Friday, January 20, 2012

Financial plan: Flint union contracts under review

Flint? A financial plan from Flint's state-appointed emergency manager says city employee union contracts are currently under review for possible renegotiation.

The Flint Journal reports that the plan includes Michael Brown's suggestions for reducing the city's projected $11.3 million deficit. A copy of the plan was released to the public Tuesday.

According to the plan, Brown wants to cut costs through "negotiated union contracts, consolidation and shared services." His next steps include restructuring collective bargaining agreements and reorganizing departments.

Flint Mayor Dayne Walling said in a statement that the proposals "highlight the need for greater cooperation."

Brown was appointed last year. He has broad authority to make changes in the financially troubled city, including the power to oversee city government and toss out union contracts in some situations.

Source: http://www.detroitnews.com/article/20120118/METRO/201180372/1478/rss

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Thursday, January 19, 2012

HTC EVO 3D: poof, no more Carrier IQ software

It's been exactly a month since we received word that Sprint was disabling Carrier IQ software installed on its carrier-branded devices, and this week we witnessed a firmware update on the HTC EVO 3D that quietly removes all traces of the tracking software completely. Neither company was forthcoming about this particular feature disappearing -- we have a hunch they're trying to keep the public from being reminded that CIQ ever happened -- but Android Authority discovered that both HTC IQAgent and IQRD were completely gone after the update. So add this to the list of the build's other performance enhancements, and here's to hoping that we'll start seeing a plethora of other devices getting similar releases.

HTC EVO 3D: poof, no more Carrier IQ software originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Jan 2012 11:07:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/01/17/htc-evo-3d-poof-no-more-carrier-iq-software/

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Reader Roundup: Pets in Your Bed? | Apartment Therapy

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When we first got our French Bulldog, Luna, I was adamant that she would sleep in her own bed. For one thing she was so small I was worried I would roll over her and smother her, and for another, I thought she would make the bed dirty.

Now that she is no longer tiny and she is savvy enough that she is more likely to slowly push me out of the way rather than the other way around, I have been worn down over time and she now has full reign of the human bed.

I often see photos of pets lounging on furniture, but do you let your pet sleep in bed with you?

MORE LIVING WITH PETS ON APARTMENT THERAPY:
? 3 Items to Help you Green Clean your Pets
? 5 Tricks for Dealing with a Hairy Home

(Image: Liana Walker)

Source: http://www.apartmenttherapy.com/pets-in-your-bed-keeping-your-toes-warm-or-dirty-habit-164547

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Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Liver and thyroid cancer rates rise

"Relatively large" increases in the prevalence of liver and thyroid cancer, two less common forms of the disease, have been reported by Statistics Canada.

The agency released its report, Canadian Trends in Cancer Prevalence, on Tuesday, calling it the first such detailed report of the trends in the country.

Prevalence rates for prostate cancer, the most common cancer in Canada, rose substantially, mainly because of the aging of the population over the study period 1997 to 2008, according to the report.

Increases in the prevalence of breast cancer, the second most common cancer and the most common in women, were "more moderate."

Prevalence is defined as all cancers diagnosed within a given period among people alive on a specified date. In contrast, "incidence" refers to newly occurring cases.

The five-year prevalence rate for cancer overall rose 2.1 per cent a year between 1997 and 2008.


Liver cancer factors

Larry Ellison and Kathryn Wilkins of the agency?s health statistics division said both the incidence and observed survival rose over the study period, with only about 20 per cent of the increase in prevalence due to aging of the population.

Various explanations for rising liver incidence have been suggested, they said, including:

- Increases in immigrants from countries where hepatitis B and C virus infections and exposure to aflatoxins that can lead to liver cancer are more common.

- Rising incidence of hepatitis C infection linked to intravenous drug use and sharing of needles.

- Growing rates of obesity and Type 2 diabetes.

Many countries have also reported increases in thyroid cancer incidence rates, especially among young and middle-age women. Advances in diagnostic techniques are thought to be a factor, though a recent U.S. study suggested more detection alone can?t explain the increase in that country, the authors said.

Rates declined for cancers of the larynx and a type of uterine cancer.

The biggest disparity between the sexes was for lung cancer. The five-year prevalence proportion fell slightly among men but rose among women ? a difference that was attributed to sharper decreases in smoking prevalence among men since the mid-1960s.


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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2012/01/18/liver-and-thyroid-cancer-_n_1212967.html

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Lead poisoning common in Burmese refugee kids (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) ? Many Burmese refugee children bound for the U.S. may have dangerously high levels of lead in their blood, a new government study finds.

Researchers at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) found that of 642 U.S.-bound Burmese children, 90 percent had some amount of lead in their blood. Overall, 5 percent had lead poisoning -- including nearly 15 percent of children younger than 2.

High lead exposure is especially dangerous for young children, since it can permanently damage their developing brains.

In the U.S. and other developed countries, children's lead exposure dropped substantially after the heavy metal was removed from gasoline, house paints and other products. But studies have found that lead poisoning is still fairly common among refugee children who come from countries where lead exposure is a bigger problem.

For the new study, CDC researchers focused on Burmese children who were living in one of three Thailand refugee camps before coming to the U.S.

In 2008, there had been reports of high lead poisoning rates among children who were resettled in the U.S. after living in those camps -- suggesting that at least some of their lead exposure happened in the camps.

The CDC researchers found that of 642 refugee-camp children tested over two months in 2009, nearly all had some detectable lead in their blood. And the number with lead poisoning was several times higher than what's seen in U.S. children.

Of children younger than 6 -- the most at-risk age group -- about 7 percent had lead poisoning. In the U.S., it's estimated that 1 percent of kids in that age range suffer lead poisoning.

