Friday 31 December 2010

Cancer risk for large waist women

women measuring her waistThe warning is based on the Health Survey for England
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Nearly half of women in England are at increased risk of some cancers because of their large waistlines, says a cancer charity.

The World Cancer Research Fund warning is based on data from the Health Survey for England suggesting 44% have a waist size exceeding 31.5 inches (80cm).

Research has found that these women are particularly at risk from bowel and breast cancer.

A third of men had a larger than recommended waistline.

The Health Survey for England, which monitors trends in the country's health and is commissioned by the Department of Health, was published earlier this month.

It contained information and statistics on obesity and raised waist circumference in men and women in England.

Previous scientific studies have shown that excess body fat increases cancer risk.

“Excess body fat, particularly fat carried around the middle, is a cancer risk factor.”

Dr Rachel Thompson WCRF

There is strong evidence that a large waistline is particularly harmful and raises the risk of cancers of the bowel, pancreas, breast (post-menopausal) and womb lining, the World Cancer Research Fund says.

Dr Rachel Thompson, deputy head of science for WCRF, said it was often thought that men were more likely to put on weight on their stomach.

"But these statistics show that, actually, women in England are more likely to have a raised waist circumference than men.

"This is why it is important that we let women know that this is just as relevant for them, particularly as breast and endometrial cancers account for about a third of newly diagnosed cancers in women," she said.

Dr Thompson added: "Over the last few years the evidence has become increasingly strong that excess body fat, and particularly fat carried around the middle, is a cancer risk factor."

The charity says it is a good idea to measure both your waist and also your body mass index (BMI).

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/health-12068966

Sirena Camareno Roosevelt Simmelink Alycia Mcgraw Luciano Lisitano

Many hurt in Argentine rail crash

A TBA train (archive image from company website)Both trains were heading north
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At least 45 people were injured when one passenger train crashed into another in the Argentine capital, Buenos Aires.

Realising a crash was imminent with a stationary train, the driver of the moving train applied emergency brakes, a rail official said.

He also left his seat to warn passengers to brace for impact.

Another 90 passengers suffered minor bruises and scrapes in the crash which occurred in Palermo district.

One of the injured is a woman seven months pregnant, officials at the Municipal Assistance Service (Same) said.

The 45 casualties were ferried by ambulance to hospitals around the city.

Giving details of the crash, Gustavo Gago, a spokesman for the privately run TBA railway network, said one train had stopped on a bridge and was hit from behind by another moving at a speed of between 30 and 40km/h (19 and 25mph).

Argentina suffered its worst rail disaster in 1970 when 142 people were killed and 368 injured at Benavidez, just north of the capital.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/world-latin-america-12100861

Carolina Breznay Noah Sudekum Minh Zieg Harley Sanfilippo

Ad campaign as flu deaths increase

Figures show 39 people in the UK have now died with flu-like illnesses this winter.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/health-12096706

Graig Lozada Mathilda Rusteika Ervin Vieweg Roni Nooney

Inquiry into UK dementia spending

Elderly person's handsThe inquiry will look at how to improve dementia care
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The spiralling cost of caring for dementia patients is to be the subject of a major inquiry by MPs and peers.

The All-Party Parliamentary Group on Dementia will look at how funds could be spent more effectively.

Dementia care in the UK is currently estimated to cost £20bn a year, and is likely to rise to around £27bn by 2018.

The group highlights existing money-saving programmes, such as a care home liaison team in Doncaster, which cut hospital admissions by 75% in a year.

The Doncaster programme was highlighted in a report from the King's Fund earlier this year.

It also detailed the work of a Leeds-based mental health liaison service which had reduced hospital admissions and enabled people to be discharged earlier.

The average length of hospital stays fell by 54%, saving 1,056 bed-days per year.

Baroness Sally Greengross, chair of the all-party group, said: "As the number of people with dementia rises the financial burden will only increase. In this difficult economic climate, it's imperative that money is spent wisely.

“It's imperative that money is spent wisely”

Baroness Sally Greengross APPG chair

"We know that it's possible to create cost savings and deliver better quality of care for people with dementia.

"We want people to share ideas and practical examples so that the NHS, local authorities and others can deliver the best care at the right price."

A 2009 report from the Alzheimer's Society suggested that at least £80m a year could be saved if people with dementia were able to leave hospital just one week earlier.

Research also shows that if the government achieves its target of reducing the use of anti-psychotic drugs by two-thirds, this would save £55m every year.

Jeremy Hughes, chief executive at the Alzheimer's Society, said: "We recognise that we are facing a difficult financial climate, but what the [parliamentary group] is aiming to achieve is to ensure funds currently being spent on dementia are used in a more efficient way.

