Thursday, April 11, 2013

Co-infections not associated with worse outcomes during H1N1 pandemic

Apr. 9, 2013 ? A study at Rhode Island Hospital has found that despite complications, patients co-infected with the pandemic 2009-2010 influenza A H1N1 (pH1N1) and a second respiratory virus were not associated with worse outcomes or admission to the hospital's intensive care unit.

The study is published online in the journal PLOS ONE.

"There is scant data in the literature regarding the incidence and impact of simultaneous infection by two respiratory viruses, particularly in adults," said senior investigator Leonard Mermel, D.O., medical director of the department of epidemiology and infection control at Rhode Island Hospital. "We compared 617 people hospitalized with respiratory infection due to a single virus to 49 people hospitalized with such infections due to two viruses (co-infection). Those with viral co-infection were younger, more often had fever/chills and shortness of breath than those with co-infection. Although patients with viral co-infection were more likely to be treated for a secondary bacterial pneumonia, they were not more likely to require ICU admission and they did not have a longer length of hospital stay."

The pandemic 2009-2010 influenza A (pH1N1) was first identified in the U.S. in April 2009 and infected patients across the country in two waves. There were an estimated 61 million cases of pH1N1; 274,000 hospitalizations; and 12,470 deaths associated with the pandemic -- a significant increase in hospitalizations, and a decrease in mortality as compared to seasonal influenza averages.

Children experienced a greater burden of disease than adults during the pandemic, with a higher mortality rate. However, despite fewer cases in adults, more adult patients were afflicted with serious illness. Children also had a higher rate of co-infection, which may be due to an absence of protective antibodies or other forms of immunity that older individuals have gained over time.

A previous study at Rhode Island Hospital compared patients with pH1N1 to those infected with other respiratory viruses. While patients with co-infections were excluded from the initial study, the current analysis focused on this patient population, and hypothesized that those with both pH1N1 and a respiratory virus would have worse outcomes than those with just one infection.

However, Mermel and his colleagues found that despite the risk for complications including treatment for a bacterial pneumonia, co-infection was, in fact, not associated with worse outcomes.

"Although by our measures there was no demonstration of worse outcomes, co-infected patients demonstrated a significant greater rate of patterns of viral pneumonia by chest radiographs," said principal investigator Ignacio A. Echenique, M.D., a former Rhode Island Hospital researcher who is now affiliated with Northwestern University. "These forms of pneumonia would not be expected to respond to antibiotics. Ultimately, the significance of the association of a co-infection with viral pneumonias is unclear. While hospitalized patients with respiratory virus co-infection did not experience poorer outcomes, our findings do not address whether co-infection is a risk factor for hospitalization itself."

The researchers concluded that a large, multi-center study should be conducted across various levels of care to measure the impact of co-infections on hospitalization, and to distinguish between viral and bacterial pneumonia in co-infected patients.

The unfunded study was conducted by Leonard Mermel, DO, ScM, Rhode Island Hospital and Alpert Medical School; Ignacio A. Echenique, M.D., Northwestern University in Chicago, IL; Philip A. Chan, MD, MS, and Kimberle C. Chapin, MD, Rhode Island Hospital and the Alpert Medical School; Sarah B. Andrea, BS, Rhode Island Hospital; and Joseph Fava, Ph.D., The Miriam Hospital.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Lifespan, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Ignacio A. Echenique, Philip A. Chan, Kimberle C. Chapin, Sarah B. Andrea, Joseph L. Fava, Leonard A. Mermel. Clinical Characteristics and Outcomes in Hospitalized Patients with Respiratory Viral Co-Infection during the 2009 H1N1 Influenza Pandemic. PLoS ONE, 2013; 8 (4): e60845 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0060845

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://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/VUgAUTvwRdE/130409173549.htm

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Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Data storage: Shingled tracks stack up

Apr. 10, 2013 ? Simply changing the pattern by which data is recorded may lead to increased hard drive capacities.

Modern hard drive technology is reaching its limits. Engineers have increased data-storage capacities by reducing the widths of the narrow tracks of magnetic material that record data inside a hard drive. Narrowing these tracks has required a concordant reduction in the size of the magnetic write head -- the device used to create them. However, it is physically difficult to reduce the size of write heads any further. Kim Keng Teo and co-workers at the A*STAR Data Storage Institute, Singapore, and the Niigata Institute of Technology, Japan, have recently performed an analysis that highlights the promise of an alternative approach, which may sidestep this problem completely.

In a conventional hard drive, a write head stores data by applying a magnetic field to a series of parallel, non-overlapping tracks. Halving the width of the track effectively doubles the data-storage capacity, but also requires the size of the write head to be halved. The head therefore produces less magnetic field than is needed to enable stable data storage. This is because the small magnetic grains that are characteristic of modern hard drive media need to be thermally stable at room temperature.

Shingled magnetic recording represents a step towards solving this problem as it allows for narrower track widths without smaller write heads. Rather than writing to non-overlapping tracks, the approach overlaps tracks just as shingles on a roof overlap (see image). Tracks are written in a so-called 'raster' pattern, with new data written to one side only of the last-written track.

Teo and co-workers analyzed the scaling behavior of this approach by using both numerical analysis and experimental verification. Their results showed that the size of the data track is not limited by the size of the write head, as in conventional hard drives. Instead, the track size is limited by the size of the magnetic read head, and by the 'erase bandwidth', which represents the portion of the track edge that is affected by adjacent tracks.

"This is a paradigm shift for the industry," says Teo. "A relatively small difference in the way that writing occurs calls for a completely new approach to head design." Teo expects the shingled approach to be a useful stop-gap measure prior to the arrival of more advanced, next-generation technologies in the next decade or so that will apply more radical modifications to the hard drive such as the use of heat to assist the write head.

The A*STAR-affiliated researchers contributing to this research are from the Data Storage Institute.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by The Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR).

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Kim Keng Teo, Moulay Rachid Elidrissi, Kheong Sann Chan, Yasushi Kanai. Analysis and design of shingled magnetic recording systems. Journal of Applied Physics, 2012; 111 (7): 07B716 DOI: 10.1063/1.3679383

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

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/k5ruVCxXZOM/130410114113.htm

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Experts: Fla. couple may not be welcome in Cuba

This undated photo provided by the Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office shows a 25-foot sailboat that was recently acquired by Joshua Michael Hakken. Officials are searching for Hakken, who kidnapped his two children from their grandparents' home in Tampa, Fla. Hakken lost custody of the children last year after a drug possession arrest in Louisiana. (AP Photo/Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office)

This undated photo provided by the Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office shows a 25-foot sailboat that was recently acquired by Joshua Michael Hakken. Officials are searching for Hakken, who kidnapped his two children from their grandparents' home in Tampa, Fla. Hakken lost custody of the children last year after a drug possession arrest in Louisiana. (AP Photo/Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office)

