Archive for January, 2012

Windsor Genova – AHN News News Writer

Khartoum, Sudan (AHN) – Sudan’s army on Monday was pursuing rebels who kidnapped 29 Chinese workers in the restive South Kordofan region.

Fighters of the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement, which is trying to overthrow Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir, seized the workers in the compound of a Chinese construction company involved in a local road project on Saturday during a clash with government troops.

Fourteen Chinese workers were rescued by soldiers while another 15 were missing, according to Khartoum government spokesman Rabie Abdelaty. The state-owned Chinese news agency Xinhua reported that 18 Chinese workers who fled the compound when rebels raided it were found in a neighboring area and secured.

The Chinese construction company’s security personnel were working with Sudanese authorities in the rescue of the workers.

The rebels claimed the Chinese workers were unharmed and they were just protecting the foreigners from harm during the fighting with government troops. They denied any link with the South Sudan government, which is ruled by a party having the same name as the rebels’ group.

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Ugg boots given; given boot

Diane Alter – AHN News Reporter

Boston, MA, United States (AHN) – New England is going to the Super Bowl in Indianapolis this Sunday where they will face the New York Giants in what is expected to be one of the most watched games in TV history, and one of the best displays of some football in some time.

In a congratulatory gesture, Patriots’s quarterback Tom Brady gave each player on the team a pair of Ugg boots.

This is the second time the generous Brady, who endorses the footwear, gave the boots to his fellow teammates.

Meanwhile, the cult-like, sheepskin, fur-lined and comfy boots have been given the boot at Pottsdown Middle School outside Philadelphia.

Principal Gail M. Cooper said the boots (and their less expensive imitators) have become the hiding place of choice for cellphones and other gadgets that are not supposed to be brought to class.

Some fashionistas consider Uggs just plain ugly; others can’t get enough of them, even wearing the warm footwear year-round.

While Brady and the Patriots will be sporting them as they head to the Super Bowl, some middle school kids will have to leave them at home.

bx

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Myanmar (IRIN) – Aid workers in Myanmar’s northern Kachin State have expressed concern over the health of thousands of internally displaced persons (IDPs) along the border with China.

Preventable illnesses caused by unsanitary conditions and colder weather are taking their toll on the more than 45,000 IDPs in two dozen IDP camps as sporadic fighting between government forces and the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) nears almost eight months, they say.

“Many of the children in the IDP camps suffer from diarrhea and stomach parasites because they have to drink dirty water. When they go to the toilet, there aren’t enough,” May Li Aung, director of Wun Pawng Ninghtoi (WPN – “Light of Kachin”), a volunteer group comprising eight local NGOs and charity groups, told IRIN.

In one camp, aid workers report just five latrines for more than 1,200 people.

“A few people in the camps have already died from this and we are worried that diseases will spread,” she said.

While much of the water supply is trucked into the camps, many of the displaced while on the run have to drink directly from streams or boil pond water

The WPN assists 16 camps under KIA control in the southern part of Kachin State, where about 20,000 IDPs are housed in temporary bamboo shelters, but there is a growing strain on volunteers and resources as the conflict continues.

In the north, another 20,000 IDPs are housed in camps also under KIA control, with about 10,000 in the government-controlled area around the border town of Myitkyina.

Vulnerable women

“Women in the camps can use the clinics there; however, many women are not getting the midwife or family support they need,” Shirley Seng, a spokeswoman for the Kachin Women’s Association of Thailand (KWAT), based in Chiang Mai, said. “Many women feel insecure and at risk of possible assault by Burmese troops.”

“The problem that we face right now is that many women who are pregnant are having miscarriages,” explained nurse Di Di Ah Hkaw.

The pregnant women have no choice but to run from their homes to a safe place while many of their husbands are fighting on the frontline. Many of the women are carrying their household possessions with them, she explained.

“In December we had three women in our clinic who miscarried,” Di Di Ah Hkaw added.

Meanwhile, as the political dialogue between Myanmar and others in the international community slowly moves forward, international relief groups are calling for faster action to better address the needs of the displaced.

Earlier this month, Refugees International released a report calling for increased humanitarian aid to coincide with a string of recent political reforms by the country’s first nominally civilian government in decades.

At the same time, Bill Davies of Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) described a recent UN inter-agency mission to the KIA-controlled town border town of Laiza in December – which delivered essential household items to the displaced and conducted an initial assessment of the situation – as a positive step, but stressed the need for stronger assistance and access.

