Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Litvinenko suspect said poisoned with polonium (AP)

MOSCOW ? Russia's top investigative body says the prime suspect in the 2006 radioactive poisoning of Kremlin critic Alexander Litvinenko was himself poisoned with polonium.

British prosecutors have named ex-KGB agent Andrei Lugovoi as their chief suspect in Litvinenko's death in London, which was caused by ingesting tea laced with radioactive isotope polonium-210.

Russia has refused to hand Lugovoi over. Lugovoi, who met with Litvinenko in a London hotel hours before he fell ill, has denied involvement.

Russia's Investigative Committee said Wednesday that Lugovoi became the "victim" of polonium poisoning when he communicated with Litvinenko in London.

On his deathbed, Litvinenko, a KGB agent-turned government critic, accused the Kremlin of orchestrating his killing.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111130/ap_on_re_eu/eu_russia_poisoned_agent

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Slovakia doctors threaten to leave over low pay

(AP) ? Slovakia has declared a state of emergency in more than a dozen hospitals to ensure that health care is not compromised after thousands of doctors resigned from public hospitals over low pay.

Prime Minister Iveta Radicova, speaking after an emergency government meeting on the crisis, said the measures involve 15 hospitals across the country, including two clinics in the capital, Bratislava.

Around 2,000 doctors in state-run hospitals have handed in their resignations, effective Dec. 1, if their demands for higher pay are not met. More than 7,000 doctors work in Slovak hospitals.

The state of emergency means the doctors must stay at their jobs or face fines or even prison terms.

The government has proposed pay increases of euro300 ($400) a month, but the doctors' union wants a euro700 ($934) increase.

The doctors plan to rally Tuesday in the central city of Banska Bystrica.

Radicova said she agreed the salaries were "inadequate" but said the government could not afford to increase its offer because of the debt crisis in Europe. Slovakia is one of 17 nations that uses the common euro currency.

"The situation is very serious," Radicova said.

Health Minister Ivan Uhliarik said Monday it was not clear how many doctors would change their minds and accept the government's offer. He has asked neighboring countries to send doctors to help.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/bbd825583c8542898e6fa7d440b9febc/Article_2011-11-28-EU-Slovakia-Doctors-Protest/id-fe05bf734a394403ada35fe542941cf7

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Fans campaign to save zombie movie chapel

Horror movie fans are trying to save a southwestern Pennsylvania cemetery chapel featured in several scenes of the cult classic "Night of the Living Dead."

A sound engineer who worked on the 1968 George Romero film is trying to raise $50,000 to repair the chapel at Evans City Cemetery.

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The cemetery association had planned to tear down boarded-up building but delayed those plans to see if Gary Streiner can come up with the money.

Cemetery association President Ron Volz tells the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette the building will have to come down if the fundraising effort falls short. Streiner has raised about $7,000 so far.

Story: Why don't zombies ever die? Because we love 'em

Streiner says he hopes the chapel could be used as a movie museum or rented out for events, like zombie-themed weddings.

The website designed to highlight the campaign is at www.fixthechapel.com.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/45474993/ns/today-entertainment/

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New thinking required on wildlife disease, experts say

ScienceDaily (Nov. 29, 2011) ? A University of Adelaide scientist says much more could be done to predict the likelihood and spread of serious disease -- such as tuberculosis (TB) or foot-and-mouth disease -- in Australian wildlife and commercial stock.

Professor Corey Bradshaw and colleagues have evaluated freely available software tools that provide a realistic prediction of the spread of disease among animals.

They used a combination of models to look at the possible spread of TB among feral water buffalo in the Northern Territory.

Buffalo can harbour bovine tuberculosis, which poses a threat to commercial cattle livestock. They were introduced to northern Australia in the 1800s from Timor-Leste. In the 1980s and 1990s the government of the time began a broad-scale culling program, culling tens of thousands of buffalo.