"We know that by adopting examples of best practice, we can not only deliver cost-effective and high-quality services in care homes and hospitals, but also save money."

The inquiry will invite health and social care providers, people with dementia and leading organisations to submit evidence.

It then aims to promote the examples of best practice for use across the UK.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/health-12092971

Evalyn Kareem Lyndon Gokey Leona Ostermeyer Mike Branford

BBC Breakfast host's home burgled

Susanna Reid Susanna Reid shares her home with Dominic Cotton and their three sons

Burglars have raided the south London home of BBC Breakfast host Susanna Reid as she slept upstairs with her family.

The thieves forced their way into Ms Reid's terraced house in Balham during the early hours of Thursday morning.

They stole a haul that included a flat screen television and her Vauxhall Zafira car.

The 40-year-old presenter shares the home with partner Dominic Cotton, who is a sports reporter, and their three sons.

Ms Reid only realised there had been a break-in later in the morning.

She broke the news of the raid by posting the statement "burgled" on her Twitter account on Thursday morning.

Later, she added the message: "Thanks all for brilliant msges of support. Have done all admin. If u spot abandoned but well-loved silver Vauxhall Zafira in Lambeth."

A Metropolitan Police spokesman said Lambeth Burglary Unit was investigating the break-in.

"It appears the burglar entered the premises by forcing a front window," he added.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/uk-england-london-12098455

Ashlee Siemering Rolando Wuertz Allene Reif Sergio Fajen

Lost in the Sinai

African migrants gather in the Sinai before making the perilous journey to Israel -2010African migrants gather in the Sinai before attempting the perilous journey to Israel
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Human rights groups say Bedouin smuggling gangs are holding over a hundred African migrants for ransom in the Sinai desert. The BBC's Rupert Wingfield-Hayes has had rare access to smugglers close to the Israeli border.

Dusk is falling across the desert as we arrive at our rendezvous. It has taken five hours to get here from Cairo via a circuitous route to avoid the Egyptian police checkpoints.

We draw up beside a white, Toyota four-wheel drive. The window rolls down to reveal the face of a handsome, Bedouin man with a carefully trimmed beard and a red and white kefiyyah scarf on his head.

"Follow me," he shouts in Arabic and we head off again, this time into the sand dunes and gathering gloom.

Half-an-hour later I am sitting beside a crackling fire inside a Bedouin tent with five men. They are all people smugglers.

Bedouin man in the Sinai

“Often the Africans do not have any money but we still have to feed and house them... In this situation we lose money”

Bedouin smuggler

It is not the Bedouin way to hurry. First we must drink tea. Our hosts are exquisitely polite, but it is more than two hours before we can finally broach the subject we have come to talk about.

"We have heard that Africans are being held for ransom out here and that women have been raped and men killed," we say.

Their answers are evasive.

"We hear of such tragedies," one man states, "there are people in this business who mistreat migrants."

"It is a very hard journey," he adds. "Some migrants die along the way from thirst or exhaustion."

We press them about reports that people are being held hostage.

"Often the Africans do not have any money," the man answers, "but we still have to feed and house them. Out of 30 maybe only 10 can pay. In this situation we lose money."

As if to prove they do not mistreat their clients the smugglers then produce two young African men from out of the night.

One is barely past childhood. He tells me in broken English that his name is Amar, he is just 15 and from Eritrea.

As we talk, it rapidly becomes apparent that Amar is being held hostage.

Desert scene

Migrants crossing the desert are completely at the mercy of the Bedouin people smugglers

He has been waiting with the smugglers for a month to cross to Israel but they will not let him go until his family pays up.

"How much do they want?" I ask.

"Tonight my brother called to say he can send US $2000. They are trying to make a deal," Amar says.

Amar is well-dressed and shows no signs of mistreatment but as we sit and eat with our Bedouin hosts the two Eritreans are made to sit in the corner and watch.

They are not even offered a cup of tea.

It is a telling sign of how the smugglers view the African chattels.

If you want to get an idea of the full horror of what can happen out in the desert you have to cross the border to Israel.

Migrants queuing at clinic in Tel AvivAfrican migrants get medical and legal assistance from Israeli NGOs

There are over 30,000 African migrants in the country who have entered illegally from Egypt.

At a Tel Aviv clinic run by the group Physicians for Human Rights, there are hundreds of Eritreans, Ethiopians and Sudanese crowded into the waiting room.

One young woman from Ethiopia agrees to talk. She asks to be called Amira, although it is not her real name.

