Pietersen crucial for England’s chances of winning World Cup: Collingwood

London, May 13 (ANI): Skipper Paul Collingwood has said that Kevin Pietersen, who arrived back in the Caribbean after becoming a father, is crucial for England’s chances of winning their first cricket World Cup after 35 years of trying.

Pietersen landed last night and will regain his place at No.3 in the World Twenty20semi-final with Sri Lanka today. Pietersen”s wife Jessica Taylor gave birth to their first baby, a boy, on Sunday.

Collingwood insisted Pietersen will rejoin a squad oozing with confidence, excitement and talent, The Sun reports.

“I’m sure KP will be happy and raring to go. Fatigue shouldn’t be an issue and he will be in a great state of mind. He won’t have a formal practice, but I’m sure he will have a few hits,” the England skipper said.

‘There is nothing technical he needs to change and I’m sure his mind will be 100 per cent right. KP is very important. He played two man-of-the- match innings before he went home and looks back to his best,” Collingwood said.

England won all three of their Super Eights matches against Pakistan, South Africa and New Zealand.

“Captaining England in a world semi-final, that’s brilliant. I had a real sense when we turned up with this squad that we could do well. We’ve made some selections that have really come good,” Collingwood said.

“I think there was a real belief in the squad at the start of the tournament and now there is a lot of excitement. Sometimes, when you get to these situations, you sense some nerves but that hasn’t been the case. The boys can’t wait to play.

“This is the most powerful England side I”ve played in – definitely. Everybody can hit sixes all the way down to No 10. The bowlers are also thinking for themselves,” added. (ANI)

Watching R-rated movies linked to early alcohol use

Washington, April 26 (ANI): A new study has suggested that middle-schoolers who are forbidden to watch R-rated movies are less likely to start drinking than peers whose parents are more lenient about such films.

In a study of nearly 3,600 New England middle school students, researchers found that among kids who said their parents never allowed them to watch R movies, few took up drinking over the next couple years.

Of that group, 3 percent said they had started drinking when questioned 13 to 26 months after the initial survey.

That compared with 19 percent of their peers who”d said their parents “sometimes” let them see R-rated films, and one-quarter of students who”d said their parents allowed such movies “all the time.”

The researchers say the findings underscore the importance of parents paying close attention to their children”s media exposure.

“We think this is a very important aspect of parenting, and one that is often overlooked,” said Dr. James D. Sargent, a professor of pediatrics at Dartmouth Medical School in Hanover, New Hampshire.

The new study has been reported in the May issue of the Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs. (ANI)

Lumb gets central contract to play home matches for England

Melbourne, Apr 21 (ANI): Hampshire opener Michael Lumb, who has already made it into the England squad for the Twenty20 World Cup, now joins a group including the 11 elite players on 12-month central contracts and the seven with second-tier deals.

Lumb is the only new player in England’s 27-man squad announced on Tuesday for the team’s home matches this year.

England will play two Tests against Bangladesh in May followed by five ODI matches against Australia, The Age reports.

England then hosts Bangladesh again for three one-day matches before playing Pakistan for four Tests, two Twenty20s and five one-day matches.

“The England Performance Squad is designed to allow the selectors to monitor the development of international players and better prepare them for the demands of the international game,” national selector Geoff Miller said.

“The selectors can name up to 30 players in the EPS, but we have decided to keep three places vacant at present in order to give ourselves greater flexibility.

“We will reserve the right to add further players to the squad if their performances in domestic cricket merit it,” Miller added. (ANI)

Man dies in car crash

A 35-year-old Wallabadah man has been killed in a two-car collision on the New England Highway, 30 kilometres south of Tamworth.

Emergency services responded to reports of an accident, near Gowrie, involving a hatchback and a sedan shortly after midday on Saturday.

The man’s 45-year-old wife and five-year-old son, also from Wallabadah, sustained non-life threatening injuries and are being treated at Tamworth Hospital.

Police media spokeswoman, Rebecca Walsh, says the driver of the sedan was interviewed at length by police.

