Monday, 10 January 2011

Minister: Smoking to be banned in Egyptian public spaces by 2015

Mon, 10/01/2011 - 18:51

Photographed by Mohamed Ibrahim

Smoking will be officially banned in all public places in Egypt by 2015, Health Minister Hatem al-Gabli announced this week.

Violators, he said, would be subject to fines of LE1000 for taxi drivers, LE15,000 for coffee shop owners and LE100 for everyone else.

At a recent session of parliament, al-Gabli noted that Egyptians smoke a total of 80 billion cigarettes annually, adding that the ministry aimed to reduce this figure to a mere 70 billion by 2015.

Al-Gabli also pointed out that 9.8 percent of Egypt's population was infected with the hepatitis C virus, noting that the ministry's goal was to reduce this percentage to 6.8 by 2015.

The minister went on to warn that the number of diabetes patients was set to rise from a current 4 million cases nationwide to 9 million cases if public awareness about the disease was not substantially raised.

Translated from the Arabic Edition.

Egypt govt to install surveillance cameras throughout Alexandria


Mon, 10/01/2011 - 20:25

Photographed by Tarek Alfaramawy
Archived

The
government has allocated LE100 million for the purchase and
installation of surveillance cameras throughout Alexandria, Egypt's
second city,
Amin Rady, chairman of parliament’s defense and national security committee, said on Monday.

“The cameras will monitor all of the city's entrances and exits, public squares and landmarks,” he said.
Rady
also noted that the Interior Ministry planned to step up security in
and around the nation's churches, especially during Christian feasts and
holidays.
The
moves come in the wake of the New Year's Eve bombing of a Coptic church
in Alexandria that killed 25 people and left scores injured.

Sunday, 9 January 2011

Digital health tech on display at electronics show

9 January 2011 - 09H47

The USB Insta-scan Thermometer from Ion Health is displayed at the 2011 International Consumer Electronics Show at the Las Vegas Convention Center in Las Vegas, Nevada. The USD 90 device can acquire non-contact temperature readings from 1.2 inches away from the skin and upload data via USB 2.0 to a computer where it can be used with Ion Health Suite software.
The USB Insta-scan Thermometer from Ion Health is displayed at the 2011 International Consumer Electronics Show at the Las Vegas Convention Center in Las Vegas, Nevada. The USD 90 device can acquire non-contact temperature readings from 1.2 inches away from the skin and upload data via USB 2.0 to a computer where it can be used with Ion Health Suite software.
Attendees relax in massage chairs at the 2011 International Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vega, Nevada. Technology companies showed off the latest innovations on the digital health care front at the annual Consumer Electronics Show (CES) alongside the newest smartphones, touchscreen tablet computers and 3D television sets.
Attendees relax in massage chairs at the 2011 International Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vega, Nevada. Technology companies showed off the latest innovations on the digital health care front at the annual Consumer Electronics Show (CES) alongside the newest smartphones, touchscreen tablet computers and 3D television sets.
The Wheeme robot from DreamBots Inc massages the back of an attendee at the 2011 International Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Nevada. Technology companies showed off the latest innovations on the digital health care front at the annual Consumer Electronics Show (CES) alongside the newest smartphones, touchscreen tablet computers and 3D television sets.
The Wheeme robot from DreamBots Inc massages the back of an attendee at the 2011 International Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Nevada. Technology companies showed off the latest innovations on the digital health care front at the annual Consumer Electronics Show (CES) alongside the newest smartphones, touchscreen tablet computers and 3D television sets.

AFP - Technology companies showed off the latest innovations on the digital health care front at the annual Consumer Electronics Show (CES) alongside the newest smartphones, touchscreen tablet computers and 3D television sets.

For the second year, organizers staged a full-day "Digital Health Summit" featuring sessions such as "The Doctor in Your Hand: Exploring Mobile Health Options" and "Does Technology Motivate People to Stay Healthy?"

Exhibitors said digital technology can help significantly lower health costs, give people the ability to be more actively involved in their care through self-monitoring and improve doctor-patients communications.

"The intersection of health and technology is really ripe for an explosion," said Jason Goldberg, 33, president and founder of Ideal Life, a Toronto-based company that makes monitoring devices.

"Technologies formally were cost prohibitive," Goldberg said.

"But I can now sit down at the kitchen table for breakfast and check my blood sugar," he said, and transmit the data in real-time to a health care provider using a device that costs less than $100.

Elliot Sprecher, senior data analyst for Israeli company IDesia, developer of a heartbeat sensor, said digital technology should lead to "better patient awareness of their own physical health."

"Typically if you're an informed consumer in any market you're going to get better service," Sprecher said.

"For example, an electrocardiogram (ECG) is usually taken maybe once a year," he said. "That's not enough to capture the possibility of any real substantial heart problem.

"If you were taking readings every day eventually you'd also see the affects of bad lifestyle," Sprecher said. "Conversely you'd see the improvement if you started an exercise program."

Ideal Life's Goldberg said digital devices can have a big impact on chronic condition management.

"You can do that with simple, easy to use, affordable, familiar devices," he said. "A blood pressure cuff, a glucose meter."

