Thursday, February 27, 2014

Venison chilli, with black beans and cocoa, lime quinoa recipe

2 celery sticks, chopped

2 sweet red peppers, chopped

1 rounded tsp ground cinnamon

1 rounded tsp cumin, chopped

1 rounded tsp chilli powder

1kg venison leg or shoulder, trimmed and cut into 2cm dice

200ml Mexican or Spanish beer

250ml passata, or liquidised tinned tomatoes

450ml meat stock

1 x 450g can black beans, drained, or 200g dried black beans, soaked overnight then boiled until tender

2 tsp cocoa powder

for the quinoa

250g quinoa grains

2 tbsp (30ml) lime juice

2 tbsp extra-virgin olive oil

a handful of coriander leaves, chopped

Heat three quarters of the oil in a casserole pan and add all the vegetables. Fry gently over a low heat until they shrink and begin to brown. Add the spices and stir over a low heat for a minute then set to one side. Brown the meat in a separate pan, using the remaining oil – you may need a little more. Add the meat to the casserole with the vegetables then place it over the heat again. Add the beer and bring to the boil. Cook for one minute then add the tomatoes and stock. Bring to simmering point and cook very gently for 45 minutes or until the venison is tender. Add the beans and cocoa powder and bring back to simmering point. Season with salt and pepper to taste.

To prepare the quinoa, put the grains in a pan and cover with boiling water. Boil until the grains begin to uncurl and you see a small white thread-like sprout. Drain and refresh with cold water. Put in a bowl and add the lime juice, oil, coriander and salt to taste. Mix well and serve alongside the chilli. You can also serve sour cream with the chilli.

Tamarind dal with carrot chutney and crisp squash patties recipe

Honey chickpeas and cod-and-ham fritters recipe

Bread soup, with Neapolitan tomato and Parmesan-bread crisps recipe

Spiced rice pudding with pistachio caramel recipe

Source : http://telegraph.feedsportal.com/c/32726/f/564649/s/37a03e67/sc/26/l/0L0Stelegraph0O0Cjournalists0Crose0Eprince0C10A6581470CVenison0Echilli0Ewith0Eblack0Ebeans0Eand0Ecocoa0Elime0Equinoa0Erecipe0Bhtml/story01.htm

Groups urge FDA to halt launch of Zohydro pain drug

WASHINGTON Thu Feb 27, 2014 12:46pm EST

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A coalition of addiction experts, physicians and others is urging U.S. health officials to reverse course and block the launch of a powerful painkiller called Zohydro, expected to hit the market next month.

The opioid drug, manufactured by Zogenix Inc, contains a potent amount of an active ingredient that could be lethal to new patients and children and is not safer than other current pain drugs, the groups told the Food and Drug Administration.

"Someone unaccustomed to taking opioids could suffer a fatal overdose from just two capsules. A single capsule could be fatal if swallowed by a child," they wrote in a petition to FDA Commissioner Margaret Hamburg, dated Wednesday.

In December, attorneys general from 28 states also urged the FDA to reconsider its approval of the drug.

Shares of San Diego-based Zogenix were down 2 percent to $4.59 in mid-day trading on the Nasdaq.

Zogenix, in a statement, said it was confident in the FDA's approval of the drug, which will be "subject to stricter prescribing and dispensing rules." The company has said it plans to start selling the drug in early March.

The latest petition came as the United States grapples with an epidemic of prescription drug abuse, especially involving powerful opioid pain medications. Opioids are a class of drugs that includes morphine, codeine and oxycodone as well as hydrocodone.

Nearly 5 million people in the United States ages 12 and older abuse pain drugs, outpacing sedatives, stimulants and other abused medications, according to a 2012 U.S. government survey.

The FDA, which has launched its own efforts aimed at curbing abuse of pain-killing medications, approved Zohydro last year despite earlier concerns from a panel of FDA outside advisers worried about addiction risks.

The FDA advisers echoed the concerns of public health experts, law enforcement and others, who pointed to the drug's delivery system and say they are worried about the potential for Zohydro to be crushed or injected.