The UN and its humanitarian partners have repeatedly expressed their readiness to support all those affected by the conflict, and the most vulnerable in particular, a statement by the UN read at the time.

“There needs to be consistency and more access for bigger organizations to go in and provide better technical support for the people on the ground.

“Something as simple as diarrhea could kill someone as the dehydration leads to the immune system breaking down which could lead to respiratory problems and pneumonia – and eventually death,” the health worker warned.

On 9 June 2011, the 17-year-old cease fire that had been in place between the government and the KIA broke down, in part because the KIA rejected orders to transform into a single border guard force under Burmese military control. Others still cite the military’s desire to widen its control over areas with Chinese energy projects .

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Jacksonville, FL, United States (KaiserHealth) – For a candidate who keeps vowing to repeal the 2010 federal Affordable Care Act, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney sure can make a convincing argument on its behalf.

At least that’s how it appeared to a lot of people after Thursday night’s Republican presidential candidate debate in Jacksonville, FL.

During a more than 10-minute back-and-forth on health care largely between Romney and former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, Romney ended up delivering a lengthy justification for his state’s decision to pass a 2006 law that included requiring nearly every resident to either have health insurance or pay a tax penalty.

“If you don’t want to buy insurance, then you have to help pay for the cost of the state picking up your bill, because under federal law if someone doesn’t have insurance, then we have to care for them in the hospitals, give them free care,” said Romney. “So we said, no more, no more free riders. We are insisting on personal responsibility. Either get the insurance or help pay for your care.”

“Does everybody in Massachusetts have a requirement to buy health care?” asked Santorum.

“Everyone has a requirement to either buy it or pay the state for the cost of providing them free care,” Romney shot back. “Because the idea of people getting something for free when they could afford to care for themselves is something that we decided in our state was not a good idea.”

Santorum’s conclusion was that “in Massachusetts, everybody is mandated, as a condition of breathing … to buy health insurance, and if you don’t … you have to pay a fine.”

But backers of the requirement saw Romney’s explanation in a somewhat different light.

Said John McDonough, a professor at the Harvard School of Public Health, “Romney has given in this entire presidential campaign last evening what I believe is the most effective and persuasive rationale and defense of the individual mandate.”

Of course, that may not be a good thing for Romney as he fights to win over Republicans who dislike the 2010 law in general, and the insurance requirement in particular. Santorum said the Massachusetts law passed under Romney’s stewardship in 2006 is too close to the federal law for Republicans to make health care an issue this fall.

“It does not provide the contrast we need with Barack Obama if we’re going to take on that most important issue. We cannot give the issue of health care away in this election,” he said.

And while Romney insisted that the Massachusetts law and the federal law differ in significant ways, McDonough, who was intimately involved in the development and passage of both the Massachusetts and federal health laws, insists that’s not really the case.

“The similarities go far far beyond the mandate,” he said. For example, “the essential architecture of the insurance reforms in the Affordable Care Act are taken wholly from the Massachusetts health reform law.”

On the other hand, Santorum may have overspoken when he claimed that the Massachusetts law isn’t working very well.

Just this week the policy journal Health Affairs published a study looking at the Massachusetts program’s first five years in operation.

“We find the state is continuing to do quite well in terms of maintaining high levels of health insurance coverage and improvements in access to care,” said lead author Sharon Long of the University of Minnesota and the Urban Institute. “Including for the first time we’re seeing reductions in emergency department use, and also some improvements in health status. So really, some very positive changes that came with health reform.”

Positive for Massachusetts residents, perhaps. Positive for Mitt Romney’s chances to win the Republican nomination? That still remains to be seen.

– Provided by Kaiser Health News.

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Linda Young – AHN News Writer

Washington, DC, United States (AHN) – Initial jobless claims for the week ending Jan. 21 rose by 21,000 to 377,000, compared with the previous week’s revised figure of 356,000, the U.S. Department of Labor said.

The less volatile four-week moving average was 377,500, a drop of 2,500 from the previous week’s revised average of 380,000.

DOL figures show that the total number of people claiming benefits in all programs for the week ending Jan. 7, the most recent week for which such data is available, was 7,638,233, down by 188,612 people from the previous week.

