Monday 11 February 2013

GOOGLE’S CHAIRMAN ERIC SCHMIDT TO SELL UP TO 3.2 MILLION SHARES!



SAN FRANCISCO – With Google’s stock hovering at record highs, Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt plans to sell more than 40 percent of his stock in the Internet search leader this year.
The plan disclosed Friday calls for Schmidt to sell up to 3.2 million shares. If he were to sell all that stock at Google’s current price, Schmidt would realize a $2.5 billion windfall.
Schmidt ended December with 7.6 million Google shares, or a 2.3 percent stake in the Mountain View, Calif., company.
He would be left with about 4.4 million shares of Google stock worth another $3.5 billion if he follows through on his divestiture plan for this year. He has gradually been winnowing his holdings in Google in recent years, without giving a specific reason.
Google Inc. declined to comment Friday.
Google’s stock rose $11.42 to close at $785.37 Friday. Earlier in the day, it traded at $786.67 – its highest price since the company went public at $85 per share in August 2004.
Google co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin are the only company executives who own more stock than Schmidt.
Page controls an 8.7 percent stake and Brin holds an 8.5 percent stake. Each stake is currently worth nearly $20 billion.

Sunday 10 February 2013

CM Hoti announces plan to distribute free laptops


Chief Minister Amir Haider Hoti
Pakistan, Peshawar News – Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Amir Haider Hoti announced on Sunday that his government would distribute free laptops among students in the province.
Speaking at a ceremony here, he said that more than 30, 000 laptops with an estimated cost of Rs1 billion would be distributed in the province
“Although the governor of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa has been changed as per the constitutional process, I am not sure whether ANP leadership was consulted on the issue,” he said.

Tax theft and Corrupt leaders should be removed


Tax theft and Corrupt leaders should be removed
Pakistan News – Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf chairman Imran Khan said Sunday that it was essential to eliminate corruption and taxtheft in order to steer the country towards the path of prosperity.
Addressing a convention of party workers here, Imran said he had been advocating for the last nine years that the US led war on terror should not be fought by Pakistan and the country should hold talks with the Taliban. “I was called Taliban Khan and now everyone is in favour of talks with the Taliban.” Imran Khan added that when he spoke of not sending the army into FATA he was called a terrorist without a beardby former President General (retired) Pervez Musharraf.
The PTI chairman also spoke of the new Bilawal House in Lahore and asked for accountabilityfor President Zardari’s wealth.
According to Imran Khan, the intra-party elections of the PTI would be completed by March 15 and there will also be an election for the chairman’s post.

Metro Bus Service launched by CM Shahbaz


Metro Bus Service News
Pakistan, Lahore News – The much-trumpeted Metro BusService project was inaugurated by Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif at a ceremony here on Sunday.
A high-level Turkish delegation, led by Turkish Deputy Prime Minister, attended the inaugural ceremony of the multi-billion rupees project at the invitation of Punjab government. PML-N President Mian Nawaz Sharif was also present on this occasion.
According to organizers, 27- kilometer long distance from Gajjumata to Shahdara would be covered in 55 minutes. Strict security measures were taken by law enforcement agencies on this occasion.
Nawaz Sharif, Shahbaz Sharif, foreign diplomats and Turkish delegation is now taking a ride of the bus.  Speaking at the ceremony, Shahbaz said this project will prove to be a milestone.
“The Metro bus service is unprecedented. Patients, officials, students and I myself will travel by the Metro bus,” he said.
The Chief Minister has announced a cash prize of one crore among labourers, who worked day and night to complete this great project

Saturday 9 February 2013

Tobacco Companies must Run ads to tell about Cigarettes Effects



Cigarettes Effects on Health
World Health News –  A US federal judge ruled here that tobacco companies must run ads acknowledging that they lied about the health effects of cigarettes, and explain in blunt terms the adverse effects of smoking.
The ruling on Tuesday by District Judge Gladys Kessler was part of a government racketeering case against top cigarette companies originally brought in September 1999.
Kessler ruled in 2006 that the companies violated racketeering laws by deceiving the public for decades on the health dangers of smoking, and were ordered to publish corrective statements on five topics — including the health risks of smoking, the addictiveness of smoking, and the fact that there was no health benefit in smoking ‘light’ cigarettes.
The exact wording of those statements however was held up pending tobacco companylitigation.
Kessler said Tuesday that each “corrective statement” must begin with words declaring that a federal court ruled the tobacco companies “deliberately deceived the American public about the health effects of smoking, and has ordered those companies to make this statement. Here is the truth.”
Those “truths” include statements such as “More people die every year from smoking than from murder, AIDS, suicide, drugs, car crashes, and alcohol, combined;” “Cigarette companies intentionally designed cigarettes with enough nicotine to create and sustain addiction;” and “When you smoke, the nicotine actually changes the brain — that’s why quitting is so hard.”
Defendants in the case include Philip Morris US, a subsidiary of the Altria Group; RJ Reynolds Tobacco and Lorillard Tobacco Company.