Zohydro can contain as much as 10 times the amount of the narcotic hydrocodone as other painkillers such as AbbVie Inc's Vicodin or UCB Inc's Lortab, advocates said in their petition.

"Zohydro is not safer," they wrote.

Both Vicodin and Lortab also contain the pain-killing ingredient acetaminophen. Zohydro does not.

FDA officials have said they are working to balance public health worries about opioid addiction with access to the drugs for patients seeking pain relief. The FDA has said Zohydro's benefits outweigh its risks.

FDA spokeswoman Morgan Liscinsky said the agency would review the group's letter.

The petition was signed by 42 supporters, including representatives of advocacy groups such as Public Citizen as well as physicians and community addiction treatment providers.

(Reporting by Susan Heavey; Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe)


Source : http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/healthNews/~3/_Hoy80NrNPo/story01.htm

Signed copies of Hitler's 'Mein Kampf' auctioned for $64,850

LOS ANGELES Fri Feb 28, 2014 12:37am EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Copies of Adolf Hitler's manifesto "Mein Kampf" signed by the German Nazi leader sold for $64,850 at an auction on Thursday in Los Angeles, auction house Nate D. Sanders said.

The autographed copies of the two-volume work steeped in anti-Semitism are inscribed as Christmas gifts to Josef Bauer, an officer in the German SS during World War Two and a participant in Hitler's failed Munich coup in 1923.

Eleven people bid during an online auction that ended on Thursday evening for the signed books, which were estimated to sell for between $20,000 and $25,000, the auctioneer said. The winning bid includes a buyer's premium, also known as commission fees.

The same Bauer books fetched $25,000 in a sale at Bonhams auction house in London in 2012.

In the two-volume "Mein Kampf" (My Struggle), Hitler lays out his vision for a resurgent Germany after World War One along with his racist National Socialist political ideology.

"Mein Kampf," unlike Nazi insignia and some Nazi films and songs, is not banned in Germany. Its German copyright has been owned by Bavaria since the end of World War Two, and the southern German state has prohibited sales and printing.

(Reporting by Eric Kelsey and John Russell in Los Angeles; Additional reporting by Eric M. Johnson in Seattle; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)


Source : http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/lifestyle/~3/alVecpEdCYA/story01.htm

Tamarind dal with carrot chutney and crisp squash patties recipe

4 cloves of garlic, chopped

½ tsp ground turmeric

the juice of 1 lime

1 tbsp tamarind pulp

a handful of fresh

curry leaves

sunflower oil

2 tbsp melted butter

for the carrot chutney

500g carrots, grated

450g golden granulated sugar

400ml malt vinegar

100g fresh grated ginger

1 tbsp mustard seeds

2 cloves of garlic, chopped

2 tbsp flaked almonds

for the crisp squash patties

500g butternut squash, grated

5 tbsp gram (chickpea) flour

2 mild red chillies, chopped

a handful of chopped coriander

1 tsp nigella seeds

oil for frying

Wash the dal in a sieve under the cold tap until the water becomes clearer. Bring one litre of water to the boil then add the dal, tomatoes, chillies, ginger, garlic, turmeric and a teaspoon of salt. Simmer for about 25 minutes, until the grains soften and break up. Whisk to make a smooth mash then add the lime and tamarind. Before serving, fry the curry leaves in a little oil over a medium heat so they do not burn. Remove them from the pan with a slotted spoon and scatter over the top of the dal. Dribble on the melted butter and eat with hot naan breads.

To make the carrot chutney, boil all the ingredients together, with salt to taste, until syrupy. Allow to cool. Serve.

To make the crisp squash patties, mix all the ingredients together and then heat some oil in a pan over a medium heat. Drop a tablespoonful of the mixture in the pan, flatten with a spoon and fry on each side until golden on the outside and soft on the inside.