The largest increases in initial claims for the week ending Jan. 14 were:

  • Florida (+2,711)
  • California (+1,682)
  • Iowa (+596)
  • West Virginia (+571)
  • District of Columbia (+115)
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Diane Alter – AHN News Reporter

Washington, D.C., United States (AHN) – The U.S. government on Wednesday released new nutrition standards for school meals that mandate dramatic changes.

Among the changes, sodium will be slashed, calories will be cut and students will be offered a wider variety and larger portions of fruits and vegetables. These changes raise the nutrition standards for school meals for the first time in more than 15 years.

The quality of school menus have been the subject of some heated debates for years. Sparking the debates is the growing number of overweight or obese children in the United States. The latest tally put the number at one-third.

The changes are designed to improve the health of nearly 32 million children who eat lunch every day at school, and the nearly 11 million who eat breakfast. Overall, kids consume about 30 percent to 50 percent of their calories while at school.

Among the new standards:

Establish maximum calorie and sodium limits for meals, The sodium limits are phased in over 10 years.

Require schools to serve a fruit and vegetable every day at lunch and in larger portions than offered before.

Require schools to offer a minimum number of leafy green vegetables, red-orange vegetables, starchy vegetables and legumes each week.

Require that after the two year implementation, all grains offered to students must be rich in whole grains. Breads, buns, cereals and pasta must list whole grains as the first ingredient.

Require milk to either be low-fat or fat-free.

Require that foods that are served contain no trans fat.

The new standards for lunch take effect starting with the next school year. Changes for breakfast will be phased in.

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United States (KaiserHealth) – The latest casualty of the Great Recession may soon be the nation’s elderly. Cuts in government payments for patient care and less construction of new nursing homes are already taking a toll. Add to this the aging baby boom generation and you have a worst-case scenario in which older people who need full-time care won’t be able to get it. “We believe we’re at a tipping point,” says Mark Parkinson, head of the American Health Care Association (AHCA), which represents nursing homes.

If so, the timing couldn’t be worse. The first baby boomers hit age 65 last year. By 2030, 20 percent of the U.S. population will be at least 65, up from 13 percent today. In that same period, the number of 85-year-olds will increase more than 50 percent and the number of 100-year-olds nearly triple. But the number of nursing homes dropped almost 9 percent from 2000 to 2009.

Nursing homes and hospitals are places that everyone wants to avoid … until they can’t. Most people say they want to age at home, but as retiring boomers get older, more will need the type of 24-hour care that only a nursing home or hospital can offer. That’s because the prevalence of chronic illnesses like Alzheimer’s disease, cancer and diabetes increases with age. Fifty-five percent of all cancers are diagnosed in individuals 65 and older, and by 2030, 7.7 million of those 65 and older will suffer from Alzheimer’s, 50 percent more than today according to the Alzheimer’s Association. By 2025, the number of those 65 and older with diabetes is projected to almost double to 10.6 million.

Several trends are cutting into the number of nursing homes. Many homes were constructed during the 1960s under Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society programs. Often those homes are closed because they are old or, with their long hallways and large, multi-resident rooms, don’t fit what current residents want, says Robert Kramer of the National Investment Center for the Seniors Housing and Care Industry.

But the recession has made getting private financing for new nursing home construction tougher. From 2007 to 2011, the number of under-construction nursing home units (the sections of a facility that provide only nursing care) declined by a third. “I cannot tell you of anyone who has actually developed a new skilled nursing facility in at least the last five years in California,” says Edward Steinfeldt, a consultant to developers of retirement housing and health care.

And existing nursing homes are struggling. They long have lost money on patients whose stays are covered by state-run Medicaid programs, which pay for long-term care for chronically or terminally ill patients who have run out of money. According to a report this month by the AHCA, in 2011 nursing homes lost at least $20 per Medicaid resident per day nationwide. Total losses came to $6.3 billion nationally, the highest yearly total ever, with higher deficits to come next year, according to the report.

Making matters worse, last year the federal government also cut its reimbursement rates by 11 percent to nursing homes for Medicare patients—people released from hospitals to nursing homes who need short-term care to recover from injuries or acute illnesses. That’s a huge hit since Medicare payments are responsible for more than 20 percent of nursing home revenues. (Medicaid provides about 50 percent of revenues, and most of the rest comes from private long-term care insurance and people who pay out of pocket.) For the 187-bed nonprofit Lutheran Home in Milwaukee, which has gross receipts of about $20 million, the Medicare slash will take $700,000 to $750,000 straight off the organization’s bottom line this year says CEO Scott McFadden.