Drugs Abuse Tied with Early Life Strokes


Drugs abuse tied to early-life strokes
Health News / World Health News > Younger adults who suffered a stroke were often smokers or had abused drugs or alcohol, according to a US study that looked at over 1,000 patients.
Strokes are often thought of as a condition of the elderly, but researchers said long-term changes in the heart, arteries or and blood as a result of drug abuse or heavy drinking may put users at higher-than-average risk earlier in life.
Substance abuse is common in young adults experiencing a stroke,” wrote lead researcher Brett Kissela from the University of Cincinnati in the journal Stroke.
“Patients aged younger than 55 years who experience a stroke should be routinely screened and counseled regarding substance abuse.”
It’s also possible that some drugs, particularly cocaine and methamphetamines, may trigger a stroke more immediately, according to S. Andrew Josephson, a neurologist from the University of California, San Francisco, who has studied drug use and stroke but was not involved in the study.
“We know that even with vascular risk factors that are prevalent – smoking, high blood pressure… most people still don’t have a stroke until they’re older,” he added.
“When a young person has a stroke, it is probably much more likely that the cause of their stroke is something other than traditional risk factors.”
According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, close to 800,000 people in the United States have a stroke every year, and they are the most common cause of serious long-term disability. One study of 2007 data found that almost five percent of people who had a stroke that year were between ages 18 and 44.
The current study involved people from Greater Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky who’d had a stroke before they hit 55.
The researchers reviewed medical charts for blood or urine test results of other records ofsubstance abuse for close to 1,200 stroke patients.
In 2005, the most recent year covered, just over half of young adults who suffered a stroke were smokers at the time, and one in five used illicit drugs, including marijuana and cocaine. Thirteen percent of people had used drugs or alcohol within 24 hours of their stoke.
“The rate of substance abuse, particularly illicit drug abuse, is almost certainly an underestimate because toxicology screens were not obtained on all patients,” said Steven Kittner, a professor of neurology at the University of Maryland School of Medicine in Baltimore who also wasn’t part of the research.
The rate of smoking, drug use and alcohol abuse – defined as three or more drinks per day – seemed to increase among stroke patients between the mid-1990s and the mid-2000s.
But Kissela and his team said they can’t be sure whether more people were actually using those substances or doctors were just getting better at testing for and recording drug abuse.
The study also can’t prove that patients’ drug or alcohol use directly contributed to their strokes. It’s possible, for example, that people who abuse drugs also see their doctors less often or engage in other risky behaviors that increase the chance of strokes, Josephson explained.
He added that the study emphasizes the need to learn and quickly recognizing the signs of strokes, even in young people, since some treatments can only be used in a short window of opportunity after the stroke.

People unaware of Risk from CT scan radiation


CT scan radiation risk
Health News –  One-third of people getting a CT scan didn’t know the test exposed their body to radiation, in a new study from a single US medical center.
Researchers found the majority of patients also underestimated the amount of radiation delivered by a CT scan, and just one in 20 believed the scan would increase their chance of ever getting cancer.
The study’s lead researcher, Janet Busey, said doctors need to do a better job of talking to patients about the risks and benefits of the tests, including about radiation exposure.
One challenge is that there is still debate within the medical community about just how much long term cancer risk the scans carry, she said. That risk also depends on how many scans a patient gets and which organs are exposed to radiation.
“There’s no doubt, CT saves lives,” Busey, from the University of Washington in Seattle, told Reuters Health. And their benefits usually outweigh their risks, she added.
Still, even if the radiation risk is small, patients “definitely should be aware of it.”
CT scans are high-powered X-rays that provide clearer images but expose patients to between ten and 100 times more radiation than a normal head or chest X-ray, for example.
Busey said from their earlier studies, she and her colleagues learned anecdotally that many patients didn’t know much about CT scans. So they surveyed 235 people who were having a non-emergency scan, for example to check a cancer’s spread or to look into symptoms such as shortness of breath.
Those scans included CTs as well as another type of imaging, known as single photonemission computed tomography, or SPECT scans.
Two-thirds of the patients believed their scan was definitely necessary and would benefit their health, and 84 percent said their doctors had explained the reason for the scan.
Another two-thirds of the patients understood CT scans involve radiation, but less than half of those had learned about radiation risks from their doctor.
Few patients were worried about the scans or the link between radiation exposure and cancer. More people reported having thought about when they could eat or whether their parking would be validated after the test than about the effects of radiation, according to findings published in JAMA Internal Medicine.
“It’s really a physician’s job to explain to a patient what the risks and the benefits are… and sometimes we need to do a better job,” said Dr. Angela Mills, an emergency medicine researcher who has studied radiation risks at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.
The radiation dose from one CT scan typically ranges from a couple of millisieverts – comparable to the yearly background radiation from natural sources – to close to 20 millisieverts, the annual exposure limit for nuclear industry employees.
Although each scan only has a small impact on a person’s long term risk of cancer, that risk can build over time with more scans and more radiation exposure.
“To me the problem is when patients have a problem that either is chronic or they keep having pain or maybe there are alternative ways to diagnose (their condition), and patients then need to be better informed what their options are,” Mills, who wasn’t involved in the new study, told Reuters Health.
For example, people who develop recurring kidney stones may be able to skip a scan altogether or get an ultrasound instead of having repeat CTs, she said.
One study from the National Cancer Institute estimated there would be about 29,000 future cancers related to scans done in 2007 alone. That year, Americans had about 72 million total CT scans.
Busey said it’s important to educate all patients about the benefits and possible harms of their scans – but that it will be up to the larger medical community to figure out how to do that in a way that’s both standardized across facilities and individualized to each patient’s particular situation.
“It’s a difficult concept to understand, and risk itself is difficult to talk about,” especially because of the uncertainties involved, she said.
“This is the first step.” (Reuters)