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Tuesday, October 8, 2013

BBC News - MEPs tighten anti-tobacco laws aimed at young smokers

BBC News - MEPs tighten anti-tobacco laws aimed at young smokers

 
CREATIVE LIVING AWARENESS WELFARE (CLAW): 

Banning Tobacco Use:

- A.R.Shams's Reflection - Series of Press / Online Publication - Moral Messages Worldwide - http://arshamssrefletion.blogspot.com  

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 It has been observed that danger signals about tobacco use publicized by the authorities could get positive response from some adults although the youngsters are still found involved in smoking cigarettes who seem very impossible to be convinced by their grown ups. What to do fir such situation!

Diver attacked by shark off Australia | AMAZING & INTERESTING - geo.tv

Diver attacked by shark off Australia | AMAZING & INTERESTING - geo.tv
 Diver attacked by shark off Australia


www.geo.tv/article-121578-Diver-attacked-by-shark-off-Australia#sthash.luxmO3Sl.dpufAMAZING AND INTERESTING!

SYDNEY:
A commercial diver suffered "substantial" injuries after being attacked
by a shark off remote Western Australia, officials said Tuesday.

The man, reportedly aged 55, was with a diving crew from Southern Wild
Abalone when the shark struck off Poison Creek beach, east of the town
of Esperance.

"Obviously, there has been some substantial injuries
(as) with any encounter with a shark, but at this stage (the details
are) still quite sketchy," the firm's owner Marcus Tromp told the
Australian Broadcasting Corporation.

"I understood that he was still conscious and in good hands as far as first aid goes," he added.

Another diver was in the area and came to assist the injured man's crew with
first aid before he was transported to shore for treatment, Tromp said. - See more at: http://

Sunday, October 6, 2013

627 cancer patients treated through new robatic surgery at JPMC | HEALTH - geo.tv

627 cancer patients treated through new robatic surgery at JPMC | HEALTH - geo.tv
627 cancer patients treated through new robatic surgery at JPMC

CREATIVE LIVING AWARENESS WELFARE (CLAW):

HEALTH AWARENESS: 627 cancer patients treated through new robatic surgery at JPMC

- A.R.Shams's Reflection - Series of Press / Online Publication - Moral Messages Worldwide - http://arshamssrefletion.blogspot.com 

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// KARACHI: Project Director CyberKnife Unit, Jinnah Postgraduate Medical Center (JPMC), Prof Tariq Mehmood, on Saturday informed that the early stage of cancer is curable though latest Robotic Radio-surgery Cyberknife and treatment of cancer is available in Karachi.

Tariq, also the Head of Radiology Department, JPMC told PPI that ‘cyber’ and ‘knife’ words tell this treatment is a computerised surgery. He that the robot could cure early stage of brain, head and neck, spine, prostate, lungs cancers etc by one to five sessions of two-hour radio-surgery by Cyberknife.................//

Friday, October 4, 2013

Diesel exhaust fumes baffle bees: study | AMAZING & INTERESTING - geo.tv

Diesel exhaust fumes baffle bees: study | AMAZING & INTERESTING - geo.tv
Diesel exhaust fumes baffle bees: study

CREATIVE LIVING AWARENESS WELFARE (CLAW):

AMAZING & INTERESTING: Diesel exhaust fumes alter the flowery smells that guide bees when they forage, potentially sending them off course and putting the food-growing industry at risk, a study said today.

- A.R.Shams's Reflection - Series of Press / Online Publication - Moral Messages Worldwide - http://arshamssrefletion.blogspot.com 

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/ SOUTHAMPTON: Diesel exhaust fumes alter the flowery smells that guide bees when they forage, potentially sending them off course and putting the food-growing industry at risk, a study said today.

Honeybees rely heavily on their sense of smell to locate flowers from which they harvest life-giving nectar -- transferring pollen grains from one bloom to another in the process.

The new research shows that diesel exhaust fumes from cars, tractors or power generators can chemically alter the smell of flowers and render them undetectable to bees.