The real estate crash has added to nursing homes’ budget crunch. Many clients sell their homes and use the money to pay out of pocket for long-term care services from a nursing home. By obliterating more than $8 trillion in home equity, the collapse cut the number of patients who can pay their own way. McFadden says that the private-paying clients his home serves used to run out of money in two or three years. Now they’re broke much more quickly. Once they can’t pay, Medicaid picks up only some of the tab, and the Lutheran Home then starts losing money on them. It’s illegal for a Medicaid-certified nursing home to ask a patient to leave just because they run out of money.

Residing at a nursing home is not cheap. The median annual cost of a private U.S. nursing home room rose to $77,745 in 2011—up almost 30 percent from 2005. People without chronic conditions have less costly options—it takes about $43,500 yearly to pay for a home health care aide who doesn’t have specialized medical skills, and $39,000 to live in an assisted living facility that provides help with activities of daily life like cooking, but doesn’t necessarily offer health care services.

If nursing homes continue to be squeezed, they may need to cut more staff. A November 2011 report by the University of California-San Francisco concluded that poor quality of care is already endemic in many nursing homes, especially the largest for-profit chains where staffing levels have been cut the deepest to save money. Parkinson maintains that so far, homes in his association are keeping up their level of service with less money by eliminating managers, freezing wages, and cutting capital improvements like painting walls and replacing carpets—anything to avoid laying off caregiver staff.

Bill Mulligan, a managing director at Ziegler Capital Management, which provides low-cost financing for nursing home developments, argues that given the decreasing supply and rising demand, nursing homes are still a good investment. “The demographics are going to level off the number [of homes], maybe even increase it at some point,” he says. But Steinfeldt, who also works with developers, has little confidence in their profitability: “Why would you go into a business that can’t cover its costs?”

If major shortages of nursing home space do surface, they’ll likely show up in urban and high-poverty areas first. Widespread waiting lists have already been reported in Tallahassee in Florida, Rapid City in South Dakota, and San Francisco. Homes also have been closing in poor neighborhoods—a study published last year in the Archives of Internal Medicine showed that nursing homes shut down there more often than elsewhere (the hardest hit cities were New Orleans, Oklahoma City, San Francisco, and Dallas). And Medicaid patients may have an increasingly hard time finding nursing homes that will take them–Kramer says when homes replace their old buildings, they often cut the number of beds to make space for more private rooms and sophisticated medical facilities that can attract the higher paying Medicare and private-pay clients.

“Every adult is going to face this nursing home crisis in some way, whether it’s through their own care or the care of loved ones,” says McFadden. “Ignoring it is not going to make it better.”

– Provided by Kaiser Health News

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Linda Young – AHN News Writer

London, United Kingdom (AHN) – The outlook for the global labor market is worse for 2012 than it was in 2011 when one in three workers or an estimated 1.1 billion people, either were unemployed or living in poverty, the International Labour Organization (ILO) says.

Findings came from its annual Global Employment Trends 2012 report released this week.

ILO officials said they were more pessimistic because three years of crisis conditions in the global labor market have created a weaker global economy. The ILO called on governments to do more to create jobs.

Calling the situation an “urgent challenge,” the ILO said governments needed to create 600 million jobs over the next decade.

ILO said it expects a sluggish labor market recovery in Southeast Asia because the global economic downturn will hamper domestic growth.

The exception to the gloomy forecast was in Latin America and East Asia where good economic conditions in large emerging economies there are pushing up job creation, the ILO said.

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Building a blood bank

Juba, South Sudan (IRIN) – A small fridge in the corner of Juba Teaching Hospital’s laboratory is the only blood bank in South Sudan, the world’s newest nation with some of the worst health statistics in the world.

Health workers say a lack of blood is the main cause of mortality at the country’s main but extremely under-resourced hospital, and they face the anguish of having to watch patients who could be saved die.

“Sometimes they bleed until they die and we cannot do anything about it,” said Wani Mena, head of the hospital. “The first cause, the major cause, of maternal mortality in our department is bleeding,” said Chuol Kuma, an obstetrics and gynecology consultant.

While the rest of the hospital is sometimes left for days without power due to frequent cuts, capacity to keep more blood is hampered by only having a small fridge in the laboratory – the only room with a back-up generator.

“The blood bank we have is a very small refrigerator. It only takes around 50 units of blood. This is not enough,” Kuma said.

