Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Exorbitantly-Priced New Cancer Drugs Threaten Solvency of the Health Care System

What big ideas can help America solve its most pressing problems? In an ongoing project, Yahoo News is soliciting creative, outside-the-box and possibly controversial (but still credible) solutions. Here's one.

Interested in submitting your big idea? Learn more.

COMMENTARY | Our worst national problem is probably the unsustainable growth in the cost of health care. My suggestion is to reduce drug costs without price control. Other advanced countries provide equivalent or better health care for less than one-half the cost.

The principles of the free enterprise system-- charging the maximum price the market will allow to deliver the highest possible profit-- are not compatible with the welfare of the medical patients. Patients will pay almost any price to live longer. When a person is dying or is in immense pain, worldly goods lose their importance. The fact that most of the medical bills are paid by insurance companies or the government reduces concern for the cost even further. The medical industry exploits this advantage to reap enormous profits. The drug industry is a prime mover of the cost.

According to a New York Times op-ed, some advanced cancer drugs cost twice the price of older drugs, but they offer no better results. The FDA approves new drugs as being safe and effective. They do not consider price. New cancer drugs typically cost about $10,000 monthly. Two of the newest cancer drugs cost $35,000 monthly.

Medicare is required by law to pay for most cancer drugs that receive FDA approval. This provides little incentive for drug companies to show pricing constraint. If innovative advertising can be used to convince doctors to use the new drugs, inflated prices would enable a new drug to be profitable at very modest sales levels.

Proponents call this free enterprise, but the normal market forces are being grossly distorted by Medicare being required to pay for most cancer drugs, no matter how expensive. Most advanced countries regulate drug prices.

Within our capitalistic system, this would be intolerable.

At the very least, the law should be changed to require Medicare, Medicaid and insurance companies to pay only for the lowest-priced versions of a cancer drug that are equally as effective as the higher-priced one. Drug companies are willing to sell their drugs in other countries, even though regulation results in much lower prices. U.S. citizens are, in effect, subsidizing lower drug prices for the rest of the world.

Health care cost escalation is on a collision course with our other national needs. Ways must be found to maintain a strong health care system that we can afford while protecting the health of the nation.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/exorbitantly-priced-cancer-drugs-threaten-solvency-health-care-180100804.html

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Monday, March 11, 2013

Get Your Bikini Body With MuTu! Finally A DVD That Gives Mums ...

There are so many women who have tried everything to get their bikini bodies back only to be left with a saggy belly and a frustrated mind! But finally there is a proven solution that can help women young and old get their bikini bodies back: MuTu System.

MuTu System is for every mum, It gives them the vital exercises they must do first, if they want their tummy to be flat.? It shows women how to target and restore their core muscles, with expertise, focus and understanding.

A ?mummy tummy? overhang, is the unwelcome but all too-common bane of many mother?s lives. But there is help on hand. MuTu Focus is the missing link, the vital information that makes women?s tummies and pelvic floor muscles work correctly.

MuTu Focus DVD is an 8 week course which comes with a manual that mums can do in the comfort of their own home, whilst watching their bodies finally get back to where they want them to be.

Wendy Powell, MuTu System founder, has been a pregnancy and postpartum specialist for over a decade and is also a mother of 2. She demonstrates and guides you step by step in this groundbreaking new program that is available to watch on DVD.?

In each video Wendy guides, reassures, demonstrates, and picks mums up if they fall, in order to get real results.

Wendy teaches Mums to understand:
?- Why their tummy still pooches out, even if their pregnancy weight has gone
?- Which exercises they should avoid and why
?- How to test & assess their own core strength and degree of abdominal ??separation (diastasis recti)
?- Exactly what to do to build the foundations of a flatter tummy. Step by step, week by week.

Wendy dispels the myths, explains the ?science bits?, and demonstrates clearly how to perform the exercises. She takes you step by step through 8 weeks of highly effective exercises and adjustments that will get your waistline, tummy and pelvic floor right where you want them! Muffin tops are a thing of the past after the 8-week MuTu DVD course. It is the perfect way to start your New Year fitness goals!