"The cull successfully reduced or eradicated buffalo from major pastoral lands in the Northern Territory, taking tuberculosis with it, but since then there has been no major follow-up culling. The buffalo population is re-invading the formerly culled areas," says Professor Bradshaw, who is Director of Ecological Modelling at the University of Adelaide's Environment Institute.

"Although Australia now trades its livestock under the `TB-free' banner, the disease is prevalent throughout Africa, southern Europe, the Middle East and parts of Asia. Realistically, it's only a matter of time before it rears its ugly head again here. If it does, it could potentially cost our cattle industry billions of dollars."

Professor Bradshaw says Australia needs to implement tools such as those combining disease and population models to help plan the response to any potential return of TB -- or other, nastier diseases, such as foot-and-mouth.

"We found that the probability of detecting a disease as well known as TB in buffalo was extremely small, even for thousands of `sentinel' animals culled each year. Current monitoring programs by the Northern Australia Quarantine Strategy (part of the Australian Quarantine and Inspection Service -- AQIS) could definitely benefit from the use of these software tools, which are freely available for anyone to download," Professor Bradshaw says.

"If the goal of culling programs is to reduce prevalence of TB to near-zero, our prediction is that somewhere between 30-50% of the current buffalo population would have to be culled each year for about 15 years. That's a lot of buffalo -- at least 100,000 killed over the first five years."

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Journal Reference:

  1. Corey J. A. Bradshaw, Clive R. McMahon, Philip S. Miller, Robert C. Lacy, Michael J. Watts, Michelle L. Verant, John P. Pollak, Damien A. Fordham, Thomas A. A. Prowse, Barry W. Brook. Novel coupling of individual-based epidemiological and demographic models predicts realistic dynamics of tuberculosis in alien buffalo. Journal of Applied Ecology, 2011; DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2664.2011.02081.x

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/11/111129112345.htm

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Tuesday, November 29, 2011

What wakes dormant tumor cells

What wakes dormant tumor cells [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 28-Nov-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Rita Sullivan
news@rupress.org
212-327-8603
Rockefeller University Press

Prostate tumor cells can be lulled to sleep by a factor released by bone cells, according to a study published online this week in the Journal of Experimental Medicine (www.jem.org). Disease recurs in up to half of prostate cancer patients after treatment, often as a result of metastases that spread to distant organs.

Kounosuke Watabe and colleagues at Southern Illinois University School of Medicine now show that BMP7, a protein pumped out by cells that line the bone interior, signals tumor cells to enter a state of hibernation. But this state is reversible. In mice, withdrawal of BMP7 acts like an alarm clock, restarting tumor growth.

Prostate cancer patients bearing tumors that express BMPR2BMP7's binding partnershow longer recurrence-free survival than those whose tumors lack BMPR2.

These findings suggest that therapies aimed at maintaining or mimicking BMP7 expression may help prevent prostate tumor recurrence.

###

About The Journal of Experimental Medicine

The Journal of Experimental Medicine (JEM) is published by The Rockefeller University Press. All editorial decisions on manuscripts submitted are made by active scientists in conjunction with our in-house scientific editors. JEM content is posted to PubMed Central, where it is available to the public for free six months after publication. Authors retain copyright of their published works and third parties may reuse the content for non-commercial purposes under a creative commons license. For more information, please visit www.jem.org.

Kobayashi, A., et al. 2011. J. Exp. Med. doi:10.1084/jem.20110840


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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


What wakes dormant tumor cells [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 28-Nov-2011
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Rita Sullivan
news@rupress.org
212-327-8603
Rockefeller University Press

Prostate tumor cells can be lulled to sleep by a factor released by bone cells, according to a study published online this week in the Journal of Experimental Medicine (www.jem.org). Disease recurs in up to half of prostate cancer patients after treatment, often as a result of metastases that spread to distant organs.

Kounosuke Watabe and colleagues at Southern Illinois University School of Medicine now show that BMP7, a protein pumped out by cells that line the bone interior, signals tumor cells to enter a state of hibernation. But this state is reversible. In mice, withdrawal of BMP7 acts like an alarm clock, restarting tumor growth.