This undated image provided by the Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office shows Sharyn Patricia Hakken. Authorities are searching for two young boys they believe were kidnapped by their father from their maternal grandparents' Florida home after their grandmother was tied up. The Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office on Wednesday night April 3, 2013 asked for the public's help in locating the boys, 4-year-old Cole Hakken and 2-year-old Chase Hakken. (AP Photo/Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office)

This undated image provided by the Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office shows 35-year-old Joshua Michael Hakken. Authorities are searching for two young boys they believe were kidnapped by their father from their maternal grandparents' Florida home after their grandmother was tied up. The Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office on Wednesday night April 3, 2013 asked for the public's help in locating the boys, 4-year-old Cole Hakken and 2-year-old Chase Hakken. The news release identified Hakken and the children's mother, 34-year-old Sharyn Patricia Hakken, as suspects in the abduction. (AP Photo/Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office)

This undated image provided by the Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office shows two-year-old Chase Hakken. Authorities are searching for two young boys they believe were kidnapped by their father from their maternal grandparents' Florida home after their grandmother was tied up. The Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office on Wednesday night April 3, 2013 asked for the public's help in locating the boys, 4-year-old Cole Hakken and 2-year-old Chase Hakken. (AP Photo/Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office)

This undated image provided by the Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office shows four-year-old Cole Hakken. Authorities are searching for two young boys they believe were kidnapped by their father from their maternal grandparents' Florida home after their grandmother was tied up. The Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office on Wednesday night April 3, 2013 asked for the public's help in locating the boys, 4-year-old Cole Hakken and 2-year-old Chase Hakken. (AP Photo/Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office)

(AP) ? The Florida couple accused of snatching away their two sons and fleeing to Cuba may have thought they could find a refuge from U.S. authorities on the communist island. But with criminal charges pending and little for Cuba to gain politically by holding them, experts say they are unlikely to stay for long.

In a case drawing parallels with the Elian Gonzalez saga more than a decade ago, authorities say Joshua Michael Hakken kidnapped his sons, 4-year-old Cole and 2-year-old Chase, from his mother-in-law's house north of Tampa and took the children and his wife, Sharyn, on a boat to Cuba.

The boys' maternal grandparents had been granted permanent custody of the boys last week.

The U.S. and Cuba share no extradition agreement and the island nation is also not a signatory of the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction, an international treaty for governmental cooperation on such cases.

That means it will be up to Cuban authorities on whether or not to return to them.

"If Cuba's view is the father has the right to the children, it's up to them to make that decision," said Cyra Akila Choudhury, a Florida International University law professor and expert in family custody cases.

Cuba is long known for harboring U.S. criminals with an ideological bent. But in a case with no political overtones and pending kidnapping charges, Cuban authorities there may be hesitant to keep them.

Hakken lost custody of his sons last year after a drug possession arrest in Louisiana and later tried to take the children from a foster home at gunpoint, authorities said. A warrant has been issued for his arrest on two counts of kidnapping; interference with child custody; child neglect; false imprisonment and other charges.

"There is no upside for Cuba," said Jaime Suchlicki, a Cuba expert at the University of Miami.

The incident recalls the child custody case that set the two Cold War foes feuding in 1999. That year, 5-year-old Elian Gonzalez was found clinging to an inner tube off Florida after his mothers and others drowned while fleeing Cuba toward American soil. The boy was taken to Miami to live with relatives, but his father in Cuba demanded the boy be sent back.

U.S. courts ultimately ruled Gonzalez should be sent back, though his Miami relatives refused to return him. In April 2000, federal agents raided the family's home and he was returned to Cuba soon after.

Cuban authorities had no immediate comment on the current case.

The two nations are divided by the 51-year-old U.S. embargo against Cuba and have limited diplomatic relations.

According to the Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office, Hakken entered his mother-in-law's Florida house last Wednesday, tied her up and fled with his sons. Federal, state and local authorities searched by air and sea for a boat Hakken had recently bought. The truck Hakken, his wife and the boys had been traveling in was found Thursday, abandoned in Madeira Beach, Fla.

In Cuba, an Associated Press reporter approached the family at the dock where their boat was tied up, and a man who resembled photographs of Joshua Michael Hakken yelled out "Stop! Stay back!" He had a full beard and wore shorts and a baseball cap.

The family appeared to interact normally. The youngest child was seated in a stroller and the elder boy on a curb. A woman who resembled mother Sharyn Hakken was seen on the boat.

Heavy Cuban state security was present and told reporters not to take pictures of the family or the boat, which bore the name Salty and a paw print on its side. The four later ducked into the office of dock master Gabriel Abrego, who declined comment.

Andrew Zych, a Canadian docked in a sailboat steps away from the Hakkens, said the family had arrived recently and seemed normal.

"I liked the way they played with the kids," he said, adding he was surprised to learn of events in the U.S.

An Amber Alert had been issued for the boys in Florida, Louisiana and other states. Authorities have previously characterized Hakken as "anti-government.'

State Department spokesman Patrick Ventrell said the U.S. Interests Section in Havana is seeking more information from local authorities about the case but wouldn't comment further because of privacy reasons.

"U.S. officials are providing all appropriate assistance to the family," Ventrell said.

A State Department official, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the case publicly, told The AP: "We have received very good cooperation from the Cuban authorities in this ongoing investigation."

The U.S. has complained in the past that Cuba has failed to deport dozens of U.S. fugitives, including several former Black Panthers accused of killings and other violent acts in the 1960s and 1970s. More recently, dozens of Cuban Medicare fraud fugitives in the U.S. have tried to escape prosecution by returning to the island.

But deportations do occur. An American fugitive who was facing federal charges in California of sexually abusing a Costa Rican girl and possessing child pornography was deported from Havana in 2008. Several others have been deported to the U.S. since Fidel Castro's brother, Raul, became Cuba's president in 2006.

Barry Golden, spokesman for the U.S. Marshals Service in Miami, said the agency doesn't track how many fugitives might be in Cuba at a given time. He said it is usually extremely difficult to persuade the Cuban government to arrest and extradite any U.S. suspects, although it does happen.

"That's really on a case by case basis and it doesn't happen very often," Golden said.

James Cason, a former principal officer of the U.S. Interests Section in Havana, said whether or not Cuba returns a fugitive usually depends on what they have to gain from keeping them.

"You never know what motivates the Cubans to return somebody or not," he said.

In U.S. courts, the children's grandparents have been granted permanent custody but it's unknown whether Cuban authorities will acknowledge that.

Suchlicki said he suspects Cuba will force Hakken and his family to return.

"They'll tell them you have until tomorrow to get out of here or we'll put you in jail or throw you on a plane," Suchlicki said. "That's how the Cuban government operates."

_____

Associated Press writers Paul Haven and Peter Orsi in Havana; Curt Anderson and Kelli Kennedy in Miami; Kevin McGill in New Orleans; and Matthew Lee in Washington contributed to this report.