MuTu Focus has been approved by Women?s Health Physiotherapists as highly beneficial and restorative for all these mentioned pelvic and abdominal conditions.

Source: http://www.missecoglam.com/prenancy/item/5268-get-your-bikini-body-with-mutu-finally-a-dvd-that-gives-mums-their-bodies-back

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Gay GOP activist considers primary against Sen. Lindsey Graham (Washington Post)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/290660030?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Sunday, March 10, 2013

PFT: Steelers reportedly will cut linebacker Harrison

Cliff AvrilAP

With the official start of free agency four days away and the unofficial launch at midnight tonight, Lions defensive end Cliff Avril is moving closer to becoming former Lions defensive end Cliff Avril.

Avril tells Anwar Richardson of MLive.com that, as of now, the Lions and Avril?s camp aren?t talking.

?We haven?t really been talking, but there?s still a few days,? Avril said. ?Maybe they will make a strong push, or we?ll make a push with them. At the same time, we haven?t really been talking. Last year, I got franchised, and we didn?t start talking to them until four or five days before that deadline. I don?t know if that?s their way of doing things, but we haven?t been talking.?

If Avril plays elsewhere, he?s willing to move to linebacker in a 3-4 defense.? He?s already been linked to the Browns, and we?ve reported that multiple 3-4 teams are interested in Avril.

?I think I can do it,? Avril said. ?I thought I was going to be a 3-4 coming out, obviously. I ended up getting drafted to the Lions at the defensive end position. The weird thing is all the guys out of Purdue from the last few drafts who played end became 3-4 ends. I?m the only one out of all of those guys who played linebacker and became a defensive end. Maybe I?ll join that club, if it?s the case.?

The problem remains that defensive end in a 4-3 often pays more than a 3-4 linebacker. For Avril, though, the real issue will be what any team will pay when it?s time to field offers.

The offers can officially be fielded as of midnight tonight.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/03/08/report-steelers-on-verge-of-cutting-james-harrison/related/

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Saturday, March 9, 2013

Senate panel casts year's first votes on gun curbs

Former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, center, is joined by her husband Mark Kelly, left, and Emily Nottingham, mother of shooting victim Gabe Zimmerman, listening to a speaker as they returned to the site of a shooting that left her critically wounded to urge key senators to support expanded background checks for gun purchases, Wednesday, March 6, 2013, in Tucson, Ariz. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin)

Former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, center, is joined by her husband Mark Kelly, left, and Emily Nottingham, mother of shooting victim Gabe Zimmerman, listening to a speaker as they returned to the site of a shooting that left her critically wounded to urge key senators to support expanded background checks for gun purchases, Wednesday, March 6, 2013, in Tucson, Ariz. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin)

(AP) ? In Congress' first gun votes since the Newtown, Conn., nightmare, the Senate Judiciary Committee voted Thursday to toughen federal penalties against illegal firearms purchases, even as senators signaled that a deep partisan divide remained over gun curbs.

The Democratic-led panel voted 11-7 to impose penalties of up to 25 years for people who legally buy firearms but give them to someone else for use in a crime or to people legally barred from acquiring weapons. The panel's top Republican, Sen. Charles Grassley of Iowa, cast the only GOP vote for the measure.

President Barack Obama urged lawmakers to vote on gun curbs, including the bill approved Thursday, which lawmakers named for Hadiya Pendleton, the Chicago teenager who was fatally shot days after performing at Obama's inauguration.

Congress should consider those bills "because we need to stop the flow of illegal guns to criminals, and because Hadiya's family and too many other families really do deserve a vote," he said at an Interior Department ceremony.

The parties' differences were underscored when senators debated a proposal by Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., to ban assault weapons and high-capacity ammunition magazines. Democrats have noted that such firearms have been used in many recent mass shootings.

"The time has come, America, to step up and ban these weapons," said Feinstein, a lead sponsor of a 1994 assault weapons ban that expired a decade later. She added, "How could I stand by and see this carnage go on?"

The response from Republicans was that banning such weapons was unconstitutional, would take firearms from law-abiding citizens, and would have little impact because only a small percentage of crimes involve assault weapons or magazines carrying many rounds of ammunition.