Honey chickpeas and cod-and-ham fritters recipe

Venison chilli, with black beans and cocoa, lime quinoa recipe

Bread soup, with Neapolitan tomato and Parmesan-bread crisps recipe

Spiced rice pudding with pistachio caramel recipe

Source : http://telegraph.feedsportal.com/c/32726/f/564649/s/37a03e65/sc/26/l/0L0Stelegraph0O0Cjournalists0Crose0Eprince0C10A6581330CTamarind0Edal0Ewith0Ecarrot0Echutney0Eand0Ecrisp0Esquash0Epatties0Erecipe0Bhtml/story01.htm

China detains more than 1,000 in baby trafficking crackdown

BEIJING Fri Feb 28, 2014 12:02am EST

BEIJING (Reuters) - Chinese police have detained 1,094 people and rescued 382 infants in a nationwide crackdown on four online baby trafficking rings, state media said on Friday, as criminals prey on citizens yearning to escape strict population curbs.

Child trafficking is widespread in China, where population control rules have bolstered a traditional bias for sons, seen as the support of elderly parents and heirs to the family name, and led to the abortion, killing or abandonment of girls.

About 118 boys are born for every 100 girls in the world's most populous country, against a global average of 103 to 107 boys per 100 girls.

The imbalance has created criminal demand for kidnapped or bought baby boys, as well as baby girls destined to be brides attracting rich dowries in sparsely populated regions.

"Child traffickers have now taken the fight online, using 'unofficial adoption' as a front," state news agency Xinhua quoted an unidentified police official as saying. "They are well-hidden and very deceptive."

The traffickers used websites with names such as "China's Orphan Network" and "Dream Adoption Home", highlighting a trend of online deals that make it harder to hunt down the criminals, Xinhua added.

But it did not say what steps authorities were taking to reunite the rescued babies with their parents.

In a separate article, Xinhua warned parents to guard against kidnappers who could pose as nurses in hospitals or lie in wait outside school gates to bundle unsuspecting children into vans or speed off with them on motorbikes.

Last month a Chinese court handed down a suspended death sentence for a doctor who sold seven newborns to human traffickers in a case that sparked public anger.

Zhang Shuxia, 55, an obstetrician in northwestern Shaanxi province, was found guilty of selling the babies for as much as 21,600 yuan ($3,600) each between 2011 and 2013, the court said.

Last year, China, which has a population of about 1.4 billion, said it would ease family restrictions, letting millions of families have two children, in the country's most significant liberalization of its strict one-child policy in about three decades.

(Reporting by Natalie Thomas; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)


Source : http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/lifestyle/~3/k9UHbAzvC4U/story01.htm

Chronically ill facing high drugs costs under U.S. health law

WASHINGTON Fri Feb 28, 2014 1:11am EST

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama's ban on discriminatory health insurance practices against the sick has not stopped insurers from increasing up-front charges for the expensive drugs needed to control chronic illnesses from leukemia to multiple sclerosis.

Actuarial studies of plans sold through health insurance marketplaces in some states found that many make consumers responsible for as much as 50 percent of the price of specialty drugs, which can cost $8,000 or more a month.

Long before the U.S. Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, known as Obamacare, became law in 2010, insurers began replacing fixed-dollar co-payments for the drugs with co-insurance rates that require consumers to pay a percentage of the cost of specialty medicines.

Insurers say they had to move toward greater cost-sharing due to higher prices for new drugs, some of which can cost more than $100,000 annually per patient.

Researchers also say the higher rates help insurers bankroll low monthly premiums to attract healthy young enrollees.

"Research shows that spending on specialty drugs is expected to significantly increase. Therefore, any discussion of prescription drug coverage must also include a focus on the direct link between rising prescription drug prices and consumer cost sharing," said Clare Krusing, spokeswoman for America's Health Insurance Plans, a trade and lobbying group.

THE CHRONICALLY ILL

The healthcare overhaul, Obama's signature domestic policy achievement, bars insurers from denying coverage to people due to prior illness. The law protects the chronically ill from insurer practices that limited their annual medical benefits but did not cap their out-of-pocket expenses, the Department of Health and Human Services said in a statement.