_____

Follow Christine Armario on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/cearmario

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-04-09-US-Children-Kidnapped-Cuba/id-2667b05572a24e6194f81ec78bae7fc4

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Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Robot hot among surgeons but FDA taking fresh look

In this March 22, 2013 photo, Dr. Pier Giulianotti, chief of minimally invasive and robotic surgery at the University of Illinois Hospital & Health Sciences System in Chicago, sits at the control panel of the da Vinci robot system. Surgeons say the advantages of the system include allowing them to operate sitting down, using small robotic hands with no tremor. But critics say a big increase in robot operations nationwide is due to heavy marketing and hype, and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is looking into problems and deaths that may be linked with robotic surgery. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green)

In this March 22, 2013 photo, Dr. Pier Giulianotti, chief of minimally invasive and robotic surgery at the University of Illinois Hospital & Health Sciences System in Chicago, sits at the control panel of the da Vinci robot system. Surgeons say the advantages of the system include allowing them to operate sitting down, using small robotic hands with no tremor. But critics say a big increase in robot operations nationwide is due to heavy marketing and hype, and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is looking into problems and deaths that may be linked with robotic surgery. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green)

In this March 22, 2013 photo, Dr. Pier Giulianotti, chief of minimally invasive and robotic surgery at the University of Illinois Hospital & Health Sciences System in Chicago, shows off a robotic arm of the da Vinci robot system. Surgeons say the advantages of the system include allowing them to operate sitting down, using small robotic hands with no tremor. But critics say a big increase in robot operations nationwide is due to heavy marketing and hype, and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is looking into problems and deaths that may be linked with robotic surgery. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green)

In this photo from video provided by Intuitive?Surgical, Inc. of Sunnyvale, Calif., maker of the da Vinci robotic system, doctors are seen using the device to perform a surgery. Surgeons say the advantages of the system include allowing them to operate sitting down, using small robotic hands with no tremor. But critics say a big increase in robot operations nationwide is due to heavy marketing and hype, and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is looking into problems and deaths that may be linked with robotic surgery. (AP Photo/Courtesy of Intuitive?Surgical, Inc.)

FOR STORY BY LINDSEY TANNER TO MOVE PRIMETIME, TUESDAY, APRIL 9 - In this March 26, 2013 photo, Aidee Diaz, 36, is seen at the Rauner Family YMCA on Chicago's South Side before a workout with a personal trainer. Diaz has lost 100 pounds since a simultaneous robotic kidney transplant and obesity surgery in July 2012 at the University of Illinois Hospital & Health Sciences System in Chicago. Diaz says the YMCA workouts are helping her get in shape. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green)

In this March 26, 2013 photo, Aidee Diaz, 36, right, exercises with personal trainer Angela Appleton at the Rauner Family YMCA on Chicago's South Side. Diaz has lost 100 pounds since a simultaneous robotic kidney transplant and obesity surgery in July 2012 at the University of Illinois Hospital & Health Sciences System in Chicago. Diaz says the YMCA workouts are helping her get in shape. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green)

(AP) ? The biggest thing in operating rooms these days is a million-dollar, multi-armed robot named da Vinci, used in nearly 400,000 surgeries nationwide last year ? triple the number just four years earlier.

But now the high-tech helper is under scrutiny over reports of problems, including several deaths that may be linked with it, and the high cost of using the robotic system.

There also have been a few disturbing, freak incidents: a robotic hand that wouldn't let go of tissue grasped during surgery and a robotic arm hitting a patient in the face as she lay on the operating table.

Is it time to curb the robot enthusiasm?

Some doctors say yes, concerned that the "wow" factor and heavy marketing are behind the boost in use. They argue that there is not enough robust research showing that robotic surgery is at least as good or better than conventional surgeries.

Many U.S. hospitals promote robotic surgery in patient brochures, online and even on highway billboards. Their aim is partly to attract business that helps pay for the costly robot.

The da Vinci is used for operations that include removing prostates, gallbladders and wombs, repairing heart valves, shrinking stomachs and transplanting organs. Its use has grown worldwide, but the system is most popular in the United States.

"We are at the tip of the iceberg. What we thought was impossible 10 years ago is now commonplace," said Dr. Michael Stifelman, robotic surgery chief at New York University's Langone Medical Center.

For surgeons, who control the robot while sitting at a computer screen, these operations can be less tiring. Plus robot hands don't shake. Advocates say patients sometimes have less bleeding and often are sent home sooner than with conventional laparoscopic surgeries and operations involving large incisions.

But the Food and Drug Administration is looking into a spike in reported problems. Earlier this year, the FDA began surveying surgeons using the robotic system. The agency conducts such surveys of device use routinely, but FDA spokeswoman Synim Rivers said the reason for it now "is the increase in number of reports received" about da Vinci.

Reports filed since early last year include at least five deaths.

Whether there truly are more problems lately is uncertain. Rivers said she couldn't quantify the increase and that it may simply reflect more awareness among doctors and hospitals. Doctors aren't required to report such things; device makers and hospitals are.

It could also reflect wider use. Last year there were 367,000 robot-assisted surgeries versus 114,000 in 2008, according to da Vinci's maker, Intuitive Surgical Inc. of Sunnyvale, Calif.

Da Vinci is the company's only product, and it's the only robotic system cleared for soft-tissue surgery by the FDA. Other robotic devices are approved for neurosurgery and orthopedics, among other things.

A search for the company's name in an FDA medical device database of reported problems brings up 500 events since Jan. 1, 2012. Many of those came from Intuitive Surgical. The reports include incidents that happened several years ago and some are duplicates. There's also no proof any of the problems were caused by the robot, and many didn't injure patients. Reports filed this year include:

? A woman who died during a 2012 hysterectomy when the surgeon-controlled robot accidentally nicked a blood vessel.

? A Chicago man who died in 2007 after spleen surgery.

? A New York man whose colon was allegedly perforated during prostate surgery. Da Vinci's maker filed that report after seeing a newspaper article about it and said the doctor's office declined to provide additional information.

? A robotic arm that wouldn't let go of tissue grasped during colorectal surgery on Jan. 14. "We had to do a total system shutdown to get the grasper to open its jaws," said the report filed by the hospital. The report said the patient was not injured.

? A robotic arm hit a patient in the face during a hysterectomy. Intuitive Surgical filed the report and said it's not known if the patient was injured but that the surgeon decided to switch to an open, more invasive operation instead.

Intuitive Surgical filed all but one of those reports.

Complications can occur with any type of surgery, and so far it's unclear if they are more common in robotic operations. That's part of what the FDA is trying to find out.

Intuitive Surgical disputes there's been a true increase in problems and says the rise reflects a change it made last year in the way it reports incidents.

The da Vinci system "has an excellent safety record with over 1.5 million surgeries performed globally, and total adverse event rates have remained low and in line with historical trends," said company spokeswoman Angela Wonson.