Chuck Parker, executive director of Continua, an industry consortium that works to ensure the interoperability and of medical devices, said digital technology "has the opportunity to really lower the cost of health care overall."

"Individuals can collect data and send it and the health care professional on the other end can interact with it," he said, potentially cutting down on some expensive emergency room visits.

"There's absolutely no question that digital technology is going to impact health in a positive way," said Ananth Balasubramanian, senior director for product management at iMetrikus, a Sunnyvale, California-based company which securely transmits self-monitoring health data.

"The big thing is how the industry overcomes all of the political factors, the complete entrenchment of the system right now," he said. "That needs to be changed."

Dr. Amar Setty, a Baltimore-based medical technology consultant, agreed that a number of barriers remain before full advantage can be taken of the digital revolution in the medical field.

"There's just too many different vendors dealing in too many proprietary systems," Setty said, adding that the vast promise of electronic health records also remains elusive for the moment.

"Privacy and liability are big matters," he said. "People are scared to enter the space in some ways.

"Physicians are somewhat scared because they don't want to be sued because they let a patient's record get out," he said.

At the same time, Setty said he has seen "a lot of consumer-based mobile applications that are really interesting.

"Especially for people who want to exercise -- apps to help motivate them and track their data," he said.

"I think really at the moment the industry is centered on individuals who are motivated to take charge of their own health care," Setty said. "What I'm personally looking for is something for everyone."

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UK beauty queen set for deployment to Afghanistan

9 January 2011 - 10H55

Katrina Hodge pictured at a Miss England press event in November 2009. Corporal Hodge may be deployed in Afghanistan as early as next year after she returned to the Army following her term as a beauty queen.
Katrina Hodge pictured at a Miss England press event in November 2009. Corporal Hodge may be deployed in Afghanistan as early as next year after she returned to the Army following her term as a beauty queen.

AFP - A former Miss England may be deployed in Afghanistan as early as next year after she returned to the Army following her term as a beauty queen.

Corporal Katrina Hodge, who has already served in Iraq, swapped active duty for the glitz and glamour of the catwalk when she took the title last January.

But she has now handed over her crown and is back on exercise in Army fatigues, preparing for a possible tour of war-torn Afghanistan.

The married soldier, decorated for her bravery in Basra, today insisted she was glad to be back in the forces and ready to take on the challenge.

"At the end of the day, it's my job. If that's what I've got to do, then that's what I've got to do," she said.

"It's hard to be excited about going to Afghanistan but it's the reality of our job. Our job is be out there, protecting our country."

Corporal Hodge, 24, tied the knot with husband Neil - a soldier whose surname cannot be disclosed for security reasons - in a secret ceremony in Sri Lanka in June.

Three months later, when her spell as Miss England came to an end, she joined a new regiment and was thrown back into Army life.

This involved a month on exercise and tough training to get her up to speed.

"I'm not going to lie, it was hard to come back," she said.

"It's definitely a change of lifestyle from having your hair and make-up done every day to being in your combats and having your hair scraped back. I was thrown in at the deep end and realised that this was reality.

"I went on exercise and it was hard because I was living in woods, having spent the last year living in amazing hotels around the world. To go straight back to this, it was definitely a culture shock."

She admitted she had been "apprehensive" about how she would be received by fellow servicemen and women.

"When people met me, they knew I had been Miss England and I think people had an opinion of me," she added.

"Then they realised that I'm just a normal squaddie. It's nice having a bit of banter at work and it's nice being back in the Army.

"There are days when I miss getting dressed up and going to an event but the Army is my life and the Army has made me who I am."

Corporal Hodge, from Brighton, joined the forces as a 17-year-old and served with 1st Battalion, Royal Anglian Regiment, in Iraq for seven months before becoming a beauty queen.

She has written a book about her experiences. Combat To Catwalk comes out on April 4 and is available to pre-order.

Jessica Linley, 21, a law student at the University of Nottingham, is the new Miss England.

Cyber sex on offer as adult industry adapts

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Indonesia threat over BlackBerry porn sparks anger

9 January 2011 - 12H00

Indonesian Muslim men check their Blackberry phones while waiting for their Iftar meal or the breaking of the fast during Ramadan in September. A threat by Indonesia to curb BlackBerry smartphone services unless the company filters pornographic sites prompted a wave of angry protests online on Sunday.
Indonesian Muslim men check their Blackberry phones while waiting for their Iftar meal or the breaking of the fast during Ramadan in September. A threat by Indonesia to curb BlackBerry smartphone services unless the company filters pornographic sites prompted a wave of angry protests online on Sunday.

AFP - A threat by Indonesia to curb BlackBerry smartphone services unless the company filters pornographic sites prompted a wave of angry protests online on Sunday.

The row is the latest in a series of controversies that BlackBerry maker Research in Motion (RIM) has found itself in, as a number of governments have complained about difficulties monitoring communications via the smartphones.

Communications and Information Technology Minister Tifatul Sembiring has given RIM a two-week deadline to block access or risk restrictions being imposed, according to local reports.

"We have repeatedly asked them to do it and we have given them some time," Sembiring was quoted as saying by the Jakarta Globe newspaper on Saturday.