Prostate cancer patients bearing tumors that express BMPR2BMP7's binding partnershow longer recurrence-free survival than those whose tumors lack BMPR2.

These findings suggest that therapies aimed at maintaining or mimicking BMP7 expression may help prevent prostate tumor recurrence.

###

About The Journal of Experimental Medicine

The Journal of Experimental Medicine (JEM) is published by The Rockefeller University Press. All editorial decisions on manuscripts submitted are made by active scientists in conjunction with our in-house scientific editors. JEM content is posted to PubMed Central, where it is available to the public for free six months after publication. Authors retain copyright of their published works and third parties may reuse the content for non-commercial purposes under a creative commons license. For more information, please visit www.jem.org.

Kobayashi, A., et al. 2011. J. Exp. Med. doi:10.1084/jem.20110840


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-11/rup-wwd112211.php

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Amazon says Kindle sales surge on Black Friday (Reuters)

(Reuters) ? Amazon.com Inc said on Monday it saw a surge in sales of its Kindle devices, helped by its new Kindle Fire tablet, on the crucial "Black Friday" shopping day after Thanksgiving.

Consumers bought four times as many Kindles on Black Friday as they did on the same day last year, when the company sold only e-readers, the largest Internet retailer reported.

The $199 Fire was the best-selling product on Amazon.com on Black Friday and it has been the top seller over the eight weeks since the tablet was launched, the company added.

"We're seeing a lot of customers buying multiple Kindles - one for themselves and others as gifts - we expect this trend to continue on Cyber Monday and through the holiday shopping season," said Dave Limp, vice president, Amazon Kindle.

Amazon shares were up 6.5 percent at $194.25 on Monday afternoon, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite Index was up 3.4 percent.

"If the 4x sales run-rate (vs. 2010) is representative for the entire fourth quarter, then we believe our current Kindle estimates could be conservative," Anthony DiClemente, an analyst at Barclays Capital, wrote in a note to investors.

Amazon sold about 3.4 million Kindle e-readers in the fourth quarter of 2010, DiClemente estimated. Data released on Monday by Amazon suggests the company may sell 13.6 million Kindle devices in this year's fourth quarter, the analyst noted.

DiClemente was previously forecasting Kindle sales of 11 million in the fourth quarter, which consisted of 4.5 million Kindle Fire tablets and 6.5 million other Kindle devices.

The new Kindle Fire is a crucial part of Amazon's effort to sell more digital products such as e-books, apps, video games, music and movies. The company is selling the tablet in more than 16,000 retail stores to try to get the device into as many hands as possible.

IN-STORE SALES

The Kindle Fire was the best-selling tablet in Target Corp stores on Black Friday, Nik Nayar, vice president of merchandising at Target, said in a statement.

Target sells several tablets, including the market-leading iPad from Apple Inc. Over Black Friday, Target offered a $75 gift card when customers bought an iPad 2 with 3G.

Goldman Sachs analysts visited stores run by Best Buy Co Inc and other retailers in recent days and found that Kindle products were "very sharply outselling" Nook devices from bookseller Barnes & Noble Inc.

At stores run by Barnes & Noble, interest in the Nook was "robust," but the Goldman analysts said extra distribution to other retail stores was having less impact than expected.

"Now Amazon has a more competitive suite of hardware, its hardware share should increase, and its ebook share should follow," the analysts wrote in a note to investors on Monday.

Barnes & Noble shares were up 7.3 percent at $17.25 on Monday afternoon.

(Reporting by Alistair Barr; editing by Dave Zimmerman, Andre Grenon and Matthew Lewis)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/personaltech/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111128/tc_nm/us_amazon_kindle

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Expanded Gaming in Massachusetts Creates Huge Competition in ...