Obamacare caps those expenses at $6,350 for individuals and $12,700 for families.

But patient advocates say the spike in cost-sharing means chronically ill people could reach those caps quickly, in some cases within the first months of coverage.

"In the past, we've seen 10 or 20 percent coinsurance rates. Now we're seeing 30, 40 and 50 percent. So patients are being asked to bear more of the cost," said Brian Rosen, senior vice president for public policy at the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society, which commissioned actuarial firm Milliman Inc to study the new plans.

"Patients are going to spend their entire out-of-pocket cap before they ever see a dime from the insurance company," he added.

Opponents of Obamacare have sought to use the difficulties faced by the chronically ill in congressional elections this year. A television campaign funded by a conservative group, Americans with Prosperity, recently featured women with leukemia and lupus who say they face unexpected costs due to Obamacare.

Patient advocates, however, insist that the law is not directly to blame for higher charges on specialty drugs.

"The Affordable Care Act is great," said Dr. Patience White, a rheumatologist and vice president for public health policy and advocacy at the Arthritis Foundation. "Insurance companies now have to take people with chronic illness. But they have investors and can't lose money. That's the way American healthcare is."

WINNERS AND LOSERS

Among people with preexisting conditions, winners and losers have emerged from Obama's overhaul of the U.S. healthcare system. Nearly 4 million people have signed up for the Obamacare plans, and the enrollment period for 2014 ends on March 31.

One of the winners is Robert Ruffino, who is among the 1.1 million Americans who suffer from blood cancer. The 45-year-old sales manager from Baton Rouge, Louisiana, has had chronic myelogenous leukemia for a decade.

Ruffino's individual policy previously cost him $13,000 to $19,000 a year in monthly premiums, co-payments and coinsurance charges for drugs, blood tests and specialist visits. When the law's provisions on preexisting conditions took effect in 2014, he was able to join his wife's employer-sponsored family health plan, which had modest co-pays.

"It's a no-brainer," Ruffino said. "We have so much more flexibility and options to gain insurance. Before, we were virtually locked out."

But that may not be the case for other patients who need specialty drugs to keep chronic illnesses at bay.

The Milliman study on the health exchange plans in California, Texas, Florida and New York found coinsurance rates of 40 and 50 percent for specialty drugs in two states whose Republican leaders have sought to thwart Obamacare.

Plans from Aetna Inc, Humana Inc and Cigna Corp, three major publicly traded insurers, accounted for some of the highest coinsurance rates in Texas and Florida.

Some bronze-level plans, the least expensive in the state exchanges, in those states charged no coinsurance or co-pay for specialty drugs but had deductibles at or near the law's out-of-pocket maximum costs of $6,350.

California and New York, which were quick to embrace the Obamacare marketplaces, had substantially lower specialty drug costs. Most of California's coinsurance rates were below 30 percent, while New York insurers charged co-pays of no more than

$70.

A separate study of 19 states by consulting firm Avalere Health said most health exchange plans require consumers to pay coinsurance rates for many specialty drugs and that many plans also charged high monthly premiums.

Avalere said 59 percent of mid-range silver plans and 38 percent of top-quality platinum plans had coinsurance rates for specialty drugs. Sixty percent of bronze plans had coinsurance rates greater than 30 percent, it said.

"These cost-sharing levels are considerably higher than the cost-sharing that is typically seen in the commercial marketplace," Avalere Chief Executive Officer Daniel Mendelson said. "We're at this crux where we have to ask ourselves what we want insurance to cover, what we want insurance to be."

DISCOVERING BENEFITS

Among the people who say they have suffered since the healthcare law went into effect, Emilie Lamb has become one of the faces of Americans for Prosperity's attack on Obamacare.

The 40-year-old Tennessee accountant and lupus sufferer is among the women featured in the political group's ads, which the media has criticized for overstating or not supporting its claims.

Her ad claims Lamb's annual health insurance costs went up more than $6,000 as a result of Obamacare. She says that number is actually $4,400, after she learned four of her six prescription drugs were in fact covered by her Obamacare plan.

