Saturday, January 5, 2013

Detroit's Big Three trying to power up Motor City

19 hrs.

The building has been abandoned for years, but?its windows aren?t broken and there?s no graffiti on its walls???unlike so many other forgotten hulks nearby in the long-impoverished southwest corner of Detroit.

Community organizers promise to soon reopen the Mexicantown Mercado and turn it into an anchor for the city?s Latino community. They also hope to turn the complex into a shining example of what can happen in Detroit with help from the companies that transformed the once sleepy Midwest town into the Motor City.

As part of Operation Brighter Future, Ford Motor Co. is pumping $10 million into the resurrection of the Mexicantown Mercado ? which will serve as a new food bank and community center and be renamed the Ford Resource and Engagement Center. Company officials, notably including new Chief Operating Officer Mark Fields, promise still more aid to come for the long-beleaguered Detroit.

Such moves are not entirely altruistic, said Fields.? Detroit?s long-running problems don?t just serve as the butt of jokes when he travels, but the transplanted Jersey boy has also seen firsthand that it can be difficult to get others to migrate to Motown.??

?The community we live in can be either a draw ? or not ? to get the best and brightest we need for our company?s future,? Fields said.?

Ford is by no means alone. Since emerging from bankruptcy in 2009, General Motors has ramped up its involvement in a city that is teetering on bankruptcy. So has Chrysler, which moved its headquarters to the fringe suburb of Auburn Hills more than two decades ago.

There?s no question that Detroit needs all the help it can get.?

The making of Motor City
In the years after World War II, the ?Arsenal of Democracy? was a major part of American pride about its industrial muscle???and the primary source of the machines that helped transport U.S. workers out to the fast-growing suburbs. But over the years, the factories and jobs followed, leaving a city of abandoned assembly and supplier plants and rapidly shrinking communities, especially after the riots of the mid-1960s.

Whole neighborhoods have vanished or are largely filled with abandoned homes and once-thriving businesses.?In the 1950 census, Detroit?s population peaked at 1.85 million, making it the nation?s fifth-largest city. That dwindled to?706,585 people in 2011, according to the U.S. Census estimate. During the previous decade, the city lost one?resident every 22 minutes.?

Related:?'Lost respect for life': 2012 deadly in Detroit

The city?s massive budget deficit is so severe it has had to relinquish control of institutions like its zoo and main art museum, the Detroit Institute of Arts. Bankruptcy is a serious possibility for the city, and though Michigan voters in November rejected a law permitting a state takeover, a new measure approved by state lawmakers in the final weeks of 2012 could soon place an emergency manager,?appointed by the governor, in charge of the city's finances.

There?s a growing number of small to large businesses that have reinvested in the Motor City?s downtown, including software giant Compuware and, more recently, Quicken Loans, whose founder Dan Gilbert has, in turn, been rapidly buying and renovating office, residential and retail properties.

Surprisingly, there are reasons to feel optimistic, said Hector Hernandez, chairman emeritus of the Mexicantown Community Development Commission, or MCDC.?He notes that in many areas Detroit has already bottomed out and has begun to show surprisingly solid signs of revival. There are a growing number of restaurants and stores in his neighborhood, he said, some like the every-busy El Barzon attracting a growing number of suburbanites who hadn?t visited the inner city in decades ? if ever.

Quicken and other firms have been offering subsidies to convince mostly young employees to relocate rather than commute, and many landlords report they are looking for additional lofts and apartment buildings in the central core to renovate.

?It takes innovative strategies to make it work because the city itself doesn?t have the money,? said Hernandez.

Indeed, during a presentation of an oversized Ford check to the MCDC, Detroit Mayor Dave Bing said, ?I wish I could take that check back with me.?

Despite help from? companies like Quicken and Compuware, ?there is no way the city of Detroit will recover without the assistance of the domestic automakers and their suppliers," who have far more power to create jobs and pump money both into the city government and into the coffers of its business owners, landlords, developers and residents, said R.J. King, editor of the Detroit-based trade publication D:Business, and a longtime follower of the city?s ups?and?downs.

Help from the?Big Three
A few years ago, it looked like Detroit?s automakers might not even be able to help themselves, all three teetering on insolvency, and both GM and Chrysler eventually going into bankruptcy before being rescued by federal bailouts. At one point, shortly after emerging from Chapter 11, GM gave serious thought to abandoning its headquarters on the Detroit River, the massive Renaissance Center complex, but decided to stay and help revitalize the surrounding riverfront area.