But an upcoming research paper suggests that problems linked with robotic surgery are underreported. They include cases with "catastrophic complications," said Dr. Martin Makary, a Johns Hopkins surgeon who co-authored the paper.

"The rapid adoption of robotic surgery ... has been done by and large without the proper evaluation," Makary said.

The da Vinci system, on the market since 2000, includes a three- or four-armed robot that surgeons operate with hand controls at a computer system several feet from the patient. They see inside the patient's body through a tiny video camera attached to one of the long robot arms. The other arms are tipped with tiny surgical instruments.

Robotic operations are similar to conventional laparoscopy, or "keyhole" surgery, which involves small incisions and camera-tipped instruments controlled by the surgeon's hands, not a robot.

Almost 1,400 U.S. hospitals ? nearly 1 out of 4 ? have at least one da Vinci system. Each one costs about $1.45 million, plus $100,000 or more a year in service agreements.

The most common robotic operations include prostate removal ? about 85 percent of these in the U.S. are done with the robot. Da Vinci is often used for hysterectomies too, Wonson said.

Makary says there's no justification for the big growth in robotic surgery, which he attributes to aggressive advertising by the manufacturer and hospitals seeking more patients.

He led a study published in 2011 that found 4 in 10 hospitals promoted robotic surgery on their websites, often using wording from the manufacturer. Some of the claims exaggerated the benefits or had misleading, unproven claims, the study said.

Stifelman, the Langone surgeon, said it makes sense for hospitals to promote robotic surgery and other new technology, but that doesn't mean it's the right option for all patients.

"It's going to be the responsibility of the surgeon ... to make sure the patient knows there are lots of options," and to discuss the risks and benefits, he said.

His hospital expects to do more than 1,200 robotic surgeries this year, versus just 175 in 2008.

For a few select procedures that require operating in small, hard-to-reach areas, robotic surgery may offer advantages, Makary said. Those procedures include head and neck cancer surgery and rectal surgery.

Some surgeons say the robotic method also has advantages for weight-loss surgery on extremely obese patients, whose girth can make hands-on surgery challenging.

"At the console, the operation can be performed effectively and precisely, translating to superior quality," said Dr. Subhashini Ayloo, a surgeon at the University of Illinois Hospital & Health Sciences System in Chicago.

Ayloo, who uses the da Vinci robot, last year began a study on the effectiveness of robotic obesity surgery in patients who need a kidney transplant. Some hospitals won't do transplants on obese patients with kidney failure because of the risks. In the study, robotic stomach-shrinking surgery and kidney transplants are done simultaneously. Patients who get both will be compared with a control group getting only robotic kidney transplants.

"We don't know the results, but so far it's looking good," Ayloo said.

Aidee Diaz of Chicago was the first patient and was taken aback when told the dual operation would be done robotically.

"At first you would get scared. Everybody says, 'A robot?' But in the long run that robot does a lot of miracles," said Diaz, 36.

She has had no complications since her operation last July, has lost 100 pounds and says her new kidney is working well.

Lawsuits in cases that didn't turn out so well often cite inadequate surgeon training with the robot. These include a malpractice case that ended last year with a $7.5 million jury award for the family of Juan Fernandez, a Chicago man who died in 2007 after robotic spleen surgery. The lawsuit claimed Fernandez's surgeons accidentally punctured part of his intestines, leading to a fatal infection.

The surgeons argued that Fernandez had a health condition that caused the intestinal damage, but it was the first robot operation for one of the doctors and using the device was overkill for an ordinarily straightforward surgery, said Fernandez's attorney, Ted McNabola.

McNabola said an expert witness told him it was like "using an 18-wheeler to go the market to get a quart of milk."

Company spokesman Geoff Curtis said Intuitive Surgical has physician-educators and other trainers who teach surgeons how to use the robot. But they don't train them how to do specific procedures robotically, he said, and it's up to hospitals and surgeons to decide "if and when a surgeon is ready to perform robotic cases."

A 2010 New England Journal of Medicine essay by a doctor and a health policy analyst said surgeons must do at least 150 procedures to become adept at using the robotic system. But there is no expert consensus on how much training is needed.

New Jersey banker Alexis Grattan did a lot of online research before her gallbladder was removed last month at Hackensack University Medical Center. She said the surgeon's many years of experience with robotic operations was an important factor. She also had heard that the surgeon was among the first to do the robotic operation with just one small incision in the belly button, instead of four cuts in conventional keyhole surgery.

"I'm 33, and for the rest of my life I'm going to be looking at those scars," she said.

The operation went smoothly. Grattan was back at work a week later.

___

Online:

Robotic surgery: http://tinyurl.com/byuljds

___

AP Medical Writer Lindsey Tanner can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/LindseyTanner

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/bbd825583c8542898e6fa7d440b9febc/Article_2013-04-09-Robotic%20Surgery/id-f5236df925f84f3db7fb3c8e53de8669

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Panasonic Lumix DMC-GF6 leaks out in white ahead of April 9 launch

Lumix DMCGF6 leaks out in white ahead of April 9 launch

After a review was published prematurely on another site revealing specs of Panasonic's Lumix DMC-GF6, Digicam Info has leaked press images of the upcoming model in white. As noted before, the stylish-looking MFT will pack 16-megapixels, a new Venus image engine, low light AF system, 4.2 fps burst speed, 1080-60i video, WiFi, NFC and up to 25,600 ISO, among other features -- if the leaks pan out, of course. We noted earlier that the GF6 would start at around $680 with a 14-42mm kit lens, and sources also claim the camera will be launched early tomorrow morning -- though at this point, there's very little left to actually announce.

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Via: 43 Rumors

Source: Digicam Info (translated)

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/O6mUkK1T368/

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ZAGG?s Animatone Earbuds and Headphones protect your child?s hearing

ZAGG may be more known for their protective device skins, but they’ve long offered their ifrogz line of earbuds and headphones. ?They now have some Animatone products that are designed just for children. ?As you know, the loud volumes produced by earphones and headphones can damage hearing. ?Some devices include maximum-volume settings for their audio [...]

Source: http://the-gadgeteer.com/2013/04/08/zaggs-animatone-earbuds-and-headphones-protect-your-childs-hearing/

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Samsung HomeSync Could Be Android-Powered Gaming Console ...

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Samsung HomeSync Could Be Android Powered Gaming ConsoleThe Samsung HomeSync was first announced to the free world earlier this year at Mobile World Congress that happened in Barcelona, Spain, and it certainly did turn heads, although the rather boxy design certainly did not make it rush right to the top of the pile when it comes to industrial looks among game consoles, or at least, that is what the Samsung HomeSync could very well end up as. Sure, this is no PS3 or Xbox 360, but it could provide some decent challenge to the crowd-funded OUYA.