“The male driver of the Toyota Corolla, a 59-year-old French National, was arrested by Oxley Crash Investigation Unit officers when he was discharged from hospital,” she said.

“He was later released without charge pending further inquiries.

“Police are still appealing for anyone who may have witnessed the crash, and who hasn’t spoken with them, to contact Tamworth Police Station via Crime Stoppers.”

Liberals open Riverina pre-selection nominations

The Liberal Party has opened nominations in the Nationals’ held seat of Riverina.

The three cornered contest is possible after Kay Hull’s decision to retire at the next election.

The Liberal Party’s country vice president Scott McDonald says the amount of money the party will spend trying to take the seat depends on local support.

“Every regional seat is always a locally funded campaign so that’ll be entirely raised in the communities of Wagga, Griffith, Leeton and so on,” he said.

“There won’t be big buckets of money, I can assure you, from head office. But that’s an internal party matter. If the candidate is the right one, they’ll attract that support.”

Riverina is one of the safest Coalition seats in the country.

Mr McDonald says they should have a candidate by the end of the month and it would not be an ugly campaign.

“The contest will be straight forward, it won’t be a Liberal versus National. Obviously the target will be to keep the seat out of the hands of the Labor Party. And certainly my advice to any prospective candidate is to fight on the merits and we fight on the issues,” he said.

“We’ve got a pretty good track record of that in places like Farrer and New England where this has happened in the past.”

Meanwhile, former Wagga newspaper editor Michael McCormack has revealed he will be among those vying for pre-selection for the Nationals.

Mr McDonald from Griffith says it has been decades since the party held Riverina.

“I think you’ve got to go back to the early 20th century, so it’s been quite a while since the Liberal Party’s held it federally,” he said.

“But as I say, we’ve got a good record of holding the main centre which is around Wagga, we’ve held that as a state seat off and on. So we’ve got a good record in the community and we’re looking to extend that federally.”

Man dies of suspected meningococcal disease

An elderly man from the Hunter New England Health region in mid New South Wales has died in hospital from a suspected case of meningococcal disease.

If confirmed, it will be the second death and fourth confirmed case of the disease in the region this year.

Last year there were 14 cases of the disease in the Hunter New England region.

The man’s close contacts are being provided with antibiotics.

Moves to streamline bushfire compo hearing

Lawyers for the ACT Government are seeking changes to the direction of a compensation hearing into the 2003 Canberra bushfires.

The hearing in the ACT Supreme Court is in its 19th day and will determine whether NSW or Territory authorities are liable for about $75 milion in damages.

The ACT Government’s senior defence counsel, Peter Garling SC, has tendered seven pages of suggested common questions for the 127 plaintiffs to Chief Justice Terence Higgins.

The questions are expected to be debated in court today.

Some legal experts suggest the debate over these topics could shorten the hearing.

But emergency law researcher Michael Eburn from the University of New England disagrees.

“Between the parties there will be an agreed set of questions that the judge will have to consider and that will allow everyone to focus their evidence, focus their submissions,” he said.

“What his honour is going to have to do is hear all the evidence and then answer these questions because everyone will have agreed these are the issues [he has] to deal with,” he said.

“When we know what evidence to call to address those issues, we know what submissions to make to address those issues.”

The questions deal with negligence, breach of statutory duty and statutory defence.

More investment sought in growing regions

The Foundation for Regional Development Limited has called for greater government investment in regional New South Wales.

The 2009 to 2009 Australian Bureau of Statistics figures show a population increase in regional NSW of 1.3 per cent.

Tamworth, Gunnedah, Armidale and Narrabri all recorded growth, while growth was flat in Moree.

The CEO of the Foundation for Regional Development, Peter Bailey, says the recent decline in regional populations appears to be changing.

“What has changed is that 12 months ago many of the centres in regional NSW and the New England/north-west were in negative, we’re now in a situation where the vast majority of centres have bounced back and are now growing, it’s one of the great things for regional NSW,” he said.

Top vintage produces ‘outstanding wines’

Winegrowers from the New England/New South Wales north-west are reporting an outstanding vintage as the season draws to a close.