"Are we really going to pass another law that will have zero effect, then pat ourselves on the back for doing something wonderful?" said Sen. John Cornyn of Texas, the No. 2 Senate Republican.

The two other bills would require background checks for nearly all gun purchases and provide around $40 million a year for schools to buy security equipment. The committee was expected to vote on those measures and the assault weapons ban on Tuesday.

Thursday's debate made it clear that despite recent mass slayings, new gun restrictions face a difficult path in a Congress in which the National Rifle Association and conservative voters have a loud voice. Obama proposed a broad package of gun curbs in January, including a call for background checks for nearly all gun purchases and an assault weapons ban.

Solid opposition from Republicans, and likely resistance from moderate Democrats from GOP-leaning states, seems all but certain to doom the assault weapons ban when gun bills reach the full Senate, probably in April. The fate of the other bills is uncertain.

The Senate measures were all crafted since the December slayings of 20 children and six educators at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn. That massacre plus others in Aurora, Colo., Tucson, Ariz., and elsewhere, have made guns a top national topic but have not erased many lawmakers' concerns about protecting gun rights.

Feinstein's assault weapons prohibition "represents the biggest gun ban proposal in our history," Grassley said. He argued that firearms bans don't work and said, "Had this bill been law at the time, Sandy Hook still would have happened" because shooter Adam Lanza used a legally owned gun he took from his mother.

Democrats disagreed, arguing that assault weapons firing large numbers of bullets make killers like Lanza even deadlier.

"The plain, simple, blunt fact is that some if not all of the beautiful children who perished that day in Newtown, along with the great educators who gave their lives trying to save those children, might well be alive today if this ban had been in effect," said Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn.

The bill boosting federal penalties for illegal gun purchases, whose chief sponsor is the committee's chairman, Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., was one of the least controversial measures that senators are debating. Studies have shown that large numbers of firearms used in crimes are purchased illegally.

Both parties agree that stiffer penalties are needed to stifle gun trafficking and straw purchases, when someone legally buys a gun to give to a criminal or someone else not allowed to have one. Currently, law enforcement officials prosecute the practice with laws that forbid lying on forms for gun purchases, punishable by up to 10 years in prison.

The bill was approved after Grassley inserted language requiring the Justice Department to take steps aimed at preventing a repeat of the agency's botched Fast and Furious gun smuggling investigation. Republicans, who also expressed worries that people might be prosecuted for unwittingly giving firearms to someone who ends up using them in a crime, indicated GOP support could grow if some changes are made.

Expanding background checks is the cornerstone of Democrats' gun proposals. That effort suffered a setback this week when Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., dropped efforts to write a compromise with Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla.

Coburn's blessing could have won crucial support from Republicans and moderate Democrats because he is a solid conservative with an A-rating from the National Rifle Association. Schumer and two allies ? moderate Sens. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., and Mark Kirk, R-Ill. ? said they would continue seeking compromise with other Republicans.

Background checks are now required for sales by the nation's 55,000 federally licensed gun dealers, not for private sales between individuals, like those at gun shows or online.

The school aid measure by Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., and others would provide $40 million a year in grants for reinforced school doors and other security measures, plus create a new program with existing funds to improve college safety.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-03-07-US-Gun-Control-Congress/id-620fb102d52b427cad9639329d0eb611

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Thursday, March 7, 2013

Israel arrests 2 Palestinians in West Bank raids

TULKAREM (Ma?an) ? The Israeli army detained at least six Palestinians from cities and towns across the occupied West Bank early Wednesday, relatives and security officials said.

Soldiers raided the house of 20-year-old Walid Mohammed Ajouli in the village of Qaffin north of Tulkarem, detaining him on the scene. The detainee?s family said Walid had heart problems.

An army spokeswoman said six Palestinians were detained overnight.

One was detained in Nablus, two in Bizzariya, north of Nablus, two in Ayda refugee camp in Bethlehem, and one in Surif, southwest of Bethlehem, the official said.

Meanwhile an Israeli unit attacked dozens of Palestinians protesting against Israel's dumping waste in a landfill in the city of Nablus.

Soldiers arrived at the landfill and forced a complete evacuation of the area, before firing stun grenades and tear gas against protesters, and arresting 13-year-old Mohammad Munther Solaiman.