In a nutshell, the Samsung HomeSync was specially developed to store and stream multimedia content from as well as to Galaxy devices, or it could also double up as a standalone device. This media streamer at heart also has the possibility of being an Android-based gaming console, especially after one takes into account its hardware underneath the hood, where it runs on a dual-core 1.7GHz Exynos processor, powered by the Android 4.1 Jelly Bean operating system as well as boasts of support for Samsung Apps. Since it also has Bluetooth connectivity, the HomeSync should also play nice with Bluetooth-enabled controllers.

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Source: http://www.ubergizmo.com/2013/04/samsung-homesync-could-be-android-powered-gaming-console/

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Montana pet owner to feds: The dog ate my money

(AP) ? A Montana man whose 12-year-old golden retriever ate five $100 bills hopes to be reimbursed by the federal government.

Wayne Klinkel tells the Independent Record (http://bit.ly/143rwRZ ) that his dog Sundance ate the bills while he and his wife were on a road trip to visit their daughter.

Klinkel says he carefully picked through the dog's droppings, and his daughter recovered more when snow melted.

He says he washed the remnants of the bills and taped them together and sent them to the Treasury Department's Bureau of Engraving and Printing with an explanation of what happened.

The bureau's website says an "experienced mutilated currency examiner" will determine if at least 51 percent of a bill is present and eligible for reimbursement. The process can take up to two years.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/aa9398e6757a46fa93ed5dea7bd3729e/Article_2013-04-08-Dog%20Eats%20Cash/id-e3d8b3a6484349a2914c95c257ed8cdc

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Monday, April 8, 2013

Flies model a potential sweet treatment for Parkinson's disease

Apr. 6, 2013 ? Researchers from Tel Aviv University describe experiments that could lead to a new approach for treating Parkinson's disease (PD) using a common sweetener, mannitol.

This research is presented today at the Genetics Society of America's 54th Annual Drosophila Research Conference in Washington D.C., April 3-7, 2013.

Mannitol is a sugar alcohol familiar as a component of sugar-free gum and candies. Originally isolated from flowering ash, mannitol is believed to have been the "manna" that rained down from the heavens in biblical times. Fungi, bacteria, algae, and plants make mannitol, but the human body can't. For most commercial uses it is extracted from seaweed although chemists can synthesize it. And it can be used for more than just a sweetener.

The Food and Drug Administration approved mannitol as an intravenous diuretic to flush out excess fluid. It also enables drugs to cross the blood-brain barrier (BBB), the tightly linked cells that form the walls of capillaries in the brain. The tight junctions holding together the cells of these tiniest blood vessels come slightly apart five minutes after an infusion of mannitol into the carotid artery, and they stay open for about 30 minutes.

Mannitol has another, less-explored talent: preventing a sticky protein called ?-synuclein from gumming up the substantia nigra part of the brains of people with PD and Lewy body dementia (LBD), which has similar symptoms to PD. In the disease state, the proteins first misfold, then form sheets that aggregate and then extend, forming gummy fibrils.

Certain biochemicals, called molecular chaperones, normally stabilize proteins and help them fold into their native three-dimensional forms, which are essential to their functions. Mannitol is a chemical chaperone. So like a delivery person who both opens the door and brings in the pizza, mannitol may be used to treat Parkinson's disease by getting into the brain and then restoring normal folding to ?-synuclein.

Daniel Segal, PhD, and colleagues at Tel Aviv University investigated the effects of mannitol on the brain by feeding it to fruit flies with a form of PD that has highly aggregated ?-synuclein.

The researchers used a "locomotion climbing assay" to study fly movement. Normal flies scamper right up the wall of a test tube, but flies whose brains are encumbered with ?-synuclein aggregates stay at the bottom, presumably because they can't move normally. The percentage of flies that climb one centimeter in 18 seconds assesses the effect of mannitol.

An experimental run tested flies daily for 27 days. After that time, 72% of normal flies climbed up, in comparison to 38% of the PD flies. Their lack of ascension up the sides of the test tube indicated "severe motor dysfunction."

In contrast, were flies bred to harbor the human mutant ?-synuclein gene, who as larvae feasted on mannitol that sweetened the medium at the bottoms of their vials. These flies fared much better -- 70% of them could climb after 27 days. And slices of their brains revealed a 70% decrease in accumulated misfolded protein compared to the brains of mutant flies raised on the regular medium lacking mannitol.

It's a long way from helping climbing-impaired flies to a new treatment for people, but the research suggests a possible novel therapeutic direction. Dr. Segal, however, cautioned that people with PD or similar movement disorders should not chew a ton of mannitol-sweetened gum or sweets; that will not help their current condition. The next step for researchers is to demonstrate a rescue effect in mice, similar to improved climbing by flies, in which a rolling drum ("rotarod") activity assesses mobility.

"Until and if mannitol is proven to be efficient for PD on its own, the more conservative and possibly more immediate use can be the conventional one, using it as a BBB disruptor to facilitate entrance of other approved drugs that have problems passing through the BBB," Dr. Segal said. A preliminary clinical trial of mannitol on a small number of volunteers might follow if results in mice support those seen in the flies, he added, but that is still many research steps away.

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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://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/Tbahh3a8bWY/130407090737.htm

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Sunday, April 7, 2013

Arson suspected in La. fast-food restaurant fire (Providence Journal)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/297096558?client_source=feed&format=rss

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U.S. lawmakers say China has failed to rein in North Korea

By David Morgan

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - China has failed to use its influence to stop North Korea's warlike rhetoric against the United States and U.S.-backed South Korea, despite an escalating crisis that could trigger armed conflict by accident, U.S. lawmakers said on Sunday.

Republican Senator John McCain, a member of the Armed Services Committee, criticized China's "failure to rein in what could be a catastrophic situation," saying Beijing could step up pressure on Pyongyang by using its influence over North Korea's economy.

"China does hold the key to this problem. China could cut off their economy if they want to. Chinese behavior has been very disappointing," McCain said on CBS's "Face the Nation" program.

"More than once, wars have started by accident and this is a very serious situation," he added.

"South Korea would win. We would win if there was an all-out conflict. But the fact is that North Korea could set Seoul on fire. And that obviously would be a catastrophe of enormous proportions," McCain said.

Senator Chuck Schumer, a Democrat who has been a prominent critic of China's currency policy, said he agreed with McCain.

"The Chinese hold a lot of the cards here. They're by nature cautious. But they're carrying it to an extreme. It's about time they stepped up to the plate and put a little pressure on this North Korean regime," Schumer said on the same program.

North Korea has threatened war against the United States and the South in what analysts and U.S. politicians see as an attempt to wring concessions from the international community and shore up internal support for Pyongyang's 30-year-old leader, Kim Jong-un.

The senators' comments came as China, North Korea's sole financial and diplomatic backer, showed growing irritation with Pyongyang's vitriolic rhetoric toward the West.

Beijing has warned against "trouble making" on its doorstep in an apparent rebuke to North Korea, while Chinese leaders have spoken against provocative words and actions in the region.