A 20-year-old mother of two recently died after suffering complications from a late miscarriage. “She needed an immediate blood transfusion and she needed blood and then she got the blood late and died,” he said.

This woman, like many others who enter the hospital, was already anemic.

“The need for blood is so great in this place because of injuries. Anemia is one of the most common presentations to our hospitals, both of women who are pregnant and for those who have malaria… and sometimes they die from it,” said Mena.

Fight for blood

But most of the time, the small amount of blood in the family-sized fridge cannot be touched even in emergencies, as it has been donated for specific patients due for surgery.

“Currently the system that exists is that somebody gets sick, relatives come and donate blood. That is not a good system. We should have a stock of blood that we can give to any patient in need of it, and immediately,” said Mena.

Cultural taboos and a lack of awareness about the risk-free benefits of giving blood also mean that getting relatives to give blood to save a life is often a struggle that staff do not win.

“In some tribes, somebody cannot, for example, give blood to his in-law, or somebody cannot receive blood from a foreigner, things like that,” said lab supervisor Charles Stanley Mazinda.

Other staff say families avert their eyes or want to know their loved one will make it before committing themselves. Amin Gerald, a nurse at Torit Hospital, about four hours’ drive from Juba, said he had come to give blood for his wife.

He understands the importance of giving blood, but would not do it for a stranger.

Gerald says he often comes across people who believe that giving blood will make them ill or weaken them, or that blood should never be mixed as it could kill the patient.

But Mazinda said that when there is an emergency, people rush to the laboratory expecting blood, only to find it cannot be touched.

Fighting fear

Technician Charity Ritti said the laboratory used to divert blood to emergency patients whose relatives promised to donate afterwards, but when they did not come back, staff faced a backlash from donors.

“The owners of the blood will come and quarrel and sometimes they even want to beat us,” she said.

Ritti is concerned that often the bank only has one unit of key blood types, such as O-negative, but says changing people’s mindsets to build up reserves is extremely difficult.

“They are afraid of donations – we have people coming here from Kenya, Uganda and Khartoum [Sudan] and giving blood… but our people here cannot face free donations,” she said.

“Sometimes we screen them, then we say go and have breakfast and they never come back,” she said.

Changing attitudes Hospital staff say awareness campaigns and better medical education are needed, among the huge challenges facing a nation where only 16 percent are literate and very few have access to health facilities. Even local doctors admit they too are scared to donate.

“There’s just not a lot of cultural education about giving blood and still being healthy. I think in the US and UK and Europe we are very educated about that,” said Matthew Fentress, an American doctor working at Juba Hospital.

In addition, Mazinda said getting people to the blood screening stage was a challenge, as people feared finding out they were HIV-positive.

“Sometimes we screen some blood donors, and when they are [HIV-]positive, we tell them to go to the VCT center down the road, but some of them don’t reach there [and flee],” he said.

Bridging the gap The government is planning to build a national blood bank here this year that will hold up to 200 pints (113 liters).

Meanwhile, doctors from the Harvard Initiative in Massachusetts have set up a “virtual blood bank” to try to beat storage and power problems.

The bank is made up of a database of pre-screened volunteer donors who are willing to come in and replace a unit of their blood type.

Fentress said this would free up blood for emergencies and when the hospital cannot get blood from patients’ friends and families.

“Right now we’re really focused primarily on foreigners, as their attitudes are already changed,” he said.

The hospital is advertising on the internet and in community centers, such as churches, until a government campaign hopefully ensures South Sudan’s first “real” blood bank is filled.

“It is just the beginning and I hope it will succeed. But I think they need assistance from the communities. There must be medical education or health education for the communities so that they accept to come and donate freely so that we may have enough blood in our blood bank,” said Kuma.

hm/mw

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Schenectady, NY, United States (AHN) – Price Chopper Supermarkets is issuing a voluntary recall on its 16-ounce Coyote Joe’s Shredded Taco Cheese with UPC 41735-12509 and an expiration date of April 21, 2012, due to the possibility of shredded plastic fragments inside the packaging.

The cheese was sold chain-wide between the dates of Jan. 4 and Jan. 17, 2012.

Price Chopper has initiated its Smart Reply notification program, which uses purchase data and consumer phone numbers on file in connection with the company’s AdvantEdge loyalty card to alert households that may have purchased the product.

Customers can return the product to their local Price Chopper for a full refund.

For more information, visit the pricechopper.com website or call Price Chopper at 1-800-666-7667, option 3, between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.

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