She now has a $373 monthly premium, no deductible and a $1,500 cap on out-of-pocket expenses, but the higher cost requires her to work a second job. Lamb, who voted for Obama because she wanted healthcare reform, called the law a disaster.

"I don't know what to do other than repeal it and start over," she said.

Lamb's former health plan, however, was unusually inexpensive, costing only $53 a month in premiums with modest co-pays that added up to about $1,000 a year. It capped coverage at $25,000 annually, compared to her current plan, which has no benefits limit.

The average annual cost of treating lupus cases more severe than Lamb's can reach $63,000, according to a 2011 study published in the journal Arthritis Care and Research. An estimated 1.5 million people have the disease in the United States.

(Reporting by David Morgan; Editing by Michele Gershberg and Amanda Kwan)


Source : http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/healthNews/~3/xPncwWvP9ig/story01.htm

Move Over Trojans, Condoms Appeal to Crunchy Women

Copy

Condoms may have macho names like Trojan and Magnum, but some women are now taking the reins, hoping to appeal to women by making more environmentally friendly condoms that purport to serve the greater good.

Conventional condom aisles "scream sex," said Meika Hollender. "They are bold, bright and male oriented."

So Hollender, 26, is poised to go a different route by marketing a sustainable brand of condoms in May. She hopes to tap into the growing "crunchy" market, those who will change their lifestyle to be green.

"While women are buying condoms, they are not doing it very happily," she said. "Even though we are a big part of the market, we don't use them when having sex."

Sustain Condoms, made of latex described by the company as non-toxic and produced in a rubber plantation in India with fair-trade and fair-wage credentials, are certified by the Forest Stewardship Council, and carry the slogan, "Do what's natural."

Hollender is a graduate of New York University's Stern School of Business and her father and business partner, Jeffrey Hollender, 59, is the founder of the green products company Seventh Generation in Burlington, Vt.

Condoms, once hidden behind the counter, have now moved to the feminine product aisles, reflecting women's new interest.

"We know from talking to buyers at major retail stores and drug stores where condoms are sold that women are a significant part of the market," said Jeffrey Hollender.

"Part of the challenge we are facing is the huge discomfort women feel buying condoms," he said. "If a man buys them, he's having sex and he's cool. Women have a negative attitude."

The Hollenders said that women are looking for more natural products with less exposure to chemical additives. They want to be able to see the ingredients on condom labeling and decide for themselves. Some condoms can contain harsh additives such as glycerin, paraben and spermacides, which can irritate the vagina.

"We will list all the ingredients that go into the manufacturing of the product on our website," said Hollender.

Condoms made of natural latex are not wasteful, which is better for the environment, according to the Hollenders.

Many condoms today are made from synthetic materials because of concerns about allergies to latex.

Popular brands like Trojans are made out of a variety of synthetic and natural materials.

The company said in a statement to ABCNews.com: "The Trojan Brand takes rigorous steps and precautions to ensure that our users are getting the best quality condoms from a brand trusted over 90 years and their safety and pleasure is at the forefront of each of our innovations. It's important to note that the US FDA has strict rules about manufacturing standards for medical devices such as condoms. Trojan condoms have a decades-long history of safe use, and for many consumers are the best choice for prevention of unintended pregnancies and sexually transmitted infections."

The Food and Drug Administration regulates the manufacture of both latex and synthetic condoms to ensure ingredients are safe and the product is effective for both birth control and helping to prevent the spread of sexually transmitted diseases.

The Hollenders join other condom producers in the crunchy marketplace.

San Francisco-based L Condoms boasts that they are made of "sustainably-tapped latex ... vegan and not tested on animals ... low in protein and scent and packaged in recycled materials." They even have a one-hour delivery service and their condoms are delivered locally by bicycle in an unlabeled black box.

Source : http://abcnews.go.com/Health/move-trojans-condoms-appeal-crunchy-women/story?id=22656541

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Watch: A Call to Good Men

Home > Video > Health

VIDEO: New Express Makeup Bar in NYC

New Express Makeup Bar in NYC

New Express Makeup Bar in NYC

Makeup store Pucker offers professional on-the-go makeup services without the celebrity price tag.