There are more than 40 small vineyards in the region and three new cellar doors are expected to open shortly.

The Southern New England Vignerons Association says the industry is continuing to grow, despite mass oversupply elsewhere in the country.

President Andrew Close says weather conditions have been good for local vignerons this year.

“It’s been a fabulous year, we’ve seen quite a lot of heat for the New England which is quite rare and that has actually produced some outstanding wines, in particular the reds have been wonderful this year,” he said.

“Cabernets, they’ve been doing very well, but also the pinots, which generally don’t like a lot of heat but have actually really excelled this year, which is fabulous.”

Supermarket distribution centre promises jobs boost

Newcastle council says if a big supermarket distribution centre goes ahead at Beresfield it will strengthen the region’s reputation for attracting big business.

German supermarket giant ALDI has confirmed Beresfield is one of several preferred sites for the centre and says a deal is close to being finalised.

More than 300 new jobs would be created if the $100 million project goes ahead at Beresfield.

Council’s director of city assets, Steve Edmonds, says the distribution centre would be ideally located.

“You’ve got the East Maitland residential area where there’s certainly a good supply of available skilled labour and you’ve got Cessnock and Newcastle

“The other very good positive is that it is very much on the convergence of the F3 Freeway, the New England Highway and the Pacific Highway.”

Doctor deregistered over misconduct finding

A doctor who was sacked over an incident at Maitland Hospital, in the New South Wales Hunter Valley, has been deregistered.

Melvin Muralidharan was sacked by Hunter New England Health after a patient made a complaint about a medical examination at Maitland Hospital 2005.

The Medical Tribunal was told the doctor inappropriately took a locum appointment at Hornsby Hospital while he was suspended on full pay from Maitland.

He later worked at the St George and Shoalhaven hospitals where he was under an order to be supervised.

But concerns were raised about Dr Muralidharan not being supervised and the Health Care Complaints Commission took action.

It was also alleged he applied to be registered in Queensland without disclosing that he was the subject of disciplinary proceedings.

The tribunal found him guilty of misconduct and deregistered him for a year.

Science to allow graziers to track stock

Scientists says real-time tracking devices should be commercially available within five years to let farmers know exactly where their herds are grazing.

A research team from the University of New England has conducted a trial in western New South Wales using GPS cattle collars.

It showed steers only used 10 to 20 per cent of the paddock available to them for grazing.

Spokesman Mark Trotter says the team is looking at the benefits of real-time tracking, where farmers would know instantly what their herds are doing.

“There are several companies out there at the moment developing real-time tracking systems that will enable producers to see where their livestock are grazing at any given point in time – they can look it up on their computer at home or say on their iPhone,” he said.

“We’re sort of talking about three to five years before we start to see some of these systems filtering through into a commercial situation.”

Dr Trotter says several companies are working on the systems.

“A lot of these are developing something that will be the size of an ear tag that would give the positional data,” he said.

“Obviously a collar is not necessarily practical for a lot of agricultural enterprises.

“It might be okay for some dairy situations or some intensive systems but certainly we need to get it down to an ear tag form factor to be applied in a wider livestock sense.”

Health service sorry cancer patient sent home

Hunter New England Health has apologised to the family of an elderly woman who was repeatedly sent home from her local hospital, despite needing palliative care.

The family of the 87-year-old woman, who had terminal lung cancer, says she was sent home three times from Tomaree Community Hospital before she died in early January.

The woman was told she would receive palliative care, but the family says she was instead sent home.

Hunter Health met the family early this month and has apologised for any distress caused while the woman was in the service’s care.

It says it conducted a review into the patient’s case and spoke to staff who may have been involved with her treatment.

Hunter Health says to ensure appropriate discharge processes are in place, staff will undertake education with a specific focus on communication with family members.

Gisele Bündchen due in December

Washington, September 12 (ANI): Supermodel Gisele Bündchen’s husband has confirmed that the model is pregnant and is due in December.

Tom Brady said in an interview with ESPN’s Chris Berman that the couple is expecting the baby in the year-end.

