but he is issuing a warning.

“The road is not in very good condition and it is quite a long way to Broken Hill,” he said.

“It is over 500 kilometres to Broken Hill from Wanaaring, so we’re still treating that effectively as an isolated community.”

Flood isolated town gets supplies

The first load of supplies has been flown into the town of Goodooga, in north-western New South Wales, which is expected to be isolated by floodwaters for about six weeks.

Roads into the town were cut on Saturday morning.

The State Emergency Service (SES) says more than one metre of water is over the road into the town, which is home to about 330 people at the moment.

The operations controller for the SES in the far west, Bob Evans, says from today a Lightning Ridge grocery store owner will open a temporary shop in Goodooga.

“The shop will be there for the duration of the isolation. It will be operational, the plan is at the moment to have it operating two days a week another two days of the week it will be restocking the shelves and things like that,” he said.

He says other services are working to ensure Goodooga survives being cut off.

“The community’s going to be isolated at a minimum for weeks quite possibly six or more weeks, so those departments are looking at setting up some sort of activities for the adults and the children in the community to keep them busy,” he said.

About 50 people are in Wanaaring and about the same in Weilmoringle, which are also isolated along with about 30 in Angledool.

Floods cut off last road to Goodooga

The town of Goodooga in north-western New South Wales is now isolated by floodwaters which have moved down from Queensland.

Graham Craig, the SES controller in the far west, says residents are prepared and crews are continuing community consultation to cope with the isolation.

He says the last road into town was cut a short time ago.

“The Goodoga to Lightning Ridge road has approximately 25 millimetres of water running across it, approximately one mile out from Goodooga,” he said.

“That’s continuing to rise now so as at this stage now, Goodooga is now isolated.”

Residents given flood evacuation deadline

Floodwaters from Queensland have started cutting off roads and isolating farms in north-west New South Wales.

Rises along the Paroo River have cut access between the village of Wanaaring and Bourke and there are also several road closures in the Brewarrina Shire.

The first major flooding is expected to begin at Wanaaring today or tomorrow when the river peaks near five metres.

The State Emergency Service (SES) operations controller for the far west, Tony Casey, says residents of the village will be protected by its levee but rural properties are under threat.

“Of concern in the Wanaaring area is of course the various rural properties which will see isolation for some considerable periods and of particular concern of course is the amount of potential for stock loss in the north-west area of the state,” he said.

Mr Casey says SES representatives will also be meeting residents in the Goodooga Reserve and Weilmoringle today to discuss plans for evacuations in those communities.

“The danger is Weilmoringle. There is a levee there but the peak in the town on the Culgoa River will be such that the levee cannot be guaranteed to keep the floodwaters out and there’s the potential there for loss of life if the community do not evacuate before the peak gets there,” he said.

The SES has ordered residents in the Goodooga Reserve to evacuate their homes by Tuesday night and people in Weilmoringle are being asked to leave by Thursday.

Major flooding is predicted to start in these areas later this week due to rises on the Culgoa and Bokhara rivers.

Song birds have to deal with cover artists too

Washington, Sep 9 (ANI): Just like great singers among humans, birds too have to deal with cover artists who copy songs.

A new research has revealed that some bird species have evolved to sing the same tune as their rivals, in order to compete effectively.

Led by Dr. Joseph Tobias and Dr Nathalie Seddon from the Edward Grey Institute, University of Oxford, the research team analysed the calls and songs of two antbird species that were living side-by-side in the Amazon rainforest- the Peruvian warbling-antbird and the yellow-breasted warbling-antbird.

The study was aimed at investigating their similar songs, and, in particular, at testing the theory that the birds’ songs could become increasingly similar to enable effective communication between competing species.

The above notion has attracted controversy as many scientists have argued that convergence in territorial or mating signals results in needless confrontation or crossbreeding and the creation of hybrids.

“Biologists have long been fascinated by convergence in ecological traits as it offers tangible evidence of evolution and the forces of selection by which it operates, but until now there is no clear evidence that social competition between animal species can produce convergent signals. We examined this idea by analysing the structure and function of songs in two birds which we knew to be strong social competitors,” said Tobias.

The researchers studied the species in Peru and Bolivia at one site where they lived together, and two sites where they lived in isolation.

Firstly, they recorded three sets of signals-songs, calls, and plumage colour of both species (including a total of 504 songs from 150 individuals).

Later, they played them back to individuals of each species to test the significance of songs of both types.