Protesters were demanding Israel shut down the site because the waste comes from Israeli territory and its contents are unknown. Protesters said it risked harming the environment.

An army spokeswoman said 40 Palestinians hurled rocks at soldiers who responded with riot-dispersal means. She was unaware of the reports of an arrest.

Source: http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=572138

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Hand Recognition, Gesture Support Landing On Microsoft Kinect For Windows Soon

kinect-for-windows-sensorThe Kinect is arguably Microsoft's most important innovation of the past decade, and has done more for changing the nature of computer interaction than pretty much any other recently created input devices. Today, Microsoft Research has demoed how it's about to get even better, with the addition of hand recognition complete with refined gesture support.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/QrJWY8oOVes/

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[iPhone] Tweak to fix missing wifi auto-join?

I been having issues with wifi network at work whereby my iphone 5 wouldn't auto-join, and the option to auto-join is missing from the network settings.

Is there a tweak to fix that? Been discussing these issues with some morons on another forum, so to address some possible questions:
*the phone auto-joins most other networks just fine
*ask to join is set to OFF
*other devices, like my personal laptop running Win7 have no problems auto-connecting to that network
*my co-workers' android phones have no problems auto-connecting to that network
*I am not asked for password every time I connect--I only have to tap the network name in the list of available networks and it works--it just wouldn't do it automatically
*I tried "forgetting" the network, entering network name/UID/PW manually--it didn't fix the issue

Would much appreciate REAL advice or suggestions for a tweak that would fix this. Please don't tell me things like "iPhone does it natively, so there is no need for any tweak", "Apple knows best", etc.

I'm attaching two screencap files--screencap1 is from my work wifi where the auto-join option is missing. screencap2 is from a local store's hotspot where it works as expected.


Last edited by DixonCox; Today at 09:32 PM.

Source: http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?t=1553166&goto=newpost

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Michigan Liberal::: ICYMI: State Senate defines Pi as 3.14

What happens when a bunch of scientific illiterates are given legislative powers to make decisions involving science: They define Pi. Or, in the case of that most august of law making bodies, the Michigan State Senate, they decide that people aren't the cause of species loss and erase 100 years of evolution in conservation thought by voting along party lines to prohibit the DNR from using biodiversity as a goal in decision making. In other words, they voted to outlaw reality.

This is the stupidest piece of legislation to get a legislative chamber to sign off on it since Tom McMillin's lightbulb freedom bill. The thinking behind it isn't just primitive, it's downright counterproductive. Biodiversity is at the core of healthy ecosystems, which means every enterprise that requires a healthy ecosystem -- in human terms, this would be from sport fishing to general outdoor recreation like hiking and camping -- suffers as a result. This is trading the illusion of short term economic benefit for long term sustainability. It's binge resource squandering ... from people who call themselves conservatives.

Update! ... The bill's sponsor, Tom Casperson, speaks.

"We're not going to blame humans for this," Casperson said, suggesting a lack of human activity contributed to last year's massive Duck Lake fire that hurt biodiversity in the Upper Peninsula. "Humans can be the solution."

May I quote Neil DeGrasse Tyson here? ?The good thing about science is that it's true whether or not you believe in it."

A quick primer on forest fires. First off, wildfires are part of a natural cycle, but people who come from the logging industry -- like Casperson -- hate them because they burn up raw products (keep in mind that the logging industry gets wealthy removing trees from public lands as well as private). Back in the day, the policy was to aggressively suppress all wildfires to prevent losses to the logging industry (this is now again Forest Service policy). This led, in a lot of areas, to a build up of ground detritus that is normally burned up in fires. When things are left to their own devices, because fires tend to blow through forests every so often, the dead wood doesn't build up and the fires are typically fairly mild and adult trees are usually naturally wet enough to survive them. With lots of garbage on the ground to burn, the fires are historically worse and more costly because they are hot enough to kill even the healthy, adult trees.

In other words, Casperson is probably exactly wrong on last year's Duck Lake fire. The fire was part of the natural cycle in the area. If anything made it worse, it was the kind of thinking embodied in the piece of legislation he's championed.