"We had been told to pay $2,000, but when we got to the Sinai they said the price was $3,000," Amira recalls. "Those who refused to pay were beaten."

She says the men were then forced to watch as their wives were raped in front of them.

"They would take me into the front of the pick-up and do whatever they liked with me. The distress of this was too much for my husband," Amira says and then falls into uncontrollable weeping.

Silhouette of rape victimMore cases are coming to light like that of Amira who says she was raped in the desert

"Oh my love," she cries. "Oh my sweetheart."

Depressed and weakened by the beatings and dehydration, Amira's husband died in the desert.

Doctors at the clinic are documenting more and more cases of this kind. More than a third of the migrant women they treat have been raped. A quarter of the migrants tell of being tortured.

"It is in order to extort money," says Dan Cohen, director of Physicians for Human Rights.

"The smugglers use different methods like torturing. The women are raped and men are buried in sand and left for days to put pressure on them and make the families send money."

More than a thousand Africans are staggering out of the desert to arrive in Israel each month, hoping to start a new life.

Yet the Sinai is huge and unforgiving.

There is no law out there and nobody knows for certain how many more African migrants are being held hostage, raped, or left to die along the desert trails.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/world-middle-east-12089445

Waylon Swanagan Leisa Deighan Rory Ireson Tobie Africa

Afghan casualties doctor knighted

Sir Keith Porter, professor of clinical traumatologyProfessor Keith Porter has been a key figure in improving the care of injured soldiers

The doctor in charge of treating injured soldiers flown back from Afghanistan and Iraq has received a knighthood in the New Year's Honours.

Professor Keith Porter, from the Royal Centre for Defence Medicine in Birmingham, said it was a "great honour" to be recognised".

Professor Robin Murray, an expert in schizophrenia, is also knighted.

GPs, nurses and occupational therapists from around the UK are also honoured, along with a number of NHS chiefs.

Prof Porter's knighthood, for services to the Armed Forces, is a recognition of how much the care of injured soldiers has improved in the past 10 years.

A consultant at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham and the UK's only professor of clinical traumatology, Prof Porter has been leading the treatment of complex battle injuries.

His work has led to improved survival rates and more rapid recovery for injured service personnel.

“I am proud of the efforts of the military and NHS teams that work side-by-side...”

Professor Sir Keith Porter

He said: "I am privileged to be the civilian lead over a service that is highly-tuned and fully engaged in the care of injured soldiers.

"I am proud of the efforts of the military and NHS teams that work side-by-side to deliver excellent outcomes for patients who previously had non-survivable injuries."

Prof Porter, 61, explained that in his work he deals with injuries in military patients that bear no comparison with normal wounds.

"We are seeing multiple injuries from firearms and explosive devices which require multiple operations and critical care."

But the prognosis for many of these patients, he says, is much better than it would have been.

"In Birmingham there are cases of patients surviving when they wouldn't have three years ago," Professor Porter said.

He was involved in looking after patients in the first Gulf War and admits that military care, from wounding to discharge and rehabilitation, has improved dramatically.

"Our patients come back here now, about 36 hours post-injury, invariably in the best possible physiological condition they can be."

Robin Murray, professor of psychiatry at King's College London, receives a knighthood for his work in schizophrenia research.

Based at the Institute of Psychiatry, Professor Murray has done much to combat the stigma of mental illness.

Professor Lewis Ritchie, honorary consultant in public health, receives a knighthood for services to the NHS in Scotland.

Also honoured, with a knighthood for services to healthcare, is the chief executive of Guy's and St Thomas's NHS Foundation Trust, Ronald Kerr.

Dr Brian Patterson, former chairman of the British Medical Association in Northern Ireland, has been made an OBE in the New Year's honours list for services to health care.

Dr Paul Darragh, current BMA chairman in Northern Ireland, paid tribute.

He said: "The contribution that Brian Patterson has made to the health service in Northern Ireland has been immense, through both his dedication as a GP for over 30 years and in his contribution to the BMA."

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/health-12093420

Paula Weidmann Jerry Luksa Autumn Feast Cory Susong

Fall in violent deaths in Iraq

The number of civilians killed by violence in Iraq in the past year was the lowest since the 2003 US-led invasion, a rights group has said.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/world-middle-east-12095617

Reynaldo Siciliano Johana Zoltek Alexis Montonez Yetta Schorr

Thursday 30 December 2010

Pub closure loophole under review

A legal loophole that allows breweries to sell off pubs and prevent them being reopened by a rival could be removed by the government.

This article is from the BBC News website. � British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/int/news/-/news/uk-12097227

Vannesa Mentel Graig Lozada Mathilda Rusteika Ervin Vieweg