GM has steadily increased its involvement in community affairs; at one event last year, Chevrolet General Marketing Manager Chris Perry washed the feet of some young inner city children and helped them find new shoes donated by the Samaritan?s Feet charity.

Chrysler,?meanwhile, has taken several floors of space in one of Quicken?s new downtown buildings ? recently renamed Chrysler House ? and kicked in cash and manpower for other community projects.?

Skeptics question whether it?s all too little and too late as the bulldozers continue to demolish derelict neighborhoods and a shrinking, underpaid police force struggles to get a grip on endemic drug and crime problems.

Few expect to see a Detroit once again filled with assembly and component plants, as it was prior to the 1960s. But activists say that without the support of the Big Three ? who can, in turn, motivate other businesses to lend support ? there simply will be no Motor City, downsized or not. ?


Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/detroits-big-three-trying-power-motor-city-1B7818498

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Transfer of Health | Change Health Care: 2012 Most Influential People

My passion is all about participating and promoting the transformation to improve the current ?health care? system and cultural practices. I want to help change health care.?I began to wonder: who has the most influence on the current system? It is difficult to affect change without influence, and as I re-evaluate my college degree options, this question inspired me to evaluate Modern Healthcare?s list of the ?100 Most Influential People in Health Care of 2012.? Below is the list, which I will update with supporting documentation and overall breakdown as the study progresses.

Please comment: what are your thoughts? Your questions would also be helpful as I research.

Here are the 2012 Most Influential People in Health Care:

1. John Roberts
Chief Justice of the United States, Washington

2. Mark Bertolini
Chairman, president and CEO, Aetna, Hartford, CN

3. Dr. John Kitzhaber
Governor, State of Oregon, Salem, OR

4. Barack Obama
President of the United States, Washington

5. Kathleen Sebelius
Secretary, Health and Human Services, Washington

6. George Halvorson
Chairman and CEO, Kaiser Permanente, Oakland, CA

7. Stephen Hemsley
President and CEO, UnitedHealth Group, Minnetonka, MN

8. Marilyn Tavenner
Acting CMS administrator, CMS, Baltimore, MD

9. Angela Braly
Chair, president and CEO, WellPoint, Indianapolis, IN

10. Michael McCallister
Chairman and CEO, Humana, Louisville, KY

11. Patricia Hemingway Hall
President and CEO, Health Care Service Corp., Chicago, IL

12. Kent Thiry
Chairman and CEO, DaVita, Denver, CO

13. Mitt Romney
Presidential nominee, Republican Party; former Massachusetts governor (MA)

14. Paul Diaz
President and CEO, Kindred Healthcare, Louisville, KY.

15. Dan Wolterman
President and CEO, Memorial Hermann Healthcare System, Houston, TX

16. Sister Carol Keehan
President and CEO, Catholic Health Association of the United States, Washington

17. Dr. John Noseworthy
President and CEO, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN

18. Joel Allison
President and CEO, Baylor Health Care System, Dallas, TX

19. John Boehner
Speaker of the House (R-Ohio), U.S. House of Representatives, Washington

20. Dr. Regina Benjamin
U.S. surgeon general, U.S. Public Health Service, Washington

21. Dr. Delos ?Toby? Cosgrove
President and CEO, Cleveland Clinic

22. Judith Faulkner
Founder and CEO, Epic Systems, Verona, WI

23. Lloyd Dean
President and CEO, Dignity Health, San Francisco, CA

24. Paul Ryan
Chairman, House Budget Committee, U.S. House of Representatives, Washington

25. Wayne Smith
Chairman, president and CEO, Community Health Systems, Franklin, TN

26. Dr. Atul Gawande
Associate professor of health policy and management, Harvard School of Public Health; associate professor of surgery, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA

27. Alan Miller
Chairman and CEO, Universal Health Services, King of Prussia, PA

28. Maureen Bisognano
President and CEO, Institute for Healthcare Improvement, Cambridge, MA

29. Dr. Gary Gottlieb
President and CEO, Partners Healthcare, Boston, MA

30. Trevor Fetter
President and CEO, Tenet Healthcare Corp., Dallas, TX

31. William Carpenter
Chairman and CEO, LifePoint Hospitals, Brentwood, TN

32. Dr. Carolyn Clancy
Director, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD

33. Chip Kahn
President and CEO, Federation of American Hospitals, Washington

34. Dr. Farzad Mostashari
National coordinator, Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology, Washington

35. Max Baucus
Senate Finance Committee chairman, U.S. Senate, Washington

36. Rose Ann DeMoro
Executive director, National Nurses United/AFL-CIO, Washington

37. Richard Umbdenstock
President and CEO, American Hospital Association, Chicago, IL

38. Michael Dowling
President and CEO, North Shore-Long Island Jewish Health System, New York, NY

39. Joseph Swedish
President and CEO, Trinity Health, Novi, MI

40. Eric Holder
U.S. attorney general, U.S. Justice Department, Washington

41. Dr. Gary Kaplan
Chairman and CEO, Virginia Mason Medical Center, Seattle, WA

42. Eric Cantor
House majority leader, U.S. House of Representatives, Washington

43. Rick Scott
Governor, State of Florida, Tallahassee, FL

44. Ron Wyden
U.S. senator (D-Ore.), U.S. Senate, Washington

45. Dr. Susan Turney
President and CEO, MGMA-ACMPE (Formerly the Medical Group Management Association), Englewood, CO

46. Dr. Thomas Frieden
Director, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA

47. Gary Newsome
President and CEO, Health Management Associates, Naples, FL

48. Kevin Lofton
President and CEO, Catholic Health Initiatives, Englewood, CO

49. Pete Stark
U.S. representative (D-Calif.), U.S. House of Representatives, Washington

50. Dr. Risa Lavizzo-Mourey
President and CEO, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Princeton, NJ

51. Dr. Mark Chassin
President, Joint Commission, Oakbrook Terrace, IL

52. John Hammergren
Chairman, president and CEO, McKesson Corp., San Francisco, CA

53. Dr. Glenn Steele Jr.
President and CEO, Geisinger Health System, Danville, PA

54. Alex Gorsky
CEO, Johnson & Johnson, New Brunswick, NJ

55. Drew Altman
President and CEO, Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation, Menlo Park, CA

56. Charles Grassley
U.S. senator (R-Iowa), U.S. Senate, Washington

57. Margaret ?Peggy? O?Kane
President, National Committee for Quality Assurance, Washington

58. Dr. Margaret Hamburg
Commissioner, U.S. Food and Drug Administration, Silver Spring, MD

59. Douglas Hawthorne
CEO, Texas Health Resources, Arlington, TX

60. Dr. Francis Collins
Director, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD

61. Teri Fontenot
President and CEO, Woman?s Hospital, Baton Rouge, LA

62. Jay Grinney
President and CEO, HealthSouth Corp., Birmingham, AL

63. Dr. Harvey Fineberg
President, Institute of Medicine, Washington

64. Dr. Eric Topol
Chief academic officer, Scripps Health, San Diego; director, Scripps Translational Science Institute, La Jolla, CA

65. Dave Camp
U.S. representative (R-Mich.), chairman, Ways and Means Committee, U.S. House of Representatives, Washington