As for the idea that people aren't responsible for loss of biodiversity, which is written into the legislation's language ... it's purely wishful delusion. Naturally, it was adopted by the state senate on a party-line vote.

Source: http://www.michiganliberal.com/diary/20148/icymi-state-senate-defines-pi-as-314

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Rock solid proof of Iowa meteorite crater

USGS

A three-dimensional view of Decorah, Iowa, and the Upper Iowa River with the location of the Decorah Impact Structure marked with the white dotted line. Scene is looking due north.

By Andrea Thompson
LiveScience

Buried beneath the rocks, dirt, buildings and roads of the city of Decorah, Iowa, lies a 470 million-year-old meteorite crater.

Unlike the craters on the pockmarked surfaces of the moon and Mars, this crater can't be seen by looking down at Earth's surface, at least not by the human eye.

But recent aerial surveys primarily aimed at getting a better picture of the minerals that underlie the region got a look at the crater structure using instruments that detect the variations in gravity of different types of rock, as well as their ability to conduct electricity.

"Capturing images of an ancient meteorite impactwas a huge bonus," Paul Bedrosian, a U.S. Geological Survey geophysicist in Denver who is leading the effort to model the data the surveys acquired, said in a statement.

The images provided corroborating evidence that the feature is in fact an impact crater. They are the "first images which really show the geometry," Bedrosian told OurAmazingPlanet.

USGS

Data from drill cores and an aerial electromagnetic survey show the Decorah Impact Structure.

Discovering a crater
The crater, known as the Decorah Impact Structure, was discovered during a 2008-2009 effort by scientists with the Iowa Geological and Water Survey to examine samples from drill cores (cylinders of sediment drilled out from the ground). In them, they found a unique unit of shale beneath and near Decorah.

The shale formed a "nice circular basin" about 3.4 miles (5.5 kilometers) wide, Robert McKay, a geologist at the Iowa Geological Survey, said in the USGS statement. That makes the Decorah crater about four to five times the size of Arizona's famed Meteor Crater, Bedrosian said. [Meteor Crater: Experience an Ancient Impact]

The thinking is that the shale was deposited by an ancient seaway that formed some time after the impact ?that created the crater. The identity of the basin as an impact site wasn't known for certain, and more evidence was needed to back up the hypothesis.

Some of that added evidence came from the identification of shocked quartz in a layer of breccia below the shale. Breccia is a type of rock made up of broken fragments of other rocks cemented together by a finer-grained medium. The shocked quartz found within this breccia is considered strong evidence of a meteorite impact, Bedrosian said.

Shale signature
When the recent surveys set out, they were aware that the crater was in the area, he said. "We weren't aware that we would be able to image it so cleanly," Bedrosian said.

The keys to the sharp imaging were the distinctive electric conductivity and gravity signals of the shale layer.

"The shale is an ideal target and provides the electrical contrast that allows us to clearly image the geometry and internal structure of the crater," Bedrosian said in the release.

In the new view obtained from the surveys, the impact crater appears as a circular structure that is distinct from the area around it. This imaging provides still further evidence that the structure is indeed a crater.

The researchers plan to use the data they've taken to learn more about the crater and the meteorite that created it. The nearly circular shape of the crater suggests that whatever space rock caused the impact came from directly overhead, and the width of the crater suggests that the rock was a couple hundred meters across, Bedrosian said. The modeling he and his team are doing could tell them more about the energy the impactor had as it hit.

The team is planning to publish findings from the survey in the next six months, Bedrosian said, which will be the "ultimate scientific confirmation" of the crater. The crater will truly become official when it is added to the Earth Impact Database, he added. The database is a list that contains fewer than 200 confirmed meteor impacts (though many more meteors have impacted the Earth throughout its history, their signatures have simply been wiped away by the planet's active plate tectonics).

"Hopefully ? we'll be adding one to the list," Bedrosian said.

Follow Andrea Thompson @AndreaTOAP, Pinterestand Google+. Follow OurAmazingPlanet?@OAPlanet, Facebook?and Google+.

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://science.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/03/06/17213253-rock-solid-evidence-of-a-meteorite-crater-under-iowa?lite

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