The results showed that territorial songs of both species were extremely similar particularly where they lived together, such that territorial birds treated songs of both species as equally threatening.

In the meantime, they discovered that non-territorial signals like calls and plumage were highly divergent.

“In effect, the territorial songs of these birds are more or less interchangeable in design and function. Given that they last shared a common ancestor more than 3 million years ago, it is almost equivalent to humans and chimpanzees – which diverged around 5 million years ago – using the same language to settle disputes over resources” said Tobias.

“Our results provide the first compelling evidence that social interaction can cause convergent evolution in species competing for space and resources.

They also suggest that while competition drives convergence in territorial songs, this is offset by divergence in non-competitive signals such as plumage colour to promote species recognition and reduce the chance of interbreeding,” he added.

The study has been published in Evolution.(ANI)

Lonely, depressed Brit pensioners are drinking themselves to death

London, Aug 31 (ANI): An increasing number of lonely and depressed elderly in the UK are turning to drinking, and are dying from booze-related illnesses.

Recent data has revealed that a total of 1,912 over-60s died as a result of boozing in 1999, which has increased 40pct in the last decade to 2,677 in 2008.

Among men, fatalities have risen 44pct – from 1,161 to 1,671 – and among women the toll is up by more than a third, from 751 to 1,006.

Shadow Home Affairs Minister James Brokenshire, who uncovered the data, warned that Ministers were ignoring the problem.

“These figures are a wake-up call on the consequences of Britain’s booze culture. This touches all age groups,” the Mirror quoted the Tory MP as saying.

Andrew Harrop, of Age Concern and Help the Aged charities, said that Britain’s ageing population didn’t explain the “very worrying” rise in drink-related deaths.

“More are drinking excessively throughout adult life. The isolation of many older people, particularly if they struggle with mobility, can lead to excessive drinking,” he said.

“The death of a spouse or friends also leaves many lonely and depressed.

“Excessive drinking in older adults is often un-diagnosed,” he added. (ANI)

Condition of three swine flu suspects better, says RML doctor

New Delhi, Aug 13 (ANI): The condition of the three swine flu suspects, who are admitted to the Ram Manohar Lohia (RML) Hospital, was reported to be much better on Thursday.

“The condition of three patients who were serious is improving well. We are awaiting the report from NICD, ” said Dr. N K Chaturvedi, Medical Superintendent, RML.

The three patients were admitted to RML on Wednesday with swine flu like symptoms.

Of the three, one is a 29-year-old man, who is also suffering from renal failure, another a 40-year-old man, who is suffering from pneumonia and a two-year-old child suffering from cough and cold.

The patients have been put under treatment and are responding well.

Though the reports of their samples are still awaited, the doctors at the hospital are hopeful of their recovery.

RML is one of the government certified testing centres for the symptoms of H1N1 virus.

Till Wednesday, a total of 654 people were screened at the RML, of which 584 are adults and rest 70 are children.

The RML doctors took samples of eleven patients, but no one has been advised admission. Of the 11 patients in the isolation ward, four have already been discharged.

The toll of H1N1 positive cases has risen to 312 in New Delhi.

As on Thursday, the fatal cases of swine flu had touched the mark of 20. (ANI)

2008 China earthquake destroyed 23 percent of the pandas’ habitat

Washington, July 28 (ANI): In a new study, scientists have shown that when the magnitude 8 Sichuan earthquake struck southern China in May 2008, more than 23 percent of the pandas’ habitat was destroyed in the area.

The Sichuan region is designated as one of 25 global hotspots for biodiversity conservation.

Home to more than 12,000 species of plants and 1122 species of vertebrates, the area includes more than half of the habitat for the Earth’s wild giant panda population, according to study lead author Weihua Xu of the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing.

“We estimate that above 60 percent of the wild giant panda population was affected to some extent by the earthquake,” said Xu.

In an effort to develop conservation strategies for the panda’s remaining habitat, Xu and his colleagues used satellite imagery, field observations and published research to determine the pandas’ habitat loss and fragmentation in the South Minshan region, which is adjacent to the earthquake’s epicenter.

Since forests are the main vegetation type used by the pandas, the authors compared forested areas in satellite images from September 2007, before the earthquake, to images after the earthquake and its aftershocks, in July 2008.

The authors then combined results based on these satellite data with criteria that make forests suitable for pandas, including elevation, slope incline and presence of bamboo.