Gov. Deval Patrick signed legislation November 22 permitting casino gambling in Massachusetts. CBS News reports that now Connecticut and Rhode Island are seriously considering legalizing casinos as well to keep up with the increasing competition in New England.

Currently, the Mohegan Tribal Gaming Authority behind the Mohegan Sun in Uncasville, Connecticut is seeking to build a gaming resort?complete with a 600-room hotel and spa, and a casino with slots, table games and poker?in Palmer, Massachusetts. On December 8 at the MassMutual Center in Springfield, Massachusetts, the Mohegan Sun will co-host a conference to explore the opportunities for community businesses as a result of new destination casino resorts popping up in Western Massachusetts in the near future. Mohegan Sun planned the conference, Destination Casino Resorts: Opportunities for the Business Community of Western Massachusetts, in partnership with the Economic Development Council of Western Massachusetts, the Affiliated Chambers of Commerce of Greater Springfield, the Massachusetts Latino Chamber of Commerce and the Quaboag Hills Chamber of Commerce.

The new law authorizes up to three casinos and one slots parlor in Massachusetts. Other casino developers are currently pursuing casinos in Springfield and Holyoke in Western Massachusetts.

Next year, Rhode Island voters will be asked to answer a ballot question on whether a slot parlor should be made into a full-fledged casino, CBS News reports.

While the Connecticut government cannot project dollar amounts related to the impact from new casinos in Massachusetts, it expects competition to be ?negative for Connecticut?s casinos,? Gian-Carl Casa, spokesman for the state Office of Policy and Management, wrote in an email to CBS News.

Source: http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2011/11/29/expanded-gaming-in-massachusetts-creates-huge-competition-in-new-england-64945

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Herman Cain: Is his political career kaput?

Herman Cain is not likely ever to stretch his legs in the Oval Office, except as part of a White House tour group. But that was the case even before Herman Cain became embroiled in allegations of an extramarital affair.

Ginger White claims she had a 13-year affair with Herman Cain, and that she?s got records of 61 calls or text messages from his private phone to prove it. Is this the end of the Hermanator?s presidential hopes?

Skip to next paragraph

Well, no and yes. No, in the sense that Ms. White?s allegations have yet to be proved, and Mr. Cain denies them. It?s possible there was no affair. Given the extent of the allegations, and the possibility of a paper/e-mail trail of evidence, we may well know the full story soon enough.

But yes, in the sense that Cain?s chances of sitting in the Oval Office as part of anything but a White House tour group are pretty much gone. That?s not due to the most recent charges, per se. His time as flavor of the month had expired prior to Ms. White?s going public.

?Most people no longer care about Cain,? noted conservative Washington Post blogger Jennifer Rubin Tuesday morning.

Cain himself may realize the damage already inflicted on his campaign ? and perhaps his political career overall. On Tuesday morning he reportedly told his senior staff he is reassessing whether to stay in the race. He'll make a decision over the next couple of days, reports the National Review's The Corner blog.

His polls had already fallen sharply in the face of allegations of sexual harassment by other women. He peaked in late October with about 26 percent of the Republican primary electorate, according to the Real Clear Politics rolling average of surveys. Now he?s down to about 15 percent, and Newt Gingrich has taken his position as the chief opponent to Mitt Romney.

Perhaps worse for him, his likeability score is plummeting. His Gallup Positive Intensity Score, created by subtracting the percentage of voters who view him unfavorably from those who view him favorably, has dropped to 14, from an October high of 34. He fell three points last week alone ? before the latest allegations became public.

So the Cain train?s in the station. Allegations aside, he was done in by lack of cash in the early stages, and later by bad staff, according to Erick Erickson, editor of the conservative RedState blog.

Mr. Erickson points to the fact that Cain?s lawyer issued a nondenial denial of the Ginger White allegations ? a statement that sounded as if it were admitting something had occurred.

?Whether Herman had an affair with this lady or not is largely beside the point at this point,? wrote Erickson on Tuesday.