On Sunday, the Foreign Ministry expressed "grave concern" and said China had asked North Korea to "ensure the safety of Chinese diplomats in North Korea, in accordance with the Vienna Convention and international laws and norms."

'BOILING POINT'

Meanwhile, the United States has postponed the long-scheduled test of its Minuteman III intercontinental missile to avoid what a defense official called "any misperception or miscalculation."

Former U.S. Ambassador to China Jon Huntsman told CNN on Sunday that it was unprecedented for Chinese President Xi Jinping to warn in a recent speech that no country "should be allowed to throw a region and even the whole world into chaos for selfish gain."

"It suggests to me, as I've watched the ratcheting up of frustration among Chinese leaders over the last many years, that they've probably hit the 212-degree boiling point as it relates to North Korea," Huntsman said.

The White House on Sunday had no immediate comment on recent Chinese statements.

But White House senior adviser Dan Pfeiffer told ABC's "This Week" program that North Korea is following a long-standing pattern of "provocative actions, bellicose rhetoric."

"The key here is for the North Koreans to stop their actions, start meeting their international obligations and put themselves in a position where they can achieve what is their stated goal, which is economic development," he said.

China also came under fire from Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, a leading voice on foreign policy issues who also sits on the Armed Services Committee.

"I blame the Chinese more than anybody else. They're afraid of reunification. They don't want a democratic Korea next to China, so they are propping up this crazy regime. And they could determine the fate of North Korea better than anybody on the planet," he said on NBC's "Meet the Press."

(Reporting by David Morgan; Additional reporting by Aruna Viswanatha; Editing by Eric Beech)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-lawmakers-china-failed-rein-north-korea-165531592.html

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Saturday, April 6, 2013

John Key hints at China exchange rate policy

  • TVNZ - Saturday 6th April, 2013

    Source: ONE News Prime Minister John Key has hinted he is open to the idea of establishing a new exchange rate policy with China. Key told reporters at the Bo'oa Forum in China he had received Treasury advice on New Zealand adopting such a policy. The move would allow the New Zealand dollar to be exchanged directly with the Chinese currency, known as the Renminbi. The policy would ...

  • Calif. governor looks to China for investments

    Tampa Bay Online - Saturday 6th April, 2013

    SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) -- California Gov. Jerry Brown has designs on building some of the most expensive public works projects in the nation and wants to keep the state moving forward in its slow recovery from the ...

  • Chinas debt issue not particularly serious

    China Daily - Saturday 6th April, 2013

    finance minister Xiang Huaicheng said in Boao, Hainan province on Saturday. "The majority of the debts are internal ones, and the government has always adhered to the principle of sustainability while handling the debt issue," Xiang told a sub-forum of the ...

  • Robert Downey Jr. hits Beijing to promote Marvels Iron Man 3

    Yahoo - Saturday 6th April, 2013

    Tony Stark in the upcoming movie - said he?s fascinated with Chinese culture and loves Chinese movies, while urging the local audience to see the superhero film.';Iron Man 3'; was financed in part by the Chinese ...

  • Mexicos Pemex to increase oil exports to China

    The Globe and Mail - Saturday 6th April, 2013

    April 6 (Reuters) - Mexico's state oil monopoly Pemex this month will begin increasing exports to China by 30,000 barrels a day, the head of Pemex said on Saturday.The two-year agreement between Pemex and China's Sinopec was signed in January, Pemex Chief Executive Emilio Lozoya said at a press conference in Sanya, ...

  • China ?severely concerned? over North Korean tensions

    Global Times - Saturday 6th April, 2013

    A South Korean soldier walks past barricades on the road leading to North Korea's Kaesong joint industrial complex, at a military checkpoint in the border city of Paju on Saturday. Photo: ...

  • Private firms lead Chinas investment overseas

    China Daily - Saturday 6th April, 2013

    /enpproperty--> BOAO, Hainan - Chinese private firms are seeing new expansion abroad and already lead China's investment overseas, Chris Lu, CEO of Deloitte China, said on Saturday at a forum in south China's Hainan ...

  • China closes poultry markets amid bird flu outbreak

    CNN Asia - Saturday 6th April, 2013

    NEW: Nanjing becomes third city to suspend live poultry trading Sixteen human cases of H7N9 have been reported in eastern China No cases of human-to-human transmission have been confirmed Poultry markets in Shanghai and Hangzhou were ...

  • Capital restraints still challenge China?s SMBs

    Global Times - Saturday 6th April, 2013

    The difficulty of raising capital from banks remains a major challenge for China's small- and micro-businesses (SMBs) which urgently needs policy incentives, economists said at a discussion session at the Boao Forum for Asia Saturday. China's SMBs saw slower growth in 2012, amid shrinking overseas demand and weaker domestic economic growth, with nearly 60 percent of the 1,000 surveyed ...

  • B.C. health officials monitoring Chinas bird flu outbreak

    CTV - Saturday 6th April, 2013

    Canada's Chief Public Health Officer Dr. David Butler-Jones, left, speaks to B.C. provincial health officer Dr. Perry Kendall during a news conference at the British Columbia Centre for Disease Control in Vancouver, B.C., on Friday October 16, 2009. (Darryl Dyck / THE CANADIAN ...

  • China approves anti-flu drug with H7N9 potential

    China Daily - Saturday 6th April, 2013

    /enpproperty--> BEIJING - China has approved a new type of flu drug that it believes may be effective in treating H7N9 bird flu virus. According to a statement issued by the China Food and Drug Administration on Saturday, the potential of injections of peramivir diluted in sodium chloride injection has been proven by preliminary tests. Peramivir is a neuraminidase inhibitor. As of Saturday ...

  • U.S. gets rare chance to build ties with China over N. Korea

    Japan Times - Saturday 6th April, 2013

    Defense Minister Itsunori Onodera sought support Saturday from Okinawa Gov. Hirokazu Nakaima for a plan to return a number of U.S. military facilities in the prefecture to Japanese control. ';I believe the plan will contribute to further developing Okinawa,'; Onodera told Nakaima in Naha, ...

  • Two new cases of bird flu in China

    TVNZ - Saturday 6th April, 2013

    Technicians wearing protection suits begin to cull poultry at a poultry wholesale market, where H7N9 bird flu virus was detected in pigeon samples, in Shanghai. ...

  • Burning For Freedom Crisis In Nepal As Tibetan Monks Self-Immolate And China Cracks Down

    IBTimes - Saturday 6th April, 2013

    KATHMANDU, Nepal -- On the morning of Feb. 13, Drupchen Tsering, a Buddhist monk from Tibet, walked out of a restaurant here in Nepal's capital, dripping with gasoline. In front of the Bouddhanath Stupa, one of the holiest Buddhist shrines in the world, he lit himself on ...