The New England Patriots quarterback mentioned that he was also ready to attend Lamaze classes with the beauty.

“I told her no Sundays. It couldn’t be harder than training camp, so I’ll be prepared,” People magazine quoted him as saying.

He added: “The women are the ones who have to do the work. We just have to be there to support them and so it’ll be nice to do that.”

Brady already has 2-year-old John Edward Thomas with ex-girlfriend Bridget Moynahan.

However, it will be the first child for Bündchen. (ANI)

Manchester United world’s richest club in all sports

London, Sep.4 (ANI): Premier League champions Manchester United is still the world’s richest sports club.

The club is valued at between 1.3 billion to152 million pounds, which is more than American football’s Dallas Cowboys in a new rich list.

Magazine Forbes believe the Old Trafford side’s value has risen four per cent since 2008 when they were also top.

The richest ten in British pounds are: 1 Man U (1,305m), 2 Dallas Cowboys (1,153m), 3 Washington Redskins (1,080m), 4 New York Yankees (1,050m), 5 New England Patriots (952m), 6 Real Madrid (944m), 7 Arsenal (837m), 8 New York Giants (827m), 9 New York Jets (818m) and 10 Bayern Munich (774m), reports The Sun. (ANI)

New drug shows promise to reduce stroke risk

London, Aug 31 (ANI): A new drug developed as an alternative to popular drug warfarin, also used as rat poison, has been found to significantly reduce stroke risk.

Generally, patients at risk of stroke are given warfarin to prevent blood clotting, but the treatment is risky and requires regular monitoring.

In the new study, the doctors found that the new drug, dabigatran (Pradaxa), was 34 per cent more effective at reducing the risk of stroke and blood clots in at-risk patients than well-controlled warfarin.

It also reduced death rates by 15 per cent.

In the three-year long study, the researchers recruited patients with an average age of 71, all of whom suffered from atrial fibrillation, a heart rhythm disorder that greatly increases the risk of stroke.

The British Heart Foundation said that the results for an alternative to warfarin were promising, but the drug would not be available to patients until next year at the earliest.

“Warfarin is a highly effective treatment when indicated for stroke prevention, but it is underused, often because of safety concerns or the need for regular blood tests to monitor its effects,” Times Online quoted Keith Muir, a medical advisor for the Stroke Association, as saying.

The trial indicates that dabigatran may offer a useful alternative to warfarin for stroke prevention in some circumstances.

“However, the trial only involved people who could equally well have taken warfarin, and anyone currently taking warfarin should continue it unless advised by their doctor,” he added.

The study has been published in the New England Journal of Medicine. (ANI)

Obama’s upcoming vacation threatened by Hurricane Bill in Atlantic Ocean

Washington, August 22 (ANI): U.S. President Barack Obama’s vacation plans this coming week in Martha’s Vineyard may be spoilt, with a satellite image released by NASA on Tuesday showing Hurricane Bill in the Atlantic Ocean.

A report posted on Accuweather.com says that the hurricane will not make landfall along Cape Cod, instead passing by to the east.

However, adds the report, the storm may bring large amounts of wind and rain to the area this weekend, and possibly into early next week.

Gusts of wind between 30 and 60 mph are expected to be experiences in the region.

Forecasts suggest that rainfall may reach as much as two inches in some areas of New England.

Given that the Obamas are scheduled to arrive at Martha’s Vineyard on Sunday, the White House is closely tracking the hurricane.

“We are obviously watching that. Certainly it’s our hope that the storm will avoid reaching the United States and turn back out into the Atlantic,” the Politico quoted White House press secretary Robert Gibbs as saying during his daily briefing. (ANI)

Global warming may spell demise of key salt marsh constituent

Washington, July 14 (ANI): A new research has shown that global warming may exact a toll on salt marshes in New England, with one key constituent of marshes being especially endangered.

Pannes are waterlogged, low-oxygen zones of salt marshes.

According to Keryn Gedan, a graduate student and salt marsh expert at Brown University, despite the stresses associated with global warming, pannes are “plant diversity hotspots,”

“At least a dozen species of plants known as forbs inhabit these natural depressions,” Gedan said.