"If they keep delaying, we will shut down their operation here because they fail to comply with our laws," he added. Details of the extent of any curbs were unclear.

His statement had drawn protests on microblogging site Twitter on Sunday however.

"Can you guarantee that the flow of pornography will be reduced after BB is blocked?" user Tiffanywilliam wrote, among many other protesters.

Mainly Muslim Indonesia has been scandalised by the online release of homemade sex videos involving three popular celebrities, fuelling proposals to filter the Internet.

Sembiring, who is from a conservative Islamic party, on Sunday told his nearly 149,000 "followers" on Twitter that he was only "executing the laws".

He urged RIM to respect and obey the country's regulations and block pornographic sites.

He also asked RIM to open a representative office and service centre in Indonesia to serve the more than two million BlackBerry users in the country of 240 million people, seen as a major emerging market for information technology and mobile communications.

"So far, it seems that RIM is dragging time in carrying out its commitment. As a nation, do we want to be treated in that way?" he wrote in one Tweet.

He also said: "We're not negotiating, if RIM does not comply with the rules and laws of Indonesia, enough is enough!"

Indonesia is the world's fourth most-populous country and has about 40 million Internet users, according to Internet World Stats.

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Germany vows action after dioxin scare

9 January 2011 - 13H13

The German government vowed Sunday to get tough after a dioxin poisoning scare led to import bans on some of its farm products, as a survey showed one in five consumers in Europe's top economy avoiding eggs.
The German government vowed Sunday to get tough after a dioxin poisoning scare led to import bans on some of its farm products, as a survey showed one in five consumers in Europe's top economy avoiding eggs.
A graphic explaining how dioxins find their way into food products and the effect they can have on the human body. The German government vowed to get tough after a dioxin poisoning scare led to import bans on some of its farm products, as a survey showed one in five consumers in Europe's top economy avoiding eggs.
A graphic explaining how dioxins find their way into food products and the effect they can have on the human body. The German government vowed to get tough after a dioxin poisoning scare led to import bans on some of its farm products, as a survey showed one in five consumers in Europe's top economy avoiding eggs.
Policemen stand on the grounds of the Harles & Jentzsch GmbH animal feed facility in Uetersen near Pinneberg, northwestern Germany on January 5. The German government vowed to get tough after a dioxin poisoning scare led to import bans on some of its farm products, as a survey showed one in five consumers in Europe's top economy avoiding eggs.
Policemen stand on the grounds of the Harles & Jentzsch GmbH animal feed facility in Uetersen near Pinneberg, northwestern Germany on January 5. The German government vowed to get tough after a dioxin poisoning scare led to import bans on some of its farm products, as a survey showed one in five consumers in Europe's top economy avoiding eggs.

AFP - The German government vowed Sunday to get tough after a dioxin poisoning scare led to import bans on some of its farm products, as a survey showed one in five consumers in Europe's top economy avoiding eggs.

"This is a big blow for our farmers. They have totally innocently been dragged into this situation by the sick machinations of a few people," Agriculture Minister Ilse Aigner told the Bild am Sonntag newspaper.

"It is tough to shake off the suspicion from the information that we have so far that criminal energy has been combined with an alarming unscrupulousness.

"The judiciary has to clamp down hard."

Police last week raided a firm in northern Germany suspected of supplying up to 3,000 tonnes of fatty acids meant only for industrial use contaminated with potentially carcinogenic dioxins to some 25 animal feed makers.

Tests on samples from the company, Harles und Jentzsch, showed nine samples out of 20 had dioxin levels higher, or much higher, than permitted, with one 78 times over the legal limit.

Tests by the firm itself in March last year had revealed high dioxin levels, but this was not reported to the authorities, the agriculture ministry in Schleswig-Holstein said on Friday.

Its 25 customer companies then delivered reportedly up to 150,000 tonnes of contaminated feed to farms -- mostly those producing eggs and rearing poultry and pigs -- across the country.

Germany banned some 4,700 of Germany's 375,000 farms from selling any products while authorities performed tests, destroying more than 100,000 eggs and launching recall actions. Some 700 have since been given the all-clear.

The German government has moved to curb fears by saying tests conducted so far on eggs and poultry meat indicate that there is no immediate risk to public health.

This was despite tests showing meat from two chickens with dioxin levels above the norm.

But public faith has been shaken, with 21 percent of people currently steering clear of eating eggs because of the scandal, a poll published in the Bild am Sonntag showed. It was unclear how many people were surveyed.

None of the contaminated feed was exported, Berlin says, and just 136,000 eggs -- annual output is 10 billion eggs -- went abroad, and all to the Netherlands, where some were made into products that ended up in Britain.

The European Commission has said there were no grounds for a ban on exports of German meat or other products and called import restrictions by South Korea on German pork imports "out of proportion."

This did not stop EU member state Slovakia suspending sales of German poultry meat and eggs while it conducted tests.

Russia's agriculture watchdog said it had stepped up controls on food of animal origin from Germany and also from other EU countries although it did not specify which ones fell under the tougher regime.

Aigner was due on Monday to meet with feed suppliers and farmers' associations to discuss possible consequences from the scare.