  • Firms must learn Chinas rules says PM

    SBS - Saturday 6th April, 2013

    Australians doing business in China will be offered training in how to play by its rules and avoid jail under a new program. At least four Australian business executives working in China have been jailed in recent times for questionable reasons, but little action has been taken to address the issue. Attending the Boao Forum for Asia on the Chinese resort island of Hainan, which has trade and ...

  • NE China colliery blast deaths hit 36

    China Daily - Saturday 6th April, 2013

    /enpproperty--> CHUANGCHUN - The death toll from a coal mine gas explosion on March 29 in Northeast China's Jilin province has risen to 36 after seven more deaths were reported by local authorities on Saturday. The accident occurred in Baishan city in Tonghua Mining Group's Babao Coal Mine. Another explosion in the same mine on Monday left six people dead and four others injured. ...

  • Shivraj Singh Chouhan competing with China not Narendra Modi

    NDTV - Saturday 6th April, 2013

    Bhopal : As comparison with his Gujarat counterpart grows, Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan today kept his speech on the BJP's 33rd foundation day focussed around his state's "growth." "We are growing at 10.2 per cent which is higher than the entire country. The country's growth rate is only six per cent I would want Madhya Pradesh to compete ...

  • China Focus BOAO sub-forum debates Chinas innovation bottleneck

    Global Times - Saturday 6th April, 2013

    Economists and entrepreneurs attending a sub-forum of the 2013 Boao Forum for Asia Annual Conference have discussed how Chinese firms, faced with rising costs and shrinking returns, must innovate to survive the global economic slowdown.But the country's longstanding weakness in innovation remains the most pressing issue facing Chinese society, they acknowledged, at a sub-forum ahead of the ...

  • The Real Meaning Behind Apples Apology To China

    Forbes - Saturday 6th April, 2013

    Apple made one of its rare apologies - this time to consumers of the world's most populous nation, China. Apple does not normally do apologies but if it did, China right now is the place to make them. According to data released in November 2012, Apple had 71.4%of the Chinese tablet market, ...

  • Flowers in full blossom as spring comes in China

    Global Times - Saturday 6th April, 2013

    Photo taken on April 6, 2013 shows tulips in full blossom at the People's Park in Zhengzhou, capital of Central China's Henan Province. (Xinhua/Li ...

  • North Korea warns diplomats as Beijing urges caution

    Belfast Telegraph - Saturday 6th April, 2013

    British and other foreign embassies in Pyongyang were considering evacuating their staff yesterday after North Korea warned that it could not guarantee their ...

  • China is growing faster than expected the U.S. is the 1st among equals another world war is not a threat but the collapse of the euro and climate change are possible. Recently the National Intelligence Council of the USA an influential government thi

    Pravda - Saturday 6th April, 2013

    China is growing faster than expected, the United States is the first among equals, another world war is not a threat, but the collapse of the euro and climate change are possible. Recently, the National Intelligence Council of the USA (NIC), an influential government think tank of the intelligence community, issued a report "Global Trends 2030: Alternative Worlds." The principal ...

  • Source: http://www.beijingnews.net/index.php/sid/213657950/scat/55582c89cb296d4c

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    Arduino-enhanced guitar promises less typing, more shredding

    Arduinoenhanced guitar promises less typing, more shredding

    It's far from the first Arduino-based mod we've seen for a guitar, but this one from David Neevel of the Wieden + Kennedy ad agency may well be the most unique. Apparently tired of having to drop his guitar and pick up a keyboard every time he wanted to send an email, he decided to make the guitar the keyboard, and replace the dull drone of keystrokes with an extended solo. As you might expect, the project comes with a fairly high degree of difficulty, but those interested in trying their hand can find the basics to get started at the source link below, and get a look at what's possible in the video after the break. You're on your own with the moustache.

    Filed under:

    Comments

    Source: W + K Blog

    Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/gy4xPcu_Z48/

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    Friday, April 5, 2013

    Military: Gaza militants fire rockets at Israel

    JERUSALEM (AP) ? The Israeli military says Gaza militants have fired rockets at the south of the country a day after Israel warned of an escalation.

    A military spokesman says several rockets were fired early Thursday. One exploded in Israel causing no injuries while the others exploded prematurely inside Gaza. The spokesman spoke on condition of anonymity in line with military regulations.

    Gaza militants have fired several rockets at Israel since November, when an informal truce took hold after eight days of fighting triggered by almost daily Palestinian rocket attacks.

    Israel retaliated for the first time this week. Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon warned he will not allow rocket attacks to become routine again. Israel holds Gaza's militant Hamas rulers responsible for all attacks from the coastal strip.

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/military-gaza-militants-fire-rockets-israel-063310057.html

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    Speaker voices concerns about abuse culture | The Marquette Tribune

    Giving a face and voice to an emotionally jarring subject, Elin Stebbins Waldal spoke on campus last night about her experience as a domestic violence survivor and the role of the media in driving the narrative about rape and abuse.

    ?We have a big problem with dating violence in this country,? Waldal said.

    Waldal, who was in an abusive relationship as a teenager and college student, spent part of her discussion talking about her personal experience and her own recovery, but focused the majority of her talk about rape culture, socialization of gender stereotypes in the media, and current efforts to change the conversation.

    ?We are in a dire need for a paradigm shift on how to prevent sexual assault,? Waldal said. She referred to the Steubenville case as well as Chris Brown and Rihanna as examples of how the media drives the conversation about domestic violence and abuse.

    Waldal said that the ??Twilight? enterprise? inspired her to tell her story. She said that there were several parts of the multi-million dollar book-turned-movie enterprise that disturbed her. She said that the emphasis on the damsel in distress stereotype, as well as the normalization of both stalking and controlling behavior through Edward?s actions, were problematic for her.

    ?There?s a significant amount of glossing over of signs of abuse in the books,? she said.

    Waldal?s presentation was part of the McGee Lecture Series, which focuses on addressing social justice issues. Becca Osmolski, a sophomore in the College of Arts & Sciences, was inspired after reading Waldal?s book ?Tornado Warning? to help bring her to campus. ?Tornado Warning? is Waldal?s biography and tells her experience from two perspectives: that of her teenage self experiencing the abuse and reflections on her ordeal from the future.

    ?I wanted to share how helpful she was to me,? Osmolski said.

    ?One of the reasons that Ms. Waldal?s story is so powerful is because it highlights that domestic violence can happen to anyone,? said Meghan Stroshine, an associate professor of Criminology and Law Studies who teaches a course on domestic violence.

    Stroshine, who teaches Waldal?s book as part of her class, said the book helped students understand the complex dynamics and powerful emotions that are involved in abusive relationships.?The topic of domestic or dating violence is significant for college students, given the statistics regarding its frequency. Nearly one in three (29 percent) college women say they have been in an abusive dating relationship, according to a 2011 College Dating Violence & Abuse Poll, which Stroshine cited. In addition, according to the same poll, girls and young women between the ages of 16 and 24 experience the highest rate of intimate partner violence, at almost triple the national average.