Who?s unhappy about Cain?s apparent political demise? Other than Cain himself, we mean. Oddly, the person who has the most to lose here might be Mitt Romney.

Yes, Cain was challenging Romney for front-runner status. Yes, Romney?s been running steadily in recent months, the only GOP candidate to do so. But Romney just can?t get up over 30 percent in the polls, because conservatives see him as a once-and-future moderate.

Romney would benefit from a splintered conservative vote. As long as Cain seemed viable, he siphoned votes from other right-side hopefuls such as Rick Perry and Newt Gingrich. But now the split scenario seems unlikely to occur. With Cain plummeting, and Mr. Perry earthbound, only Mr. Gingrich remains.

?The latest allegations regarding Cain, when coupled with the dead-in-the-water candidacies (at least for the moment) of Perry and [Minnesota Rep. Michele] Bachmann, make it increasingly likely that Republicans looking for a Romney alternative will view Gingrich as the only viable option,? writes Washington Post political analyst Chris Cillizza on his blog, The Fix.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/-kspmC6BiTw/Herman-Cain-Is-his-political-career-kaput

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Tebow the king of the comebacks this year

By ARNIE STAPLETON

AP Pro Football Writer

Associated Press Sports

updated 5:05 p.m. ET Nov. 28, 2011

ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) - Tim Tebow might want to update his autobiography and not just because it's already a best-seller.

In "Through My Eyes," Denver's unconventional quarterback writes about how those who finish strong in football or life will achieve success and even greatness.

He could write several more chapters on the subject in addition to the two pages he devoted to the topic in his book.

Since taking over as the Broncos' starter a month and a-half ago, Tebow has engineered three fourth-quarter comebacks, two of which set up overtime wins for Denver, and another win at Oakland in which he rallied Denver from a halftime deficit to win going away.

In nine NFL starts, he has four fourth-quarter comebacks among his half-dozen wins.

? 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Things looking down for Giants

PFT: While the Saints showcased their spectacular offense at home, New York continued on its way to missing the playoffs. Soon, it'll be an historic collapse.

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Brees, Saints blow past hapless Giants

Drew Brees and the surging New Orleans Saints made everything look easy against the slumping Giants.? Brees passed for 363 yards and four touchdowns and ran for another score as New Orleans rolled to a 49-24 victory Monday night, extending New York's losing skid to three games.

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/45469321/ns/sports-nfl/

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Britons worry profits to trump services in hospital deal (Reuters)

HUNTINGDON, England (Reuters) ? Maggie Blight has only praise for the local state-funded hospital where she got her hernia fixed last year.

"I couldn't fault it. It was excellent," the 67-year-old family worker said of the care she received at Hinchingbrooke hospital in Huntingdon, 60 miles northeast of London.

Now she is worried, not for her own health, but for that of the debt-laden hospital, which is the first in more than 60 years to be transferred to a private company from the state system under a contract approved on November 10.

At the heart of her concerns -- shared by many in England -- are fears that organizing health services around profit will lead to services being cut and patients being forced to pay extra for some treatments.

Ministers and officials stress the worries are unfounded, but the subject is sensitive in a country where the National Health Service, providing free care for all since 1948, is viewed with an almost religious awe.

Any dilution of the system where the state both pays for and provides medical care is routinely condemned as unacceptable "privatization."

"I think of it as our National Health Service, it belongs to us, we paid for it," said Blight.

"As soon as you have got private enterprise involved, the word profit pops up," she said.

Britain's state health service is under strain from a 20-billion-pound savings program, a massive reorganization of primary care and proposed legislation to increase competition among providers of medical care.

With a 100-billion-pound ($160-billion) annual budget and 1.4 million staff in England alone, even a sliver of its business is an attractive prize for private health operators.

Conservative Prime Minister David Cameron and his ministers say greater competition from within and outside the NHS will improve efficiency and quality, and argue that the standard of medical service is what matters, not who delivers it.