66. Richard Feinstein
Director, Bureau of Competition, U.S. Federal Trade Commission, Washington

67. Daniel Levinson
Inspector general, HHS, Washington

68. Dr. Bruce Siegel
President and CEO, National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems, Washington

69. John Bardis
Chairman, president and CEO, MedAssets, Alpharetta, GA

70. Leah Binder
CEO, Leapfrog Group, Washington

71. Nancy Schlichting
President and CEO, Henry Ford Health System, Detroit, MI

72. Karen Ignagni
President and CEO, America?s Health Insurance Plans, Washington

73. Susan DeVore
President and CEO, Premier, Charlotte, NC

74. Richard Bracken
Chairman and CEO, HCA, Nashville, TN

75. Dr. Ralph de la Torre
Chairman and CEO, Steward Health Care System, Boston, MA

76. Anthony Tersigni
President and CEO, Ascension Health Alliance, St. Louis, MO

77. Rick Foster
Chief actuary, CMS, Baltimore, MD

78. Keith Pitts
Vice chairman, Vanguard Health Systems, Nashville, TN

79. Scott Serota
President and CEO, Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association, Chicago, IL

80. Dr. Georges Benjamin
Executive director, American Public Health Association, Washington

81. Helen Darling
President and CEO, National Business Group on Health, Washington

82. Mary Grealy
President, Healthcare Leadership Council, Washington

83. Neal Patterson
Chairman and CEO, Cerner Corp., Kansas City, MO

84. Eric Shinseki
Secretary, Veterans Affairs Department, Washington

85. Dr. James Madara
Executive vice president and CEO, American Medical Association, Chicago, IL

86. Peter Shumlin
Governor, State of Vermont, Montpelier, VT

87. Kenneth Raske
President, Greater New York Hospital Association, New York, NY

88. Dr. Richard Gilfillan
Acting director, CMS Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation, Washington

89. Thomas Dolan
President and CEO, American College of Healthcare Executives, Chicago, IL

90. Ron Pollack
Founder and executive director, Families USA, Washington

91. Robert Ortenzio
Co-founder and CEO, Select Medical Corp., Mechanicsburg, PA

92. Debra Cafaro
Chair and CEO, Ventas, Chicago, IL

93. James Skogsbergh
President and CEO, Advocate Health Care, Oak Brook, IL

94. Dr. Darrell Kirch
President and CEO, Association of American Medical Colleges, Washington

95. H. Stephen Lieber
President and CEO, Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society, Chicago, IL

96. David Bernd
CEO, Sentara Healthcare, Norfolk, VA

97. Dr. Charles Sorenson
President and CEO, Intermountain Healthcare, Salt Lake City, UT

98. Jonathan Gruber
Professor of economics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston; healthcare researcher at National Bureau of Economic Research, IL

99. James Guest
President and CEO, Consumer Reports, Yonkers, NY

100. George Paz
Chairman and CEO, Express Scripts, St. Louis, MO

Anyone can be nominated and voted on by readers as, ?those individuals in healthcare who are deemed by their peers and an expert panel to be the most influential individuals in the industry, in terms of leadership and impact.??Read more: 2012 100 Most Influential People in Healthcare (text list) | Modern Healthcare

Health is the condition of being sound in body mind, or spirit; especially: freedom from physical disease or pain. Care is attention to. Health care is defined as ?efforts to maintain or restore health especially by trained and licensed professionals.?? (Definitions via Merriam Webster)

No one wants to change the definition of health care, right? Well, unfortunately, when we watch the news, research health care bills spinning around our government floors, or hear about it around the water cooler, ?health care? has morphed into a new definition. Even the website changehealthcare.com?simply addresses health care cost transparency.

Change Health Care - Twisted Definition

Do you agree with Princeton University?s WordNet Search first entry definition of ?health care?? I reject that definition.

Reject health care as money, and embrace it as wellness, as it is intended. If you are exhausted from insomnia, debilitated by?migraines, perplexed by family illness, flat on your back because of pain, or in fear of learning you need one more prescription because of complications due to being overweight, you know exactly what I mean. I am sick of friends and family being sick. I am tired of drugs and their ?side? effects.

Would you like to be a part of the transformation of?true health care that promotes??efforts to maintain or restore health especially by trained and licensed professionals.???

Let?s no longer ignore the need to really change health care. True health care.

?

Source: http://www.transferofhealth.com/wellness/100-most-influential-people-healthcare-2012

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Friday, January 4, 2013

96% Sister

All Critics (54) | Top Critics (16) | Fresh (52) | Rotten (2)

The movie takes a refreshingly low-key, observational approach to storytelling ...

"Sister" avoids sentimental indulgence. There's no room for wallowing in this spare, almost ascetic exercise ...

French-born director and co-screenwriter Ursula Meier balances the scenario's bleak, wrenching aspects with a stirring confidence in the redemptive power of love.

Seydoux perfectly captures the anger and self-defeat of ill-educated, hedonistic, man-chasing young women who live on the fringes.

L?a Seydoux fulfills Louise, and Kacey Mottet Klein, as Simon, is one more to join the pantheon of film's excellent child actors.

Haunting and sad. And absolutely worth seeing.

Strong cinematography, excellent performances, and a deft touch with how adulthood can be forced upon what should be carefree adolescence make it emotionally memorable without ever feeling manipulative.

A low-key, affecting story of dreams at odds with reality and crime sprung from necessity.

We come away relieved and somehow chastened, the same way we might feel after having our pocket picked by a true artist.

The storytelling is exciting and the characters well-observed.

For the most part a distant film, Sister supplies a full behavioral experience that's riveting at times, with lead performances by Lea Seydoux and Kacey Mottet Klein communicating isolation in bravely vulnerable ways.

Emotionally engaging and impeccably crafted

Klein and Seydoux give such naturalistic performances that they're never overwhelmed by the spectacle.