The species include the purple flower-tipped plants Limonium nashii (sea lavender), the edible plant Salicornia europaea (pickleweed) and Triglochin maritima, a popular food for Brent and Canada geese as well as ducks and other migratory waterfowl.

Gedan and her adviser, Mark Bertness, chair of the Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Department at Brown, decided to find out how global warming may affect pannes.

In a series of experiments, the pair subjected plots of forb pannes to air as much as 3.3 degrees Celsius (about 6 degrees Fahrenheit) warmer than the surrounding area.

They found that the plants in the test plots responded initially by growing more but then began a rapid die-off. As they died, they were replaced by a salt marsh grass, Spartina patens.

At two sites – Nag Creek (Prudence Island, Rhode Island), and Little River (Maine) – the forbs covered less than 10 percent of the plot, from 50 percent originally, in tests that spanned the summer from 2004 to 2006.

At the third site, Drakes Island (Maine), the forb pannes cover decreased from 50 percent of the plot to 44 percent (a 12-percent decline) in just the summer of 2007.

The researchers believe the forbs disappeared due to changes in the plant-water balance in the zone.

What that means, Gedan explained, is the warmer air causes the forbs to take in more water, thus making the area less waterlogged and more hospitable to an invasion by Spartina patens, which prefers less water-soaked conditions.

“The forbs basically engineer themselves out of their habitat by making it more favorable for their competitor,” said Gedan.

The Brown experiments “demonstrate that New England salt marsh pannes are extremely sensitive to temperature increases and will be driven to local and regional extinction with the temperature increases expected to occur in New England over the next century,” Bertness said. (ANI)

Experimental drug found effective against anthrax poisoning

London, July 10 (ANI): An experimental drug called raxibacumab has been found to be effective in treating anthrax poisoning, say researchers.

“The results published today showed that a single dose of raxibacumab was highly effective as a treatment for inhalation anthrax in both rabbits and monkeys,” said Dr Sally D. Bolmer, R.A.C, lead author and Senior Vice President, Development and Regulatory Affairs, HGS.

“Raxibacumab acted quickly to provide a significant survival benefit to animals showing clinical signs of disease caused by exposure to a dose of aerosolized anthrax spores that was approximately 200 times the median lethal dose.

“We also note that the safety profile shown in healthy human volunteers provides support for use of raxibacumab in the clinical setting of immediately life-threatening inhalation anthrax disease,” she added.

The drug works by targeting anthrax toxins after they are released by the bacteria into the blood and tissues.

In an inhalation anthrax attack, people may not know they are infected with anthrax until the toxins already are circulating in their blood, and it may be too late for antibiotics alone to be effective.

“We are very proud that the importance of these data and the rigor and high quality of our scientists’ work have led to publication in The New England Journal of Medicine,” said Dr David C. Stump, Executive Vice President, Research and Development, HGS. Based on these results, we believe raxibacumab has the potential to be a significant step forward in the treatment of inhalation anthrax,” he added.

The study has appeared in the New England Journal of Medicine. (ANI)

BP drug could slow progression of eye damage in diabetics

London, July 2 (ANI): Scientists have found that a drug, commonly prescribed to treat high blood pressure, could slow the progression of eye damage in people with type 1 diabetes, a common complication caused by this disease.

By administering an antihypertensive, University of Minnesota Medical School researcher Michael Mauer, M.D. and colleagues were able to slow progression of diabetic eye damage in more than 65 percent of participants involved in the study.

Three groups of participants were observed over the course of five years. Two groups were administered one of two antihypertensive medications, losartan or enalapril, and the last group, a placebo.

Mauer’s study demonstrated that participants who were administered either enalapril or losartan experienced a significant slowing of the progression of diabetic eye injury, by 65 and 70 percent, respectively.

“The secondary results of this study showed that people taking these antihypertensive medications experienced a substantially positive effect in slowing diabetic eye injury,” said Mauer.

The study has been published in the July 2nd issue of The New England Journal of Medicine. (ANI)