This, in turn, threatens the insects' crucial role as a key pollinators of human food crops.

"Somewhere in the region of 70 per cent of world crops require pollination services, and... About 35 per cent of our current food production is reliant on pollination," study co-author Tracey Newman of the University of Southampton told a press conference ahead of the report's release in the journal Nature Scientific Reports.

Pollination services have an estimated economic value of 153 billion euros (USD 208 billion) a year.

For the study, Newman and a team created a synthetic odour blend mimicking the complex chemical mix that make up the smell of oilseed rape flowers.

The synthetic blend of eight chemicals was released into a sealed glass vessel with clean air, and another that contained diesel exhaust at levels similar to rush-hour, roadside fumes.

The fumes contained high concentrations of NOx gases: nitric oxide and nitrogen dioxide, as well as carbon monoxide.

Within one minute, the chemicals alpha-farnesene and alpha-terpinene, which comprised 72.5 per cent and 0.8 per cent of the blend respectively, were "rendered undetectable" in the diesel-polluted air.

The other chemicals were also considerably reduced in volume while there was no change for the blend in the clean-air vial.

Next, the team tested whether bees would notice the difference.

They trained the insects by exposing them to the eight-chemical synthetic odour blend and feeding them a sugar solution at the same time to build an association of reward -- as the smell of flowers hold the promise of nectar.

Over time, the trained bees would start sticking out their tongue-like proboscis in anticipation whenever they recognised the odour. (AFP) //

Doctors still prescribe antibiotics too often: US study | HEALTH - geo.tv

Doctors still prescribe antibiotics too often: US study | HEALTH - geo.tv
Doctors still prescribe antibiotics too often: US study

Creative Living Awareness Welfare (CLAW):

Health Awareness: Over prescribing of antibiotics is dangerous.

- A.R.Shams's Reflection - Series of Press / Online Publication - Moral Messages Worldwide - HTTP://arshamssrefletion.blogspot.com

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// WASHINGTON: US doctors prescribe antibiotics to six out of 10 patients with a sore throat, even though only one infection in 10 is severe enough to merit them, researchers said Thursday.

Over prescribing of antibiotics is dangerous because it contributes to the rise of superbugs that do not respond to treatment.

US health officials have repeatedly warned that nearly all major bacterial infections in the world are becoming resistant to the antibiotic treatment of choice.

The latest study by Michael Barnett and Jeffrey Linder at Harvard University and Brigham and Women's Hospital included data on more than 8,100 visits to doctors' offices and emergency departments from 1997-2010.

Antibiotic prescribing rates were initially around 80 percent and have bottomed out at 60 percent for the past decade, said the research letter in the Journal of the American Medical Association...............................//

Thursday, October 3, 2013

BBC News - Health of oceans 'declining fast'

BBC News - Health of oceans 'declining fast'
Coral reef

CREATIVE LIVING AWARENESS WELFARE (CLAW):

Unhealthy ocean would certainly contain unhealthy drinking water while water is uversally considered as 'LIFE'. May we be blessed!

Hong Kong seizes elephant tusks worth $1 million | AMAZING & INTERESTING - geo.tv

Hong Kong seizes elephant tusks worth $1 million | AMAZING & INTERESTING - geo.tv
Hong Kong seizes elephant tusks worth $1 million

AMAZING AND INTERESTING:

// HONGKONG: Elephant tusks worth more than $1 million were seized by Hong
Kong customs after being discovered hidden under bags of soya in
shipments from West Africa, officials said Thursday.

In what officials called an "intelligence-based" operation last month, the
southern Chinese city's border control found 189 tusks in three
containers.

"After X-ray examination, the officers found the ivory
tusks, weighing 769 kilogrammes (1,695 pounds) in total, in the
innermost parts of the containers. The ivory tusks were packed in linen
and nylon bags and covered by bags of soya," a Hong Kong government
spokesman said in a statement released Thursday.//