Critics fear the legislation will destabilize the system by encouraging state hospitals to abandon unprofitable services and splitting patient care among unconnected medical providers.

The debate has hurt Cameron, who has worked hard to shake off his center-right party's reputation -- gained under former leader Margaret Thatcher in the 1980s -- of preferring private to public healthcare.

SHARED OWNERSHIP

Circle, a medical cooperative listed on the London stock market with ownership shared between its employees and international investment funds, will take over management of Huntingdon from February.

The hospital's future had been in doubt since 2007 after it ran up debts of 39 million pounds on an annual turnover of just 100 million pounds, partly because a new treatment center failed to attract as many patients as expected.

Circle says it can pay off the debts over the life of its 10-year contract by identifying more efficient ways of delivering care. Unison, the main health union, says it fears a loss of jobs from "profiteers."

Local health officials said if the Circle deal is successful, it could be repeated at the estimated 20 other NHS hospitals suffering financially.

The hospital will remain NHS property, staff will remain NHS employees and patients will continue to receive NHS treatment free of charge.

"This is not privatization," said Stephen Dunn, policy director at local health authority NHS Midlands and East, who conceived of the plan.

"It's a ground-breaking and watershed moment for the NHS. I am confident that this will be a model for the future," he said, and added that it was a "great deal" for local people.

Huntingdon's residents praise the care provided by the mainly single-story hospital, which opened in 1983 to the west of the town and serves a catchment of 165,000 people in the surrounding area.

Its location spares local patients an 18-mile journey to larger hospitals in Cambridge or Peterborough.

"The maternity service was fantastic," said Jo Robinson, a 38-year-old writer whose son was born at the hospital in September last year.

LABOUR LEGACY

The Circle contract is actually part of a wave of public sector reforms introduced in the early 2000s by former Labour Prime Minister Tony Blair, who held that the state did not have to be the sole supplier of public services.

The Hinchingbrooke deal itself was set in train under the previous Labour administration, voted out in May 2010, which hired private firms to provide NHS services at around 30 new orthopedic and day-surgery treatment centers.

Circle takes this one step further and will be the first private company to run the full range of hospital services, including maternity and emergency care, since the NHS was founded.

Commercial rivals say it will be hard for Circle to make a profit at a small hospital like Huntingdon while it continues to be paid standard NHS rates for carrying out treatments and at a time when the state service is seeking spending savings of 5 percent a year.

The hospital could also lose some income-generating patient services because of trends in medical practice: specialist treatment such as stroke care or heart surgery is increasingly concentrated at larger hospitals, while many minor procedures and long-term care can now be moved to smaller community clinics and even patients' homes.

Matt James, chief executive of the Private Hospitals Alliance, a private healthcare lobby group, said he had twice backed out of bidding for the Huntingdon contract when working for health firms.

"In both instances I could not justify the level of risk involved given the minimal, if any, expected returns," he said in emailed comments.

Circle Chief Executive Ali Parsa, a former executive of investment bank Goldman Sachs, said his firm would make money by cutting waste, not services.

"Our problem is we have a healthcare system we can't afford and it needs to become more efficient," he said.

He said Circle had improved productivity by 20 percent in the first year of running an NHS surgical treatment center in Nottingham, central England, while improving quality of outcomes, by giving greater authority to doctors and nurses.

"It's incredible what can be achieved within the (health) system with the same people," he said.

Parsa said local people should not worry that Circle -- which will take a share of annual surpluses -- would put profits before patients. Circle would aim for a single digit surplus similar to that targeted by existing NHS organizations, and would reinvest part of that back into services, he said.

"Our profit will not come from taking more money out of the healthcare. Our profit will come by taking more waste out and ensuring that the surplus (is shared) between everybody," he said.

Under Circle's contract the company will not get paid unless Hinchingbrooke hospital makes a surplus and its historic debt is being repaid. If the hospital slips back into the red, Circle will be liable for up to 5 million pounds of the deficit.