Their analyses revealed that more than 354 square kilometers, or about 23 percent, of the pandas’ habitat was converted to bare land.

Of the remaining habitat, the researchers found that large habitat areas had been fragmented into smaller, disconnected patches, which Xu says can be just as harmful as habitat destruction.

“It is probable that habitat fragmentation has separated the giant panda population inhabiting this region, which could be as low as 35 individuals,” said Xu.

“This kind of isolation increases their risk of extinction in the wild, due in part to a higher likelihood of inbreeding,” he added.

Xu and his colleagues propose a plan to encourage pandas to move between patches using specially protected corridors.

They also recommend areas to be protected outside of nature reserves, where the earthquake caused more than twice as much damage to panda habitat as inside reserves.

Finally, they recommend that post-earthquake relocation of affected towns takes panda habitat into consideration.

“It is vital to the survival of this species that measures are taken to protect panda habitat outside nature reserves,” Xu said. (ANI)

One more person with symptoms of swine flu quarantined in Tamil Nadu

Coimbatore, July 14 (ANI): One more person with symptoms of the dreaded swine flu was quarantined in Coimbatore.

Presently, he is in the isolation ward of the Coimbatore Medical College Hospital.

The blood samples of a youngster named Harijan (24) who returned to India from Malaysia has been sent to the National Institute of Communicable Disease (NICD) in New Delhi for further analysis.

So far, nine cases of swine flu have been reported in Tamil Nadu out which, two from Coimbatore were confirmed positive cases.

“Thirteen cases were reported here out of which two were positive and all others were negative. The two positive cases have been treated successfully and sent back home. This is the fourteenth case referred from the nearest district,” said Dr. Durai Kannan, Joint Director, Health Department, Coimbatore Medical College Hospital.

Meanwhile, experts from the New Delhi-based National Institute of Communicable Diseases visited the Coimbatore Medical College Hospital and examined the quarantine wards in the hospital.

“We have come to see the situation. The Joint Director is here and the Regional Director looking after this area,” said Shahai Hussain, Joint Director, National Institute of Communicable Diseases, New Delhi.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) had declared influenza pandemic last month and advised governments to prepare for a long-term battle against an unstoppable new flu virus.

The WHO had no immediate comment on the case of Tamiflu resistance. (ANI)

Two girls test positive for swine flu, toll rises to three in Gujarat

Ahmedabad, July 12 (ANI): Two girls from Ahmedabad were reported to have tested positive for swine flu and two others were suspected to have the disease on Sunday in Gujarat.

The girls were a part of a troop of students who had gone to the US on a year-long cultural-cum-educational programme organised by an NGO.

“The group returned to New Delhi on July 5 and the girls boarded the Ashram Express next day from the National Capital and reached Ahmedabad on July 7,” Principal Secretary (Health) Ravi Saxena said.

The positive and the suspected victims have been kept in the isolation ward of the civil hospital in Ahmedabad.

“Two other member of the group, a girl and a caretaker were also suspected of the Swine Flu symptoms and they too have been kept in isolation. Blood sample of all four were sent to National Institute of Communicable Disease (NICD) in New Delhi. Two girls tested positive for the disease,” he added.

With the two confirmed cases the total number of reported Swine flu has rose to three in Gujarat. (ANI)

Mediterranean algae lost their tropical element between 5 and 7 mln yrs ago

Washington, July 8 (ANI): A new research has suggested that Coralline algae in the Mediterranean Sea lost their tropical element between 5 and 7 million years ago.

The international team of researchers studied the coralline algae fossils that lived on the last coral reefs of the Mediterranean Sea between 7.24 and 5.3 million years ago.

The research team from the University of Granada (UGR) and the University of Modena and Reggio Emilia (Italia) show coralline algae distribution patterns in the west and centre of the Mediterranean Sea (in Salento, Italy and Almería, Spain) by way of a fossil register of 21 species collected in the two areas.

The study describes and interprets the disappearance of the last Messinian coral reefs (between 7.24 and 5.3 million years ago) in the Mediterranean Sea.

“In subsequent, more recent eras, this sea has not had the right oceanographic conditions (above all a high enough temperature) to house coral reefs,” said Juan C. Braga, the chief author and a researcher at the Stratigraphy and Paleontology Department of the UGR.

During the period studied by the scientists through the coralline algae fossils found in the Mediterranean, the last few reefs boasted very little coralline diversity.