"Sister" is loose and episodic, but held together with nicely sketched characters.

[A]voids bathos. . .reveals unexpected depth in a heartbreaking bond. . . Different classes conflict [in] adjacent spaces . . .in spare, realistic Dardennes' style.

Meier draws out wonderfully naturalistic performances from her young stars, with Mottet Klein particularly good as the young roustabout Simon ...

It comes over like a subtle short story and is well acted.

Meier's portrait of Simon ... is richly atmospheric and never sentimental.

An enigmatic, heartfelt account of a vulnerable young boy's yearning for a better life.

Most intriguing is how the writers and director have transformed what's essentially a rather dark, bleak story into something involving and emotionally resonant, all without ever turning sentimental.

No quotes approved yet for Sister. Logged in users can submit quotes.

Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/lenfant_den_haut/

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Video: Immigration reform a key focus for new Congress

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Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/newsnation/50356282/

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Samantak Ghosh '13 Wins Award for Paper on ... - Berkeley Law

Samantak Ghosh ?13 Wins Award for Paper on Patent Doctrine

By Andrew Cohen

Samantak Ghosh ?13 has won the American Intellectual Property Law Association?s national student writing award for his paper on the policy ramifications of the Supreme Court?s recent decision involving patents covering natural processes.

The annual Robert C. Watson Award honors an impactful contribution to intellectual property law that displays original, creative information not previously published. Ghosh?s paper will soon appear in the Journal of the Patent & Trademark Office Society as Prometheus and the Natural Phenomenon Doctrine: Let?s not Lose Sight of the Forest for the Trees.

In the article, Ghosh critiques the recent Supreme Court opinion in Mayo v. Prometheus, which rejected a drug-related patent claim for not extending far enough beyond merely identifying a natural law. By ruling that a method of administering drugs to a medical patient was not patent-eligible, Ghosh said the Court ?recalibrated the natural phenomenon doctrine, which had been untouched for 30 years,? and that the case ?was a poor vehicle for doing so.?

Although the doctrine of excluding natural phenomena from patent eligibility has existed for more than 150 years, the case law has been far from consistent. Part of the struggle to draw boundaries between patent-eligible inventions and natural phenomena, Ghosh noted, is that ?every invention involves some application of a natural phenomenon.?

Courts have similarly struggled to delineate natural products and items derived from natural products. Over the past 60 years, purified Vitamin K1, adrenaline, and Vitamin B12 have been ruled patentable, while purified Vitamin C, glucoside, and extracts containing chlorophyll have been ruled ineligible.

Ghosh highlighted this inconsistency in an earlier paper, ?Gene Patents: Balancing the Myriad Issues Concerning the Patenting of Natural Products,? which was published in the Berkeley Technology Law Journal. He argued that the patent-eligibility of genes cannot be addressed in isolation, and proposed a framework for assessing the patent-eligibility of all natural products, including genes.

Ghosh earned a Ph.D. in chemistry from Stanford before enrolling at Berkeley Law. He continued exploring the natural phenomenon doctrine and developed the award-winning paper in his Advanced Legal Scholarship course co-taught by Professors Robert Merges and Kathryn Abrams.

Pinpoint patent analysis

?The intellectual property faculty are very proud of Samantak for receiving this award,? Merges said. ?It?s fantastic that he?s getting recognition on such a grand stage, and his work surely deserves it. Samantak?s understanding of natural genes, their chemical structure as well as function, was instrumental to his approach. This is the sort of informed, nuanced, and carefully reasoned analysis that the courts are looking for in this delicate policy area.?

?In Prometheus, the Supreme Court got the science behind the claimed invention wrong,? said Ghosh, who has worked on synthesizing artificial variations of DNA and explored their use in therapeutics and diagnostics. His paper questions the Court?s new standard of how the natural phenomenon doctrine will be administered and forecasts a troubling effect on the biotech and personalized medicine industries.

?Both industries apply natural processes to provide personalized interventions and have relied on these kinds of patents for decades,? Ghosh said. ?To make matters worse, the Court merely described some general principles, leaving it to the lower courts to figure out how to apply them. This leaves a lot of uncertainty for patents in this area.?

Multiple studies, Ghosh said, show that most drugs prescribed in the U.S. are effective in fewer than 60 percent of treated patients?with a total cost of drug inefficacy estimated at $170 billion annually. He believes personalized medicine can greatly improve health care quality and dramatically reduce costs ?by using diagnostic tests to obtain information on a patient?s biomarkers and then provide patient-specific treatment.?