VIDEO: A ninth grader's death prompts health officials to look out for a rare and deadly infection.

NC Teen's Death Sparks Warning at High School

NC Teen's Death Sparks Warning at High School

A ninth grader's death prompts health officials to look out for a rare and deadly infection.

VIDEO: Dave Kot's teen character does his part to battle comic book villains.

Artist Draws on Autistic Life for New Superhero

Artist Draws on Autistic Life for New Superhero

Dave Kot's teen character does his part to battle comic book villains.

VIDEO: Neknominate encourages players to drink massive amounts then challenge others to top them.

New Drinking Game Linked to 5 Deaths

New Drinking Game Linked to 5 Deaths

Neknominate encourages players to drink massive amounts then challenge others to top them.

Sustainable condoms to save the world.

A Call to Good Men

A Call to Good Men

Sustainable condoms to save the world.

Court records show several people died under Sung Min Im's care.

Wash. Man Accused of Fraud in Treating Cancer Patients

Wash. Man Accused of Fraud in Treating Cancer Patients

Court records show several people died under Sung Min Im's care.

VIDEO: The "Nashville" star talks about coming to terms with her mother's disease.

Kimberly Williams Paisley Opens Up About Her Mother's Dementia

Kimberly Williams Paisley Opens Up About Her Mother's Dementia

The "Nashville" star talks about coming to terms with her mother's disease.

VIDEO: Kimberly Fugate gives birth to identical quadruplets.

Mississippi Mother Delivers a Surprise

Mississippi Mother Delivers a Surprise

Kimberly Fugate gives birth to identical quadruplets.

VIDEO: Michael Schumacher's near-fatal accident raises concerns over helmet safety.

Ski Helmet Cameras May Be a Danger

Ski Helmet Cameras May Be a Danger

Michael Schumacher's near-fatal accident raises concerns over helmet safety.

VIDEO: Andrew Joannou says his severe tics ceased after undergoing deep brain stimulation.

Tourette's Syndrome Kept Couple From Holding Hands - Until Now

Tourette's Syndrome Kept Couple From Holding Hands - Until Now

Andrew Joannou says his severe tics ceased after undergoing deep brain stimulation.

UC Berkeley student may have exposed thousands to the disease before his diagnosis.

San Francisco Subway Riders Warned of Measles Risk

San Francisco Subway Riders Warned of Measles Risk

UC Berkeley student may have exposed thousands to the disease before his diagnosis.

VIDEO: Researchers in Texas have successfully grown human lungs using stem cells for other lungs.

Human Lung Grown in Pet Shop Fish Tank

Human Lung Grown in Pet Shop Fish Tank

Researchers in Texas have successfully grown human lungs using stem cells for other lungs.

Girl Survives Parachute Failure Describes Being 'Scared'

Girl Survives Parachute Failure Describes Being 'Scared'

Girl Survives Parachute Failure Describes Being 'Scared'

Sixteen-year-old Makenzie Wethington fell 3,500 feet while skydiving and lived to tell her story.

Bill allows terminally ill minors to receive life-ending medication with parental approval.

Belgium Grants Children Right to Die

Belgium Grants Children Right to Die

Bill allows terminally ill minors to receive life-ending medication with parental approval.

Andy Marso urges universal vaccination for deadly disease.

Reporter Loses Fingers and Toes to Meningitis

Reporter Loses Fingers and Toes to Meningitis

Andy Marso urges universal vaccination for deadly disease.

Source : http://abcnews.go.com/Health/video/call-good-men-22584832

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Sketch: Caring, sharing Jeremy Hunt

Jeremy Hunt is improving fast. As I may possibly have mentioned, in no more than 13 or 14 previous sketches, the Health Secretary often looks and sounds like a children's TV presenter "doing the birthdays". The boyish grin, the perky voice, the cheeky quiff, the camply waving arms. Such a pity, both friends and foes have reflected, that he missed his vocation.