“This is the result of the long history of global cooling over the last 20 million years and the isolation (separation) of the Mediterranean from the Indian Ocean, some 15 million years ago,” according to the research.

According to the results of the research, the relative abundance of coralline algae in reefs and slope deposits is 1-5 percent and 18 percent lower respectively in the Sorbas basin (Almería) than in Salento (Italy).

Furthermore, the main components of the coralline algae assemblages found in shallow water are extant species that are very common in the Mediterranean.

“Just like reef corallines, algae flora reflects the cooling of the Mediterranean and its isolation from the Indian Ocean, and only a few tropical biotas existed in the Messinian era. Moreover, most of them already had Atlantic affinities and resembled the algae that still inhabits our coasts today,” said Braga.

The Mediterranean-Atlantic characteristics of Messinian reef corallines therefore reflect the decrease in tropical biotas that occurred during the Miocene (around 20 million years ago).

According to the research team, the widespread decline of this type of algae was due to global cooling and the isolation of the Mediterranean during the middle Miocene. (ANI)

Amphibians and reptiles face “mounting extinction crisis”

Edinburgh, July 7 (ANI): A charity has determined that a “mounting extinction crisis” is facing frogs, toads, newts, snakes and lizards across the UK and Europe.

According to a report in The Scotsman, the charity in question is Amphibian and Reptile Conservation, which has been formed from the merger of The Froglife Trust and The Herpetological Conservation Trust.

The charity said that there were many major threats to reptiles and amphibians. These included habitat loss, pollution, non-native diseases, climate change and the isolation of populations by roads and other infrastructure.

More than half (59 per cent) of all European amphibians and 42 per cent of all reptile species are disappearing, according to a International Union for Conservation of Nature study, funded by the European Commission, published in May.

Of the UK’s 13 species of amphibians and reptiles, ten are listed on the government’s biodiversity action plan watchlist because of their risk of extinction. (ANI)

Seasonal cycles promote global hunger

Washington, June 30 (ANI): Most of the world’s hunger doesn’t occur in conflicts or natural disasters but is actually driven by seasonal cycle, according to a new research.

The ‘hunger season’ is the time of year when the previous year’s harvest stocks have dwindled, food prices are high, and jobs are scarce, and is often under recognized.

According to the researchers, presently nearly six hundred million people are either members of small farm households or landless rural labourers

They say that many of these people live in areas where water or temperature constraints allow only one crop harvest per year.

Their poverty is driven by seasonal cycles, worsening especially in the preharvest months.

In the “hunger season”, household food stocks from the last harvest begin to end; while low production levels, inadequate storage facilities, and accumulated debt all of them force families to sell or consume their agricultural production well before the new harvest.

While writing in journal PLoS Medicine, the authors stressed that proven interventions to alleviate seasonal hunger are known, but they often operate on a small scale and in isolation.

They say community-based interventions to treat acute undernutrition and promote growth of preschool children are examples of successful interventions that should be scaled up, they argue.

“Global scale-up of a basic “minimum essential” intervention package against seasonal hunger would cost around 0.1pct of global GDP and save millions of lives, while protecting millions more from severe illness,” they argue. (ANI)

White House still open to talks with Iran

Jerusalem, June 29 (ANI): Despite claiming that Iranian President Mohammad Ahmadinejad is not in-charge of his country’s foreign policy, Washington has said it is still interested in having a dialogue with the Iranian leadership.

US President Barack Obama’s top adviser, David Axelrod, said the US remains open to meeting with Iran in Paris in an effort to curb Tehran’s nuclear ambitions.

“We are looking to sit down and talk to the Iranians and offer them two paths. And one brings them back into the community of nations, and the other has some very stark consequences,” the Jerusalem Post quoted Axelrod, as saying.

He, however, was careful to signal that the White House doesn’t think Ahmadinejad has the final say over Iran’s interaction with the West.

“We are also mindful of the fact that the nuclear weapons in Iran and the nuclearization of that whole region is a threat to that country, all countries in the region, and the world. And we have to address that. We can’t let that lie,” Axelrod said.

Earlier, Ahmadinejad had accused the West of stoking unrest, singling out Britain and the United States for alleged meddling.

Axelrod said Ahmadinejad’s accusations are meant for domestic consumption and to quell unrest after his re-election that his opponents call a fraud.