However, noting the patent community?s outcry in the wake of Prometheus, Ghosh cautions against abandoning the natural phenomenon doctrine. ?If it is to be rejected, that should be based on its merits rather than on the occasional mistakes of courts applying it,? he said. ?The Supreme Court had previously used the doctrine?s flexibility to conform patentability to modern demands, and the doctrine plays a key role in allowing tools of future innovation to emerge.?

The Court will soon decide a case involving the patenting of human genes. Ghosh, who will join the patent litigation group at Wilmer Hale next fall, hopes the ruling clarifies the doctrinal contours involved in patenting natural phenomena set forth in Prometheus.

?The ethical, legal, and social issues involving patents covering natural phenomena, genetics, and personalized medicine are going to be some of the most important issues of our time,? he said. ?The law is not only lagging behind science, it is hopelessly unclear.?

1/2/2013

Source: http://www.law.berkeley.edu/14665.htm

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Argentina's president urges Falklands talks with Britain

LONDON (Reuters) - Britain rejected calls on Thursday from Argentine President Cristina Fernandez for talks over the disputed Falkland Islands after she wrote an open letter to Prime Minister David Cameron.

Britain and Argentina fought a 10-week war in 1982 over the remote South Atlantic islands, which are part of Britain's self-governing overseas territories and are known in Argentina as Las Malvinas.

Fernandez has marked the 30th anniversary of the conflict with a sustained diplomatic campaign to assert Argentina's sovereignty claim, whose significance has been raised by oil exploration in the waters around the islands.

In her letter, published in British newspapers, Fernandez accused Britain of breaching United Nations resolutions urging the two countries to negotiate a solution to the dispute.

"The question of the Malvinas Islands is also a cause embraced by Latin America and by a vast majority of peoples and governments around the world that reject colonialism," Fernandez wrote.

Cameron rejected her call for negotiations, sticking to London's stance that the approximately 3,000 people of the Falkland Islands had chosen to be British.

"The future of the Falkland Islands should be determined by the Falkland Islanders themselves," he said. "Whenever they have been asked their opinion they have said they want to maintain their current status with the United Kingdom."

The islanders are expected to vote overwhelmingly in favor of the existing arrangement in a referendum this year.

"I hope the president of Argentina will listen to that referendum and recognize it is for the Falkland Islanders to choose their future," Cameron said.

"As long as they choose to stay with the United Kingdom, they have my 100 percent backing," he added.

Fernandez said her open letter was timed to coincide with the 180th anniversary of the day when Argentina was "forcibly stripped" of the islands in what she called a "blatant exercise of 19th century colonialism".

Noting that the islands are 14,000 km (8,700 miles) from London, Fernandez accused Britain of expelling Argentines from the territory and carrying out a "population implantation process".

Britain disputes this, saying no civilian population was expelled from the Falklands on or after January 3, 1833.

(Reporting by Estelle Shirbon and Tim Castle; Editing by Ruth Pitchford)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/argentinas-president-urges-falklands-talks-britain-180016587.html

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Civilian Spacefarers Face Medical Hurdles

60-Second Space

Opening the door to the paying public means that less healthy individuals will soon have access to space--if their doctors approve. John Matson reports.

More 60-Second Space

Let?s say you?ve saved up 200 grand for a trip to space with Virgin Galactic. Lucky you. But are you healthy enough to fly? You?ll have to talk with your doctor.

A new study in the BMJ? [S. Marlene Grenon et al, Can I take a space flight? Considerations for doctors] outlines the role that general practitioners will have to play in commercial spaceflight. After all, astronauts typically have to be in tip-top shape. But opening the door to the paying public means that less healthy individuals will soon have access to space, too.

And the stress of spaceflight, combined with the negative effects of weightlessness on muscle and bone, could cause real problems. It may be up to your personal physician to make the go/no-go call based on your medical history.

Among the potential hypotheticals floated in the BMJ study: ?Can my patient with stable angina and a pacemaker for complete heart block participate in a suborbital Virgin Galactic flight? What is the maximum allowable time that my patient with osteoporosis can spend on a planned vacation at a space hotel??

There are no official answers, yet. But the study?s authors note that such questions may be in the air?or lack thereof?in the not-too-distant future.

?John Matson

[The above text is a transcript of this podcast]


Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=0399ceed1c46fc7b9e20c326e88e1afc

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