But – as could be seen at Health Questions today – Mr Hunt has been working hard on his image. The quiff is cropped short. The grin is under control. The hands are clamped firmly to the dispatch box. And the voice, once as chirpy as a Teletubby's, is now pillow-soft with pathos. No longer, in short, does Mr Hunt sound like a children's TV presenter "doing the birthdays".

Patient: "It's very kind of you to visit, Mr Hunt, but I'm actually feeling rather tired, so if you don't mind, I'd quite like to…"

Secretary of State: "What's that, Mr Snufflekins? The nice lady wants us to cheer her up? She wants us to cheer her up by putting on a special show for her? A special show with all your animal puppet friends? With lots of singing and games and magic tricks and stories? Oh, Mr Snufflekins, what a wonderful idea! What a lovely hedgehog you are! Come on, everybody! We're putting on a special show for the nice lady, RIGHT NOW!"

[Secretary of State empties ministerial red box on to patient's bed. Out tumbles menagerie of animal hand puppets, toys and brightly coloured props, including a tiny plastic trumpet.]

At Health Questions, Mr Snufflekins the Hedgehog was sadly not in attendance (although we did at least get to hear from the Care Minister, Norman the Lamb). The main topics of debate were the sale of medical records to the insurance industry, as revealed by the Telegraph, and the delayed NHS database, "Care.data". Andy Burnham, Labour's spokesman, ranted in his usual manner. "Shambles… useless… masterclass in incompetence…"

Mr Hunt shook his head pityingly. "The Shadow Secretary of State," he replied, "searches for NHS crises with about the success of George Bush searching for weapons of mass destruction!"

Personally I doubt many children would get a reference as old as that. If I were Mr Hunt I'd probably stick with the hand puppets.

Source : http://telegraph.feedsportal.com/c/32726/f/568612/s/3785a1bd/sc/14/l/0L0Stelegraph0O0Cnews0Cpolitics0C10A660A8170CSketch0ECaring0Esharing0EJeremy0EHunt0Bhtml/story01.htm

Monday, February 24, 2014

Watch: A Call to Good Men

Home > Video > Health

Sustainable condoms to save the world.

A Call to Good Men

A Call to Good Men

Sustainable condoms to save the world.

Court records show several people died under Sung Min Im's care.

Wash. Man Accused of Fraud in Treating Cancer Patients

Wash. Man Accused of Fraud in Treating Cancer Patients

Court records show several people died under Sung Min Im's care.

VIDEO: The "Nashville" star talks about coming to terms with her mother's disease.

Kimberly Williams Paisley Opens Up About Her Mother's Dementia

Kimberly Williams Paisley Opens Up About Her Mother's Dementia

The "Nashville" star talks about coming to terms with her mother's disease.

VIDEO: Kimberly Fugate gives birth to identical quadruplets.

Mississippi Mother Delivers a Surprise

Mississippi Mother Delivers a Surprise

Kimberly Fugate gives birth to identical quadruplets.

VIDEO: Michael Schumacher's near-fatal accident raises concerns over helmet safety.

Ski Helmet Cameras May Be a Danger

Ski Helmet Cameras May Be a Danger

Michael Schumacher's near-fatal accident raises concerns over helmet safety.

VIDEO: Andrew Joannou says his severe tics ceased after undergoing deep brain stimulation.

Tourette's Syndrome Kept Couple From Holding Hands - Until Now

Tourette's Syndrome Kept Couple From Holding Hands - Until Now

Andrew Joannou says his severe tics ceased after undergoing deep brain stimulation.

UC Berkeley student may have exposed thousands to the disease before his diagnosis.

San Francisco Subway Riders Warned of Measles Risk

San Francisco Subway Riders Warned of Measles Risk

UC Berkeley student may have exposed thousands to the disease before his diagnosis.

VIDEO: Researchers in Texas have successfully grown human lungs using stem cells for other lungs.

Human Lung Grown in Pet Shop Fish Tank

Human Lung Grown in Pet Shop Fish Tank

Researchers in Texas have successfully grown human lungs using stem cells for other lungs.