“Let’s be clear that we didn’t meddle in the election in Iran. The dispute in Iran is between the leadership in Iran and their own people, and plainly, Mr. Ahmadinejad thinks that by fingering the United States, that he can create a political diversion. So, I’m not going to entertain his bloviations that are politically motivated,” Axelrod said.

Axelrod said Tehran faces a choice between engaging the West or facing further isolation in the wake of a presidential election that sent thousands of protesters to the streets amid questions of its validity.

Last week, Iran expelled two British diplomats, and Britain responded in kind. Iran has also said it’s considering downgrading diplomatic ties with Britain; the US does not have diplomatic relations with the country. (ANI)

Solomon Islands – Swine Flu hits Solomon Islands

Solomon Islands – Swine Flu hits Solomon Islands

HONIARA – The Solomon Islands reported its first suspected case of swine flu Monday as health authorities warned against panic in the South Pacific nation.

A man who had been studying in Australia and who returned home last week for a holiday was experiencing flu-like symptoms, said James Auto of the country’s swine flu taskforce.

The man has been placed in isolation in a hospital in the capital, Honiara.

With regular flights between Honiara and Australia – where nearly 1,500 H1N1 flu cases have been confirmed – Honiara authorities and the World Health Organisation have set up a swine flu taskforce to respond to an expected outbreak.

Some patients flee the hospital in Honiara at the weekend, after rumours of an outbreak saw.

One more tests positive for swine flu in Hyderabad

Hyderabad, June 26 (ANI): A foreign national was tested positive for swine flu on Thursday in Hyderabad taking the number of swine flu cases to 17 in Andhra Pradesh.

The fifteen-year-old girl who tested positive for swine flu arrived on June 19 from Hong Kong by Silk Airways. She showed symptoms of swine flu on June 22 and her sample was sent to National Institution of Communicable Diseases (NICD) in Delhi.

After she was found positive for swine flu, nine other passengers who had accompanied her were also quarantined.

“On 22nd the report was sent on the same day. It was tested positive yesterday night from NICD Delhi. So I have isolated the other nine who accompanied her. We have sent the samples to NICD Delhi. This is the first foreign national tested positive in India,” said Dr. K Sudhakar, Physician, Government Chest Hospital, Hyderabad.

Out of the 17 cases reported in Andhra Pradesh, 14 have been treated and discharged, while three are still undergoing treatment. Ten other patients presently under observation are awaiting reports.

Another 45-year-old man who had travelled from Doha has also been admitted in the hospital for suspected HINI infection, after the initial screening at Hyderabad airport showed signs of the flu affliction in him.

So far, a total of 60 persons have been found positive for swine flu across India, out of which 32 patients have been treated as inpatients in isolation wards and discharged.

Out of the total 60 patients, 54 came from abroad while six contracted the disease within the country. In all, 413 suspected cases were quarantined.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) elevated the H1N1 strain to pandemic status earlier this month.

The WHO, in an update on the spread of the new flu strain on Saturday (June 20) had observed that the number of worldwide cases had risen to 44,287, with 180 deaths.

Mexico, United States and Canada have borne the brunt of the illness while research work is still on to formulate an effective vaccine to counter the pandemic. (ANI)

How to prevent transmission of stomach ulcer bacteria

Washington, June 25 (ANI): A new research from the Sahlgrenska Academy has revealed that the stomach ulcer bacterium Helicobacter pylori is not transmitted through drinking water as previously thought, but rather through vomit and possibly faeces.

The researchers say that it is therefore possible to prevent the spread of the bacterium in developing countries through some fairly simple measures.

“Taking some cheap but powerful measures may prevent the spread of the bacterium. It could be enough to isolate vomiting patients especially from small children for a short period of time, since Helicobacter pylori is not able to survive for long outside the stomach,” says doctoral student Anders Janzon.

“If isolation is not possible, it may suffice to pay extra attention to good hygiene’, Janzon added.

The researchers analysed the drinking water, lake water and wastewater in an area in Dhaka in Bangladesh, where the bacterium Helicobacter pylori is very common.

They found that while the diarrhoea bacterium ETEC is often present in the drinking water, Helicobacter pylori is not.

Other studies have shown that new cases of Helicobacter pylori tend to pop up in connection with various diarrhoea illnesses, and this pointed the research team in the right direction.

“We analysed vomit and diarrhoea from cholera patients, and found large amounts of active Helicobacter pylori. We therefore conclude that vomit is a very likely source of new infections,” said Janzon. (ANI)