Nigel Beverley, Hinchingbrooke's interim chief executive, said the Circle contract, which went through 12 months of government scrutiny, was vital for the hospital's survival.

Although the hospital was now running with a small surplus, it could not pay off its debts alone and would have had to find another partner or consider closing if the government had rejected the contract, he said.

"If the deal had not had happened we would have to go back to the drawing board. Fortunately we are not in that position."

(Additional reporting by Paul Sandle; Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111128/lf_nm_life/us_britain_hospital

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Monday, November 28, 2011

Samsung Captivate Glide (AT&T)


AT&T has plenty of smartphones, but it doesn't have plenty of keyboarded smartphones. Sure, there's the Sharp FX Plus?(Free, 3.5 stars) and the RIM BlackBerry Torch 9810?($49.99, 3 stars), but neither of those devices are particularly cutting edge. Enter the Samsung Captivate Glide ($149.99 with contract). It's a lot like the popular Samsung Galaxy S II?(4.5 stars, $199.99), with the addition of a full, slide-out QWERTY keyboard and a slight bump down in specs. It's our Editors' Choice for keyboarded smartphones on AT&T.

Physical Features, Phone Calls, and Internet
The Captivate Glide measures 4.9 by 2.5 by 0.5 inches (HWD) and weighs 5.2 ounces. Made out of lightly textured black plastic, the Glide looks unassuming, but feels well built and comfortable in your hand.

The 4-inch, 800-by-480-pixel Super AMOLED display is gorgeous. It has fewer subpixels than the Super AMOLED Plus display on the Galaxy S II, but it still looks excellent. The screen can get very bright, but darker colors maintain a luxurious depth and richness. Four haptic feedback-enabled functions keys sit beneath the display, which are suitably responsive. Typing on the on-screen QWERTY was fine, but I suspect most people are looking to the Glide for the real thing. The phone slides open to reveal a large, four-row physical keyboard. The keys are large and backlit, with comfortable, even spacing. They're a bit flat, but it shouldn't take long to adjust to typing on them.

The Glide is a good voice phone. Reception is average, and calls sound rich, clear, and natural in the phone's earpiece. The speakerphone also sounds good but volume doesn't go loud enough to use outdoors. Calls made with the phone are clear, though voices can sound thin and background noise cancellation is just average. I had no trouble connecting to a?Jawbone Era?Bluetooth headset ($129.99, 4.5 stars) and calls sounded great. Thankfully, voice dialing works better here, using Android's native voice-dialing app, than it does on the Galaxy S II, which uses a version of Vlingo that had difficulty recognizing names.

The Glide is a world phone that uses AT&T's HSPA+ 21 network and 802.11 b/g/n Wi-Fi. It also works as a Wi-Fi hotspot with the right service plan. Download speeds averaged 4Mbps down, with peak speeds of 8Mbps, while uploads were around 1Mbps up. Those numbers are good, but they're no match for AT&T's blazing 4G LTE speeds on devices like the Samsung Galaxy S II Skyrocket?($249.99, 4.5 stars). This isn't too big a deal, though, because AT&T only has LTE in 14 cities right now. Battery life was excellent, at 10 hours 3 minutes of continuous talk time.

Processor and Apps
The Captivate Glide is powered by Nvidia's 1GHz dual-core Tegra 2 processor. It scored well in our benchmark tests, easily overpowering single-core devices, though not quite at the top of the dual-core heap.

The phone runs Android 2.3.5 "Gingerbread" with Samsung's TouchWiz extensions. There are some useful add-on apps, including Media Hub, a downloadable music and video store with reasonable prices, and Social Hub, a combination Facebook/Twitter client. There's also some bloatware from AT&T, including FamilyMap and the U-Verse Live TV app, which are both deletable. Other apps, like AT&T Navigator and an AT&T 'Featured Apps' store, are not. The Glide should be compatible with most everything in the Android Market, which currently has over 250,000 apps.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/iSh70JWQEzI/0,2817,2396819,00.asp

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