    ?We may be (far) more educated about domestic violence than we were years ago, but there is still a tendency for many young people to believe that domestic violence is something that can?t or won?t happen to them,? Stroshine said.

    For Waldal, changing the societal story is extremely important. She cited several public service announcement campaigns such as ?Love Is Not Abuse? and ?No More,? saying that these are important ways of helping people.?

    ?The book related well to my life,? Osmolski said. ?It didn?t make me feel so isolated.?

    Source: http://marquettetribune.org/2013/04/04/news/domestic-violence-speaker-voices-concerns-about-abuse-culture/

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    Thursday, April 4, 2013

    finding joy: 10 Motherhood Secrets

    I'm often asked what I've learned being a mother. And besides never running out of all forms of paper products at one time or to buy the gallon pails of vanilla icecream in the summer because you can use those pails for so many things most of what I'd tell you I've learned is from my kids. Through trial and error and tears and laughter and storms and sun. Life isn't perfect. But us mothers? We're amazing people - we just need to believe it - to start walking boldly through life wearing the motherhood badge proudly. ~Rachel

    Here are ten simple things that I've learned in the almost seventeen years that someone has looked at me as mom. They're life things, secrets, I guess.

    1. You don't need to know everything. Do you remember those months before that first child came in your home? I do. I remember stacks of books bought at Border's book (this was early internet years - there was no google for me - just thinking about that makes me wonder how on earth I did it - what did I do when I needed a quick recipe? A book? grin) that I would devour, underline, and reference. What to expect the first day, week, year, and so on. And I had this other one - this portable pediatrician one - that I'd scour symptoms making sure that my Hannah was fine. And she was. In fact, she's almost 17 and survived those early years of me looking everything up and calling my mother and worrying. You know what? I didn't know so much, and we did okay. We muddled through, and I figured stuff out, and it's been okay. So I've learned that even if I don't know it all that I'll be okay. And, honestly, sometimes I'd like to know a bit less. We live in a data rich information saturated world and sometimes google search can just stay unopened.

    2. Listen first, speak second. My argument, my reasoning, and why I'm right seems to always play in my head when I'm talking with my kids. But, after almost seventeen years of parenting I've truly begun to learn the value in listening first - hearing their point of view - and truly trying to understand before I end up speaking mine. It doesn't mean that they're always right, but rather is this sign of respect for the feelings of their hearts. So I've learned - listen, listen, listen, bite your tongue, listen, and listen. This skill? Applies to all of life and relationships. We can learn a great deal by listening to others and shelving our agenda for a bit. When we bless others with attentiveness we get a glimpse into their heart and their importants. Those things matter.


    3. The agenda doesn't need to be set in stone. Even though you'd sometimes like it to be. Flexibility has been what I've learned - adapt, change, recalculate - and to not let the adaptations taint my mood for the day. Raising a family, having children, and just living life has truly emphasized me the idea of grace and flexibility. If you can learn to laugh, and to brush things off, then your day will go so much smoother. Just pick up where you can, press on, and use the remainder of your day well. Instead of looking where things didn't go right look to what did. And often some of the sweetest life lessons and moments come in those times where you went off schedule and tried something new.

    4. Others may not agree, but you can still be respectful. Us mothers can work ourselves up in a tizzy about all the different things mothers debate. And all of these things - vaccinations, education, etc - are all good things. Needed things. Remember? It's good that we're not the same - that's beautiful. But here's the deal even if others don't agree with you or you don't agree with them there still needs to be a level of respect. I expect that from my kids when they don't agree with me or with their siblings. As women let's hold that bar high and respect each other even when we don't agree. Our children are watching.

    5. Playing matters more than the dishes. There has been so many in a minutes and just a seconds in my life because I've wanted to get those dishes done. You know what? They always get done. Inevitably. But sometimes, playing, and getting on the floor or throwing that baseball in the backyard matters way more than the pile of dishes waiting to get done. I have had to discipline myself to say no to those things and time and yes to my children. They need us there doing life with them. If you need to read more read Dear In a Minute Mom.


    6. Start saying yes. Several months ago I wrote a post called Becoming a Yes Mom. My good friend Toni at The Happy Housewife has been doing a series of pictures called Today I said Yes to... You know what? It's easier for me to say no. I'm being honest. When I say no most of the time it means less effort, less work from me. But I need to say yes. I never realized how often I said no until I had children. Now, now I've learned that I need to start saying yes before it comes to the point that they stop asking. What can you say yes to today?

    7. Chores are good. Even though my children might tell you otherwise. From a young age we've expected chores around our home. Nothing excessive, but keeping your room tidy, making your bed, putting your clothes in the laundry. My kids rotate with the dishes, and help with the garbage and help with folding. All of that is good. Our society needs kids that are taught the value in work, and that it is not always something that needs to have a dollar sign attached to it. Part of living in a family and in a home is working together to get it all done. So don't run from chores - incorporate them into your life. Now, the kids do get an allowance, but that is for specific chores outside of the general expected stewardship roles. Find the balance, but don't run from chores.

    8. Optimism is worth it. Sometimes it's easier for me to be pessimistic and see all that doesn't work. But, when I do that I find myself scurrying around from thing to thing to thing. Optimism is worth it. It's an attitude, a heart adjustment, really. It's being willing to see the good before seeing the things that don't work. It's kind of like the listening before speaking bit - it's practice, but worth the effort. Optimism takes work and choosing to see the good, but living an optimistic life allows for many more finding joy loving the little things moments.


    9. Choose {find} joy. It would be easy to sit and lament how hard everything was during the day. And you know what? Sometimes we simply need to do that. But do you know that it is also of utmost importance for our children to see us happy? Not all the time, but some of the time? Once a little one of mine asked me why I didn't smile much during the day. I didn't even realize that I had been so focused that I was kind of moving through my house like a bull in a china shop. I remember looking in his eyes and telling him that I was so happy to be his momma and he told me then I needed to smile. Mothers, smile at your kids today. Tell them you love being their momma even though inside it might have been a really hard day. Those words matter.
    10. Tell your kids you like them. Remember how I said words matter? Well, let me tell you, make sure you tell your kids that you simply like them. Love is unconditional. Like is the word that tells them you like being around them, you like who they are, and that you simply like them as your child. My Samuel the other night was resting in my bed and he said, momma, I like you. Talk about melt my heart. Learn from that - take a minute and walk with your little one or your big one and let them know that you like them. Simple words, but very powerful heart words to cherish.

    Ten secrets, ten facts, ten things I learned being a mother. Children are often the best teachers - their tenacity, zest for life, and unending curiosity inspires me to look at life through a different lens.

    Life is good.

    to subscribe by email - click?HERE.

    Images and original content are sole property of Rachel Martin and may not be used, copied or transmitted without prior written consent.

    Source: http://rachelmariemartin.blogspot.com/2013/04/10-motherhood-secrets.html

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