What's more, refugee children younger than 2 had a lead poisoning rate of 14.5 percent.

Children were considered to have lead poisoning if their levels were at least 10 micrograms of lead per deciliter of blood. That's the CDC's current threshold.

A federal advisory panel, however, just recommended that the threshold be lowered to 5 micrograms. It has long been known that even lead exposures lower than 10 micrograms per deciliter are linked to lower IQ in children.

The CDC already recommends that all refugee children have their lead levels checked within three months of arriving in the U.S.

CAR BATTERIES, REMEDIES, ANEMIA AT FAULT?

The current study is the first to test children's lead concentrations before they come to the U.S., according to the CDC researchers, led by Dr. Tarissa Mitchell.

And the findings point to some factors that put children at particular risk while they're still in refugee camps.

Many children with lead poisoning were exposed to car batteries in their homes, which families used to generate power for electronic items. Children younger than 2 were particularly likely to have touched or "mouthed" the batteries.

Young children who'd been given traditional remedies at the camps were also at increased risk of lead poisoning, the researchers found.

Past studies have found that some traditional medicines are contaminated with lead. When Mitchell's team tested seven remedies sold at the Thai refugee camps, they found that one -- a "multipurpose infant remedy" called Gaw Mo Dah -- had lead levels far above what's considered acceptable in foods in the U.S.

But the biggest factor seemed to be anemia, which is most often caused by iron deficiency. Anemia is known to make children more vulnerable to lead poisoning.

The CDC recommends that when refugee children in the U.S. are tested for lead levels, they also be screened for anemia and have a "nutritional assessment."

But the current findings also show that efforts are needed in the refugee camps themselves, according to Mitchell's team.

The Thai camps, they say, have already started educational campaigns to warn families about the dangers of lead exposure.

Once children are in the U.S., the CDC researchers say, families should be placed in "lead-safe" housing. And after their first lead test, children younger than 6 should be re-tested within six months of settling into permanent housing.

Burma, also known as Myanmar, was under military rule until last year, when a civilian government was installed following elections. Each year since 2007, up to 15,000 Burmese refugees have resettled in the U.S. from camps in Thailand.

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/zNNv7x Pediatrics, online January 16, 2012.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/parenting/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120117/hl_nm/us_lead_poisoning

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

LDS church to build new temple in Meridian

BOISE, Idaho (AP) ? The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has announced the site of its future temple in Meridian.

The project in southwestern Idaho was first announced in April and is expected to take about two years to complete. The church announced Monday its new temple will be located on Linder Road, north of Chinden Boulevard in Meridian.

The Meridian temple will be the fifth temple for Idaho The church currently has temples operating at sites in Boise, Twin Falls, Idaho Falls and Rexburg.

Temples are considered the most sacred of church buildings and are used for marriages, proxy baptisms and other ceremonies.

Source: http://meridian.kboi2.com/news/news/54276-lds-church-build-new-temple-meridian

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Friday, December 2, 2011

Computer Model Spots Image Fraud

Image: Courtesy AntesyDespues.com

Scientists in the United States have come up with a tool for automatically analysing digital photographs, making it possible to gauge the extent to which images have been altered or retouched.

Advances in image-manipulation software have made it trivial to radically alter the appearance of models and celebrities in photos, notes Hany Farid, a computer scientist who studies digital forensics and image analysis at Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire. Farid created the analysis tool with his colleague Eric Kee, also at Dartmouth College. The promotion of unrealistic body images in some advertisements and magazines is thought to have a role in triggering eating disorders, explains Farid, and some countries, including the United Kingdom, France and Norway, are now considering legislation to require digitally altered images to be labelled as such.

The idea is to use the software to generate a scale that can be printed next to published images, say Farid and Kee, so that readers can tell how accurately they represent the originals. The hope is that this will shed light on the culture of 'airbrushing' in the advertising and fashion-magazine industries. The software could also help to deter fraud in scientific images, they say.

However, simply labelling manipulated images is not the solution, says Farid, because this would tar all altered images with the same brush ? even those that used legitimate adjustments such as cropping and colour modification. Farid and Kee's solution, published online today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA, is a system that can score on a scale of one to five how much an altered image has strayed from reality.

Compare and contrast
Farid and Kee first compared more than 450 pairs of images before and after manipulation, quantifying their dissimilarity according to eight different statistical parameters. These ignore any global changes, such as cropping, and instead focus on local geometric modifications?for example, by how many pixels the shape of a person has altered?and photometric changes such as smoothing or sharpening.

To combine these parameters into one metric, the researchers asked more than 350 volunteers to compare the same pairs of images, ranking them on a scale of 1 (very similar) to 5 (very different). These ratings were then used to train a machine-learning algorithm to extract a single score from the measured values that would faithfully reflect the perceptual judgement of the volunteers.

The resulting system is able to rate the extent of manipulation in new pairs of images with an accuracy of about 80%, says Farid. Although the technique is currently specifically tuned to images of people, Farid says that the underlying algorithms could easily be adapted to analyse scientific images, using journal editors and scientists during the training process.

Farid notes that image manipulation is a growing problem in the scientific community, calling it "extremely disturbing?. He explains that it has become all too easy for some researchers to misrepresent their results, enhancing DNA bands in a gel, for example, or scrubbing out background blemishes, either to innocently make images look better or, in some cases, to skew the results deliberately.

Picture imperfect
It is not clear why scientific image fraud is a growing problem, says John Dahlberg, director of investigative oversight for the Office of Research Integrity in Rockville, Maryland, whose division investigates cases of alleged research misconduct. ?It seems the scientific community is very aggressive about beautifying its images,? he says. ?About 70% of our cases involve questioned images.?

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=275de1c448864c77193345a3c3ad996f

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