Girl Survives Parachute Failure Describes Being 'Scared'

Girl Survives Parachute Failure Describes Being 'Scared'

Girl Survives Parachute Failure Describes Being 'Scared'

Sixteen-year-old Makenzie Wethington fell 3,500 feet while skydiving and lived to tell her story.

Bill allows terminally ill minors to receive life-ending medication with parental approval.

Belgium Grants Children Right to Die

Belgium Grants Children Right to Die

Bill allows terminally ill minors to receive life-ending medication with parental approval.

Andy Marso urges universal vaccination for deadly disease.

Reporter Loses Fingers and Toes to Meningitis

Reporter Loses Fingers and Toes to Meningitis

Andy Marso urges universal vaccination for deadly disease.

Barbara Mancini was accused of giving her terminally ill father a lethal dose of morphine.

Assisted Suicide Case Against Philly Nurse Dismissed

Assisted Suicide Case Against Philly Nurse Dismissed

Barbara Mancini was accused of giving her terminally ill father a lethal dose of morphine.

VIDEO: Karina Smirnoff reveals her personal decision and why she decided to freeze her eggs.

'Dancing' Star on Decision to Freeze Eggs

'Dancing' Star on Decision to Freeze Eggs

Karina Smirnoff reveals her personal decision and why she decided to freeze her eggs.

VIDEO: Robyn Benson was 22 weeks pregnant when found unresponsive by her husband at home.

Canadian Baby Born to Mother on Life Support

Canadian Baby Born to Mother on Life Support

Robyn Benson was 22 weeks pregnant when found unresponsive by her husband at home.

Muhammad Shahzeib Bajwa, a student at UWS in Minnesota, may be sent home after his visa expires.

Comatose Pakistani Exchange Student Faces Deportation

Comatose Pakistani Exchange Student Faces Deportation

Muhammad Shahzeib Bajwa, a student at UWS in Minnesota, may be sent home after his visa expires.

Source : http://abcnews.go.com/Health/video/call-good-men-22584832

Hidden camera GP permitted to practise

However, he has not been seen at his surgery in Iver, Buckinghamshire since his arrest. The GMC's investigation will determine whether he should face a "fitness to practise" hearing, where he could be struck off.

Abeywardena was arrested after security staff noticed him "acting suspiciously" inside the Boots store at the shopping centre last August.

Speaking after his high-profile hearing at Birmingham Magistrates Court a spokesman for the Crown Prosecution Service said: "Dr Buddhi Abeywardena claimed that he was unaware that his actions and behaviour were an offence as he felt he was not hurting anyone.

"What this defendant was doing was committing a very serious criminal offence and this was not a victimless crime.

"Young females were being stalked by this man and then filmed without their knowledge or approval."

A spokesman for the Iver Heath Health Centre, where the doctor worked, has since confirmed that he has not practised since his arrest.

He told the Birmingham Mail: "We are aware of the conviction and community order given to Dr Abeywardena at Birmingham Magistrates' Court.

"Dr Abeywardena has not practised as a GP since he was arrested. His offence does not relate to patients and did not occur at Iver Heath Health Centre. The practice has plans in place to ensure the continuation of medical services for our patients."

A spokesman for the Medical Practitioners Tribunal Service said a fitness to practice hearing is likely to be set within the next few months.

Last year Davinderjit Bains, a GP from Royal Wootton Bassett, Wiltshire, was jailed for twelve years after using a secret camera hidden in his wristwatch to record himself abusing patients.

Detectives branded him a "sexual predator" after he admitted carrying our more than two dozen sex attacks.

Source : http://telegraph.feedsportal.com/c/32726/f/568612/s/377a4e66/sc/38/l/0L0Stelegraph0O0Cnews0Cuknews0Ccrime0C10A6581940CHidden0Ecamera0EGP0Epermitted0Eto0Epractise0Bhtml/story01.htm

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Source : http://abcnews.go.com/Health/video/call-good-men-22584832